Events
| Sat | ||
|---|---|---|
Start: 10:00 am
End: 12:00 pm
Saturday
04/10/10
10am-12noon (held every second Saturday)
Prompt Writing
Class by Nancy Peacock
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: 2:00 pm
End: 3:30 pm
Sat 4/10 2pm
Carolina Wren
Release Party
Phoebe Hoss
discusses All Eyes: A Mother’s Struggle to Save Her Schizophrenic Son
“Families of
people with mental illness will want to read this book, if for no other reason
than to encounter a version of their own tale retold with clarity, compassion,
and amazing honesty. Though readers will have different children, with
different problems, and most hopefully, different outcomes, parents especially
will recognize their own daily struggles when they read about Phoebe Hoss’s
long fight to endure, to manage and to save her schizophrenic son. Her memoir,
set during the 1970s and ’80s, is especially relevant to those struggling with mental
illness today, because Hoss is graced and cursed with the perspective of
hindsight. This tale of love and loss is at once harrowing and redemptive, and
Hoss does not hold back—she lays bare the failings and miscues of American family
life, our communities, and our precarious health care system. —LYNN YORK,
author of The Piano Teacher
“This searing memoir unflinchingly probes the conflicts
and anguishing choices that can imprison a family trying to cope with the terrors of mental illness. That Phoebe Hoss
never gave up trying to help her son, not even in the face of insulting and destructive
mental health professionals, is a tribute to her intelligence, determination,
maternal commitment, and questing spirit. She has written a brave,
soul-searching book. All Eyes opened
mine.” —ALIX KATES SHULMAN, author of To
Love What Is
“A vivid and compelling read. A rare and poignant view of
a mother’s life with a schizophrenic child. The extraordinarily
heavy toll of a child’s illness and suicide on the entire
family is portrayed elegantly by an extraordinarily fine writer.”
—IRVIN YALOM, author of Love’s Executioner
PHOEBE HOSS is the author of two books for children, Noses are for Roses and Better Never Than Late. She was the
co-translator of The View From Afar by Claude Lévi-Strauss, and the editor of
two books of poetry: River Voices, by
the poets of Stuyvesant Cove Park, and Offerings
II, poems by the members of the Unitarian Church of All Souls, NYC.
About the press: Carolina Wren Press publishes poetry, fiction,
nonfiction, and children’s books. The Press is committed to an ever-growing vision of the
audience for, and the producers of, contemporary literature.
Carolina Wren Press gratefully acknowledges the ongoing
support of the Durham Arts Council and the North Carolina Arts Council.
Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm
Saturday
04/10/10
Thriller author
Bryan Gilmer and Sawyer-Goldberg band swing FELONIOUS JAZZ live
Author Bryan Gilmer reads from Felonious Jazz, a compulsively readable crime thriller set in
Raleigh. The reading will be accompanied Prairie Home Companion-style by the
Sawyer-Goldberg jazz band.
If you enjoy thrillers by the likes of Michael Connelly,
John Sandford, Lee Child or Carl Hiaasen, come discover author Bryan Gilmer,
whose darkly comic crime novels are set in the Triangle. One reviewer called
his FELONIOUS JAZZ, "one of the freshest novels I've read in some
time," while another wrote, "The twist at the end had me screaming
for more."
The Sawyer-Goldberg jazz band will accompany Bryan
Prairie Home Companion-style as he reads scenes. And the band will play
standards from Monk, Miles and other jazz greats as guests mingle and browse
and Bryan meets readers and signs books.
Synopsis: When a top client of an elite Raleigh law firm
comes home to find his McMansion burglarized -- and his new wife's dog dead in
the kitchen -- the man suspects his ex-wife. But legal investigator Jeff Davis
Swaine senses the killer is someone far more dangerous. From a stolen minivan,
washed-up jazz bassist Leonard Noblac watches as Swaine begins to investigate.
He's ready to perform his next crime to punish zeros in the soulless suburbs
and happy to have Swaine in his audience. Used to working from the shadow at
the back of the stage -- and drunk on waterless hand sanitizer -- Leonard intends
to put down a throbbing beat of crime and destruction he hopes will make him
famous: his perfect jazz album of felonies.
Bryan Gilmer has made his living as a writer for more
than 15 years, working first as a night-shift crime reporter for a Southern
newspaper before advancing to Florida's largest paper, the
Pulitzer-prizewinning St. Petersburg Times. Now he teaches newswriting at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and writes for institutional and
corporate clients in addition to his fiction. He lives with his wife, Kelly,
and their son, Quinn, in Durham, North Carolina.
| ||


