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Tuesday, November 4, 2025

It's almost that time of year, when gift-giving is on everyone's mind. If you're anything like me, you've already decided that books are the only things worth getting for family, friends, neighbors, colleagues, all the way down the list. Send the biggest book lovers you know on a "stunningly illustrated" global tour with Bookstores of the World by Jean-Yves Mollier and Patricia Sorel. And enthrall the most curious with Phenomena: An Infographic Guide to Almost Everything by Camille Juzeau, with its vibrant and bold visualizations that run the gamut of fascinating topics. Plus, nature-lovers and outdoor adventurers will certainly appreciate Yosemite Wildlife: The Wonder of Animal Life in California's Sierra Nevada by Beth Pratt and Robb Hirsch for the "informative document as well as a stunning visual feast" that it is.

--Dave Wheeler, senior editor, Shelf Awareness

Books for Giving

Gift Books

Bookstores of the World

by Jean-Yves Mollier and Patricia Sorel

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Jean-Yves Mollier and Patricia Sorel's Bookstores of the World is a stunningly illustrated tour of, and tribute to, the bookstore as a cultural and literary institution. Beginning in France (which leads the world in bookstores per capita), the tour continues through Europe and the Americas before stops in the Middle East, Asia, and Australia. French scholars Mollier and Sorel highlight bookstores--iconic, ancient, or otherwise distinctive--in 40 countries, with lavish photos showcasing memorable architecture, unusual locales, and eye-catching interior design. Readers may recognize such giants as Foyles in London and the Strand in Manhattan, but the book also features tiny bookstores set in cottages, courtyards, and even on boats. The text of Bookstores comments on various aspects of bookselling, including book festivals and "book towns"; the financial and cultural challenges of keeping a bookstore afloat; the constant shadow of censorship; and the ingenious ways booksellers of all stripes continue to serve their communities.

Erudite and eye-catching, Bookstores of the World is a treat for armchair travelers and an inspirational list of destinations for any book lover. --Katie Noah Gibson, blogger at Cakes, Tea and Dreams

Abbeville Press, $89.95, hardcover, 304p., 9780789215161

Eventually a Sequoia: Stories of Art, Adventure & the Wisdom of Giants

by Jeremy Collins

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Artist Jeremy Collins travels the world with a clear directive: "observe, find a connection, and draw," and the result is Eventually a Sequoia, a beautiful collection of sketches, stories, and encouragement for anyone with a longing to serve others and an urge to create. Pulled from Collins's travel journals, the graphic memoir features detailed line drawings, watercolors, and the occasional photograph to illustrate the mix of handwritten and typed stories. Each chapter highlights a different mission-driven adventure, like paragliding and earthquake relief in Nepal, or floating the Aichilik River as part of preservation efforts in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

The travelogue is visually stunning and thoroughly inspiring as it shares what Collins learned while working with such "giants" as film director Céline Cousteau and founders of the Ancient Forest Society Wendy Baxter and Anthony Ambrose. Not content with merely sharing his art and ideas, Collins asks readers, "What do you care about? What are you concerned about?" before urging them to action: "Pick up your pencil and start there. Every good idea starts with a pencil." --Sara Beth West, freelance reviewer and librarian

Mountaineers Books, $29.95, hardcover, 224p., 9781680518054

This Will Last Forever

by Octavie Wolters, illus. by Octavie Wolters, transl. by Michele Hutchison

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Dutch artist Octavie Wolters creates an awe-invoking meditation with This Will Last Forever, an oversized yet minimalist picture book for adults translated by Michele Hutchison. Printed on thick, matte paper, the book features striking linocuts of birds on the right-hand pages (mostly with black, white, and primary colors), and a seasonal musing or memory on the left. The book progresses through each month of the year this way. The contemplative writing, reminiscent of Mary Oliver's, evokes the beauty and simplicity of nature, and includes an encounter or observation of the creatures Wolters captures in her art. For instance, in October's section, she writes, "The field looks woolly in the low sun, the edge of the forest still dark, the hill soft and undulating." And after an imagined conversation with a bird, she writes, "We stand there for a while, the magpie in the tree and me. The sun is creeping toward its highest point for the day, the dew has evaporated, the gold has migrated to the forest edge." --Nina Semczuk, writer, editor, and illustrator

Pushkin Press, $22, hardcover, 40p., 9781782695295

For the Birds: An Artist's Aviary

by Alex Beard

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In For the Birds: An Artist's Aviary, artist and conservationist Alex Beard celebrates birds around the world and how "birds are there to remind us of the natural world, to pique our curiosity, and free us from the mundane." While his paintings are as varied as the birds they depict, Beard uses distinctive techniques throughout--bold swirls and strokes to form the attachment point of a tucked wing on a goldfinch and the plumage spreading from the neck of a colorful nicobar pigeon. Birds are grouped ornithologically and artistically, and each section opens with a simple poem, like one about the company of a woodpecker on a forest walk. Illustrations presented against a stark background are interspersed with two-page spreads and nods to Beard's artistic process--such as swatches of color above a half-page confusion of guinea fowl, and a brief meditation on loons that ties memories of childhood summers to Beard's travels as an adult. This vibrant collection is full of life and movement, and is a true celebration of the world's avian inhabitants. --Kristen Coates, editor and freelance reviewer

G Editions, $65, hardcover, 224p., 9781943876662

Little Moments in a Big Universe

by Todd Stewart

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Although the intended audience may be children, discerning, dreamy adults, too, will undoubtedly appreciate the thought-provoking layers in Canadian author/illustrator Todd Stewart's Little Moments in a Big Universe. A space explorer "in search of adventure" and a "smart and reliable" robot crash-land on an unknown planet. The explorer is understandably "weak with fear," while the robot soon realizes they're "the strange creatures here." The planet's inhabitants, however, are welcoming and helpful, ready to "share [their] stories" while the spaceship is repaired. After clean-up and celebrations, the spaceship and crew return to the sky. "I witness and understand," the universe beholds.

Stewart writes from multiple perspectives, the many "I"s belonging to all the elements touched by the explorer's journey: the robot, spaceship, forest, planet, solar system, galaxy, universe. When contact is made with the planet's people, the "I"s become an inclusive "We," acknowledging and honoring connection between locals and visitors. Seamlessly blending familiar planetary space-scapes with surreally inventive creatures, Stewart's technicolor images invite sharp eyes to appreciate the diverse details of fantastic landscapes and otherworldly explorations. --Terry Hong

Owlkids, $19.95, hardcover, 48p., 9781771475907

DogDogs

by Elliott Erwitt

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Dogs offer unconditional love and support, and they work with first responders. They also make us smile, as do the 500 charming photos by renowned photographer Elliott Erwitt collected in DogDogs, which also includes a topical essay by the late author P.G. Wodehouse.

First published in 1998, this reissue depicts the humorous side of dogs as they're just being themselves. Erwitt showcases the universal love of dogs with black-and-white photographs taken throughout the U.S., France, Switzerland, and elsewhere. The portraits are varied--of dogs by themselves, with other canines, at dog shows, sleeping, wearing hats, on beaches, within cityscapes, or just being cute. Other photos feature dogs with people, as the pets sit, beg, stare adoringly, or play. Erwitt also includes a couple of sad photos, such as one of a pregnant female, head down, walking alone.

Erwitt says, "I don't know of any other animals closer to us in qualities of heart, sentiment and loyalty," and he captures those qualities fantastically in these lovely photographs. --Oline H. Cogdill, freelance reviewer

Phaidon Press, $29.95, hardcover, 512p., 9781838669256

Math Cats: Scratching the Surface of Mathematical Concepts

by Daniel M. Look, illus. by Johanna Breu

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From the "Purrthagorean Theorem" (Triangles) to "Loafing Around" (Topology) to "Lamp Breaker Blues" (Game Theory), Daniel M. Look--1 Ph.D., 4 cats, and 20 math-related tattoos--wants to demystify math, with feline help.

Who hasn't looked at their cat curled in a catnap and thought, oh, so perfectly shaped? Look sees the golden spiral, or a furry fractal. A cat leaps onto a ledge with (usually) perfect accuracy. Is it intuition, or the utilization of Euler's Method to approximate flight path? In the chapter "Divide Like an Egyptian," Pickles pushes a statue--the Eye of Horus--over to illustrate fractions. Chaos Theory is made for cats ("Does a Cat Eating a Butterfly in Kansas Prevent Tornados?"). In "Keyboard Cat," Mrs. Waffles likes to walk across keyboards, typing gibberish; what is the probability she will eventually write "LUV YOU"?

With whimsical drawings by Johanna Breuch, and side notes like why Pythagoras died avoiding a field of fava beans, Daniel M. Look has written a delightful book for both math nerds and math-phobes--and, of course, ailurophiles. --Marilyn Dahl

Running Press, $20, hardcover, 128p., 9798894140001

Dark City Dames: The Women Who Defined Film Noir (Revised and Expanded Edition)

by Eddie Muller

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In 2001, Eddie Muller, host of Turner Classic Movies' Noir Alley, published Dark City Dames, an homage to six golden-age Hollywood actresses who left their marks on the silver screen while playing femmes fatales and other morally dicey women. By the time Muller interviewed these actresses, the film business had long "discounted their allure." Muller didn't, and neither will readers of this invaluable expanded edition, which spotlights 10 additional noir actresses and offers an afterword containing "personal remembrances that, at the time, couldn't be included in the original edition."

The six featured actresses are heartbreakingly candid: Marie Windsor laments her dashed A-list dreams. Ann Savage recalls a life of trouble and tragedy. Evelyn Keyes's story would have challenged the Hollywood Production Code. The book is lavishly illustrated with promotional film posters, publicity shots, and personal photos. There's a feminist shimmer to the whole production--after all, crime dramas were, as Muller puts it, the only golden-age film genre in which women were the equals of men: "equally tempted, equally compromised, every bit as guilty." --Nell Beram, author and freelance writer

Running Press, $32, hardcover, 288p., 9780762488261

Classical Mythology of the Constellations: Timeless Tales of the Starry Night Sky

by Annette Giesecke, illus. by Jim Tierney

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Many stargazers can identify the bear-shaped constellation known as Ursa Major or spot Orion's famous belt in the night sky, but who exactly was Ursa Major, and why is Orion's belt so recognizable? Annette Giesecke (Classical Mythology A to Z) answers these questions and so many more in Classical Mythology of the Constellations. Teaming up again with illustrator Jim Tierney, Giesecke features the 48 constellations first identified nearly 2,000 years ago by the ancient Greek astronomer Ptolemy, as well as 40 constellations added centuries later to his original list. The myths behind each constellation are credited to a "synthesis of the best-known versions... a range of voices from classical antiquity," a recognition of the time-honored oral traditions that passed stories from the Bronze Age forward to modern times.

Amateur and experienced astronomers alike are sure to appreciate the direction given for both reading and mapping the heavens, and history lovers will delight in this decadent illustrated guide to the night sky--and the stories that live in the stars. --Kerry McHugh

Black Dog & Leventhal, $30, hardcover, 256p., 9780762488513

Wild Ocean: A Journey to the Earth's Last Wild Coasts

by Peter Pickford and Beverly Pickford

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Wildlife photographers Peter and Beverly Pickford describe their visually stunning Wild Ocean, the follow-up to Wild Land, as "our appeal to you to open your heart to the sea." The book captures four years of fieldwork. The scale alternates between the dramatic and the intimate; sweeps of clouds and immense icebergs intermingle with close-up portraits of coastal and marine creatures. Birds and fish appear singly or mass in impressive formations. The colors pop in striking compositions, such as a purple basslet cutting left across brown corals. Iguanas are perfectly camouflaged on rocks in the Galápagos; king penguins carpet South Georgia Island north of Antarctica. Chapters are divided by ocean and region. Lesser-known locales include the Forgotten Islands of Indonesia and Cocos Island National Park, a protected area off of Costa Rica. The Pickfords' adventures also included an extended vigil to find a crocodile in Cuba. Heading each chapter are a few-page introduction and thumbnail images giving captions and location information so that the photographs can speak for themselves on subsequent pages. It's a spectacular tour. --Rebecca Foster, freelance reviewer, proofreader, and blogger at Bookish Beck

Thames & Hudson, $65, hardcover, 400p., 9780500030530

Vitamin V: Video and the Moving Image in Contemporary Art

by Phaidon

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One can't help admiring a publishing house that names a series on trends in contemporary art after nutrients that are essential for good health. Vitamin V, the first from Phaidon's Vitamin series on modern-day artists, focuses on video artists who use moving images as a form of protest and to foreground questions of identity. This volume with ample photographs showcases the work of more than 100 creators from around the world. Mixed among the famous names--such as South Africa's William Kentridge, whose "versatile practice often centers on themes of apartheid, colonialism, oppression, cultural trauma, and other political-historic processes and legacies"--are lesser-known creators, such as Morocco's Meriem Bennani, who "approaches current global crises with sophisticated formal innovation, embodied intimacy, and laugh-out-loud humor," as in 2 Lizards (2020), in which the animated leads "wander through an abandoned Times Square, discuss potential viral exposures, and express feelings of loneliness in times of quarantine." Struggling to find a gift for someone who celebrates Indigenous, queer, and other historically marginalized populations? Problem solved. -- Michael Magras, freelance book reviewer

Phaidon Press, $69.95, hardcover, 288p., 9781838668730

The Minimalist Photographer: 50 Techniques for Capturing Beauty in Simplicity

by Antony Zacharias

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Whether for an aspiring or accomplished, amateur or professional photographer, Antony Zacharias's striking The Minimalist Photographer: 50 Techniques for Capturing Beauty in Simplicity is a superb guide to creating emotionally compelling images. Informative instructions provide an aesthetic approach to the "use of simplicity to distill the visual narrative." At its core, minimalism is based on the Zen philosophy of essentialism. Above all else, that means "mindfulness." For Zacharias, that means utilizing four key elements: composition; light, color, and contrast; creative techniques; and storytelling. These precepts are displayed in more than 40 glossy examples in black and white or vivid color. Many are by Zacharias; other photos include Murray Fredericks's evocative dancing flames engulfing a tree; Philippe Halsman's soaring diver; and Edward Steichen and Dorothea Lange classics. Every page is a valuable lesson in perception: removing distractions, embracing negative space, generating dynamic tension, absorbing patterns, engaging narrative possibilities. All of which leads to a seductive "hypnotic reduction in clarity" and creativity. The Minimalist Photographer is an ideal gift to encourage seeing the world anew and capturing its grace. --Robert Allen Papinchak, freelance book critic

Laurence King, $21.99, paperback, 144p., 9781399624848

Jane Austen's Fashion Bible

by Ros Ballaster, editor

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This gold-beribboned, elegantly designed paper-over-board edition of Jane Austen's Fashion Bible is perfect for fashion buffs, Austen fans, and even The Gilded Age enthusiasts. It offers 21 full-color fashion plates from La Belle Assemblée, a monthly magazine launched two months after Jane Austen's 30th birthday. Ros Ballaster, a professor of 18th-century studies, artfully links each plate to an excerpt from one of Austen's works or letters, along with the magazine's original "explanation" of the fashion. The duplicitous widow of Lady Susan provides the excerpt for a "Mourning Evening Full Dress." "Hyde Park Walking Dresses" illustrate the scene of the Dashwood sisters' arrival at Barton Cottage in Sense and Sensibility (along with a description of global influences on the style, such as a Spanish spencer, French cambric, Chinese silk). A Circassian corset appears with a shapely rose-colored velvet "Morning Walking Dress" of the type Elizabeth Bennet might have worn in Pride and Prejudice.

Devotees of Austen's characters will cherish the chance to see what they might have worn; novices will appreciate this sampling of her writing--from both famous and unpublished works. --Jennifer M. Brown

Macmillan Collector's Library, $24.99, hardcover, 144p., 9781035049127

Phenomena: An Infographic Guide to Almost Everything

by Camille Juzeau

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Ever want a quick, visual explanation of far-rangling topics from anthropology to zoology? In Camille Juzeau and design studio the Shelf Company's Phenomena: An Infographic Guide to Almost Everything, vibrantly and boldly imaged infographics give readers a crash course on content such as dinosaur size, space pollution, permafrost, the history of yoga, Ovid's The Metamorphoses, and the chemistry of love. The eye-catching, full-page diagrams accompany short informative texts that provide interesting, conversation-provoking overviews. To resist the heaviness of a textbook, the topics are loosely organized, allowing for a free-thinking approach to new information--deep-sea exploration, for example, finds itself next to the world's tallest buildings, and a page on snail shells faces one on mobile homes. There are helpful guides for easy navigation at the end of the book: a list of topics and a further list of subject fields. This coffee-table book is meant to be opened frequently and randomly, and can be explored alone or with others; Phenomena achieves a skillful balance between teaching and entertaining. --Michelle Anya Anjirbag, freelance reviewer

Thames & Hudson, $39.95, hardcover, 144p., 9780500028650

Yosemite Wildlife: The Wonder of Animal Life in California's Sierra Nevada

by Beth Pratt and Robb Hirsch

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Environmental leader and lifelong Yosemite lover Beth Pratt partners with biologist and wildlife photographer Robb Hirsch to offer Yosemite Wildlife: The Wonder of Animal Life in California's Sierra Nevada, the first book in 100 years to address this national gem's diverse animal wildlife. With more than 300 images, Yosemite Wildlife is also rich in Pratt's accessible prose; this thorough survey of observations and storytelling is designed to update a 1924 publication for the historical record. As a beautifully produced, large-format, glossy presentation, it also exhibits Pratt's and Hirsch's expertise and passion for a place that is much more than just its famous geology and dramatic scenery. With plentiful archival records, historical images, and personal stories from park staff and naturalists, it's an informative document as well as a stunning visual feast.

Conservation success stories and profiles of Yosemite's human defenders over the years accompany Hirsch's sumptuous images of the iconic black bear and mule deer, the Sierra green sulphur butterfly, the northwestern pond turtle, raptors and songbirds, dragonflies and butterflies, charismatic predators, shy shrews, quirky herptiles, and more. Exquisite. --Julia Kastner, blogger at pagesofjulia

Yosemite Conservancy, $60, hardcover, 456p., 9781951179267

Women of the Fairy Tale Resistance

by Jane Harrington

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Women of the Fairy Tale Resistance: The Forgotten Founding Mothers of the Fairy Tale and the Stories That They Spun is a stunning hardcover, filled with enchanting, full-color illustrations by Khoa Le. Jane Harrington (In Circling Flight) shares the forgotten stories of a group of 17th-century Parisian women writers, the conteuses, whose contributions have since been overshadowed by figures such as Charles Perrault and the Brothers Grimm.

The book combines biographies of seven of these writers--including Marie-Catherine d'Aulnoy, who is credited with "start[ing] the fairy tale craze"--with retellings of 13 of their fairy tales, including stories such as "Belle-Belle", which has elements that may have gone on to inspire the popular classic "Beauty and the Beast." Each chapter contains vibrant, painted vignettes and evocative scenes from the featured stories.

Using their tales to advocate for female empowerment and to fight against the tyrannical monarchy of Louis XIV, the conteuses portrayed their heroines as strong protagonists, capable of independent thought and agency.

Harrington is a lively and astute researcher, ensuring that Women of the Fairy Tale Resistance educates, entertains, and inspires. --Grace Rajendran, freelance reviewer

Black Dog & Leventhal, $30, hardcover, 240p., 9780762488704

A Year of Garden-Inspired Living: Season by Season

by Linda Vater, illus. by Briana Kranz

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Exemplifying her philosophy that "it is the daily ritualistic little things that set the tone of our lives," Linda Vater (The Elegant and Edible Garden), garden designer and creator of garden-inspired content for multiple media outlets, offers chatty, beautifully illustrated tips in A Year of Garden-Inspired Living. Divided into Wintering, Springing, Summering, and Autumning sections, the book has more than 200 one-page pointers that include creative approaches to home and garden management, gift giving, entertaining, and self-care, each presented as an inviting short story. Jules had seeds but a small yard. Voila! Hollyhocks growing in the alley! Jon's grouping of blue and green wine bottles placed bottoms up in a clay pot form a "bouquet" echoing the colors in his garden, underscoring Vater's commitment to reducing consumption.

This colorful, sprayed-edge hardcover collection lies flat and includes an attached ribbon bookmark, making it perfect to keep close at hand for quick reference. Delicate watercolor drawings by Briana Kranz enhance every page, which end with an encouraging "Why not try?" summary. This homage to living intentionally is sure to inspire. --Cheryl McKeon, Book House of Stuyvesant Plaza, Albany, N.Y.

Cool Springs Press, $30, hardcover, 208p., 9780760395158

The Inn Crowd: Artistic Getaways and the Modern Innkeepers Who Crafted Them

by Jackie Caradonio

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As a hotel general manager's daughter, travel photojournalist Jackie Caradonio has always loved staying in hotels. But not just any lodging--she seeks out bed-and-breakfasts that are one of a kind. After discovering that many of these properties have owners with extraordinary passion and vision, Caradonio has collected their stories in the sumptuous The Inn Crowd: Artistic Getaways and the Modern Innkeepers Who Crafted Them, with a foreword by cosmetics mogul Bobbi Brown and her husband, Steven Plofker.

Elegant photographs lounge beside the innkeepers' fascinating accounts of overcoming nearly insurmountable odds to create happy, restful spaces, often with special treats for visitors--like a secret closet containing a generous variety of candy, all complimentary, at Brown and Plofker's the George in New Jersey. Want to sleep in a former castle? Head to Maine and check into the Norumbega Inn, whose Library Suite--with a library on a mezzanine above the bed--is a dream for book lovers. No budget for a vacation? No problem. Just brew a cuppa and get swept away by Caradonio's gorgeous photography. --Elyse Dinh-McCrillis, freelance editor at The Edit Ninja

Monacelli Press, $59.95, hardcover, 288p., 9781580936965

October Stars

The Writer's Life

Judith Levy: Memories Worth Their Weight in Gold

Judith Levy
(photo: Jeffrey Tholl)

Judith Levy is a grandmother to five grandchildren. She began her life as one of 10 children in an immigrant family and proudly reached for the American dream, beginning her career as a singer and TV news reporter. The creator of the family keepsake genre, Levy has written 13 books. Her first, Grandmother Remembers, reached #2 on the New York Times bestseller list. Her books have sold more than six million copies, helping families across the world preserve their memories, traditions, recipes, and photos in beautifully illustrated albums that will be passed down for generations to come. Her most recent book, Great-Grandmother Remembers (G Editions, $20) is the ideal gift for the holiday season--it's a book that will bring families together.

What does a physical journal like Great-Grandmother Remembers offer families that digital photos don't?

The physical journal is special because it's more than photographs; it's a treasured family heirloom that shares the memories of the great-grandmother's roots, family, childhood, married life, and more. Pictures are an important part of sharing these stories, but the book itself is for great-grandmothers to share family history and love.

How do you structure the prompts for a journal like this?

In compiling this book, I interviewed many grandchildren, who shared what they really wanted to know about this special lady in their life. With their questions in mind, I organized the prompts chronologically to allow the great-grandmother to take her grandchildren on a journey through her life. 

What are some qualities that distinguish something an heirloom?

This is a family heirloom because those memories are precious and worth their weight in gold. This beautifully illustrated family treasure will last and be passed from generation to generation.

How do you cope with the loss of an heirloom?

You can't replace what you've lost, and that's something to grieve; however, remembering and creating records like Great-Grandmother Remembers can help you preserve those heirlooms in writing for future generations.

What are five heirlooms you'll never part with?

My most precious heirlooms include my grandmother's special necklace, the handkerchief that she sewed, her gold earrings, and her charity box--but mostly, the wisdom she shared with me.

What was your favorite book when you were a child?

I loved the Nancy Drew books by Carolyn Keene. Seeing Nancy succeed as the heroine in her own stories made me feel I could succeed as well.

Name one book that changed your life:

Reading the Bible changed my life; I was inspired by the ethics and wanted to try to live up those teachings. Although, to be frank, I'd say that my own book Grandmother Remembers changed my life, too. It made me a published author.

What's your favorite line from a book?

My favorite line from a book comes from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The White Company: "You are my heart, my life, my one and only thought."

Book Candy

Book Candy

An Open Culture invitation: "Meet the Forgotten Female Artist Behind the World's Most Popular Tarot Deck."

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Mental Floss explained "How Thomas Jefferson Invented a New Way of Saying 'Goodbye.' "

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In a podcast about fandom, Atlas Obscura explores an unusual object of fan devotion: the (empty) grave in lower Manhattan's Trinity Graveyard of Charlotte Temple, a fictional character in Charlotte Temple by Susanna Rowson, published in 1791.

Great Gifts

Gift Roundup

Here's an array of even more books that we think would make ideal gifts for that special someone, a couple of which we reviewed earlier this year.

Nearly everyone on your list can appreciate the tender biography Paul Myers has written of a comedy legend. John Candy: A Life in Comedy (House of Anansi, $29.99) covers the actor's humble beginnings, his groundbreaking entrance into the improv scene, and the blockbuster career that followed. With a foreword by his close friend Dan Aykroyd, and released the same year as Colin Hanks's documentary John Candy: I Like Me, Myers's touching portrait of a beloved film star is filled with as much joy as any of Candy's scene-stealing roles.

In any hierarchy of life's important jobs, fatherhood unquestionably sits near the top. And yet, for all its myriad and complex demands, the position doesn't come with an instruction manual. In #1 Dad Book: Be the Best Dad You Can Be in 1 Hour (Little, Brown, $25), famed crime writer James Patterson does his best to remedy that deficiency. It's a breezy but heartfelt and highly practical guide to navigating the challenges facing fathers at any stage in their journeys.

Pet owners and nature lovers know that something special arises in the soul when you're in the presence of another living creature. The Gift of Animals: Poems of Love, Loss, and Connection (Storey, $25) is a contemplative collection of poetry and art edited by Alison Hawthorne Deming, known for her perceptive writing on beasts of land, sea, and air. With contributions by Robin Wall Kimmerer, Nick Flynn, and Jose Hernandez Diaz, this anthology is one to be treasured.

The books in Bloomsbury's Object Lessons series (Hyphen; Sock) are endlessly delightful, beautifully designed, and full of unexpected wisdom about ordinary things. In a wryly affectionate tone, Rebecca van Laer writes Cat as an encyclopedia entry and memoir in one, dabbling in the general history and domestication of cats, and the specific history of her cats and the lives they have lived.

Puzzle lovers and armchair sleuths will both enjoy You Are the Detective: The Creeping Hand Murder by Maureen Johnson & Jay Cooper (Ten Speed Press, $19.99). This baffling case offers would-be detectives lavishly illustrated with two-color drawings of the crime scene and dossiers of wily suspects. Only the most clever minds will be able to piece together the clues on each peculiar page in order to solve this suspicious death.

Argentinian cartoonist Quino introduced the brilliantly insightful, refreshingly unfiltered six-year-old Mafalda in 1964, but the internationally renowned black-and-white comic strip has aged very well. Perfectly situated between youthful innocence and impressive sophistication, Mafalda: Book One (Elsewhere Editions, $18), translated by Frank Wynne, draws plenty of visual humor throughout, particularly engaging in capturing the children's vibrant expressions and their constant in-motion energy with minimal pen strokes. With more volumes planned, the delightfully precocious Mafalda deserves prominent space on anyone's shelves.

arrow_backPreviousOctober 31, 2025