Ready to spend a bookish day in Des Moines?
The Planned Parenthood Book Sale takes place Oct. 9 to Oct. 13 at the 4-H Building at the Iowa State Fairgrounds. I can attest that it is possible to spend two to four hours browsing the 600,000 books, CDs, DVDs, records, VHS tapes, games, puzzles, posters and collectibles.
We try to go on Opening Night, or “Dealer Day,” as I call it. When the sale opens at 4 p.m., the book scouts madly rush in with their electronic scanners beeping and buzzing. One friend says “book scouts have ruined the sale,” and I admit I am nostalgic for the pre-scanner device years. (Perhaps the scanner technology is silent by now: I haven’t kept up.) We show up late because we don’t like being squished and joggled by book scouts.
Did I find anything tonight?
Of course I did.
Here’s a sampling:
NEW PAPERBACKS
Elena Ferrante’s The Story of a New Name ($3).
Maria Semple’s Where’d You Go, Bernadette? ($3)
D. E. Stevenson’s Mrs. Tim of the Regiment ($4)
VIRAGO
Dorothy Edwards’ Rhapsody ($1.50)
CLASSICS
Trollope’s Why Frau Frohmann Raised Her Prices and Other Stories ($3)
Saul Bellow’s The Adventures of Augie March ($3)
Joyce Cary’s Mr. Johnson (50 cents)
H. G. Wells’ Secret Places of the Heart ($3.50)
INTERESTING (AND UNEXPECTED) OLD BOOKS
Rumer Godden’s Black Narcissus ($1.50)
Thorne Smith’s Skin and Bones (75 cents) (N.B. Thorne Smith is the author of Topper)
NANCY DREW
Carolyn Keene’s The Secret at Shadow Ranch ($2, a 1931 edition with proper grammar and a more sophisticated style than the later “updated” editions)
TRAVEL
Jean Moorecroft Wilson’s Virginia Woolf’s London: A Guide to Bloomsbury and Beyond ($3)
A pretty good haul!
One assumes that some of the great books we missed will show up at Jackson Street Booksellers in Omaha.
P.S. Afterwards you can grab a bite at Tursi’s The Latin King, a traditional Italian restaurant with 1950s decor (was the ceiling red, or did I dream that?), A Dong (a great Vietnamese restaurant), or, for the adventurous, Zombie Burger, where you can eat an “East Village of the Damned” (burger with blue cheese, caramelized onion, lettuce, tomato, onion, mayo: sounds dreadful).
That is the largest book sale I have ever seen. I can’t tell you the joy I would feel there. Lucky you.
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I’m so jealous – just the look of those tables is tantalising! And wonderful finds – well done!!
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I love sales of this type and yours is outstanding. Next year can I commission you to buy for me? No beepers allowed.
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Part of me is so jealous that I am spitting little green pips and the other half is thinking how on earth do you ever find anything you want amongst such a mass of books. Oh, and my bank manager is thinking thank goodness she doesn’t live anywhere near there!
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Alex, it is a lot of fun and I never get through all the books, but we came home with two boxes. Sometimes I even find “almost new” cookbooks but I didn’t even get to that section this year. The bank managers are probably all having fits.:)
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Cynthia, it IS a joy. It is a huge space and I certainly don’t get through everything, alas!
Karen, it’s like Oxfam times I don’t know the number. I never find what I’m looking for, but I always find a lot of books.
Nancy, I will gladly look around for you at the next sale in the spring. Let me know what you want and I’ll send it to you.:)
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