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Thu, Sept 8, 7 PM
The WIRED Speakers Series and ALOUD present
“The ‘Cradle to Cradle’
Design Protocol”
In conversation with
Thomas Goetz, Articles Editor, WIRED Magazine
The world-renowned sustainable architect—one of the main proponents of “The Next
Industrial Revolution”— discusses ecologically, socially and economically intelligent architectural solutions.
ZÓCALO
“The Terminator,
John Updike, and
Asian Americana”
Chang, author of five novels, including a mystery trilogy featuring a Korean-American detective, discusses his role as an Asian American writer, his influences, his concerns, and his intentions.
Heir to the
Glimmering World
In conversation with author/critic
David L. Ulin
One of America’s most graceful literary stylists offers grand storytelling inspired by the real-life Christopher Robin.
World Festival of Sacred Music and ALOUD present
Performed by Robert Een and
the Mystical All-Star Band
Obie-award winning composer Robert Een and the Mystical All-Star Band—Gwen Wyatt; Sizzle Ohtaka; Yuval Ron; Mader; Billy Goodrum; M.B. Gordy—draw on diverse musical and spiritual traditions to present a musical vision of a guest house, a refuge for travelers on pilgrimage.
Tickets: $7.00 general admission;
$5.00 Library Associates and students with i.d. Cash only, payable at the door.
Thu, Sept 22, 7 PM
Thirteen Ways of
Looking at the Novel
In conversation with novelist
Marianne Wiggins
Two great writers celebrate the novel—from the 1,000 year-old Tale of Genji to Zadie Smith’s recent bestseller White Teeth; from classics to little-known gems.
The Life of David
The former U.S. Poet Laureate fearlessly plumbs the depths of King David’s life.
“Art and Life: Finding the Thread: L.A. Diary with Peter Sellars”
Screening and discussion with the filmmaker
Goldovskaya’s inquisitive lens offers an intimate glimpse into the life and art of Peter Sellars, one of the most prominent and controversial theatre, opera, and television directors in the world.
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Thu, Sept 22, 7 PM
Jane Smiley
Photo © Elena Seibert
Marianne Wiggins
Photo © Lara Porzak
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Jane Smiley was born in Los Angeles, California, moved to the suburbs of St. Louis, Missouri as an infant, and lived there through grammar school and high school (The John Burroughs School). After getting her B.A. at Vassar College in 1971, she traveled in Europe for a year, working on an archeological dig and sightseeing, and then returned to Iowa for graduate school at the University of Iowa.
M.F.A. and Ph.D. in hand, she went to work in 1981 at Iowa State University in Ames, where she taught until 1996. She has two daughters, Phoebe Silag (1978) and Lucy Silag (1982), and one son, AJ Mortensen (1992). Jane is the author of ten works of fiction, including The Age of Grief, The Greenlanders, Ordinary Love and Good Will, A Thousand Acres, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1992, Moo, Horse Heaven and Good Faith, as well as many essays for such magazines as Vogue, The New Yorker, Practical Horseman, Harper's, the New York Times Magazine and the New York Times travel section, Victoria, Mirabella, Allure, The Nation and others. She has written on politics, farming, horse training, child-rearing, literature, impulse buying, getting dressed, Barbie, marriage and many other topics. She is also the author of the nonfiction book A Year at the Races and from Penguin Lives Series, a biography of Charles Dickens. Her new book, Thirteen Ways of Looking at the Novel, will be published by Knopf in Sept 2005.
Jane lives in Northern California, as do several of her horses.
Marianne Wiggins
Marianne Wiggins is the author of seven books of fiction, including John Dollar, Almost Heaven, and Eveless Eden, which was nominated for the Orange Prize. She has won the Whiting Writers' Award, an NEA grant, and the Janet Heidinger Kafka prize. She won the Commonwealth Club of California Book Award and was a National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize finalist for Evidence of Things Unseen.
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