Diesel, A Bookstore

Independent California bookstore in Oakland, Larkspur, and Brentwood.
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What’s the Westside been reading? Check out the December bestseller lists from Diesel, A Bookstore in Brentwood at http://www.dieselbookstore.com/brentwood/bestsellers!

I’ve been hearing & reading a recurring sentiment since the election: I can’t read fiction right now. That I hear it most commonly from those I consider “serious readers” (those who don't read fiction strictly for entertainment or diversion), is cause for concern – as I understand both the importance they place on reading and the mournful loss they’re experiencing at not being able to do so.

I have a suggestion. It will sound so pithy that some of you will stop reading. But here goes: try poetry.

Let me stop you at the first all-too-common, immediate objection: “But I don’t know how to read poetry.” Nonsense. You’re not dead. If you’re this far into this post, you’re obviously still breathing: that’s all it takes. The rest is negotiable. 

Some poems are meant to be read quickly, the ideas seemingly less important than their expression. I’m not going to tell you whose or which these are. Because like anything worth reading, poems beg to be read askew (I like that word): at different paces, in many places, and in enclosed (for a moment, like a photo) by as many frames as there are minds. The poem will tell you when to breathe – but here’s a secret, you can tell the poem, “No … not just yet … not here.” The poet might object, but the poem won’t suffer for it. It’s really okay.

Some poems are stuffed with ideas. They’re in a rage about something, even if you don’t know quite what. You’re not even sure if they do. The good ones are talking their way into a problem; beware the ones with solutions you immediately agree with. The ones that too quickly talk themselves out of trouble are usually not to be trusted. They’re either a huckster or a friend – though possibly both. Poets like C.D. Wright, my obsession this year, don’t want to be your friend – and the aces up their sleeves are clearly from another deck. They want you inhabiting the ideas. With or without them, they’ll nudge you further along, in search of the last reference, until you’re alone with it. From there, you’re on your own. But only until the next page – really, trust me, it’s okay.

But why poetry at all, you might be wondering? There’s political theory! There’s philosophy! There’s work to be done, Brad!

Because from time to time, you need to eat.

Who should you being reading now? I’m asked this from time to time. My interest and evangelism for the section at the store is known. It’s usually a question asked by people who are not already reading poetry. Once you are, oh, you become the best browser ever! At Diesel, we don’t carry a lot of multiple copies in our poetry section. I want to pack in as much as possible. Hulking epics flank the wispiest seventy-page masterpiece. You’re going to miss things – your eyes will not seize them that time around. Poetry readers get this – it happens every time they open a book. Just as we read in order to re-read, we return to the shelves of our bookshops often. We keep discovering things that were already there. (Or, yes, had previously been sold out. The Revolution hasn’t happened yet, we suddenly recall from that political theory.)

But seriously, who should you reading right now? Okay … Some suggestions:

  • Your local poets. Ask booksellers and librarians if you don’t any know. Go to a reading. If it’s not to your liking, sneak peeks at the books everybody brought with them. Here in Oakland, I’m fortunate to have places like Small Press DistributionCommune Editions & Timeless, Infinite Light. Fortunately, for you, they all have websites.
  • C. D. Wright – There are so many places you can start with C.D. Or you can do like me, and just read it all. If you’re not like me, grab what you can find. It doesn’t matter if it looks more like essays or lectures either – it’s poetry all the same. What’s more, it'll turn into an encyclopedia of poetry before your very eyes. Humane: it’s such a dry, dull word. And yet the one I keep associating with her, and realizing it’s become so foreign.
  • Robert Creeley – He is C.D.’s titanic lion … and in many respects opened many ears (mine anyway) for the poets we so desperately need to be reading today.
  • Daniel Borzutzky – He won the National Book Award for poetry this year. I know, you don’t trust award committees. (Maybe reassess that with poetry, by the way. There’s not a ton of people reading it seriously [or at all]. Usually, I feel like Fiction prize juries really should hang out more with Poetry prize juries. Do some trust-falls at a camp or something. Grab a coffee at the very least.) There is a rawness to Borzutzky’s anger (principally at a capitalist system not meant to fit the living world) that could, with a lesser writer, slip out of his control. It never does.
  • Solmaz Sharif – I thought her debut collection Look would win the National Book Award this year. I was wrong about that, but certainly not at its enduring place in our thinking about role language places in assessing, processing, admitting, and denying identity.
  • Ari Banias – There’s a wonderful funny tenderness to a lot of Ari’s poems in his debut collection, Anybody. But not in a facile sort of way. Rather, more like that of a body – wonderful because it is so permeable and present, but precarious for the very same reason.
  • Harryette Mullen – A co-worker, a poet (naturally), got me to read Sleeping With the Dictionary. Oh my … some books change not simply the way you see the word, but the way it sounds.
  • Dawn Lundy Martin / Tonya Foster / Robin Coste Lewis – Again, lumping together for the sake of space. These three rocked my world, in the sense of opening it to each of theirs. They remind me that my greatest political contribution might be to shut up and listen.
  • Susan Howe / Tess Taylor / Etel Adnan – Wildly different, all three, but I thought of them together. They all orbit that brilliant star called by the scientists “Emily Dickinson,” and contain multitudes. .
  • Mary Ruefle – Ah, dear Mary! Quirky and funny, until you realize she’s gone pitch black dark on you in a second. Kind of like life.

Okay … that’s enough right now,  I think. There’s so many more – Fred Moten, Nathaniel Mackey, Douglas Kearney, Eileen Myles … somebody stop me.

Basically, the answer to “What poets should I read now?” is simple: read the poet who at any given moment doesn’t so much take your breath away (again, you need to keep doing that if you want to read poetry at all) … but rather seizes it, holds it but for a moment, and returns it, changed into oxygen.  

The fiction you’re not able read right now builds worlds; poetry breathes.

When we made our big announcement about East Bay Booksellers, we had an idea it’d make a bit of news. We never would’ve imagined that two weeks after the big reveal, it’d be mentioned in the New York Times. 

The press continues to be great, but the best part about all this so far: your response! You crowded in, pie and apple cider in hand, for the informational meeting after our Customer Appreciation Party in Oakland; you listened; and you keep telling us, “I’m in." 

East Bay Booksellers still has a ways to go before it reaches $200,000 in pledged loans, but every day makes us all the more confident that you’re as excited about this as we are! 

Your enthusiasm means everything to the success of what we have cooking in Oakland, and can help us find eyeballs and ears of people we otherwise might not on our own. Please consider sign up for EBB's Mailing list … following them on Twitter … liking them on Facebook … or simply share news of what we’re up to on all your social platforms (even face-to-face!). In short: keep in touch

There’s been lots happening in DIESEL-land lately. We’re always buzzing about this time of year, in preparation for the holidays – the shelves burgeoning with beautiful books. That’s unchanged, but … well, let’s face it, it’s been a, let’s call it...

There’s been lots happening in DIESEL-land lately. We’re always buzzing about this time of year, in preparation for the holidays – the shelves burgeoning with beautiful books. That’s unchanged, but … well, let’s face it, it’s been a, let’s call it “weird,” year. We’ve lost musical legends. Political heroes. What’s more, though the social and political landscape is always changing, the abruptness of it all this year has left many of us reeling. We won’t just remember 2016 as weird or tough – we’ll be dealing with its consequences for a while. In short, we believe we need more than ever stable cultural institutions like independent bookstores that honor and guard free expression. 

So when we announce, as many of you may have already heard – either from us or from your newspaper – our intentions (with your help!) to change the ownership of our Oakland location to one of its present managers, Brad Johnson, as well as its name, to East Bay Booksellers, we do so in a celebratory way. In an unexpected twist to an unpredictable year: we think this may very well be the best possible time to make such a change. We love that the vision Brad is casting – which the entire DIESEL family has had a hand in molding – has been a ray of hopeful, exciting light to so many already! 

DIESEL has never been opposed to experiments. We keep our management structure as horizontal as possible, and have been built from the beginning on the idea that mutual respect for one another, for the store, and for the community is what sustains the good times and gets us through the bad. East Bay Booksellers will be built around the same core value. Brad is a talker – oh, is he ever! And his commitment to conversation is a downright passion. “Conversation changes everything – which is why so many forces seem intent on getting in its way – and it is the engine by which mutual respect becomes mutual regard and care.”

We also think he’s got a good head on his shoulders for business!

But here’s the thing: he also needs your help to make East Bay Booksellers a reality. Remember what we said about experiments! The transition from one store to another has its costs – right around $200,000, in fact. He’s not looking for donations (though he certainly would not turn them away either!). On the contrary, he’s hoping his friends and neighbors in Oakland and beyond might share his enthusiasm so much that they invest in it. Details on the community lending program are at East Bay Booksellers' website.

Brad will be talking with all who are interested, about DIESEL’s transition and how you can help achieve it at an informational meeting at the Oakland store immediately following our Customer Appreciation Day, on Sunday, November 20th at 5pm. If you cannot make it, please feel free to contact him directly. 

What’s L.A.’s Westside been reading? These are the October bestsellers at DIESEL, A Bookstore in Brentwood, from dieselbookstore.com/brentwood.

Fiction:
1. Maria Semple, Today Will Be Different (Little, Brown and Company)
2. Norman Ollestad, French Girl with Mother (Counterpoint Press)
3. Ann Patchett, Commonwealth (HarperCollins)
4. Ian McEwan, Nutshell (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday)
5. Colson Whitehad, The Underground Railroad (Doubleday Books)
6. Elena Ferrante, My Brilliant Friend (Europa Editions)
7. Tana French, The Tresspasser (Viking Books)
8. Elizabeth Strout, My Name Is Lucy Barton (Random House Trade)
9. Stephanie Danler, Sweetbitter (Alfred A. Knopf Publishing Group)
10. Amor Towles, A Gentleman in Moscow (Viking)

Nonfiction:
1. Bruce Springsteen, Born to Run (Simon & Schuster)
2. Peter Himmelman, Let Me Out (TarcherPerigee)
3. J. D. Vance, Hillbilly Elegy (Harper)
4. William Finnegan, Barbarian Days (Penguin Books)
5. Ina Garten, Cooking for Jeffrey (Clarkson Potter Publishers)
6. Ruth Bader Ginsburg with Mary Hartnett and Wendy W. Williams, My Own Words (Simon & Schuster)
7. Oliver Sacks, Gratitude (Knopf Publishing Group)
8. James Andrew Miller, Powerhouse (Custom House)
9. Sadhguru, Inner Engineering (Spiegel & Grau)
10. The Dalai Lama & Desmond Tutu with Douglas Abrams, The Book of Joy (Avery Publishing Group)

Children’s:
1. Raina Telgemeier, Ghosts (Graphix)
2. Dav Pilkey, Dog Man (Graphix)
3. Andrea Beaty & David Roberts, Ada Twist, Scientist (ABRAMS Books for Young Readers)
4. Julia Donaldson & Axel Scheffler, Room on the Broom (Puffin Books)
5. Mary Pope Osborne & Natalie Pope Boyce with Sal Murdocca, Magic Tree House: Incredible Fact Book (Random House Books for Young Readers)
6. Rick Riordan, Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard: The Hammer of Thor (Disney Hyperion)
7. Jory John & Lane Smith, Penguin Problems (Random House Books for Young Readers)
8. Ransom Riggs, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children (Quirk Books)
9. Guinness World Records, Guinness World Records 2017 (Guinness World Records)
10. J.K. Rowling & Jim Kay, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets: The Illustrated Edition (Arthur A. Levine Books)

Dear Reader,

Okay the season is upon us. No, not the election season, but the season of gathering together for large meals with extended family and friends. The season of gift-giving. This is so much fun in the bookstore – readers looking for the finest, most unexpected, most desired books to give as gifts. The bounty of cookbooks that are released this time of year are filling our shelves awaiting readers’ attentions for making delectable meals.  Great gift books of all varieties abound in the store – come in and peruse them!

I wanted to also draw a little attention to some writing that’s been going on at DIESEL (please see Editor’s Notes, below, for more).  DIESEL bookseller and professional writer Aaron Bady has penned two worthy pieces recently: one was posted on Lithub – Did Imbolo Mbue actually write the Great American Novel? (Lithub, by the way, is a great source for all things literary.)  The other was an op-ed in the L.A. Times.

Check them out, along with all the other creative and imaginative events, book selection, display, and reviews radiating out of DIESEL this season.

Happy Reading,
John and all DIESELfolk

Check out our reviews of books by Peter Wohlleben, Amor Towles, Brian Evenson, Natalie Léger, Angela Liddon, Natasha Farrant, and Delia Sherman at eepurl.com/cj2vyb.

What’s Brentwood been reading? You can see all our September bestsellers at dieselbookstore.com/brentwood/bestsellers.

What’s Brentwood been reading? We’ve listed our bestseller lists for August at dieselbookstore.com/brentwood/bestsellers so you can see.

The next meeting of DIESEL, A Bookstore in Brentwood’s Mystery Book Club will be at 7 pm on Friday, September 2nd, in the lower courtyard of the Brentwood Country Mart. We’re going to discuss Ruth Ware’s In a Dark, Dark Wood. The group is free, and RSVPs are requested but not required. To keep up with the latest news from DIESEL, A Bookstore in Brentwood, sign up for our mailing lists.

Dear Reader,

Summer holidays tend to run through August, which means you have one of the best months of the year for reading ahead of you. In July, on All Things Considered, I gave a few recommendations over the radio waves of wonderful summer reads. We have displays in-store and each of us have our favorites for summer reading, if you need some help.  

My favorite summer read ever was Moby Dick. Completely immersive, it seems like I read it every night from 10 or 11 at night until 1 or 2 in the morning, all summer long. I was busy working and playing the rest of the day, but those few hours every summer night were an utter pleasure. Even Moby Dick wouldn’t have taken me all summer, but the extended pleasure of reading that amazing, intricate, delightful and engaging book comes back to me every time I see, or think of, it.  

I also remember reading a horror novel one summer at the beach that completely absorbed me, but it tends to be one big classic that means ‘summer reading’ to me: Sometimes A Great Notion, Of Human Bondage, and last year’s was Ulysses.  Whether it is a trashy read, an enthralling re-read of a favorite book from your past, or like me an absorbing big read – we hope you take the time to read the perfect book this summer.

Check out STALKS, our newsletter, for more news and reviews of books by Emma Rathbone, Tommy Wallach, Yuri Herrera, Douglas R. Hofstadter, Carol Anderson, Ruth Reichl, and Lesley Barnes.

John and all DIESELfolk