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By Constance Lambson Views (97) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

I'm not a big fan of Hallmark Holidays, or holidays in general, really, but if you are, well, have fun. More joy to you.

This week's readings feature a terrible dilemma: on Friday, both Maxine Hong Kingston and Connie Willis are speaking, at different venues, at the same time! Terrible, awful news! Don't Seattle's booksellers speak to each other? This is criminal scheduling, absolutely unacceptable. I protest! Moreover, I strongly protest! Rise up against the negligence of event planners, I say, rise all you bibliophiliacs; revolt against your oppressors, and make your voices heard. Vive la Révolution!

Ahem.


2/14/2011 12:05 p.m. Seattle Public Library
Thrilling Tales
Story Time for Grown-Ups
Monday lunch hour series at the Central Library.

2/14/2011 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss. Aye, Cap'n!

2/14/2011 6:30 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Ned Vizzini
It's Kind of a Funny Story
EBBC's Young Adult Book Group has a new regular day and time; do take note, please.

2/14/2011 6:30 p.m. West Seattle Branch Library
Seattle Opera
Don Quixote
The Opera previews Massenet's "Don Quixote."

2/14/2011 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Kevin Young
Ardency: A Chronicle of the Amistad Rebels
...Being an Epic Account of the Capture of the Spanish Schooner Amistad, by the Africans on Board; Their Voyage and Capture Near Long Island, New York; with Phrenological Studies of Several of the Surviving Africans

2/14/2011 7 p.m. Queen Anne Books
Patrick Radden Keefe
The Snakehead: An Epic Tale of the Chinatown Underworld and the American Dream
QAB's monthly book club. Repeats Wednesday, February 16.

2/14/2011 8 p.m. Century Ballroom
Nick Hornsby
High Fidelity
The Bushwick Book Club presents music inspired by this dreadful lad-lit novel. Decent movie, though.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (134) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

If you don't yet know who Jane McGonigal is, you are missing out. Ms. McGonigal is a game designer and theorist who claims that gaming is necessary to the survival of the human race. Her new book, Reality is Broken, is an Epic Win. Watch her on TED and then go see her live on Thursday. Buy the book. Collaborate, cooperate, live the dream...

2/7/2011 12:05 p.m. Seattle Public Library
Thrilling Tales
Story Time for Grown-Ups
Monday lunch hour series at the Central Library.

2/7/2011 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss. Aye, Cap'n!

2/7/2011 6:30 p.m. Queen Anne Books
Sarah Blake
The Postmistress
Ms. Blake will read and sign. QAB has chosen this as their March Book Club selection.

2/7/2011 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Sailesh Chutani, Jessica Rothenberg Aalami, & Akhtar Badshah
Technology at the Margins: How IT Meets the Needs of Emerging Markets
Geeks save the world! "A must-read for nonprofit leaders and technologists who want to leverage the power of IT to help solve global poverty. Authors Chutani, Aalami, and Badshah have given the sector one of the best handbooks filled with stories, advice, and best practices." - Beth Kanter

2/7/2011 7 p.m. Richard Hugo House
Works in Progress
Open Mic
A monthly open reading series. Sign up begins at 6:30 p.m.

2/8/2011 -3/6/2011 Queen Anne Books
Book-It Theatre
Great Expectations
QAB has partnered with Book-It to promote the current production. Season ticket holders receive 15% off any title that Book-It performs. From 2/8/2011-3/6/2011, the company will be performing Dicken's overworked novel of narcissistic social climbers. Ahem.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (122) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

This week, Jamie Ford is back in Seattle on another book tour for his debut novel; meanwhile, Ron Reagan fils is still on tour with his memoir of Ron Reagan pere, My Father at 100: A Memoir.

Frankly, the Reagan memoir is not that interesting. I've been trying to come up with something to say about it for a couple of weeks now, and keep butting up against the fact that President Reagan was a boring guy who had a somewhat exciting life. The Reagan family history, which takes up a good third of the memoir, could be about anyone in America, including my own near-ancestors. I'd hoped My Father would be livelier than Edmund Morris's (well-written, but ultimately soporific) Dutch, but instead, My Father is simply shorter--a kind of virtue in itself, I suppose.

And onto the calendar...

1/31/2011 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss. Aye, Cap'n!

1/31/2011 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Deborah Rodriguez
A Cup of Friendship
Ms. Rodriguez's last book was the memoir, Kabul Beauty School, which was entertaining, but apparently not strictly truthful. Or something. This one is listed as fiction, straight up.

1/31/2011 7 p.m. Temple De Hirsch Sinai
Michael J. Sandel
Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do?
Professor Sandel challenges us to examine the ethical foundations of public issues.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (185) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

Edmund Morris, who was scheduled to visit the SPL back on December 10, 2010, will finally share the third volume of his definitive biography of Theodore Roosevelt on Wednesday, 1/26.  The first volume won a Pulitzer, don'tcha know. Unfortunately, Town Hall has Sherry Turkle booked at the same time, which causes a dismaying conflict between history and modernity.

Also highly recommended this week are Stephanie Coontz at Town Hall tonight, discussing The Feminine Mystique 50-ish years later; tomorrow's lecture about dark matter by Richard Panek; and Inaugural poet Elizabeth Alexander on Thursday, 1/27, at Kane Hall.

1/24/2011 12:15 p.m. UW Bookstore
City Club
A Conversation with Dr. Phyllis Wise
A public interrogation of the UW (Interim?) President; go ask about budgets, research, tuition, and curriculum.

1/24/2011 7:30 p.m. Benaroya Hall
Seattle Arts and Lectures
Elizabeth Strout
SAL presents the Pulitzer-winning author of multiple novels.

1/24/2011 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss. Aye, Cap'n!

1/24/2011 7 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Stephanie Coontz
A Strange Stirring: The Feminine Mystique and American Women at the Dawn of the 1960s
The social historian and Evergreen State professor "analyzes the impact of Betty Friedan's groundbreaking 1963 book on the generation of white, middle-class women electrified by Friedan's argument that beneath the surface contentment, most housewives harbored a deep well of insecurity, self-doubt, and unhappiness ... Coontz contends that Friedan's great achievement was uplifting so many women out of despair even if her book ignored the problems of working women, especially blacks, and tapped into concerns people were already mulling over ... This perceptive, engrossing book provides welcome context and background to a still controversial bestseller that changed how women view themselves."- Publishers Weekly

1/24/2011 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Susan Noyes Platt
Art and Politics Now: Cultural Activism in a Time of Crisis
The local art historian and critic considers art that engages issues such as war, terrorism, and racism.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (132) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

This week's calendar features a number of revisits from local artists, poets, and authors, so if you missed Kangas, Baskas, or Perillo last year, you have another chance this week.

For something completely different, the Seattle Public Library now offers free music downloads, via Freegal. Get it? Free and legal music downloads. Patrons can download up to three songs per week from the website; just click through to the Digital Books & Media page, scroll down past the Overdrive link, and there you go.

Also, please join The SunBreak in congratulating Susan Hildreth, head librarian of the Seattle Public Library. On December 22, 2010, the United States Senate confirmed Ms. Hildreth's appointment as Director of Museum and Library Services by President Barack Obama. She will begin her term at the end of this month. Then will begin the search for a new City Librarian... woe.

01/17/11 6 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Claire Dederer
Poser: My Life in Twenty-three Yoga Poses
The reading will begin at 7 p.m., after a reception with the author. "Dederer's humor is tangy and precision-aimed ... A book reviewer and social critic with bylines in The New York Times, Slate, and Vogue, Dederer acidly deconstructs hip, politically correct Seattle ... Dederer writes superbly and offers sharp insights into family dynamics as well as hatha yoga's impact on American life." – Donna Seaman, Booklist

01/17/11 6 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Thought Leaders Discussion
Cascadia: A Vision for a Restorative Future
Island Press presents a panel discussion of sustainability and change.

01/17/11 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
"New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss." Aye, Cap'n!

01/18/11 4 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Perry Moore
Hero
After School & Beyond, the EBBC Young Adult Bookgroup, will discuss this surprising and delightful story of a young, gay superhero. Highly recommended for all ages, by the way.

01/18/11 6 p.m. UW Bookstore
Michael Honey
All Labor Has Dignity
Honey has collected a group of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s speeches that focus on economic justice.

01/18/11 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Cory Doctorow
Little Brother
Speculations, the EBBC SFF Bookgroup, takes on Cory's YA novel of child labor, technology, privacy, and government. Awkward when it's not overly facile, the story nonetheless resonates with anyone who's ever played Farmville or feared the Department of Homeland Security. Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

01/18/11 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Kurt Timmermeister
Growing a Farmer: How I Learned to Live Off the Land
The founder of Cafe Septieme wrote a book: "Timmermeister begins his enterprise with little farming know-how. As he cultivates his agrarian education (often through trial and error), he reflects on self-sufficiency, sustainability, and the industrialization of food production. While narrating over two decades of the farm's history, he describes such tasks as installing bees in a new hive, making apple cider, buying livestock, and slaughtering a pig ... Part memoir, part manual, this refreshingly candid account doesn't oversell its author or a political message." – Lisa Campbell, Library Journal

01/18/11 7 p.m. The UW Club
Naomi Sokoloff & Susan Glenn
Boundaries of Jewish Identity
This discussion of the short fiction of Sayed Kashua, an Arab citizen of Israel, will include a dessert reception.

01/18/11 7:30 p.m. Open Books Poem Emporium
Belle Randall
The Coast Starlight
The local poet shares her first collection in quite a while. Go welcome her back.

01/18/11 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Parag Khanna
How to Run the World
Khanna asks whether we are entering a new Enlightenment, courtesy of Bill Gates and Bono.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (138) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

The literary calendar is packed this week, but snow is once again predicted for the region. Should we actually get a weather event, please call ahead to confirm that the reading event has not been canceled.

01/10/11 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
"New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss." Aye, Cap'n!

01/10/11 6:30 p.m. Richard Hugo House
Northwest Independent Editors Guild
Show and Tell
Guild members will also be swapping office supplies. Allegedly.

01/10/11 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Elsie Hulsizer
Glaciers, Bears and Totems: Sailing in Search of the Real Southeast Alaska
Rescheduled from November, when our little snowstorm caused the cancellation of all life in Seattle, one hopes the weather holds long enough for the local writer to finally say her piece. Or perhaps not, since the previously threatened PowerPoint presentation is still on the evening's agenda.

01/10/11 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Allison Stanger
One Nation Under Contract: The Outsourcing of American Power and the Future of Foreign Policy
This book should be required reading for the "government is too big!" crowd. Them are fightin' words, a meaningless catchphrase tossed out by the misguided, the uninformed, or those who would deliberately mislead the public for questionable purposes.

01/11/11 10 a.m. Barnes & Noble U-Village
Thom Ditty
Storytime
Apparently, the monorail has been wrapped into a Harry Potter billboard for the month of January, in conjunction with the Pacific Science Center exhibit. Mr. Ditty works for the Seattle Monorail. Somehow this is all supposed to make sense.

01/11/11 6 p.m. High Point Branch Library
Poetry Workshop
Get feedback on your writing from a panel of poets. (Meep!)

01/11/11 6:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Helena Norberg-Hodge
The Economics of Happiness
The author of Ancient Lessons: Learning from Ladakh will screen her documentary film about the global movement for economic localization. The showing will be followed by conversation with David Korten, John de Graaf, and Fran Korten.

01/11/11 6:30 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Michael J. Sandel
Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do
The Global Issues & Ethics Book Group meeting examines Wall Street, immigration, affirmative action, marriage, and religion with one of the more interesting books of political philosophy to be published in the past few years. Professor Sandel will not be on hand, unfortunately, but your neighbors will. Join them to discuss liberty and the common good.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (334) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

After far too long, Michael Pollan--author of six books, numerous articles and essays, and semi-official voice of the sustainable food movement--returns to the Pacific Northwest. On January 15th, Benaroya Hall will host Mr. Pollan's talk on "In Defense of Food: The Omnivore's Solution," a cute title for a serious topic that he has been flogging since 2002.

I've been a fan of Pollan's writing since A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder was released, back in 1997. (The title was reprinted in 2008 as A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams.)

Pollan's gentle and funny memoir tells the story of his family's relocation to a place in "the country" and his efforts to build himself a modest (ahem) writing studio out back. Written in the intimate, thoughtful narrative voice that has since become his trademark, Pollan has gone on to write four more books that have increasingly focused on agriculture and sustainability.

The startling success of 2006's The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals turned Pollan into a household name beyond the food-obsessed coasts, due in part to both the text's accessibility and the publisher's excellent timing. Released just a year after the inauguration of World Environment Day in 2005, and the series of sustainability conferences that accompanied it, The Omnivore's Dilemma helped to propel the concept of "locavore" out of food-geek ghettos and into the mainstream--in 2007, the Oxford English Dictionary added locavore to its lexicon. (Even my rural Mississippi parents know what the word means, now.)

Disturbing in both concept and detail, The Omnivore's Dilemma explicated the complicated and deeply irrational food system which both sustains and sickens Americans. Pollan has stayed with the topic, publishing In Defense of Food in 2008 and Food Rules: An Eater's Manual in 2009. With each new book, Mr. Pollan has built his case for eating simply and thoughtfully, a campaign which dovetails neatly into closely allied movements such as Slow Food, organic standards, GMO regulation, and food justice.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (115) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

I may have taken Monday off due to poor planning. Or it may have been part of a sinister plot. I'm reaching, here, people. Not that anything happened. The rest of the week looks interesting, though.

Greg Bear is not pimping Hull Zero Three, tonight, instead signing a Halo tie-in novel at UW Bookstore. The rest of the week is heavy on poetry, both local and imported, with Ben Lerner in town from Brooklyn, and several group readings from home-grown writers.

There's also a sprinkling of sports, science, music, and dance to keep Seattleites intellectually well-rounded, if physically still rather pale and wan. Not as pale and wan as deceased honorees Gerry Garcia and Gypsy Rose Lee, but on the vampirish side, nonetheless.

01/04/11 7 p.m. UW Bookstore
Greg Bear
Halo: Cryptum, Book One of the Forerunner Saga
The local SF legend has penned a game tie-in novel. I'm ambivalent about this. On the one hand, everybody needs to eat, right? And if anyone can write a good tie-in novel, it is Mr. Bear. But still, it makes me feel ooky. (Although, not as ooky as calling a grown man, "Mr. Bear.")

01/04/11 8 p.m. Richard Hugo House
Castalia Reading Series
Group Reading
UW folks read their work.

01/05/11 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Megan Snyder-Camp, Laura Shoemaker, & Sarah Steinke
Poetry Reading
EBBC hosts three local poets whose last names all start with an S. One of those odd little things that strike me as funny, what can I say?

01/05/11 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Doug Merlino
The Hustle: One Team and Ten Lives in Black and White
Back in the '80s, Seattle was trying really hard to be integrated and post-racial, with varying degrees of success. One effort was an integrated student basketball team. Merlino looked up the members, twenty years later, to gauge the results. This is a "sports" book that I will definitely be reading.

01/05/11 7:30 p.m. Richard Hugo House
Scribes
Group Reading
Alums from Hugo House's Scribes program read.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (256) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

The annual midwinter meat-feast is imminent, so cookbooks dominate the (rather slim) literary events this week. Local chefs Greg Atkinson and Ethan Stowell, and urban homesteader Amy Pennington, are appearing at local venues. Also on the calendar are the one and only Nancy Pearl, and Greg Bear, author of one of my favorite creepy-SF stories, Blood Music.

12/13/10 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
"New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss." Aye, Cap'n!

12/13/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
David Rohde & Kristen Mulvihill
A Rope and A Prayer: A Kidnapping from Two Sides
"In suspenseful prose, he recounts his abduction and she describes her efforts, along with those of the Times, to secure his release ... Possibly the most informative segments of the book are the masterly observations of life with the jihadists, the chaotic Pakistani tribal areas and the topsy-turvy war itself. This potent story of love and conflict ends well, but not without making some smart and edgy commentary on terrorism, hostage negotiation, political agendas, and the human heart." – Publishers Weekly

12/14/10 11:30 a.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
ReAct Theatre
Holiday Storytime
Actors will present classic holiday stories near the castle.

12/14/10 6 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Greg Atkinson
Northwest Essentials: Cooking with Ingredients That Define a Region's Cuisine
The NW chef presents a revised and enhanced edition of his very important guide.

12/14/10 7 p.m. UW Bookstore
Greg Bear
Hull Zero Three
SF master Greg Bear is in town to promote his widely anticipated new novel. Whee!

12/14/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Bill Shore
The Imaginations of Unreasonable Men
Why and how do some people persist despite "skepticism, doubt, and logistical and financial obstacles." Why, indeed? Promises to be an interesting talk.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (190) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

This week's readings and signings are all about the gifts. History buffs will want to check out readings by Edmund Morris [CANCELED!] and James Bradley, both of whom have serious Teddy Roosevelt biographies out, or Charles Wilkinson, who opens a window on the Siletz people. Science geeks will be interested in seeing Stan Fields at Town Hall tonight, while Science Fiction geeks should head to Pilot Books for Ted Chiang and Erik Owomoyela.

If the current state of American politics raises your blood pressure and makes you froth at the mouth, or you have a Red-state relative that you really want to piss off, get a book signed by Joshua Holland, Wendell Potter, or Doug Massey, and send it off with your very best wishes. For relatives you don't loathe and despise, there is Sam Verhovek's history of the jet airplane or John Richardson's A Life of Picasso, both of which have local relevance while being non-confrontational.

Trying to lure someone you actually like to Seattle? David Volk gives the scoop on how to live in Seattle on the cheap, while The SunBreak contributor Jay Friedman shares how to eat well. Art, poetry, and music round out this week's list.

12/06/10 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
"New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss." Aye, Cap'n!

12/06/10 7 p.m. UW Bookstore
David Volk
Cheap Bastard's Guide to Seattle
It really all depends on your definition of "cheap." Or, perhaps, "bastard."

12/06/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Matthew Kangas
Burning Forest: The Art of Maria Frank Abrams
Seattle art critic and curator Kangas will discuss the work of local artist and Holocaust survivor Marina Frank Abrams.

12/06/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Stan Fields
Genetic Twists of Fate
The UW professor explains that it really is all your parents' fault.

12/07/10 10 a.m. Barnes & Noble U-Village
Jeannie Ianelli
The Polar Express
Celebrity story-time, or so B&N claims. Who the hell is Jeannie Ianelli?

12/07/10 11:30 a.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
ReAct Theatre
Holiday Storytime
Actors will present classic holiday stories near the castle.

12/07/10 7 p.m. Bellevue Regional Library
Candace Dempsey
Murder in Italy
Not technically within my coverage zone, but our editor has a big thing for the Amanda Knox story, so I'm currying favor by including the reading.

12/07/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Christian Lander
Whiter Shades of Pale: The Stuff White People Like, Coast to Coast, from Seattle's Sweaters to Maine's Microbrews
Play a round of White Bingo during your next car trip. Fun for the whole family. (Hint: The answer is "mayonnaise.")

12/07/10 7 p.m. Barnes & Noble U-Village
Joshua Holland
The Fifteen Biggest Lies about the Economy: And Everything Else the Right Doesn't Want You to Know About Taxes, Jobs, and Corporate America
The editor and senior writer at AlterNet will discuss his book.

12/07/10 7 p.m. UW Bookstore
Truman Capote
A Christmas Memory
UW Book Buyer Brad Craft will read the holiday story.

12/07/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Sam Verhovek
Jet Age
"Seattle journalist Sam Howe Verhovek, author of Jet Age, moderates a discussion with those who designed, built, sold, and flew the iconic jet airliner: Joe Sutter, legendary Boeing 707 engineer and "Father of the 747"; test pilot Brien Wygle; engineer Peter Morton; and PanAm stewardess Paula Clark. The event also features rare photographs and promotional film footage of the 707." - UW

12/07/10 8 p.m. Pilot Books
Feminist SF
Book Club ...

By Constance Lambson Views (189) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

Tomorrow is the last day of National Novel Writing Month. Seattle's team, the Hydrophobic Ducks, is still in first place with a total word count of 49,289,518. Los Angeles, Germany, London, and New York City fill out the rest of the top five. I'll have the full wrap on Wednesday, after my hands quit cramping.

In the meantime, and if you're not participating, maybe you could read a book or something.

11/29/10 3 p.m. Barnes & Noble U-Village
Carolyn Douglas
Storytime
Rescheduled due to snow. Children's stories with anchor Douglas.

11/29/10 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
"New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss." Aye, Cap'n!

11/29/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Jack Shoemaker
presenting the work of Gary Snyder
Counterpoint Press editor Shoemaker presents reissues of Snyder's work, with a screening of a documentary about the poet.

11/29/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Antonio Damasio
Self Comes to Mind: Constructing The Conscious Brain
"...my head I'd be scratchin', while my thoughts were busy hatchin', if I only had a brain."

11/30/10 10 a.m. Barnes & Noble U-Village
Interagency Academy with Jordan Babineaux
Poetry Reading
The Seahawks player reads poetry with students from IA. Fabu.

11/30/10 6:30 p.m. UW Campus, Kane Hall, Room 120
Wes Jackson
Consulting the Genius of the Place
Jackson will be discussing "The Need of a 50-Year Farm Bill and What it Might Look Like".

11/30/10 7 p.m. Secret Garden Books
Molly Coxe
Benjamin and Bumper to the Rescue
Ultimate Tuesday reading with the author.

11/30/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Nancy Medwell
Eternal Moments
The Seattle-based artist presents her new book of photos.

11/30/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Fen Montaigne
Fraser's Penguins: A Journey to the Future in Antarctica
Our friends in feathered formal-wear are in grave danger! Send help.... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (237) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

You should be going to BlogsGiving, tonight. In other news, after last week's multiple cancellations, I feel compelled to remind readers to please call to confirm an event, before you pay for parking. 'Tis the season for canceled and delayed flights, snow storms and black ice.

11/15/10 2 p.m. Secret Garden Books
Seattle Children's Theatre
Lyle the Crocodile
The Secret Garden Bookshop teams up with Seattle Children's Theatre to bring books to life.

11/15/10 6 p.m. Columbia City Theatre
BlogsGiving
A Benefit for Northwest Harvest
If I weren't dying of the influenza, I would be here.

11/15/10 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
"New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss." Aye, Cap'n!

11/15/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Justin Spring & Wendy Moffatt
A Great Unrecorded History: A New Life of E.M. Forster / Secret Historian: The Life and Times of Samuel Steward, Professor, Tattoo Artist, and Sexual Renegade
Two great books about notable and noteworthy queers; one famous, the other infamous.

11/15/10 7 p.m. UW Bookstore
Kim O'Donnel
The Meat Lover's Meatless Cookbook: Vegetarian Recipes Carnivores Will Devour
Vegetarian cooking for carnivores. Don't ask me, I just work here.

11/15/10 7 p.m. Richard Hugo House
Rose Alley Press
Group Reading
Elizabeth Austen, Lana Hechtman Ayers, Oliver de la Paz, Nashira Priester, Belle Randall, Amy Schrader, Michael Dylan Welch, and others.

11/15/10 7 p.m. UW Johnson Hall, Room 102
Steven Simon
The Sixth Crisis: Iran, Israel, America, and the Rumors of War
"Exploring the three aspects of Israel-Iran-U.S. crisis, The Sixth Crisis provides the first full account of the situation since President Barack Obama took office, presenting a comprehensive look at the complex diplomacy underway to temper Iran's nuclear program and its implications on international security." - UW

11/15/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Christopher Wills
Darwinian Tourist:Viewing The World Through Evolutionary Eyes
"From the underwater life of Indonesia's Lambeh Strait to an earthquake off the island of Yap, Wills demonstrates how ecology and evolution have interacted to create our world." - Town Hall

11/15/10 8 p.m. Pilot Books
Caitlyn McGehee, Emily Wittenhagen, & Zac Fulton
Group Reading ...

By Constance Lambson Views (333) | Comments (1) | ( 0 votes)

This weeks literary events include visits from Kat Von D of High Voltage Tattoo; the revered Armistead Maupin with his newest Tale of the City; and many people talking about food. What to eat, what not to eat, why one should or should not be vegan... screw 'em all and go have a burger. Moo!

11/08/10 6 p.m. Barnes & Noble U-Village
Kat Von D
Tattoo Chronicles
Best known to sofa surfers for the Miami Ink & L.A. Ink reality shows, Kat Von D is one of the finest portrait tattooists currently working. She's also funny as hell, has terrible taste in men, and is totally hot. Ahem.

11/08/10 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
"New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss." Aye, Cap'n!

11/08/10 6:30 p.m. Secret Garden Books
Laurie Halse Anderson
Forge
The sequel to Chains.

11/08/10 7 p.m. Seattle Public Library
Andrew Lam
East Eats West: Writing in Two Hemispheres
Mmmmm. Pho. I could totally go for some Pho, right now. Or fish ball noodle soup. That would be good. I really like the vegetarian Pho at Long Provincial, though. Pill Hill for fish balls or downtown for tofu and squid-on-a-stick? It's all so difficult.

11/08/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Mark Kurlansky
Edible Stories: A Novel in Sixteen Parts
You know you want to go: "A delicious and delectable novel by an award-winning food writer that leaves you wanting more." - Kirkus Reviews

11/08/10 7 p.m. UW Bookstore
William Dietrich
The Final Forest: The Battle for the Last Great Trees of the Pacific Northwest
Dietrich offers the shocking theory that national natural resource policy is messed up. No, really?... (more)

By Constance Lambson Views (240) | Comments (2) | ( 0 votes)

Tomorrow is election day. Hopefully, you have already sent in your absentee ballot. If you haven't, find a polling place and vote! Did you know that Australians have to vote, it's the law? Do you want socialized-Australian-gay-anchor-baby-marriage ballots? Then you gotta vote, y'all! If you don't vote, then I will sing, and no one wants that.

11/01/10 12 a.m. Seattle Public Library
Starting today, fines and fees for overdue items will increase, in an attempt to reduce tardiness and meet budget shortfalls. Ah, well.

11/01/10 4 p.m. UW Parrington Hall Common
Michael Edwards
Small Change: Why Business Won't Save the World
Zeke Spier of Social Justice Fund, Adam Porsch of the Gates Foundation, and Cynthia Renfro of the Marguerite Casey Foundation join Edwards to discuss "philanthrocapitalism."

11/01/10 5 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Robert Camuto
Palmento: A Sicilian Wine Odyssey
The author of Corkscrewed: Adventures in the New French Wine Country is in town to share his latest adventures in tippling. Tough life, no?

11/01/10 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
"New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss." Aye, Cap'n!

11/01/10 7 p.m. UW Bookstore
Ch'ŏn Un-yŏng & Hailji
Azalea: Journal of Korean Literature and Culture #2 and #3
Join the emerging writers for a reading and signing.

11/01/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Geoffrey Wolff
The Hard Way Around: The Passages of Joshua Slocum
"As one would expect from Geoffrey Wolff, The Hard Way Around is an engrossing and energetically written life of a very tricky and complex character. Slocum has at last met, in the author of The Duke of Deception, the biographer he has long deserved." - Jonathan Raban.

11/01/10 7 p.m. Richard Hugo House
Works in Progress
Open mic.... (more)

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Do you have a favorite Halloween-themed or scary book, story, or poem? Let us know in the comments!

In the meantime, check out this week's readings and signings, brought to you with some truly horrifying haiku.

10/25/10 6 p.m. Pilot Books
Writer's Group
"New exercises every week. Come prepared to write and discuss." Aye, Cap'n!

10/25/10 6:30 p.m. Secret Garden Books
Christina Wilsdon
For Horse-Crazy Girls Only
Kids can nab a blue ribbon at this launch party.

10/25/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Yiyun Li
Gold Boy, Emerald Girl
Yiyun conjures hope
with rare delicacy in
Gold Boy, Emerald Girl.

10/25/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Cristina Eisenberg
The Wolf's Tooth: Keystone Predators, Trophic Cascades and Biodiversity
Do you remember
the old program, Wild Kingdom?
The food chain at work.

10/25/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Ingrid Betancourt
Even Silence Has an End: My Six Years of Captivity in the Colombian Jungle
Six years captive of
Columbian terrorists
yet she lives to speak.... (more)

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Jonathan Franzen in a really awful picture.

School has started and so has book tour season. There is a metric ton of readings and signings this week, so if you can't find something to tickle your fancy, you aren't trying hard enough.

09/13/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Beverly Olevin
The Good Side of Bad
A novel about family, crisis, and the economic meltdown, set in New York and Seattle.

09/13/10 7 p.m. UW Bookstore
Deborah Willis
Vanishing and Other Stories
The author presents her collection of 14 short stories.

09/13/10 7 p.m. Richard Hugo House
Works in Progress
  Monthly open mic.

09/13/10 7:30 p.m. Open Books Poem Emporium
Norman Fischer & Emily Warn
Fischer reads from Questions/Places/Voices/Seasons and Warn reads from Shadow Architect.

09/13/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Ussama Makdisi
Faith Misplaced
The author will speak on "The Devolution of American-Arab Relations," which will mean discussing the Israel question, which inevitably will lead to shouting and vituperation, although probably not from the podium.

09/14/10 11 a.m. Borders
Maria Ross
Branding Basics for Small Business
What she said.

09/14/10 6 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Jennifer Jordan
The Last Man on the Mountain: The Death of an American Adventurer on K2
I adore stories about crazy-assed mofo's doing deeply insane shit, and this fits the bill. Also, Jordan can write.

09/14/10 6:30 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Howard Zinn
A People's History of the United States
Professor Zinn has unfortunately left us, to muddle along on our own, but he fortunately left a legacy of books and essays that should be required reading for every American. Elliott Bay's Global Issues & Ethics Book Group will be discussing A People's History, Tuesday. You should go.

09/14/10 7 p.m. UW Bookstore
Brandon Sanderson
The Way of Kings
Book One of The Stormlight Archive. TOR promises nine more volumes in this fantasy series.

09/14/10 7:30 p.m. Benaroya Hall
Jonathan Franzen
On Autobiography & Fiction-Writing: An Evening with Jonathan Franzen
I will be out of the country when Franzen steps on stage. That's my excuse for not being there. What's yours?

09/14/10 8 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Eric Puchner
Model Home
Another story of families in crisis, this one the first novel by the author of Music Through the Floor, a collection of stories.... (more)

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Today is Labor Day in the U.S. After the debacles of the past few years, I think it appropriate to revisit exactly what that means, beyond the hot-dogs and stump-speeches, picnics and parades. All together, now:

Are you poor, forlorn and hungry?
    Are there lots of things you lack?
Is your life made up of misery?
   Then dump the bosses off your back.
Are your clothes all patched and tattered?
   Are you living in a shack?
Would you have your troubles scattered?
   Then dump the bosses off your back.

Are you almost split asunder?
   Loaded like a long-eared jack?
Boob--why don't you buck like thunder,
   And dump the bosses off your back?
All the agonies you suffer
   You can end with one good whack
Stiffen up, you orn'ry duffer
   And dump the bosses off your back.

09/07/10 12 p.m. Seattle Mystery Bookshop
Mary Daheim

Loco Motive
The local author presents her latest Bed-and-Breakfast mystery. Daheim will also be at the Bellevue Regional Library at 7 p.m. tonight.

09/07/10 7 p.m. Richard Hugo House
LiTFUSE Launch Party
Locals Tara Hardy, Susan Rich, Mimi Allin, Elizabeth Austen, et cetera, will read and/or perform.

09/07/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Mark Richard Schuster
Lofty Pursuits: Repairing the World One Building at a Time
The Seattle real estate developer talks about sustainability and community.

09/07/10 7 p.m. Barnes & Noble U-Village
William Gibson
Zero History
The Father of Cyberpunk is down from Vancouver to discuss the return of Hubertus Bigend in his bizarrely compelling new novel.

09/07/10 7:30 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
David Callahan
Fortunes of Change
Is it possible that someone can be insanely wealthy and yet not a complete asshole? Callahan suggests so. This could be a severe blow to my zeitgeist.... (more)

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It's a relatively quiet week for the Seattle literary scene, due to the closure of all Seattle Public Library branches, and the hoopla of Bumbershoot. On the bright side, this means that no Library materials are due and no late fines are accrued, for a week. On the less bright side, the Library is closed! Oh, the horror. And there is horror aplenty on this week's calendar, with genocide, environmental destruction, and yet more evidence that U.S. immigration policy and procedure has been less than stellar for many, many shameful decades.

Next week there will be a happy, fluffy bunny reading if I have to make it up.

08/30/10 12 a.m. The Seattle Public Library
The Seattle Public Library system is closed Aug. 30 through Sept. 6
In order to help meet $3M in budget cuts, the entire system is shutting down for a week, saving about $655K. This year, as opposed to last, some online Library services will be available. To leave a comment for the city librarian or the Library Board, call 206-684-0471. Be polite.

08/31/10 12 p.m. Seattle Mystery Bookshop
Jayne Castle (Jayne Ann Krentz)
Midnight Crystal
The (not very) pseudonymous author will sign book three in her Dreamlight Trilogy.

09/01/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Judith Armatta
Twilight of Impunity: The War Crimes Trial of Slobodan Milosevic
I have to admit, the whole genocide thing really freaks me out. The last time I tried to read one of these sorts of books, I had screaming nightmares for weeks, after getting through only a few dozen pages. I can't imagine what the journalist who reported on Milosevic's trial could talk about that wouldn't send me back into therapy. I'm not proud.

09/01/10 7 p.m. Town Hall Seattle
Matthew Kahn
Climatopolis
The author will talk about "Urban Life in a Hotter World." Soylent Green is PEEEEEEOPLE! You heard it here, first.... (more)

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The big news this week is the release of the third Hunger Games novel, Mockingjay. The dystopian young-adult trilogy is among the best of the past two years' YA releases. Reminiscent of early Stephen King, Suzanne Collins' novels are gory thrill-rides set in an indeterminate future where political and economic power is wielded through gladiatorial reality-television contests. These stories are classic hero(ine)'s journey plots with contemporary set-pieces. If you want to know "what the kids are up to, these days," the Hunger Games books are it.

08/23/10 6:30 p.m. University Bookstore, U-District
Christine Hartzler, Dave Rowley, & Matthew Simmons
Best of the Web 2010
Maybe.

08/23/10 11 p.m. University Bookstore, U-District
Release Party
Mockingjay
Go celebrate the release of Suzanne Collins' new book with a battle to the death.

08/23/10 7 p.m. Elliott Bay Book Company
Daniel Burton Rose
Guerilla USA: The George Jackson Brigade and the Anticapitalist Underground of the 1970's
Seattleites have been raising hell and speaking truth to power for over a hundred years. Burton-Rose documents the George Jackson Brigade's campaign against "corporate and state institutions" in the 1970s.

08/24/10 7 p.m. University Bookstore, U-District
Terry Brooks
Bearers of the Black Staff
The ever-reliable local fantasy author touts the first book in a new Shannara series. One has to admire the man's consistency.

08/24/10 10 a.m. Secret Garden Books
Mockingjay Release Party
SGB is celebrating the release of the third Hunger Games book with an all day party. Prizes with purchase, a raffle, and munchies promised.... (more)

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After, lo, these many months, I am finally getting my act together to post upcoming readings, signings, and various related bookish events for those with an interest in such things. Assuming Michael (our brave and noble editor, long may he reign, huzzah!) approves, I will post every Monday. (Perhaps a bit of flattery will ease the way.)

This week starts off with the long-awaited opening of ticket sales for Hugo House's 2010-2011 literary series, and closes out with beers, steers, and queers at Elliott Bay Books. Okay, I lied about two out of three of that last. I think. "Who knows?" she said whimsically, and then proceeded to spend the rest of the evening referring to herself in third-person.

Monday, August 16th

12 a.m. Hugo House
Hugo House Literary Series
Tickets for the fourth season go on sale today. Get 'em while they're hot! Featured authors include Nancy Rawles, Stacey Levine, Laura Love, and many others that I shall not list here. The season starts with Under the Influence on October 15, 2010, followed by Mother Knows Best on November 19, 2010. The series continues on February 18, 2011 with Brief Encounters, i.e. Hugo House: The Musical, and concludes with Born in the U.S.A. on March 18, 2011. Season ticket buyers will save $5/event: what a deal!

1 p.m. Seattle Mystery Bookshop
Carl Hiaasen
Star Island
Hiaasen's books populate U.S. airport and hotel news stands like triffids. It must stop. 

7 p.m. Cafe Racer
Gillian Gaar
Return of the King: Elvis Presley's Great Comeback
Gaar joins Cafe Racer in a "death day" luau in honor of The Pelvis. Rather morbid, if you ask me, not that anyone did.

7 p.m. The Red Door
Charles Bukowski's Birthday Party
Obviously the writer will not be present, unless something very unusual happens before 7 p.m.

7 p.m. University Bookstore, U-District
Carl Hiaasen
Star Island
Fans will be pleased to know that Hiaasen will sign up to six books per person.... (more)