Category Archives: Pelican’s Picks

Summertime and the Readin’ is easy!

Lots of great summer time reading at the bookstore! New and out this week is Danielle Steel’s First Sight, Daniel Silva’s The English Girl, and Sarah Dunant’s Blood & Beauty. We’ve got these and so many more just waiting for you at the store, stop by and pick up something for your days in the sweet summer sunshine!

Danielle Steel First SightDaniel Silva The  English GirlSarah Dunant blood-and-beauty

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Mary Alice Monroe’s The Summer Girls

the-summer-girls

Mary Alice Monroe’s latest book The Summer Girls hit shelves yesterday, June 25th. It is the first in the Lowcountry Summer Trilogy. Already it’s made several “Best Summer Reads” lists, including CBS and affiliates in Baltimore, Chicago, Miami, San Francisco, Southern Living, Azalea, and Charleston Magazines.

Mary Alice plans on spending a long summer on the road promoting this books, and as well she should. It’s wonderful and she has so many stories to tell her readers about the research she did with dolphins for this book. She is also giving away a weekend for two, including airfare, to Wild Dunes Resort on Isle of Palms, a dolphin sunset cruise  and a meet and greet with her.  To enter, just go to her Facebook Page  www.facebook.com/maryalicemonroe.

And don’t forget to stop by Pelican Bookstore and pick up The Summer Girls!

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Lovin’ These Summer Books

Here’s what we’re loving this summer! Karen White’s new book, “The Time Between.” It’s a really a good southern story set in Charleston, SC.  And Carl Hiaasen’s “Bad Monkey” is great.

There’s also a new “Dork Diary” out and a new Sarah Dessen called “The Moon and More.”

The Time Between Karen WhiteBAD MONKEY by Carl HiaasenDork Diary

We also have plenty of jig saw puzzles for those too hot or rainy afternoons!

Pelican Bookstore Puzzles

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New Summer Picks

The weather is warm and we love it! The author of “Saving CeeCee Honeycutt” has written a new book,”Looking For Me” another sweet story from Beth Hoffman. A staff pick for this week! Also new this week, a new Mary Kay Andrews, “Ladies Night.”

For the young adults, Sarah Dessens new title “The Moon and More” is out and Ransom Riggs’ “Miss Perregrine’s Peculiar Children” is out in paperback. Stop by the store and pick a book for your beach reading!

Looking for MeLadies NightThe Moon and More

 

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New Books this Week!

It’s going to be a big week this week for blockbuster books. Dan Brown’s long awaited “Inferno” was released last week and this week Khalid Hosseini’s book  “And The Mountains Echoed” will be released Tuesday.  Also still selling well is Jeffrey Archer’s book “Best Kept Secret.” Lots of great things at the bookstore, so stop in.

We also just received a new shipment of puzzles!

Dan Brown InfernoAnd the Mountains EchoedBest Kept Secret

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All New Books!

Are you looking for something new to read? Well, you’re in luck! We’ve got several new books coming out this Tuesday to wet your reading appetite. There’s David Sedaris’ Let’s Explore Diabetes with Owls, David Baldacci’s  The Hit, Kristin Hannah’s Fly Away, and Edward Rutherfurd’s Paris.  Stop in the store and pick up one of these great books or we’d be happy to recommend another one for you!

Let's Explore Diabetes with OwlsThe HitFly AwayParis

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New Picks!

We are very excited about this new book by Patti Callahan Henry coming out this week called, And Then I Found You. Patti is  a great writer and we can’t wait for this one! Stop by the store this week and pick up your copy.

And Then I Found You

Marybeth Whalen and Patti Callahan Henry, both authors and contributors on SheReads.org, one of our favorite sites. It’s a site run by authors to promote other authors whose works “are not receiving the attention they deserve.” If you love a good book you should definitely check it out!

Marybeth Whalen and Patti Callahan Henry

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Spring Update

Lots of new books out this spring! One of our favorites “The Aviators Wife” by Melanie Benjamin is about Charles Lindbergh’s spouse Anne, and our number one best seller this spring! Then, read “Gift From the Sea” by Anne Morrow Lindbergh, another great spring read! Maybe one of these will wind up in your Easter basket…

The Aviator's WifeGift from the Sea

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Little Known Facts about Ireland’s Most Famous Author for St. Patty’s Day

St. Patty's Day

St. Patrick’s Day is just a mere 2 days away and we though we’d take this opportunity to let you in on a few little known facts about one of Ireland’s most famous writers—Oscar Wilde. You thought he was British? Well, that just goes to show you’ve got lots to learn about this son of Ireland! Happy St. Patty’s Day!

1. ‘Oscar’ is the best-known ‘Wilde’

True, but unfairly so. His father, Sir William, was a remarkable Dublin doctor whose medical work on the 1851 and 1861 censuses earned him his knighthood, and is still referred to today as essential source material for 19th century Irish history. Sir William also published important contributions to the study of Celtic antiquities and Irish folklore. Oscar’s mother, Jane, was a prominent Irish Nationalist and poet who was nearly imprisoned for her inflammatory anti-English writing in 1848. As Oscar would write from prison in 1897: “She and my father had bequeathed me a name they had made noble and honoured not merely in literature, art, archaeology and science, but in the public history of my own country in its evolution as a nation.”

2. He coasted through university, with a reputation for langorousness and a love of lilies

Oscar was certainly influenced by the aesthetic theories of John Ruskin and Walter Pater while at Oxford, and he adopted the pose of an effete young man, but he went up as a scholar to Magdalen and came down with a double first in classics and the Newdigate prize for poetry. This took considerable application as his contemporaries later testified and his surviving Oxford notebooks demonstrate.

3. Being Irish was just an accident of birth, he was an English author, surely?

In the sense that The Importance of Being Earnest and Lady Winderemere’s Fan are archetypically ‘English’ plays – perhaps; but there is a profound Irishness underlying much of what Oscar wrote and thought, especially in his correspondence. He may have remarked that the first thing he forgot at Oxford was his Irish accent, but when his play Salomé was banned he openly accused the English of being narrow-minded saying, “I am not English; I’m Irish which is quite another thing.”

4. ‘Earnest’ was a code-word for ‘gay’ and wearing a green carnation was a ‘secret’ sign of homosexuality

Both explanations seem to have been conveniently invented years later with little or no foundation in fact. ‘Earnest’ was supposedly a corruption of ‘Uraniste’ or one who practices Uranian or homosexual love, and the green carnation was said to be the badge of Parisian pederasts. If either had been true, Edward Carson, the Marquess of Queensberry’s defense lawyer in the libel trial, would certainly have pinpointed them, as he did the overtly gay passages in the magazine publication of The Picture of Dorian Gray (which were later suppressed in the book.)

5. Oscar Wilde’s arrest was delayed by several hours to allow him to catch the last boat-train and escape to the continent

When Oscar’s libel action against Queensberry collapsed, Queensberry’s lawyers sent all their papers to the director of public prosecutions, who consulted the solicitor-general and the home secretary and then immediately applied to the magistrates for a warrant. Oscar was arrested at 6.20pm, though there were still four more trains to Paris that night. He was then twice prosecuted by the crown. The jury failed to agree on the first occasion, and the crown, though not obliged to do so, tried him again – hardly the action of a government anxious to see him escape.

6. Once Oscar Wilde was arrested, tried and imprisoned, Lord Alfred Douglas, who essentially got him into the mess, abandoned him

‘Bosie’ Douglas, in a devoted but often muddle-headed way, was remarkably supportive when the crash came. He visited Oscar on remand in Holloway every day and only went to France before the first trial at the insistence of his brother and Oscar’s lawyers. After Oscar’s conviction he wrote a defense of their love for a French journal, which would have done more harm than good, and was never published. He also helped Oscar financially after his release from prison.

7. Oscar Wilde died of syphilis

This is an old canard which has been doing the rounds for nearly a century, and was lately championed on the flimsiest of evidence by his best modern biographer, Richard Ellmann. Killing Oscar off with the classic ‘disease of the decadents’ has always seemed a suitably sensational way of rounding off a sensational life, but modern medical opinion agrees almost universally that it was an ear infection and meningitis which did for him in the end.

Oscar Wilde

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In an Irish State of Mind…

To get in the mood for the wearing of the green, we dedicate this St. Patrick’s Day to Maeve Binchy.  One of Ireland’s and the bookstores long time favorite. From The Circle of Friends, to her last, A Week In Winter, published after her death, we salute you. All perfect reads to get you in the mood for a green beer or two.

 

Maeve Binchy was an Irish novelist, playwright, short story writer, columnist, and speaker best known for her humorous take on small-town life in Ireland, her descriptive characters, her interest in human nature and her often clever surprise endings. Her novels, which were translated into 37 languages, and sold more than 40 million copies worldwide. After her death, she was became known as Ireland’s best-loved and most recognizable writer.

 

Maeve Binchy

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