Events
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Start: 9:30 am
Sat 2/23 9:30am-11:30am
Deb Perelman signs copies of her Smitten Kitchen
Cookbook
Knopf $35.00 hc 9780307595652
Join us next door on the Foster’s Market patio to meet
Deb Perelman, author of the bestselling Smitten Kitchen Cookbook.
Deb is a self-taught home cook and
photographer and the creator of SmittenKitchen.com, an award-winning blog with
a focus on stepped-up home cooking through unfussy ingredients.
Foster’s Market will be serving food samples from the
book starting at 9:30am until everything’s gobbled up—come early to meet Deb,
try the samples and get a book signed!
If you can't make the event, call us and we'll get a copy signed for you! 919-942-7373
Start: 2:00 pm
Sat 2/23 2pm-3pm
Christal Presley, memoir: Thirty Days with My Father: Finding Peace from Wartime PTSD
Health Communications (Consortium) $14.95 pb 9780757316463
"Whether you are a professional who treats veterans
and their loved ones, or a person at risk for military PTSD, or anyone who
cares, you will be profoundly moved by this eloquent memoir."
Frank Ochberg, MD, award-winning mental health expert who helped define the
term "post-traumatic stress disorder"
When Christal Presley's father was eighteen, he was
drafted to Vietnam. Like many men of that era who returned home with
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), he was never the same. Christal's father
spent much of her childhood locked in his room, gravitating between the deepest
depression and unspeakable rage, unable to participate in holidays or
birthdays. At a very young age, Christal learned to walk on eggshells, doing
anything and everything not to provoke him, but this dance caused her to become
a profoundly disturbed little girl. At the age of eighteen, Christal left home
and didn't look back. She barely spoke to her father for the next thirteen
years.
To any outsider, Christal appeared to be doing well: she earned a BA and a
master's, got married, and traveled to India. But despite all these
accomplishments, Christal still hadn't faced her biggest challenge her
relationship with her father. In 2009, something changed. Christal decided it
was time to begin the healing process, and she extended an olive branch. She
came up with what she called "The Thirty Day Project," a month's
worth of conversations during which she would finally ask her father difficult
questions about Vietnam. Thirty Days with
My Father is a gritty yet heartwarming story of those thirty days of a
daughter and father reconnecting in a way that will inspire us all to seek the
truth, even from life's most difficult relationships. This beautifully realized
memoir shares how one woman and her father discovered profound lessons about
their own strength and will to survive, shedding an inspiring light on
generational PTSD.
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