Bookstore Tuesday


It’s Bookstore Tuesday, and today I’m going to tell you all the exciting stuff happening at All on the Same Page Bookstore!

First, we have the Big Red Tub, full of FREE books – stop by and grab a couple! All topics, all genres. Second, THIS week only, all of our used books are just $3.00 – hardcover and paperback! AND we have coffee, a lot of varieties, and FREE cookies. What more could you want? I mean, besides all the great books we stock by local authors…

And we have a great line-up of author events this month too, and into July: Ned Randle this coming Saturday, a surprise guest on June 15, the launch of the new YA novel, P.A.W.S. on the 22nd, Pam Foster, author of Bigfoot Blues and Redneck Goddess on June 28 – a Friday instead of a Saturday, don’t forget! June 29 we’ll be hosting L.S. Murphy, author of the YA book, Reaper.

July 1 brings a special Monday evening event, with details coming soon: Anne Rodgers will be in town and she’ll be giving a talk on her new book, Kiss and Tell – and it’s not fiction! Ladies, this a night for you…

We’re also hosting two book launches in July – The American Queen, Dacia Wilkinson, on July 20 and Recycled, by yours’ truly, on July 27.

Let’s jump back to June for a quick moment: in conjunction with our P.A.W.S. book launch on June 22, we’re hosting an event for Tenth Life Cat Rescue – come on out at 11:30 or so and meet some adorable kitties, see how you can help, and maybe even bring home a kitten to its forever home!

And, after you’ve met the kitties and picked up your copy of P.A.W.S. – and entered the drawing for an awesome cat charm! – you can scoot on down to our friends at The Book House. They’re having a barbeque that day, along with some great specials, and get this – you can even help them pack up for their big move down the street to Kirkwood!

So, yep, we’re busy, busy, busy! And no, we didn’t forget the kids: we have a monthly storytime on the second Tuesday of the month, 10:30 a.m. AND we have a ton of books on those summer reading lists – you can RENT one for just $1! Keep it as long as you need it…

One more:

Our summer kids’ writing contest is about to kick off! Details coming very soon, so watch our website and Facebook page!

Re The Book House


No, I haven’t forgotten the plight of The Book House – the up-to-date word on the street is that no one really knows how things stand. Several letters to the editors have been sent, and published, in both the Webster-Kirkwood Times and STL Post. We’ve rallied, we’ve attended a meeting of Rock Hill’s Historic Preservation Commission – all of whom, I might add, are sympathetic to our cause.

The Rock Hill City Council, however, continues to be rather lukewarm. We have quiet support from the mayor and at least two aldermen. The city administrator, Mr. Liyeos, has been quoted as saying that a “high end” storage unit is preferable to the current condition of the property.

I have this to say to Mr. Liyeos:

Does not the city of Rock Hill have the ability to enforce regulations? To cite the property owner for, say, lack of landscaping and a deplorable parking lot? Do you, personally and for your city, have any inkling of plan or design concepts? Are there not enforcement officers, or at least one, who report to city hall?

Allowing property to just sit and stagnate seems counterproductive to your vision, to that of your city, or of any city. And your solution is simply to bulldoze the property? Why not administer ordinances that are already in place? Why not call upon Rex Stahl to take care of his property?

And why in the world would anyone want to demolish a 150-year-old building when so much well, crap, is visible on Manchester Road? I think there are probably a few other sites that could be utilized for a storage unit – I’ve driven that stretch a few times recently, and quite frankly, I’m relieved that I don’t have to do it more often. Yes, Mr. Liyeos, there are eyesores in your city, but those don’t include The Book House.

Is all the media attention and effort thus far merely beating a dead horse? I don’t think so, in spite of a recent article that stated, in the title, “Book House Going Out of Print.” No one ever said this store was closing!

Write, rally, call Rock Hill; contact the developer, Bill Bowman, at greatcgroup@aol.com or (586) 703-9882. Sign the petition and pass it around – and contribute to The Book House’s Indiegogo campaign. Perhaps the house itself can be saved, and The Book House will continue for many, many years to come; or, perhaps, Michelle can move her business to a city that values both history and books, as well as small business – a city that doesn’t cater to large companies at the expense of the independents.

NOTE: there is a Board of Aldermen meeting on Tuesday, May 21.