Although it may surprise some, when on vacation I don't go into every bookstore. My longtime travel companion (life's journeys as well) Denise is more than willing to accompany me. But you can spend your whole vacation browsing, so we try to be selective. While traveling through some iconic small towns in Maine last month from Portland to Acadia National Park (the view from Cadillac Mountain is above) we did shop at two very good independent book shops that are worth the time and effort to visit.
The first book shop was Gulf of Maine Books in downtown Brunswick, Maine near the stately campus of the Bowdoin College. It's the kind of town you might expect to find a good liberal book store and Gulf of Maine owned by the poet and activist Gary Lawless and Beth Leonard fits that bill. You are not going to find Bill O'Reilly books at this place. Unlike many book store owners that keep to themselves, Lawless chats with his customers and there was a steady flow of conversation. When I overhead him talking about using the Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk (2012) in his veterans writing group, I mentioned that I had just seen Rick Atkinson, author of the World War II Liberation Trilogy here in Decatur. (Coincidentally, someone just gave me a copy of Billy Lynn, which I am now reading.)
Gulf of Maine is packed full of books with a large section of books about the area. There are ample offerings of fiction, current events and a good sized remainder table where I picked up Gary Shteyngart's Super Sad True Love Story (2010). Denise bought Linda Greenlaw's The Lobster Chronicles: Life on a Very Small Island (2003) and Rachel Herz's Scent of Desire: Discovering Our Enigmatic Sense of Smell (2007).
Even though we had purchased more than enough to read during our vacation Happy Hours – where we drink, read and nap while overlooking the water – we stopped by Blue Hill Books in Blue Hill, Maine. Where Gulf of Maine is a little cluttered but inviting, Blue Hill situated in a small house, is precisely packed with books not unlike a library. Again, there were plenty of Maine books (Denise purchased Joseph Dane's Dogfish Memory: A Memoir 2012), and a large selection of trade paperback fiction. I was impressed at the selection because it wasn't limited to the latest releases. There was a wide offering from respected writers who you know but may not have read yet: Jane Austen, Philip Roth, Joesph Heller and Christopher Hitchens to name a few. It was a rainy day when we were there, and the owner and the single staffer were busy, so I didn't strike up a conversation, but you could see from the flyers and posters that Blue Hill Books was engaged with the community, much like Gulf of Maine Books.
Of course, what
makes Maine a reader's paradise is that it also provides great venues
for reading. In the picture below, check out the two readers hidden in the rocks near
Acadia's Seawall trail, overlooking the Atlantic Ocean.
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