Archive for the “feature books” Category


Gordon Schnare at Gallowglass Books

On Tuesday Sept 22nd we had Armstrong B.C. author Gordon Schnare at the bookstore all day promoting his book “Uncovering Treasures from the Earth: The Life Story of Prospector Thomas James McQuillan.”

McQuillan grew up in Courtenay and went on to become one of Canada’s most successful prospectors, laying claim to four major ore bodies (all major producers) over his career. He served in the Canadian Navy in W.W.II as a petty officer aboard a Corvette and was also a coastal logger for a time.  The author was a long-time friend.

The book retails at $25.00 and is currently available for sale.

Gordon Schnare's new book

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Books of interest for those interested in literature studies who are well read or wish to be better acquainted with the literary universe:

  1. Alberto Manguel’s “A History of Reading”, published by Knopf of New York in 1996 in hardcover (Inventory # 42861). It contains a treasury of anecdotes, stories and knowledge explaining what it might mean to be a reader and a lover of books. We are transported from Ancient Rome to medieval France, from great British and Persian Libraries, to book thievery and book burning, to the inventions of printing and eyeglasses, finally to hyper-texting in the computer age and modern reading habits. The Argentine author explores whether readers affect the books they read as much as the other way around, and if so then how. I can attest, for myself, that I have had certain books alter my perceptions of life….and therefore my life! If you wish to know which ones, and how, please come into our bookstore and we can chat.
  2. “Fiction In Several Languages” edited by Henri Peyre, from the Daedalus Library Volume #9 in vg+ 8vo hb, published by Houghton Mifflin of Boston in 1968. (Inventory # 48585) A series of essays written by literature students from many different countries explore how the novel mirrors the deepest concerns of individuals and nations. The nations explored here are in Arabia, Brazil, the Philippines, Japan, Israel, Poland, Hungary, the Netherlands, and Greece. The essayists which to demonstrate that novels not only express the uniqueness of each culture but also contain universal features common to all people’s.
  3. The third in our selection is Inventory # 55312 “The Transformation of Sin” by Patrick Grant, sub-headed as ‘Studies in Donne, Herbert, Vaughan and Traherne’ in 8vo hardcover, in Vg+ condition, first edition, published by McGill-Queens University Press in 1974. Four great British authors and poets are examined in terms of the spiritual and intellectual temperment or what Grant calls the “shifting firmament of values” bestirring 17th century England. The search for a new spiritual model is on…a model essentially we still are affected by to this day in the world of words and thought.
  4. Last but not least: Donald Keene’s “World Within Walls: Japanese Literature of the Pre-Modern Era, 1600 - 1867″. (Inventory # 37998), published in New York by Holt, Rinehart & Winston in 1976 in very good condition. This is the first volume in a projected four-volume study covering that period in Japanese history when literature reached a broader public than it had in the past when the only access to literature was by the aristocratic elites. A work of considerable scholarship on the drama, poetry and fiction of Japan before any significant westernization occurred.

Up-Coming: Nigerian author Ben Okri on stories, creativity and the imagination.

Bye for now, Richard on staff.

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Here are four of our latest arrivals that might tickle your curiosity:

  1. We have a 1901 7-volume complete set in very good hardcovers of “The Italian Novelists” translated into English by W. G. Waters and illustrated in ink by E. R. Hughes and Jules Garnier.  The first four volumes are the works written by Giovanni Francesco Straparola called the “Facetious Nights of Straparola” (le piacevoli notti). Straparola was a fairy-tale collector who lived in the first half of the 16th Century.  The collection was first translated into Spanish in 1583, and it was modeled on Boccacio’s “Decamerone”. People at a 13-night party on the Island of Murano (think:glass) tell each other bawdy and humorous fables to pass the time.  These stories will help pass our wintertime as well.  This is number 413 of a limited edition printing of 1000 copies.
  2. Our second selection is Kay Thompson’s fourth in the Eloise series: “Eloise in Moscow”, rare indeed, written during the Cold War in 1959. It is a 4to hardback collectible first edition published by Max Reinhardt Ltd. and illustrated in color by Hilary Knight.  There are spies everywhere (you must spot the spy!) and a fold-out map of the infamous and shady Kremlin. Our heroine, a small girl somehow sets out on her own (!!) to visit the subway, the Bolshoi ballet, Moscow’s streets and the Russian Line-up for practically everything. I believe this book to be most realistic and least…fun.  Reading this we become familiar with a Communism that is now strained and somewhat weakened but by no means vanquished.  My father, who was born in the Soviet Union, can vouch for the line-ups!
  3. Third, we have an usual 8vo hardback called “The Dorak Affair”, written by Kenneth Pearson and Patricia Connor in 1967. A British archaeologist is lead to to the Royal Tombs at Dorak in NW Anatolia (Turkey) by a mysterious Greek woman.  Lucky fella!  A muse?  After the find was published, both the treasure and the woman disappeared!  Did both really exist?  A book of archaeology and intrigue in very good + condition.
  4. Finally (for now), “The Gospel of Father Joe: Revolutions and Revelations in the Slums of Bangkok” by Greg Barrett, with a Forward by Reverend Desmond Tutu.  Roman Catholic Father Joe Maier takes on poverty through the opening up of a school for both Muslims and Buddhist in the big city slums of Bangkok, Thailand.  Read this only if you want your heart warmed up and your sense of humanity renewed. Fine 8vo hardback with B&W photos.

Ciao for now, Richard on staff.

Note: For more information on these or any other books, feel free to leave a comment or contact us however you prefer.

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Hello Readers;

We have four new books, amidst a well-organized stack, well worth the peek:

  1. Umberto Eco’s “The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana” is one of them.  Translated from the Italian by Geoffrey Brock, the book is about a man who loses all memory save the stories from the novels he had read and hopes to piece his life together. Nostalgic and humorous.
  2. The second on our list is called “Tigerland and other Unintended Destinations” which is a personal travelogue of Eric Dinerstein’s career as Chief Scientist for the World Wildlife Fund. He brings us to places from Nepal to Montana to share his mission. His mission is to…oh, well, you must read the book.
  3. Our number three choice is Alexander N. Yakovlev’s unique take on Soviet history since 1914 called “A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia”. It is translated from the Russian by Anthony Austin and was complete after ten years of research in 2002.  The Cold War is still in the shadow of modern politics, and Yakovlev’s insights have not lost their relevance.
  4. Finally, Idries Shah has written an historical novel about Britain in the Dark Ages which traces their culture backwards to a group of ‘nomades’ from an area in Central Asia called “Saksina”.  Primarily known for his Sufi tales and fables, Shah is trying on other clothes.

Bye for now.

Richard on staff.

Note: For more information on these or any other books, feel free to leave a comment or contact us however you prefer.

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