Events

« Tuesday January 26, 2010 »
Tue
Start: 5:30 pm
        Tuesday, January 26, 5:30 p.m. The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner What kind of books are we going to read? Good ones, and you’re going to help pick them out! Perfect for: Anyone in 4th to 6th grade. This month we are reading The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner. Gen is a thief. He is a very good thief, possibly the best thief in the world, which is why he has been plucked out of prison and sent on a mission to steal a treasure from a temple of ancient gods. His adventure is full of danger and stories that are very like, but not quite, the myths of our Ancient Greece. Book Club books are available at the front of the store, in our special Book Club section. Or, just ask us! Book Club members get a 15% discount on Book Club titles – be sure to ask for this discount at the register! Please bring $2.00 for pizza and drinks. Do let us know if you plan to come, or if you have a question. Contact Megan at megan@keplers.com
Start: 7:30 pm
      Tuesday, January 26, 7:30 p.m. Raymond Carver: A Writer's Life  BUY NOW Tobias Wolff will join Carol to read a story written by Carver Raymond Carver was the most beloved American short-story writer of the late twentieth century. Two decades after his death, this definitive biography tells the story of Carver's uncanny ambition, legendary life, and enduring work. When Raymond Carver died at age fifty, readers lost a distinctive voice in its prime. Carver was, the Times of London said, "the Chekhov of middle America." His influence on a generation of writers and on the short story itself has been widely noted. Not so generally known are how Carver became a writer, how he suffered to achieve his art, and how his troubled and remarkable personality affected those around him.  Sklenicka's meticulous and absorbing biography re-creates Carver's early years in Yakima, Washington. She draws on hundreds of interviews with people who knew Carver, prodigious research in libraries and private collections, and all of Carver's poems and stories for Raymond Carver, which took ten years to write.  Photo Credit: R.M. Ryan
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