alt

"Life being very short, and the quiet hours few,

we ought to waste none of them in reading valueless books."

—John Ruskin

alt


"The world is a book, and those who do not travel, read only a page."

—St. Augustine

 
 
alt

"For books are more than books, they are the life,

the very heart and core of ages past.

The reason why men lived, and worked, and died,

the essence and quintessence of their lives."

—Amy Lowell

 
alt


"A good book is the precious lifeblood of a master spirit,

embalmed and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life."

—John Milton

alt


"All that mankind has done, thought, gained or been:

it is lying as in magic preservation in the pages of books."

—Thomas Carlyle

alt

"In the best books, great men talk to us,
give us their most precious thoughts, and pour their souls into ours.
God be thanked for books.
They are the voices of the distant and the dead,
and make us heirs of the spiritual life of past ages.
Books are true levelers. They give to all, who will faithfully use them,
the society, the spiritual presence of the best and greatest."

—William Ellery Channing

alt

"We all know that books burn—yet we have
the greater knowledge that books cannot be killed by fire.
People die, but books never die.
No man and no force can abolish memory. . . .
In this war, we know, books are weapons."

—Franklin Delano Roosevelt
alt



"A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us."

—Franz Kafka



"Every creature is full of God and is a book about God."

—Meister Eckhardt



 
alt

"A book, too, can be a star,

a living fire to lighten the darkness,

leading out into the expanding universe."

—Madeleine L'Engle
alt


"A truly good book teaches me better than to read it.

I must soon lay it down, and commence living on its hint. . . .

What I began by reading, I must finish by acting."

—Henry David Thoreau

alt

"The love of learning,

the sequestered nooks,

And all the sweet serenity of books."

—Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

alt
"A truly great book should be read in youth,

again in maturity and once more in old age,

as a fine binding should be seen by morning light,

at noon and by moonlight."

—Robertson Davies


alt

"The theory of books is noble.
The scholar of the first age
received into him the world around; brooded thereon;
gave it the new arrangement of his own mind,
and uttered it again. It came into him, life;
it went out from him, truth."

—Ralph Waldo Emerson

alt


"Books—the best antidote against the marsh-gas

of boredom and vacuity."

—George Steiner

alt

"The failure to read good books both enfeebles

the vision and stengthens our most fatal tendency—

the belief that the here and now is all there is."

—Allan Bloom

alt

"All good books have one thing in common—

they are truer than if they had really happened."

—Ernest Hemingway
alt

"Each friendship and love is the ultimate journey
where the soul is born and grows. The journey
is the drama of the heart's voyage into the tide
of possibilities which open before it. Indeed,
a book is a path of words which takes the heart
in new directions."

—John O' Donohue
alt

"In that abyss, I beheld how love held bound
Into one volume all the leaves whose flight
Is scattered through the universe around . . .
For everything the will has ever sought
Is gathered there, and there is every quest
Made perfect, which apart from it falls short."

—Dante
alt


"No man can be called friendless

who has God and the companionship of good books."

—Elizabeth Barrett Browning

alt


"Books are the flowers or fruit stuck here or there on a tree
which has its roots deep down in the earth of our earliest life,
of our first experiences. But . . . to tell the reader anything
that his own imagination and insight have not already discovered
would need not a page or two of preface but a volume or two of autobiography."

—Virginia Woolf

alt


"Books are but waste paper unless we spend in action
the wisdom we get from thought—asleep. When we are weary
of the living, we may repair to the dead, who have nothing
of peevishness, pride, or design in their conversation."

—W. B. Yeats

Upcoming Titles


Love and Ice: The Tragic Obsessions of Dr. Elisha Kent Kane, Arctic Explorer
by Ray Edinger

A tale of romance, adventure, and tragedy, this is the story of the famed explorer who was among the first Americans to search for the missing Sir John Franklin expedition of 1845. And while he searched the Arctic for Franklin, Kane not only discovered the Humboldt Glacier, but also mapped the little-known Smith Sound that Robert E. Peary followed fifty years later on his quest for the North Pole.   
See more . . .


Charlotte Dogs
Edited by Scamper McGowan

More than a hundred "tales" about the illustrious dogs of Charlotte, North Carolina. Each story is told from the perspective of the dog or written by a member of the dog's "pack" and is accompanied by a photo of the featured dog.
See more . . .


Kamallah's Bracelet
by Derek Smith

Earnest, naive, and shy with women, the Reverend Denson Roswell is the newly appointed pastor of the Mt. Absalom Baptist Church in the south Georgia town of Levidgville during the early 1960's. Instead of being a preacher who stirs his flock with sermons laced with hellfire and damnation, he becomes deeply embroiled himself with a temptress who answers his personals ad in an Atlanta newspaper.
See more . . .



Andrew Low and the Sign of the Buck:
Trade, Triumph, Tragedy at the House of Low
by Jennifer Guthrie Ryan and Hugh Stiles Golson

This biography spans two centuries of the intertwined families of the House of Low. Commencing with the Jacobite rebellions for the throne of feudal Scotland, this is a peek into the a family's history up until the unhappy marriage of Juliette Gordon Low, the founder of the Girl Scouts movement in Savannah.
See more . . .



William James on Habit, Will, Truth, and the Meaning of Life
Edited and with an Introduction by James Sloan Allen

The radical modern philosopher and father of American psychology, William James found habit and will to be the secret of a good life. He elaborated this discovery into a philosophy of life that runs through his many scintillating writings, ranging from psychology and religion to pragmatism and war. Always he urged people to cultivate habits of mind—especially the habits of will, including the power to break bad habits."
See more . . .


Tom Coffey's Savannah
by Tom Coffey

As the author writes: "Every community has its stories, some of them told and written down, many of them told but never recorded. This work is a combination of both; roll them together and call this Savannah folklore." Inveterate Savannahians and those who want to know more about this mystical place will want to read this work by an author who knows and loves his hometown.
See more . . .