The upper left edge. (Cannon Beach, Or.) 1992-current, July 01, 1998, Page 2, Image 2

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    Now & Then
Continued -from p y t
7
Let me tell you about why 1 love books. I’ve
already told you why I love art, in general, but my
love for books, in particular, is a particular thing
with me. Like a lot of folk, books are many things
to me, escape, information, inspiration, but that’s
just the story part, the text of the book, the
illustrations, all those things that you can get on the
internet in beautiful color and large type. The books
themselves, the bindings, the weight, the size, the
condition, and, as an amateur bookman, how they
managed to reach my hands. These things interest
me. In five years of working with books daily I
found that they could teach me about myself. I
learned that I had a weakness for broken books. I’ve
been accused, falsely, of taking all the “good books”
home. Truly most of my personal library is stuff that
wouldn’t impress someone wanting to ‘invest in a
library’, but I think someone who loves books ‘as
things’ would understand. Copies of books are each
individuals, like people, we all have a similar
chemical makeup or text, our printings or DNAs
vary, but our life experiences result in our
‘condition’. Broken books are like broken people,
children hurt by other children or adults, old tired
people, old damaged books, they have stories to tell.
I take a lot of them home. I even buy them. I
recently bought, for a dollar, Edmund Dulac’s
Picture Book for the French Red Cross. For the
information of those of you not salivating, this is a
volume with over twenty color illustrations of classic
fairy tales by an early nineteenth century artist of
some talent. It was printed to help the Red Cross
during the Great War, copyright 1915. The
illustrations had, of course, been ripped out. They
probably sold for $20 to $100 each, framed. The
book was left behind. Intact, the book would sell
for, maybe, $100; the math is pretty easy. The
reality isn’t that pretty, or easy, but I bought it
anyway. I also have a copy of Twain’s The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer, a cheap edition. I took
it home because someone had cut out a hole in the
pages, so they could ‘cleverly’ hide something. I
keep it to remind myself that I too did that as a boy.
One of many things I try to remember, and forgive
myself for doing
I delight in books that were first printed in
paperback. It makes me giggle to think of someone
who wants to ‘invest’ in books calls his dealer and
wants everything that Hemingway ever published,
and he wants only first editions, to impress his
friends with his ‘library’. There will be a paperback
in the box, and a hefty bill. Hemingway’s The
Wilderness Years, published by Dell Paperbacks,
alone will cost $50, the rest in the neighborhood of
five figures each. I have a Fahrenheit 451 first
edition, it’s a paperback, a lot of the early Sci-Fi
Classics were first published in paperback, but it’s
not ‘perfect’, just real. Like real people the flaws &
weaknesses in books arouse my feelings of wanting
to help and protect them. I have this fantasy of
finding copies of all the Dulac illustrations and
putting the Red Cross book back together.
Protecting broken books is obviously easier than
helping broken people, but both seem important.
Some books and some people will always remain
broken, but ‘if they are loved they can teach love’. I
read that in an old book. A book can tell you quite a
lot... even if it doesn’t have a cover.
IN AN UNJUST WORLD... JUSTICE.
Personal Injury Lawyer
----------- WHERE TO O*T AN EDGE
M o’ Stuff
Cannon Bench: Jupiter's Rare and Used Books. Osburn's
Grocery. The Cookie Co.. Coffee Cabans. Bill's Tavern. Cannon
Beach Book Co.. Hanes Bakerle The Bistro. Midtown Café.
Once Upon a Breeze. Coplea A Fax. Heather's. The Homegrown
Café. Haystack Video. Mariner Market. Espresso Bean. Ecola
Square A Cleanline Surf
M anzanita Mother Nature’s Juice Bar. Bayside Gardena.
Cassandra's. Manzanita News A Espresso A Nehalem Bay
Video
Nehalem Mermaid Cafe
Rockaway Sharkey's
Tillam ook Rainy Day Books
Bay C ity
Art Space
Yachats By-the-Sea Books
Pacific City. The River House. Far Country Books. A Village
Merchants
Oceanside Ocean Side Espresso
Lincoln C ity Trillium Natural Foods. Driftwood Library. A
Lighthouse Brewpub
Depos Bay Oregon Books
Newport. Oceana Natural Foods. Café DIVA. Cosmo Café.
Bookmark Café. Newport Bay Coffee Co.. Cuppatunes. Bay
Latté. Ocean Pulse Surf Shop. Coastal Coffee Co.. Sylvia Beach
Hotel. Green Gables Bookstore/ BAB. A Canyon Way
Eugene Book Mark. Café Navarra. Eugene Public Library.
Friendly St. Market. Happy Trails. Keystone Café. Klvs Foods.
Lane C.C.. Light For Music. New Frontier M arket Nineteenth
Oasis Market.
Perry's. Red Barn Grocery.
__
Street Brew P u b.
b ._____
Sundance Natural Foods. U ofO. .A W O W H a U
C orvallis The Environmental Center. OSU
Salem: Heliotrope. Salem Library. A The Peace Store
..................
’
*
Café.
. The
The Community Store. The
Astoria:
KMUN. .....
Columbian
(
Wet Dog Cafe. Astoria Coffee Company. Café Uniontown. A
Shark Rock Café
Seaside Buck's Book Barn. Universal Video. A Café Espresso
Portland: Artichoke Music. Laughing Horse Bookstore. Act III.
Barnes A Noble. Belmonts Inn. Bibelot Art Gallery. Bijou Café.
Borders. Bridgeport Brew Pub. Capt'n Beans (two locations).
Center for the Healing Light Coffee People (three locational.
Common Grounds Coffee. East Avenue Tavern. Food Front.
Goose Hollow Inn. Hot Lips Pizza. Java Bay Café. Key Largo. La
Pattlaserle. Lewis A Clark College. Locals Only. Marco's Pizza.
Marylhurst College. Mt. Hood CC. Music Millenium. Nature's
(two locations). NW Natural Gas. OHSU Medical School. Old
Wives Tales. Ozone Records. Papa Haydn. PCC (four locations).
PSU (two locations). Reed College. Third Eye. TransCentral
Library. A YWCA
Cornelius: The Weekend Garden Market
The Dalles: Kllndts Bookseller
Hood River Purple Rocks Art Bar A Café
Ashland: Garo's Java House. The Black Sheep. Blue Mt. Café.
A Rogue River Brewery
Cave Junction: Coffee Heaven A Kerby Community Market
Grants Pass: The Book Shop
(Out o f Oregon)
Vancouver. WA: The Den
Longview. WA The Broadway Gallery. A Carat Patch
Long Beach. WA Pacific Picnics
Naselle, W A Rainy Day Artistry
Nahcotta. WA Moby Dick Hotel
Duvall. W A Duvall Books
Bainbridge Island. WA Eagle Harbor Book Co.
Seattle. WA Elliot Bay Book Co.. Honey Bear Bakery. New
Orleans Restaurant. Still Life In Fremont. Allegro Coffeehouse.
The Last Exit Coffee House. A Bulldog News
San Francisco. C A City Lights Bookstore
Denver. Co: Denver Folklore Center
New York. NY The Strand Book Company
Wash 1 n f t on. D.C.t Hotel Tabard (nn
The Cannon Beach Arts Association is now
offering Artists Grants for original work. The $3000
grant in part or total will be awarded to “professional
artists in any media”... “showing senous intent”...
(who are) “a part of the Cannon Beach community,
actively exhibiting or performing within the city”, or
(can) “document of short-term residence for the
duration of the project proposed.” The grant is
intended to promote professional excellence of our
local artists and provide support necessary to expand
their creative process. Artists may pick up
applications at the Cannon Beach Gallery, and
proposals are due July 31st. For more information
call Jay Raskin at 503 436-2162. Cool, huh?
Publishing news; Sally Lackaffs “Wildlife on the
Edge” will be at the printers by the time you read
this. Those who have pre-paid for your copies, we
will be sending them as soon as we get them back,
expect them by not later than somewhere in August,
and if you don’t get yours by then contact us, we do
make mistakes.
We have received two new publications recently;
the first, String Town, edited by Polly Buckingham,
is an annual magazine of short prose and poetry.
Drawing its writers from Astoria, Portland and
Seattle and as far away as Florida, it is a fine
selection, presented simply and honestly. At 56
pages for $4.50 it’s a good buy. There are short
bios in the back pages, listing some impressive
credentials of the 24 writers included. You can get a
copy at several independent bookstores, or by
writing to String Town, Route 6, Box 74, Ivy
Station Rd., Astoria, Oregon 97103, or for the cyber
abled, stringtown@aol.com.
The other is Romance of Waterfalls by Barbara
Bloom and Garry Cohen. It’s a user friendly guide
book to one hundred waterfalls in Northwest Oregon
and. Southwest Washington. It includes maps,
accessibility information, good places to kiss, a
poem for every waterfall and Bloom’s drawings of
each fall, as well as wildlife that might be
encountered there. This 252 page slick paperback is
published by Outdoor Romance Publishing and sells
for $16.95. It is available at bookstores in the area or
by writing to Outdoor Romance Publishing, 817 SE
139th, Portland, Oregon 97233 or again, for those
‘on-line’, at wwaterfalls@aol.com.
Andrea & Cheth Rowe will be joined by Heather
Lively Tuesday July 28th around 8pm to play some
original folk, rock & blues at The River 230 W.
Marine Dr. in Astoria. It’s a benfit for this
wonderful preformance space.
Editor/Publisher/Janitor: The
Belov ed Reverend Billy Lloyd Hulls
Graphics Editor: The Humble Ms.
Sally Louise Lackaff
Copy Editor/Science Editor/Voice
of Reason/Uncle Mike/etc.: Michael
Burgess
W ildlife Inform ant/Music Reporter
at Large: Peter "Spud" Siegel
Education E d ito r Peter Lindsey
Improvisational Engineer: Dr.
Karkeys
Paste/Production/Proof Reader:
Myma Uhlig
Bass Player Bill Uhlig
Poetry Editor: John Buckley
Political Consultant: Kathleen
Krushas
History E d ito r Douglas Deur
Environmental News: Kim Bossé
Lower Left Beat Victoria Stoppieilo
M r. Baseball: Jeff Larson
Local Colour: Ron Logan
June's Garden: June Kroft
WEB Builder: Liz Lynch
WEB Ad Sales: Virginia Bruce
Essential Services: Ginm Callahan
Ad Sales: Katherine Mace
M ajor Distribution: Ambling Bear
Distribution
Assistant W hite Space
Coordinator: Karen Brown
And A Cast O f Thousands!!
Advertising rates:
Business Card Size Ad
$30.
1/16th approx. 3 x 5
S35.
l/8 th approx 4 x 7
$50.
lX4th approx. 6 1 /2 x 9 $100.
1/2 page
$150.
Full page
$300.
Back page
$400.
. . . per month. Payment is due
the 15th o f the month p rio r to
the issue in which the ad is to
appear. Camera read) art is
requested. We are usually on
the streets by the first
weekend o f the month.
DUAML JOHNSON
RIAL ESTATE
Next Month; The McMenamins Kingdom
■Wÿl
OREGON BOOKS
T
New Location
or
A l l 'V our R eal E state N eeds
425 Coast H w y SW
Newport, O regon 97365
541-574-6004 • 800-668-6105
GREGORY KAFOt RY
202 Oregon Pioneer Building
320 S.W. Stark Street
Portland. OR 97204
Phone:
Events • Authors • D e li
Espresso • W in e
M oby
(503) 224-2647
-W.
J* -W. .W_w- M
H otel & O ¡ ter F arm
*
July I - L ab o r Day
IT'S DINNER TIME!
P A C IF IC M E D IA T IO N A S S O C IA T E S
ANTHONY STOPPIELLO
Architect
Earth friendly architecture
Consultant - Educator
Passive solar design
Conscientious material use
Licensed in Oregon and Washington
310 Lake S t • COB 72. Ilwaco, WA 9 6 6 2 4 (3 6 0 ) 6 4 2 -4 2 5 6
D isputes? C onflicts?
C om m unication P roblem s?
T R Y M E D IA T IO N
• E conom ical * C ooperative
• C onstructive
• C onfidential
Pain & Stress R e lie f -0- D e e p T issu e
S w e d is h
R e la x a tio n
V A L O R E E G IF T , L M T
Labor Day experience C h e f Routt's personal style with
the freshest o f our local and regional ingredients W ith a
career that has taken him through some o f the U SA's best
restaurants and his ambition, this w ill be a culinary experience
you’ ll never forget! ( neither w ill M oby!)
Located in Nahcotta, W A
On Sandridgc Road
just south a f Bay Ave
limited aealing
reservations only
(3 6 0 )6 6 5 -4 5 4 3
• P A C IF IC M E D IA T IO N
If everybody contemplates the infinite instead of
fixing the drain, many of us will die of cholera.
John Rich
G e n e r a l C o u n s e l in g
Licensed M assag e Therapy
Moby Dick w ill be cookin’ this summer with a rising
.
young star o f a chef, A llen Routt Between July I “ and
P a c ific M ed iatio n A sso ciates
(5 0 3 ) 7 1 7 -1 1 7 2
P A C IF IC M E D IA T IO N A S S O C IA T E S
C o n o r s
• P A C IF IC M E D IA T IO N
Thursday - M onday
5.30 - 8 :3 0 PM
In d iv id u a ls
C o u p le s &
F a m ilie s
V i c t o r H . P lu c y ,
aa . a
- l a a f . t
503-436-2425
P.O. Box 8 72 • C annon B each, Oregon 9 7 1 1 0
71X-81Ô1
W oabilrtçjtor) S fa to Lia
O ro rh a rf
*A A F 2 O O O O 4 O
71Z-81Ô1
C a n n o n B oach
A S H O E & A C C E S S O R Y B O U T IQ U E
Life is easier to take than you’d think; all that is
necessary is to accept the impossible, do without the
indispensable and bear the intolerable.
Kathleen Norris
503 436 0 57 7
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TrAnsfomtAtion
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SweW»R/SRUt»w - Arom»ther>pv< - Relict
Covnfort Care - A.B.M.F. - N.CT.M.B.
Dv. «ppotntment. . . »OJ-7J»-»*fO
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UrPEJt LEFT E6&E. TUL7 W S
Serving the Northern Oregon coAtt. . .
239 N
HEM LOCK
CANNON BEACH, OREGON
We are all inclined to judge ourselves by our ideals;
others by their acts.
Harold Nicholson