Showing posts with label author visit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author visit. Show all posts

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Get Excited--It's time for YAVA 2015!

On Wednesday, October 21st the Richmond Public Library will be host to a celebration of best-selling, award-winning Virginia authors of books for middle school age and young adults. Now in its third year, YAVA, which stands for Young Adult Virginia Authors, is more than an event—it is also an award.

The Richmond Public Library YAVA Award will be presented to the winner and two honorable mentions during the 2015 YAVA Book and Author Party. The selection process included open reader’s choice voting and final selection from the top 3 winners, is made possible with support from the Richmond Public Library Foundation. The selected list of 14 titles was narrowed down to three by popular vote. From those three the winner will be decided by this year’s judge, Secretary of Education Anne Holton, life-long advocate for children and families and former first lady of Virginia.

YAVA attendees will be able to meet and mingle with 14 celebrated Virginia authors: Gigi Amateau, Tom Angleberger, Anne Blankman, Bill Blume, Martina Boone, Lana Krumwiede, Sara McGuire, Jodi Meadows, Sara Raasch, Madelyn Rosenberg, Wendy Shang, Steve Watkins, Kat Spears, winner of the 2015 YALSA award for Best Fiction, and this year’s Newbery Honor recipient Cece Bell.

The event is free and the public is invited to enjoy an evening of music, refreshments, lively discussion, book sales and signings, prize raffles, and more.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015
6 – 8:30 pm
Richmond Public Main Library
101 East Franklin Street


Breakaway by Kat Spears 
Conspiracy of Blood and Smoke by Anne Blankman
Dante of the Maury River by Gigi Amateau

El Deafo by Cece Bell
Gidion's Blood by Bill Blume
Ice Like Fire by Sara Raasch

Ghosts of War: Lost at Khe Sanh by Steve Watkins
Nanny X Returns by Madelyn Rosenberg
The Orphan Queen by Jodi Meadows

Persuasion by Martina Boone
Star Wars. Beware the power of the dark side!: an original retelling of Star wars: Return of the Jedi by Tom Angleberger
The Way Home Looks Now by Wendy Wan-Long Shang

True Son by Lana Krumwiede
Valiant by Sarah McGuire

Friday, June 26, 2015

Richmond’s Hidden History is Just Beginning to Be Told

Guest blog by Benjamin Campbell, author of Richmond's Unhealed History. 

The received history of Virginia, as taught in our public and private schools, our museums, our public sites and monuments, and even in our universities, has had a strange, orthodox, doctrinal quality to it. Sometimes – often – it seems comprised of a few great men, a few great ideals, a few great monuments, a lot of street signs, and some commemorative stamps, repeated over and over. Everything else is seen as a footnote, if mentioned at all.

The theft of native lands and decimation of 90% of the population of pre-European Tsenacomoco is taught as an exciting colonial adventure. The enslavement, torture, sale, and resale of 90% of the first white Europeans brought to the colony from 1607 to 1650 is unmentioned. The exportation of all of London’s convicted felons to Virginia and Maryland during the 18th Century is unknown. The revolution which sent 50% of the population into slave labor is described as a successful birth of freedom. And the second largest slave market in America, from which 300,000 or more African Virginians were ripped from their families and shipped into slave labor camps, is buried underground, not even a footnote in approved textbooks.

It is not that the untold stories are completely unknown. They are just not known in Virginia, and never have been. Richmond’s slave market was well described in the London Illustrated News in the mid-19th century. It was described in an excellent chapter in Frederic Bancroft’s classic Slave Trading in the Old South, first published in 1931; in William Still’s The Underground Rail Road, published in 1872; in Eyre Crowe’s With Thackeray in America, published in 1892; and in Charles Emery Stevens’ Anthony Burns: A History, published in 1856. The stories of the earlier Virginia Colony are well-documented – everybody has the same documents – but they are told in a triumphant European way, devoid of balance or historical perspective.

The work of Ed Ayers and Philip Schwarz, some good work at the Virginia Historical Society, and the recent exhibition on slavery at the Library of Virginia, along with a lot of unpublished work on the Burial Ground and Slave Trail in Richmond, are just beginning to unsettle the mythology of our city and state. The tarnishing of the fantasy has been supported by several national publications of note, including the movie version of Twelve Years a Slave and Edward Baptist’s recently published The Half has Never Been Told, a powerful description of the downriver slave trade.

We may, paradoxically, be obsessed with history in Virginia, not because it is wonderful, but to prevent difficult truths from being admitted. Otherwise, the complicated histories of injustice and conflict might rise to the surface, and we could, at last, move on to complete the task of healing our deep wounds.

-- by Rev. Benjamin P. Campbell, author of Richmond’s Unhealed History and Pastoral Director of Richmond Hill, an ecumenical Christian community and retreat center in Richmond, Virginia’s Church Hill.

Join Rev. Ben Campbell at Richmond Public Library’s Ginter Park Branch on Wednesday, July 8, from 6:00 - 7:30 PM as he reads and presents themes from his book, Richmond’s Unhealed History. Book signing will follow.

Monday, September 17, 2012

52 Ways to use your Library Card: Week Three

Week Three: Hear a local author reading his/her latest book.

People should take advantage of great opportunities the library has to offer. One of those opportunities is going to a  "FREEbook talk given by an author.

There have been many great book talks by authors in the past at the Richmond Public Library. We had Meg Medina and Gigi Amateau during the summer for The Girls of Summer program as well as special guest author, Wendy Shang who wrote The Great Wall of Lucy Wu.
We also had child star, Dr. Danielle Spencer-Fields from the show, What's Happening. Even though Danielle is not from Virginia, she has family rooted here.

Expect to see more local author talks, including an upcoming talk from Reverend Benjamin P. Campbell.

Rev. Benjamin P. Campbell

Author Rev. Benjamin P. Campbell of Richmond’s Unhealed History, will lead a book talk and discussion that examines the contradictions and crises that developed in Richmond over the last two centuries. This two-part public discussion is a direct response to what is the “next step” from the Uncovering the 2010 Census program. 5:45 – 9 p.m.

Thurs. Sept 27: The Decision to Destroy Jackson Ward
Thurs. Oct 11: The Liberation of Metropolitan Richmond

More information about the author can be found at this link: Reverend Benjamin P. Campbell.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Girls of Summer 2012: One Night, Three Authors and One Amazing Book List

Gigi Amateau and Meg Medina
If you were not downtown at Library Park on Tuesday, June 19th, you missed a real treat! Oh and ice cream too. Local authors, Gigi Amateau and Meg Medina, presented their second annual Girls of Summer book list. Books about amazing, strong girls for amazing, strong girls! The list is made up of 18 titles for girls of all ages; and includes fiction, nonfiction, and graphic novels. The complete list is posted to their Girls of Summer website.

Each book was introduced at random with a short review. We were even treated to a few readings, which were all done by three wonderful young ladies.

Each Friday, their website will feature and interview with a different author who wrote one of the books on the list. Short reviews of each of the books on the list are also posted.

We were also treated to a conversation with a conversation with Wendy Shang, author of The Great Wall of Lucy Wu.

Wendy used to be a lawyer, and a few years ago she found herself wondering what was the one thing she hadn't done that she still really wanted to do? The answer was write a children's book!

It is hard to grow up and have one foot in two different cultures and no one is every completely comfortable with it. You are always told, to write about what you know, so she did. Which was also the reason why Lucy is twelve.Wendy remembers being twelve better then most other times in her life.

But she also wanted to make Lucy different, so she made Lucy a short, basketball player. (Gigi will tell you that is great basketball in the book!)

Wendy's advice to aspiring writers is this: read! Read a lot, read everything. Write a lot, write a little every day, and learn to edit your own work. 

We are looking forward to next year's event at Library Park!

a crowd of all ages




Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Saturday Events@ Main


If you are out and about this weekend and looking for something to do, the Main Library is the perfect place to be. Come join us for these programs.


The Chamber Music for the River City will be having a free concert, Legends, in the Gellman Room at 12 noon. The concert will be depicting watery tales of beauty and mystery told through the music of Debussy, Szymanowski and Richard Strauss.









As part of the event series, Why Children's BooksAnita Silvey, author of Everything I Need to Know I Learned From a Children's Book, will be here Saturday at 2 pm. This will be the last program for the event.


 

Friday, April 20, 2012

"Why Children's Books" Events

"WHY CHILDREN'S BOOKS: Inspiring Generations" is an exhibit on display now at the Main Library. It explores the power of children's books through stories shared by notable Richmonders. If you want more information on the exhibit and the people involved, you might enjoy reading this article written by Bill Lohmann for the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

The "Why Children's Books" exhibit will be on display through May 29th. If you enjoy reading the stories and hearing about the experiences of the Richmonders featured, you might like to attend some of the events associated with the exhibit.

On Tuesday, April 24th at 6:30 and on Tuesday, May 8th at noon, Dr. Leila Christenbury will be in the Main Library's Special Collections Room to lead a community discussion about favorite children's books and the future of children's literature in the digital age.

On Saturday, May 12th from 10:30 to 2:30, we'll be holding "Children's Day" at the Main Library. Celebrate Children's Book Week and the exhibit with authors Meg Medina and Gigi Amateau, Megan Hicks and her storytelling magic show, crafts with the Children's Museum of Richmond, readings from the exhibit, and more. This event promises to be fun for the whole family.

Anita Silvey, author of Everything I Need to Know I Learned From a Children's Book, will be at the Main Library on Saturday, May 19th at 2 pm. Silvey's book is what inspired the Friends of the Library to sponsor the "Why Children's Books" exhibit, and we can't wait to hear her discuss the topic of children's literature.
 

Wednesday, January 04, 2012

Benjamin Campbell at the Main Library this Friday

This Friday, Church Hill resident Benjamin Campbell will be at the Main Library at 7 pm to discuss his book, Richmond's Unhealed History.

A summary of the book from the publisher's website confirms that this will be a lively and interesting discussion of our city's tumultuous history and its potential as a model for healing and reconciliation:
In a detailed look at the history of Richmond, Benjamin Campbell examines the contradictions and crises that have formed the city over more than four centuries. Campbell argues that the community of metropolitan Richmond is engaged in a decisive spiritual battle in the coming decade. He believes the city, more than any in the nation, has the potential for an unprecedented and historic achievement. Its citizens can redeem and fulfill the ideals of their ancestors, proving to the world that race and class can be conquered by the deliberate and prayerful intention of honest and dedicated citizens. (Brandylane Publishers)
This event is sponsored by the Friends of the Richmond Public Library as part of the Richmond Writers Series. Books will be available for purchase and signing. The discussion will take place as part of our monthly First Friday art exhibit openings. This will be a great opportunity to see some art and learn something new about your city.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Local Author Discusses Lewis Ginter

"Brian Burns tells the story of the man who was the first major marketer of the hand-rolled cigarette in the United States, developed the streetcar suburb of Ginter Park (and helped bring Union Theological Seminary, now Union Presbyterian Seminary, there) and built The Jefferson Hotel. And Burns does more. By using many original sources, he writes of details of Ginter's life that even longtime Richmond-history buffs may not know." --Richmond Times-Dispatch

Local author Brian Burns will be visiting RPL locations during the next three upcoming Saturdays to talk about his new book, Lewis Ginter: Richmond's Gilded Age Icon. Mr. Burns will share the evolution of his passion for Lewis Ginter. He will also discuss his research in uncovering Ginter's phenomenal career along with his inspiring, lifelong devotion to Richmond and its welfare.

Learn more about this Richmond icon and discover how Brian Burns delved into the fascinating life of Lewis Ginter. This program is scheduled at three branches on the following days:
  • Main Library  -  Saturday, October 29th  -  2-3 PM
  • Ginter Park Library  -  Saturday, November 5th   -  2-3 PM
  • West End Library  -  Saturday, November 12th  -  2-3 PM

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Summer Reading Kickoff at Main Library

Lauren Baratz-Logsted writes The Sisters Eight
series with her husband Greg and daughter Jackie.
We are so excited about the Summer Reading Kickoff happening this Saturday at the Main Library. The authors of The Sisters Eight series will be joining us to talk about writing their popular children's books. Behind this wonderful series is a talented family, including Lauren Baratz-Logsted, her husband Greg Logsted, and their daughter, Jackie Logsted. Jackie, age 10, will talk about what it's like to be a published child author with her parents. They will discuss the series, answer questions, and sign copies of the books, which will be available for purchase courtesy of bbgb children's bookshop.

The Sisters Eight is a blend of comedy, mystery, fantasy, and adventure. This fabulous series follows the Huit girls, 7-year-old octuplets, along with their eight talking cats. When their parents vanish, the girls begin a thrilling adventure to find them, and in the process they discover that they each have their own superpower. It is a brilliant mix of reality, humor, and fantasy, with a good dose of girl power. We love that these books provide great examples of healthy self-esteem for children. They're written for kids ages 4-8 (early chapter books), but your whole family will fall in love with the characters. We're willing to bet that you won't be able put these books down.

So come to the library on Saturday to meet The Sisters Eight authors and to sign up for Summer Reading. You'll have chances to win prizes and be involved in fun events all summer long. See you this Saturday!