New and Used Books
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We BUY, SELL & TRADE your paperback and hardcover books!
Book Again features a large selection of current best-sellers
as well as many hard-to-find & out-of-print titles!


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Book Again is located in Torrance, California, at 5039 Torrance Blvd.,
just west of Anza (between Shakey's Pizza and McDonald's restaurant)
Book Again is open 11am to 4pm (CLOSED MONDAYS) (310) 542-1156

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I would like to introduce you to our newest Book Again Helper, Loreli. Some of you have already met her while she was training with Kim and Stacy.

Loreli will be taking over the Thursday & Sunday shifts, so please come in and meet her. We are so happy to have Loreli on our team and I'm sure you will all give her a nice, warm welcome. But please, for now we ask that you temporarily limit your books (that you are bringing in for credit) on Thursdays and Sundays.

I'd like to take this moment to thank all of you most sincerely for the marvelous way in which you are handling the ongoing emergency health restrictions. You have all complied with wearing masks and by distancing. I haven't heard of anyone tracing an infection back to Book Again, and I believe this is due to your wonderful efforts.

Thank you so very much!

We are all hoping that this pandemic will be over soon. In anticipation of this, Book Again is preparing to reinstate our popular Half-Off Sales. Our first step is to completely re-build our email mailing list. This will be done from the ground, up, so even if you were on our email mailing list before, you will need to sign up once again in order to receive notice of when we begin again with our Book Again sales.

In the meantime, as we wait to safely reinstate our Half-Off sales, I'd like to remind you of the other ways you can save extra money during your Book Again visit.

First off is our Daily Specials. Each day, we choose a few letters at random, which are displayed on the dry erase board behind the counter. If you buy a book whose author's last name starts with one of those letters, you get that book for half price! That's half-off our already low prices!

Also, we have the Bonus Book Special, where you get a $3.95 discount for each $20 purchase. Not to mention our Outdoor Bargain Books, which are on sale year-round at 15 books for just $3.

But yes, we know that our regular Half-Off sales are by far the most popular way to save even more at Book Again. So during your next visit, remember to sign-up for our new mailing list! Don't miss out on being one of the first to hear the good news of when our sales return!

See you soon!

—Sheryl

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From the Editor:
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Visit us on facebook! Click here!
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  • Paperbacks (in good condition)
  • Comic Books
  • Science Fiction
  • Mysteries
  • Westerns
  • General Fiction
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Book Again Feature Articles
by Staff

Don't miss these fantastic articles and cartoons, written over the years by various Book Again staff members.

Click on the link below to start browsing our Feature Article archive! Enjoy!

click here for our feature article archives

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Orange Cream Cheese Frosting

  • 3 ounces of cream cheese (room temperature)
  • 1 small bottle of orange extract
  • Food coloring (red and yellow)
  • 1 1/2 C powdered sugar


Mix together the cream cheese, 2 cap-fulls of the orange extract, 5 drops of the red food coloring, and 4 drops of the yellow food coloring.

Beat-in the powdered sugar until you reach the desired consistency.

Mix all together until creamy, either adding a few drops of water or more powdered sugar to correct the consistency. You can add up to another cup of powdered sugar without adding any more cream cheese. If you like the taste of the orange extract, you can add a bit more of that instead of adding water

Great for using on sugar cookies!

Want more delicious food ideas? Check out our Recipe Archive!

 


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"This is the first of what we hope to be a monthly newsletter. Our purpose is to make it informative, as well as fun. It's certainly been fun putting together this first one!

My oldest son Joe, who you may have seen working here back in March, has agreed to be our editor. His qualifications are excellent, as he edited all my papers through college a few years ago. He's agreed to fit the newsletter into his busy schedule of work & school on the condition that I let him write his own folklore column -- don't miss it, his interest is contagious."

With those words the tradition of the Book Again Newsletter began.

As I recall, it was November of 1985, and my brothers and I had assembled at my mother's for dinner. During the course of the meal, she announced that she planned to open a store of some sort, and asked us for ideas. I personally pushed for a used record store, but the winning concept was, as you well know, a used Book Store. Brother Mike and I volunteered to help set it up, and Mike further signed on as Store Manager.

On opening day all the brothers were there, helping out to an extent but mostly, I fear, just getting in each other's way. I believe Mom has proof of this on video.

At any rate, the store opened in March of 1986. Mom had been searching for a name for the store, and, mindful of a song I had once written called "Look Again," I jokingly suggested "Book Again."

She liked it.

That Summer I got my first computer (an IBM XT with a whopping 20MB hard drive!), and two months later Mom hit upon the idea of starting a newsletter. (If this sounds familiar, it should -- some eleven years later I would finally go online, and two months after that so would Book Again.)

She asked me to put the newsletter together, which I did, and continued to do single-handedly through the early '90s (with monthly contributions from Mom and Mike).

At the time I had been getting increasingly interested in folklore, and sensed a golden opportunity. I based my involvement on one stipulation -- that I be allowed to contribute a folklore column on a regular basis. She readily agreed, and it worked out to the benefit of all -- the column kept the newsletter from becoming just another throwaway bit of advertising -- it became something that customers would actually look forward to.

It became frequently a royal pain as well, especially as work and school took up more and more of my time.

I enjoyed it, however, and still do -- though I never would have guessed that I'd still be doing it so many years later!

A word about what I consider to be "folklore" is, perhaps, in order. Certainly the usual examples apply: myths and legends, roots of old sayings and songs, and the origins of holidays -- the latter a theme I would devote myself to exclusively for the first six months.

Folklore, to me, goes beyond that, however. Any historic or public figure, if colorful enough, inevitably has some small bit of apocrypha attached to their story, whether they be Presidents, gunslingers, pioneers, baseball players, or Rock Stars. From Abe Lincoln's seances, to Babe Ruth's "calling the home run," to Stuyvesant's ghost, even to my own great uncle Adam Walsh's exploits under Knute Rockne in the 1920's ... it's all there, and it's all wonderfully good -- and entirely appropriate to the world of Folklore.

Additionally, the origins of the art of the Magician, rumors of Secret Societies that may or may not yet wield influence to this day, the birth of Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer -- all such matters, from the trivial to the profound to the occasionally spooky, are fair game for my musings.

Still with me? Faithful readers may have already noticed that most of the examples just cited have yet to make an appearance in one of these columns. Quite so, as the columns continue to this day. Consider the above a "teaser" -- a glimpse of things to come.

But I've rambled enough -- the blessing and curse of writing online, free of space constraints. Having said that, I must point out that all the columns prior to September of 1997 were written only for the printed newsletter, and as such they were frequently severely edited even as they were being written. I had no choice -- I only had a finite amount of space.

It is partly for that reason that no fewer than 16 of the original columns were reprinted and (usually) greatly expanded for subsequent online appearances. When such is the case you will not see the original column -- instead I'll interject as I'm doing now with a pointer to where the improved, expanded version may be found.

From October 1986 (our first issue) through the end of 1987 the newsletter and column appeared almost every month. In 1988 we briefly went bi-monthly, as we were mailing every single issue to customers, and postage was getting a little out of hand. In July of '88 we hit upon a compromise -- we returned to the monthly schedule, but elected to mail out only three issues a year. The remaining issues were available only in the store.

By January of the next year (1989) we were all just too busy to maintain any sort of monthly schedule, and so the newsletter and column went bi-monthly again, and would remain so until July 1991. That issue, there was no room for a folklore column, so instead I inserted a little box promising a return of the column "next time."

"Next time" would take six months to arrive. There were various logistic reasons for this gap, most notably being Mom's decision to move to Valencia, but for however many reasons (I recall being frightfully busy at school, for one thing) there would be no newsletter for the remainder of 1991.

We returned in January 1992, but would publish far fewer issues (four per year from 1992 to 1994), and on occasion there would be no folklore column. We were all moving on with our lives, and it seemed only a matter of time until the inevitable happened.

The inevitable happened in mid 1995, when I left the South Bay to move to the San Fernando Valley. None of us were online yet (the internet was still in its infancy), so any continuing contributions on my end became too much trouble to attempt. Mike was editing the newsletter by this point, and though issue #49 (Jan - May 1995) included the optimistic statement: "the folklore column will return in the next issue of the newsletter! (hopefully)." It was not to be. The September / December 1994 column would be my last for years.

The rest you know by now. Book Again's newsletter went online in September 1997, and the folklore column returned with a vengeance! Editing chores were divided between our Uncle Mike for the online edition and Brother Mike for the printed version. Then by 2004, Brother Dan (this is starting to sound like a monastery) took over the whole darn mess.

And, though circumstances forced a brief disappearing act on my part from May 2002 to March 2003, I have returned, and continue to write the folklore column (I have returned to the South Bay as well, incidentally). As always, I trust the best is yet to be -- but I have long wanted to make previous columns available to our readers.

With these words I now write, and the help of long-suffering Brother Dan, this dream is now a reality.

A quick legal note: All columns found herein are copyrighted to me, and should not be used without permission. My ode to Charles Schulz, "Charlie at the Bat," has found its way elsewhere on the net, and I have no problem with that as I was in communication with the webmaster of that site and a "copyright Joe Nolte" appears on the page. Generally I don't mind seeing my words take root in other places, but I strongly object to seeing my words without my authorship mentioned...

In short, if you want to cite any of this stuff, let us know first!

It's time to bid this overlong introduction goodbye, and get to the folklore! As I said, I spent the first six months delving into the origins of Holidays. To my delight, the first issue of the newsletter was to appear in October -- and Halloween has always been one of my favorite holidays. It was a good way to start things rolling...

click here to start digging into our Folklore archive
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"There are some simple pleasures that really help you cope. One is books. Books are a great escape. Books are a way to get your mind on something else."—George W Bush

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We are located in Torrance, California, at 5039 Torrance Blvd.,
just west of Anza, between Shakey's Pizza and McDonald's restaurant.
Book Again is open 11am to 4pm (CLOSED MONDAYS) (310) 542-1156

Join our mailing list to be informed of future sales!

Site updated 2/8/22 • click here for our newsletter archive
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