Showing posts with label Wellington Square Bookshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wellington Square Bookshop. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Women's Writing Circle to meet Jan. 12 in Exton


Hey budding writers, you might be interested in attending this workshop. I received the following announcement from group founder Susan Weidener: 


SUSAN WEIDENER
Start the New Year By Writing Your Story

The Women's Writing Circle will meet from 9 to 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 12, at Wellington Square Bookshop, 549 Wellington Square, in the Eagleview Town Center, Exton. 

This is a supportive group of writers. All genres welcome and writers do not have to be published. There is a $5 charge to participate in the read-around. For those who want to listen to the readings, there is no charge. 

The group also discusses writing techniques and publishing options. Free coffee and tea. For more information and directions to the bookstore, go to http://www.susanweidener.com/ or contact Susan Weidener at 610-304-5370 or sgweidener@comcast.net

Susan G. Weidener is a former journalist with The Philadelphia Inquirer, and author of Again in a Heartbeat, a memoir of love, loss and dating again and Morning at Wellington Square. Susan started the Women’s Writing Circle, a support and critique group for writers. She is currently working on an anthology of stories and poems with women writers in the Philadelphia area.

Friday, October 12, 2012

Women writers, what are you doing Sat. morning?

Image from Austin Kleon's "How to Steal Like an Artist"
(Sorry for the late notice. Any women writers out there have tomorrow morning free?)


The Women's Writing Circle meets 9-11:30 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 13, at Wellington Square Bookshop, 549 Wellington Square, in the Eagleview Town Center, Exton. 

All genres welcome and writers do not have to be published. There is a $5 charge to participate in the read-around. 


For those who want to listen to the readings, there is no charge. Free coffee and tea. 

For more information, go to http://www.susanweidener.com/ or contact Susan Weidener at 610-304-5370 or sgweidener@comcast.net

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Chester Springs author Susan Weidener to read Saturday at Wellington Square Bookshop



Below is a press release I received about an upcoming reading by Chester Springs author Susan Weidener. The free event will be held at Wellington Square Bookshop in the Eagleview Corporate Center, Exton, beginning at 11:30 a.m. 

In case you didn't make the connection, the bookstore in which she's reading is the same as the one in the book.

Susan G. Weidener will read from her new memoir, Morning at Wellington Square, at 11:30 a.m., Saturday, Sept. 22.  

The reading will be followed by a book signing and light refreshments.

Morning at Wellington Square is the story of a woman searching for meaning outside traditional roles of wife, mother, widow and career woman. She journeys from Kentucky countryside to the Arizona desert and finally back home to a bookstore called Wellington Square to find passion, renewal and magic in her life.
 
WEIDENER
A former reporter with The Philadelphia Inquirer, Susan started the Women’s Writing Circle, a support and critique group for women writers which meets twice a month at Wellington Square.  In 2010 she published Again in a Heartbeat, a memoir of love, loss and dating again. Her new book is a sequel to that. She lives in Chester Springs.

Check out her blog here

Best Fall Book Picks ... from lots of people. What are yours?

My desk, Sept. 19
It's the time of year when everybody likes to dole out their recommendations for the best new books for Fall.

What's more interesting to me are your picks. What's on your reading list for autumn. Are you inclined to run out and buy the newest titles?

While it can be fun to read the latest and greatest, I tend to be (I have to be)  a lot thriftier when it comes to new books (I avoid buying new books and frequent used book stores a lot). Also, I'm probably a lot slower to read books than most, so I'm literally in no hurry.

I find that if I bide my time my sister or a friend will lend me the trendiest, hottest new novel out there (such as Emma Morgenstern's "The Night Circus," which I recently borrowed from a friend then favorably reviewed.)

I have stacks upon stacks of (old) books at home and on my desk at work yet to read. (See photo above that I just snapped of one of the piles at/near my desk at the paper ... It's less like Fall reading, and more like reading that's about to fall!)

But if you are looking something new and shiny to read to pass the time as the weather turns brisk and chilly, here are a few of the top picks and links to see some more:

One of my fave area bookstores, Wellington Square Bookshop in the Eagleview Corporate Center, Exton, is promoting a bunch of new books for fall, including: "The Yellow Birds" by Kevin Powers; "The Malice of Fortune" by Michael Ennis; and the book pictured at left, which was also recommended by The Huffington Post.

The Huffington Post recently published a handy slideshow of its editors' picks for Fall's Must Reads that includes "This is How You Lose Her" by Junot Diaz.

Publisher's Weekly announced its list of The Best Books for Fall 2012, including: "Live by Night" by Dennis Lehane.

Amazon.com's editor's recommended books including "The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook" by Deb Perelman for fall in their Big Fall Books Preview.

Oprah Magazine released its picks for 15 Must Read Books for Fall 2012. The list includes "Laura Lamont's Life in Pictures" by Emma Straub.  

Popular Fall Picks on Goodreads.com include "Black City, #1" by Elizabeth Richards and Zadie Smith's "NW." See the entire list of more than 4,000 book picks for Fall here.

The Christian Science Monitor recommends J.K. Rowling's new novel "The Casual Vacancy," and nine others.


Flavorpill recently issued The Flavorpill Fall 2012 Books Forecast, which includes "Telegraph Avenue" by Michael Chabon and "Astray"(a collection of stories) by Emma Donoghue, author of "Room."

That's just a small and rather random assortment of the new books that people are talking about for Fall.

I'd love to know what you've read and enjoyed lately - new or not.

Please, comment and let me - and the world - in on what's on your Fall reading list.


Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Have a yen to read your stuff in public? Open Mic Night to be held this Friday at Wellington Square Bookshop

Wellington Square Bookshop, the charming little haven for booklovers and home of the book club I attend, is hosting an Open Mic Night this Friday, April 8, from 7 to 10 p.m. The shop is located in the Eagleview development off Route 100 in Exton.

Perhaps you have some poetry or a story kicking around that you'd like to try out in front of a small and friendly audience ... or a song you've written you'd like to share.

Among those invited to perform are musicians, singer-songwriters, poets, and readers. Sign-up starts at 6:30 p.m. and each slot lasts for about 10 minutes.

The shop provides the necessary mics and amps; you bring instruments of any kind. No worries if you're not looking to perform - you're welcome to just hang out at the coffee bar and watch the performances. BYOB welcome.

Open Mic at Wellington Square Bookshop is held on the second Friday of each month. The next Open Mic Night will be Friday, May 13.

The beautiful poster above right, which I copied from the Wellington Square Facebook page, was designed by Chris Vendrick.

The photo at left from a previous Open Mic night was borrowed from the Wellington Square Bookshop website.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

A Gate at the Stairs is worth the climb

What a boring thing a book club would be if everyone agreed.

While I thought Lorrie Moore's writing in "A Gate at the Stairs" (2009, Knopf, 322 pp., $26.95) was brilliant, my opinion was in the minority at a book club I visited this week.
I relished the witty banter of the novel's main character, Tassie Keltjin with all her youth and naivety.

The story follows Tassie, a Wisconsin farmer's daughter, through a year's worth of experiences at college. In that year the 20-year-old learns some difficult lessons, not just in becoming independent from her family, but in embracing them when there's trouble.

The book was the November pick - and my introduction to - a Thursday night book club at Wellington Square Bookshop in Exton. If you've never been this is a cozy and charming bookstore with lots of tall wood bookcases and cozy old chairs to sit in. The place has ambiance, if I dare say so. And pastries!

There were nine women at this particular meeting, but I'm told men are welcome, too (they're just afraid). The store also has an afternoon book club meeting time, for those who prefer.

At "my" club meeting, there was a relaxed yet passionate discussion of "A Gate At The Stairs," a book that's been aptly described as both strange and moving. My opinion of the book - that it was good - was a minority one. Of the women discussing the book, only one agreed with me that the writing is superb.

Others had strong reactions to Moore's inclusion of several shocking events through the course of the novel. (I'm not going to ruin the book for you by telling you what exactly they are).

It was brought to light that Moore is better-known for her short stories, and writes books less frequently than stories. This is her first novel in something like 15 years. (I am now dying to read some of her stories!) One book clubber said that helped to explain why there were a few different stories going on at once in "A Gate at The Stairs." Tassie and her parents; Tassie and her employer; and Tassie and her boyfriend.

Tassie, who comes from a small farming town, is dazzled by the college-town life. There are exotic foods (such as Chinese), interesting courses (Intro to Wine Tasting), and also exotic males (the Brazilian guy who sits next to her in her Intro to Sufism course). When she finds herself in need of spending money, Tassie respondes to Help Wanted ads seeking child care providers. After interviewing with several suburban moms, Tassie lands a job with the first woman who asks - Sarah Brinkman.

Sarah, who owns and is the chef of an exclusive restaurant in town, is looking for a nanny for a child she and her husband, Edward, are about to adopt. So Tassie is hired before the child arrives, and is asked to accompany Sarah and Edward to Green Bay (her first plane trip) to be part of the adoption process.

The "baby" turns out to be a mixed-race toddler, 2-year-old Mary-Emma, an uncommonly beautiful child with an incongruently sunny disposition. Tassie bonds with the girl, singing to her and taking her for long walks, ice skating on a nearby point, and to the park. It seems that Tassie spends a lot more time with the child than do her parents.

Because Mary-Emma is dark-skinned, and because of some unfortunate comments from ignorant kids (and adults) in town, Sarah starts hosting a Wednesday night meeting for parents dealing with similar race issues to come air their concerns (and drink wine!). Tassie is expected to entertain everyones' kids upstairs in Mary-Emma's room, and proves to be quite adept at it.

Meanwhile, Tassie loses interest in her classes, all of which seem to be rather unrelated to any real major. Her roommate gets a boyfriend and becomes MIA. Her younger brother starts to fail his senior year in high school and considers enlisting (the year is 2001, and there's a lot of that going on, after all) as an alternative to college or technical school.

When Tassie goes home for Christmas, the story runs to her relationship with her mother, which is rather nonexistent, perhaps a bit passive aggressive. (The book club calls her a non-character). Her dad, who farms gourmet potatoes and salad lettuces, seems like an awesome guy, always throwing out witty one-liners and paying attention to his daughter's thoughts. Tassie's close to her brother, but there's still a distance. She spends a lot of the break reading - deep stuff like Plato and Zen poems. When Sarah calls and asks her to come back early from break, Tassie does.

The springtime further reveals Sarah's more prickly nature, and her husband's predilection for the help. Tassie is absorbed with Mary-Emma, and tries to ignore the warning signs that some things aren't as they seem.

As I said before, I'm not going to ruin the surprises that come with the end of the semester. And there are some in this novel.

I recommend this book. It is a little quirky, but I like that. The writing is so well done - as an editor, I guess I reaaaalllly can appreciate that. And it did actually move me to tears (something that happens very infrequently with books ... films and dog food commercials are another story entirely.)

Check out the Wellington Square Bookshop book club - the next meeting is Thursday, Dec. 16 at 7 p.m. The book is "Strength in What Remains" by Tracy Kidder.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

The Little Stranger: Good, gothic read for dark November nights

What better way to pass a chill, dark Halloween evening than by listening to a gothic ghost story?

That's exactly what I did this past Sunday. Though the experience might have been improved had I not been doing that listening - to Sarah Waters' "The Little Stranger" (Riverhead Books, 2009, 466 pp., $26.95) on audiobook - while stuck in traffic on Route 322 on my way home from a visit to Happy Valley. (But thank God for audiobooks in times like those).

I came upon this Man Booker Prize finalist will searching for a book club somewhere in the Pottstown vicinity. I haven't been able to make the daytime club meetings at the Pottstown Public Library, and found that Wellington Square Bookshop in Exton, which looks delightful -though I've yet to set foot in it - has a book club on Thursday nights (also Thursday days). "The Little Stranger" was their selection for October.

Although I missed the October book club meeting at Wellington Square (because of WORK, I might add), I wanted to investigate the book choice to see if I liked it.

The tale was probably enhanced by the fact that the book on tape is read by a British voice actor (Simon Vance) who can do male and female voices very well, as well as dialects. This story is set in the countryside of post WWII Warkwickshire, England. The New York Times Book Review aptly describes the 1947 setting as a "wonderfully evoked atmosphere of postwar anxiety."

The story begins as the narrator, Dr. Faraday, an unmarried, middle-aged physician, is called to an estate called Hundreds Hall to look in on a servant who's taken ill.

Faraday has long been an admirer of "Hundreds," having visited as a child when the home was in a grander state while his mother was working there as a nursery maid at the grand palatial mansion. Now, the estate has fallen into disrepair, though it's still being cared for by the Ayres family - an upper crust family fallen on hard times.

Mrs. Ayres, her 24-year-old son, Roderick, and her 27-year-old "spinster" daughter Caroline reside in the massive structure along with one of two servants and a companionable old hound, Gyp.

Rod, an RAF pilot who was badly injured in the war and has some trouble getting around, is responsible for keeping the house and a dairy farm on its grounds going.

Dr. Faraday strikes up a friendship with the amiable Caroline and starts to "call" at the hall regularly to visit with her and under the premise of performing an experimental therapy on Rod's injured leg. Faraday by chance is present at a party where things start to go wrong for the family. The dog Caroline so loves gets in a tangle with a young girl who's the daughter of a neighbor. I won't ruin any spooky details for you, but the implication is that some dark force was at work, precipitating an incident that is tragic.

Soon, Rod starts to act strangely. He confides in Faraday about seeing the work of some "dark thing," some poltergeist of sorts. Faraday, ever the pragmatist and man of science, tells him in not so nice terms that it's all in his mind. Rod doesn't take this so well. He abruptly calls off Dr. Faraday's therapy (some sort of electro-stim physical therapy), stops sleeping and starts drinking ... enough to mess anyone up pretty good.

Strange things continue to happen around the mostly vacant or closed-up Hundreds. Furniture moving itself about the rooms, burn marks and graffiti of sorts appearing on the walls, and voices, flashes appearing out of the corners of the eye.

It's not a horror novel. The pace is slower and the malevolences are more implied than outright. Nothing can be proved. It's more of a psychological thriller, and had I read it in book form, I would guess it's a page turner. Since I instead had 11 CDs to listen to, I can say I went through them pretty quickly.

Following Rod's example, Mrs. Ayres and Caroline each eventually have their own run-ins with the "dark thing," the "little stranger."

Meanwhile, a bumbling romance of sorts between Caroline and Faraday completes the gothic part of the equation.

I do like Faraday, for all his faults, but Caroline is my favorite character in the novel, and not just because she bears the strong, old-fashioned name of my first-born niece. Caroline's an independent woman who speaks her mind, doesn't really care how she looks, and doesn't ask the servants to do anything she won't do herself. And there's the fact that at 27, she's looked on by her family with pity, and by the townsfolk with ridicule, because she's not married. I'm sure I felt a bond...

But there's also an intriguing story behind our narrator. At first he seems so trustworthy - the voice of reason, the good doctor. He's the one "outsider" the Ayres family turns to for help. As the story carried on, however, I began to distrust him and increasingly to side with the supernatural explanation of events, rather than the rational. Plus, he turns out to be kind of cad.

Overall, a good read and not too scary. A little out of my usual pleasure-reading picks, but in a good way.

If you'd like to hear more about the book, click here to check out a video of author Sarah Waters talking about her fifth novel, The Little Stranger, at the Harvard Book Club.

For more information about the Wellington Square Bookshop Book Club, click here. The November selection is "A Gate at the Stairs" by Lorrie Morgan. They say the book is a "challenging, touching staff favorite." The meeting is Thursday, Nov. 18, at either 2 p.m. (for folks who want a daytime club) or 7 p.m. (for a nighttime club). Pre-registration is encouraged.