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02 / 11
Start: 7:00 pm
Thursday, February 11th at 7 pm "I live on land that has not surrendered the last of its wildness..." In 1971, Susan Hand Shetterly moved with her husband to a small cabin in the wilderness of Maine. Surrounded by natural world and cut off from the busyness of conventional living, she found herself in a different mode of life. Her new collection of essays, Settled in the Wild, captures this pace of life in the Maine woods: marking seasons by the migrating geese, or the movement of ice on a nearby lake. And while some human neighbors lived nearby, life was more populated by a litany of wild creatures: bobcats and raccoons, ravens and cormorants, alewives and salmon. She writes not only about her own experiences -- saving a fledgling raven, watching the paving of an old dirt road -- but also those tricky intersections between humans and nature. Shetterly's keen observations capture both the quiet reflection of a more rural life, and an unceasing wonder at the natural world. "With wisdom and leavening humor, Susan Hand Shetterly tells tales of a small town and the woods around it, of her family and neighbors, two-legged and four, of the sound of wind and the cacophony of silence." "Shetterly's eye for poetic detail is exquisite... she writes about her neighbors with equal grace and empathy. Let's hope it's not another quarter-century before her next collection arrives." Susan Hand Shetterly, a former wild bird rehabilitator, has written about wildlife and wildlands for over twenty years. She is the author of the essay collection The New Year's Owl and several children's books. She was a contributing writer to the Maine Times and her pieces have appeared in Birder’s World, Audubon Magazine, Yankee, and Down East. | ||
02 / 12
Start: 7:00 pm
Friday, February 12th at 7 pm When author Philip Hoare had nearly finished the research and writing of his new book, The Whale, he got the chance he’d always dreamed of: to swim with whales in the wild. “Its great grey head turned towards me, looking like an upright block of granite, overwhelmingly monumental.” While reading Hoare’s book isn’t quite a frigid swim in the North Atlantic, The Whale is a remarkable and sweeping look at the lives and lore of the graceful giants of the deep. Originally published in the United Kingdom in 2008 as Leviathan, Hoare was awarded Britain’s most prestigious award for non-fiction writing, the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize. This February, Hoare’s masterly work will be available in the United States for the first time. Hoare takes readers deep into the world of whales, looking at their lives in the ocean as well as their cultural significance and lasting impact. He explores their fascinating physiology and migration habits. He travels to the fabled whaling towns like New Bedford and Nantucket in Massachusetts, and Hull and Whitby in England, once economic hubs that handled untold tons of whale oil, bone and ambergris, and he recreates life on 19th century whaling vessels. Hoare also explores the whale’s literary legacy, primarily through the American classic, Moby-Dick. Between the science and lore, The Whale also takes on a personal tone. As a young boy, Philip chanced to see a whale in captivity, and the image of that grand animal stayed with him. His life-long fascination eventually culminated in this award-winning work. "Philip Hoare's writing is quite untrammeled by convention and opens up astonishing views at every turn." "Philip Hoare's The Whale is everything you want from a book. It is unpredictable and amusing and informative and original, cavorting between biology, history, travel writing, and memoir with an engaging sense of the subject's charisma." "This singular, magnificent book inspires both awe and shame -- awe of the whales, shame of the human species that has tried to destroy them. In the end, Hoare's virtuosic sympathy for his subject makes you believe in the better angels of our nature." Philip Hoare is the author of biographies of Stephen Tennant and Noël Coward and the historical studies Wilde's Last Stand, Spike Island, and England's Lost Eden. In 2008, Hoare won the Samuel Johnson Prize for the UK edition of The Whale (titled, Leviathan). He is also the writer and presenter of the BBC documentary The Hunt for Moby-Dick. He lives in Southampton, England. | ||
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02 / 25
Start: 7:00 pm
Thursday, February 25th at 7 pm At the age of 80, venerable literary figure Norman Mailer met a young writer, Dwayne Raymond, moonlighting as a waiter in Provincetown, Massachusetts, and hired him as his personal assistant. In the new book, Mornings with Mailer, Raymond recounts the four years they spent working together before Mailer’s death in 2007. The author of more than 40 books, Norman Mailer was one of our country’s most distinguished writers. He was twice awarded a Pulitzer Prize for fiction, first for The Armies of the Night (1968), and later for The Executioner’s Song (1979), and his first novel The Naked and the Dead (1948) was named one of the best 100 English language novels by the Modern Library. | ||