Tanya Reads Three Wishes

I first discovered Liane Moriarty when I was on holiday, browsing a local bookshop. I’d already finished reading the books I’d brought with me, so I had to buy something new, naturally. I bought a copy of her first book, Three Wishes. The book opens at a birthday dinner between three triplets, Cat, Lyn and Gemma, that devolves into a violent argument and a mad dash to the hospital after one of them sticks a fork into another’s pregnant belly. We spend the rest of the book learning why and how these events came about. I spent the rest of the day finishing that book and rushing back to the bookstore to buy more of Moriarty’s books – I must have bought another three or four of them – and I promptly read all of them over the next few days of my holiday. Moriarty writes intriguing stories that are so easy to read and her characters are loveable, believable and quirky. I don’t think I’ve ever discovered an author where I can say, without a doubt, I love all their books equally. Her books are perfect for holiday reading, so when you’re next packing for a trip away, don’t forget to pack some Moriarty.

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Tanya Reads The Woman in the Window

Sometimes, when I’m meant to be putting books away in the shop, I’ll do that thing considered so scandalous – I’ll judge a book by its cover and start reading it. One day, I picked up The Woman in the Window by A. J. Finn. I have to say, whoever coined that phrase got it wrong. I think you can quite often judge a book by its cover – that’s why authors employ the best designers to create their book covers. This book captured my interest in the first few pages. It’s dark, suspenseful, compelling writing full of unexpected twists, and it’s a bit of a thriller. It’s another of those books that are so easy to fall into, and I read the whole thing within one day. Every few pages I was convinced I had worked out the next twist in the story, and every time I was surprised by the outcome. If you love books like Gone Girl, Apple Tree Yard, The Girl on the Train and Before I Go to Sleep, you’ll love The Woman in the Window. Consider these all essential reading for fans of suspense and thrillers.

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Tanya Reads Running With Scissors

I know I say this a lot, but ‘Running With Scissors’ by Augusten Burroughs is one of my all-time favourite books! He’s another of those authors where I love everything he has ever written (especially also ‘Magical Thinking’ and ‘This is How’). ‘Running With Scissors’ is the second book Burroughs published and it is a memoir that explores his childhood from about the age of 12. The thing about this memoir is that it’s the most outrageous, incredible, hilarious true story – so much so that it seems completely unbelievable. But that’s what makes it so good! Essentially, the story is about how at 12 years old, Augusten’s mother sent him to live with the family of her psychiatrist, Dr. Finch, who then acquired legal guardianship of Augusten … and also, Dr. Finch believes that children become adults at the age of 13, so there are no rules imposed and the children run wild in the Finch household, doing whatever they want. That alone should be enough to entice you to pick up this book if you ever see it!

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Stuck for What to Read During Lockdown? This Second-Hand Bookshop Uses Magic (and a Questionnaire) to Send Bang-On Personalised Book Bundles

If you tell bookseller Tanya Kurukulasuriya whether you’re a dog or cat person and if you love or hate olives, then describe your personality with a few adjectives, she’ll choose five books informed by your responses, wrap them in brown paper and post them to you. You don’t find out what the titles are until they arrive in your letterbox, but the mystery is part of the fun.

Kurukulasuriya and her dad Gerard own The Bookplate, a second-hand bookshop in Hornsby, and the book bundles are just one of the ways they’re trying to keep the business afloat as coronavirus locks down the country and the economy.

The pair bought the bookshop 11 years ago, so Kurukulasuriya has had a lot of experience matching customers with books from the store’s 35,000 titles.

“Choosing books for people is my favourite thing. I’ve been doing it for years,” she tells Broadsheet. “Someone will come in and we’ll spend 10 minutes going through what they like. It’s easy to get a sense of them as a person when they’re in front of me.”

These days she evaluates customers via an online questionnaire, but her knack for picking books translates to the digital world surprisingly well. “The way I choose the books is part intuition, part secret, part magic and partly just because I know a lot about books. I’m a giant nerd,” she says.

The Bookplate questionnaire is a simple Google form that asks customers a series of questions: their three favourite titles; whether they consider their glass half full or half empty; and whether they prefer books that are optimistic or bleak, predictable or unpredictable (plus a few other descriptors); and more. There are also bonus questions about wine for anyone who wants a surprise bottle from Orange winery Nashdale Lane to enjoy with their new reads. “What’s better than books? Books and wine,” Kurukulasuriya says.

I filled out the questionnaire, and although I read a lot, not one of the five titles Kurukulasuriya selected for me – including Kate Atkinson’s modern classic A God in Ruins and Hannah Kent’s award-winning Burial Rites – was one I’d read before. She even sent a book I’ve long wanted to read. Whatever her magic is, it clearly works.

If you live locally and still prefer to buy your books in person, The Bookplate has launched other initiatives to help customers follow social distancing guidelines. For example, there are boxes filled with books (marked $10, $5 and $2) for sale outside the shop – just pop your cash into the moneybox (it’s an honour system) and take your tomes home.

“We also did a free box. Now is the time that we need to escape into a good book,” says Kurukulasuriya. “I want to be there for those who need a book but are aren’t able to pay.”

The book bundle offer is working well – so far she’s received 300 orders.

“You don’t make a lot of money selling second-hand books, but we’re trying to stick around for as long as we can. As long as we’re making enough to cover rent and basics, we’ll be here.”

The Bookplate’s book bundles are $50 each, for five to seven books. Fill out the questionnaire here to begin your order.

facebook.com/thebookplate

 

– by Pilar Mitchell, Broadsheet Sydney, Tuesday April 14th, 2020 –

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Pick up a book bundle based on your personality from this Hornsby bookstore

If, like the majority of Australians at present, you’ve found yourself with an abundance of free time on your hands, you might be pondering which books to read while you wait out the Covid-19 pandemic. And yet, with such a dizzying number of page-turners to choose from, narrowing down your reading list can be a daunting challenge.

This is a struggle the folks at quirky secondhand store the Bookplate in Hornsby know all too well. So, to help you find the novels you never knew you needed, staff have cooked up an innovative solution: a personality test. Answer just six simple questions – nothing too personal, more self-reflective than overly invasive – and you’ll be matched with a bundle of five to seven pre-loved books that precisely meet your individual interests, all for just $50. Staff will even deliver your haul directly to your door, for free, anywhere in Australia.

Your perfectly matched reads will be hand-selected by the Bookplate’s owner, Tanya Kurukulasuriya, who has been running this stalwart store on Peats Ferry Road with her father, Gerard, for more than 15 years. And these won’t be just any old paperbacks you end up with. The store boasts a stock of secondhand books, 35,000 strong, so you’re more than likely to end up with a rare treasure that you just won’t find in the average book shop.

However, should you wish to be a little more hands-on with your next book purchase, the Bookplate is also offering a ‘Pay & Go’ service, perfect for these physically distanced times in which we live. Simply find a book from the selection displayed outside – individual books are priced between $2 and $5, or you can opt for a pre-packed book box for $10 – and leave your money at the window provided, so you don’t need to interact with another person directly.

The Bookplate will also be giving away free books – still perfect for reading, but a little too worn for resale – during the Covid-19 crisis, so no matter what your financial circumstance may be, you can get your hands on a good read.

– by Maxim Boon, Time Out Sydney, Wednesday March 25th, 2020 –

 

 

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Turning over a new leaf: A bookshop owner wants to turn her words into charity

Thank you to the Monthly Chronicle for helping us by featuring this appeal. 👍🏽❤️

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Tanya Reads #GIRLBOSS

I was drawn to this book partly because of the title – hey, I’m a girl boss! – and partly because I’d heard about the author, Sophia Amoruso, and about how she was the founder and CEO of the fashion business, Nasty Gal. This book was an absolute rollercoaster of a read. Amoruso seems to have lived a million lifestyles; dropping out of high school, working various odd jobs such as at Subway, in a bookstore and a record shop, a stint of dumpster-diving and shoplifting – before opening an online eBay store, which became the springboard for Nasty Gal. While I’m inclined to prefer to see myself as ‘boss’ as opposed to ‘girl boss’, I can’t fault Amoruso for her fascinating and unique business acumen – one that was not gained in the traditional way of school, college or university.

As she so aptly puts it; “Success is about trusting your instincts and following your gut, knowing which rules to follow and which to break.”

 

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Tanya Reads Kiss Kiss

Today I’d like to introduce you to a book by an author I’m sure you all know; Roald Dahl. You’ll probably be well aware of his children’s books, but what you may not know is that he also writes books for adults. Roald Dahl’s adult books are all a little dark, sinister or macabre. We see a little bit of Dahl’s twisted side in his children’s books – Miss Trunchbull forcing a child to eat a giant chocolate cake in front of the whole school in ‘Matilda’, the children turned into mice in ‘The Witches’ and Violet expanding into a giant blueberry after chewing gum against Willy Wonka’s instructions in ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’. ‘Kiss Kiss’ by Roald Dahl is a collection of short stories showcasing Dahl’s most macabre stories. There’s ‘The Landlady’, patiently waiting for her next guest at her charming bed and breakfast, there’s ‘Royal Jelly’, the strange tale of just how useful this bee’s product can be, and there’s ‘Pig’ – I’ll let you discover just what ‘Pig’ is.

My favourite story from this collection is based on a true historical event – ‘Genesis and Catastrophe’. What’s yours?

 

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Tanya reads The Art of Happiness

I’ve never been one to have an all-time favourite book – especially considering I own an entire bookshop; there’s just too many to choose from – but The Art of Happiness comes really close. It’s one of those books where you can flip through to any page and find some beautiful pearls of wisdom to guide you on this journey through life. The book takes the form of a series of questions and answers, posed by renowned psychiatrist Howard C. Cutler to the Dalai Lama. Through this combined wisdom of psychology and spirituality, we learn about the true purpose of our life – to seek happiness – and that this happiness is determined more by our state of mind than by anything external. The messages conveyed are powerful and uplifting, and I could read this book over and over again. I’ll leave you with one of my favourite quotes from the book – and a life lesson to live by.

“If you want others to be happy, practise compassion. If you want to be happy, practise compassion.”

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Local editor dispels myth about self-published authors

Article featured in the Monthly Chronicle

Somehow, Tanya Natalie and her father have crammed 35,000 books into their store, The Bookplate, to sell.

It’s a number competing with the amount of books in Dymocks in Sydney, which was reviewed as the largest bookstore in Australia.

While managing a weekly newsletter, the other 15,000 books that are “in storage”, and a catalogue of all the books in the shop, Tanya astonishingly also runs a freelance editing business and has been mentoring authors since 2004.

“There are many myths about self-publishing that I disagree with,” she said.

“I want local authors to embrace that even if they’re not published with a big brand, they have still produced a work of art, which is something to be incredibly proud of.’’

“I’m in awe of the works I’ve been lucky enough to edit by local and global writers, there is serious talent out there.”

Tanya is currently in the middle of editing a local writer’s romance novel and said the emotional vulnerability a writer exposes when they share their work with her is admirable.

“Writing is very personal, and when self-publishing, a writer has an element of control over their work, which they may not be afforded as much by traditional publishing houses.”

Iconic self-published novels include The Tale of Peter Rabbit, Eragon, The Martian, and Ulysses.

The Bookplate opens every day from 11am, closing at 6pm (5pm on weekends) and several reading chairs are available for bookworms to take their time when choosing a book to buy.

For more information visit https://tanyanatalie.com.au/.

Tanya has a Bachelor’s Degree in English Literature from the University of Sydney and a Diploma of Book Editing & Publishing from Macleay College.

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