Events
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15
Start: 3:30 pm
A longtime Austinite, Malka Dubrawsky originally came here to attend the University of Texas where she earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Studio Art. It was life at home with children that brought her to creating with fabric and eventually to patterning the fabric itself. Her first book, Color Your Cloth: A Quilter's Guide to Dyeing and Patterning Fabric introduces the reader to dyeing fabric with wax resist or batik. The focus of this book is the accessibility of this process to someone who | 16
| 17
Start: 7:00 pm
Jarrettsville is a novel based on the author's family history. It opens in 1869 after Martha Jane Carnes has just shot and killed her fiancé in front of fifty witnesses and former Union militia members. To find out why she did it, the story steps back to 1865, six days after the Confederate surrender and President Lincoln has been assassinated. Martha Jane is loyal to her Confederate family but in love with the Union hero, Nicholas McComas, and after discovering that her brother belongs to the same Rebel militia as John Wilkes Booth, they must keep their affair a secret. Nixon has ghosts to exorcise here. Jarrettsville is an embroidery of imagination on a true piece of her family history, sewn together from old family papers and letters, newspaper accounts and graveyard records. But the story, as vivid as it is, is overshadowed by an even more looming ghost in the nation's family history: the legacy of racism. Cornelia Nixon is an award-winning short story writer and the author of two previous novels. Cornelia Nixon was born in Boston, Massachusetts and spent many happy summers on the "Big Farm" described in her novel, Jarrettsville. Her book on D.H. Lawrence was her Ph.D. dissertation at the University of California, Berkeley, and since then she has written only fiction, including now three novels and numerous short stories. Her stories have won prizes, including the First Prize O. Henry Award in 1995, another O. Henry in 1993, two Pushcart Prizes (1996 and 2003), a Nelson Algren Award in 1988, and the Carl Sandburg Award for Fiction in 1991. She has received fellowships from the Bunting Institute at Radcliffe, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the American Antiquarian Society. She is married to poet Dean Young, lives in Berkeley, California, and teaches in the MFA program at Mills College. | 18
Start: 7:00 pm
AD/HD Generation: Holistic Ways to Support Children is an easy-to-read guidebook for parents and adults that offers reliable facts and tools for helping children thrive, plus step-by-step do-able practices that can be used immediately. AD/HD Generation: Holistic Ways to Support Children is a unique book that is aligned with current research and also supports healthy living, a greener planet, and a peaceful world. Honoring children's individuality and wholeness; it is filled with safe, effective, and holistic parenting tools that honor all aspects of children's be-ing: their physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, and energetic bodies. This book is for ALL parents, not just those with children who have diagnoses or behavioral challenges. The tools and resources in this book support the wholeness and wellness of all children so they can thrive; they also strengthen overall family relationships so that parents and kids can settle into an open, flowing, and more loving space with each other. Cecilia Zúñiga, Ph.D., is an author, teacher, counselor, and life coach. She is a Board Certified Professional Counselor and a Nationally Certified School Psychologist. For years as a School Psychologist in the public schools, she watched as kids lined up outside the nurse's office to get their prescription medications for various diagnoses during their lunch periods. She also spent hours meeting with parents who were looking for answers to their children's wellness that did not involve “drugs.” Realizing that the information about options was confusing and often misleading, Dr. Zúñiga decided to write a booklet to support parents in their searching and provide them with the kinds of parenting tools they were requesting. The booklet evolved into a 10-year project and a nearly 300-page book that challenges society's approach to children's wellness, and takes a more comprehensive look at holistic options and tools for general health and parenting. Go to www.myinnerscapes.com for more information. | 19
Start: 7:00 pm
Three San Antonio Poets (one recently come to settle in Austin) will be reading from their new books. While their subject matter ranges from an exploration of often disorienting aspects of everyday life to world affairs to the Middle Ages, their poems share a well-defined feminine perspective. These poets are attuned to the nuances of the moment and to the possibility of transcendence in these moments. Margie McCreless Roe has had poems in several anthologies and in journals such as Borderlands, Concho River Review, Gulf Coast, New Texas, The Texas Observer, and Windhover. She has published two books, Flight Patterns and Call and Response. Naomi Shihab Nye has called Roe's poems “finely crafted, carefully perceived.” Retired from teaching college English, Roe now divides her time between Cedar Park, Texas, and Estes Park, Colorado. Cyra Dumitru is a nationally published poet who has three collections of poems. Poet Hayan Charara has praised her third book Remains for "its quiet wisdom; what's remarkable about it is that even when it looks at the horrors and losses of the world, it finds beauty." Dumitru teaches full-time at St. Mary's University in San Antonio. Judith Infante has published her poetry and translations of Mexican poetry in numerous national literary journals and anthologies. Love, A Suspect Form, which is a verse re-telling of the story of Heloise and Abelard, is her first book-length publication. Of the poems in this volume Wendy Barker writes " (Infante) brilliantly evokes the twelfth-century world of the doomed lovers . . . this is a highly original work." Steve Bennett writing in the San Antonio Express News calls the work "fascinating." The composer Jan Gilbert who is using the book as the basis for an opera praises the poems for their "fine balance between medieval and contemporary sensibilities." Infante lives in San Antonio. | 20
| 21
Start: 7:00 pm
Edited by Judy Jensen, Borderlands' upcoming issue features poetry, reviews and a photographic series on the Great Inagua, Bahamas, by Emily Ann Griffin. Come celebrate the launch with us! Poets whose new works are published in the fall issue and who will be attendance include: |
