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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240411T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240411T193000
DTSTAMP:20260417T185626
CREATED:20240212T205342Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240610T203137Z
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SUMMARY:April 2024 Open Mic Night
DESCRIPTION:The Pat Conroy Literary Center’s monthly Open Mic Night will be held virtually on Thursday\, April 11\, from 6:00 to 7:30 p.m. Our featured writer is poet Heather Corbally Bryant\, author of The Coffin Makers. Open Mic will also feature short readings of 3 to 5 minutes each by other writers in many genres. \nWhen: Thursday\, April 11\, 2024 at 6 PM – 7:30 PM EDT\nPrice: Free · Duration: 1 hr 30 min\nWhere: Virtual  \nInterested in reading as part of Open Mic? Let us know at contact@patconroyliterarycenter.org \nWe want to build our community of writers and an appreciation for the art and talent of new\, emerging\, and long-time writers. Thank you for supporting this partnership! \nEvent Facebook Page \nAbout The Coffin Makers\n“Heather Corbally Bryant’s eleventh collection of poetry shows her deepening grasp of language\, and follows her grappling with the exigencies of a global pandemic in both intricate and plainspoken poetry.”–Laura Munson\, bestselling author and founder of Haven Writing Retreats \n“In The Coffin Makers\, Heather Corbally Bryant offers us poetic witness to a world turned upside down by catastrophic fear\, in clear\, beautiful poems\, marking out our moments of grief\, isolation and hope\, step by step. These poems will remain with us as graceful testament to our moment of crisis.”–Eibhear Walshe\, Director of Creative Writing\, University College Cork \nAbout our featured writer:\nHeather Corbally Bryant is a Senior Lecturer in the Writing Program at Wellesley College. She has also taught at Harvard\, the University of Michigan and the Pennsylvania State University where she has won awards for her teaching. She has written eleven books of poetry\, a prize-winning academic book\, How Will the Heart Endure: Elizabeth Bowen and the Landscape of War\, and a work of creative nonfiction\, You Can’t Wrap Fire in Paper. Her poems have been nominated for a Pushcart Prize\, the Massachusetts Book Award\, and have won Honorable Mention in the Finishing Line Press Open Chapbook Competition. \n  \n\nThis program and others like this would not be possible without your financial help for which\, as always\, Pat Conroy Literary Center gratefully thanks you.
URL:https://patconroyliterarycenter.org/calendar/april-2024-open-mic-night/
LOCATION:Online – Facebook Live
CATEGORIES:Author Interview,Open Mic Night
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://patconroyliterarycenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/open-mic-night-apr112024.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240418T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240418T190000
DTSTAMP:20260417T185626
CREATED:20240306T225530Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240306T225530Z
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SUMMARY:Evening with novelist Carolyn P. Hartley\, author of the Buried Sunshine Series
DESCRIPTION:Thursday\, April 18\, 2024 – 5-7:00 PM EDT\nPrice: $15 (includes a glass of wine and refreshments by Mimi Rodrigues)\nRegistration: Register at Eventbrite\nVenue: The Rhett House Inn | 1009 Craven St.\, Beaufort \nWebsite: Facebook Event Page \nThe nonprofit Pat Conroy Literary Center\, in collaboration with the award-winning Rhett House Inn\, will host an evening with historical novelist Carolyn P. Hartley\, author of the Buried Sunshine Series\, on Thursday\, April 18\, at 5:00-7:00 p.m.\, at the Rhett House Inn (1009 Craven St.\, Beaufort). $15 registration fee includes a glass of wine and refreshments by Mimi Rodrigues. Books will be available for sale and signing. \nRegister at Eventbrite \n“The Buried Sunshine Series is a courageous family saga\, a sizzling coming of age story\, as heroine\, Adele Dawson discovers her roots in this action-adventure series.”—Millie West\, award-winning author and screenwriter awards \nAbout Book One: Redemption\nGreed is invisible until you see the damage it inflicts on innocent children. Redemption exposes raw families caught between social lines when federal funds\, intended to trickle down from corporate landowners never makes it into the hands of tenant farmers. \nWhen agriculture was the bedrock of the American economy\, families\, suddenly penniless lost nearly everything in historic floods\, bank failures\, political and social annihilation. But at their core\, one family would not let catastrophes defeat them. Adele Christina Dawson\, the oldest stepchild of an imbittered farmer\, is suddenly thrust into adulthood when her mother dies giving birth to a tenth child. \n“Adele Dawson is intelligent\, feisty\, and strong\, and she emits a beam that carries this story forward\, that lifts it up from the rushing current of thick Mississippi Mud.”—Main Street Rag \nAbout Book Two: Reconciliation\nAdele Dawson\, finally back with her West Virginia birth family\, is driven to learn why her father died so young and why her mother remarried despicable August Beck\, a con artist\, then gave birth to eight of his children. When her half-sisters also come to live with her\, they get wise to a secret museum of treasures in Adele’s once-lavish stone mansion. She unlocks secrets inside a locked trunk about her mother’s coerced life in corruption\, greed\, and extortion\, secrets that now threaten to extinguish the entire family. \nHer paternal grandmother’s final wish is that Adele rebuild the family’s coal mine\, nearly bankrupt from the Depression\, and restore the river stone mansion to its original beauty. The more involved she becomes in the mining business\, the more she discovers her mother’s enemies have concealed themselves within the family business. On the verge of gaining trust from superstitious coal miners\, her saboteur stepfather creates mine blasts that injure workers\, forcing the reconstruction to miss critical deadlines. \n“This thrilling novel series leaves the reader spellbound with a story that captures everything a reader could wish for. Once you start reading you won’t stop. A must read.”—William A Petty\, historian\, curator\, and author \nABOUT THE AUTHOR\nCarolyn P. Hartley is an award-winning author\, most recently for the Buried Sunshine novel series: Redemption (2019)\, Reconciliation (2022)\, and Rebellion (forthcoming 2024). \nReconciliation achieved #1 bestseller rank in seven Amazon categories\, including American History Romance. She is lead author of The Caregiver’s Toolbox (CTB)\, an Amazon #1 hot new release for nine consecutive weeks in two healthcare categories. After six years\, CTB is still a popular backlist title. \nIn prior careers\, Carolyn was a book packager for Prentice Hall\, McGraw-Hill\, Universal Press Syndicate\, and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, and VP of marketing and communications for Fleishman Hillard International\, where she placed clients on The Today Show\, CBS This Morning\, Good Morning America\, Fox and Friends\, among others. Carolyn publishes her creative non-fiction\, essays\, and short stories in literary and consumer magazines\, including North American Literary Review\, Child\, Whispering Prairie Press\, Family Circle\, and Working Women’s Magazine\, and\, for six years she was a columnist for Woman’s World. She developed public service announcements for Al Franken\, Miss America\, and the Points of Light Foundation. She also is founder of JMerrillPress\, LLC\, an independent woman-owned publisher that focuses on women of courage. \n\nThis program and others like this would not be possible without your financial help for which\, as always\, Pat Conroy Literary Center gratefully thanks you.
URL:https://patconroyliterarycenter.org/calendar/evening-with-novelist-carolyn-p-hartley-author-of-the-buried-sunshine-series/
LOCATION:The Rhett House Inn\, 1009 Craven St.\, Beaufort\, SC\, 29902\, United States
CATEGORIES:Author Interview
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://patconroyliterarycenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/evening-with-carolyn-hartley.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240425T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240425T183000
DTSTAMP:20260417T185626
CREATED:20240116T211931Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240404T201331Z
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SUMMARY:An Evening with poet Ray McManus
DESCRIPTION:Thursday\, April 25\, 2024 – 5:00-6:30 PM EDT\nPrice: Free\nRegistration: Seating is limited; please call to reserve your spot: 843-379-7025.\nVenue (UPDATED): Rhett House Inn’s garden (1009 Craven St.\, Beaufort) \nWebsite: Facebook Event Page \nThe nonprofit Pat Conroy Literary Center will host an evening with award-winning poet Ray McManus\, author of The Last Saturday in America\, on Thursday\, April 25\, at 5:00 p.m.\, at the Rhett House Inn’s garden (1009 Craven St.\, Beaufort). This is an outdoor event. Free and open to the public. Books will be available for sale and signing. Please call to reserve your seat in advance: 843-379-7025. \nAbout The Last Saturday in America\n“These are poems about boys listening to men who were once boys who listened to men\, the blind leading the blind leading the blind through the dark. Some boys grow up. Some men never do. Ray McManus has chipped away at the pageantry and performance\, the stupidity of the lie\, the outright futility of it all…. The Last Saturday In America is\, ‘a song that pays homage / to a history of work we should’ve done better.’ Here’s hoping one day we do.” —David Joy\, author of Those We Thought We Knew\, from the introduction \nFor fans of Americana music and a beer after mowing the lawn\, The Last Saturday in America confronts the long shadow of Southern masculinity. \nThe Last Saturday in America is set in a nation on the precipice of great change. Through examinations of suburban neighbors\, bullies\, gun violence\, and vasectomy appointments\, Ray McManus draws a portrait of American masculinity in the face of political division\, pandemic\, and cultural warfare. McManus’s speaker is caught between the way he was raised and the future he wants to see for who he is raising. He can no longer rely on what he thought he knew\, nor does he know what to do about it. The man rendered in these pages is a father\, a son\, a Southerner. And he is willing to burn it all down and start something new\, only to see that the new start he is looking for has been with him the whole time. \nAbout Ray McManus\nRay McManus is the author of four books of poetry: Punch. (winner of the 2015 Independent Publishers Book Award for Best Book of Poetry in North America)\, Red Dirt Jesus (selected by Alicia Ostriker for the Marick Press Poetry Prize 2011)\, and Driving through the country before you are born (winner of the South Carolina Book Prize in 2006)\, and a chapbook called Left Behind. He is the co-editor for the anthology Found Anew with notable contributors with South Carolina ties. His poems have been published in numerous journals such as Crazyhorse\, Prairie Schooner\, and POETRY magazine. \nHe lives in South Carolina where he teaches for USC Sumter and serves as the Writer in Residence for the Columbia Museum of Art. \n  \n\nThis program and others like this would not be possible without your financial help for which\, as always\, Pat Conroy Literary Center gratefully thanks you.
URL:https://patconroyliterarycenter.org/calendar/an-evening-with-poet-ray-mcmanus/
LOCATION:The Rhett House Inn\, 1009 Craven St.\, Beaufort\, SC\, 29902\, United States
CATEGORIES:Author Interview
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://patconroyliterarycenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/evening-with-ray-mcmanus-rhett-house.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240429T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240429T183000
DTSTAMP:20260417T185626
CREATED:20240404T205204Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240404T205204Z
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SUMMARY:An Evening with Mark Larson\, Award-winning Educator and Author
DESCRIPTION:Monday\, April 29\, 2024 – 5:00-6:30 PM EDT\nPrice: Free\nRegistration: Seating is limited; please call to reserve your spot: 843-525-1066.\nVenue: Beaufort Bookstore (2127 Boundary St\, #15\, Beaufort) \nWebsite: Facebook Event Page \nThe Beaufort Bookstore and the nonprofit Pat Conroy Literary Center will host an evening with Mark Larson\, award-winning educator and author of Working in the 21st Century: An Oral History of American Work in a Time of Social and Economic Transformation\, on Monday\, April 29\, at 5:00 p.m.\, at the Beaufort Bookstore (2127 Boundary St\, #15\, Beaufort). \nLarson will be in conversation with two of the interview subjects of his book\, Dr. N’kia J. Campbell\, officer of academic initiatives for the Beaufort County School District\, and Bradley Tarrance\, principal of Robert Smalls Leadership Academy. \nFree and open to the public. Books will be available for sale and signing. Please call to reserve your seat in advance: 843-525-1066. \nAbout the Book\nEsquire magazine has named Working in the 21st Century as One of the Best Books of 2024 (so far). \nFrom nurses and teachers to wildland firefighters and funeral directors—this oral history offers an intimate\, honest\, and illuminating collection of interviews that reveal what it’s like to work in America at this historic and volatile moment in time. \nAuthor Mark Larson sits down with more than one hundred workers from across the socioeconomic spectrum as they share their experiences with work and what it has meant in their lives—the good\, the bad\, the mundane\, and the profound. Doulas\, firefighters\, chefs\, hairstylists\, executives\, actors\, stay-at-home parents\, and so many more talk about what they do all day and how it aligns (or doesn’t) with what they want to be doing with their lives. The pandemic\, the ensuing “Great Resignation\,” and the current reckonings with racial justice are among the forces that are now upending and reshaping our longstanding relationships with work. Larson’s interviews display how these forces collide in the lives of average Americans as they tell their own stories with passion\, heartbreak\, and\, ultimately\, hope. \nWorking in the 21st Century asks why we show up—or don’t—to the jobs we’ve chosen\, and how the upheaval of the past few years has changed how we perceive the work we do. It will be released to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of Studs Terkel’s 1974 classic Working. \n“Mark Larson’s superb and robust oral storytelling brings new light to the life of work. His book explores the intricacies of people working in these 21st-century times and shows that while work has been transformed\, it is also becoming more relevant and powerful than ever.”—Laura Washington\, Chicago Tribune contributing columnist and ABC7 Chicago political analyst \n“Mark Larson appeared in one of Studs Terkel’s books and is clearly an admirer of America’s 20th-century storyteller. While Working in the 21st Century celebrates the 50th anniversary of Studs’s Working\, the book\, through its diversity and clarity\, portrays both the similarities and differences of work 50 years later. Larson is a wonderful oral historian and the stories he tells depict the realities of work at the present time. His interviews and writing bring alive the breadth and depth of what it means to live in 2024.”—Alan Wieder\, author of Studs Terkel: Politics\, Culture\, but Mostly Conversation \nAbout the Author\nMark Larson is a Chicago-based writer and educator who holds a doctorate in educational leadership. Larson has worked at Evanston Township High School\, the Field Museum\, Lincoln Park Zoo\, and National Louis University. \nHe is the author of two books on education and Ensemble: An Oral History of Chicago Theater\, for which he conducted over 300 interviews with Chicago theater artists\, past and present. He lives in Chicago with his wife\, Mary. They have twin daughters and twin grandsons. \n  \n\nThis program and others like this would not be possible without your financial help for which\, as always\, Pat Conroy Literary Center gratefully thanks you.
URL:https://patconroyliterarycenter.org/calendar/an-evening-with-mark-larson-award-winning-educator-and-author/
LOCATION:Beaufort Bookstore\, 2127 Boundary St\, Beaufort\, SC\, 29902\, United States
CATEGORIES:Author Interview
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://patconroyliterarycenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/evening-with-mark-larson.jpg
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