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Arts

Themes of empathy define the 2018 Virginia Festival of the Book

What makes literature distinct from other art forms is the opportunity it allows us to inhabit the space in someone else’s mind, to experience a life other than our own. This act of temporarily shedding our perspectives and concerns teaches us empathy and compassion. After a year in which Charlottesville suffered the effects of intolerance, this practice of coming to understand how another person lives in the world is more imperative than ever. The organizers behind the Virginia Festival of the Book—the newly branded Virginia Humanities and its Virginia Center for the Book—continue to offer exceptional programming that covers a massive breadth of subject matter and interests for readers young and old.

Leland Martin. Publicity photo

Leland Melvin

Chasing Space: An Astronaut’s Story of Grit, Grace, and Second Chances

March 21, 11:45am at the Omni Hotel

Growing up in Lynchburg, Leland Melvin never imagined he would become an astronaut. The chemist, engineer and former NFL wide receiver writes in his memoir, Chasing Space, “While I had a passion for doing many things, my goals hadn’t included exploring the cosmos,” says Melvin. “The universe pulled me there.” Before he was contacted by a NASA recruiter, he never imagined space travel. “Just hearing the words that I would make a good astronaut changed me,” he says. But on day one of spacewalk training, Melvin suffered devastating hearing loss. In his memoir he details how he persevered—with the love and support of many people—regained partial hearing and eventually became a mission specialist on the space shuttle Atlantis. Melvin will appear at the festival’s kickoff luncheon, as well as St. Anne’s-Belfield with students from multiple schools in attendance.

Jason Reynolds. Publicity photo

Jason Reynolds

Long Way Down

March 21, 6pm at UVA Ruth Caplin Theatre

This young adult novel by award-winning author Jason Reynolds uses verse to tell the story of Will Holloman, whose brother, Shawn, is shot and killed two days before the story begins. No stranger to poetry, Reynolds says, “I understand the urgency of poetry, and with a story as intense and as fast-paced as this, verse seemed to be the only viable option.”

Will, bound by the rules his brother taught him—don’t cry, don’t snitch and If someone you love is killed, get revenge—enters an elevator with his brother’s gun, intent on shooting his brother’s killer. Will says of the rules, “They weren’t meant to be broken. / They were meant for the broken / to follow.” But on his descent, Will meets the ghosts of long-gone friends, family members and half-strangers who offer their wisdom as those who have killed and been killed in the cycle of violence perpetuated by the rules.

Lisa Ko. Publicity photo

Lisa Ko

The Leavers

March 21, 4pm at UVA Harrison Institute and March 22, 4pm at New Dominion Bookshop

The festival’s inaugural Carol Troxell Reader, Lisa Ko, will give a solo reading at New Dominion Bookshop during an event established in honor of the shop’s late owner—a voracious reader and supporter of the festival. The Leavers tells the story of Deming, the son of a Chinese immigrant, whose mother vanishes one night in New York City. The narrative follows Deming through the foster care system to the home of a white couple in upstate New York who rename him Daniel and attempt to redirect his love of music toward more academic pursuits. As he grows into adulthood and struggles with his identity, a childhood friend reconnects with him and gives him information about his mother’s whereabouts. Deming/Daniel must decide whether he can face the truth and prepare himself for how it will impact his sense of identity and his place in the world.

Monica Hesse. Publicity photo

Monica Hesse

American Fire: Love, Arson, and Life in a Vanishing Land

March 24, 4pm at Central Library

Written by Washington Post feature writer Monica Hesse, American Fire is a true story of arson in Accomack County, Virginia. In it, Hesse examines the lives of Tonya Bundick and Charlie Smith and the damage that their frustrations and trauma inflicted on an entire community as they lit 67 fires in empty or abandoned buildings over the course of five months in 2012. “To me it never was a whodunit, it was a whydunit from the beginning,” says Hesse. “It’s a mystery about how two normal, regular people can end up burning down half a county.” Her book details the cumulative effect of economic, work and family stressors, and the explosive result that occurs when mixed with the chemistry of this particular couple.

Nic Stone. Publicity photo

Nic Stone

Dear Martin

March 21, 4pm at UVA Harrison Institute and 6pm at UVA Ruth Caplin Theatre

Nic Stone’s debut young adult novel centers on protagonist Justyce McAllister, a black man in his senior year of prep school in Atlanta. One very early morning, Justyce is trying to help his inebriated girlfriend into her car when a police officer slams him to the ground and puts him in handcuffs. That day, Justyce begins writing letters to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., recording his observations and experiences and attempting to live according to King’s ideals. As Justyce reads reports of police brutality against unarmed black men all across the U.S., he encounters racism in his school and his city, and grapples with varying expectations of himself as a young black man.

His mother wants him to finish his education and stay away from the gang in his old neighborhood. His best friend, Manny, wants him to stop rocking the boat in calling out the racist behavior. By the end of the novel, “I think [Justyce] finally comes to the realization that who he is and who he becomes are both very much up to him,” says Stone. “The beauty of the relationships that shape us lies not in the relationships themselves, but what we take from them. What we learn about ourselves and how we interact with people. How we grow as a result. Justyce had to get to that place of collision between contradicting expectations of him, and only in that tension was he forced to decide the best thing for him.”

The story comes to a head when Justyce and Manny have a deadly encounter with a police officer in plain clothes while they’re driving and listening to loud music. Writing the violent scenes in which her characters suffer was difficult for Stone. “Honestly, writing this whole book was pretty terrible,” she says. “I spent 29 years distinctly not looking too closely at the history of people who look like me in this country I call home. I knew it was painful and ugly, so I avoided it.” But, as she writes in her note to the reader, she couldn’t let these ideas go. “Then this book sold on proposal…and I had to look because I had to write it. The worst part was the sense of helplessness I often felt as I both researched and wrote.”

Her advice for those who are in despair right now? “Find something that makes you smile and consume it,” Stone says. “A couple of those things for me are Samira Wiley’s and Lauren Morelli’s Instagram pages. Their story is a reminder to me that there’s hope. That there is love and beauty in the world and that there are things worth fighting for.” She says she does have hope that we’re moving toward a more just future. “I say that just from looking at the past and seeing how far we’ve come. Because we’ve come far, y’all. Is there ‘a ways to go,’ as my granny used to say? Yeah. But progress is progress. That we would continue to press on. Otherwise, what’s the point, you know?”

In addition to her public speaking engagements, Stone will speak to students and staff at Albemarle and Charlottesville high schools.

Tayari Jones. Publicity photo

Tayari Jones

An American Marriage

March 24, 2pm at Central Library and 4pm at Omni Hotel

A woman and man meet in college, fall in love years later and marry. After 18 months of marriage, the man is falsely accused of a crime and sentenced to 12 years in prison. This is the premise of Tayari Jones’ fourth novel, An American Marriage.

The idea began to take shape when Jones was awarded a Radcliffe Institute Fellowship to study the collateral effects of mass incarceration at Harvard. “I read texts, watched documentaries,” says Jones. “I was outraged, but I wasn’t inspired.” A breakthrough came when she was shopping with her mother in Atlanta and overheared a couple in conversation. “I could tell they were in love and they were in trouble,” Jones says. “I heard her distinctly say, ‘Roy, I know you wouldn’t have waited on me for five years.’ And he said, ‘This never would have happened to you in the first place.’ For me, I know I have the raw material for a novel when both characters have a point. So I took the story and ran with it.”

The book addresses racism in the criminal justice system, class tensions, familial strife, intimacy, jealousy, possession and the internal tension of an independent yet married woman. The title, An American Marriage, is perfect for the story Jones tells. But initially she suggested it to her editor as a joke, explaining, “Anytime you call something American it sounds important.” Her editor loved it; Jones wasn’t sure. She told him it sounded “like a book about white people in Connecticut getting a divorce.” He asked her, “Why do you feel like a story that takes place in Connecticut is more American than one set in Atlanta?” She thought about it and realized she’d been called African-American but had never been called American. She sought counsel from her mentor, writer Pearl Cleage, who told her, “If you don’t think it fits, fine, but don’t walk away from it because you think you don’t have a right to it.” And so she ultimately agreed to the title.

Jones left the male protagonist’s name unchanged from the conversation she overheard and named his wife Celestial, an artist who makes elaborate beaded dolls. The idea was inspired by her artist friend who crafts dolls. “Dollmaking is such a perfect metaphor for the challenges of a woman artist,” says Jones. Often when people learn she’s a writer, they assume she writes romances. And when they learn her friend makes dolls, they assume they are baby dolls. As a woman artist, she says, you have to “fight to be taken seriously.” But dollmaking works well as a metaphor in the book, too, Jones says, as Celestial makes dolls for herself and her aspirations while continuing to delay starting a family with Roy, who is ready to be a father.

After Roy is imprisoned, intimate letters written over the course of five years reveal the relationship’s unraveling, damaged by the sorrow and pain of the unjust separation. Celestial’s career takes off, and she finds companionship with her childhood friend, Andre. When Roy’s case is finally overturned and he’s released from prison, Jones brings the three characters together in an unflinching dramatic climax. “I like to have the same sense of breathless anticipation that I have as a reader,” says Jones. “So I let it unfold. My heart was pounding.” She resolves it beautifully, with each of the characters “able to take a new step on a new road that could lead them to the life they want to have.”

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Arts

Catch these highlights at the Virginia Festival of the Book

The programming of the annual Virginia Festival of the Book—now in its 23rd year—always seems to strike a beautiful balance of gravity and levity, tragedy and comedy, difficult reality and the dream of a better future. The organizers draw from a vast array of writers with different lived experiences and this year is no exception. The subjects touched upon encompass our messy human experience: inequality, mental illness, war, but also love, mindfulness, peace and that great community-builder—food. Among these stories there is something for everyone.

Kwame Alexander

Out of Wonder: Poems Celebrating Poets

March 22, 7pm at UVA’s Culbreth Theatre

The title of Kwame Alexander’s illustrated book of poetry comes from a quote by poet and children’s book author Lucille Clifton: “Poems come out of wonder, not out of knowing.” Alexander co-wrote the book with Chris Colderley and Marjory Wentworth with the aim of introducing young readers to 20 different poets through original poems written in their honor. Alexander says, “Poetry can really transform the human spirit.” And having grown up in a literary household, he knows firsthand the effect poetry can have on a young person.

Alexander, who has written more than 20 books for young people, says, “First I want to entertain them because I want to entertain myself. Inspire them because I want to be inspired. I want to empower them, I want them to feel they can change the world or themselves. It’s a lofty goal but it’s something I aspire to.”

The book is gorgeously illustrated by Ekua Holmes, who Alexander says “captured the mood, spirit and energy of each of these poems in a dynamic way that no one else could have done. They’re so full of verve.”

Kaitlyn Greenidge

We Love You, Charlie Freeman

March 25, 10am at the Central Library

Kaitlyn Greenidge’s debut novel begins when Laurel and Charles Freeman move with their two daughters, Charlotte and Callie, from Boston to the Berkshires to live at the Toneybee Institute and teach sign language to a chimpanzee abandoned by his family. What follows is an exploration of communication within families, the language of love, as well as the legacy of racism in America and the individuals and institutions that have propagated it.

As the African-American Freeman family learns to navigate its new predominantly white community, a parallel story arises in alternating chapters of an African-American woman who had encounters with an anthropologist at the Toneybee Institute in the 1920s. As Charlotte uncovers the institute’s racist past, she confronts her mother and her decision to bring the family there.

Greenidge writes in an e-mail to C-VILLE that the mother, Laurel, is “faced with the choices that a lot of us who are not born to privilege, either class-wise or gender-wise or race-wise or a combination of the three, [face]: Instead, you are offered these situations that are not really choices, that are actually asking you to partake in something harmful. But you make allowances, you make arguments, that it won’t be that bad. Every employed black person, certainly every employed black woman, in the U.S. in the last 100 years has been presented with a version of this dilemma. This novel presents a dramatized version of that choice. But it’s the impossibility of those choices that I wanted to talk about.”

Jane Alison

Nine Island

March 23, 2pm at the Central Library

There are road novels, full of noise and bustle, and then there is the more meditative, ambulatory novel. Jane Alison’s nonfiction novel, follows the protagonist J as she walks the boardwalks and bridges of Miami, swims and translates Ovid, pondering her dilemma: whether to retire from romantic love. Alison, professor and director of creative writing at UVA, writes in an e-mail that the impetus for the book “emerged when I was walking one evening on the Venetian Causeway (in Miami, where I lived until three years ago), thinking about a (distant) man or two who had caused me grief, and about the (dead) Roman poet Ovid, whose stories of sexual transformation I was translating, and about the whole troublesome enterprise of sexual love and whether it was really worth having, when a striking man appeared suddenly in the doorway of a house I’d thought was abandoned. A volley of ideas came together in that instant, about hopelessly dead or distant men and sexual longing and fantasy and Miami’s sensual splendor.”

Though her quest is an internal one, J encounters interesting characters along the way: the upstairs neighbor who drops something invisible from her balcony every day into the plants below; the hairstylist who clues J in to the culture of boat girls in Miami who lie like ornaments on the bows of ships, one of whom meets a violent end (connecting threads of violence against women that ripple out from Ovid’s stories and reflect J’s lived experience). “My book,” Alison writes, “is largely about the functions of both desire and time upon a female body: both transformative and erosive.”


GET MORE IN-DEPTH

Fiction

Christina Baker Kline, author of the international best-seller Orphan Train, is on tour for her latest work of historical fiction, A Piece of the World. The novel takes its inspiration from Andrew Wyeth’s painting “Christina’s World” and explores the relationship between the painter and his subject, Christina Olson, a neighbor disabled by polio. March 23, 6pm at Christ Episcopal Church.

Kathleen Grissom of Lynchburg will discuss her latest novel, Glory Over Everything, a follow-up to her New York Times bestseller, The Kitchen House. This historical novel follows Jamie Pyke, born to a slave and master—and passing for white in 1830s Philadelphia—as he returns south to help two enslaved friends escape through the Underground Railroad. March 22, 4pm at JMRL Central Library.

HiddenFigures

Nonfiction

Margot Lee Shetterly by now needs no introduction. The Charlottesville resident and 1991 UVA graduate is the author of Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Who Helped Win the Space Race, which was adapted into an award-winning feature film last year. She will appear at the Paramount alongside Dava Sobel. March 25 (sold out)

Sue Klebold, mother of Dylan Klebold, one of the two shooters in the 1999 Columbine High School shooting, penned the powerful memoir, A Mother’s Reckoning: Living in the Aftermath of Tragedy. In it she shares the details of her family life as well as what she has learned since about brain health, depression, suicide and violence prevention. March 26, 1pm at UVA’s Culbreth Theatre.

Poetry

Lisa Russ Spaar, poet and UVA professor, will discuss her latest collection, Orexia: Poems. With such evocative lines as “Bitten moon. Perfect. What’s to come,” these poems explore desire as well as feelings of mortality later in life.

Debra Nystrom, poet and UVA professor, weaves a narrative of two abandoned children, Will and Ellie, in her fourth collection of poetry, Night Sky Frequencies and Selected Poems.

Tim Seibles, the current Poet Laureate of Virginia and a professor at Old Dominion University, explores aging, mortality and the obstacles injustice and inequality pose to a peaceful life in his latest collection, One Turn Around the Sun.

Spaar, Nystrom and Seibles appear March 23, 8pm at Christ Episcopal Church.

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Real Estate

Up Close and Personal: The 2017 Virginia Festival of The Book

By Ken Wilson – 

Up and down Charlottesville’s Downtown Mall on a recent Saturday morning, the literati were looking. At New Dominion Bookshop, the oldest bookstore in town, dating back to 1924, a woman was checking out the Lit Crit section.  At the Blue Whale, where original prints, antiquarian maps, and rare volumes sit alongside 20,000 used books, a man was browsing in the philosophy of science section. At Read It Again, Sam folks were eyeing the racks out front. And just off the Mall at Daedalus Used Bookshop, the oldest used bookstore in town, a couple was navigating three floors with 100,000 books in search of . . . What is it with all these people? Haven’t they heard of the Internet, Kindle downloads, free shipping and next day delivery? Chances are they have. No, the reason there are so many booksellers on the Mall in addition to a great big chain store elsewhere in the city is that around here we like to get up close and personal with books and the good people who write them.

That’s why the annual Virginia Festival of the Book—five days of mostly free talks and panels bringing together writers and readers in celebration of books, reading, literacy, and literary culture—is the largest community-based book event in the Mid-Atlantic region, attracting audiences of more than 20,000 each year. That’s why more than 400 authors will be in town for over 260 programs this March 22-26 as part of the 23rd Festival.

“I love our book-loving community!” says Jane Kulow, Director of the Virginia Center for the Book, which programs the Festival. “While we’re proud of the audiences we attract from the region and from across the country, Charlottesville and Albemarle County residents have been  remarkable in their support for the Virginia Festival of the Book for twenty-three years. Our local community helps keep the Festival going strong; this support brings national attention to the Festival and to the community for being a ‘book-loving town,’ and it aids our efforts to bring in top-notch authors.”

Asked what she is especially looking forward to this year, Kulow singles out two programs, one hyper-topical, one highly imaginative. “Given the news cycles of the past year, through the Presidential campaign and since, we all have a greater appreciation for the necessity for media literacy,” she says. “Questions, Expertise, and the President: Not Just for News Junkies,” on Saturday March 25 from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. in the City Council Chambers will meet that need with a panel featuring National Security Affairs professor Tom Nichols, former CNN anchor and GWU School of Media and Public Affairs director Frank Sesno, and Washington Post reporters Marc Fisher and Michael Kranish.

“On a lighter note,” Kulow says, “I cannot wait to hear from the authors in “Wild Fiction!! Attacks! Exorcism! Animation!” with Manuel Gonzales, author of The Regional Office is Under Attack!, Grady Hendrix, author of My Best Friend’s Exorcism, and Kayla Rae Whitaker, author of The Animators. We’ve passed those books around the office for all to enjoy!”

Economic Inequality
No issue is more central to the national conversation currently than economic inequality, and two Friday programs, presented in collaboration with the interfaith, Central Virginia group, Clergy and Laity United for Justice and Peace, will shed light on the subject. Former CNN Anchor and White House correspondent Frank Sesno will moderate a discussion with Daniel Hatcher (The Poverty Industry), Thomas Shapiro (Toxic Inequality), and Jennifer Silva (Coming Up Short) from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center. From 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. at the Martin Luther King Jr. Performing Arts Center, Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz, author of The Great Divide: Unequal Societies and What We Can Do About Them, will speak on the rise of inequality in the West and a possible solution. Frank Sesno will join Stiglitz for discussion and questions. Tickets for this event are $5.

Religious Satire
In today’s charged political atmosphere, the urge to mock comes quick and often. True satire, argues Virginia Wesleyan College professor Terry Lindvall, is at heart moral outrage expressed in laughter. Lindvall’s 2015 book, God Mocks: A History of Religious Satire from the Hebrew Prophets to Stephen Colbert, received the 2016 Religious Communication Association Book of the Year Award. Lindvall will speak about his book on Saturday, March 25 from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at St. Paul’s Memorial Church. UVA’s Theological Horizons will host a reception honoring Dr. Lindvall, with book sales and signings, following the discussion.

Local Author Writes for Kids
Ninety of this year’s authors are Virginians, including Priya Mahadevan, who worked as a political reporter in India before moving to Charlottesville 15 years ago, began blogging about vegetarian cooking and the birth of her third child, Shreya, and now works as a caterer specializing in vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free cuisine. Mahadevan calls her first published book, the children’s picture book Princesses Only Wear Putta Puttas, “a labor of love, an embellished version of truthful events that happened during her second trip to India, which Shreya was actually able to remember. It was fascinating to watch her revel and assimilate and embrace so quickly everything she saw and experienced.” 

Bestselling author Kwame Alexander has written twenty-one books for kids and young adults, including The Crossover, winner of the 2015 Newbery Medal. Illustrator Ekua Holmes’s debut book, Voice of Freedom: Fannie Lou Hamer: The Spirit of the Civil Rights Movement (written by Carole Boston Weatherford), won the Caldecott Honor Book and a Sibert Honor Book awards. Alexander and Holmes will appear at UVA’s Culbreth Theatre on Wednesday March 22 at 7:00 p.m. to talk about their careers, the children’s publishing industry, creating books for minority readers, and their new collaborative volume, Out of Wonder: Poems Celebrating Poets. While Out of Wonder is meant for children, says Assistant Director of the Virginia Center for the Book, Sarah Lawson “as an adult reader it’s fantastic as well. It’s composed of different poems honoring poets over the course of time, from all areas.”

Storyfest
Kids will enjoy their own day-long literary blowout Saturday, with eleven “Storyfest” programs including a “Book Swap” from 10:00 to 12:00 p.m. and a “Storytime Marathon” from 2:00 to 4:30 p.m. at the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library (JMRL), and a “Wild About Reading” program with stories and live animals at the Discovery Museum from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m.

Lawson calls Christiansburg author Tom Angleberger—author of Rocket and Groot: Stranded on Planet Strip Mall, the bestselling Origami Yoda series, and the Fake Mustache, Horton Halfpott, and the Qwikpick Papers series—a “rock star” of children’s literature. Angleberger and Out of Abaton author John Claude Bemis will tell tales of betrayal, fantastical adventures, and other hijinks from their popular novels and illustrated comics at JMRL from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. Angleberger, Mahadevan and Alexander are among the children’s authors who will visit public and private schools in Charlottesville-Albemarle during the Festival to entertain and inspire students in personal encounters.

Crime Wave
Festival Saturdays bring a daylong Crime Wave to the Omni, with seven programs worth of mystery and suspense, spies and private eyes. “The Mysterious Worlds of Abbott, Dahl, Lin, and Tran” from 12:00 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. in Ballroom A will feature what Lawson calls the “dark but really immersive” psychological thrillers of Mystery Writers of America winner Megan Abbott and three whodunit “up-and-comers”: Julia Dahl, Ed Lin and Vu Tran.

Two of the three writers in “Private Eyes You’ll Want to Follow,” from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. in Ballroom C, are poets as well as crime novelists. Poets Erica Wright (The Granite Moth) and Greer Macallister (Girl in Disguise) will be joined by Michael Robertson, author of The Baker Street Letter series, featuring a Sherlock Holmesian London solicitor. Moderator Ed Lin’s six acclaimed thrillers are set in New York City’s Chinatown and in Taiwan.

Publishing Day
As always, Saturday at the Omni Hotel is Publishing Day, with a Lit Fair featuring literary magazines, publishers, and writing resources and seven programs designed to aid, instruct and encourage both published and aspiring writers. “Keys to Success in Book Publishing and Promotion,” from 10:00 to 11:30 a.m. in the Monroe Room, will bring novelists Ann Garvin and Tom McAllister and young adult novelist Brenda Drake together with moderator Jane Friedman, an internationally known speaker on writing and publishing in the digital age. Conversation will center on working with publishers and using traditional and new-tech publicity techniques to direct readers to an author’s books. Literary agents Lisa Bankoff, Michael Carlisle, and Eric Smith will take part in a roundtable discussion on the publishing business and will answer audience questions from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. in Ballroom A.

Audiobook sales were strong in 2016 and are expected to grow in 2017, according to Publishers Weekly. Love and lust were widely reported as well, and are expected to remain universal phenomena. Romance audiobook narrators and voice actors David Brenin, Will Damron, Luke Daniels, Derek Perkins, and Aiden Snow will discuss the world of audiobook publishing from 12:00 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the Preston Room at the Omni, and divulge—and possibly demonstrate—the vocal techniques that make listeners swoon.

Inspiration
That a great book can change your life is a truism, but do they retain that power in the digital age, and how do you find the right ones anyhow? While the Festival itself might be seen as five days of resounding answers (“yes,” and “here they are!”), “Get Lit: Books That Inspire,” from 2:00 to 3:30 p.m. at the Central Branch of the JMRL Library, gets a little more specific, with authors David Denby (Lit Up: One Reporter. Three Schools. Twenty-four Books That Can Change Lives) and Bethanne Patrick (The Books That Changed My Life: Reflections by 100 Authors, Actors, Musicians, and Other Remarkable People). JMRL’s Central Branch manager and assistant director Krista Farrell, a used bookstore owner in a former life, and thus doubly entitled to her own opinions, will moderate.

Middlemarch in Song
Virginia Woolf called George Eliot’s tragic but searching novel Middlemarch, published in 1872 and subtitled A Study of Provincial Life, “one of the few English books written for grown-up people.” “What do I think of Middlemarch?” wrote Emily Dickinson. “What do I think of glory?” On March 23 and 24 at the Paramount Theater Charlottesville Opera (formerly Ash Lawn Opera) will give the East Coast premiere of Middlemarch in Spring, a new chamber opera based on Eliot’s masterpiece by composer Allen Shearer and librettist Claudia Stevens. New Yorker staff writer Rebecca Mead, author of My Life in Middlemarch, a memoir of the novel’s instructive role in her own life, will speak before the March 23rd performance, at 6:30 p.m.

Presented each year by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, the Virginia Festival of the Book has produced legions of dedicated fans like Sarah Lawson, who go primed for new discoveries. “It’s always been amazing,” says Lawson, who grew up attending with her librarian parents, “to realize how many things I just stumble into. Prior to working for the Festival I would be very open to just wandering into programs and seeing if they struck my fancy, and often they did. I would learn something new, or find a new author that I loved. I think that joy of discovery is such an important part of the Festival, and something that is so crucial and so loved by the local community and the people who attend each year.” That’s for sure.

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Arts

VIDEO: Author of Beale Street Dynasty speaks with C-VILLE

The Virginia Festival of the Book, in its 22nd year, is holding events throughout Charlottesville and Albemarle County through Sunday, March 20. Read more about some of this year’s featured authors.

Click on the link below to watch our C-VILLE Live chat with Preston Lauterbach, author of Beale Street Dynasty: Sex, Song and the Struggle for the Soul of Memphis, and Jon Lohman, director of the Virginia Program for the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities.

Video overview:

5:11 — Learn about Lauterbach’s main character, Robert Church, who was born a slave and became the South’s first black millionaire.

12:14 — Learn how the book’s plot evolved out of Lauterbach’s research.

13:07 — Hear how Ida B. Wells, a journalist who helped found the NAACP, “found herself” on Beale Street.

14:25 — W.C. Handy takes Beale Street to another level.

17:50 — Hear more about the Reading Under the Influence: Blues and Brews event, which takes place from 9-11pm Friday, at Champion Brewing Company.

24:35 — Learn how music first drew Lauterbach to Beale Street, a place where everything from swing to lowdown blues could be heard.

28:20 — Learn what W.C. Handy, the father of blues, and hip-hop artists today have in common.