Monday, June 2, 2008

This Week at Auntie's: June 1-7

Sunday, June 1
2:00 p.m. Members of Poetry Scribes, a local group established in 1937, present selections from their original work in the Liberty Café.
2:00 – 5:30 p.m. Inland N.W. Bluegrass Association Jam in the 2nd floor Auditorium. Spectators welcome!

Monday, June 2

6:00 p.m. Scrabble Club meets in the Liberty Café. Drop-ins welcome.
6:30 p.m. Noetics Group meets in the 2nd floor Conference Room. For
information, call 230-5207.

Tuesday, June 3
7:00 p.m. Gay & Lesbian Book Group meets in the 2nd floor Conference
Room.

Wednesday, June 4
7:30 p.m. Local author Kevin Codd presents his book, To the Field of Stars: a Pilgrim’s Journey to Santiago de Compostela, in the Liberty Café.

Thursday, June 5
3:00-5:45 p.m. Private guitar lessons with Leon Atkinson in the 2nd floor
Conference Room.
6:00 p.m. Toastmasters meet in the 2nd floor Conference Room.
7:00 p.m. East Valley High School students from the class of Julie Schipp, and
under the sponsorship of Boy Scouts of America, Explorer Post 503,
read from their novel, London: Minding the Gap, in the 2nd floor
Auditorium.

Friday, June 6
5:00-9:00 p.m. First Friday Art Reception featuring ceramic artists Candace Spitzer
and Kyle Patterson. Both shows will run June 1-30 at the Pottery Place Plus on the main floor of Auntie’s (327-6920).

Saturday, June 7
11:00 a.m. Everyone loves a good story about trucks, and you’ll get to make a
bookmark to take home! Join us for Vroom Vroom Storytime and
Craft in the Children’s Section.


Friday, May 2, 2008

Red Audrey and the Roping

by Jill Malone


Monday, May 5th 7:30pm 2nd Floor Auditorium

Auntie's is proud to announce the reading of our former manager and dear friend Jill Malone.



“Jill Malone’s Red Audrey and the Roping is a terrific debut novel—a sharply-written, entertaining tour of the landscape between longing and regret.” —Jess Walter





“A wonderfully impressive writing debut.” —Sarah Waters





“A surfer chick who teaches Latin! The smart, adrenaline-addicted protagonist of Red Audrey and the Roping is irresistible… —Lucy Jane Bledsoe



http://www.bywaterbooks.com/ :: http://www.jillmalone.com/ ::::

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Good Times: National Poetry Month

April was a great month in Spokane for poetry lovers. Some fine poets were featured at GetLit including Dorianne Laux, David Wohajin, as well as J.W. Marshall. Marshall is a long-time poetry lover and co-owner of Open Books: A Poem Emporium in Seattle, one of the two poetry-only bookstores in the nation. He recently published his first book of poetry Meaning a Cloud. Check out the Open Books website for lots of information about poetry http://www.openpoetrybooks.com/.

Auntie's staffer, Claire B., reminds us that April is the cruelest month in this fine acrostic poem.

A kind word from the weatherman could
Untie this cold-roped city, send
Notes from closed windows. Not
This morning.
Instead a cartoon row of tiny, identical clouds
Each smiling grim like a trapped houseguest,
Spelling snow where there could be spring.

April is over but poetry continues on.... Gonzaga professor, D.S. Butterworth will read from his collection of poems The Radium Watch Dial Painters Tuesday, May 6th at 7:30 pm. And May 30th at 6:00 pm, the Inland Northwest Center for Writers sponsors Martin Espada. His collection, The Republic of Poetry, was nominated for a Pulitzer.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

National Poetry Month Contest

April is National Poetry Month and to celebrate Auntie’s wants to hear from you! Just send us your original acrostic poem built on AUNTIES. Like this:

Acrostics are tricky
Unusally so:
Not to resort
To some gimmick, you know
Ideally, you'd find something
Ever so smart
Sadly I've settled for this piece of "art."

Or any mention of your favorite female relative/bookstore will do. Winners can choose between either of the two Pulitzer Prize winners: Robert Hass’s "Time and Materials" or "Failure" by Philip Schultz.

Kids too! Send us your acrostic poems to win the latest from Children’s Poet Laureate Jack Prelutsky, "My Dog May Be a Genius."

Check back to auntiesbooks.com for poem postings.

Now would also be a great time to catch up on the work of our local poets Christopher Howell, Jonathan Johnson, Tod Marshall, Nance van Winckel, and more. Or pick up the latest edition of EWU’s literary journal known for its fine poetry, Willow Springs.

Find out other ways to celebrate National Poetry Month at poets.org.


Please email submissions to jasmined@auntiesbooks.com (indicate age of child if applicable).

Auntie's Book Group: Suite Francaise

The Auntie’s morning book group met Tuesday for an enthusiastic discussion of "Suite Francaise" by Irene Nemirovsky. The author began the manuscript during the early years of WWII then tragically lost her life in Auschwitz. All agreed the book showed a surprising amount of perspective considering this. Comparisons were made to Mary Doria Russell’s "Thread of Grace," also set during WWII. But where Nemirovsky focuses on the mundane details of Occupation living, Russell is interested in the courage and nobility displayed by the Italians during that difficult time. Join us next month for a discussion of "River of Doubt" by Candice Millard – a biography of Theodore Roosevelt told through his thrilling adventure charting the Amazon River.

2008 Pulitzer Prize Winners Announced


FICTION

"The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao" by Junot Diaz




HISTORY



"What Hath God Wrought" by Daniel Walker Howe



POETRY (dual award)


"Time and Materials" by Robert Hass






"Failure" by Philip Schultz




BIOGRAPHY
"Eden's Outcasts" by John Matteson




DRAMA
"August: Osage County" by Tracy Letts

Monday, March 31, 2008

"The Emperor's Children" by Claire Messud

I am completely ruptured by this book. Yes, ruptured. Claire Messud's quietly ironic, powerfully human story of three thirty-year-old New Yorkers is shattering and lush and gorgeous. Imagine Austen colliding with James and tackling the complex struggle of perception and reality in late American society. Let this book work you over.

Friday, March 28, 2008

"The Willoughbys" by Lois Lowry

This sly, delightful read by Newberry Award-winning author Lois Lowry is a parody of old-fashioned stories. Think of The Secret Garden and the Lemony Snicket books in a mixing bowl and you'll have some idea of the enchanting, clever characters and plot you'll find here. Suitable for boys and girls, this slim volume has orphans, a wealthy industrialist, a nanny, a beastly baby, strange goings-on in Switzerland, chocolate bars, four scheming siblings, and a particularly hilarious glossary. A pleasure to read aloud, this book is recommended for ages 8 and up.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

"Run" by Ann Patchett

I will admit to being an Ann Patchett fanatic. She is one of those marvels of a writer whose narratives are hard and tender and feel like love. In Run, her latest novel, she explores race and family, poverty and privilege, secrets and motherlessness within the context of one mixed-race family in Boston over a period of 24 hours. The plot is unexpected and suspenseful, and you will read deliberately, because each sentence is worth savoring. Discover the latest from the incomparable writer of Bel Canto.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

"Then We Came to the End" by Joshua Ferris

This clever, funny novel about one dot-com company's smash-up is a delight to read. The New York Times listed it as one of the top five fiction books of the year, and it was nominated for a National Book Award, so this title has chops, but what is most pleasurable about the read is the inventive narration and the scaffold of seriousness that supports all the hijinks and wit these characters have.

Monday, December 3, 2007

"The Meaning of Night" by Michael Cox

I just started this excellent page-turner set in Victorian England. It starts out as a confession of murder, "After killing the red-haired man, I took myself off to Quinn's for an oyster supper". The journey to why is proving to be as provocative as the beginning line. Check back on the blog for more to come.

- Janet

Thursday, November 29, 2007

"Burning Fence" by Craig Lesley


How does a kid grow up without his father? And if that father disappears, how hard will the boy try to find him, once he has grown up?

Award-winning author Craig Lesley traces the breakup of his parent’s marriage to the post-war trauma which changed his father’s personality to the point that he simply left, saying, “I’m going to  get a flashlight.” Lesley grows up, becomes a professor, adopts a Native American son who suffers from Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, marries, fathers two daughters, and launches a writing career. 

But the curiosity about his father impels him to find Rudell, a hilariously plain-spoken man who builds the sturdiest fences ever seen in his part of the country.  They develop a relationship that is respectful of the distance Ruddell needs to have from his son and ex-wife, but allowing the joys of grandfatherhood, especially to Lesley’s oldest girl, born on her grandfather’s birthday and with a remarkable resemblance to him.

Lesley’s calm, gentle style lends itself to this tale of a son mending fence with his father.  Great reading!

- Lois