Friday, October 29, 2010

Mountains of Books Book Fair

If you're in the Dandenongs this weekend, definitely drop in on the Mountains of Books Book Fair at Ferny Creek. I went earlier this afternoon and there are lots of great stalls, including Babyboomer Books all the way from South Australia. Joan, who used to run The Old Bakery Bookshop at Warrandyte, has a stall there too, and it was good to see her again. Jilly Bookworm's chilren's book stall has loads of lovely hardbacks by authors like Elinor M Brent-Dyer, Enid Blyton, Lorna Hill, Lucy Maud Montgomery etc. Local bookshops with stalls there include Kallista Books, Rainy Day Books and Wormhole Books. Oh, and there's a great sausage sizzle outside the hall.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Book fair this weekend

I haven't updated this blog for ages ... but then, I haven't visited any bookshops for ages. Work, family and a long, cold and wet winter have all conspired to prevent me from going on any bookshop jaunts.

But, for anyone who might still check this blog occasionally, I thought I'd mention that the Mountains of Books book fair takes place at Ferny Creek in the Dandenong Ranges this weekend. More info here. Be there or be the proverbial! :)

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Eclectic Bookshops Walk




On Saturday, I joined 19 other people for the Eclectic Bookshops Walk from Federation Square - one of the Melbourne Writers' Festival's more energetic events, involving nearly two hours of walking round the city.

If you've seen the Writers' Festival program, thought the walk sounded interesting, then baulked at the $45 fee ... seriously, this walk is well worth the money. I discovered a couple of bookshops I'd never heard of before - the amazing and arty Metropolis Bookshop (up three steep flights of stairs ... also worth it!) and the sci fi/fantasy bookshop Science and Swords - as well as the Sticky Institute, which produces zines, and Mag Nation, three floors of wall-to-wall magazines. And it included some great bookshops already known to me, but definitely worth a visit or re-visit: Kill City, Minotaur, the Haunted Bookshop, and the very lovely Kay Craddock antiquarian bookshop.

Time allowed only five minutes or so in every shop, though we did get a bit more time in Metropolis (our penultimate destination - the last one was a cafe, for more than welcome coffee and cake). This was probably a good thing, given the walk was strenuous enough without having bags of books to carry! It was also a chance to explore some of Melbourne's lanes and alleys, and to see buildings once part of Melbourne's publishing history - such as the original Herald Sun building.

Apparently the tour will change slightly for next year, as they are planning to add some new bookshops. In the interim, I'll need to go into the city a few times and spend a lot more time browsing in Kay Craddock, the Haunted Bookshop, et al. ...

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Inner-city bookshops

It's time I got out of country Victoria and into Melbourne, isn't it? Today, thanks to picking up an eBay purchase from Malvern, I did just that ... via a couple of bookshops in Armadale.

Grant's Bookshop used to be in Prahran, but is now located in Armadale's High Street ... sort of. The sign resides in High Street, but the shop itself is at the back of number 909, down a little laneway. This bookshop has a very erudite feel about it ... I think it's the sheer volume of massive old tomes on various subjects on display! There are loads of books in the shop itself, and more in another room out the back. The shop is particularly good for Australian fiction - all the genres contain shelves full of Australian novels as well as the ones from Britain, the USA and other countries.

Just along High Street is Berkelouw Books, which I was keen to visit having loved the one opposite Eumundi Markets in Queensland when we were up there a couple of years ago. The Eumundi one was huge, with new books at the front of the shop and an amazing second-hand collection at the back. The Armadale shop just doesn't have the space for them to do that, however, and it's mostly new books, with just a couple of cases of antiquarian titles. It's still worth going in for a browse, however!

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Wormhole Books

When you read a great book like Connie Willis's The Doomsday Book and want to read more by this American sci-fi writer, where better to head than Wormhole Books in Belgrave Heights?

As its name suggests, Wormhole Books started off specialising in sci-fi, but is now a general bookshop. The owner, Sandy, is very knowledgable. There was no "Who?" when I said I was looking for something by Connie Willis, and she straightaway found something for me: Passage, which isn't one of the time-travel ones, but is about near-death experiences and looks interesting.

The shelves are full of books on every topic: crime, plays, literary fiction, hobbies ... Sandy began life selling new books in nearby Upwey, but changed to second-hand because she liked hunting down old books and the eccentric customers.

Wormhole Books is a little off the beaten track and is close to the Birdland Reserve, a great place for a picnic and walking for those spending a day or weekend in the Dandenongs. Along with Rainy Day Books in the Basin and Vintage Cookbooks and Kallista Books in Kallista, it makes up the Dandenong Ranges Book Trail - don't forget to call in at new bookshop Through the Looking Glass as you drive through Belgrave if you decide to do the trail.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Fishy tales!!

Fish Tales second-hand bookshop in Fish Creek is a great little stopping-off point if you're on your way to Wilsons Promontory National Park from Melbourne. It's an atmospheric little shop, with log fire, a piano in the music section, and a typewriter to the right of the door as you enter. It is also, of course, crammed with books - and has a very good children's section, including vintage kidlit as well as more recent titles. There's an excellent crime fiction section too, plus shelves of poetry and plays, and lots of literary fiction. About the weakest area, fiction-wise, is sci-fi and fantasy - just a couple of shelves. Usually that wouldn't bother me, but I've just discovered a new-to-me author whose work I love - sci-fi writer Connie Willis. I discovered this bookshop about six years ago and no trip to the Prom is ever complete without dropping off here first.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Through the Looking Glass ...

Through the Looking Glass is a new second-hand bookshop in Belgrave - in the main street not far from the roundabout, so conveniently close to Puffing Billy. The sign isn't on the bookshop yet, but you can't miss it - there are lots of books in the window!

It's a beautiful little shop, with lots of good-quality books, candles burning in the fireplace, and owners (a mother and daughter) who love books and know loads about them. There's a good fiction section, a glass case containing some collectibles, lots of non-fiction, and an excellent selection of picture books, children's novels, and young adult fiction at the back.

This is a welcome addition to Belgrave - and judging by the number of people browsing when I was in, I'm not the only one to feel this way. It's been a very long time since Belgrave's main shopping strip had a second-hand bookshop and that one was nowhere near as good as this one is. Through the Looking Glass opened only a week ago and hopefully it'll be there for a very long time.

Monday, June 21, 2010

More Gippsland bookshops

If you're heading for Wilsons Promontory National Park from Melbourne and like browsing in secondhand bookshops, then the township of Meeniyan is a good place to take a break.

It has two bookshops in the main street: Antiquities, which specialises in collectibles, and Meeniyan Books, which is a bookshop/cafe/gallery in one.

I hadn't been to Antiquities before - it opened two years ago - and while it contains lots of old books and first editions, I was a bit disappointed with the lack of order; vintage kids' books could be found on various shelves and tables, and I didn't come out confident that I'd seen everything I might be interested in. I also found some of them a bit pricey. My husband, who's interested in Victorian history books, thought the same thing. However, it's definitely worth visiting, especially if you collect first editions (there were lots of Nevil Shute books) or books/magazines about guns and shooting. I don't think I've ever seen as many publications on this subject all together in one place! Visit quickly, as the bookshop is up for sale.

Meeniyan Books has been there for years, and is an atmospheric place, with books lining a passageway and two rooms of the building it's located in. The aroma of coffee and soup and the log fire in the cafe add to the atmosphere. Books here are a lot cheaper than the ones down the road, and you can still come across the odd gem. On this visit, I found an Elinor Lyon and a Geoffrey Trease for $2 each, both in lovely condition.

As well as being en route to the Prom, Meeniyan is close to the south Gippsland coastal towns like Inverloch and Venus Bay, and can be included in a drive taking in bookshops in nearby Loch and Fish Creek.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

New shop in Loch

In an age when so many people are predicting the demise of the printed book, it's heartening to come across new bookshops. Last weekend, having got up very early to watch the World Cup, we went out for a drive and found ourselves in the little Gippsland township of Loch. Here we found Bluebird Books and Records, which opened last December.

The shop contained a lot of thrillers and crime fiction and I bought a copy of Denise Danks's The Pizza House Crash, while my son bought a few Goosebumps titles from the children's shelves. Most of the books were in the main part of the shop, with a few more, plus some records, in a back room. The owner had thoughtfully set up a table of Lego in the back room so kids could keep themselves amused while their parents browsed - but I'm not sure if this is a permanent fixture or if it was set up for the public holiday weekend, which Loch was celebrating with a wine-tasting festival, thereby attracting plenty of visitors.

The books were inexpensive, and this is definitely a good place to go if you're on holiday or spending a weekend in south Gippsland and are looking for something to read - especially if you enjoy thrillers.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Just call me anal!

I went to the Salvation Army's book fair in The Basin yesterday morning. I knew I had no chance of coming across a rare copy of Jane at the Chalet School for $2, because a) the Salvation Army are pretty savvy when it comes to pricing old books and b) Meryll Williams of Rainy Day Books was a mere minute's drive from the venue and so was bound to find such mega-bargains first! But I hoped I might find a few cheap children's classics, as I did at the book fair on Philip Island back in January. There I found Tom's Midnight Garden and The Children of Green Knowe, among others, for two bucks per book; I like my son, who's nine, to read classic children's literature as well as contemporary kidlit.

But I came out with nowt! There were lots of books, the non-fiction in one room, the fiction in another. But in the fiction room, the books hadn't been sorted by alphabetical order or even by genre. (The non-fiction had been sorted into genre, but was not in alpha order.) My son and I looked through the children's books, didn't find anything either of us wanted, and then I started to look at the adult fiction, but it was all such a mess and I couldn't be bothered going through it all just in case I found a Margery Allingham.

I appreciate the book sale was run by volunteers, and they don't have time for sorting. But I've gone into one or two bookshops like this over the years, where all the books are higgledy-piggledy on the shelves and piled on the floor in no particular order. If you have lots of time to browse, that's great. But not everyone does. I just don't have time to spend hours in one bookshop, painstakingly going through everything just in case I find a gem. I'd rather go online and buy exactly what I want - or even better, go to a bookshop where everything is arranged by genre, then alphabetically.

Come to think of it, Meryll is a busy lady too - maybe that elusive Chalet book was there among the Barbara Taylor Bradfords ...

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Books for a rainy day!


Melbourne is having its wettest start to winter in years and years and years ... so, where better to stock up on winter reading than the aptly named Rainy Day Books?

Rainy Day Books is in the Basin, right at the foot of the Mountain Highway leading up to Mount Dandenong. Its owner, Meryll Williams, has had the bookshop for around four and a half years; prior to that, you might remember there was a great little collection of vintage children's books in the antique shop just past the Old Bakery Bookshop in Warrandyte. They were Meryll's stock. I still miss that little room when I go in that antiques shop!

Rainy Day Books is a general bookshop, selling everything from poetry to Mills and Boon, but its crime and children's collections are particularly strong. Meryll's a fan of old girls' books by the likes of Elsie J Oxenham and Mary Grant Bruce and it shows: there are some great vintage titles to be found on the "old and interesting" section as well as in the children's corner.

Meryll named the shop one wet day when her friend picked up a book and said, "This is what I like to do on a rainy day." She's not the only one. I spent most of yesterday absorbed in a crime novel while the rain pattered on the window and the housework remained undone!

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Popular book exchange

In Australia, a lot of second-hand bookshops call themselves book exchanges. The idea is that you take in one or more of your books, the bookshop owner values it/them, and then you can exchange your book(s) for other books up to that particular value. I've only encountered bookshops like this in Australia - do other countries have book exchanges?

The Ramalama Book Exchange in Wonthaggi (conveniently located opposite Safeway) contains thousands of books, mostly popular paperbacks - Wonthaggi is near Inverloch and other popular Gippsland beaches so there's plenty of holiday reading. It's particularly good for contemporary crime and I've bought a few trade paperbacks from there by authors like Gillian White, PD Martin and Katherine Howell. The kidlit consists mainly of contemporary popular series and authors (Goosebumps, Paul Jennings, Roald Dahl and the like), though there are usually Enid Blytons on the shelves as well. Nothing stays on the shelves very long in this shop, though - the owner only buys books he knows will sell quickly (hence there are lots of Agatha Christies but no Margery Allinghams) - so don't decide to come back and buy later in the week.

It's a very busy shop - I don't think I've ever set foot in it and there hasn't been at least one person buying. The owner admits he knew nothing about books till buying the book exchange a few years ago, so if you're looking for a title by an author whose name is just on the tip of your tongue, it's no use asking him for help. He's a friendly guy, though, and lets you know if there are any book-related events in the area, such as book fairs. And given the rapid turnover of books, he's probably making more from his bookshop than the very knowledgable owners of one or two more overpriced bookshops I could mention, but won't.

Definitely worth a visit if you're spending any time in South Gippsland and like popular fiction.

Village delights



Kallista is one of the lesser-known villages in the Dandenong Ranges, overshadowed by the tourist meccas of Olinda, Sassafras and Mount Dandenong. But if you're a bibliophile, Kallista is the village to head for, boasting two unique bookshops.

I'm not exactly renowned for my culinary skills, and even my eating habits leave a lot to be desired (my favourite meal is soup with toast and I'm usually more interested in what's in my glass than what's on my plate!), but Vintage Cookbooks (bottom image, above), in Kallista's main street, is definitely a place to check out if you have even the remotest interest in food. Its shelves contain countless tomes covering all aspects of cooking: baking, vegetarian food, wild foods, vegetables, fruit, French, Eastern European, Mediterranean, Italian, English cooking pre- and post-World War II ... and, of course, Australian cuisine. You name the food, this bookshop has a book about it! The kitchenalia - scales, rolling pins, wooden spoons - adds to the atmosphere. The shop's owner, Barbara, is a historian with a passion for cooking. Her bookshop is inspirational: when you've been there, you just want to go home and bake.

Equally passionate about books is Willie, whose shop Kallista Books (top image, above) is around the corner and up the hill from Vintage Cookbooks (just follow the signs on Saturdays, when his shop is open). This shop is crammed with books as well as old maps, recipe booklets, obscure old magazines and horticultural catalogues. He also has a collection of book-related furniture in the shop, including a working printing press. If you visit and can't find what you're looking for, ask - Willie has back rooms full of books, and if he knows what you're seeking, he might well have it in stock. It's a beautiful shop, with heaps of atmosphere, and there are so many books that you know the elusive novel you're looking for to complete your collection just has to be there somewhere ...

When you've finished browsing, Kallista offers non-literary attractions, including a fabulous deli just across the road from Vintage Cookbooks and Grant's Picnic Ground just down the road heading towards Belgrave. Lots of colourful parrots and some good walking trails there ...