Events
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Start: 10:00 am
End: 12:00 pm
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: 3:00 pm
End: 4:30 pm
Saturday
3/27 3pm (note
new time)
Fosters &
Flyleaf Easter Egg-stravaganza:
Cookie Decorating,
the Easter Bunny and
Storytime featuring Darren Farrell, author of Doug-Dennis and the Flyaway Fib
Join us for a joint Fosters Market &Flyleaf Books
event: bring the kids for a fun time of Easter cookie decorating and a
storytime with the Easter Bunny and Darren Farrell, author of the new, very
fun, picture book Doug-Dennis and the
Flyaway Fib.
Recommended for
Preschool and up, this event is free and open to all kids.
More about Doug-Dennis
and the Flyaway Fib:
When best friends Doug-Dennis and Ben-Bobby go to the
circus, something terrible happens.
Doug-Dennis eats all of his best friend's popcorn, and
then tells a fib (It wasn't me!), which grows and grows (Maybe monsters ate
it!), carrying Doug-Dennis away.
As the lie gets bigger, Doug-Dennis flies higher, until
he's floating in a land of lies—some of them big, some small, and some just
downright weird. Doug-Dennis misses his best friend, and realizes there's only
one way to come back down: by finally telling the truth.
This charming sheep is sure to become a favorite. (And
that's the truth.)
Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm
Saturday
3/27/10 7:00pm-8:00pm
Joanna Smith
Rakoff reads from A Fortunate Age
Instantly compelling and immensely satisfying, A
Fortunate Age details the
lives of a group of Oberlin graduates whose ambitions and friendships threaten
to unravel as they chase their dreams, shed their youth, and build their lives
in Brooklyn during the late 1990s.
There’s Lil, a would-be scholar whose wedding brings the
group back together; Beth, who struggles to let go of her old beau Dave, a
onetime piano prodigy trapped by his own insecurity; and Emily, an actor
perpetually on the verge of success— and starvation—who grapples with her
jealousy of Tal, whose acting career has taken off. At the center of their
orbit is wry, charismatic Sadie Peregrine, who coolly observes her friends’
mistakes but can’t quite manage to avoid making her own. As they begin their
careers, marry, and have children, they must navigate the shifting dynamics of
their friendships and of the world around them—from the decadent age of dot-com
millionaires to the sobering post–September 2001 landscape. Smith Rakoff’s
deeply affecting characters capture a generation.
"An entertaining, updated look at artistic-minded
young people progressing toward adulthood in New York. As they experience
marriage, children, dot-com busts, infidelities, alcohol abuse, personal
tragedies, professional successes, and other common experiences of
twentysomethings in the mid-1990s, Rakoff objectively and deftly chronicles all
of it."
-- Library Journal
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