Look out for these books new books coming to Picture Book inside HudCo in November
Preview all the most-anticipated books of the Fall on Bookshop.org
Look out for these books new books coming to Picture Book inside HudCo in November
Preview all the most-anticipated books of the Fall on Bookshop.org
The Rivertowns Chamber of Commerce presents a ghastly gathering of historical haunts and local legends. Join us for an eerily entertaining evening filled with the ghostly tales as told by Ghastly Grinn, your trolley guide through the spine-chilling streets of Hastings-on-Hudson, Irvington, and Dobbs Ferry.
Picture Book will be open late inside HudCo with special spooky books for the occasion, and HudCo’s bar will be open. Tickets required for the trolley, but it’s free to browse the bookshop and open to all to imbibe inside HudCo.
Family Fun Tour - 4:30 pm, Ghostly Tours (12+) - 6:00 pm & 7:30 pm
PB Book Club is the relaxed meet up hosted by Sara of Picture Book and Stephanie of Parson Brown at HudCo. Our next selection is Tom Lake by beloved author Ann Patchett. Tom Lake is a novel about youthful love, and the lives parents have led before their children were born. For a limited time, get the PB Book Club Bundle with the novel and the Parson Brown Candle, the signature scent of HudCo, as a discounted package. Book Club will meet on November 14th.
Tuesday October 24th, 12-2pm -Jessie Kanzer
Come celebrate local author Jessie Kanzer's new book release Unlocking Your Inner Zelensky: Lessons We Can All Learn from an Unexpected Leader. Books are available for purchase from Picture Book, and Jessie will be available to sign them on release day at the shop.
Friday November 3rd, 12-2pm - Rebecca Pitts
Rebecca Pitts new book Jane Jacobs: Champion of Cities, Champion of People is out on October 31st! Books are available for purchase from Picture Book, and Becky will be available to sign them on Friday November 3rd at the shop.
Check out all the books from our talented Rivertown authors online.
Sta tuned for more great events in November, with local author/illustrator Heather Ross leading a workshop on Sunday November 5th during River Arts Studio Tour, and Frances Largeman-Roth, RDN’s new cookbook release.
Don’t miss the new October releases on the table at HudCo this month. Including the latest from cookbook queen Molly Baz, short stories from Jhumpa Lahiri, and the latest First Cat in Space graphic novel! Preview all the most-anticpated books of Fall on our Bookshop.org website.
Ending the newsletter with a quick note of gratitude to Picture Book’s community on the third (!!!) anniversary of the bookshop inside HudCo this month. I am so grateful for your support and to have gotten to know you all through books. -Sara
Find Picture Book inside
HudCo - Dobbs Ferry, NY
Monday-Friday 9am-5pm
& other special programming:
-Wednesday October 18th 9am-8pm
-Sunday November 5th, 11am-3pm
Coffee weekdays until 3pm
Pick-up also available at
Yellow Studio, Cross River, NY
Look out for these highly anticipated October’s releases at Picture Book this month!
10/3
Our Strangers: Stories From one of the most accomplished writers of our time comes another brilliant collection of short fiction. Artful, deft, and inventive; Lydia Davis’ newest collection of stories delves into topics ranging from marriage to tiny insects. These stories are a celebration of language and careful observation that once again confirms Davis’ sincere love and mastery of the form. Only available at independent bookstores like Picture Book and libraries, by request of the author.
In Begin Again, his first illustrated book created specifically for readers of all ages, Oliver Jeffers shares a very brief history of humanity and shares his dreams for where we go from here. A must-have for anyone who wants the next generation to inherit a world to be proud of--and a perfect gift to share with those you care about.
Let's Become Fungal!: Mycelium Teachings and the Arts: Based on Conversations with Indigenous Wisdom Keepers, Artists, Curators, Feminists offers teachings on collaboration, decoloniality, nonlinearity, toxicity, mobilization, biomimicry, death and being nonbinary, while also examining the world of fungi. Let’s Become Fungal! shows how fungi can inspire artists, collectives, organizations, educators, policymakers, designers, scientists, anthropologists, curators, urbanists, activists, gardeners, community leaders, farmers and others to become more fungal in their ways of working and being.
The First Cat in Space and the Soup of Doom (First Cat in Space #2) Award-winning creators Mac Barnett and Shawn Harris are back with the second volume in the bestselling The First Cat in Space graphic novel series! Secret tales of woe, hilarious new characters, and dangerous plans of sabotage will keep readers delighted and laughing until the thrilling climax.
Monica, the long-awaited new graphic novel from Daniel Clowes, author of Ghost World, is a genre-bending thriller from one of the defining voices of the genre. "Daniel Clowes is the rare cartoonist whose graphic novels become cultural events." —New York Magazine
Stacey's Mistake: A Graphic Novel (the Baby-Sitters Club #14) is a brand-new Baby-sitters Club graphic novel adapted by National Book Award finalist and Eisner-nominated cartoonist Ellen T. Crenshaw following the Baby-sitters Club visiting Stacy in New York City for the weekend. (Ages 8-12)
10/10
Roman Stories by Jhumpa Lahiri is the first short story collection by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author and master of the form since her number one New York Times best seller Unaccustomed Earth. Rome--metropolis and monument, suspended between past and future, multi-faceted and metaphysical--is the protagonist, not the setting, of these nine stories. These are splendid, searching stories, written in Jhumpa Lahiri's adopted language of Italian and seamlessly translated by the author and by Knopf editor Todd Portnowitz.
Family Meal by Bryan Washington, the bestselling, award-winning author of Memorial and Lot, an irresistible, intimate novel about two young men, once best friends, whose lives collide again after a loss.
More Is More: Get Loose in the Kitchen by Molly Baz It's time to crank up the heat and lose the measuring spoons because the secret to cooking is hiding in one simple motto: MORE IS MORE. In her bestselling debut cookbook, Cook This Book, Molly Baz taught the cooking essentials and put her love for mortadella and dill on blast. In More Is More, she's teaching cooks how to level up their cooking, loosen up in front of that ripping hot pan, and seek deliciousness at all costs.More Is More is a philosophy that encourages more risk-taking, better intuition, fewer exact measurements, and a "don't stop 'til it tastes delicious" mentality.
The Puppets of Spelhorst is an original fairy tale by master storyteller Kate DiCamillo with enchanting illustrations by Julie Morstad, in which five puppets confront circumstances beyond their control with patience, cunning, and high spirits.
End of October:
Art in Flower: Finding Inspiration in Art and Nature shows how Lindsey Taylor creates stunning but achievable floral arrangements inspired by works of art, riffing on works by a diversity of artists across mediums, periods, and styles.
Jane Jacobs: Champion of Cities, Champion of People by local author Rebecca Pitts is the first biography for young people of Jane Jacobs, the visionary activist, urbanist, and thinker who transformed the way we inhabit and develop our cities. (grade 7+)
Unlocking Your Inner Zelensky: Lessons We Can All Learn from an Unexpected Leader by local author Jessie Asya Kanzer examines the words of the leader of Ukraine as a spiritual leader for our times.
Preview all the most-anticipated releases this Fall on Picture Book’s Bookshop.org website
Out and available from Picture Book on October 3rd:
Our Strangers: Stories From one of the most accomplished writers of our time comes another brilliant collection of short fiction. Artful, deft, and inventive; Lydia Davis’ newest collection of stories delves into topics ranging from marriage to tiny insects. These stories are a celebration of language and careful observation that once again confirms Davis’ sincere love and mastery of the form. Only available at independent bookstores like Picture Book and libraries, by request of the author.
In Begin Again, his first illustrated book created specifically for readers of all ages, Oliver Jeffers shares a very brief history of humanity and shares his dreams for where we go from here. A must-have for anyone who wants the next generation to inherit a world to be proud of--and a perfect gift to share with those you care about.
Let's Become Fungal!: Mycelium Teachings and the Arts: Based on Conversations with Indigenous Wisdom Keepers, Artists, Curators, Feminists offers teachings on collaboration, decoloniality, nonlinearity, toxicity, mobilization, biomimicry, death and being nonbinary, while also examining the world of fungi. Let’s Become Fungal! shows how fungi can inspire artists, collectives, organizations, educators, policymakers, designers, scientists, anthropologists, curators, urbanists, activists, gardeners, community leaders, farmers and others to become more fungal in their ways of working and being.
The First Cat in Space and the Soup of Doom (First Cat in Space #2) Award-winning creators Mac Barnett and Shawn Harris are back with the second volume in the bestselling The First Cat in Space graphic novel series! Secret tales of woe, hilarious new characters, and dangerous plans of sabotage will keep readers delighted and laughing until the thrilling climax.
Monica, the long-awaited new graphic novel from Daniel Clowes, author of Ghost World, is a genre-bending thriller from one of the defining voices of the genre. "Daniel Clowes is the rare cartoonist whose graphic novels become cultural events." —New York Magazine
Stacey's Mistake: A Graphic Novel (the Baby-Sitters Club #14) is a brand-new Baby-sitters Club graphic novel adapted by National Book Award finalist and Eisner-nominated cartoonist Ellen T. Crenshaw following the Baby-sitters Club visiting Stacy in New York City for the weekend. (Ages 8-12)
Preview all the most-anticipated releases this Fall on Picture Book’s Bookshop.org website
C. Pam Zhang, the award-winning author of How Much of These Hills Is Gold returns with the rich new novel, Land of Milk and Honey, about a young chef and the transformative power of a woman embracing her own appetite
Diner: Day for Night is the new cookbook from Andrew Tarlow of Brooklyn's restaurants Marlow & Sons, Roman's, and Diner, a farm-to-table restaurant in a repurposed dining car under the Williamsburg bridge.
Something, Someday is the beautiful new picture book by presidential inaugural poet Amanda Gorman and Caldecott Honor-winning illustrator Christian Robinson that shows how even small gestures can have lasting impact.
The Wild Robot Protects, the thrilling third installment of the Wild Robot series takes readers on a new adventure through the ocean and to the frigid northern waters where Roz may have to make the ultimate sacrifice to save her island. Recommended for ages 8-12 and younger readers with their parent's help.
September is full of amazing, highly-anticipated new releases. You can find the brand new books below on the Picture Book table this month: The Fraud, the highly anticipated new novel by Zadie Smith set in Victorian England. Living Upriver: Artful Homes, Idyllic Lives showcases the beautiful homes and lifestyles of creatives who have left the city fto live surrounded by nature by Barbara de Vries with a foreword by Emma Austen Tuccillo of And North. In Happy Plants, Happy You: A Plant-Care & Self-Care Guide for the Modern Houseplant Parent author Kamili Bell Hill shows us that plant care can really be self-care. Get tickets for the author event with Kamili on September 19th! The latest volume in the hit graphic novel series Witches of Brooklyn is out to delight your 8-12 year olds with a fun read to kick off the school year.
The Vaster Wilds by three-time National Book Award finalist and the New York Times bestselling author Lauren Groff. The captivating novel starts off running with a young girl escaping a colonial settlement in early 17th century Virginia into the wilderness with just the clothes on her back and her will to survive. Lauren Groff is one of my favorite writers, but you don't have to take my word for it as the New York Times Book Review boasts, “I know of few other writers whose sentences are so beautiful and so propulsive.” Any new release of hers is a must-read for me, and this one is particularly exciting as The Los Angeles Times declares, “Lauren Groff just reinvented the adventure novel.”
New cookbook, I Could Nosh: Classic Jew-Ish Recipes Revamped for Every Day by Jake Cohen is the follow-up to his beloved bestseller Jew-ish. I Could Nosh brings Jake's signature modern flair to traditional Jewish recipes that are soon to become everyday favorites and new holiday traditions. with creative, must-cook recipes, including: Jake's famous Challah recipe, now with new variations like Chall-zones, Pletzel, Babka, and Sufganiyot, & a whole chapter dedicated to Schmears to up your bagel game.
And new to the Bloomy bookshelf, Madame Fromage’s Adventures in Cheese, a charming, witty, deeply knowledgeable and, above all, passionate book here to teach us pretty much everything we need to know about choosing cheese, tasting it, pairing it, and sharing it. Pick it up from Bloomy on Cedar Street and you get to support two small local women-owned businesses at once!
C. Pam Zhang, the award-winning author of How Much of These Hills Is Gold returns with the rich new novel, Land of Milk and Honey, about a young chef and the transformative power of a woman embracing her own appetite
Diner: Day for Night is the new cookbook from Andrew Tarlow of Brooklyn's restaurants Marlow & Sons, Roman's, and Diner, a farm-to-table restaurant in a repurposed dining car under the Williamsburg bridge.
Something, Someday is the beautiful new picture book by presidential inaugural poet Amanda Gorman and Caldecott Honor-winning illustrator Christian Robinson that shows how even small gestures can have lasting impact.
The Wild Robot Protects, the thrilling third installment of the Wild Robot series takes readers on a new adventure through the ocean and to the frigid northern waters where Roz may have to make the ultimate sacrifice to save her island. Recommended for ages 8-12 and younger readers with their parent's help.
Preview all the most-anticipated releases this Fall on Picture Book’s Bookshop.org website
New releases this week include The Vaster Wilds by three-time National Book Award finalist and the New York Times bestselling author Lauren Groff. The captivating novel starts off running with a young girl escaping a colonial settlement in early 17th century Virginia into the wilderness with just the clothes on her back and her will to survive.
And a new cookbook, I Could Nosh: Classic Jew-Ish Recipes Revamped for Every Day by Jake Cohen is the follow-up to his beloved bestseller Jew-ish. I Could Nosh brings Jake's signature modern flair to traditional Jewish recipes that are soon to become everyday favorites and new holiday traditions. with creative, must-cook recipes, including: Jake's famous Challah recipe, now with new variations like Chall-zones, Pletzel, Babka, and Sufganiyot, & a whole chapter dedicated to Schmears to up your bagel game.
And new to the Bloomy bookshelf, Madame Fromage’s Adventures in Cheese, a charming, witty, deeply knowledgeable and, above all, passionate book here to teach us pretty much everything we need to know about choosing cheese, tasting it, pairing it, and sharing it. Pick it up from Bloomy on Cedar Street and you get to support 2 small local women-owned businesses at once!
We're kicking off the school year with a whole new selection of books on the table! New releases this week include The Fraud, the highly anticipated new novel by Zadie Smith set in Victorian England. Living Upriver: Artful Homes, Idyllic Lives showcases the beautiful homes and lifestyles of creatives who have left the city fto live surrounded by nature by Barbara de Vries with a foreword by Emma Austen Tuccillo of And North. In Happy Plants, Happy You: A Plant-Care & Self-Care Guide for the Modern Houseplant Parent author Kamili Bell Hill shows us that plant care can really be self-care. Save the date for an author event with Kamili on September 19th! And last but not least, the latest volume in the hit graphic novel series Witches of Brooklyn is out to delight your 8-12 year olds with a fun read to kick off the school year.
I’m thrilled to share the latest art books out this summer and available at Picture Book inside HudCo. All art book titles in stock on the website are available for pick up at Yellow Studio in Cross River, New York as well after purchase. My favorite new art books out this summer include the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s exhibition catalogue for Cecily Brown’s first full-fledged (and long overdue) museum survey of Brown’s work in New York since she made the city her home, an unsettling but also charming collection of photographs by Finnish photographer Iiu Susiraja on view this summer at MoMA PS1, the newly reprinted definitive book on James Turrell that every Contemporary Art book collection needs, and the deluxe, oversized monograph on LA-based painter Jonas Wood.
In addition to the latest releases, I’ve recently added some more beautiful art books on important artists to Picture Book’s offerings. Click on the cover images below to learn more
View all of the best new art books available this summer to be shipped through Bookshop.org
Q&A With Edoardo Ballerini
by Sara Davidson of Picture Book
Edoardo Ballerini was photographed here at HudCo by the wonderful Camila Montanhani of Living Notes Photography. You may recognize Edoardo from around the Rivertowns, River Arts events, or from his acting career with roles in The Sopranos, Boardwalk Empire and more. I was happy to get the opportunity to ask him a few questions for the HudCo Journal
Before I met you here at HudCo, I knew your voice as an audiobook narrator. You've narrated over 400 books, some of which I've collected on this playlist, and are a two-time winner of the "Audie" Award. One of my favorites that really brought me to love the audiobook medium was the full-cast narration you were part of for Téa Obreht's Inland. Could you tell us how you first got into audiobook narration, and a couple of your favorite projects?
It happened a bit by accident. I'd never considered audiobooks as a career path, but somebody asked me to record a book, and I was intrigued by the artform. I was then fortunate to have some early success, thanks to a book by Jess Walter called "Beautiful Ruins." My audiobook version took off, even outselling the print for a while, which was unheard of at the time. Then it all just took on a life of its own, and before I knew it I was being asked to record all kinds of things, from Dante to Dean Koontz. It worked out well, actually, because my kids were little, and I was able to make my own schedule. Before that I'd been filming on locations, which sounds glamorous, but isn't all that easy when you're starting a family.
As to favorite projects, there are several, but two recent ones would be Amor Towles' "The Lincoln Highway" and Cormac McCarthy's "Stella Maris," his final work, which is really a two character play. Julia Whelan and I co-narrate. It's dense, but works really well in audio. Julia is terrific.
You also have an impressive career as an actor, and are a member of SAG-AFTRA. Is there anything you think we should know about the current strike?
Yes, I worked on-screen for many years, and still do. The highlight of that side of my career would have to be a small but memorable recurring part on "The Sopranos." The strike is unfortunate but necessary. The imbalance between employers and employees has reached unsustainable heights. Or lows, more accurately. Fortunately for those of us who work in audio, that work is not affected, so I can continue to record audiobooks. But it's a painful time for actors in general.
You are traveling to Italy soon, as you do most summers. Do you have any travel tips you can share?
I spent all my summers in Italy as a child, and try to bring my own children there each year. We also try to add in other countries while we're in Europe. Last year was France, this year is Denmark. I want my kids to know about this incredible continent just across the ocean. If I had any advice about visiting Italy it would be to go in the winter or spring. The weather is better, especially these days, and the lines are shorter. And if you go off-peak, you really see the country as it is, not as a tourist destination.
Are you taking any books with you on your trip?
I always bring books with me! I'm old school. I like physical books, but this year I'll be taking some PDFs so I can mark them up on an iPad. I have to record an 800 page work by Karl Ove Knausgaard, one of my favorite writers working today, as soon as I return, so that's most of my summer reading...
What brought you to settle down in the Rivertowns?
We were living in New York City, where I grew up, and thought I'd live forever, but then child number two came along, and our apartment suddenly felt really small and, well... it's a familiar tale. Even so, I was somewhat resistant to the move at first. As a city boy, the thought of "the suburbs" made me queasy, but I've been delighted to find a vibrant community of artists and creatives. And space! I do miss the city at times, but I can't imagine living there right now.
Do you have any favorite local businesses or organizations in the Rivertowns?
I've done some readings and performances with RiverArts, and I like their mission and how they go about things. And of course HudCo. What a gorgeous space, and such a terrific place to work.
Any projects you are looking forward to in the Fall?
I mentioned the Knausgaard, which tops the list of things to record, but I'm also heading in two new directions this year. First off, I've been asked to teach a course at my alma mater, Wesleyan University. It came quite by surprise, but I'm thrilled about it. And nervous. I've also been working on a project of my own, which is why you see me at HudCo from time to time. I don't want to say too much about it just yet, but if it works out as I'm hoping, I'll let you know. It should be an interesting Fall.
Photo Credit: Camila Montanhani, Living Notes Photography
You DO NOT need to be a member to come in and shop the bookshop. Picture Book is joyfully open and welcoming to all!
But, if you want to take advantage of co-working at the beautiful HudCo, you should get a membership. Right now, they are offering half off your first month membership if you use a referral code: Sara_Davidson_Promo. Enter the code in their inquiry form at www.hudco.co.
Hope to see you here soon!
The most-anticipated books of Summer 2023 in literary fiction, picture books, art books, cookbooks, graphic novels and more are available to order now from Bookshop, or find them at Picture Book inside HudCo as they release.
FREE SHIPPING
Picture Book’s online partner Bookshop.org is offering FREE SHIPPING on Tuesday and Wednesday this week, and if you spend over $100, you get a free super cute tote bag. Browse Picture Book's lists of the summer’s most-anticipated new releases, new in paperback, graphic novels for age 8-12, new cookbooks, for ideas or come see Sara back in the shop at HudCo during camp hours this week for more recommendations.
Sara of Picture Book & Stephanie of Parson Brown have loved hosting book club at HudCo this past year! Instead of picking one book per month this summer, we recommend this full list. Pick a few you want to read and we’ll all get together in the fall with cheese & CBD mocktails to discuss! All are available from Picture Book at the shop in HudCo, on Bookshop.org, and as audiobooks on Libro.fm.
1. The Guest
By Emma Cline
A deliciously fun and dark tale of a scammer wreaking havoc across the Hamptons after she is kicked out of her boyfriend’s mansion, from the bestselling author of The Girls.
My kind of summer read!
By Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
Hunger Games for grown ups, critiquing the private prison system, by the author of Friday Black.
The Seven Deadly Sins and the Price Women Pay to Be Good
By Elise Loehnen
Our first non-fiction book club pick asks, why do women equate self-denial with being good?
4. The Postcard
By Anne Berest
Translated by Tina Kover
When an anonymous postcard is delivered, it launches an enthralling investigation into family secrets. It’s a poignant tale of a Jewish family devastated by the Holocaust and partly restored through the power of storytelling.
By Barbara Kingsolver
2023 Pulitzer Prize winner, and 2023 Women’s Prize for Women winner. "May be the best novel of 2022...Equal parts hilarious and heartbreaking, this is the story of an irrepressible boy nobody wants, but readers will love....You may be reminded of another orphaned boy slipping through the country's underbrush, just trying to stay out of trouble: Huck Finn. With Demon, Kingsolver has created an outcast equally reminiscent of Twain's masterpiece, speaking in the natural poetry of the American vernacular....Kingsolver's best demonstration yet of a novel's ability to simultaneously entertain and move and plead for reform."— Ron Charles, Washington Post
by Lorrie Moore
Lorrie Moore’s first novel since A Gate at the Stairs.
"[Moore] manages the impossible in her writing: every other sentence is a gut-punch or the funniest line you've ever read, and it coheres into some of the truest writing about life--for what is life if not constantly either hilarious or devastating, and often both? I Am Homeless If This Is Not My Home is a ghost story, a love story, a family elegy, and a search for answers both tangible and ephemeral: it's the world of Lorrie Moore, beckoning us back in." —LitHub, "Most Anticipated Books of 2023"
7. Family Lore
By Elizabeth Acevedo
Out August 1st
The story of one Dominican-American family told through the voices of its women as they await a gathering that will forever change their lives.
By Yu Miri
Translated by Morgan Giles
Out August 1st
From the National Book Award winning author, an extraordinary, ground-breaking, epic multi-generational novel about a Korean family living under Japanese occupation.
9. Horse
By Geraldine Brooks
Based on the remarkable true story of the record-breaking thoroughbred Lexington, Horse is a novel of art and science, love and obsession, and our unfinished reckoning with racism.
10. Two memoirs tie for the #10 spot:
By Hua Hsu
Stay True is a bracing memoir about growing up, and about moving through the world in search of meaning and belonging, written in the wake of his college roommate’s murder.
By Maggie Smith
The bestselling poet and author Maggie Smith offers a lush and heartrending memoir exploring coming of age in your middle age. Beginning with the disintegration of her marriage, begins with one woman's personal, particular heartbreak, but its circles widen into a reckoning with contemporary womanhood, traditional gender roles, and the power dynamics that persist even in many progressive homes.
Wednesday June 21, 2023 10am-4pm
Picture Book, Inside HudCo
145 Palisade Street, Suite 200, Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522
Come to Picture Book to get your kids’ summer reading and support the great work of SPRING Community Partners! Picture Book is putting up an expanded section of books for elementary and middle school students on Wednesday, just in time to stock your kids up for camp or the extra reading-for-pleasure hours of the summer. The selection will include new releases in chapter books and graphic novels, Newbery Award winners, and a few classics by authors like Judy Blume, Lois Lowry, and Gary Paulsen. 10% of all sales on Wednesday will be donated to SPRING Community Partners.
In the fall of 2007, four kindergarten students without snacks and warm winter clothing inspired a few concerned teachers and parents to SPRING into action, so they organized a holiday drive for coats and gifts. Soon a small network of parents became Snack Fairies for young students without healthy snacks.
Some families in our community struggle to meet basic needs or find themselves in difficult circumstances. That’s where SPRING steps in to help.
SPRING provides support to families with school-aged children challenged by the costs of school supplies, clothing and food. We assist in ensuring all children have access to participation in various in-school and extracurricular programs. SPRING partners with the Dobbs Ferry Food Pantry and Hastings-on-Hudson based nonprofit Family-to-Family on food support.
SPRING provides necessary resources so that all children in Dobbs Ferry, regardless of means, can bloom, grow and reach their full potential. Our programs have expanded beyond food, clothing and school supplies to include academic guidance, musical instrument rentals, sports and enrichment support, senior awards and more.
Learn more at https://www.springcommunitypartners.org/
Picture Book is an independent bookstore inside the co-working & community hub HudCo in Dobbs Ferry, New York. It was founded in August 2020 by local mom Sara Davidson Johns as a pandemic pivot away from her career in the art world. Sara hopes to make it an easy and delightful experience to find books for the children in your life, and for yourself from her curated collection.
Wednesday June 14th, Picture Book will be on site at Hudson Lab School for the second annual book fair! Hudson Lab School families can support the school while finding great summer reading for their kids. Kids and parents will shop the sale in person at the school, and can also shop for any book they want online on the Bookshop.org.
Beginning Monday June 12th, HudCo will be closing at 5pm instead of 6pm
Picture Book is kicking off HudCo’s Pride Market on Sunday June 11th with a book signing by local author Allyson McCabe at noon! Allyson McCabe is a writer, reporter, and producer whose work is often broadcast on NPR, and her byline appears in the New York Times, BBC Culture, Wired, and other publications. Her latest book Why Sinéad O'Connor Matters is a stirring defense of Sinéad O'Connor's music and activism, and an indictment of the culture that cancelled her. Come to the Picture Book table at noon to purchase the book and get a personalized signature.
In 1990, Sinéad O’Connor’s video for “Nothing Compares 2 U” turned her into a superstar. Two years later, an appearance on Saturday Night Live turned her into a scandal. For many people—including, for years, the author—what they knew of O’Connor stopped there. Allyson McCabe believes it’s time to reassess our old judgments about Sinéad O’Connor and to expose the machinery that built her up and knocked her down.
Allyson McCabe’s intensely engaging, thoroughly researched, and deeply personal critical assessment, Why Sinéad O’Connor Matters, makes a serious and sharply observed yet compassionate appraisal of its subject, inarguably among the most influential artists of the late 1980s and early ’90s. McCabe’s willingness to reassess her own dismissal of Sinéad’s work as being too pop to take seriously is rare; not many writers are willing to be honest about what they miss. Acknowledging that Sinéad's life story can be a difficult, contradictory mess, McCabe painstakingly relates this magnificent, irreplaceable artist's tale to her own heartfelt story, showing us in the process how and why so many of us also connect with Sinéad.
~Vernon Reid
Why Sinéad O’Connor Matters is a thought-provoking look at one of the most influential artists and activists of our time that ultimately asks, "Why did we abandon her?" In her time of need, when she needed support, when she stood by her values--her audience trusted the industry more than the artist. I hope this book is read by those who don’t know Sinéad’s story, and those that do will gain insight into the pain and punk ethos she still stands for. Allyson McCabe makes us all want to ask Sinéad for forgiveness and, one hopes, ask ourselves how we can do things differently.
~Sharon Van Etten
Sinéad O’Connor is a brilliant, fragile, and exceptionally courageous talent whilst blessed with the voice of an angel. Having been treated so carelessly by the world, this book underscores why O'Connor remains relevant and treats her with the reverence she so rightly deserves.
~Shirley Manson
Absolutely brilliant, heartbreaking, insightful, and personal.
~Margo Price, Literary Hub
Why Sinéad O’Connor Matters reassesses the oft-misunderstood songwriter and activist through a lens that is both historical and personal...Written in clear and provocative language...McCabe’s impassioned defense of O’Connor in the wake of her many controversies is both heartfelt and persuasive...our protagonist emerges from Why Sinéad O’Connor Matters as a conquering hero; having weathered abuse, cruelty, and prejudice, not to mention the usual unreasonable expectations too often placed on female artists, the courageous nonconformist emerges wounded but wiser. Ultimately—and most importantly—she is redeemed.
~Aquarium Drunkard
Phoenicia Flea, a nomadic market of makers & merchants started in Upstate New York is returning to Dobbs Ferry on June 3rd! This outdoor market at the waterfront will host unique makers of jewelry, apparel, pottery and more along with good food, and music from River Arts.
Picture Book will be set up with a curated selection of beautiful books for all ages, including unique picture books, graphic novels for age 8-12, new & notable fiction, art books, and cookbooks.
Fingers crossed for good weather!
Other vendors include:
Ava Rogers Jewelry
Bloomy Cheese & Provisions
Product Think Tank
MCV Textiles
Per Lei
Galipette Vintage
Cooper’s Daughter Spirits
Ombrato
Renegade Organics
and many more!
River Arts Waterfront music lineup:
Sophia Rae, 11am
Dr Ex and the Breakups, 12pm
James G Barry Band, 1pm
Stephanie Chou Group, 2pm
Us!, 3pm
The Black Capsule. 5pm
Slingshots, 6pm
Friday June 2nd
Hastings-on-Hudson, New York
Warburton Avenue 6-9pm
Pre-event at The Good Witch 3:45-5:45
Picture Book is thrilled to join Friday Night Pride this year! We're bringing new books, primarily for kids, that celebrate LGBTQ+ families, love, and equity. Books will be available for purchase to continue the celebration at home.
I’m honored to be included in this amazing event because it helps define Hastings as an inclusive and affirming community for all of us, in a way that is completely joyful and fun!
Find me on Warburton Ave 6-9pm
Other participants in Friday Night Pride include Broadway vet Jamie Karen, stage and recording artist Amy Lynn of @amylynnandthehoneymen, Brass Queens, art teacher Katie Reidy of @iamurbanillustration, Jimmy Award Winner Marla Lou, Hastings Public Library, drag artist Amber Guesa, Hastings Beauty Salon. Kat Gang, Hastings Nursery School (The "Co-Op!"), Broadway star James Jackson Jr., Wildly Cakes, and many more!
You can shop the selection of books curated by Picture Book online here: https://bookshop.org/lists/hastings-pride
The list was pulled together with recommendations of The Rainbow Book List from the American Library Association, Stonewall Book Awards List and the assistance of:
MacKenzie Cadenhead, local author and book lover
Allee Manning, Youth Services Librarian of Hastings on Hudson Public Library
Brian Harris and Jen DiBonaventura Co-Organizers of Friday Night Pride
Tasslyn Magnusson, Program Consultant with Freedom to Read, PEN America
Three ways to help today
Donate to organizations like Florida Freedom to Read Project
Read Buy or order banned books from your library
Spread the Word tell friends and family about what's happening & start a banned book club
Learn more at https://pen.org/issue/book-bans/