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Disney Reads Day

VILLAGE HOUSE OF BOOKS AND RAZZBERRY LIPS PRESENT

mick_nephewsread
DISNEY READS DAY!

2:30 PM – 5:00 PM on February 6th
Celebrate the Joy of Storytelling!

Village House of Books and Razzberry Lips are celebrating the magic of Disney Storytelling by presenting this fantastic event together!

bookfairyCome See the Book Fairy when she arrives at 2:30! She’ll be reading from some of her favorite books here!

At 3:15, we’ll be selling a one-of-a-kind mystery book with original art from a Pixar Animator. We can’t reveal what it is until February 6th!mystery_cover

elsashilouetteAnd we’ll be receiving a royal guest from the Kingdom of Arendelle! The royal carriage is anticipated to arrive between 3:30 and 4:00 PM. 

Kids and Adults! Come in costume and join our Disney Costume Contest! Dress up like your favorite Disney character and win an awesome prize! Winners will be announced at 4:15 PM. 

Check out our co-sponsors for this event, Razzberry Lips!

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Next In-Store Event – Illustrator Day with Jerrod Maruyama

Sadness flying with Crying Cloud

Come To Our Next Event with Illustrator Jerrod Maruyama!

Don’t Cry Because You Missed Our Last Event!

Box of Mixed Emotions Illustrator Jerrod Maruyama is coming to Village House of Books!

December 12th at 2 PM

We had so much fun here with Mike Wu that we wanted to get another children’s book creator, and we’ve found Jerrod Maruyama! He’s going to come to the store on December 12th and talk about the book he illustrated, The Box Of Mixed Emotions. Bring your kids and your own mixed up emotions! We promise, no tears!

Sadness from Inside Out

Pixar’s Sadness from Inside Out

But…I like crying. It helps me slow down and obsess over life’s problems.”

Well, Sadness can cry, but you don’t have to if you join us on December 12th! Don’t miss out!

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Upcoming Event: Disney Book Club

Disney Book Club: Song of the South & Forbidden Disney
June 28th, 2015 at 5:30 pm

Have you ever ridden on Splash Mountain and wondered “Who the heck is Br’er Rabbit anyway?” You aren’t alone! 9780984341559_p0_v1_s260x420Song of the South was a hybrid live-action/animated film released in 1946 by Walt Disney. It was re-released to theaters in the 50s, 70s, and 80s and sold on VHS and Laserdisc before the Walt Disney Company decided to seal the film in the Disney Vault permanently. Why was the film so controversial, and should it be re-released today?

Learn more about the history of Song of the South in Jim Korkis’ Who’s Afraid of the Song of the South? And Other Forbidden Disney Stories and join us on June 28th for a screening of the movie. Afterwards, we’ll discuss the film and other controversial Disney projects highlighted in Korkis’ book.

I’ll also be showcasing new Disney books that have come out in the last few months. If you’ve read a Disney book since our last meeting that you’d like to recommend, bring it along and share it with us!

RSVP on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1570272899892203/

Or call or e-mail the store!

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Staff Review: Walt Disney and the Promise of Progress City by Sam Gennawey

Don’t forget, our Disney Book Club will be meeting this upcoming Wednesday, April 1st, at 6:30pm to discuss Walt Disney and the Promise of Progress City. Please come and join us. Whether you’ve read the book before or just want to know more about Walt Disney, it’ll be a fun and entertaining evening for you. For more details, visit our ‘Upcoming Events’ page or visit the event’s page on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/events/434000056765860/

Walt Disney and the Promise of Progress City
by Sam Gennaweydisneybook

In the months before his death, Walt Disney unveiled his plans for an Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow (called EPCOT for short), a centrally planned city that utilized the latest technological innovations to create a new kind of urban center. Developing a city may seem far-fetched for a man best known for his innovations in animation, but author Sam Gennawey traces Disney’s interest in urban planning and designing public spaces from its roots in his backyard steam train and the design of his Burbank Studio all the way through to Disneyland and beyond. Along the way, the reader is introduced to failed projects, like a proposed ski resort, as well as the successes. Walt Disney died before his proposed city could be built, but Gennawey extrapolates what may have in Florida today had Disney’s plan been carried out as he envisioned it.

I found this book to be absolutely fascinating and eye-opening. As a frequent visitor to Disneyland, I’m very familiar with Main Street USA, the “land” at the entrance to the park. It has an old-timey, classic appeal and as you walk down the street, toward the Sleeping Beauty Castle, it’s a comforting and calming experience. Sam Gennawey explains many of the architectural tricks and cues that help create this experience for guests, and as I read I found a new appreciation for the care and attention to detail that Disney and his Imagineers devoted to the appearance and layout of the buildings. As Gennawey continued to other areas of the park, I mentally followed in his footsteps. He also talks about some of the innovations Disney brought to his theme park, like the dedication to preventing litter and maintaining the appearance of the buildings, and how his ideas spread to other parks and eventually became standard practice.

I also loved reading about lesser-known Disney projects. We’re all familiar with the phenomenal success of Disneyland, but I’ve only heard of his proposed Mineral King project in footnotes or asides. It was a proposed ski resort, to be located near Sequoia National Park in the Sierra Nevada mountain range. I hesitate to call it “Disneyland in the mountains” but in many ways that’s exactly what was planned. The resort was to be an entertainment destination, with wilderness lectures, outdoor activities, restaurants, a conference center, and planned ‘attractions’ similar to the ones at Disneyland. The project was eventually shut down by the United States Forest Service after protests and a lawsuit filed by the Sierra Club. As a Disney fan, I’m so curious about what Mineral King would have been like, but as a Sierra Club member I’m also horrified at the thought of the impact of the described resort on the environment just outside one of the most beautiful parks in California. It would have been interesting, but I’m glad the decision was made not to go with the Disney proposal.

Of course, most of the book is devoted to EPCOT. I really enjoyed Sam Gennawey’s projection of what EPCOT would look like if it had been completed; it’s a great thought exercise that showcases Disney’s creativity and his forward-thinking. I certainly enjoy the EPCOT theme park and what it offers today, but neither it nor the Disney city of Celebration really encapsulates Disney’s vision. Anyone who has enjoyed walking around Disneyland or the Magic Kingdom, admiring the architecture and the themed lands, will learn a lot from this book. Those who are curious about the urban planning and want to explore a centrally-planned city will also find it difficult to put this book down.

– Review by Suzi

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Upcoming Event: Disney Book Club

DISNEY BOOK CLUB: SAM GENNAWEY’S WALT DISNEY AND THE PROMISE OF PROGRESS CITY
APRIL 1ST, 2015, 6:30 PM

Village House of Books is proud to launch our first themed book club. Our new Disney Book Club will meet quarterly and will focus on books written about the history of Walt Disney’s contributions to animation, live action film, theme parks, and other forms of entertainment.disneybook

For our first book, we will be reading “Walt Disney and the Promise of Progress City”. Disney historian and urban planner Sam Gennawey traces the evolution of the EPCOT we didn’t get and the Epcot we did, in a tour-de-force analysis of Walt’s vision for city-building and how his City of Tomorrow might have turned out had he lived.

Beginning with Walt’s earliest conceptions for “Progress City”, a centrally planned, centrally run community where people could work, live, and play, Gennawey weaves urban planning concepts into a meticulously researched historical narrative that culminates in Walt’s death and his brother Roy’s decision to focus on building a new theme park in Florida, not an Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow.

We will also be screening Walt’s last film, “EPCOT,” in which he reveals his concepts and plans for the Disney World and EPCOT project. After the show, we’ll be talking to Sam Gennawey via Skype, and he’ll be able to answer your questions about his research.  It will be a fun-filled evening for Disney fans, theme park buffs, and anyone interested in architecture and urban planning.

walt