![]() ![]() There may be items that we are unable to return. ![]() Our return policy does not apply to the following goods: discounted or sale items, gift cards, personalized items or perishable goods such as newspapers or magazines. To be eligible for a return, your merchandise must be unused and in the same condition that you received it and must be in the original packaging. Once an item of merchandise is delivered to you, you can return that item within 30 days of delivery. Online book and ebook ordering is available 24/7 on this website. In addition to our line of books, we also have a good selection of cards, magazines, newspapers, calendars, games and a very large collection of children’s books and games. Out-of-print searches are a regular part of our business as well. ![]() We can accommodate special orders by phone and email if by email please put special order in your email subject line. Our orders are placed daily, with most books arriving in 1 - 2 days. We are a locally owned, full service bookstore. Thank you for visiting us here to view and shop for books online 24/7 through our downtown bookstore. We look forward to welcoming you though our front doors. We hope our community will stay safe during this COVID-19 Pandemic. We are still doing curbside, so you can pickup your purchases or we are happy to deliver in the Ukiah area. We require facial co verings to be worn properly while you are shopping and we ask that conversations with staff and other shoppers are kept to a minimum so we can maintain adequate social distancing. Please shop here or come inside the store or call!! We have missed you!!! We have worked hard to open our doors to our customers in a safe way per the guidelines set forth by the Mendocino County Public Health Officer. Please know we will assist you with your book needs in any way we can. We are here for you and we love our community. Equal parts Bukowski and Portis, Durkee’s darkly comic novel is a feverish, hilarious, and gritty look at a forgotten America and a man at life’s crossroads.įirst of ALL: Thank you for all your support, kind words and consideration during these very difficult past months. Shedding nuts and bolts, The Last Taxi Driver careens through highways and back roads, from Mississippi to Memphis, as Lou becomes increasingly somnambulant and his fares increasingly eccentric. Lou is forced to decide how much he can take as a driver, and whether keeping his job is worth madness and heartbreak. With Uber moving into town and his way of life vanishing, his girlfriend moving out, and his archenemy dispatcher suddenly returning to town on the lam, Lou must finish his bedlam shift by aiding and abetting the host of criminal misfits haunting the back seat of his disintegrating Town Car. Meet Lou-a lapsed novelist, struggling Buddhist, and UFO fan-who drives for a ramshackle taxi company that operates on the outskirts of a north Mississippi college town. Hailed by George Saunders as “a true original-a wise and wildly talented writer,” Lee Durkee takes readers on a high-stakes cab ride through an unforgettable shift. Partnering with local businesses and neighborhood volunteers, we hope to provide you with an original Montana experience that celebrates and champions community and inclusion.“A wild, funny, poetic fever dream that will change the way you think about America.” -George Saunders In the spirit of the anthology, we hope to enrich your visit beyond the bubble of the bike race. Though the scope of The Last Best Ride does not cover as much statewide geographical ground as the collection Smith and Kittredge present, we believe that our event will showcase some of Northwest Montana's most spectacular outdoor offerings. Working with friends and editors, the two compiled journals, essays, stories, poems, and indigenous oral histories to help paint a portrait of the state through its literature. The book became a national bestseller, and the title accrued its own history, as many Montana residents adopted it as the unofficial moniker for their home state. In 1988, in celebration of Montana's centennial, Annick Smith and William Kittredge published a book titled, The Last Best Place, A Montana Anthology, from which our race gains its namesake. ![]()
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