Low Sensory Sundays

We are often told - and we love to hear! - how beautiful visitors find the shop. There’s a lot to enjoy - the lofty ceilings, the bright airy feel, the laughter and conversations, variations of musical adventures (depending on who is in charge of the playlist), and, of course, all the lovely books.

That said, sometimes our favorite moments in the shop are when we’re alone, when the lights are minimal, everything is quiet, and we don't have to talk to anyone. So we would like to extend that experience to all of you - whether you have sensory needs, preferences, or just want a softer space to enjoy. We are designating the first hour of the last Sunday of every month to this goal, and we’re calling it Low Sensory Sundays. The lights will be low. The music will be off. Chatter will be as minimal as possible. We won't come to you, you can come to us if you need assistance. We ask that customers also meet these goals to the best of their ability. Disability Awareness Month seems the perfect time to kick this off.

We look forward to gently enjoying the morning with you this Sunday! 

Resisting Amazon: Lydia Davis

In her new book, Our Strangers, Lydia Davis delivers another delicious collection of exquisite short fiction. One of the most renowned and accomplished writers presently working, her stories are deft, inventive, and endlessly artful - ranging in topics from tiny insects to marriage. The book comes out in October, and we can’t wait.

But here’s the interesting thing about this lovely book. Like so many of us, Lydia Davis has beaming increasingly appalled by the business practices of (as we call it in the shop) the Evil River. She writes: Many years ago, my eyes were opened to Amazon's unsavory business practices--its poor treatment of employees, its stranglehold on competition, its destruction of small businesses, its violation of the very notion of community. I have not bought books or anything else through Amazon since then. So it seemed completely unreasonable that I was still allowing them to sell my own books, and I vowed that with my next one I would end that.

To which we say: Amen.

Of course, things were not as simple as they might sound. Lydia’s agent tried to place the book with conventional publishers, but they were all unwilling or unable to promise it would not be sold on Amazon, due to the logistics of book distribution systems and Amazon’s retaliatory nature. (For more on the terribleness of Amazon, we recommend Danny Caine’s brilliant How To Resist Amazon and Why.)

Nevertheless, she persisted. Lydia found a willing partner in bookshop.org, who have committed to publishing the book and to making sure that Amazon gets no share of any profits arising from its sales. The book will be available exclusively through independent bookstores, libraries, and bookshop.org.

All of which seemed worth celebrating. So please consider pre-ordering a copy of Our Strangers from us, or any other independent bookshop. We’ll give the last word to Lydia: I am delighted that ... Our Strangers will be able to avoid the grasp of the marketplace bully and sell my book in the time-honored way--through independent bookstores that value community and engage in a humane, respectful conversation with readers.

1964: EYES OF THE STORM - VERY SPECIAL EDITION SIGNED BY PAUL McCARTNEY!!

A while back we may have mentioned that we were in possession of one of the extremely limited special edition of Paul McCartney’s beautiful book of photography, 1964: Eyes of the Storm. Only 175 of these babies were printed, and each one is individually numbered and signed by the great man.

It is kind of a big deal.

After the interest that was generated when we sold our signed copy of McCartney’s Lyrics last year, we realized that we had an opportunity to raise some money for a good cause this time around. So if you would like to get your hands on this (literally) unique collector’s item, here is what are proposing.

We are going to hold an online auction for this item. What does that mean? It means people will be able to email us their bids any time up until 9:00 p.m. CST on Monday, July 24. The highest bid at that time will. (More details below.) Here’s the thing, though. Once we have cleared what we need to pay for the original book and cover our expenses, we will apply every single dollar over and above that amount to purchase books for the library that our friends at the Center Project are building for the LGBTQIA+ community that they serve with such dedication and passion.

We want to make this as fair and as transparent as possible, so here are the rules:

  1. All bids must be made by email to mail@skylarkbookshop.com. Bids submitted any other way will NOT be considered or accepted.

  2. We will do our best to keep the website updated here with the highest current bid - at least daily, hopefully more frequently. But, you know, we’re busy people, so you may have to be patient with us.

  3. On which subject: PLEASE DO NOT CALL THE SHOP.

  4. You can make as many bids as you like.

  5. Bidding will end at 9:00 p.m. CST on Monday, July 24. ON THE DOT.

  6. Missouri sales tax will be payable if the auction winner is a Missouri resident.

  7. The winning bid will not include shipping. We will contact the winner and agree the best way of shipping the book at that point - there will be an additional charge for this.

  8. Good luck!

Waldo is back!

We are excited to welcome Waldo back to Columbia for a second year!

Waldo is visiting to help us run our Find Waldo Local event this July! In fact, 25 Waldos will be hiding in local businesses in Columbia. The question for you is, can you find them all?

Skylark Bookshop is your Find Waldo Headquarters all July, so drop by and pick up a passport from us (they are also present at other participating locations) or print your own here! Participating businesses can be identified by a SHOP LOCAL, FIND WALDO HERE Decal on business doors/windows, and are also listed with addresses in the passport.

And Waldo didn’t just bring himself to Columbia . . . He brought gifts! The first 125 people to find at least 10 Waldos can claim a temporary tattoo and a $1 off coupon good for Waldo titles at Skylark Bookshop.

We are also hosting a party for Waldo at 6:30 on Thursday, August 3rd. If you turn in a passport with 20 stamps/signatures at the party, you will be entered into a prize drawing including Waldo goodies and some spectacular treasures from several of the participating businesses. If you find all 25 and are able to find his missing glasses so he can set up the big party, you will receive an extra goodie at the party to celebrate your extraordinary sleuthing skills.

All are welcome to participate in this event - adults, kids, and everyone in between. Spend a fun filled day of adventure, or spread the search through the whole month while you visit Waldo at these fantastic local businesses.  Done with summer reading and looking for some fun? This might be what you’re looking for! Just want to get out and about? You are welcome to join us! 

The hunt for Waldo is on!

Beth introduces an Indies Introduce Pick!

This year Beth was invited to join an exclusive panel of independent booksellers who are tasked with selecting the very best debut books of the year - these titles become part of the American Booksellers Association Indies Introduce campaign. It involves a huge amount of reading and discussion - and the panelists each get to interview one of the winners. Here Beth talks to novelist John Milas about The Militia House, which will be published by Henry Holt in July.

John Milas is the author of The Militia House, a Summer/Fall 2023 Indies Introduce selection.

Milas enlisted in the US Marine Corps at age 19 and subsequently deployed to the Helmand Province of Afghanistan in support of OEF 10.1. He was honorably discharged from active service in 2012. After his discharge, he earned both his BA and MFA in creative writing. As a student, he studied with writers such as Marianne Boruch, Roxane Gay, Brian Leung, Robert Lopez, Terese Marie Mailhot, Julie Price Pinkerton, Donald Platt, Sharon Solwitz, and others.

He enjoys engaging with his local literary community by attending readings, hosting workshops at his hometown library, and judging creative writing contests, which he has done since 2015. He has also read submissions for literary magazines such as Sycamore Review and Ninth Letter and has completed various freelance assignments as a journalist and editor. He grew up in Illinois, where he currently reads, writes, and watches baseball.

Beth Shapiro of Skylark Bookshop in Columbia, Missouri, served on the panel that selected Milas’ debut for Indies Introduce. Of the experience, Shapiro said, “Let me put it out there: I don’t typically read war or horror books. But what Afghanistan veteran John Milas has accomplished by combining the two genres is chilling, enlightening, and so very sad. An amazing insight into the deployment experience as well as PTSD that has stuck with me.”

Here, Milas and Shapiro discuss the making of The Militia House.

Beth Shapiro: To be honest, I'm not a reader of either military or horror writing, but this book grabbed me so completely.  What factors do you believe make your book special in that it possesses this wider appeal?

John Milas: In Afghanistan, I felt that both internal and external reality were being redefined daily not in a wholly dissimilar way to the set of expectations — or lack thereof — established chapter-by-chapter in a gothic horror novel. Maybe in getting to the root of this parallel there’s something appealing to readers who would normally not exclusively read a haunted house book or a book about war. It’s like mixing individual ingredients in a recipe to create a singular, unique flavor. Additionally, I wanted the voice of the book to feel plain-spoken and accessible beyond the jargon, as if a common person was talking to the reader. I hope that helps the reader feel invited.

BS: You were deployed to Afghanistan in 2010. How much of Loyette's story derives from your personal and direct experience there? More broadly, how does the story reflect the US presence in Afghanistan and its pull-out?

JM: In terms of my experience, I was not yet a corporal when I deployed, so the narrator’s subject position is largely fictional. I was in the position of characters like Blount or Vargas. My peers and I often didn’t know what was going on in a detailed sense, but many of the details in The Militia House, such as the setting and the mission at hand, are inspired by what I saw at the time rather than research I’ve done since. More specifically, the FOB [Forward Operating Base] where the story takes place and the Militia House itself are both real. We went inside as they do in the book, but in real life nothing strange happened. If my book reflects on the US presence and abrupt exit from Afghanistan in a broad sense, it’s really holding a magnifying glass up to an earlier point in the domino rally. My book does not directly explain the chaos that unfolded in Kabul in 2021, but it’s not completely unrelated to the big picture.

BS: Without revealing any spoilers, I found the ending of The Militia House incredibly moving and suggestive of a glimmer of hope.  Was this always your planned ending, and how does this ending comment on PTSD?

JM: Narratives told in the western tradition of storytelling ask two questions with their endings: Did the protagonist get what they wanted? How will that affect them? The ending of this book when it was my grad school thesis did not ask those questions, which shuts out the reader and renders the experience trivial if you’re working in a narrative tradition reliant on causality. The ending is much more character focused now rather than thematically focused, and the specific focus on a character who thinks about the choices he has made and the choices he can still make is a moment that can reflect on us as individuals in many ways, but also on the institutions that get us into wars if you want to see it the way I do. The ending now asks about the possibilities that new choices can lead us to, which is hopeful. There’s nothing resonant in an ending that closes the door to future possibility. If my ending comments on PTSD, it’s to say: PTSD does not have to be the end.

BS: Did you plan on this book being a horror novel initially, or did that decision evolve? What works influenced your writing of this book?

JM: The Militia House was always meant to be scary. I originally wrote it as a short story for my first fiction workshop in grad school before it later became my thesis. People used to tell me how much it creeped them out back then, which always satisfied me in a perverse way. Some of the most important works I relied on include the books The Turn of the Screw, The Haunting of Hill House, House of Leaves, The Grip of It, The Little Stranger, Redeployment, The Lieutenant Don’t Know, The Short-Timers, the graphic novel The White Donkey, the documentary Combat Obscura, the feature film The Blair Witch Project, and a mid-series episode of The X-Files called “Field Trip.” I never close myself off from the influence of other work regardless of the medium or whether it suits my personal taste. Most of my novel was written and revised while listening to portions of the scores for the film It Follows and the Chernobyl series on HBO which corralled me into the right headspace.

BS: Finally, do you feel compelled to write more about the military, or do you have other ideas percolating?

JM: The Marine Corps feels like my wedge in the pie chart of war writing, but I like the idea of moving on eventually. I’ve been working on a collection of short stories inspired by my time in and I would potentially write a follow up novel to The Militia House as I have a great deal of interest in sequels. The opportunity to answer old questions while asking new questions is intriguing. Additionally, the trope of the “former Marine” or “ex-Marine” is fascinating to me, so I would be curious to explore that. Otherwise, I have a couple of novels in my queue that are inspired by other unrelated life experiences, but I wouldn’t be surprised if something military-adjacent grabs me again in the future. Either way, I always need to be making art or something feels off. That’s how I’ve always been.

Looking Back: Erin Introduces our New Classics Section.

I chose Robert Frost because I liked his name.

In the early- to mid-90s, when we Gen X-ers blew our free time at the mall, I could most often be found in either the coffee shop that put tons of whipped cream on their mochas (complete with chocolate shavings that made teenage me feel like a Very Fancy Coffee Drinker) or staring at the classics section in the Louisville, KY Oxmoor Mall Waldenbooks, the mall bookstore of the 1990s. I never knew what I was looking for, or even what I was looking AT for that matter, but I was drawn to those books simply because they were old -- stories of a time past that I would never truly know or experience, but which captivated my curiosity for as long as I can remember.

One of the first books that I bought for myself with my own money was The Complete Poems of Robert Frost. I loved the nature imagery that his name evoked -- frosty windows in our old and marginally-insulated house; crumbling stone fences in a snowy field, the naked limbs of trees reaching to the slate winter sky. To me, Robert Frost invoked magic, so I bought the book, fully believing that one day I would be a poet much like he was. Inside I found the one poem of his with which I was slightly familiar - 'The Road Not Taken," of course - and after memorizing that one I dove headfirst into this book and became obsessed with Frost and his poetry, finding a new favorite in "Stopping By the Woods on a Snowy Evening." Years later, I would find myself teaching this haunting poem to college undergrads, sparking intense conversations on the meaning of the last two lines. The mystery is compelling. To this day, this is one of my most favorite poems. I still own this book, now battered and torn, chewed by a rabbit, and yellowed with age.

Growing up, I was not incredibly interested in the popular books that my friends and classmates were reading, but was enamored by the stories and poems of people long gone who had unique insights about the world that I was navigating. When I was twelve years old, for example, I read Les Miserables, simply because I was fascinated by the sheer size of the book and the fact that it was old. Surely a book that size must contain a really amazing story, especially considering how long it had been around! While I skipped many sections that were in French, and I am sure that I did not understand the French Revolution bit, I finished that book lying under the front desk at my father's record shop, and I knew that I had just entered a new phase of my life, one in which literature would play a pivotal role. This would not have been possible without my deep love for old books, and the bookshop that made them accessible to me.

I wanted to create a classics section at Skylark that would have been exactly what I needed as a young teenager trying to figure out how literature would play a role in my life. I always knew that it would, but felt directionless when it came to buying these old classics, and I wanted a section for that person -- someone who had no idea what they were looking for, but who wanted to see what was available to someone interested in these ages-old texts. Our new classics section, affectionately titled "oldies but goodies," is curated for the curious, for the wanderer, for the dreamer. I wanted to create a section that someone with little to no knowledge of the literary canon could stand in front of and stare at in awe and excitement - a section that could change a life the way that the Waldenbooks' classics section did for me.

It was at this Waldenbooks that I eventually purchased Walden, the book that would influence the entire trajectory of my life and career path. The importance of that 90s mall bookstore deserves to be paid forward to the next generation of literary questioners. (I have promises to keep.) Come by and check out our new classics section in the shop. We are continuing to bring in new titles regularly, so you will see it fill out even more over time. If there is a title that you realize you never read but feel like you should, or if you just find comfort and excitement thinking about the thinkers and writers of the past, this section is for you. If you are curious about the world as it was, and appalled at how little some things have changed, this section is definitely for you. If you have no idea what it is that you like, but you feel drawn to these older texts for reasons you can not quite explain, this section is especially for you, my friend. May you find your Walden in these stacks.

With miles to go before I sleep, I wish you all happy reading.

150 Bookstores to Visit Before You Die

As a bookshop, we’re obviously more used to selling books than appearing in them - but we were thrilled to learn some months ago that we had been chosen (we still don’t know how!) to appear in this beautiful book by Elizabeth Stamp from Lannoo Publishing which features 150 bookstores from around the world. Now the book is out in the world and we no longer have to keep the secret!

It’s a glorious book - there are full color photos on every page, and some of them will take your breath away - and each shop gets a little write-up (ours is below) which explains why they were chosen. It’s a treat to be included here along with some of our good friends like Exile in Bookville in Chicago and Left Bank Books in St. Louis.

Unsurprisingly, we ordered quite a few of these and invite to you stop by and have a look for yourself. Even if we weren’t in it, we would still love this book to pieces - and it would make a fabulous gift for any book lover in your life.

An Important Discussion

This is not technically a Skylark event, but we are pleased to promote it here and encourage our customers to attend. On Saturday, June 3, Steve Harris will be appearing at Serendipity Salon and Gallery to discuss his book, Band Aid. Come and join in this important conversation. And of course we have lots of copies at the shop!

Band Aid is a compelling invitation to deepen your understanding of the effects of racism and racial biases on people of color. With one hundred personal stories, Steve Harris walks his readers through his lived experiences of dealing with issues of race, and he allows us a view into his own head - the cost-benefit analysis that so many people of color implement when deciding how to deal with racism. Walking in Harris’s shoes allows us to see how racism continues to play out in our society, and Harris gives us a framework to help us begin to undo the systems and processes in our society that continue to perpetuate the inequities of racism.

Steve Harris is a lawyer, educator, and the CEO and owner of Harris Consulting since 2011. Harris Consulting provides change management and leadership development services to clients across the country, and speaks on issues of equity and justice. Steve earned his BS in Mathematics and Computer Science from William Jewell College, his Juris Doctorate from the University of California at Berkeley, and his doctorate in Education Policy and Leadership from Harvard University.

Fundraising with Skylark!

At the shop we often chat about the ability to stay nimble in a small-business setting, allowing us to test out new ideas easily. What are we trying now? Hosting fundraisers!

Who can participate?  We're delighted to host a fundraiser for any not-for-profit group, including, but not limited to, school media centers, PTSAs, arts organizations, sports leagues, religious groups, scout troops, etc. Not sure if your organization would qualify? Give us a holler.

How do our fundraisers operate? We want to host the easiest fundraiser that you can imagine for your organization. Choose a date for one hour beginning at our usual closing time of 6:00 pm, invite your community to shop, and we’ll return to your organization a percentage of sales from that hour as either 20% in store credit or 10% with a check--your choice!.

When can I schedule? Get started here.  We are already booking and are excited to collaborate with our community's wonderful organizations in this new way!

Questions? Email us at outreach@skylarkbookshop.com.  

The link for the Katherine May event is here!

On March 6 we’re excited to celebrate Katherine May’s wonderful new book, Enchantment, in an online event that we are co-hosting with some of our good independent bookshop friends. The event is a conversation between Katherine and Priya Parker.

Registration is free, but you do need to sign up to join us. Here (finally) is the link! You won’t want to miss the event - to read more about it, go here.

Here’s the link, one more time.

The Bookseller Goes to College

SKY at college, IN THE LIBRARY.

Sky writes…

You know how the saying goes - you can take a girl out of a bookshop, but—

No, wait. That doesn’t really work.

Well, you can take the bookseller out of a girl, but—

No. That’s not possible either.

The more time I spend at college away from Skylark, the more I realize how close I am to the bookshop. One of my favorite places to read on campus is tucked away on the top floor of the library, in an armchair by the window . . . There aren’t skylights, but when it rains, sometimes it feels exactly the same as our armchairs upstairs, both surrounded by nonfiction and the smell of books.

I walked into the cafeteria to have lunch with friends a few days ago, and they left with books I had been saving for them. It made me stop and think - I don’t just read for myself anymore. I love what I read, and I will always read for myself, but I read for others now too. I read for the bookshop and all of you who visit us. I read for my friends and one of my favorite professors who all trade book recommendations with me every time I need to just calm down and not think for a bit.

And this is the real reason you can’t take a girl out of a bookshop. Because a bookshop isn’t really a place, it’s a community. And if you take a girl out of a community, she’ll just build a whole new one up around her.

Subscriptions Just How You Want Them!

From Beth…

The other day I picked up a call from Reggie, a homebound man in his 80s, who is a voracious reader needing books delivered.  After chatting for a while, we decided on a subscription that we customized perfectly for him.  

First, since Reggie doesn’t use a computer, we sent him a modified reading survey via snail mail that he completed and returned to us via a stamped envelope that we provided.  Second, we adjusted the monthly book delivery upward to several titles a month due to his rapid book consumption. Finally, we made a note to accommodate Reggie by calling a few times in a row if he didn’t answer initially.  

We are excited to help Reggie with his passion for reading!  And we would be honored to help other homebound friends or relatives with subscriptions that meet their needs, too.  Would your loved one appreciate a subscription of large-print books?  Let us know.  Would your loved one enjoy reading shorter titles?  Let us know.  Is one book a month too many, or, like Reggie, is one book insufficient?  Let us know.

And perhaps you, reader, are homebound and are wanting to bring more books into your life.

In short, at Skylark Bookshop we are eager to develop the most tailored reading experience for you or your homebound friend or relative.  Please feel free to drop us a line if you’d like to make this happen.

The Unbound Book Festival 2023 keynote speakers!

We are so excited that the Unbound Book Festival has announced that next year's keynote speakers at the festival will be Ross Gay and Patrick Rosal!

Ross and Pat are two of the most acclaimed and exciting poets of their generation. They are also best friends.

They will be appearing together - sans moderator - at the Missouri Theatre on Friday, April 21, to kick off next year's festival. It's safe to say that this will be an Unbound keynote like no other. Ross and Pat will bring their extraordinary talents to the stage for an evening of joy, delight, poetry, music, wisdom, and friendship (and maybe some basketball.)

Pat came to the very first Unbound Book Festival back 2016 and redefined for many who saw him what a poetry reading could look like. Ross’s first book of essays, The Book of Delights, has been a bestseller in the store since it came out in 2019, and we are also having a grand old time selling his new collection of essays, Inciting Joy. If you’ve read either of Ross’s books, you may remember that he writes quite a lot about his friend Pat.

Yes, it’s this Pat.

We have loads of Ross’s and Pat’s books for sale in the shop, so you have a chance to read their work before they come to Columbia in April next year. Come in and stock up, and then keep watching for information on tickets early in the new year!

Bookseller Paradise in St. Louis! (Really)


We miss Skylark when we are gone. We have also missed in person bookselling conferences. When Alex & I first talked about opening a bookshop, we drove for 12 hours to our first ever Winter Institute and vowed to make THE decision on the drive home. Heartland (the Midwest and Great Lakes conference), Winter Institute (American Booksellers and International), and Spring Road Trip (Midwest only) are a huge part of the roots and fuel behind our passion. Gathering hundreds of Booksellers, Publishers, Authors, and other industry professionals is epicly nerdy and we always try to make the most of it.

Conferences can be broken down into a few major things . . . things we thought we would share with all of you. Because in the end, that is what it is all about. Bringing bookish dreams to all of you.

Place.

Every conference is in a different place. We get out of our shops into a new space to let our brains take on a new perspective. We visit other shops. We learn their stories. We look at what works and why and wonder what changes we should or could make back home. And we miss home. Every single time we walk into Skylark we love it more. But we also know that walking away every so often helps keep it that way. It honestly takes effort not to stop at the shop immediately instead of going home first and we pretty much force ourselves to go home and empty our suitcases and save the shop for the next morning. 

People.

The people behind the bookselling industry have a relationship like no other. We help one another with pretty much anything and everything. We never stop seeking more knowledge, more ideas, more more. Independent booksellers don’t view one another as competition. We are a whole. Every success is to be celebrated. Every dream is a foundation. Alex was recognized for making bookish impacts and it was beautiful. Our friend Kris from Left Bank Books in St. Louis was recognized for her significant contributions to bookselling (and the universe at large) and it was inspiring. We met booksellers who had only been booksellers for a few weeks, booksellers who are icons, booksellers who have ties to multiple bookshops because they can’t stop being booksellers, no matter where they land.

The publishers and reps are generous and invested and just as excited about the books as the rest of us. They spend time at their booths, talking to us as we riffle through their displays. They make recommendations for us, and for you. Books that aren’t out yet and books we might have missed from before. This is where we discover some of our biggest sellers. Unique titles that are not on any bestseller list, but are on ours. They introduce us to authors, spoil us with small dinner gatherings, and generally share in our excitement.

Speaking of authors. The authors speak to us, dine with us, mingle and nerd out with us. We make plans for events, book clubs, and again . . . share the nerdy excitement of published (or soon to be published) pages.

Books.
BECAUSE BOOKS, y’all.

Because.

Today we celebrate our fourth birthday.

It’s been an adventure beyond our wildest imaginings. We’ve experienced highs that we wouldn’t have imagined, and a few lows as well (thanks, COVID.) But we’re still here, all thanks to you.

Every year on our birthday we create a new Skylark T-Shirt. On the back of each one we play with our “Because Books” saying.

In 2019 (the picture of our shopfront) it was "Because Local”.

In 2020 (the wonky bird and BYLARK SKOOKSHOP) it was “Because 2020.”

In 2021 (the bird on a syringe) it was “Because Science.”

This year, as we inch back toward normality, we wanted to recognize our community that has supported us so wonderfully throughout the last four years. And so we dedicate this year’s design to each and every one of you. For every shirt that we sell today, we’ll donate $5.00 to our wonderful local nonprofit, True North, who provide essential support services to victims of domestic and sexual violence.

Thank you from the bottom of our hearts. We hope to see you today and celebrate in person!.

Are you a teacher? Then read on...!

This post is for educators of all types. from kindergarten classrooms to graduate seminars!

We know that your summers are short, we know that you're already thinking about the upcoming school year, and we know that you welcome any and all assistance. We get you and we've got you.

We're now pleased to have a description of all of our educator perks located in one convenient area. Here is where you'll find out about our everyday educator's discount, wish lists, subscriptions, bulk purchases, and book fairs.

Check out our updated and consolidated details, and reach out to us at outreach@skylarkbookshop.com so that we can best support you. Don't see something you need? Please feel free to get in touch with your idea.

Where's Who?

Skylark is excited to welcome a super secretive and special guest to Columbia during the month of July.

Waldo is visiting to help us run our Find Waldo Local event. In fact, 26 Waldos will be hiding in local businesses in Columbia. The question for you is, can you find all the Waldos?

Skylark Bookshop is your Find Waldo Headquarters all July, so drop by and pick up a passport from us or another participating location or print your own here! Participating businesses can be identified by a Waldo Decal on business doors/windows. They are also listed with addresses in the passport.

And Waldo didn’t just bring himself to Columbia . . . He brought gifts! The first 125 people to find at least 10 Waldos can claim a temporary tattoo and a $1 off coupon good for Waldo titles at Skylark Bookshop.

We are also hosting a party for Waldo at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, August 4th. If you turn in a passport with 20 stamps/signatures at the party, you will be entered into a prize drawing including Waldo goodies and some spectacular treasures from several of the participating businesses. If you find all 26 Waldos and are able to “spot the difference” with the one special Waldo, you will receive an extra goodie at the party to celebrate your extraordinary sleuthing skills.

All are welcome to participate in this event - adults, kids, and everyone in between. Spend a fun filled day of adventure, or spread the search through the whole month while you visit Waldo at these fantastic local businesses.  Done with summer reading and looking for some fun? This might be what you’re looking for! Just want to get out and about? You are welcome to join us! 

The hunt for Waldo is on!

Sweet Summer Story Time and Workshop!

Another fun event to tell you about! We are adding new events all the time - please do check our events page regularly to make sure you don’t miss out!

On Saturday, June 25 at 10:00 a.m., we’re pleased to host Art Teacher Abbey from Artful Seeds for storytime and an art workshop! Abbey will be reading the book, Oh Look, A Cake! by J.C. McKee and then teaching artists how to make their own mixed-media cakes. Paint, snip and collage a colorful cake artwork to take home. This event is great for all ages, but best for ages 3-10.

The cost of the workshop is $15.00 per child. Cash or Venmo accepted at the door.

For the month of June, Artful Seeds is donating a portion of proceeds to Daniel Boone Regional Library. A portion of this workshop goes straight to DBRL. Supporting your local library is a piece of cake!

Announcing our Teen Book Club!

It’s Pride month and school is out! We wanted to celebrate both these things by starting a brand new book club, especially for teen readers. We looked through our shelves and pulled down All Out, a collection of stories about queer teens. Fitting for a book club for teens during pride month, no?

We will be meeting on Wednesday the 29th of June at 6:30 p.m. - the day before our regular Skylarking Bookclub. It’s completely free to attend – we just ask that you purchase your copy of the book from us, whether in person or online.

The session is for teen readers and will be led by the younger Skylark staff! It will be a relaxed and welcoming environment where you’ll be able to chat and share your views with no judgement. It’s going to be a really interesting conversation, and also a lot of fun.

 Here’s what Kirkus Reviews (a notoriously tough reviewer) had to say about the book: “Readers searching for positive, nuanced, and authentic queer representation—or just a darn good selection of stories—need look no further than this superb collection.”

Seventeen of the best young adult authors across the queer spectrum have come together to create a collection of beautifully written diverse historical fiction for teens. From a retelling of Little Red Riding Hood set in war-torn 1870s Mexico featuring a transgender soldier, to two girls falling in love while mourning the death of Kurt Cobain, forbidden love in a sixteenth-century Spanish convent or an asexual girl discovering her identity amid the 1970s roller-disco scene, All Out tells a diverse range of stories across cultures, time periods and identities, shedding light on an area of history often ignored or forgotten.

The book features stories by Malinda Lo, Elliot Wake, Anna-Marie McLemore, Shaun David Hutchinson, Mackenzi Lee, Kody Keplinger, Kate Scelsa, Nilah Magruder, Alex Sanchez, Natalie C. Parker,  Dahlia Adler, Sara Farizan, Scott Tracey and Robin Talley, Tess Sharpe, and introducing Tehkor Kay Mejia.