Shopping cart is empty.

Birchbark Blog

Hey Good Looking!

Louise Erdrich - Saturday, July 02, 2011
Dear Good Looking Friends,

I've noted it -- everyone who enters Birchbark Books is really good looking.  I don't know why it is, but just a fact.  And particularly when clad in a Birchbark Books organic cotton T-shirt of any vintage everybody is good looking.  That is why we are asking you to send your picture wearing a Birchbark T-shirt to our Facebook page.  We have several editions of our T-shirt now, each one produced for us by that fabled local company, Monkey In a Dryer.  We have the birchbark brown, the robin's egg blue, the erotically charged graphite gray, the current deep Currant, the current Lucky Blue, and I can't remember what else.  If you've got the inclination, please include your favorite book, dog, or tree.   Please tell us where the picture was taken, as long as you were there legally.  Truly, we'd love to meet you wherever you are! 

This is Tree Month -- have you  noticed?  The trees in Minnesota have now fully leafed out and this week just past the solstice they are in such glory it gives a person green brain.  Time to read eaarth, by Bill McKibben to find out what you can do to help your best tree friend.  We cannot exist without trees, and they would certainly do better without us, but they continue to be the most generous living beings on earth.   I'm reading Keepers of the Trees, by Ann Linnea, meeting people who devote themselves to the love of trees.  One of my favorite characters in the book is Merve Wilkinson, who devoted himself to a tree-lot and logged it over the span of fifty years in such a profoundly thoughtful way that there is now more wood in the forest than when he started.  He figured out how to sustain himself, his family, and the forest and has educated people ever since.

We have books on Remarkable Trees, More Remarkable Trees, Tree Houses --  as I'm sitting here writing the late afternoon sun is flowing down through the still, tiny leaves of my favorite locust tree just outside the window.  I know people don't like these trees much because they have big thorns.  Yet their blossoms are swooningly fragrant, they're unkillable, and unfathomably lovely.  But really, isn't every tree helplessly gorgeous, just like the people who come into Birchbark Books?

Book People!  Thanks for your support this summer!  Oh, before I forget, I'd also like to celebrate the Green Team who have made such a beautiful impact on the other side of the street from the bookstore.  Come and see!  People gardening what was once a small wasteland of asphalt -- children learning to grow food -- this is truly inspiring.  Subject of next blog . . . 


Comments
Peggy commented on 16-Jul-2011 03:02 PM
This is so funny! I'm going to come to BB for the first time just so I can be good-looking. :) And I will _definitely_ have to check out that graphite T ... See you soon!
Post a Comment!

Canoe Family
RSS

Recent Posts


Tags

Louise Anishinabemowin Philip Roth Up Late Again Remarkable Trees anniversary Too Much Happiness Master Butchers Singing Club china Gail Caldwell Book Review H2Oil Chitra Divakaruni Climate Change S.C. Gwynne The Transition Handbook Makoons Light in August Catalyst Our Knowledge Is Not Primitive Chickadee germany The Farmer's Daughter NACDI:All My Relations buffalo Easter Island Keeping Heart on Pine Ridge solstice, Thomas King Native People Canada Ha Jin friends language revitalization Rare Books Alice Munro E.L. Doctorow favorite tree The Royal Prussian Library Patrick O'Brian Love Empire of the Summer Moon post holiday reads ependent customers Kenwood Gardens Wastepaper State Troopers Tar Sands Ojibwemowin ireland devoted customers Birchbark Books adventure Guthrie Theater cafe Tree Houses Ojibwe Bohumil Hrabal Roberto Bolano Let's Take the Long Way Home city of books north dakota Video birchbark t-shirt show your love Bleak House Unnatural Disasters incarnation Native Arts Greenland President Obama Anton Treuer Dartmouth aquifer thank you friends favorite book Keystone XL Magers and Quinn Emily Johnson support Michael Jackson Beth Dooley Pembina Jim Harrison Stephen Salisbury fresh water Milkweed Press Peak Oil Dogs Victory Gardens British Navy health care reform ependent Bill Moyers Journal The Resilient Gardener birchbark house series Botany italy boarding school Too Loud A Solitude monkey in a dryer favorite dog Women and Trees leaves and snow Kate DiCamillo Crushing Books The Porcupine Year Keepers of the Trees book and dinner club twins Zombies Gryphon Press peculiar touches of green and gold post holiday mississippi Wolf Hall 2666 Hilary Mantel neighborhood The Birchbark House gardens Interview thanks local economy Peak Water Vic Glover The Game of Silence Ice This Green World green Minnesota joy tree books The Wealth of Nature Mankato Powwow Nemesis Fireworks photography how good looking you are france School Gardens Mohamed's Ghosts William Trevor Minneapolis japan bill mckibben The Ojibwe Brown Dog Aubrey/Maturin Czech Writer spring pilgrims t-shirt cafe closing Poetry Wendy Makoons Geniusz Green Team More Remarkable Trees Small Bookstores as Commons The Blue Sky Collective Denial Gary Clement plants knowledge coyote World on the Edge Anishinabe sweden the most romantic city in the world

Archive