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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T110000
DTSTAMP:20260425T083920
CREATED:20210330T174804Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210401T225509Z
UID:5589-1621159200-1621162800@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Our Stories\, Our Voices: Writing As Activism
DESCRIPTION:Join Our Stories\, Our Voices: 21 YA Authors Get Real About Injustice\, Empowerment\, and Growing Up Female in America editor AMY REED and contributors AMBER SMITH and IW GREGORIO as they discuss what it means to write in one’s own voice\, how do you make the personal political\, what is the role of literature and art in social justice\, and how is artistic or literary activism defined. \nSaturday\, 5/15 – Part 1 – Our Stories\, Our Voices: Four Years On\nSunday\, 5/16 – Your Story\, Your Voice: A Writing Workshop\n \nPurchase books from our official bookseller\, Scuppernong Books\, by clicking book images above. \n  \nAMY REED is the award-winning author of several novels for young adults\, including The Nowhere Girls\, The Boy and Girl Who Broke the World\, Beautiful\, Clean\, and Crazy. Her newest book\, the psychological thriller Tell Me My Name\,  is a near-future\, gender-swapped retelling of The Great Gatsby. Amy is a feminist\, mother\, and Virgo who enjoys running\, making lists\, and wandering around the mountains of western North Carolina where she lives.\nAuthor Website \nAMBER SMITH is the New York Times bestselling author of the young adult novels The Way I Used to Be\, The Last to Let Go\, and Something Like Gravity. An advocate for increased awareness of gendered violence\, as well as LGBTQ equality\, she writes in the hope that her books can help to foster change and spark dialogue surrounding these issues. She grew up in Buffalo\, New York\, and now lives in Charlotte\, North Carolina\, with her wife and their ever-growing family of rescued dogs and cats. \nAuthor Website \nIW GREGORIO is a practicing surgeon by day\, masked avenging YA writer by night. She is author of This is My Brain in Love\, which was awarded the 2020 Schneider Family Book Award by the American Library Association. After getting her MD\, she did her residency at Stanford\, where she met the intersex patient who inspired her debut novel\, None of the Above\, which was a Lambda Literary Finalist\, a Publishers Weekly Flying Start\, and an ALA Rainbow List selection. She is proud to be a board member of interACT: Advocates for Intersex Youth\, and is a founding member of We Need Diverse Books. Her essays have been published in Newsweek\, The Washington Post\, The San Francisco Chronicle\, The Philadelphia Inquirer\, and Scientific American\, among others.\nAuthor Website \n  \nThis event is sponsored by:
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/our-stories-our-voices-2/
LOCATION:VIRTUAL
CATEGORIES:Adult,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction,Young Adult
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T133000
DTSTAMP:20260425T083920
CREATED:20210330T174835Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210430T144236Z
UID:5387-1621166400-1621171800@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:LIVE Your Story\, Your Voice: A Writing Workshop
DESCRIPTION:  \nJoin Our Stories\, Our Voices: 21 YA Authors Get Real About Injustice\, Empowerment\, and Growing Up Female in America editor AMY REED and contributors AMBER SMITH and IW GREGORIO in a writing workshop to explore how to find your own “voice” as a writer. Each author will speak about their journey and then guide participants through a writing exercise to uncover your own voice. Workshop will conclude with a participant discussion and an opportunity to share your writing.  A great opportunity to explore writing in an authentic voice for young adults\, parents of young adults\, aspiring YA writers\, and marginalized communities. \n \n  \n  \nConversations \nSaturday\, 5/15 – Part 1 – Our Stories\, Our Voices: Four Years On\nSunday\, 5/16 –  Part 2 – Our Stories\, Our Voices: Writing As Activism\n \nAMY REED is the award-winning author of several novels for young adults\, including The Nowhere Girls\, The Boy and Girl Who Broke the World\, Beautiful\, Clean\, and Crazy. Her newest book\, the psychological thriller Tell Me My Name\,  is a near-future\, gender-swapped retelling of The Great Gatsby. Amy is a feminist\, mother\, and Virgo who enjoys running\, making lists\, and wandering around the mountains of western North Carolina where she lives.\nAuthor Website \nAMBER SMITH is the New York Times bestselling author of the young adult novels The Way I Used to Be\, The Last to Let Go\, and Something Like Gravity. An advocate for increased awareness of gendered violence\, as well as LGBTQ equality\, she writes in the hope that her books can help to foster change and spark dialogue surrounding these issues. She grew up in Buffalo\, New York\, and now lives in Charlotte\, North Carolina\, with her wife and their ever-growing family of rescued dogs and cats. \nAuthor Website \nIW GREGORIO is a practicing surgeon by day\, masked avenging YA writer by night. She is author of This is My Brain in Love\, which was awarded the 2020 Schneider Family Book Award by the American Library Association. After getting her MD\, she did her residency at Stanford\, where she met the intersex patient who inspired her debut novel\, None of the Above\, which was a Lambda Literary Finalist\, a Publishers Weekly Flying Start\, and an ALA Rainbow List selection. She is proud to be a board member of interACT: Advocates for Intersex Youth\, and is a founding member of We Need Diverse Books. Her essays have been published in Newsweek\, The Washington Post\, The San Francisco Chronicle\, The Philadelphia Inquirer\, and Scientific American\, among others.\nAuthor Website \n  \nThis event is sponsored by:
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/ya-workshop/
LOCATION:LIVE ZOOM
CATEGORIES:Adult,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction,Workshop,Young Adult
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T150000
DTSTAMP:20260425T083920
CREATED:20210401T065451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210512T181928Z
UID:5563-1621173600-1621177200@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:LIVE Candacy Taylor and The Historic Magnolia House
DESCRIPTION:CANDACY TAYLOR\, author of Overground Railroad:The Green Book and the Roots of Black Travel in America\, joins preservationist NATALIE PASS-MILLER and The Historic Magnolia House\, one of only four Green Book sites in North Carolina still in operation. Taylor reaches into her personal history to share the story of the Green Book and the roots of black travel in America. This beautifully researched and illustrated book chronicles the publication of the Green Book between 1936-1967. Pass-Miller’s family purchased the home at 442 Gorell Street in 1995 and worked over the next 22 years on it’s restoration. The Magnolia House was frequented by some of our nation’s most well-known African Americans including James Baldwin\, Louise Armstrong\, and Jackie Robinson during segregation. Work is underway to complete its restoration as a museum and to bring it back into operation as a hotel. Hosted by RODNEY DAWSON. [event is free\, but registration is required]\n\n \n  \n  \nPurchase books from our official bookseller\, Scuppernong Books\, by clicking book image above. \nCANDACY TAYLOR is an award-winning author\, photographer and cultural documentarian working on a multidisciplinary project based on the Green Book. She is the author of the bestselling book\, Overground Railroad: The Green Book and the Roots of Black Travel in America (Abrams Books). Taylor is also the curator and content specialist for the exhibition\, The Negro Motorist Green Book\, which is being toured by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES) from 2020 to 2024. Taylor was a fellow at the Hutchins Center at Harvard University under the direction of Henry Louis Gates Jr. and her projects have been funded by numerous organizations including\, The Library of Congress\, National Geographic\, The American Council of Learned Societies\, The National Endowment for the Humanities\, The National Park Service\, The National Trust\, and The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Taylor’s work has been featured in over 65 media outlets including The Atlantic\, CBS Sunday Morning\, The Guardian UK\, The Los Angeles Times\, The New York Times\, The New Yorker\, Newsweek\, PBS Newshour\, and The Wall St. Journal. Taylor lives in Harlem\, New York.\nAuthor Website \nNATALIE PASS-MILLER is the owner and operator of The Historic Magnolia House and Inn. A Greensboro native\, Natalie attended NC A&T State University where she received a degree in nursing. She later became an IT professional and traveled around the southeast with her family\, before moving back to Greensboro in 2018 to help her father\, Sam Pass\, complete the restoration work on the home. Natalie has a rich family lineage that includes her great\, great grandfather\, Jefferson Davis Diggs\, who was one of the founders of the school that would become Winston-Salem State University; her uncle Samuel Penn\, was Greensboro’s first Black police officers; and her aunt Eloise Logan-Penn\, was the first Black woman to run a music program in the local schools and created the Delta Sigma Theta “Sweetheart Song”. In April\, The Magnolia House announced that it would once again open as an inn this fall.\nMagnolia House Website \nRODNEY DAWSON is the Curator of Education for the Greensboro Historical Museum. He is an Army veteran\, former on-air radio personality\, and former Crisis Prevention Intervention instructor. He received his Ed.S (Education Specialist) degree from Liberty University.\nHe is responsible for a variety of the Museum’s virtual experiences\, including the Juneteenth celebration and a forthcoming Holocaust program. \nThis event is sponsored by:
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/candacy-taylor/
LOCATION:LIVE ZOOM
CATEGORIES:Adult,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T160000
DTSTAMP:20260425T083920
CREATED:20210401T065109Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210402T152204Z
UID:5640-1621177200-1621180800@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:A Measure of Belonging: 21 Writers of Color on the New American South
DESCRIPTION:A Measure of Belonging: 21 Writers of Color on the New American South  editor CINELLE BARNES fell in love with a boy from the Carolinas\, moved South with him\, and immediately encountered the worst and the best The South has to offer. Committed to “making this place as big as it is\,” she found 21 other writers of color\, both established and emerging\, who are also confronting the paradoxes that envelop the South. A Measure of Belonging is the space she held for their stories. Contributors IVELISSE RODRIGUEZ and DIANA CEJAS join us to talk about their experiences— the good\, the bad\, and the befuddling— of living down south. [rsvp required; see below] \nPurchase books from our official bookseller\, Scuppernong Books\, by clicking book image above. \nCINELLE BARNES is a memoirist\, essayist\, and educator from Manila\, Philippines\, and is the author of Monsoon Mansion: A Memoir (Little A\, 2018) and Malaya: Essays on Freedom (Little A\, 2019)\, and the editor the New York Times New & Noteworthy book\, A Measure of Belonging: 21 Writes of Color on the New American South (Hub City Press\, 2020). She earned an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Converse College.  She is currently at work on a nonfiction narrative book on climate justice and the Philippine water crisis.\nAuthor Website \nIVELISSE RODRIGUEZ’s debut short story collection Love War Stories is a 2019 PEN/Faulkner finalist and a 2018 Foreword Reviews INDIES finalist. She is the founder and editor of an interview series focused on contemporary Puerto Rican writers published in Centro Voices. She was a senior fiction editor at Kweli and is a Kimbilio fellow and a VONA/Voices alum. She earned an M.F.A. in creative writing from Emerson College and a Ph.D. in English-creative writing from the University of Illinois at Chicago.\nAuthor Website\n\nDIANA CEJAS  is a pediatric neurologist and writer in Durham\, NC. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in medical journals and literary magazines including The Journal of the American Medical Association\, The Iowa Review\, and Catapult\, among others. She is currently working on a memoir that describes her life as a physician-patient. She spends her days off on her family’s farm gardening and tending to their honeybees.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/a-measure-of-belonging/
LOCATION:VIRTUAL
CATEGORIES:Adult,Literary Fiction,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T180000
DTSTAMP:20260425T083920
CREATED:20210401T064410Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210401T192754Z
UID:5648-1621184400-1621188000@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:A Conversation on Race & Grace in America\, with Denise Kiernan & D. Watkins
DESCRIPTION:The non-fiction work of DENISE KIERNAN has become surefire bestseller material (The Girls of Atomic City\, The Last Castle) and her latest book\, We Gather Together: A Nation Divided\, a President in Turmoil\, and a Historic Campaign to Embrace Gratitude and Grace\, brings her considerable gifts to the untold story of Lincoln and the burgeoning of the Thanksgiving holiday. D. WATKINS\, author of the recent We Speak for Ourselves: How Woke Culture Prohibits Progress (and also The Cook-Up: A Crack Rock Memoir and The Beast Side: Living (and Dying) While Black in America)\, introduces you to Down Bottom\, the storied community of East Baltimore that holds a mirror to America’s poor black neighborhoods–“hoods” that could just as easily be in Chicago\, Detroit\, Oakland\, or Atlanta. As Watkins sees it\, the perspective of people who live in economically disadvantaged black communities is largely absent from the commentary of many top intellectuals who speak and write about race.[rsvp required; see below] \nPurchase books from our official bookseller\, Scuppernong Books\, by clicking book image above. \nDENISE KIERNAN is a writer and producer. She writes for herself\, has ghost written\, and has written for both adults and children. And she’s occasionally written with her husband\, author Joseph D’Agnese. She started out in journalism and has covered everything from women’s issues\, sports and history to food\, travel and education in places like The New York Times\, The Wall Street Journal\, The Village Voice\, Saveur\, Discover\, Ms.\, Reader’s Digest\, and others. She also worked as head writer for ABC‘s “Who Wants to be Millionaire” during its Emmy award-winning first season and has produced for ESPN\, MSNBC and a variety of independent productions.\nAuthor Website \nD. WATKINS is Editor at Large for Salon. He holds a Master’s in Education from Johns Hopkins University and an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Baltimore where he is a  college lecturer  and founder of the BMORE Writers Project. He is the author of the New York Times bestsellers The Beast Side: Living (and Dying) While Black in America and The Cook Up: A Crack Rock Memoir and We Speak for Ourselves: A Word from Forgotten Black America. Watkins is from and lives in Baltimore.\nAuthor Website
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/kiernan-watkins/
LOCATION:VIRTUAL
CATEGORIES:Adult,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T190000
DTSTAMP:20260425T083920
CREATED:20210401T064103Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210510T155618Z
UID:5651-1621188000-1621191600@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Wilmington's Lie: A Conversation with John Sayles & David Zucchino
DESCRIPTION:  \nJOHN SAYLES is an indy film legend. He has written and directed dozens of movies including Lone Star\, Brother From Another Planet\, Matewan\, Eight Men Out\, and The Secret of Roan Inish. Sayles has also written a handful of novels and story collections. His 2011 novel\, A Moment in the Sun\, looks at America in 1898 and the Wilmington Race Riot figures prominently in the narrative. DAVID ZUCCHINO’s 2020 nonfiction book\, Wilmington’s Lie: The Murderous Coup of 1898 and the Rise of White Supremacy\, is the definitive book on the massacre. Together\, Sayles and Zucchino will talk about the atmosphere in Wilmington in 1898 and the lasting impact of the white riot through the 20th Century. The discussion will also focus on the parallels with the January 6\, 2021 insurrection and the continued strain of white supremacy in America. Hosted by BRIAN LAMPKIN.  (rsvp required; see below) \nPurchase books from our official bookseller\, Scuppernong Books\, by clicking book image above. \nDAVID ZUCCHINO is the author of Wilmington’s Lie\, Thunder Run and Myth of the Welfare Queen. He is a contributing writer for The New York Times\, covering Afghanistan and Iraq. He has been a foreign correspondent from more than 30 years\, reporting from more than three dozen countries. He is a four-time Pulitzer Prize finalist and won a Pulitzer Prize for his reporting from apartheid South Africa.\nAuthor Website \nJOHN SAYLES career as a storyteller began with his fiction. His first novel was Pride of the Bimbos (1975) followed by Union Dues (nominated for National Book Award and National Critics Circle Award)\, the short story collection At the Anarchists Convention\, Los Gusanos\, Dillinger in Hollywood\, and his epic historical novel A Moment in the Sun . His latest work is Yellow Earth. Fiction brought Sayles to the attention of legendary Director/Producer Roger Corman\, for whom he wrote screenplays. Screenwriting is still Sayles’ primary profession\, and credited or not\, he has been able to work in a myriad of genres.\nAuthor Website \nBRIAN LAMPKIN is the Vice Chair of the Greensboro Literary Organization\, the producer of the Greensboro Bound Literary Festival\, author of The Tarboro Three: Rape\, Race\, and Secrecy\, and co-owner of Scuppernong Books. A former social worker and teacher\, Brian spends his life advocating for social justice and sharing his love of the written word with any and everyone who walks through Scup’s doors.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/sayles-zucchino/
LOCATION:VIRTUAL
CATEGORIES:Adult,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
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