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X-WR-CALNAME:BRAZOS BOOKSTORE | March 11\, 2010 - April 10\, 2010
PRODID:-//strange bird labs//Drupal iCal API//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100312T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100312T023000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/nelofer-pazira
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/nelofer-pazira
SUMMARY:Nelofer Pazira
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 The Rothko Chapel presents Afghan-Canadian filmmaker\, writer\, journalist\, and human rights activist Nelofer Pazira for a talk about Afghanistan and booksigning of <em>A Bed of Red Flowers\: In Search of My Afghanistan</em>. Book sale by Brazos to follow the event. <a href=\\"http\://www.rothkochapel.org/Nelofer%20Pazira.htm\\">More details here.</a><strong><em><br />
 </em></strong>
 </p>
 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100312T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100312T030000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/rosalind-wiseman
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/rosalind-wiseman
SUMMARY:Rosalind Wiseman's Girl World Tour
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <strong>PLEASE NOTE\: The online box office is now closed and we are no longer selling tickets at the store or over the phone. Tickets will be available at the door. Doors open at 6 pm\, seating at 6\:30.</strong>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 Dove go fresh deodorant presents
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <strong>Rosalind Wiseman's </strong>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <a href=\\"http\://www.instantseats.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=home.venue&amp\;VenueID=286\\"><strong><br />
 </strong></a>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"left\\">
 Moms and daughters (ages 8-14) are invited to join Rosalind Wiseman -- an internationally-recognized author\, mom\, and expert on teens and parenting -- for a fun-filled evening of mother-daughter bonding. In addition to celebrating Rosalind's latest books\, the tour will feature an interactive discussion about confidence\, friendships\, sweat-inducing moments and common mother-daughter challenges. A Q&amp\;A session and book signing will follow. The two-hour event is sure to get mothers and daughters talking\, laughing\, and connecting.
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <strong>TICKETS\:</strong>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"left\\">
 <strong>$40 per mother-daughter pair</strong> (two tickets) includes admission to the event\, one copy of each of Rosalind's latest books\, a complementary one-year subscription to Family Circle magazine\, light refreshments and a gift bag! Individual tickets may be purchased for <strong>$20 per person </strong>(also includes a book and gift bag).
 </p>
 <p></p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 For more insight from Rosalind or information about Dove Go Fresh deodorant\, visit <a href=\\"http\://www.dontfretthesweat.com/\\" target=\\"_blank\\">www.dontfretthesweat.com</a>
 </p>
 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100317T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100317T023000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/elizabeth-mccracken
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/elizabeth-mccracken
SUMMARY:Rice Cherry Reading Series\: Elizabeth McCracken
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 The Rice Department of English and Fondren Library's Cherry Reading Series continues at your neighborhood bookstore with the fantastic Elizabeth McCracken. She is the author of <em>The Giant's House</em>\, which was nominated for the National Book Award\; <em>Niagara Falls All Over Again</em>\, winner of the PEN/Winship Award\; and <em>Here's Your Hat\, What's Your Hurry?</em>\, a collection of stories. Her most recent book is a memoir titled <em>An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination</em> about the loss of her first child in the ninth month of pregnancy\, called by McCracken &quot\;the happiest story in the world with the saddest ending.&quot\;
 </p>
 <p>
 &quot\;Reading it is a mysteriously enlarging experience. It could pair neatly with Joan Didion's <em>The Year of Magical Thinking</em>\: it's hard to imagine two more rigorous\, unsentimental guides to enduring the very bottom of the scale of human emotion.&quot\; <em><strong>Lev Grossman</strong></em>
 </p>
 <p>
 &quot\;'A child dies in this book\: a baby\,' Elizabeth McCracken tell us<br />
 early on\, so that we we might not hope too much\, as she has\, for the<br />
 beautiful child who would grace her life. Alert to every nuance of<br />
 feeling\, McCracken writes with such clarity and immediacy that we hope<br />
 anyway. 'It's a happy life\,' she says\, 'and someone is missing.' That<br />
 these statements can both be true is the mark of great emotional<br />
 maturity\, and of a writer who rises to the human complexity of grief<br />
 with all her powers\, and all her heart.&quot\; <em><strong>Mark Doty</strong></em>
 </p>
 <p>
 &quot\;In <em>An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination</em>\, Elizabeth<br />
 McCracken does not howl out her loss. She is devastatingly calm and in<br />
 this matches measure for measure her own fine writing. By the end of<br />
 this memoir you will have held a beautiful child in your hands and you<br />
 will have acknowledged him. This book is an extraordinary gift to us<br />
 all.&quot\; <em><strong>Alice Sebold</strong></em>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <a href=\\"http\://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_McCracken\\" target=\\"_blank\\">Wikipedia Elizabeth McCracken. </a>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <a href=\\"http\://www.randomhouse.com/boldtype/0397/mccracken/\\" target=\\"_blank\\">Learn more about Elizabeth McCracken on Random House's Bold Type.</a>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <a href=\\"http\://www.elizabethmccracken.com/\\"> http\://www.elizabethmccracken.com/</a>
 </p>
 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100321T220000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100322T000000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/chang-rae-lee
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/chang-rae-lee
SUMMARY:Asia Society presents Chang-rae Lee
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 </p>
 <p></p>
 <p>
 Chang-rae<br />
 Lee's powerful new novel (released March 9) had its beginnings twenty years ago in questions<br />
 he had about his father's Korean War experiences\, something his father<br />
 had never wanted to discuss.
 </p>
 <p> </p>
 <p>
 But<br />
 under prompting\, the elder man finally opened up\, describing the<br />
 horrors he had seen and endured as a boy fleeing with his family<br />
 southward ahead of the advancing North Korean army. Lee could never<br />
 shake those images. Now they have inspired the opening pages of <em>The Surrendered</em>\, a novel <em>Publishers Weekly</em> hails as &quot\;deeply felt\, compulsively readable and imbued with moral gravity.&quot\;
 </p>
 <p> </p>
 <p>
 It is the fourth novel from 44-year-old Korean-born\, American-raised Lee\, whose first book\, <em>Native Speaker</em> (1995)\, won the PEN/Hemingway Award for best first work of fiction.
 </p>
 <p></p>
 <p>
 Though it begins in the chaotic opening days of the Korean War\, <em>The Surrendered</em><br />
 expands outward over time and geography and becomes what Lee describes<br />
 as &quot\;not so much a war novel as a story concerned with the effects of<br />
 mass conflict on the human psyche and spirit\, the private odysseys<br />
 those who've experienced conflict must endure.&quot\;
 </p>
 <p> </p>
 <p>
 The<br />
 story centers on the life of June Wan\, who escapes the war and builds a<br />
 business in New York\, outlives a husband\, and raises a son. But a<br />
 mid-life quest for that now-missing son prompts a journey into the past<br />
 and opens up the secrets she has nursed for three decades. The journey<br />
 also involves a reunion with the man\, Hector Brennan\, who saved her<br />
 life long ago. Novelist Junot Diaz says <em>The Surrendered</em> &quot\;looks to be Lee's epic masterpiece.&quot\;
 </p>
 <p> </p>
 <p>
 Born<br />
 in Korea in 1965\, Lee emigrated to the United States with his family<br />
 when he was three. Raised in Westchester\, N.Y.\, he graduated from Yale<br />
 University and worked briefly as a Wall Street analyst before turning<br />
 to writing full time. <em>Native Speaker</em>\, about a Korean-American industrial spy\, was followed by <em>A Gesture Life</em> (1999) and <em>Aloft </em>(2004). Lee's books have been named to &quot\;best books of the year&quot\; lists by The New York Times\, Los Angeles Times\, Esquire\, and other publications. In addition to the PEN/Hemingway\, he has won the Asian-American Literary Award and the Barnes &amp\; Noble Discover Great New Writers Award. The New Yorker named him one of the twenty best writers under forty. He teaches creative writing at Princeton University and is widely considered the most important living Korean-American novelist.
 </p>
 <p> </p>
 <p>
 His<br />
 reading will be followed by a reception and book-signing in nearby<br />
 Brochstein Pavilion. Brazos Bookstore will handle onsite book sales.<br />
 Admission to the reading is free to Asia Society members\, $5 for<br />
 nonmembers. <a href=\\"https\://dnbweb1.blackbaud.com/OPXREPHIL/EventDetail.asp?cguid=33D9FFC5-2EBA-44BA-92C2-F3B47F9FA465&amp\;eid=28818&amp\;sid=9BE74A07-7830-4D83-98E2-F1EBB1883EA6\\">Click here to register.</a>
 </p>
 <p></p>
 <p>Directions to Herring Hall\: </p>
 <p>
 Take Entrance 18 off Rice Boulevard\, park in West Lot 1. For campus map\, visit link below.
 </p>
 <p>
 <a href=\\"http\://www.rice.edu/maps/maps.html\\"></a><a target=\\"_blank\\">http\://www.rice.edu/maps/maps.html</a>
 </p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>For more information\, please call 713.439.0051 x17 </p>
 <p> or email <a href=\\"mailto\:fritzl@asiasociety.org\\">fritzl@asiasociety.org</a></p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 </p>
 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100323T003000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100323T003000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/inprint-brown-reading-series-tracy-kidder
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/inprint-brown-reading-series-tracy-kidder
SUMMARY:Inprint Brown Reading Series\: Tracy Kidder
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 <p>
 <strong>Tracy Kidder</strong>\, a master of the non-fiction narrative\, won the National<br />
 Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize for his book\, <em>Soul of a New Machine</em>.<br />
 Kidder combines award-winning reportorial skill with what one <em>New York Times<br />
 Book Review</em> critic describes as “the author’s genuine love\, delight\, and<br />
 celebration of the human condition.” He has written nine books of nonfiction\,<br />
 including <em>House</em>\, <em>Among Schoolchildren</em>\, <em>Old Friends</em>\, <em>Home</em><em> Town</em><br />
 and <em>My Detachment</em>\, Kidder’s personal account of his time as a soldier in<br />
 Vietnam\,<br />
 where he was awarded the Bronze Star. Of his highly acclaimed book\, <em>Mountains</em><em> Beyond Mountains</em>\,<br />
 author Thom Jones writes\, “<em>Mountains</em> is the sort of book that makes you<br />
 want to buy a hundred copies and pass them out like a street corner<br />
 evangelist.” Kidder’s newest book\, <em>Strength in What Remains</em>\, has been<br />
 described as a book which will “resurrect your faith in the human spirit.” It<br />
 follows the story of Deogratias\, a refugee from the civil war and genocide of<br />
 1990s Burundi\, who makes his<br />
 way to New York City.<br />
 “Deo’s story\,” says Alex Kotlowitz\, “is remarkable\, stunning really. His<br />
 journey is the story of our times\, one that keeps the rest of us from<br />
 forgetting.”
 </p>
 <p>
 <em>General admission tickets\: $5\, on sale March 1\, 2010.</em>
 </p>
 <p>
 <a href=\\"http\://www.inprinthouston.org/tracy-kidder\\" target=\\"_blank\\">Click here for tickets and details. </a>
 </p>
 
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100324T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100324T023000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/rus-bradburd
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/rus-bradburd
SUMMARY:Rus Bradburd
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 An exploration of the racial politics of American sports\, from<br />
 the Jim Crow era to the present day\, witnessed through the life of<br />
 legendary African-American basketball coach and NCAA title winner Nolan<br />
 Richardson
 </p>
 <p>
 Born in El Paso's Segundo Barrio\, or Second Ward\,<br />
 pioneering basketball coach Nolan Richardson grew up in the only black<br />
 family in a Mexican neighborhood and attended desegregated Bowie High<br />
 School in 1955. Richardson went on to play at Texas Western College\,<br />
 now the University of Texas at El Paso\, as the first black star player<br />
 for legendary coach Don Haskins. Richardson eventually rose to national<br />
 prominence as a coach in his own right. He became the first black coach<br />
 at a predominately white school in the Old South to win the NCAA<br />
 Championship in 1994 at the University of Arkansas. With Richardson's<br />
 Razorbacks playing at a high-pressure\, electrifying pace—a style he<br />
 called &quot\;Forty Minutes of Hell\,&quot\; which became a nationally known<br />
 trademark—Arkansas made three appearances in the Final Four\, and<br />
 Richardson was named NABC Coach of the Year in 1994.
 </p>
 <p>
 Richardson's gradual political awakening\, and his subsequent refusal to<br />
 keep quiet about overt or subtle racial injustices\, marked his rise.<br />
 Regardless of his staggering win totals\, tensions in Arkansas<br />
 culminated in an infamous 2002 press conference in which he accused the<br />
 University of Arkansas of discriminating against him\, bringing about an<br />
 abrupt end to his college coaching career. The only coach in history to<br />
 win a Junior College National Championship\, the NIT\, and the NCAA<br />
 tournament\, Richardson went on to coach internationally and in the<br />
 WNBA.
 </p>
 <p>
 Rus Bradburd\, a former college basketball coach who<br />
 also worked with Don Haskins\, highlights Richardson's trailblazing<br />
 career with empathy and intimacy\, revealing a man whose hard-won<br />
 successes were matched by deeply felt losses. An intensive inside look<br />
 at elite collegiate athletics and a chronicle of the transition away<br />
 from the segregated era of American sport\, <em>Forty Minutes of Hell</em><br />
 is the first full-length biography of Nolan Richardson\, setting his<br />
 complicated story against the backdrop of a decisive time in American<br />
 history.
 </p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>&quot\;Nolan Richardson's extraordinary life and<br />
 success as the University of Arkansas' coach are an important chapter<br />
 in the history of our country's struggle for racial equality\, with all<br />
 the excitement of the Final Four. What an incredible journey! I am<br />
 grateful that I got to see a lot of it first hand and to know such an<br />
 able and remarkable man.&quot\;<br />
 - President Bill Clinton</strong>
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>&quot\;This<br />
 is a great story about America and its hidden histories. Nolan<br />
 Richardson understands the struggle because he did the heavy lifting.<br />
 Every black college coach with a good job today owes Nolan Richardson a<br />
 measure of respect for the fearless way he kicked down doors. Every<br />
 American should thank him for showing us it was possible.<br />
 - Charles Barkley</strong>
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>&quot\;I've<br />
 never read a sports book I would describe as operatic until now. Nolan<br />
 Richardson's story\, both unique and universal\, would challenge the most<br />
 seasoned biographer\, but Bradburd's libretto is heartbreaking and<br />
 inspiring. This is the finest sports biography I've read in years\,<br />
 hands down.&quot\;<br />
 - Dave Zirin\, author\, <em>A People's History of Sports in the Unites States</em></strong>
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>Establishes Richardson as one of college basketball’s most compelling figures\, both because of and in spite of his race.<br />
 - Kirkus Reviews</strong>
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>Rus Bradburd</strong> teaches writing classes in New Mexico State<br />
 University’s MFA program. A Chicago native\, he coached basketball at<br />
 UTEP and New Mexico State for fourteen seasons before resigning to<br />
 pursue a writing career in 2000.
 </p>
 <p>
 Rus Bradburd coaching in Ireland\, the subject of his memoir <em>Paddy on the Hardwood</em>.</p>
 <p>
 At NMSU\, he studied with Robert Boswell\, Antonya Nelson\, and Kevin McIlvoy. His fiction has appeared in <em>The Southern Review</em>\, <em>Colorado Review</em>\, <em>Puerto del Sol</em>\, <em>Freight Stories</em>\, and <em>Aethlon</em>.
 </p>
 <p>
 Since retiring from college coaching\, his essays have appeared in <em>The Houston Chronicle</em>\, <em>El Paso Times</em>\, <em>Las Cruces Sun-News</em>\, <em>Heartland Journal</em>\, <em>SLAM Magazine</em>\, <em>Bounce</em>\, and <em>Los Angeles Times</em>.
 </p>
 <p>
 Rus went to Ireland in 2002 to coach Tralee's Frosties Tigers. <em>Paddy on the Hardwood\: A Journey in Irish Hoops</em> was his first book\, published in 2006.
 </p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100324T173000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100324T190000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/harbir-singh
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/harbir-singh
SUMMARY:Asia Society presents Harbir Singh
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 <a href=\\"http\://www.asiasociety.org/centers/texas\\">Asia Society</a>'s Wells Fargo South Asia Lecture Series presents Mack Professor of Management and Vice Dean for Global Initiatives at the Wharton School of Business <strong>Harbir Singh</strong>. Co-author of <em>The India Way\: How India's Top Business Leaders Are Revolutionizing Management</em>\, which will be released this March\, Singh will discuss how management innovation in the future won't pass from West to East but will become a two-way street.
 </p>
 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100325T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100325T023000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/tamler-sommers
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/tamler-sommers
SUMMARY:Tamler Sommers
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 Do we have free will? What counts as justice in the Peruvian Amazon? Is<br />
 Catherine Zeta-Jones objectively hotter than Drew Barrymore? These are<br />
 just a few of the questions that philosopher Tamler Sommers attempts to<br />
 answer in far-spanning interviews with ten acclaimed researchers in the<br />
 burgeoning field of moral psychology contained in his new book\, <em>A Very Bad Wizard\: Morality Behind the Curtain</em>. Philip Zimbardo talks about his<br />
 famous “Stanford Prison Experiment” and how it relates to abuses of Abu<br />
 Ghraib. Harvard neuroscientist Josh Greene reports on the ways our<br />
 brains react to ethical dilemmas. Jonathan Haidt explains why we object<br />
 to incest and how that relates to disagreements between conservatives<br />
 and liberals. Renowned Primatologist Frans de Waal juxtaposes human<br />
 behavior with that of the bonobo (a species he terms the &quot\;hippie ape.&quot\;)<br />
 And much more. <em>A Very Bad Wizard</em> is essential reading for anyone curious about the origins and inner workings of our moral lives.
 </p>
 <p>
 &quot\;An intellectual feast\, completely engrossing.&quot\;<br />
 <strong>— Ian McEwan</strong></p>
 <p>“A thought-provoking and entertaining tour of one of the frontiers of human knowledge — the roots of our moral sense.”<br />
 <strong>— Steven Pinker\, Harvard College Professor of Psychology\, Harvard University\, and author of <em>How the Mind Works and The Stuff of Thought</em></strong></p>
 <p>“Tamler<br />
 Sommers has become something of a legend in the world of philosophy\,<br />
 not only for his profound insights into human morality\, but also for<br />
 the almost supernaturally funny and engaging way he presents<br />
 philosophical ideas.… These interviews give the reader a real sense for<br />
 some of the most important new research in the cognitive science of<br />
 morality\, but they also do an amazing job of capturing some of the<br />
 verve and excitement of this emerging new field.”<br />
 <strong>— Joshua Knobe\, Assistant Professor\, Program in Cognitive Science and Department of Philosophy\, Yale University</strong>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
  
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>Tamler Sommers</strong> is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University<br />
 of Houston\, and holds a joint appointment with the Honor’s College. He<br />
 teaches primarily in ethics\, political philosophy\, and the philosophy<br />
 of law\, specializing in issues relating to free will and moral<br />
 responsibility. His current research project examines differences in<br />
 perspectives about moral responsibility across cultures and what these<br />
 differences mean for the philosophical debate. A book on this topic<br />
 entitled <em>Relative Justice</em> is under contract with Princeton<br />
 University Press. Recent publications include “The Two Faces of<br />
 Revenge\: Moral Responsibility and the Culture of Honor” (<em>Biology and Philosophy</em>)\, “More Work for Hard Incompatibilism” (<em>Philosophy and Phenomenological Research</em>)\, and “The Objective Attitude” (<em>Philosophical Quarterly</em>).   Sommers also contributes regularly to the <em>Times Literary Supplement </em>and conducts interviews for <em>The Believer</em>.  A collection of his interviews\, entitled <em>A Very Bad Wizard\: Morality</em> <em>Behind the Curtain</em>\, will has just been published by McSweeney’s Press. 
 </p>
 
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100326T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100326T020000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/richard-polsky
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/richard-polsky
SUMMARY:Richard Polsky at McClain Gallery
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <a href=\\"http\://www.mcclaingallery.com/\\"></a>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 PRESENTS
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 A Special Reception and Booksigning
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 Thursday\, March 25\, 2010
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 6 PM to 8 PM
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 To celebrate the opening of the exhibit
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <strong>DAVID ROW</strong>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <em>MORPHOLOGY </em>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 </p>
 <p></p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <em>i sold Andy Warhol. (too soon) </em>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <strong>by Richard Polsky </strong>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 Remarks by the Author - 7 pm
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 Co-sponsored by PaperCity Magazine
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <a href=\\"http\://www.mcclaingallery.com/\\"><strong>McClain Gallery</strong></a>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 2242 Richmond Ave
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 Houston\, Texas 77098
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 (713) 520-9988
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <a href=\\"mailto\:info@mcclaingallery.com\\" target=\\"_blank\\">info@mcclaingallery.com </a>
 </p>
 
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100326T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100326T000000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com//event/shilpi-somaya-gowda
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com//event/shilpi-somaya-gowda
SUMMARY:An Evening with Shilpi Somaya Gowda
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 Join the Central Library for a visit from novelist Shilpi Somaya Gowda\, who will discuss and sign copies of her debut novel <em>Secret Daughter</em>.</p>
 <p>In a tiny hut in rural India\, Kavita gives birth to Asha. Unable to<br />
 afford the “luxury” of raising a daughter\, her husband forces Kavita to<br />
 give the baby up – a decision that will haunt them both for the rest of<br />
 their lives. Halfway around the globe\, Somer\, an American doctor\,<br />
 decides to adopt a child after making the wrenching discovery that she<br />
 will never have one of her own. When her husband Krishnan shows her a<br />
 photo of baby Asha sent to him from a Mumbai orphanage\, she falls<br />
 instantly in love. As she waited for the adoption to be finalized\, she<br />
 knew her life would change. But she was convinced that the love she<br />
 already felt would overcome all obstacles.</p>
 <p><strong>Shilpi Somaya Gowda</strong> was born and raised in Toronto to parents who<br />
 migrated there from Mumbai. She holds an MBA from Stanford University<br />
 and a BA from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In 1991\,<br />
 she spent a summer as a volunteer in an Indian orphanage. She currently<br />
 lives in Dallas with her husband and two daughters.
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 Book sale by Brazos Bookstore to precede the reading.
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <a href=\\"http\://www.hpl.lib.tx.us/an-evening-with\\">Learn more about the Houston Public Library's Author Series.  </a>
 </p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100326T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100326T030000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/usha-akella
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/usha-akella
SUMMARY:In the Sufi Tradition\: Poetry and Music Celebrating 'A Face That Does Not Bear the Footprints of the World'
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <em>Featuring</em>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <strong>Usha Akella\, Poet</strong>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <strong>Steve Gorn\, Flute </strong>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 Poet Usha Akella will read from her most recent book of poems\, accompanied by the internationally-renowned musician Steve Gorn. The poetry celebrates the Sufi spirit with poems of devotion\, love\, and yearning for the divine. The work resonates with the sanctity and dignity of the Rothko Chapel's mission and is universal in its spiritual message of love and harmony. A signing and booksale by Brazos will follow the program. Akella's book\, <em>A Face That Does Not Bear the Footprints of the World</em>\, will be available.
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <a href=\\"http\://rothkochapel.org/index.htm\\" target=\\"_blank\\">Visit the Rothko Chapel online for more information. </a>
 </p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100331T173000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100331T193000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/michael-lewis-luncheon
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/michael-lewis-luncheon
SUMMARY:Luncheon with Michael Lewis
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 Join Brazos Bookstore and the <a href=\\"http\://www.asiasociety.org/centers/texas\\" target=\\"_blank\\">Asia Society</a> at the Houston Club for a luncheon with bestselling author Michael Lewis\, who will discuss his upcoming book\, <em>The Big Short\: Inside the Doomsday Machine</em>.
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <strong>Tickets\: $38.50 Individuals\, $360 Table of 10</strong>
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <strong>Reservations\: 713-229-2215 or email <a href=\\"mailto\:sjones@houstonclub.org\\">sjones@houstonclub.org</a></strong>
 </p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100401T003000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100401T023000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/michael-lewis
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/michael-lewis
SUMMARY:Michael Lewis
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 We are delighted to host\, together with the <a href=\\"http\://tigernet.princeton.edu/~paa444/\\" target=\\"_blank\\">Princeton Alumni Association of Houston</a>\, Michael Lewis in Shell Auditorium at Rice University's Jones Graduate School of Business. Lewis's new book\, <em>The Big Short\: Inside the Doomsday Machine</em>\, covers the fall of the American economy with humor\, rich characters\, and insight.
 </p>
 <p>
 Who better than the author of the signature bestseller <em>Liar’s Poker</em><br />
 to explain how the event we were told was impossible—the free fall of<br />
 the American economy—finally occurred\; how the things that we wanted\,<br />
 like ridiculously easy money and greatly expanded home ownership\, were<br />
 vehicles for that crash\; and how shareholder demand for profit forced<br />
 investment executives to eat the forbidden fruit of toxic derivatives.</p>
 <p>Michael Lewis’s splendid cast of characters includes villains\, a few<br />
 heroes\, and a lot of people who look very\, very foolish\: high<br />
 government officials\, including the watchdogs\; heads of major<br />
 investment banks (some overlap here with previous category)\; perhaps<br />
 even the face in your mirror. In this trenchant\, raucous\, irresistible<br />
 narrative\, Lewis writes of the goats and of the few who saw what the<br />
 emperor was wearing\, and gives them\, most memorably\, what they deserve.<br />
 He proves yet again that he is the finest and funniest chronicler of<br />
 our times.
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>Michael Lewis</strong>\, the author of <em>Liar’s Poker</em>\, <em>The New New Thing</em>\, <em>Moneyball</em>\, <em>The Blind Side</em>\, <em>Panic</em>\, <em>Home Game</em> and <em>The Big Short</em>\, among other works\, lives in Berkeley\, California\, with his wife\, Tabitha Soren\, and their three children. 
 </p>
 <p>
 This event is free and open to the public. Please note that Michael Lewis will sign only those books bought from Brazos Bookstore.
 </p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100407T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100407T023000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/edward-hirsch
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/edward-hirsch
SUMMARY:Edward Hirsch
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 Another April means another National Poetry Month\, and another book from Ed Hirsch means (as long as we're lucky) another delightful evening of poetry here at Brazos. We love welcoming Hirsch back to Houston and celebrating his work\, past and present. His rich and significant upcoming collection of more than one hundred new and selected poems chronicle insomnia (“the blue-rimmed edge / of outer dark\, those crossroads /<br />
 where we meet the dead”)\, art and culture (poems on Edward Hopper and<br />
 Paul Celan\, love poems in the voices of Baudelaire and Gertrude Stein\,<br />
 a meditation on two suitcases of children’s drawings that came out of<br />
 the Terezin concentration camp)\, and his own experience\, including the<br />
 powerful\, frank self-examinations in his more recent work.
 </p>
 <p>
 Repeatedly confronting the darkness\, his own sense of godlessness<br />
 (“Forgive me\, faith\, for never having any”)\, he also struggles with the<br />
 unlikely presence of the divine\, the power of art to redeem human<br />
 transience\, and the complexity of relationships. Throughout the<br />
 collection\, his own life trajectory enriches the poems\; he is the<br />
 “skinny\, long-beaked boy / who perched in the branches of the old<br />
 branch library\,” as well as the passionate middle-aged man who tells<br />
 his lover\, “I wish I could paint you— / . . . / I need a brush for your<br />
 hard angles / and ferocious blues and reds. / . . . / I wish I could<br />
 paint you / from the waist down.”</p>
 <p>Grieving for the losses<br />
 occasioned by our mortality\, Hirsch’s ultimate impulse as a poet is to<br />
 praise—to wreathe himself\, as he writes\, in “the living fire” that<br />
 burns with a ferocious intensity.
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>Edward Hirsch</strong> is the author of seven previous collections of poetry and four prose books\, among them <em>How to Read a Poem and Fall in Love with Poetry\,</em><br />
 a national best seller. He has received numerous awards for his poetry\,<br />
 including the National Book Critics Circle Award and a MacArthur<br />
 Fellowship\, and publishes regularly in a wide variety of magazines and<br />
 journals. A longtime teacher\, at Wayne State University and in the<br />
 Creative Writing Program at the University of Houston\, Hirsch is now<br />
 president of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. He lives in<br />
 New York City.
 </p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100408T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100408T023000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/gabrielle-calvocoressi
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/gabrielle-calvocoressi
SUMMARY:Rice Cherry Reading Series\: Gabrielle Calvocoressi
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>
 The Rice Cherry Reading Series is presented by the Rice Department of English and Fondren Library. Brazos is the proud bookseller of the series.
 </p>
 <p>
 Rarely has a first book of poems been more exalted than Gabrielle Calvocoressi's <em>The Last Time I Saw Amelia Earhart</em>\, which the <em>Times Literary Supplement </em>called &quot\;an excoriation of present-day America by a new and lethal commentator.&quot\; Now\, in Apocalypthis extraordinary follow-up\, Calvocoressi continues her<br />
 mission to document the particular hardships of derelict American small<br />
 towns.
 </p>
 <p>
 Without sacrificing one iota of poetic imagination or brilliance\, Calvocoressi writes unbelievably potent poetry that everyday people connect with\, poetry about real lives set in the real world. The small-town settings she writes of aren't happy -- there's brutality and bigotry -- but the poems have a beauty and spiritedness that make then feel incrediby heroic. The book contains unforgettable poems about jazz and boxing\, two things to which its speaker turns to find solace and confidence. Reminiscent of work by Philip Levine and Mary Karr\, it is a book about America\, in all of its struggling and defiantly hopeful glory. 
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>Gabrielle Calvocoressi</strong> has won the Bernard F. Connors Prize from the <em>Paris Review</em><br />
 and a Rona Jaffe Award for Emerging Women Writers. She teaches in the<br />
 graduate writing programs of California College of the Arts and Warren<br />
 Wilson College. She lives in Los Angeles.
 </p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100409T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100409T020000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/wilson-turner-hester
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/wilson-turner-hester
SUMMARY:Glenwood Cemetery\: Joanne Seale Wilson\, Suzanne Turner & Paul Hester
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 </p>
 <p align=\\"center\\">
 <em><strong>Photo by Paul Hester </strong></em>
 </p>
 <p>
 <a href=\\"http\://www.glenwoodcemetery.org/foundation/\\" target=\\"_blank\\">Glenwood Cemetery</a> has long offered a serene and pastoral final resting<br />
 place for many of Houston's civic leaders and historic figures. In <em>Houston's Silent Garden</em>\,<br />
 Suzanne Turner and Joanne Seale Wilson reveal the story of this<br />
 beautifully wooded and landscaped preserve's development—a story that<br />
 is also very much entwined with the history of Houston.</p>
 <p>In 1871\,<br />
 recovering from Reconstruction\, a group of progressive citizens noticed<br />
 that Houston needed a new cemetery at the edge of the central city.<br />
 Embracing the picturesque aesthetic that had swept through the Eastern<br />
 Seaboard\, the founders of Glenwood selected land along Buffalo Bayou<br />
 and developed Glenwood. Since then\, the cemetery's monuments have<br />
 memorialized the lives of many of the city's most interesting residents<br />
 (Allen\, Baker\, Brown\, Clayton\, Cooley\, Cullinan\, Farish\, Hermann\,<br />
 Hobby\, House\, Hughes\, Jones\, Law\, Rice\, Staub\, Sterling\, Weiss\, and<br />
 Wortham\, among many others). The monuments also showcase the artistry<br />
 and craftsmanship of some of the region's finest sculptors and artisans.</p>
 <p>Accompanied<br />
 by the breathtaking photography of Paul Hester\, this book chronicles<br />
 the cemetery's origins from its inception in 1871 to the present day. Through<br />
 the story of Glenwood\, readers will appreciate some of the natural<br />
 features that shaped Houston's evolution and will also begin to<br />
 understand the forces of urbanization that positioned Houston to become<br />
 the vital community it is today.<em> Houston's Silent Garden</em> is a must-read for those interested in Houston civic and regional history\, architecture\, and urban planning.
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>ABOUT THE AUTHORS </strong>
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>Suzanne Turner</strong> is professor emeritus of the School of Landscape<br />
 Architecture at Louisiana State University and principal of Suzanne<br />
 Turner Associates. She resides in Baton Rouge\, Louisiana. <strong>Joanne Seale Wilson</strong> of Houston is the author of several publications in<br />
 horticulture and landscaping\, including a biography of historic<br />
 landscape architect Rose Ishbel Greely. <strong>Paul Hester</strong> teaches in the<br />
 Department of Visual and Dramatic Arts at Rice University. His<br />
 photographs have appeared in many books\, magazines\, and exhibitions.
 </p>
 
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20100312T010851Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100409T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100409T023000Z
UID:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/amiri-baraka-rothko
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.brazosbookstore.com/event/amiri-baraka-rothko
SUMMARY:Amiri Baraka\, Living Legend
DESCRIPTION:<p align=\\"center\\">
 <em><strong>Poet\, Playwright\, and Civil Rights Activist</strong></em>
 </p>
 <p>Amiri Baraka was born Everett LeRoi Jones in 1934 in Newark\,<br />
 NJ. After leaving Howard University and the Air Force\, he moved to the<br />
 Lower East Side of Manhattan in 1957 and co-edited the avant-garde<br />
 literary magazine <em>Yugen</em> and founded Totem Press\, which first<br />
 published works by Allen Ginsberg\,<br />
 Jack Kerouac\, and others.</p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>He published his first volume of poetry\, <em>Preface to a<br />
 Twenty-Volume Suicide Note</em>\, in 1961. <em>Blues People\: Negro Music in<br />
 White </em><em><br />
 America</em>\,<br />
 still regarded as the seminal work on Afro-American music and culture. He<br />
 also edited <em>The Moderns\: An Anthology of New Writing in </em><em><br />
 America</em><br />
 were published in 1963. His reputation as a playwright was established with<br />
 the production of <em>Dutchman</em> at the Cherry Lane Theatre<br />
 in New York on March 24\, 1964. The controversial play subsequently won an<br />
 Obie Award (for &quot\;best off-Broadway play&quot\;) and was made into a film. (The<br />
 play was revived by the Cherry Lane Theatre in January 2007 and has been<br />
 reproduced around the world).</p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>In 1965\, Jones moved to Harlem\,<br />
 where he founded the Black Arts Repertory Theatre/School. The BARTS lasted<br />
 only one year but had a lasting influence on the direction of Afro American<br />
 Arts. Sending five trucks a day into the Harlem community\, art show on one\,<br />
 poetry reading from the other\, music\, another\, drama the other\, where<br />
 performances would be given in a changed location each day. Vacant lots\,<br />
 play grounds\, housing projects pushing Art that would be Black as Bessie<br />
 Smith\, mass-based and taken to the people and Revolutionary\, reflecting the<br />
 intensity of the entire Black Liberation Movement </p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>In 1966\, when the BARTS was dissolved\, Baraka returned to Newark\,<br />
 his hometown and set up with his new bride\, Amina Baraka\, (who was a founder<br />
 of Newark’s “Loft” a local venue of contemporary art)\, Spirit House and the<br />
 Spirit House Movers\, which brought drama\, music and poetry from across the<br />
 country.</p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>During this period\, the Barakas founded the Committee for Unified<br />
 Newark and the Congress of Afrikan People which led the election of Ken<br />
 Gibson as the first Black Mayor of a major northeastern city spearheaded by<br />
 the 1972 Gary (IN) Convention. In 1968\, he co-edited <em>Black Fire\: An<br />
 Anthology of Afro-American Writing </em>with Larry Neal.</p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>He and his wife\, Amina Baraka\, edited <em>The Music</em> (Meditations<br />
 of Jazz &amp\; Blues (Morrow) <em>Confirmation\: An Anthology of African-American<br />
 Women</em>\, which won an American Book Award from the Before Columbus<br />
 Foundation. The <em>Autobiography of LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka</em> was<br />
 published in 1984. His recent publications are <em>Y’s/Why’s/Wise</em> (3rd<br />
 World 1992) <em>Funk Lore</em> (Littoral 1993)\, <em>Eulogies</em>\, (Marsilio\,<br />
 94\,) <em>Transbluesency</em>\, (Marsilio 1996)\, <em>Somebody Blew Up America &amp\;<br />
 Other Poems</em> (Nehesi 2002). </p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>Amiri Baraka's numerous literary honors include fellowships from<br />
 the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts\, the<br />
 PEN/Faulkner Award\, the Rockefeller Foundation Award for Drama\, the Langston<br />
 Hughes Award from The City College of New York\, and a lifetime achievement<br />
 award from the Before Columbus Foundation. He was inducted into the American<br />
 Academy of Arts and Letters in 1995. In 1994\, he retired as Professor of<br />
 Africana Studies at the State University of New York in Stony Brook\, and in<br />
 2002 was named Poet Laureate of New Jersey and Newark Public Schools. In<br />
 January 2007\, his award-winning\, one-act play\, <em>Dutchman</em>\, was revived<br />
 at the new Cherry Lane Theatre in New York and received critical acclaim and<br />
 international attention. His recent book of short stories\, <em>Tales of the<br />
 Out &amp\; The Gone </em>(Akashic Books) was published in late 2007.  <em>Home</em>\,<br />
 his book of social essays\, will be re-released by Akashic Books in early<br />
 2009. <em>Digging\: The Afro American Soul of Music</em> (Univ.<br />
 of California) is also due out this year.</p>
 <p> </p>
 <p><a href=\\"http\://www.rothkochapel.org/index.htm\\"> Learn more about the Rothko Chapel. </a></p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 
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