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2024 Best of C-VILLE Staff Picks

The wheel deal

What’s an e-bike and is it right for you? Josh Carp will let you borrow one of his bikes to help you figure it out. Through his Charlottesville E-bike Lending Library, the electric bike enthusiast allows you to snag one of the eight in his collection for up to a week to see if you like it. There’s tons of benefits: E-bikes are sturdier than mechanical bikes, are designed for commuting, and are battery-powered (thus, eco-friendly). But they’re a little pricier than mechanical bikes, so Carp encourages you to try before you buy.

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2024 Best of C-VILLE Staff Picks

Low-price reader

Pete Manno is the foremost expert on the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library Book Sale. Even before he began running the event for the Friends of JMRL, he was a mega-fan.

At one sale, Manno was browsing on the last day after having spent “way too much money” already. He picked up a book by Victoria Woodhull, who in 1872 became the first woman to run for U.S. president. “It was just an oddball little book,” Manno says. “Her signature was on it—very big and bold. I didn’t think it could really be hers, so I put it down.”

The JMRL Book Sale’s rare books team later verified the signature as authentic. The volunteers put it back on the shelf for the next sale, with a price increase from $4 to $400. This time around, Manno bought it.

The spring and fall book sales are JMRL’s primary funding source for library programs. Throughout the year, volunteers sort the community’s donations, select the best books, and price them to sell. The events, formerly known as the Gordon Avenue Book Sale, have been happening since the 1970s. The most recent spring book sale grossed $163,000.

“It draws people from all up and down the East Coast … collectors and sellers and book-lovers and readers,” JMRL Director David Plunkett says. “The staff that volunteer do it because they love to be around people that love books so much. It’s wonderful.”