Events

« January 05, 2010 - February 04, 2010 »
 
01 / 5
01 / 6
01 / 7
Start: 10:30 am
End: 11:00 am

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Thursday  10:30am
Pre-School storytime

Please join us for pre-school storytime every Thursday
morning at 10:30am

01 / 8
01 / 9
Start: 10:00 am

Prompt Writing: Serious writing begins with playful writing. Please join this unique ongoing group of supportive adult writers and play your way into the possibilities of the written word. Based on the work of Natalie Goldberg (WRITING DOWN THE BONES, WILD MIND) we set a timer for fifteen minutes and write using prompts as our launch pads. This class is free and open to the public.

Nancy Peacock’s first book LIFE WITHOUT WATER was published and chosen as a New York Times Notable Book. It was followed a few years later by another novel HOME ACROSS THE ROAD and most recently by a work of nonfiction, A BROOM OF ONE’S OWN: WORDS ON WRITING, HOUSECLEANING, AND LIFE.  Nancy lives in Chatham County and runs writing workshops in her studio and this Prompt Writing class every second Saturday at Flyleaf Books.

Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:30 pm

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Grand Opening
Event

 

Daniel Wallace
& Nic Brown

 

Authors, Musicians, generally highly entertaining fellows
will kick off the Flyleaf Events Schedule in style with a dual reading of each
of their new novels. This will be the first time either author has read from
their new works, which are due to be published later in the year.

 

Daniel Wallace is
author of four novels, including Big Fish (1998), Ray in Reverse (2000), The
Watermelon King (2003) and most recently Mr. Sebastian and the Negro Magician
(2007). His work has been published in over two dozen languages, and his
stories, novels and non-fiction essays are taught in high schools and colleges
throughout this country. His illustrations have appeared in the Los Angeles
Times, Italian Vanity Fair, and many other magazines and books, including Pep
Talks, Warnings, and Screeds: Indispensible Wisdom and Cautionary Advice for
Writers, by George Singleton, and Adventures in Pen Land: One Writer's Journey
from Inklings to Ink, by Marianne Gingher.  Big Fish was made into a motion picture of the
same name by Tim Burton in 2003, a film in which the author plays the part of a
professor at Auburn University. He is in fact the J. Ross MacDonald
Distinguished Professor of English at the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, which is also his alma mater. Though born and raised in
Birmingham, Alabama, he has lived in Chapel Hill longer than he has lived
anywhere else, and he has no plans to leave.

Nic Brown’s first
book, Floodmarkers, was published in 2009 and was selected as an Editor's
Choice by The New York Times Book Review. His short stories have appeared in
the Harvard Review, Glimmer Train, and Epoch, among many other publications. A
graduate of Columbia University and the Iowa Writers' Workshop, he lives in
Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

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01 / 10
Start: 3:00 pm
End: 5:00 pm

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The
Chapel Hill Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS) Community Group invites the
public to a panel discussion, "Where Science and Ancient Wisdom
Meet":  Dan Brown's "The Lost Symbol"  on Sunday,
January 10, from 3 - 5 p.m. in the events room of Flyleaf Books.

 

Panelists
include IONS members Dr. Laura Dunham, energy healer and author of
"Spiritual Wisdom for a Planet in Peril:  Preparing for 2012 and
Beyond" and Dianne Evans, energy healer and Director of Early Brain
Development Studies in UNC's Psychiatry Dept. Leigh Weber of Washington, D.C.,
an energy healer experienced in the intelligence field, international trade and
small business development, and Ric Carter, 32nd Degree Mason (York Rite,
Scottish Rite), Assistant to the Grand Secretary, Grand Lodge of Ancient, Free
and Accepted Masons of NC, and expert on Masonic history in Chapel Hill,
will also participate.

This discussion is free and open to the public

01 / 11
01 / 12
01 / 13
01 / 14
Start: 10:30 am
End: 11:00 am

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Thursday

10:30am
Pre-School storytime

Please join us for pre-school storytime every Thursday
morning at 10:30am

01 / 15
Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

Young is the author of three plays and nine books, including the national bestseller, The David Kopay Story.
A journalist with UPI during the Vietnam War, he remembers his close
friends and colleagues Sean Flynn and Dana Stone, who drove bright red motorcycles into
Communist-held territory in Cambodia on April 6, 1970—and were never
seen again. Young examines their lives and wonders what led
them to take this one final risk, as well as includes profiles of
several other colleagues who took very different paths from Flynn and
Stone. These include the legendary madcap English photographer Tim
Page, who left part of his skull in Vietnam and continues to this day
to search Cambodia for the remains of his beloved friends.

When first published in 1975, Two of the Missing
was hailed by The Washington Post as “Magnificent…unforgettable…one of
the best books yet prompted by the Vietnam War.” Truman Capote called
it “a moving and engrossing chronicle of several fascinating young men
drifting toward mysterious and desperate destinations.” Newsday
described the book as “a tender book about war, about friendship and
love, with more plain virility to it than all the gory epics put
together.” Christopher Isherwood, author of Berlin Stories on which the
musical Cabaret was based, said: “This is an extraordinary book, I
cannot recommend it too highly.”

The new edition by Press 53 contains 18 pages of photographs by and of these two
courageous photojournalists who drove bright red motorcycles into
Communist-held territory in Cambodia on April 6, 1970—and were never
seen again. Most of these photos have never been published before.

“Sean Flynn and Dana Stone were among the bravest and best of that
daring young crew of photographers who covered the Vietnam War,” says
author and friend Perry Deane Young. “Flynn was on assignment for Time
magazine and Stone was a cameraman with CBS when they were last seen
heading around a Communist roadblock near the Cambodian town of Chi
Pou.” Director Ralph Hemecker has optioned the film rights to the book
and is now in the process of casting. The screenplay was written by
Young and Hemecker. 

01 / 16
01 / 17
01 / 18
Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

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Pat
MacEnulty reads from her new novel PICARA;  the story of Eli Burnes, who  grows up under the care of Mattie, an opera
singer, and Miz Johnnie, the family maid, in Augusta, Georgia.

Pat
MacEnulty is a contributor to The Sun Magazine as well as the author of four
books and numerous short stories, essays, poems and plays. She is also a
teacher, workshop leader, writing coach and freelance editor. Pat has a
Ph.D. from the Creative Writing Program at Florida State University and is the
recipient of several awards for screenplays and fiction writing. 

 

01 / 19
01 / 20
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

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Wednesday 

01/20/10  6pm-8pm

Sacrificial Poets
Open Mic

The Sacrificial Poets and Flyleaf Books are teaming up to
provide a community wide open mic every 1st and 3rd Wednesday night. Come share or listen to poems, prose, songs,
or any other personal expression with an audience of open minds and ears. This event is open to contributors of all ages.

 

The Sacrificial Poets are North Carolina’s only youth
Performance Poetry Team, composed of youth ages 13-19 from the Chapel
Hill-Durham area. The students are chosen in a local competition (Slam) and
required to attend practices, workshops, and local community performances. Now
in their fifth year, they teach how to work effectively in a team environment;
learn to effectively express themselves through poetry and performance; learn
how to become community opinion leaders and change makers in the community.  Sacrificial Poets recently formed a
partnership with the St. Josephs Historic Foundation/Hayti Heritage Center in
Durham, and with these partners are striving to make Sacrificial Poets summer
camps and after school programs a reality in 2010.

 

Last year the new 2009 team reached the semi-finals at
Youth Speaks Brave New Voices in Chicago and placed top eight out of fifty plus
teams from around the globe. While at BNV, Sacrificial Poets members G Yamazawa
and Jake Jacoby were featured in the Youth Speaks annual Speak Green
competition. While this success demonstrates the caliber of our youth poets,
the true measure of our accomplishments lies in their fundamental growth as
human beings. Their achievements both on and off the stage demonstrate the
power of poetry as a tool for personal development and social change.

01 / 21
Start: 10:30 am
End: 11:00 am

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Thursday

10:30am
Pre-School storytime

Please join us for pre-school storytime every Thursday
morning at 10:30am

Start: 5:30 pm
End: 7:00 pm

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Thursday

01/21/10 5:30pm

Talking Sidewalks
Literary Magazine Reading & Reception

Talking Sidewalks: 
Voices of Poverty and Homelessness in Chapel Hill is a free, quarterly
literary magazine.  All contributors are
individuals who are currently experiencing homelessness in Chapel Hill. 
Talking Sidewalks is an UNC-Chapel Hill Campus Y organization.

01 / 22
Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

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Friday

1/22/09  7:00pm-8:00pm

Anne & David Whisnant /
WHEN THE PARKWAY CAME

Anne Mitchell Whisnant & David E. Whisnant will discuss WHEN THE PARKWAY CAME, the
first-ever Blue Ridge Parkway book for children.

 

This book helps young readers understand why and how the
most visited site in our national park system came to be built, the differing
views of people affected by it, and the tradeoffs that were necessary along the
way. The beautiful color photographs capture the enduring beauty of the parkway;
while the historical illustrations help readers appreciate the vision and hard
work that brought it into being.

 

ANNE MITCHELL WHISNANT is the author of Super-Scenic Motorway: A Blue Ridge Parkway
History
.  She is Director of
Research, Communications, and Programs for the Office of Faculty Governance at
UNC-CH, where she also holds adjunct faculty appointments in History and
American Studies.

 

Co-author DAVID E. WHISNANT is the author of Modernizing the Mountaineer: People, Power,
and Planning in Appalachia
 and All That Is Native and Fine: The Politics of
Culture in an American Region
.   He
is Professor Emeritus from UNC-CH.

01 / 23
Start: 10:00 am
End: 12:00 pm

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Saturday

1/23/10  10am-12pm

Your Story
Writer’s Group (meets every 4th Saturday)

The focus of this informal group is personal writing and
memoir prep.  Sessions will use focused
writing, micro-instruction, prompts and critique.  This is an informal and open group and there
is no fee for participation. Facilitated by Gaines Steer, Personal Historian
and proprietor of Creative Writing Services in Orange County.

Start: 2:00 pm
End: 3:00 pm

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Local
owner/author Deborah Carnes Christie details the designing and construction of
a healthy, energy efficient, low maintenance, and attractive home. Deb and her
architect/builder John Hartley will be on hand to discuss the design and
creation of Deb’s home called GREEN HOUSE. 
They will discuss researching and using passive solar, Modernist
design, metal roofing, exterior stucco, low-pollution built-in cabinetry and
paints, exposed ductwork, and more. The book also explores tapping experts and
resources for decisions on energy-efficient heating and air conditioning
systems, such as active solar water heating, an auxiliary pump to minimize
waste and wait time for hot water, and a device for injection of fresh air
into an efficient dual-fuel heat pump and gas furnace. It also covers
specifications for safety and emergency devices within a green home.

(as
featured on www.healthyhouseinstitute.com)

01 / 24
01 / 25
01 / 26
Start: 6:30 pm
End: 8:00 pm

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Poetry Out Loud District Competition

Students from Cedar Ridge and Orange High Schools will
compete in the district finals of the Poetry Out Loud National Recitation
Competition, sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Poetry
Foundation. The top two winners from each school will compete, judged by
accomplished local writers Stephanie Levin, Marielle Prince, and Dasan Ahanu,
who will perform from their own collections during intermissions. The program
will be held at 6:30 pm on Tuesday, January 26, and is open to the public.

01 / 27
01 / 28
Start: 10:30 am
End: 11:00 am

Thursday

10:30am
Pre-School storytime

Please join us for pre-school storytime every Thursday
morning at 10:30am

Start: 7:30 pm

Come celebrate with local jazz-blues band Club Boheme as they release their new CD. This event is free and open to the public.

 

 

In late 2005, Shelley Higgins
was looking for a new vehicle for her jazz inspired vocals. Drawn to the
classic mid-century style of Peggy Lee, Mildred Bailey, and Billie Holiday, she
wanted to combine their smooth sass with the mood of 1930s Paris café music. In
a lucky conversation with guitarist Dave Smith, he confessed an obsession with
the legendary gypsy jazz of Django Reinhardt. Another shared soft spot emerged
for the quirky 1970s records of Dan Hicks and his Hot Licks.

 

When the two finally got together
in Dave’s rustic Chatham County studio, a fascinating groove was quickly
established. Shelley knew string bassist Fred Levine from impromptu jams with
the Brown Mountain Lights and he added his rock solid bottom and distinctive
bowed solos. The group vowed never to play a standard tune if they couldn’t
make it sound new.

 

The musical chemistry and
effortless harmonies attracted the attention of other outstanding players.
Classically trained road warrior Gabriel Pelli often appears on fiddle,
bringing his European flair and intuitive fills. You might hear gifted
improviser Tony Galfano on mandolin and fiddle, or other talented friends.

 

Although this music respects the
past, it is not devoted to “upholding traditions”. The focus is strictly on the
fun of performing. Audiences are quick to get on board and tap their feet to
the upbeat exchange of guitar and fiddle… or slide sideways into a bluesy
ballad.

 

 

 

01 / 29
Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:30 pm

**This event has been rescheduled

for Friday April 2nd at 7pm**

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Sam Stephenson is a writer and instructor at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University. He has written a beautiful hardcover book, full of photographs, about W. Eugene Smith's photographs and recordings of some of the biggest names in Jazz who haunted a Sixth Ave loft in NYC in the late 50's... 

 

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"(A) landmark
book...An essential book for jazz fans, photography lovers, and those
interested in the history of New York." - Publisher's Weekly, starred
review.

"Absolutely magnificent.  It brings a moment in jazz to life as
perhaps no work in any other medium, including documentary cinema, ever
has." - Booklist, starred review.

"The most chaotic and soulful gift book this year...an elegiac stew of
sight and sound, and a singularly weird, vital, and thrumming American
document." - Dwight Garner, New York Times.

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"(A) landmark
book...An essential book for jazz fans, photography lovers, and those
interested in the history of New York." - Publisher's Weekly, starred
review.

"Absolutely magnificent.  It brings a moment in jazz to life as
perhaps no work in any other medium, including documentary cinema, ever
has." - Booklist, starred review.

"The most chaotic and soulful gift book this year...an elegiac stew of
sight and sound, and a singularly weird, vital, and thrumming American
document." - Dwight Garner, New York Times.
 

n 1957, Eugene Smith, a thirty-eight-year-old magazine photographer,
walked out of his comfortable settled world—his longtime well-paying
job at Life and the home he shared with his wife and four
children in Croton-on-Hudson, New York—to move into a dilapidated,
five-story loft building at 821 Sixth Avenue (between Twenty-eighth and
Twenty-ninth streets) in New York City’s wholesale flower district.
Smith was trying to complete the most ambitious project of his life, a
massive photo-essay on the city of Pittsburgh.

821 Sixth Avenue was a late-night haunt of musicians, including some
of the biggest names in jazz—Charles Mingus, Zoot Sims, Bill Evans, and
Thelonious Monk among them—and countless fascinating, underground
characters. As his ambitions broke down for his quixotic Pittsburgh
opus, Smith found solace in the chaotic, somnambulistic world of the
loft and its artists. He turned his documentary impulses away from
Pittsburgh and toward his offbeat new surroundings.

From 1957 to 1965, Smith exposed 1,447 rolls of film at his loft,
making roughly 40,000 pictures, the largest body of work in his career,
photographing the nocturnal jazz scene as well as life on the streets
of the flower district, as seen from his fourth-floor window. He wired
the building like a surreptitious recording studio and made 1,740 reels
(4,000 hours) of stereo and mono
audiotapes, capturing more than 300 musicians, among them Roy Haynes,
Sonny Rollins, Bill Evans, Roland Kirk, Alice Coltrane, Don Cherry, and
Paul Bley. He recorded, as well, legends such as pianists Eddie Costa,
and Sonny Clark, drummers Ronnie Free and Edgar Bateman, saxophonist
Lin Halliday, bassist Henry Grimes, and multi-instrumentalist Eddie
Listengart.

Also dropping in on the nighttime scene were the likes of Doris
Duke, Norman Mailer, Diane Arbus, Robert Frank, Henri Cartier-Bresson,
and Salvador Dalí, as well as pimps, prostitutes, drug addicts,
thieves, photography students, local cops, building inspectors,
marijuana dealers, and others.

Sam Stephenson discovered Smith’s jazz loft photographs and tapes
eleven years ago and has spent the last seven years cataloging,
archiving, selecting, and editing Smith’s materials for this book, as
well as writing its introduction and the text interwoven throughout.

W. Eugene Smith’s Jazz Loft Project has been legendary in the worlds
of art, photography, and music for more than forty years, but until the
publication of The Jazz Loft Project, no one had seen Smith’s
extraordinary photographs or read any of the firsthand accounts of
those who were there and lived to tell the tale(s) . . .

 

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Start: 6:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

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Wednesday 

02/03/10  6:30pm-8:30pm

Sacrificial Poets
Open Mic (every 1st & 3rd Wed)

The Sacrificial Poets and Flyleaf Books are teaming up to
provide a community wide open mic every 1st and 3rd Wednesday night. Come share
or listen to poems, prose, songs, or any other personal expression with an
audience of open minds and ears. 
This event is open to contributors of all ages.

 

The Sacrificial Poets are North Carolina’s only youth
Performance Poetry Team, composed of youth ages 13-19 from the Chapel
Hill-Durham area. The students are chosen in a local competition (Slam) and
required to attend practices, workshops, and local community performances. Now
in their fifth year, they teach how to work effectively in a team environment,  learn to effectively express themselves
through poetry and performance, and learn how to become community opinion
leaders and change makers in the community. 
Their achievements both on and off the stage demonstrate the power of
poetry as a tool for personal development and social change.  The Sacrificial Poets recently formed a
partnership with the St. Josephs Historic Foundation/Hayti Heritage Center in
Durham, and with these partners are striving to make Sacrificial Poets summer
camps and after school programs a reality in 2010.

02 / 4
Start: 10:30 am
End: 11:00 am

Thursday

10:30am
Pre-School storytime

Please join us for pre-school storytime every Thursday
morning at 10:30am

 This week's theme: SILLY STORIES

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