Location: Cambridge, 02138, United StatesLocal venues245 Concord Ave., Cambridge, MA 373 Huron Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138 99 Brattle Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 1640 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, 02138 10 Garden St., Cambridge, MA 02138 64 Aberdeen Avenue, Cambridge, MA 1771 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02140 29 Everett St., Cambridge, MA 02138 14A Eliot St, Cambridge, MA 02138 99 Mt Auburn St, Cambridge, MA 02138 1400 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02238 1 JFK Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 52-B JFK Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 1281 Massachusetts Avenue, Harvard Yard, Cambridge, MA 02138 1271 Massachusetts Avenue, Harvard Yard, Cambridge, MA 02138 1 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 70 Rindge Ave., Cambridge, MA 76A Mount Auburn Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 25 White Street, Cambridge, MA 02140 1256 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138 2 Divinity Avenue Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138 6 Plympton Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 32 Quincy St., Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-3802 45 Francis Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138 55 Elm St., Somerville, MA 02144 1158 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02138 12 Arrow Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 12 Arrow Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 449 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02139 407 Highland Ave, Somerville, MA 02144 193 Belmont St., Belmont, MA 02478 40 College Avenue, Somerville, MA 300 North Harvard St., Allston, MA 02134 4 Pleasant Street, Cambridge, MA 02139 731 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139 694 Broadway, Somerville, MA 02144 698 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 1299 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, MA 02139 175 Massachusetts Ave., Arlington, ma 02474 19 Bow St., Somerville, MA 02143 79 Highland Ave, Somerville, MA 02143 45 Pearl Street, Cambridge, MA 35 Professors Row, Medford, MA 02155 131 Harvard Ave., Allston, MA 02134 226 Pearl St., Somerville, MA 02145 826 Cambridge St., Cambridge, MA 336 Concord Avenue, Belmont, MA 02478 201 Mass Avenue, Boston, MA 02115 765 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 725 Commonwealth Avenue, Room 601, Boston, MA | Local events Christine Gross-Loh, Ph.D
 Drew Magary
 C. Anthony Martignetti, Lunatic Heroes “Miracles and monsters abound in Anthony Martignetti’s memoir Lunatic Heroes...Beautifully, honestly, sometimes fiercely told, these memoirs are, like Martignetti himself, unique.” Neil Gaiman “Thoughtfully described, heartbreakingly honest...a powerful piece of writing and of inner observation and, of course, redemption.” Jack Kornfield, PhD Dark, comic, raw, disturbing, and often redemptive, these tales take us from the 1950s to the present, along with a repeating cast of heroes and lunatics. These characters span the breadth and depths of human qualities and capacities. The same person, in one story, may materialize as a hero and a god, and in another, as a lunatic and a demon. While the author roughs up the people in his stories with the hand of terror, he simultaneously views them with the eyes of love. Martignetti spares no on, and to his credit, particularly not himself. For one who confesses so much fear, he is fearlessly self-revealing. After reading this collection of memoirs, you will come to know these characters and the author intimately. Not that you’d want to, it’s just the way things will turn out. C. Anthony will be in conversation with Amanda Palmer. Yep, that Amanda Palmer.
Location: Street: Porter Square Shopping Center Additional: 25 White Street City: Cambridge, Province: Massachusetts Postal Code: 02140 Country: United States (added from IndieBound)… (more)
Books in Bloom Tour the library to for a free exhibition featuring fresh floral arrangements inspired by book covers. Presented by members of the Spade and Trowel Garden Club of Andover. (added from Eventkeeper)
The Great Books The Great Books Discussion Group meets at the library twice a month, on the second and fourth Wednesdays, in the Fearing Room, from 10:15 to about noon. We welcome newcomers--all ages, stages and persuasions. Ours is a leaderless group that follows somewhat loosely the principles of the Great Books Society. A few guidelines: Please feel free to attend any time (do come a couple of times to check us out!), but we ask that you enter the discussion only if you have done the reading for that session. We want to have a balanced discussion and hear from everyone who wants to participate, so it's important that no one dominate the discussion. We prefer to have only one person speaking at a time so we encourage attentive listening and and discourage side conversations. Great Books suggests that we focus on the reading itself, limiting our discussion to our interpretations of and questions about that particular piece rather than other writings by the author, the author's background, similar writings by other authors, or our own personal experiences. We are pretty good about this. We have also been known to deviate... Typically we read essays, short stories, occasional poetry, and excerpts from larger tomes, generally not more than about 40 pages at a time. Everyone from Plato to present day authors. The first meeting of the month we have been reading from publications by the Great Books Society. On the second meeting of the month we have chosen other selections. For information about current readings, please contact Martha Cochrane at 617-838-7441. (added from Eventkeeper)… (more)
Pen to Paper Creative Writing Sessions 2-DAY WRITING SESSION Pen to Paper Creative Writing Sessions with Writer/Author Laura Lovett Storybook Cove, Event Room Merchants Row, Upper Level Cost: $60.00 Wednesday and Thursday May 22 and May 23 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. each day each day Boys and Girls ages 9+ Each day we'll focus on a new theme: mysteries, poetry, journal writing, fantasy and personal narratives. LIMITED SPACE - RESERVATIONS REQUIRED FOR PROGRAM INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION, PLEASE CONTACT: jbcove@bibeau.us or Storybook Cove at 781-871-7801
Location: Street: Storybook Cove - EVENT ROOM Additional: 2053 Washington Street, Merchants Row - UPPER LEVEL City: Hanover, Province: Massachusetts Postal Code: 02339-1655 Country: United States (added from IndieBound)… (more)
 Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie ( Americanah, Half of a Yellow Sun, The Thing Around Your Neck, The African Trilogy) Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie grew up in Nigeria, where she attended medical school for two years at the University of Nigeria before coming to the United States. A 2003 O. Henry Prize winner, Adichie was shortlisted for the 2002 Caine Prize for African Writing. Her work has been selected by the Commonwealth Broadcasting Association and the BBC Short Story Awards, and has appeared in various literary publications, including Zoetrope and the Iowa Review. Her first novel, Purple Hibiscus, was shortlisted for the Orange Prize and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, and longlisted for the Booker. She now divides her time between the U.S. and Nigeria. (added from Random House)… (more)
Books of Hope Books of Hope Book Release Party. Readings and book signings. (added from Eventkeeper)
Kim Triedman and Donna Johnson, Plum(b) and Selvage “There is love in this book--erotic love, mother love, love animals and nature--but it’s not an easy love. One has to work hard to hold together. And Triedman does, relying on unflinching observation and far-reaching imagination to provide a plumb line to anchor an unknown future.” Wendy Mnookin “Every poem in Selvage digs up treasures of insight, words pungent as the air outside the tannery, ineradicable artifacts like the bullet in a slave woman’s unearthed spine--not always comfortable to contemplate, but satisfying as only the truth can be.” Jendi Reiter Kim Triedman has published widely in such literary journals as Prairie Schooner, Salamander, Women Arts Quarterly, and Poetry International. She won the 2008 Main Street Rag Chapbook Contest for her first collection bathe in it or sleep, and has won and placed in numerous other poetry and fiction competitions. After the 2010 earthquake, she developed and edited Poets for Haiti: An Anthology of Poetry and Art which benefited Partners in Health. Her first novel, The Other Room is due out in October. Donna Johnson grew up in Tennessee, but now lives with her family outside of Boston. Her poems and reviews have been published in Birmingham Poetry Review, Blue Unicorn, Cafe Review and others. In 2010 she won Cutbank magazine’s annual poetry contest and was a finalists for the Patricia Dobler Award. She currently works in the educational software publishing field.
Location: Street: Porter Square Shopping Center Additional: 25 White Street City: Cambridge, Province: Massachusetts Postal Code: 02140 Country: United States (added from IndieBound)… (more)
 Maryanne O'Hara
Rescheduled to October 26, 2013 - Whitey Bulger THIS EVENT HAS BEEN RESCHEDULED TO SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26TH AT 1:00 PM, DUE TO THE CONFLICTS IN THE AUTHORS' SCHEDULES. ALL PATRONS WHO WERE REGSITERED BY 5/1/13 AT 12:00 PM HAVE BEEN REGISTERED FOR THE 10/26 EVENT. WE ARE SORRY FOR THE INCONVENIENCE. Raised in a South Boston housing project, James "Whitey" Bulger became the most wanted fugitive of his generation. In their riveting book, award-winning Boston Globe reporters Kevin Cullen and Shelley Murphy follow Whitey's extraordinary criminal career—from teenage thievery to bank robberies to the building of his underworld empire and a string of brutal murders. Join them for an evening of intrigue. Kevin Cullen, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who has written for the Boston Globe since 1985, was the first to raise questions about Whitey Bulger's relationship with the FBI. A frequent commentator on NPR and the BBC, Cullen has won major journalism prizes including the Goldsmith Prize, the George Polk Award, and the Selden Ring Award. Shelley Murphy has covered Whitey Bulger and organized crime in Boston since 1985, beginning at the Boston Herald and moving to the Globe in 1993. She has won a George Polk Award for National Reporting. (added from Eventkeeper)… (more)
Barrie Edward Local author and Hanover resident Barrie Little-Gill will speak about his latest novel "Death of a Democracy" in the library on May 22 at 7:00pm. The story centers on the exploitation of the Constitution by a group of terrorists using their rights as prisoners in a democracy to gain freedom from the very democracy they had threatened. There is no charge for admittance. Books will be available for purchase and signing. "Terrorists attacking the United States from within is all too familiar. But this novel will take things to a whole new level. Join us at the John Curtis Free Library on May 22nd at 7PM as we welcome author and Hanover resident Barrie Edward. He will discuss his fictional political thriller, his writing, and what led him to pursue the title of author." (added from Eventkeeper)… (more)
Pen to Paper Creative Wrting Sessions 2-DAY WRITING SESSION Pen to Paper Creative Writing Sessions with Writer/Author Laura Lovett Storybook Cove, Event Room Merchants Row, Upper Level Cost: $60.00 Wednesday and Thursday May 22 and May 23 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. each day each day Boys and Girls ages 9+ Each day we'll focus on a new theme: mysteries, poetry, journal writing, fantasy and personal narratives. LIMITED SPACE - RESERVATIONS REQUIRED FOR PROGRAM INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION, PLEASE CONTACT: jbcove@bibeau.us or Storybook Cove at 781-871-7801
Location: Street: Storybook Cove - EVENT ROOM Additional: Merchants Row - UPPER LEVEL, 2053 Washington Street City: Hanover, Province: Massachusetts Postal Code: 02339-1655 Country: United States (added from IndieBound)… (more)
 Jim Gaffigan Jim Gaffigan ( Dad Is Fat) Jim Gaffigan is a stand-up comedian and actor with numerous film, television, and stage credits. He lives in Manhattan with his wife, Jeannie, and their five children in a two-bedroom apartment. (added from Random House)
 Ramona Ausubel
 Qais Akbar Omar, A Fort of Nine Towers “From squatting inside a cave in the head of a Bamyan Buddha to escaping torture at the teeth of a dog and his master, Qais Akbar Omar’s tale of one family’s journey during the Afghan civil war is inscriptional: its images carve themselves into the reader’s mind. Unlike most accounts of life in exile, A Fort of Nine Towers never leaves Afghanistan, as a boy and his family remain trapped within the nation’s borders by familial ties and by war. This book is essential reading for anyone eager to learn what more than three decades of war have cost the Afghan people.” Eliza Griswold, author of The Tenth Parallel: Dispatches from the Fault Line Between Christianity and Islam “I know of no other book in which the complex realities of life—and death—in contemporary Afghanistan are so starkly and intimately portrayed. This brave memoir, rich in tough humor and insight, recounts an insider’s view into both the suffering and the integrity of an uncompromisingly proud and courageous people. Above all, it is a powerful reminder of the extraordinary tenacity of a culture that foreigners have repeatedly and fatally misjudged.” Jason Elliot, author of An Unexpected Light: Travels in Afghanistan Qais Akbar Omar (whose first name is pronounced “Kice”) manages his family’s carpet business in Kabul and writes books. In 2007, he was a visiting scholar at the University of Colorado. He has studied business at Brandeis University and is currently pursuing an MFA in creative writing at Boston University. Omar has lectured on Afghan carpets in Afghanistan, Europe, and the United States. He is the coauthor, with Stephen Landrigan, of Shakespeare in Kabul.
Location: Street: Porter Square Shopping Center Additional: 25 White Street City: Cambridge, Province: Massachusetts Postal Code: 02140 Country: United States (added from IndieBound)… (more)
Political Suicide Meet New York Times bestselling author Michael Palmer as he reads from his new thriller novel Political Suicide.
Also with Daniel Palmer. (added from Macmillan)
Author Talk: Jan David Blais, author of 'Twentieth Century Limited' About Twentieth Century Limited: A COURAGEOUS NEWSMAN DARES TO SPEAK OUT ABOUT THE PARTISAN DIVISION PLAGUING AMERICA. Overcoming disabling injuries, Vietnam vet Paul Bernard becomes an award-winning journalist and television newsman known for holding a mirror to American society. Long critical of the radical right, after 9/11 Bernard attacks the Bush administration for Osama bin Laden's escape and leading the nation into a disastrous war. On assignment in Iraq, he is killed under suspicious circumstances. Interwoven with the account of Bernard's life is an interview of his mentor, Professor Augustus F.X. Flynn, by a magazine writer profiling him. Frustrated by Washington's inaction, the two set out to discover who is behind the killing. Meet the author, Jan David Blais, and enjoy refreshments as well. (added from Eventkeeper)… (more)
Thursday, May 23rd at 7 pm - John Hanson Mitchell, "An Eden of Sorts" Please join us at the Bookshop on Thursday, May 23rd at 7 pm as we welcome back John Hanson Mitchell, reading from his latest book, An Eden of Sorts. Along with his nonfiction work, John Hanson Mitchell is editor of the award winning magazine, Sanctuary, published by the Massachusetts Audubon Society. He was editor of The Curious Naturalist, and a co-author, with Chris Leahy and Tom Conuel, of the coffee table edition of The Nature of Massachusetts (l998), illustrated by the internationally-recognized Swedish painter Lars Jonsson. In 2001 he won a Vogelstein grant for Following the Sun. He was awarded an honorary PhD from Fitchburg State University for his work on the book Ceremonial Time and was given three different grants for his work on Looking for Mr Gilbert. He is also winner of the John Burroughs Essay Award for his Sanctuary piece, “Of Time and the River”. In 2000, he was given the New England Booksellers’ Award for the body of his work. Mitchell attended the Sorbonne and is a graduate of Columbia University. A former journalist, he has had assignments in Kerala in southern India and also the South China Sea and has written extensively about Western Europe.
Location: Street: 65 Main Street City: Concord, Province: Massachusetts Postal Code: 01742-2503 Country: United States (added from IndieBound)… (more)
 Kathryn Miles, "All Standing" (Andover) All Standing: The Remarkable Story of the Jeanie Johnston, The Legendary Irish Famine Ship recounts the journeys of this famous ship, her heroic crew, and the immigrants who were ferried between Ireland and North America. Spurred by a complex web of motivations—shame, familial obligation, and sometimes even greed—more than a million people attempted to flee the Irish famine. More than one hundred thousand of them would die aboard one of the five thousand aptly named “coffin ships.” But in the face of horrific losses, a small ship named the Jeanie Johnston never lost a passenger. Shipwright John Munn, community leader Nicholas Donovan, Captain James Attridge, Dr. Richard Blennerhassett, and the efforts of a remarkable crew allowed thousands of people to find safety and fortune throughout the United States and Canada.
Why did these individuals succeed when so many others failed? What prompted them to act, when so many people preferred to do nothing—or worse? Using newspaper accounts, rare archival documents, and her own experience sailing as an apprentice aboard the recently re-created Jeanie Johnston, Kathryn Miles tells the story of these extraordinary people and the revolutionary milieu in which they set sail. The tale of each individual is remarkable in and of itself; read collectively, their stories paint a unique portrait of bravery in the face of a new world order. Theirs is a story of ingenuity and even defiance, one that recounts a struggle to succeed, to shake the mantle of oppression and guilt, to endure in the face of unimaginable hardship. On more than one occasion, stewards of the ship would be accused of acting out of self-interest or greed. Nevertheless, what these men—and their ship—accomplished over the course of eleven voyages to North America was the stuff of legend.
Interwoven in their tale is the story of Nicholas Reilly, a baby boy born on the ship’s maiden voyage. The Reilly family climbed aboard the Jeanie Johnston in search of the American Dream. While they would find some version of that dream, it would not be without a struggle—one that would deposit Nicholas into a deeply controversial moment in American history. Against this backdrop, Miles weaves a thrilling, intimate narrative, chronicling the birth of a remarkable Irish-American family in the face of one of the planet’s greatest human rights atrocities.
Kathryn Miles is the author of All Standing, which details the miraculous journeys of the famine ship Jeanie Johnston, and Out With Ari, a memoir recounting her year as a canine naturalist. An excerpt of the book was named a Best American Essay by Houghton Mifflin in 2009; two years later, her essay "Killing Laughter" was named a notable essay by the same publication. Since that time, Miles has written about subjects that include Puerto Rican street food, eel poachers, homing pigeons, and lifesavers. Her writing has appeared in publications like Ecotone, Flyway, History Magazine, Outside, and Terrain, where she is also an editorial board members and regular columnist.
Kathryn serves as professor of Environmental Writing at Unity College and as part of the faculty for the Chatham University MFA low-residency program. She is editor-in-chief of Hawk & Handsaw: The Journal of Creative Sustainability and a scholar-in-residence for the Maine Humanities Council. She is also an exceptionally messy chef, a reprehensibly lazy gardener, a mediocre sailboat racer, and a clumsy but passionate surfer.
Location: Andover Bookstore Street: 89 R Main Street City: Andover, Country: United States (added from IndieBound)… (more)
David Lawton DAVID LAWTON, a Woburn native and published poet will appear at our Library on Thursday, May 23 at 7:00 p.m. In celebration of the ultra-hip Three Rooms Press of New York City publishing David's poetry book, he will read some of his poems, talk about the process that brought them about, and answer questions. FREE ADMISSION - light refreshments will be served. Sponsored by the Friends of the Woburn Public Library The library is handicapped accessible; please call for assistance 781-933-0148 (added from Eventkeeper)… (more)
CONSTRUCTION (Ages 4-5) CONSTRUCTION Ages 4-5 FRIDAY, MAY 24 9:30 a.m. to 10:15 a.m. We'll listen to a fun story and make our own lift the flap picture with a surprise find. Reservations required (call 781-871-7801 or e-mail to jbcove@bibeau.us with "Storytime Reservations" in subject line) Location: Street: Storybook Cove - EVENT ROOM Additional: 2053 Washington St. - Merchants Row - UPPER LEVEL City: Hanover, Province: Massachusetts Postal Code: 02339-1655 Country: United States (added from IndieBound)… (more)
CONSTRUCTION (Ages 2-3) CONSTRUCTION Ages 2-3 Tuesday, May 24 10:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. We'll read a fun story and make a lift the flap picture with a surprise! Reservations required (call 781-871-7801 or e-mail to jbcove@bibeau.us with "Storytime Reservations" in subject line) Location: Street: Storybook Cove - EVENT ROOM Additional: 2053 Washington St. - Merchants Row - UPPER LEVEL City: Hanover, Province: Massachusetts Postal Code: 02339-1655 Country: United States (added from IndieBound)… (more)
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