Blog Post 3
(I checked my blog today while working on week 2 blog posts and saw that my blog posts 2 and 3 did not upload correctly because of the pictures, so I am reuploading them.)
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of my first week at
Loganberry, (I had the AP Latin exam on Friday), I worked on lots of
organizational tasks. The back room in the store is called “Lit Arts”,
literature arts, and it is where the fiction, historical fiction, literary criticism,
mystery, horror, romance, poetry, theatre, comic book /graphic novel/manga, and
young adult sections are located. I started by shelving about 100 books in the
poetry section, which was a considerable task because the shelves are
overflowing! I also reorganized their poetry table to look a bit more
organized. I forgot to take a before picture, but the after picture is included
below. I also reorganized the romance section. The romance section had lots of
old hardcover books that were not selling well that Harriet, the owner and founder
of the store, wanted to include in the Loganberry sidewalk sale (an event where
they sell books and merchandise at a reduced price in the driveway and on the
sidewalk outside of the store on Larchmere). I learned during this pruning that
apparently Amish romance is a popular genre because people, who Sarah (the
staff member in charge of many of the sections in Lit Arts), said mainly
consists of evangelical Christian women, like to read it because it does not
contain explicit content and it is reminiscent of an older time. I filled a few
boxes with Romance novels to put in the sale and then spent multiple hours re-shelving
the romance section. I also forgot to take a before picture, but the after
picture is included below. During these three days, I also shelved a few
hundred books from the “Lit Arts Cart”, a moving cart where they store overflow
books and books that customers take off but do not put back. It took quite a
long time, considering the shelves are so tall that almost every book required
me to both move a ladder around the room, and then climb up multiple rungs to
reach the high shelves. In those three days, I felt like I got a good feel of
the store and the basic activities necessary to keep the store looking nice.


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