Published on June 3rd, 2008
Like this post? Subscribe to our RSS feed and stay up to date.
Editor’s note: Eco-Libris‘ partnerships with independent bookstores gives us some great insights into how local shops are going green around the US. Today, they take a look at Clarksburg, Maryland’s Novel Places. This post was originally published on Sunday, June 1, 2008.
Another bookseller has joined the growing list of bookstores that participate in Eco-Libris bookstores program. This time we’re happy to present you with Novel Places of Clarksburg, MD.
Novel Places started 2 years ago by Patrick Darby, who has almost 30 years experience in book retail. The store started as an antiquarian online store, but recently, new titles and accessories were added. The rekindled Literary Society restarted by Patrick last year is a book group by today’s standards, which help promote the store. Patrick tries to emulate the history of the Society (which dates back to 1833!) by inviting authors to read and talk about their books. The plan is to include unpublished authors to get feedback on their creations.
The books offered by Novel Places can also be found at Mayorga Coffee (23207 Stringtown Road Clarksburg, MD). The online store offers a community forum to discuss issues and books. Patrick says he designed it the way he would want his brick and mortar store to be like - a place where people can come and relax by a fire or in a comfy chair for conversation, reading, and purchasing a good book. And now there’s also going to be there the opportunity to plant a tree with every book you purchased with Eco-Libris. Customers will be receiving our sticker (made of recycled paper) saying “one tree planted for this book” with every new book purchased at Novel Places.
Read the rest of this entry »
Published on June 3rd, 2008
Posted in
Baltimore,
Boston,
California,
Chicago,
Connecticut,
District of Columbia,
EcoLocalizer,
Florida,
Hawaii,
Honolulu,
Illinois,
Maryland,
Massachusetts,
Minnesota,
New York,
New York City,
Oregon,
Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia,
Portland,
San Francisco,
Seaside,
Seattle,
Washington
Why have gas prices risen to nearly $4 a gallon (or more) in the U.S.? Is it oil speculation? Rising demand? Or the first signs of peak oil?
Whatever the cause (and there’s good reason to blame all three to some degree), most so-called experts these days aren’t expecting oil prices to drop anytime soon. In fact, Newsweek this week features a sobering article titled, “The Coming Energy Wars,” that predicts we’ll soon see oil prices top $200 a barrel. When that happens, the authors warn, we can expect everything about our daily lives to change.
Read the rest of this entry »
Published on May 25th, 2008
Bethesda, Maryland-based Marriott International has introduced a new green meeting program in which it will donate a portion of group guest room costs to its Amazon rainforest protection effort.
Under the program, Marriott will donate five percent of a group’s room costs in the group’s name to help protect and preserve the Amazon rainforest. To qualify, groups must book meetings between July 1 of this year and December 31, 2009.
Read the rest of this entry »
Published on May 13th, 2008
Posted in
California,
Colorado,
Connecticut,
EcoLocalizer,
Georgia,
Indiana,
Maine,
Maryland,
Michigan,
Missouri,
New York,
Ohio,
Oregon
Rising prices for everything from copper and platinum to flour, gas and cooking oil are creating new markets for trend-minded thieves across the U.S.
With gasoline prices in the U.S. breaking new records weekly, for example, law enforcement officials are seeing more cases of cooking grease thefts from fast-food establishments and other restaurants. Why used grease? Because cooking oil can be converted into biodiesel fuel that can be sold at a cool profit.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags:
biodiesel,
commodities,
cooking grease,
cooking oil,
copper,
grease theft,
metal theft,
metals,
platinum,
scrap metal,
used grease
Published on March 5th, 2008
Baltimore’s Parks & People Foundation is offering a special kind of tree sale this spring aimed at boosting the region’s tree cover quickly.
The foundation teamed up with RPM Ecosystems, a wholesale native plant nursery in Dryden, New York, to sell year-old trees grown with a root production method (RPM) that helps them grow three times faster than normal … meaning they can sequester carbon dioxide from the atmosphere three times faster than conventional young trees.
Read the rest of this entry »