Monthly Archives: April 2026

Books & Coffee

So then, the last Saturday of April is known as Independent Bookstore Day, and now that we’ve got a brick & mortar shop that fancies itself a bit of an independent bookstore, it’s a day that’s taken on some significance for us. Last year we celebrated for the first time with a weekend event that ran Saturday and Sunday. This year, we’ve added Friday evening, as well. And that’s tonight. If you’re local to Lake Worth, please come join us this weekend for our Independent Bookstore Days celebration! We’ll be open tonight, Friday April 24, from 6 to 9 PM, and then Saturday & Sunday, April 25 & 26, from 11 AM to 4 PM each day. We’ll be operating our 1950s Nolan Proof Press (you’ll be printing the cover for a book on that press), and then we’ll teach you how to make your own single signature pamphlet book using that letterpress-printed cover. We’ll be writing a Community Exquisite Corpse story (the old literary game invented by the Surrealists in which you write two sentences based solely on the previous two sentences that were written). We’d love for you to write two sentences of your own. And we’ll be serving my sister’s homemade cookies (three kinds, I think) and our newest coffee arrival at the shop: Horn & Hardart Automat Coffee, roasted in small batches in Philadelphia. The printing, the book, the story, and the coffee and cookies: these are all free and on the house. Books and coffee, after all, go together like peas in a pod. We’re also open, of course, for wonderfully eclectic shopping… including an awful lot of wonderful books.

Let’s go back to that Automat Coffee. Do you know the Horn & Hardart Automat? I think it was 1972 when Thelma DeMarco, an old friend of the family, brought me to Madison Square Garden in New York City to see a matinee performance of “The Ice Capades”. It was just the two of us. And when the show was over, Thelma took me to the Automat for dinner. Granted, I was just a little boy, but I’d never seen anything like it, and I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything like it since. All the food was on display in little windows, and Thelma put coins in the slot to open the little glass door for each thing we ate. I’m quite certain I had pie.

Mom remembers the Automat, too, from her working days at an umbrella factory in New York City. The Automat was a great place for a quick delicious meal. The first Horn & Hardart Automat opened in Philadelphia in 1902 at 818 Chestnut Street, and in 1912, Horn & Hardart opened their first New York location on Times Square. At their peak in the 1930s to 1950s, there were more than one hundred Automats throughout New York and Philadelphia… including the one where Mom ate when she worked at the umbrella factory in the 1940s, and the one where I ate after The Ice Capades show in 1972.

The coffee at the Automat was served out of a dolphin-shaped dispenser in the wall. The coffee was good then, and it’s good now, too. We’re really excited to offer it in our shop now. We’ll gladly ship it to you, too! And if you don’t have a local independent bookstore near you… we will also gladly ship books to you. CLICK HERE to shop, and a million thank yous.

John & Seth

 

 

April Showers, or Your Convivio Book of Days for April

For your printable Convivio Book of Days calendar for April, we are tuning into the old adage: April showers bring May flowers. Here in Lake Worth, the flowers are blooming already (Amaryllis on the ground, and when we look up, the sky right now is crazy yellow with the blooms of Tabebuia argentea). Spring is most definitely with us. We realize, though, this welcome season takes longer to reach other places. If you’ve seen little evidence of it yet, worry not, it will soon arrive.

If you’re reading this in the morning, beware, for it is All Fools’ Day, when tricks and practical jokes abound until noon. You may, of course, be one of the tricksters, in which case we wish you good luck and healthy fooling. I’ve initiated some good April Fools’ tricks in my day, but this year I am feeling rather dim-witted and so I am sticking to the defensive role, remaining on lookout all morning, with the goal being to avoid becoming un poisson d’Avril, as they say in France, or il pesce d’Aprile, as they say in Italy. Both would translate to An April Fish, the fish being the fool, and very often the unsuspecting fool might find a paper fish stuck to the back of his shirt. Why a fish? I don’t know. I’m going to leave it at that.

The setting sun this evening will bring the beginning of Passover, or Pesach, commemorating the freeing of the Israelites from their slavery in Egypt, and is celebrated with a meal, the seder. A friend explains it thusly: “We are traveling through the desert with our ancestors via a table filled with metaphor and symbolism.” Unleavened bread is a central part of the celebration, for the Israelites had to leave Egypt so quickly there was no time to let the bread rise. Instead, it had to be baked immediately.

The Italians call Passover Pasqua Ebraica, which you might translate as “Jewish Easter,” but in fact in many languages the names of both Easter and Passover are the same. Pesach informs the name given to Easter in Italian: Pasqua. The English word “Easter” does not share this etymological relation to Pesach. It is related more to the the Old English “Eostre,” which is the name of an Anglo-Saxon goddess whose feast day was celebrated around the Spring Equinox.

Among the questions asked at the seder table is this one: Why is this night different from all other nights? And just as I cannot tell you why when it comes to the poisson d’avril, I also cannot tell you why this night is different from all other nights. I’ve never attended a seder. But I will join all who are in spirit tonight and wish you abundant blessings.

In my Christian tradition, it is Spy Wednesday today, which has to do with Judas Iscariot, one of Jesus’ disciples, betraying him and setting the course for the rest of Holy Week. Tomorrow night, on Holy Thursday, we will make our pilgrimage to three churches, deep in the night, moon illuminating the skies above us, for the Night Watch. It is not necessary an easy night, and yet it is one of the most beautiful each year, one of the most special. And so our April will begin. A most eventful few days.

OPEN SHOP DAY!
We’re planning to open the shop this Saturday from 11 to 4, for your last chance to pick up Easter goods like traditional wooden bunnies from Germany’s Erzgebirge woodworkers, beautiful pysanky eggs from Ukraine, German splintwood baskets and wood wool Easter grass (none of the plastic stuff!), German papier mache eggs to fill with treats, and as far as the sweets in your basket, how about sweet and sour Swedish candies, licorice (some chocolate covered) and fruitful gummies from Denmark, and marzipan piglets from Germany? CLICK HERE to shop, and come on by this Saturday, please!

And please make plans to join us later this month for our annual celebration of Independent Bookstore Day on Saturday, April 25. We’ll be making a full weekend of it, opening the shop on Friday night, the 24th, plus Saturday and Sunday the 25th and 26th. We’ll have some appropriate treats, no doubt, plus a free and simple letterpress and bookbinding project for all who come.

Image: “April Showers, Napa Valley” by Jules Tavernier. Oil on canvas, circa 1880-1884 [Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons].