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Events
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Start: 11:30 am
Sunday, November 8, 11:30 a.m. Baltazar and the Flying Pirates BUY NOW Baltazar has always enjoyed hearing pirate stories from his grandpa, but he had no idea he was related to the legendary scallywag Greybeard. Will he be able to help the notorious crew of the flying pirate ship reclaim their long lost treasure? They'll need it, now that the amusement Treasure Isle lies atop their booty! San Francisco author Oliver Chin will join us to read, sign books, and share clues about the location of the missing treasure. Start: 2:00 pm
Fall Book Club Mixer! Sunday, November 8, 2:00 p.m. Cider anyone? Sparkling, Spiked or Natural--we'll have it all!
Enjoy cookies and cider as authors Gail Tsukiyama, Brian Copeland and Cara Black join Kepler's Head Buyer, Frank Sanchez, to talk about their best book club picks of the season.
Cara Black frequents a Paris little known outside the beaten tourist track. A Paris she discovers on research trips and interviews with French police and private detectives. She lives in San Francisco with her husband, a bookseller, and their teenage son. She is a San Francisco Library Laureate and a member of the Paris Sociéte Historique in the Marais. Her nationally bestselling and award-nominated Aimée Leduc Investigation series has been translated into five languages. Cara's most recent book is Murder in the Latin Quarter. Brian Copeland is an actor, comedian, radio talk show host, playwright and author based in the San Francisco Bay Area. For the past 12 years he has hosted a talk radio program for KGO (AM). In 2004, Copeland premiered his first one-man show, Not a Genuine Black Man, about his experiences growing up in the East Bay suburb of San Leandro in the 1970s, when it was considered a racist enclave due to its 99.4% white population and coordinated policies of housing discrimination and segregation. It became the longest-running solo show in San Francisco history. His memoir, Not A Genuine Black Man, is based on the play. Gail Tsukiyama, born to a Chinese mother and a Japanese father,is the bestselling author of six novels, including Women of the Silk, The Samurai's Garden and, most recently,The Street of a Thousand Blossoms. She is the recipient of the Academy of American Poets Award and the PEN Oakland/Josephine Miles Literary Award. Gail has served as chair of the Kiriyama Prize fiction panel, and she is WaterBridge Review book reviews editor. Start: 4:00 pm
Sunday, November 8, 4:00 p.m. Santa Olivia by Jacqueline Carey Lushly written with rich and vivid characters, SANTA OLIVIA is Jacqueline Carey's take on comic book superheroes and the classic werewolf myth. Departing from epic fantasy (Kushiel's Dart, etc.), Carey sets this powerful near-future tale in Outpost 12, a small town trapped in a DMZ buffer zone shielding Texas from pandemic-stricken Mexico. Two half-siblings chafing under General Argyle's military rule make very different plans to beat the status quo. Tom, the son of a soldier, lives at the gym, where he trains in boxing and hopes to win his freedom from the town by defeating the general's boxing champion. Loup, who has inherited her escaped father's oddly engineered genes, joins a group of church wards called the Santitos, a tight gang of vigilantes who masquerade as the local saint, Santa Olivia. Carey's fans will enjoy meeting another strong, fearless heroine with special powers, while new readers will appreciate the tight focus that intensifies the depth of character and emotion. -- Publishers Weekly - Starred Review. | ||







