2014 Holiday Gift Guide, Part III: Books & Snacks & More

Still shopping for holiday gifts? I am – but Hanukkah this year is as close to “on time” as a Jewish holiday can get. Instead of last year, when it started the night before Thanksgiving, this year we get to shop until the 16th of December. WOO! That’s positively luxurious compared to last year.

Are you ready for a few more ideas for gifting? Today we have books and snacks and other fun items. Next Wednesday, I’ll be back with more ideas, including gifts that aren’t physical items that possess mass and take up space, but are just as meaningful.

Daily Zen Doodles
A | K | AB
First, I was sent this book to review: Daily Zen Doodles: 365 Tangle Creations for Inspiration, Relaxation, and Mindfulness. I like drawing when I’m on the phone waiting for someone to pick up, or when I’m watching tv, and I thought this might be a great book to try. Then, when it arrived, Freebird, my 9 year old, wanted to try it first. He took the book to school because he thought it was PERFECT for him and for his friends, since they’d had a teacher last year who encouraged them to doodle as a meditation method when they were having trouble focusing on something.

Freebird gave me the copy back, along with pages of notebook paper. He and his friends wrote brief reviews of some of the pages:

Freebird: I thought that the meditation was really relaxing. It calmed me down. I liked the simple drawings best.

H: I liked the doodle I chose because it looked like a roller coaster.

C: I chose this doodle because it was a flame. 

So three nine year olds liked this book. The doodles range from very simple to more complicated images with dots and squiggles. Each page has a black and white line drawing, and a quote about meditation, mindfulness, or clarity from the Buddha, Walt Whitman, Thich Nhat Hanh, and others. This might be a good gift for someone who wants to try meditation and isn’t sure how to begin. Doodling and reading the quote beneath each picture, whether you copy the picture or not might be an accessible way for someone to experience meditation breaks throughout the day.

grazeI’ve tweeted about Graze before, but I don’t know if I’ve posted about it. Graze is a snack box subscription service that started in the UK and recently moved to the US, and I love it. LOVE it.

You can adjust how often you get snacks – once a week, twice a month, or once a month – and you rate the snacks you receive to help the folks at Graze better identify your tastes. Each box is $7, including shipping. The shipping box is paper, and therefore recyclable, as are the small plastic containers in which each snack is packaged.

My favorites are the flapjacks, which are like soft granola bars, the medley known as Hot Cross Yum, and the “Bonnie Wee Oatbakes” with carmelized onion jam. This week I have a new one: Billionaires’ Shortbread, which is a mix of Belgian chocolate, almonds, cranberries, and fudge. I like this billionaire. He can stay! The only things I haven’t liked are the things that have unsweetened coconut, but I think coconut generally tastes like old wax.

You can buy gift subscriptions for people, or buy someone an individual box of snacks from Graze.

Or, you can sign up using my link (this one right here) and get your 1st and 5th box free (If you use my link, I get $1 off a future box for each new registration, or I can donate that $1 to the Graze school of farming in Kabbubu, Uganda – usually, I do the latter).

I used to have a few subscription services, but this is the only service I’ve kept. With beauty products, too many of them made me break out or gave me a rash, and I ended up with half-used bottles and stuff cluttering the closet. Graze is awesome because I Eat All The Things, and they’re portable. I can put them in my bag or put them in the dudes’ lunches and they don’t crack or explode.

For those with allergies, Graze says it “is not suitable for those with allergies as all of our food is packed in the same place, and so cross-contamination is possible.” They have just added a dietary preference feature to let you identify and request snacks without gluten or dairy, that are vegan-suitable, or that are or are not spicy, among other things.

Now all this talking about Graze has made me hungry. I have to go eat one now. I think it’s Billionaire time.

Tin with a woman of color form the 40s saying I believe the word you're searching for is divine on the top in typed letters I have a coupon code for the Anne Taintor store online: 20% off orders of $60 or more, or a free gift for orders of $20 or more with code “laughter” at checkout.

The cocktail shakers, flasks, and the lip balm tins are particularly fun – to say nothing of the anniversary scarf.

I saw this duvet cover in a catalog, and when I searched online, I found a whole set of products from Doodle by Stitch.

Doodle bed-  duvet cover that looks like a giant sheet of notebook paper that can be drawn on then washed clean
Doodle Bed Duvet Cover: Twin $60, Queen $80

There’s the Doodle Bed, which is a notebook paper style duvet cover that comes with wash-off fabric markers so the cover can be drawn on, then washed to start over.

It’s expensive, though, for just a duvet cover, though the reviews state that the fabric washes completely clean so bedtime artists can start over after a laundry cycle.

There’s also the Doodle Pillowcase that also washes clean – and come with glow-in-the-dark markers that wash out completely. That is about $25.

Pencil case printed with graph paper on one side and notebook style paper on the other
Doodle Pencil Case $20

I like the Doodle Tablecloth ($50), which is printed with 1cm graph paper, and the Doodle Child’s Apron ($20).

But if these aren’t practical gift prices for the young artist you know, the Doodle Pencil Case might be perfect – it also washes clean with one laundry cycle.

Zip pouch printed to look like a library card
Library Card Pouch: $16

Out of Print Clothing has been recommended to me by a few folks, and there’s good reason. If you’ve got bookish friends (who doesn’t?), there are many gift ideas here.

For example: the Composition Book Tote ($18) or the Library Card Pouch ($16).

And then there’s the Pride and Prejudice tee ($28), which is horribly tempting, too. Pretty much everything they make is tempting, I think.

I love this idea: Art Fold books are hardcover editions of classic books that come with instructions so that, once you’re done reading them, you can fold the pages to create a three dimensional sculpture that appears when you next open the book.

Hans Christian Andersen’s The Snow Queen and Other Tales becomes a snowflake:

Book The pages are folded to make a snowflake in the edge of the pages - its neat

Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen becomes the word “Love:”

Book The edges of each page are folded so the word LOVE appears - it's really neat

And Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery becomes the word “Joy:”

Book The edges are folded so the word JOY appears in the page edges

 

Aren’t those cool? The description says about 150-200 pages need to be folded, and the instructions are detailed, too. There are other editions as well – Jane Eyre becomes “Read,” for example – and each book is between $15-20.

Please Go Away I'm Reading Via Jaye Wells on Twitter comes this most excellent phone case: Please Go Away. I’m Reading.

Available on Etsy for $15 plus shipping/tax.

Pride and Prejudice Quote on Scarf
Pride and Prejudice Quote on Scarf $40+

For the scarf-loving folks (I know you’re out there), Etsy also has many, many variations on literary scarves for you, or the scarf-loving readerly types you know.

Pick a classic book, and there’s probably a scarf for it.

There’s the Pride and Prejudice quote scarf (pictured right),  the Pride and Prejudice proposal (the first one) scarf, or the Pride and Prejudice printed page scarf.

Pride and Prejudice fingerless gloves
P&P Fingerless Gloves $26+

Then there are the Storiarts Pride and Prejudice writing gloves, which are fingerless and printed with text from the book.

There are other fingerless gloves printed with books, too, should your fingerless glove needs remain unmet at this time.

So, what about you? What have you bought or gifted so far that you’re excited about? 

Add Your Comment →

  1. Cecilia says:

    The Please Go Away, I’m Reading phone case is fabulous! A pity that I don’t own a smartphone. It would make also a wonderful case for a kindle, though.

  2. Karenmc says:

    I picked up a couple of literary totes yesterday at the book riot store http://store.bookriot.com/ Looks like their prices are a bit lower than Out of Print Clothing.

  3. Heather S says:

    Books-A-Million has some great literary gifts right now, too – tote bags, throw pillows, wall art, drinking glass sets (I saw Jane Austen ones with quotes from Pride and Prejudice and some from Alice in Wonderland), notebooks, pencil bags…. They also have library letters – cut out of old Reader’s Digest Condensed books – and the Art Fold books. They’ve got iPhone cases and some literary jewelry from Out of Print, too. Oh, and t-shirts! Some lovely t-shirts, also.

  4. LauraL says:

    I just may have to get that library card pouch for my goddaughter. She is a librarian and loves that kind of stuff.

  5. Bernadette says:

    Just ordered the Graze box……. First I buy all the books you recommend now food!!!!

  6. ClaireC says:

    I just ordered book-themed tote bags (Dubliners and Alice in Wonderland) from for two friends as presents this year. They print the whole text of a book on a bag (or tee) and use it to form an image as well. Super cool! I’d say order now unless you’re willing to wrap up a picture of the thing, since I’m pretty sure they print to order.

  7. SB Sarah says:

    @Bernadette:

    Now you have snacks for reading! I really hope you like it.

  8. […] Smart Bitches: books & snacks & things, […]

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