reading reptile

be a cupcake and help a friend in need by Warrior Ant Press Worldwide Anthill Headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri, USA.

My pals at the Reading Reptile, who will stop at almost nothing to remain the only independent bookstore in the Kansas City area, have worked up a new venture. When I first received word of this latest escapade from the reptiles, it seemed a lot like begging, but then I realized that's how corporations stay in business, except corporations ask for really large amounts of money and you get nothing in return, so why not the small venture capitalist? Besides, the reptiles are offering things in return for your support. And if you don't help them, they are liable to go the way of Dutton's, the venerable LA bookstore that just bit the bin.

OK. Truth in lending. There are a few other independent bookstores in the KC area; they just aren't nearly as interesting as the Reading Reptile.

There's that bookstore that burns books in a giant iron cauldron once a month to draw attention to the fact that "no one reads anymore" to which my reaction is, "uhh...excuse me, then how do you explain the fact that you've been able to remain in business for so long?"

Then there's that other bookstore run by those not-always-so-friendly faces across the state line. Forgive me, but I'm used to going a bookstore where there is an ongoing give and take, a discourse if you will, about things in life, of which books are but a part. Yes, granted, and important one. And I like going to a bookstore where folks are happy to see me - most of the time. And know a joke when they see one. And aren't afraid to tell one. And aren't afraid of a little criticism of the books they sell. There's a lot of books out there and I'm a fan of many, but not all of them. Some of them suck.

True, sometimes the arguments (and I mean that in the classic sense of the word) do get a little heated in the center ring at the Reptile, but generally when that happens, bitterman and I go out back and settle it like, well like intellectuals...we blow cigarette smoke in each others face. And then see who can fart the loudest.

So back to the not-always-so-friendly little store in the uppity part of town. Just last week I went there to purchase a signed copy of the Laura and Jenna Bush book, which I must say, is one of the dumbest books ever perpetrated upon the public. It's sophomoric, it has no soul, and it sucks. It's dehumanizing to children everywhere. Never-the-less, in the spirit of a m.o.i. piece, I was there plunking down some hard-earned dollars to purchase this crappy book so I could take it home and drive a spike through it and make it ART. But before I could say out loud, "what kind of Republican writes this horseshit", there before me was a tray of CUPCAKES. Little tiny CUPCAKES. Frosted in pastel colors. And who doesn't like a cupcake? I asked, in the spirit of inquiry and democracy for all people, "what's with the cupcakes?"

"Oh." came the stilted reply, "its for __ [unintelligible] who's having a book signing. It's kinda of a quaint, endearing book. We thought cupcakes would be appropriate."

"Why?" I asked, "is she a cupcake?"

The stare was cold and harsh from across the counter. "Well! I don't know about that. But she has written a book!" said the clerk handing me my bag of blubbery shubbery.

"Well let's hope it's better than the Bush book." I said grabbing a chocolate one, with lemon icing, on my way out, "even so, she could still be a cupcake."
Elsewhere:
debt depletion day at the reptile

good books to you by Warrior Ant Press Worldwide Anthill Headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri, USA.

Nothing says Christmas like The Wilder's Christmas show at the Reading Reptile. Full of 'ole timey music, corn pone humor, and family traditions. Yee Haw!

As to Christmas, and the soon-to-be New Year, Warrior Ant Press is releasing it's 2007 list of Pretty Good Books. These are books that captured our attention this year, or at least long enough for us to read them cover-to-cover. Not all of these books were published in 2007, that's just when WAP discovered them. We include them in our 2007 list, because a good book never goes out of style.

Here's fifteen books, in no particular order, and all of them are better than what's on television right now. Read one today.

Finn by Jon Clinch. Wow! No wonder Huck was a little conflicted. As politically incorrect as Twain as just as readable.

Winter's Bone by Daniel Woodrell. 2006, Little, Brown, & Company. Nobody writes about the life of poor Ozark folk as well as Woodrell, and very few writers produce anything that even comes close to this level of storytelling.

A Well-Paid Slave: Curt Flood's Fight for Free Agency in Professional Sports by Brian Synder. 2006, Viking Publishers. You think the public doesn't like Barry Bonds. It's nothing compared to what Flood had to endure when he decided to challenge the monopoly known as Major League Baseball. Flood should be in the Hall of Fame for the legacy of his efforts.

Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn. 2006, Shaye Aerhart Books. A perfect holiday whodunit about going home and confronting the demons of the past.

What is what by Dave Eggers. If this harrowing tale of struggle and triumph doesn't make you stop whining about your difficult life, you should seriously contemplate finding a new therapist.

The Septembers of Shiraz by Dalia Sofer. This book will make you forget the Kite Runner.

The Yiddish Policeman's Union by Michael Chabon. 2007, Harper Collins. Oiih! A Hard-boiled Jewish detective and his Tlingit sidekick try to solve a crime in the Alaskan noir.

Alice Waters & Chez Panisse. by Thomas McNamee. 2007, Penguin Press. You haven't heard the last of Alice Waters till you've been served this tome for dessert. After 35 years of cooking, her marks are still fresh on the plate and there's more to come.

You don't Love Me Yet by Jonathan Lethem. 2007, A book that simultaneously pokes fun at the art world AND romance. What's not to like?

Cross County by Robert Sullivan. 2006. A different sort of travelogue written as if Jack Kerouac had traveled the interstate with his wife and kids fueled by Dunkin' Donuts, truck stop coffee, and seedy motels.

Doubt: A parable by John Patrick Shanley. Shanley's 2005 play won the Pulitzer Prize. It still resonates in our celebrity culture of love/hate and guilty/not guilty. Jury duty coming up? Take this one to the court house and turn some heads.

the unbinding by Walter Kirn. 2006, Anchor Books. An internet novel - now in books!

Under the Sun by Arthur Dorros. 2004 Amulet Books. A boy makes his way through war to a place of hope.

meditations in green by Stephen Wright. 2003. Vintage Paperbacks. The best novel about Vietnam, since, well, Vietnam.

Theft, by Peter Carey. The stuff of paintings - Art world intrigue, romance, and deceit.

elsewhere:
a bitter man lives here
the wilders