Arson, after all, is an artificial crime…A large number of books deserve to be burnt.

- H.G. Wells

The heart of the Book Tavern
& 8 Days Until Fahrenheit 1026°

Tricia Hughes, Downtown Augusta Hero, humbling herselfby getting down on the floor and reading to young customers.

I snapped this photo tonight at First Friday where we had an amazing crowd for the four short hours we opened.  Aside from fudge tastings and hot wassail warming our gullets, we started selling off our overstock for $5.00 or less per book.  Saturday we’re open from 10am – 6pm and the overstock stacks will be out front under our tent and inside the store in every nook we can find.  Plus all our regular inventory will still be 30% off including new, used and rare books along with chocolate, fudge, ugly dolls and stationary.  The only thing not marked down right now are DVD’s, special orders and employees (none of them seemed eager to match our inventory discount with a pay cut).

9 Days Until Fahrenheit 1026°
New Year’s Day

Thanks to everyone who has rescued books this week. We’ve got nine more days to go before The Great Book Burning consumes the tares & chaff and perhaps a few noteworthy titles too. The responses to our pronouncement range from unspeakable consternation (though somehow they found words) to “could you please burn my high-school journal?!?” We’ve even had numerous complaints filed against us with various state and federal authorities so next Saturday promises to be more exciting than I’d anticipated. Please plan on joining us to witness our protest and proclamation.

Regards,
David Hutchison
The Book Tavern

15 Days Until Fahrenheit 1026°

firesale header

The Book Tavern has too many books and the best way to get rid of books is fire. So we are pulling everything we can find out of the warehouse and on January 9th we’ll set fire to it all. Then, like a Phoenix from the ashes, it won’t be long until we recover from the GREAT BOOK BURNING of 2010!


 
Rescue these poor and needy books! Everything in the store will be 20% OFF starting the day after Christmas.  Everything! New books, used books, rare books and even chocolate!  We want as many souls to be spared the flames as possible.


 
Visit often as we count down to the fire. Special opportunities to save books will arise.  Watch your inbox, Twitter, and Facebook.  For the next 15 days, you can make the difference in the life of these books!

Review: Eli the Good
Silas House

eli-the-good-silas-house

Signing:
Thursday, November 12th
7pm – 9pm

I began reading this book a few weeks ago and wasn’t disappointed by its lyrical smoothness.  As in House’s previous fiction, his construction particularly expresses Southern qualities of gentleness and hospitality, the slower pace of life, and a moral complexity often misunderstood by outsiders.  Read the rest of this entry »

Meet a Hero at The Book Tavern

We have the privilege this First Friday of introducing you to Lou Brissie.  Lou was from Ware Shoals, SC before being shipped of to Europe during WWII.  He left behind apotential career in Major League baseball to defend the freedom of others.  He barely escaped with his life (many of his comrades were not so blessed).  He should have lost his legs.  But his courage overcame many obstacles both on the battlefield and later the ballfield.  Come meet a hero and a legend.

Cover of The Corporal Was A Pitcher

Lou Brissie Signing
6:30 – 8:30 First Friday

The corporal was left for dead, along with the 11 others of his squad, after a German mortar attack in the freezing, unforgiving mountains of northern Italy on December 7, 1944. But hours after the Nazi infantry had retreated, one member of the American army’s Graves Registration Unit picking up the corpses, turned over a body in a ditch and called to his officer, “Hey, this one’s breathing.”

It was 20-year-old Lou Brissie, from the small town of Ware Shoals, South Carolina. He was taken to a makeshift medical tent behind the front line and told that with such extensive damage his left leg would have to be amputated to save his life. He pleaded with the medics: “Please, you can’t take my leg off. I’m a pitcher. I’ve been promised a chance to pitch in the big leagues.” He explained that he had a letter from Connie Mack, owner-manager of the A’s, as proof.

The decorated corporal couldn’t walk on his own strength for nearly a year and would undergo upwards of 23 operations. He eventually began to throw a baseball while on crutches. All the time, he kept dear the dream of pitching in the major leagues.

Not only did he realize that dream, but in virtually implausible, genuinely inspirational pursuit of his goal, the left-handed Lou Brissie – wearing a huge brace on his left, partially immobile leg and now a strike-out ace – made the 1949 American League All-Star team on merit, along with such stars as Joe DiMaggio, Ted Williams, and Bob Feller.

-from Triumph Books, publisher of The Corporal Was A Pitcherloubrissie

A man who was completely innocent, offered himself as a sacrifice for the good of others, including his enemies, and became a ransom of the world. It was a perfect act. -Mohandas Gandhi
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1026 Broad Street
Downtown Augusta
706.826.1940

 

improved Hours
Sunday 11 - 4
Mon - Fri 10 - 9
Sat 10 - 6

 

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    David Baruch Hutchison