UPPER LIFT COAST PRODUCTIONS ♦ RO. BOX 42.2.2. CA.NM0N BEACH OR WHO 4 SC3 N3fc 2V-f5 4 email MlySupperlefl-edje.coi’i 4 wMW.upperleFleJ9e.com Be not inhospitable to strangers Lest they be angels in disguise. -FROM OVER A DOORWAY W ITHIN SHAKESPEARE & CO., PARIS, FRANCE /SL Llama Spit By AJ Coyne T lD I The first Shakespeare & Company Bookshop opened in Paris in November of 1919. In it Sylvia Beach gave the literary world a place to come together - it was frequented by the “greats” such as Ernest Hemingway, TS Eliot, Gertrude Stein and so many more. It was where the controversial novel Ulysses by James Joyce was published and distributed. It was a haven to countless writers, a place where they were encouraged and challenged to read and create brilliance. What Sylvia Beach created, George Whitman keeps alive in his own Shakespeare & Co. Bookshop. Last m onth I had the privilege of going to Paris, and one of the most amazing places I saw in the week I was there, was this small bookstore in the shadow of the Notre Dame. Upon entering I realized that I would never quite be the same - and would never be able to sufficiently describe the magic of Shakespeare & Co. to anyone who had never had the honor of walking through its doors for the first time. I had come into a space that instantly felt like home. People were celebrating words and minds were being challenged, intelligent people were having ridiculous and brilliant conversations about nothing and everything. Here anyone is welcome to contribute and strangers are considered angels in disguise. I found that the employees were actually people just passing through in need of a place to sleep; some had been there for years and some for days; but ail had one thing in common and that is the greatest respect for George and what he has kept alive in Shakespeare & Co. I wandered this haven for hours, laughing in delight at the treasures found in every corner. The store is a maze of wonderment with every inch being filled with literary jewels. These jewels can be found not only in the shape of a book but also in pictures pinned to the wall, newspaper clippings carelessly taped to the door frames, a quote written below the ceiling, a wishing well filled with coins or an alcove beneath the stairs. The books are stored in some of the most beautiful and elaborate pieces of furniture and also in makeshift bookshelves propped up against whatever space happens not to be in use that day. I could have spent years in this space and surely never seen all that was there, but what I did see in my limited time told me so much. I found a place of worship where you come and celebrate life and literature. The most magnificent part of my experience was found up a steep flight of stairs in the “Sylvia Beach Memorial Library". Sylvia sold books but also used her store as a lending library, and although in this day and age it is more difficult to lend books, especially in a tourist city, George has kept Sylvia’s dream alive in what I would call a reading library. You aren’t able to take the books out of the store but you are more than welcome to stay as long as you like and come back as often as you like. As well as the rest of the building, the library is covered with books, but unlike downstairs you will also find beds tucked away in every corner. It is here where you can curl up with a book or just curl up and take a nap. There was really nothing I wanted to do more than lie down in that space surrounded by glorious writing and think about all who had been there before me. So with Hemingway in hand I found my small comer and curled up not to read, but to breathe; and it was the best nap I have ever had. I awoke with a smile on my face knowing that I would spend many more hours in my new found haven - if not in person than at least in my head. It is easy for me to understand how someone could come for a book and stay for a lifetime. 2001 (MIE (MY DOTS“ GUDE 1 Thut • 2 WASHINGTON AND OREGON COASTS p H fn ------- ¿IL1. , __ _ . _ inidaiiLlTLUW K-riiiLI'LUa 1:M. PM rw TK FT T M n I K n FM PM FT 5:17 509 709 84 86 87 813 915 l u e s * 1014 W e d * 11:11 F l w i * 043 Fn * 126 Sat * 208 90 94 9.7 99 83 86 F ri • 3 Sal • 4 SUN* 5 M on* 6 7 8 9 10 11 SUN • 6:24 7:51 9:08 10:13 6.9 11:08 7.4 11:58 7.9 .... ... 12:05 10.0 12:58 9.9 8 9 1:50 9.5 2 48 328 410 4 54 542 637 7 37 9.0 91 90 88 8.5 82 81 2:43 3:37 4:37 5:45 7:01 8:17 9:24 • • • • • • • 8 35 929 1018 1102 021 053 122 8 1 82 83 84 77 78 10:20 11:06 11:45 .... 1142 12:21 25 SUN • 26 Mon • 27 lues • 149 214 240 309 12 13 14 15 16 17 M on® lu e s ® Wed • Thur • Fri • Sat • 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 SUN Mon lues Wed thur Fn Sat 28 Wed • 6.1 12:13 6.1 6.4 049 2 05 317 4 22 520 615 708 7 59 8.8 8.1 1.9 11:42 2.8 1:28 1.5 3.3 2:40 0.8 36 35 33 28 23 19 1.5 3:45 0.0 4:41 -0.6 5:32 -1.1 6:20 -1.4 7:05-1.4 7:48 -1.2 8:29 -0.7 851 944 7.3 1040 6.6 1142 6.2 6.2 021 128 65 13 9:09 -0.1 12 9:50 0.7 12 10:33 1.6 12 11:22 2.4 12:50 1.2 31 2:00 1.1 35 3:05 0.8 6.8 7.2 7.5 36 35 32 4:00 0.4 4:47 0.1 5:28 0.0 29 26 24 6:04 6:37 7:06 7:34 -0.1 -0.1 0.0 0.2 8:00 8:27 8:57 9:31 0.5 0.8 1.3 1.8 8 0 12:58 85 8.5 8.4 81 1:36 8.2 8 3 84 86 2:15 2:57 3:47 7.9 7.5 7.0 236 337 430 516 558 637 713 7 48 823 900 941 21 18 16 14 12 The Cannon Beach Gallery opens its 2001 season with a show featuring local artist Kay ‘Aya. H er presentation will focus on still life images, rendered in pastel, and incorporating calligraphy. Also featured will be a juried show, open to all artists. Submissions for work to be juried may be made on Thursday, Feb. 15th, 9:30am - 4:30pm A rtists may subm it up to three exhibit-ready pieces in any m edium, com pleted w itnin the last two years. The show opens with a reception Okay, it is beginning, the annual disparity o f baseball Never mind that the “Super" Bowl is boring, and that basketball no longer has a Superstar, and baseball has a quarter-billion dollar man Never mind that people who call baseball boring not only play golf, but watch it on television Never mind that the Cubs have the same record as any team on opening day It begins Go Cubbies’ (503) 436-0744 Tracy Erfling N.D. Naturopathic Physician < Treating Women & Their Families / 1010 Duane • Astoria, Oregon 97103 Phone: 503-325-9194 • Email: erflingndt^hotmail.com » 4 UPPER LEFT EDGE FEBRUARY 2.004 I