The magical powers of a bookseller.

cortes-island

Last month I spent some time on Cortes Island — a remote island off the coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia.

At the Hollyhock Centre, I let an incredible group of twenty writers loose in the wild every day for a week. I asked them to come back from the forest with craft lessons from nature — and they did. (It is my belief that nature can answer any question we have — including questions about POV, pacing, and plot structure. See for yourself — try it!)

I slept in a tent in the woods after my retreat ended. Cortes is verifiably magic: wild blackberries, ripe and warm in the sun, line the forest paths. Bioluminescent plankton sparkles in the ocean — stars, in the water! I was sitting on the beach, watching the tide come in, and heard two humpback whales exhale as they swam past me. On the night of the full moon, I woke up when a deer elegantly swished past me, his long legs gliding through the salal leaves just behind my tent.

The inside of magical Marnie’s Books

And then there’s the magic of Marnie’s Books.

The proprietor of this shop used to be a librarian. Now, Marnie stocks the tables and shelves of her tiny bookstore cabin with books she knows her customers will love. She’s a book intuitive, a doctor of reading, some kind of gifted literary telepath.

When I asked her for a novel to take me through the rest of my summer, she suggested something I probably wouldn’t have picked up for myself: A Gentleman in Moscow, by Amor Towles.

She didn’t know me, but after attending my reading earlier that week, and from whatever other clues she gleaned from meeting me, that was the book she decided to put in my hands. (It was magnificent, by the way; it transported me through time and space, and made me cry at the end.)

I watched her interact with other readers in her shop, as they gathered around the table of books in the centre of the cabin. She let her hands hover over the table, as if she were feeling something through the covers. I’m not sure what ordering system she used — alphabetical? Dewey decimal? I didn’t think to look. Like the other readers in the shop, I simply asked her to find the right book for me.

How lucky the Cortesians are, to have this wise and generous bookseller!

My favourite books are often the ones that have been hand-picked or recommended for me by other readers. Good booksellers and librarians really know how to do this for people.

Reading is a form of time travel, empathy, insight, and awe. It’s worth seeking out those wise individuals who have the keys to these secret portals, and getting to know them a little bit.

Start a conversation with your local bookseller or librarian. Tell them what you hope to find in the pages of a book. Ask them for advice. Their knowledge goes way beyond any seasonal bestseller list.



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3 comments

wendy lee
 

Sarah, I loved the interview you did for The Globe and Mail. It really expressed the essence of you and was as inspiring as your books.
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Alice Smith
 

Sarah... I have a Friend who is trying to write a book... I wanted to send her your sight... So she can get some Help... From your Site... Thank You... Alice Smith
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Astrid Egger
 

I didn't read this blog post until today, and realized that you were writing about Marnie Andrews. Marnie, worked for many years in the library in Queen Charlotte on Haida Gwaii, creating an atmosphere of welcome for all. She has a great appreciation for craft; her boys now grown have learned about fine woodworking, and one of them collects pottery. Well-made objects and one-of-a kind buildings are what they stand for. But in fiction, even a kind and positive real live person, can be altered, and I had finished writing to your prompt about a corrupt bookseller when I read the story of your stay at Cortez. I am glad that the order wasn't the other way around: reading about a kind person that I know and changing their traits. When Marnie and her family moved, there were stories about her running a mobile bookstore on one of the islands down south. She now returns to visit her boys and grand kids. I so appreciated the photo of the store, thank you.
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