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Bookshop Memories: Country Basket, Sidney, Montana

This little paperback exchange was already closed when I moved to Sidney, Montana, in 2010. I relocated there to become the executive director of the local arts and historical organization and museum. The family that owned the small bookshop were avid readers and also ran a busy insurance agency at 204 2nd Ave NE. I believe they opened the bookshop mainly to satisfy their own insatiable reading habits. During the early 2000s, with the Bakken oil boom, there wasn’t enough time or staff to manage both, so the little paperback exchange bookshop next to their insurance office closed sometime before 2010. I became acquainted with this family through the museum where I was the director, and they had been engaged in the community for many years, even serving on the board of directors. Eventually, after being a little pushy about my genuine interest and curiosity, I was invited to visit the bookshop, which one day they simply shut down, turning off the lights and closing the door—like a dream for book lovers, reminiscent of Tutankhamun’s tomb. 

“You mean, it’s still there?” I asked circa 2012.

“Of course.”

‘Of course?’ I asked myself. If it’s closed, then it’s closed. How could it still be there? In a part of the world where people shut the door and walk away from failures, decrepit old cabins, and sagging sod houses stand as proof, so I don’t know why I hadn’t thought a bookshop might be the same. Maybe because commercial space, like all other space in Sidney, had shot up in value in those years, it didn’t seem like anything was going unused and sitting idle. Including it among the failures of homesteads that went bust sounds harsh, but it may not be entirely wrong. Of course, a space like that can’t sit unused forever. Checking in recently, it looks to be a tattoo shop.

On the day we designated for my visit, I stopped by the family’s insurance office. The daughter grabbed a key and led me around the corner to a connected building. She turned the key and popped on the light, apologizing for the state of things. Yes, it had seen better days, but it wasn’t a wreck. I quickly noticed it had been a paperback exchange, which makes sense in a dusty northeastern Montana town that relies on booms and has not learned enough from the busts. A town whose recent history sounds more like something from Hollywood’s depiction of western America in the 19th century than real-life 21st-century life in America’s West. Those who loved to read, that I’d found so far, loved westerns, or romance novels, or mysteries, or spy novels, and that was about it.

Rows upon rows of shelves still filled with fading romance novels. Taking in as much as I could, I thought of one of my favorite writers, Ernest Haycox. This was probably prime hunting ground for books by the acclaimed, though now nearly forgotten, Western writer. I’d inhaled most of the Sacketts series by Louis L’Amour as a kid, and like someone who can’t stand the idea of eating a whole chocolate cake alone, I hadn’t read many Westerns since. But a friend and writing mentor from when I lived in Oklahoma City introduced me to Ernest Haycox’s work, and I pick up his books whenever I find them. This seemed like a good place to look. His books were fun and packed with action and adventure, but the detail and economy of words are a lesson for writers, even several decades after his heyday. Haycox cut his teeth writing for pulp magazines, so each one was a writer’s workshop.

Unexpectedly, between a section of Nurse Romance Novels and Step-Family Romance Novels, I stumbled into a section of non-fiction. After a cursory examination, I figured it was mostly castoffs from local returning college students in the 1980s and early ‘90s. Nothing was very appealing. Then, in a town that considered pizza “ethnic food,” I found a beautiful vintage copy of The Palm Wine Drinkard by Nigerian author Amos Tutuola. A short list of potential owners—people who might have actually read this book—flashed through my mind. I grabbed it, eager for a voice that didn’t speak in the local accent that pushed every vowel through the nose. I’d also recently finished Neil Gaiman’s American Gods for the first time and was eager to read something mythic and possibly a little abstract.

Still looking for any Westerns at all, I kept looking, confident that there must be some here somewhere. And then Haycox appeared. I don’t remember exactly which one; the titles can be unremarkable. I made my way around the piles on the floor, the toppled heaps in the cobwebby flickers of the last fluorescent tubes sputtering light into the cold space. I grabbed the new-to-me Haycox eagerly, flipping it open curious to see if any previous owner had left a mark. No one had, but I don’t know what I was expecting. This was the only book of his on the small shelf of Westerns, mostly Louis L’Amour, again, and Longarm novels, which I was never into. “Thanks!” I told the daughter. I showed her the two books.

She smiled, “That’ll be $1.50.”

 I found $3 and told her to keep the change. We laughed the whole time, bantering our way through our mutual embarrassment over not just loving what some would consider the lowest genre fiction, but old genre fiction. And for me, not only did I love it, I needed to dig it up. She finally understood what I had been talking about for the couple of years that she and her family knew me. I was a book addict. I’m not only a reader, but I also needed to hunt. I had to find my own treasures.

Some of the books I flipped through in my search had a large shop ink stamp inside. Maybe inside the front cover, or on the title page. My two books didn’t have the stamp, so I asked if she still had the stamp. She was a little bewildered but already indulgent, so she found it and stamped a sheet of paper with red ink. I confessed I had a collection of such things. Of course, I can’t find this stamp now, but if it ever turns up, I’ll be sure to add it to this article.

It’s places like that, at the edges of the world where books matter that can be the true lifelines for those who love books. These places will have surprises and treasures that the local library quit shelving decades earlier. A place where serendipity weighs heavily in the air, if only you blow a little dust off the books to find it.

About the Author: Benjamin L. Clark writes and works as a museum curator.

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From Panels to Presents: The Comics History Book Gift Guide

The 2025 edition of something I’ve tried writing before, but never seemed to finish before February, so … we’ll try again. As gift-giving season approaches, I’m starting to be pestered by my loved ones about my Christmas wishlist. As I put a few ideas together, my list is pretty much the same every year: books, books, books, and expensive woolly socks. There have been so many amazing books that have come out or come to my attention this year. Here are the ones I’d recommend to anyone, especially to people who enjoy comics history.

The Art of Popeye by R. C. Harvey

Another Popeye fan and a friend got this at San Diego Comic Con this summer, and I had to borrow it immediately. It’s filled with great art from the entire world of Popeye, not only the E. C. Segar strip but also classic animation and more. If you’re already a Popeye fan or at least a Popeye appreciator, you’ll enjoy this. I don’t know whether R. C. Harvey left more finished manuscripts, but this could well be one of the last books we’ll get from one of the great comics historians.

How Comics Are Made by Glenn Fleishman

I’ve praised this book many times, and I won’t be stopping anytime soon. Yes, I was interviewed for it, and facilitated a couple of small bits of this massive and enlightening puzzle. It’s a monumental work. This time, I don’t mean the book’s overall size, but the place it holds in our understanding of comics history. The invention of newspaper comics, and how they were actually created and put into readers’ hands, is an extremely understudied element of the story, and one that is already hard to nail down with the passing of the people involved and the binning of the technology used. Glenn was perfectly positioned not only to make sense of it but also to gather these disparate elements to tell the story. There’s more work to do, but anyone who works on this subject in the future will owe a debt of gratitude to Glenn Fleishman.

Mafalda by Quino, translated by Frank Wynne

A fresh English translation of this Argentinian kid strip classic. Often compared to Schulz’s Peanuts, I think it shares stronger DNA with Ernie Bushmiller’s Nancy, but that’s me. Yes, it’s very political, but seeing the questions and observations of another place and time mirror so much of our own is a comfort, granting a nod of comforting recognition. If Mafalda can weather the storm, so can I. From what I understand, this is going to be the first of a multivolume series, so start collecting them now, or you’ll have to hunt them all down later.

History of Manga by Eike Exener

Eike Exener’s previous book, Comics and the Origins of Manga: A Revisionist History, was excellent and mind-opening for me. If you’re interested in the world of comics, its global reach and evolution, and want a de-mystified understanding of manga in particular and how this rich branch of the comics family tree fits into the larger picture, get this book. I have a lot to learn about manga in general, and Exener’s books have been enlightening, making me finally feel like I’m on the right track.

Moomin Comic Strip Collections

The Moomin comic strip collections are not new, nor did they just come to my attention this year, but I must evangelize for this hilarious and wonderfully drawn strip every chance I get. More people need to know about it, especially American comic strip fans. Tove Jansson’s Moominvalley is a place I love to visit, where ridiculous adventures launch on preposterous whims, outlandish weirdos pop in and out of the story with even more frequency than real life. With the help of her brother Lars, she created a comic strip that should be more widely known. The Complete Moomin Comic Strip collections by Drawn & Quarterly are my preferred method to collect and read this strip (in ten volumes), but there are smaller paperback collections of single storylines that have been colored and are perfect for younger readers or anyone just wanting to give it a little try. For the holidays, let me recommend Moomin Winter, for when you just need a moment away from the crowd.

The Smythes by Rea Irvin

A book that is on my own Christmas wishlist! It comes out on December 9, and I’ve not seen it yet, but from what I’ve seen of The Smythes by Rea Irvin, it looks like a ton of fun and incredibly beautiful. I’ve always been an easy touch for anything related to the early days of the New Yorker magazine. I’ve read multiple biographies and memoirs of the early writers and editors there, including some of my all-time favorites like E. B. White and James Thurber. Rea Irvin is perhaps most famous as the creator of the New Yorker’s monocle-wearing classic logo/mascot/colophon character, Eustice Tilley.

Society is Nix by Peter Maresca

This new edition has some new content from the long out-of-print earlier edition of this monumental tome. And, I don’t use the term monumental lightly. This is not only a fascinating work of comics history, it is also lovingly and gorgeously reproduces pioneering comics pages in absolutely massive reprints. The book is nearly the size of a modern newspaper sheet, so it’s still a bit smaller than these gorgeous comics were originally printed, but far larger than we typically get. Here we also have strips we never get to see by artists who would define comics as we know them today, but who did so before anything in comics was truly codified. “Gleeful anarchy,” indeed. Wild formatting, shocking color, and action that cartoonists today cannot seem to imagine.

Tell Me A Story Where the Bad Girl Wins: The Life and Art of Barbara Shermund by Caitlin McGurk

Easily the greatest title of any book, maybe ever. Another book from the past year or so, from the early days of the New Yorker, but also incredibly charming, fun, sassy humor, and gorgeous drawings. I’m a huge fan of this book, and now of Barbara Shermund. This book has easily been the most passed-around book in my circle of comic nerds and professionals this year. This book won the Eisner Award for Best Comics-Related Book this year.

The Art of Nothing: 25 Years of Mutts by Patrick McDonnell

This book has been out for a few years now, but in case you haven’t seen it, it includes Patrick’s gorgeous drawings and all the fun and humor of one of the greatest comic strips currently running, Mutts. So far, it’s the closest thing we’ve got to an artist edition of Mutts. And how many books have contributions from both Eckhart Tolle and Lynda Barry? I imagine that’s a short list.

The Poet, Volume Two: 2021, by Todd Webb

If you love Mutts by Patrick McDonnell (who wrote a foreword for this volume), Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz, the work of Mo Willems, and thought “This could use a dash of Gary Larson’s Far Side,” well, look no further. This daily strip, which Webb publishes online, has (thankfully) come out in a second annual compendium. He’s published his comic in little affordable collections, too, but these are great for passing around to friends who’ll enjoy it. These big annual collections (there’s a Volume One, as well) are fabulous, and I keep them for myself.

The Essential Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz: The Greatest Comic Strip of All Time by Mark Evanier

2025 marks the 75th anniversary for Peanuts. Yes, this book includes an essay by me, and I was on the committee that picked (and argued over) which strips to include in this very special book. This includes history, personal reflections, and so much more. It’s a very special collection. This special edition also includes a collection of stickers, mini posters, a patch, and more, all designed by Chip Kidd!

I’m sure there are books I’ve accidentally overlooked, but for now, this is a pretty good lineup. I’d be thrilled to receive any one of these books as a gift, so I imagine the comics history nerd in your life will too (if they don’t already have it). If you’re the comic nerd, forward this to your friends and family with a note about favorites. All of the affiliate links in this post support local, independent bookshops.

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About the Author: Benjamin L. Clark writes and works as a museum curator.