Local writers to mingle with community at Authors Among Us
Chautauquans will have the opportunity to see some familiar faces — and maybe some unfamiliar ones — at the Authors…
Chautauquans will have the opportunity to see some familiar faces — and maybe some unfamiliar ones — at the Authors…
Poetry is often approached with a sense of trepidation, sometimes with outright fear. Former U.S. poet laureate Robert Pinsky thinks…
Many people claim to have never read another book after finishing high school or college. For Ann Kowal Smith, executive…
Ever wonder what books famous author’s like to read? The Daily’s literary art’s reporter Ryan Pait decided to found out with an interesting situation.
Evan Fallenberg, author of When We Danced on Water and Light Fell, will close out the season’s Brown Bag lectures with his talk, called “Reading Globally,” at 12:15 p.m. today on the front porch of the Literary Arts Center at Alumni Hall.
William Faulkner once wrote that, “In writing, you must kill all your darlings.” Sheri Fink found herself having to do that as she wrote “The Deadly Choices at Memorial,” an investigative piece for the New York Times Magazine and ProPublica that won Fink a Pulitzer Prize.
Nurses are not “mindless bimbos” — at least not for Martha N. Hill, today’s morning lecture speaker. Hill, who serves as both the dean emerita and a professor for the Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, will talk about common misperceptions about the profession with her lecture, “Have You Looked at Nursing Lately?” at 10:45 a.m. today in the Amphitheater.
The winners of the 2014 Literary Arts Contests Awards were announced on Sunday on the porch of the Literary Arts Center at Alumni Hall.
Dozens gather around in a circle, waiting for word from on high. It’s not the Sermon on the Mount — it’s Bryant Day.
Some interests never die — and for Susan Grimm, her interests lie in beginnings, endings, titles and white space.