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Books For TV Lovers: 'Portlandia'

January 12, 2015 Natalie Morath

Season 5 of IFC's 'Portlandia' premiered on January 8, much to my delight, especially now that I've visited Portland a few times. Please enjoy this ten minute long feminist bookstore sketch compilation, and then read the following books, which will help you fully immerse in 'Portlandia':

Wild by Cheryl Strayed - I'm just going to keep recommending it, so get used to it. Strayed is a notable Portland resident these days, and the movie includes an Art Alexakis cameo.

Girl in a Band by Kim Gordon (out February 24) - In lieu of a book about/by Sleater Kinney's Carrie Brownstein, this should more than suffice.

Any book you buy from Powells, Portland's awesome new/used bookstore. They have a great website, by the way, and are one of the nation's best alternatives if you're anti-Amazon.

A Beverly Cleary novel - The much-beloved children's book author grew up in Portland. My favorite is the epistolary novel Dear Mr. Henshaw.

Sometimes a Great Notion by Ken Kesey - Kesey is a pretty famous Oregon resident and University of Oregon alumni, and this novel is about - what else? - the logging industry.

In Books for TV Lovers Tags Portland, Portlandia, Powell's, Girl in a Band, Kim Gordon, Carrie Brownstein, Sleater Kinney, Wild, Cheryl Strayed, Art Alexakis, Beverly Cleary, Dear Mr. Henshaw, Sometimes a Great Notion, Kes Kesey
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Bookhive Afield: Portland, OR and Powell's

July 30, 2014 Natalie Morath
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As I mentioned a few weeks ago, I headed to Oregon recently for my sister's wedding. The wedding was in Corvalis so I was very lucky that I got an afternoon of exploration in Portland before my official MOH duties started. I visited Powell's Books in the Pearl District the last time I visited, and I could not wait to get back there.

Size-wise, it compares to Strand in NYC or John King in Detroit, but what I especially love about it is how wonderfully organized and well-laid out it is. I enjoy an enormous bookstore as much as the next literary hoarder; it can be really pleasurable to get lost in a sea of shelves and discover something you didn't even know you wanted. But on the other hand, book stores are a rarity these days, and for them to serve any practical function in an urban environment, folks need to be able to find what they're looking for. Powell's gives you the best of both worlds; it's a several story building, with different genres on each floor, so it's not hard to find at least the vicinity of what you're seeking, and it's just as easy to wander as you please.

I'm also impressed by how not-seriously they take themselves. That sounds like serious shade so let me clarify: so many bookstores put themselves up on pedestals because books are an expensive luxury (unfortunately) and reading is for serious, smart people (or something like that). Powell's seems to remember that reading is meant to be pleasurable, as is shopping for books, and they have no shame in stocking their shelves with toys, games, stationary, and other nifty book-adjacent merchandise. They have a nice cafe upstairs, a huge selection of magazines, and they devote fairly equal real estate to each genre. If you were a hardcore fan of sci-fi or fantasy, for example, this is the bookstore for you. 

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I saw a copy of Marilynne Robinson's Gilead on sale on the very front table, so I snapped that up quickly and then wandered with my husband, who has never been. He wanted to check out some comics, so I found myself leaving with a copy of the complete Persepolis book, which I've been meaning to buy for a long time. I left with a Powell's tote bag too, natch.

I don't get to visit my sister and beautiful Oregon often enough, but I already can't wait to get back to Powell's, and I hope that someday I find myself in Portland with a few hours to just soak it all in.

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In META, Bookhive Afield Tags Portland, Powell's, Bookstores, Gilead, Marilynne Robinson, Persepolis
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