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Archive for February, 2007

Ken Alder: The Lie Detectors: The History of an American Obsession

February 16th, 2007

March 6, 2007 / 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm

The Wollman Auditorium
51 Astor Place (Between Third and Fourth Avenues)

Uncovering deception is an American obsession, one so powerful that for the better part of the last century, we have put our faith in a device called the “lie detector,” despite overwhelming evidence that the instrument is unreliable. Science may not have validated the polygraph, but it still pervades the culture—it is used to combat terrorism, interrogate criminals and screen government employees. Acclaimed Northwestern University historian Ken Alder explains the story behind this invention that commanded the trust of a nation but ultimately destroyed the lives of its inventors.

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Elizabeth Ewen and Stuart Ewen: Typecasting: On the Arts and Sciences of Human Inequality

February 16th, 2007

February 27, 2007 / 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm

The Wollman Auditorium
51 Astor Place (Between Third and Fourth Avenues)

Typecasting, a pervasive cultural practice, has long found support in pseudosciences and quasi-sciences like phrenology, a theory that claims to be able to determine character, personality traits and criminality on the basis of the shape of the head. Co-authors Elizabeth Ewen (professor of American history at SUNY, Old Westbury) and Stuart Ewen (professor of film and media studies at Hunter College) examine the history of eugenics, the popularization of stereotypes and the traces of prejudice in the scientific enterprise.

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Howard Zinn and Michael Lally

February 16th, 2007

February 20, 2007 / 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm

The Great Hall
7 East 7th Street at Third Avenue

Historian Howard Zinn (author of The Just War and A People’s History of the United States) and poet Michael Lally (author of “March 18, 2003: a poem for peace,” illustrated by Alex Katz) will read from their works. Photos by award-winning photojournalist Moises Saman (author of This is War) will be on display.

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Return to Fiction

February 13th, 2007

For the first time since the 1997 Booker-Prize winner God of Small Things, Arundhati Roy has announced plans for a new novel.

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Alison Lowenstein,Tom Rayfil and Smartmom in Park Slope

February 10th, 2007

May 24, 2007 / 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm

The Old Stone House
5th Avenue
btw 3rd and 4th Streets
Brooklyn, NY 11215

Price: $5

In honor of Mother’s Day, ALISON LOWENSTEIN, author of City Baby Brooklyn, will read from her novel-in-progress, MOMMY GROUP, about a group of Park Slope moms. TOM RAYFIL will read from his new book, PARALLEL PLAY, about a Park Slope mom, SMARTMOM (aka Louise Crawford) will read excerpts from her Brooklyn Papers column.

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Kristina Chew and Mothers Vox

February 10th, 2007

April 19, 2007 / 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm

The Old Stone House
5th Avenue
btw 3rd and 4th Streets
Brooklyn, NY 11215

Price: $5

KRISTINA CHEW, a classics professor and mom writes a blog called AUTISMLAND. “Finding out your child has autism is like the end of a love affair and the start of a new, lifelong, really beautiful relationship.” MOTHERS VOX, the nom-de-net of a mother, teacher, scholar and activist living in New York City, will read from her blog, AUTISM’S EDGES.

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JOEL ROSE, ” The Blackest Bird: A Novel of Murder in Nineteenth-Century New York”

February 10th, 2007

March 21, 2007 / 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm

Rocky’s Sullivan
129 Lexington Ave.
(btwn 28th & 29th Sts.)
New York, NY 10016

“Irresistibly seductive … .Murder mystery, historical novel, portal to another time; The Blackest Bird is a masterpiece.” - Anthony Bourdain

In the sweltering New York City summer of 1841, Mary Rogers, a popular counter girl at a tobacco shop in Manhattan, is found brutally ravaged in the shallows of the Hudson River. John Colt, scion of the firearm fortune, beats his publisher to death with a hatchet. And young Irish gang leader Tommy Coleman is accused of killing his daughter, his wife, and his wife’s former lover. Charged with solving it all is High Constable Jacob Hays, the city’s first detective. At the end of a long and distinguished career, Hays’s investigation will ultimately span a decade, involving gang wars, grave robbers, and clues hidden in poems by the hopeless romantic and minstrel of the night: Edgar Allan Poe.

Joel Rose founded the literary magazine Between C&D. His previous books include Kill the Poor, Kill Kill Faster Faster, and the urban historical New York Sawed in Half.

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COLUM McCANN, ” Zoli”

February 10th, 2007

March 14, 2007 / 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm

Rocky’s Sullivan
129 Lexington Ave.
(btwn 28th & 29th Sts.)
New York, NY 10016

A unique love story, a tale of loss, a parable of Europe, this haunting novel is an examination of intimacy and betrayal in a community rarely captured so vibrantly in contemporary literature.

Zoli Novotna, a young woman raised in the traveling Gypsy tradition, is a poet by accident as much as desire. As 1930s fascism spreads over Czechoslovakia, Zoli and her grandfather flee to join a clan of fellow Romani harpists. Sharpened by the world of books, which is often frowned upon in the Romani tradition, Zoli becomes the poster girl for a brave new world. As she shapes the ancient songs to her times, she finds her gift embraced by the Gypsy people and savored by a young English expatriate, Stephen Swann.

But Zoli soon finds that when she falls she cannot fall halfway> -> neither in love nor in politics. While Zoli> ‘> s fame and poetic skills deepen, the ruling Communists begin to use her for their own favor. Cast out from her family, Zoli abandons her past to journey to the West, in a novel that spans the 20th century and travels the breadth of Europe.

Colum McCann, acclaimed author of Dancer and This Side of Brightness, has created a sensuous novel about exile, belonging and survival, based loosely on the true story of the Romani poet Papsuza. It spans the twentieth century and travels the breadth of Europe. In the tradition of Steinbeck, Coetzee, and Ondaatje, McCann finds the art inherent in social and political history, while vividly depicting how far one gifted woman must journey to find where she belongs.

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BEVERLY SWERLING, “City of Glory: A Novel of War and Desire in Old Manhattan”

February 10th, 2007

February 21, 2007 / 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm

Rocky’s Sullivan
129 Lexington Ave.
(btwn 28th & 29th Sts.)
New York, NY 10016

Set against the dramatic backdrop of America’s second war for independence, Beverly Swerling’s gripping and intricately plotted sequel to the much-loved City of Dreams plunges deep into the crowded streets of old New York.>

Poised between the Manhattan woods and the sea that is her gateway to the world, the city of 1812 is vibrant but raw, a cauldron where the French accents of Creole pirates mingle with the brogues of Irish seamen, and shipments of rare teas and silks from Canton are sold at raucous Pearl Street auctions. Allegiances are more changeable than the tides, love and lust often indistinguishable, the bonds of country weak compared to the temptation of fabulous riches from the East, and only a few farseeing patriots recognize the need not only to protect the city from the redcoats, but to preserve the fragile Constitutional union forged in 1787.

Joyful Patrick Turner, dashing war hero and brilliant surgeon, loses his hand to a British shell, retreats to private life, and hopes to make his fortune in the China trade. To succeed he must run the British blockade; if he fails, he will lose not only a livelihood, but the beautiful Manon, daughter of a Huguenot jeweler who will not accept a pauper as a son-in-law. When stories of a lost treasure and a mysterious diamond draw him into a treacherous maze of deceit and double-cross, and the British set Washington ablaze, Joyful realizes that more than his personal future is at stake. His adversary, Gornt Blakeman, has a lust for power that will not be sated until he claims Joyful’s fiancée as his wife and half a nation as his personal fiefdom. Like the Turners before him, Joyful must choose: his dreams or his country.

Swerling’s vividly drawn characters illuminate every aspect of the teeming metropolis: John Jacob Astor, the wealthiest man in America, brings the city’s first Chinese to staff his palatial Broadway mansion; Lucretia Carter, wife of a respectable craftsman, makes ends meet as an abortionist serving New York’s brothels; Thumbless Wu, a mysterious Cantonese stowaway, slinks about on a secret mission; and the bewitching Delight Higgins, proprietress of the town’s finest gambling club, lives in terror of the blackbirding gangs who prey on runaway slaves. They are all here, the butchers and shipwrights, the doctors and scriv-eners, the slum dwellers of Five Points and the money men of the infant stock exchange…conspiring by day and carousing by night, while the women must hide their loyalties and ambitions, their very wills, behind pretty sighs and silken skirts.

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Harlem Writers Guild Reading at Stain

February 10th, 2007

February 18, 2007 / 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

STAIN BAR
766 grand street
brooklyn, ny 11211
(L to Grand, 1 block west)

K.C. Washington is a member of the Harlem Writers Guild and a Mellon Fellow. K.C. believes in illuminating the present by revealing the past. Along with other works of fiction and poetry, K.C. has also published in Nubian Gallery, Urban Latino and Cover Magazine. Mourning Becomes Her: a novella is her first novel.

Grace F. Edwards was born and raised in Harlem. She earned a Masters Degree in Creative Writing at CUNY and teaches fiction at Marymount Manhattan College and Frederick Douglass Creative Arts Center. Grace is the Secretary of the Harlem Writers Guild and the author of In the Shadow of the Peacock (McGraw-Hill, 1988)
reissued by Guild Press 2000, If I Should Die (Doubleday, 1997), A Toast Before Dying (Doubleday 1998), No Time to Die (Doubleday, 1999), Do or Die (Doubleday 2000), and The Viaduct (Doubleday, 2003).

Judy C. Andrews is a high school teacher in Brooklyn. She received a Master of Arts degree in creative writing from The City College of New York. She has worked as an editor and freelance writer as well as an advocate for the Children’s Advisory Panel for the International Year of the Child under the leadership of former president Jimmy Carter. Ms. Andrews is a member of The Harlem Writers Guild. An Ocean of Jewels published through the Harlem Writers Guild Press is her first novel.

Adding to an already eclectic and impressive resume, actress and director Gammy L. Singer has brought another color to her artistic palette: author, and she explores storytelling from a perspective that many more-experienced writers wish they could tap. Singer
has been a teacher, a masseuse, a clerical worker, a proofreader, an actress and director. Released in March of 2006, her second novel, Down and Dirty: Another Landlord’s Tale has likeable landlord Amos Brown back in action. The first, A Landlord’s Tale,
was recently optioned for film and television by Laurence Fishburne’s film company, Gypsy Cinema Productions. Ms. Singer earned a master’s degree in Writing Popular Fiction at Seton Hill University in Pennsylvania and has contributed theater reviews for
the New York Amsterdam News and book reviews for online FlavahReviews.com. She resides in Harlem, the setting for her novels, having moved there from Los Angeles and has a daughter, son-in-law and two grandchildren living in Atlanta whom she visits
regularly.

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