Kepler's 2020 Project in the News:
Events
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Start: 11:30 am
Sunday, October 11, 11:30 a.m.
Where the Wild Things Are BUY NOW
Climb aboard and journey with us through the forest and across the sea to the place where the Wild Things are. We’ll make crowns and parade through the store roaring our terrible roars, gnashing our terrible teeth, rolling our terrible eyes, and showing our terrible claws.
Let the Wild Rumpus start!
Start: 2:00 pm
Sunday, October 11, 2:00 p.m.
Helen Thomas, Dean of the White House Press Corps: Listen Up, Mr. President: Everything You Always Wanted Your President to Know and Do BUY NOW
Congresswoman Barbara Lee, Chair of the Congressional Black Caucus: Renegade for Peace and Justice: Congresswoman Barbara Lee Speaks for Me BUY NOW
Helen Thomas has covered the administrations of ten presidents in a career spanning nearly sixty years. She is known for her famous press conference closing line, "Thank you, Mr. President," but here she trades deference for directness.
The recipient of more than forty honorary degrees, she was honored in 1998 with the inaugural Helen Thomas Lifetime Achievement Award, established by the White House Correspondents' Association. The author of Thanks for the Memories, Mr. President; Front Row at the White House; and Dateline: White House, she lives in Washington, D.C., where she writes a syndicated column for Hearst.
Barbara Lee's willingness to stand on principle earned her unsolicited international attention when she was the only member of Congress to vote against a resolution giving President George Bush virtually unlimited authority to wage war against nations he personally deemed capable of terrorism.
In this candid and self-effacing book, Lee chronicles the challenges she overcame to break the cycle of multi-generational domestic violence, and her rise from being a young, single mother of two to being one of the most progressive, respected voices in Congress. Lee was first elected to represent California's ninth Congressional District in 1998. In 2005, she was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize along with women from 150 countries as part of the international project, 1000 Women for Peace.
PLEASE NOTE: This is a meet and greet booksigning, not a regular event.
Start: 4:00 pm
Sunday, October 11, 4:00 p.m.
The Dragons of Babel by Michael Swanwick
A war-dragon of Babel crashes in the idyllic fields of a post-industrialized Faerie and, dragging himself into the nearest village, declares himself king and makes young Will his lieutenant. Nightly, he crawls inside the young fey's brain to get a measure of what his subjects think. Forced out of his village, Will travels with female centaur soldiers, witnesses the violent clash of giants, and acquires a surrogate daughter, Esme, who has no knowledge of the past and may be immortal.
Evacuated to the Tower of Babel--infinitely high, infinitely vulgar, very much like New York City--Will meets the confidence trickster Nat Whilk. Inside the Dread Tower, Will becomes a hero to the homeless living in the tunnels under the city, rises as an underling to a haint politician, meets his one true love–a high-elven woman he dare not aspire to. You've heard of hard SF: This is hard fantasy from a master of the form.
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