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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250528T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250528T210000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20250320T175838Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250408T150025Z
UID:14002-1748458800-1748466000@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Reshaping the Divide: An Evening with Cristina Henríquez
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a compelling evening with New York Times best-selling author Cristina Henríquez as we close out this year’s Greensboro Bound Book Festival with a powerful\, thought-provoking discussion. While the festival takes place May 17\, this culminating event on May 28 offers one final opportunity to gather in celebration of literature and storytelling. \nHenríquez will discuss her latest novel\, The Great Divide\, a moving exploration of the people who lived\, loved\, and labored during the construction of the Panama Canal. She will also share her personal experience of “the divide within\,” reflecting on her identity as both American and Panamanian and how her sense of self has evolved over time. \nIn conversation with Jodie Stanley\, City of Greensboro’s International Support and Language Access Coordinator\, Henríquez will delve into themes of culture\, identity\, community\, and belonging. \nVan Dyke Performance SpaceMay 28 at 7 PMFree & Open to the Public \nThis program is sponsored by Greensboro Public Library and the Greensboro Public Library Foundation\, with community partners including Greensboro Bound and Creative Greensboro.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/reshaping-the-divide-an-evening-with-cristina-henriquez/
LOCATION:Van Dyke Performance Space\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Adult,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250517
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250518
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20241118T182906Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250410T135824Z
UID:13822-1747440000-1747526399@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:2025 Greensboro Bound Book Festival
DESCRIPTION:  \n\n\nOUR ALL DAY FESTIVAL IS SATURDAY\, MAY 17.  \nWe’ll be exploring themes of family\, the many meanings of home\, and the past as prologue. We’ll have some serious fun with Taylor Swift songs\, flesh out the best obituary ever written\, and take a look at how N.C. became a purple state. \n\n\nWhat happens when a child of the Great Migration starts nosing around Alabama for his roots?\nHow can I get published as successfully as a certain local legend and sportswriter?\nWhat does poetry have to tell us about today’s anxious existence?\n\nAgain\, we’ll showcases our High School Poet Laureates\, and welcome children’s authors who have supported our Authors Engaging Students program. \nCLICK HERE FOR THE FULL SCHEDULE OF AUTHOR EVENTS!
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/2025-greensboro-bound-literary-festival/
LOCATION:NC
CATEGORIES:Adult,All Ages,Children,Non-Fiction,Workshop,YA,Young Adult
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250423T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250423T180000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20250205T175432Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250211T165646Z
UID:13878-1745424000-1745431200@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Author Heath Lee Reveals ‘The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon’
DESCRIPTION:In partnership with the Historical Book Club of North Carolina and Well-Spring\, A Life Plan Community\, please join us as we welcome award-winning historian and biographer Heath Hardage Lee\, just as her latest book\, The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon: Washington’s Most Private  First Lady\, debuts.  \nHeath’s narrative nonfiction book entitled The League of Wives:  The Untold Story of the Women Who Took on the U.S. Government to Bring Their Husbands Home from Vietnam was published by St. Martin’s Press in 2019.  Heath’s museum exhibition entitled The League of Wives:  Vietnam POW MIA Advocates & Allies about Vietnam POW MIA wives premiered at the Dole Institute of Politics in May of 2017 and travelled to venues all over the United States through 2023.  The League of Wives is currently being developed as a television series. Heath also writes about women’s history and politics for publications such as Time\, The Hill\, The Atlantic and White House History Quarterly.  She currently serves on the Boards of FLARE the First Ladies Association for Research and Education and BIO Biographers International Organization.  Heath’s new book The Mysterious Mrs. Nixon:  Washington’s Most Private First Lady is the first commercial biography of First Lady Pat Nixon in almost 40 years. \nShe will  speak from 4-5 p.m. at Well-Spring’s Virginia Somerville Sutton Theatre\, followed by a reception and book signing. \nAdmission is free and open to the public… we do ask that you register so that we have enough food for everyone. \n\n[captainform id=”1167661″]
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/author-heath-lee-reveals-the-mysterious-mrs-nixon/
LOCATION:Well-Spring Retirement Community – Virginia Somerville Sutton Theatre\, 4100 Well Spring Drive\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27410
CATEGORIES:Adult,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221006T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221006T194500
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220829T164243Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220914T152657Z
UID:12539-1665079200-1665085500@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Beth Macy
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nGreensboro Bound presents BETH MACY\, author of Raising Lazarus and Dopesick\,  in partnership with Cone Health and Scuppernong Books.\n\nDue to limited seating rsvp is requested. Please note: **RSVPs over venue capacity will be placed on standby and you will be notified.**\n\n \n  \n\nRaising Lazarus is the crucial next installment in the story of the defining disaster of our era\, one that touches every single one of us\, whether directly or indirectly. A complex story of public health\, big pharma\, dark money\, politics\, race\, and class that is by turns harrowing and heartening\, infuriating and inspiring\, Raising Lazarus is a must-read for all Americans. \nAvailable for purchase from our independent bookseller partner\, Scuppernong Books.  \nBETH MACY is a Virginia-based journalist\, the author of Dopesick: Dealers\, Doctors\, and the Drug Company That Addicted America\, and an executive producer and cowriter on Hulu’s Peabody Award-winning “Dopesick” series. \n 
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/beth-macy/
LOCATION:Union Square Auditorium\, 124 E Gate City Blvd\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27406
CATEGORIES:Adult,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T170000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T213608Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220522T025305Z
UID:8736-1653235200-1653238800@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Just Bring Yourself: A Conversation with Ann Hood and Julia Ridley Smith
DESCRIPTION:Advanced registration for this event is closed. However\, you may "walk-up" and register onsite.  \n\n\n	 \n	\n		\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nJoin us for a conversation about the pleasures and challenges of writing memoir. When mining material from their own lives\, how do writers decide what to include and what to let go? How much (or little) are family members and friends included in the research and writing? We’ll also talk about the role of humor in memoir and how these writers approach memoir differently from (or similarly to) the fiction they write. With ANN HOOD and JULIA RIDLEY SMITH. Hosted by MOLLY SENTELL HAILE. \n  \nYou may also be interested in: \n• Memoir Plus: A Conversation on Hybrid Memoir\n• $ WORKSHOP Down the Rabbit Hole of Your Own Life: A Creative Writing Lab with Laurie Stone\n• Lost Mothers: Memoirs of Longing\n• $ WORKSHOP Writing from the Body with Nicole Lungerhausen \nANN HOOD is the author of the bestselling novels The Knitting Circle\, The Obituary Writer and The Book That Matters Most. Her memoir\, Comfort: A Journey Through Grief\, was a NYT Editors Choice and was named one of the top ten nonfiction books of 2008 by Entertainment Weekly. She lives in Rhode Island and NYC. \nJULIA RIDLEY SMITH is the author of a memoir\, The Sum of Trifles (University of Georgia Press\, 2021). She’s published fiction in Alaska Quarterly Review\, Electric Literature\, The Southern Review\, and elsewhere. Her nonfiction has appeared in Ecotone\, the New England Review\, and Southern Cultures\, and was recognized as notable in The Best American Essays. She has taught creative writing and literature at UNC Greensboro and is the 2021–22 Kenan Visiting Writer at UNC Chapel Hill. \nMOLLY SENTELL HAILE is a writer and educator whose short stories and nonfiction have appeared in Oxford American\, The North Carolina Literary Review\, Epiphany\, O. Henry Magazine\, and elsewhere. She was awarded the Doris Betts Fiction Prize and is a Pushcart and O. Henry Award nominee. Her work received a Notable designation in The Best American Nonrequired Reading. A graduate of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro’s MFA in Creative Writing\, she currently teaches creative writing classes for people with cancer\, survivors\, and caregivers at Hirsch Wellness Network in Greensboro and is at work on her first novel. \n 
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/hood-smith/
LOCATION:Van Dyke Performance Space\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T153000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T195251Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220522T025323Z
UID:8427-1653229800-1653233400@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Eating & Drinking Together: How Food Shapes Culture
DESCRIPTION:Advanced registration for this event is closed. However\, you may "walk-up" and register onsite.  \n\n\n	 \n	\n		\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nJULIA SKINNER and MARCIE COHEN FERRIS are both food historians and they bring deep understanding of the role of food and drink in our past and in our present. Each author examines how culinary excellence\, entrepreneurship\, and the struggle for racial justice converge in shaping food equity. Hosted by TAL BELVINS \nDR. JULIA SKINNER  is passionate about what we eat and the stories behind it. She uses her broad-ranging background\, from libraries to kitchens to visual art and even city bus driving to help us understand our food. She is the author of Our Fermented Lives: A History of How Fermented Foods Have Shaped Cultures & Communities. She also owns Root\, Atlanta’s fermentation and food history company offering classes\, consulting\, and other services worldwide. Julia’s writing has appeared in a number of national and regional outlets\, as well as in scholarly journals\, and she writes and illustrates a weekly newsletter on food issues. Julia is an avid fermenter\, regularly brewing and pickling whatever she can get her hands on\, as well as working with wild plants in her garden. You can follow her work at @rootkitchens or @bookishjulia. \nMARCIE COHEN FERRIS\, author of The Edible South: The Power of Food and the Making of an American Region and Matzoh Ball Gumbo: Culinary Tales of the Jewish South\, is professor emerita of American studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. \nTAL BLEVINS is the owner of MACHETE\, a James Beard-nominated restaurant in Greensboro\, NC.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/eating-and-drinking-together/
LOCATION:Stephen D. Hyers Theater\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, GREENSBORO\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Cookbooks,LGBTQIA,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T153000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220322T192411Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220522T025332Z
UID:8536-1653229800-1653233400@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Journalism and Activism
DESCRIPTION:Advanced registration for this event is closed. However\, you may "walk-up" and register onsite.  \n\n\n	 \n	\n		\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n\n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nJournalists and writers from different backgrounds discuss the importance of engaging equity\, criminal justice\, and community. The press\, and citizen journalists\, provide witness on systemic issues impacting local communities. A conversation with TESSIE CASTILLO\, TARA T. GREEN\, and LYNDEN HARRIS. Hosted by JOE KILLIAN. This panel is in partnership with the PEN America NC Piedmont Chapter.  **The ICRCM requires all guests to wear face coverings. View policy under “Museum Protocols”.** 4/5/22 \nYou may also be interested in:\n• Writing Toward Justice: Non-Fiction as a Call to Action\n• An Conversation with Nikole Hannah-Jones\n• Images of Justice and Power\n• Truth Tellers documentary presentation \n  \nTESSIE CASTILLO is an author\, journalist and public speaker who specializes in stories on prison reform\, drug policy\, restorative justice\, and racial equity. She is the editor of Crimson Letters: Voices from Death Row\, an original anthology of writings about the death penalty that features entries by Castillo as well as several current residents of North Carolina’s Death Row. In 2021 Crimson Letters was a finalist for the 2021 Eric Hoffer award for excellence in small press publishing and Castillo received the Victor Hassine Memorial Scholarship at American University for using creative work to educate the public on criminal justice issues. Tessie Castillo lives in Durham\, North Carolina with her daughter. To see more of her writings or to request a speaking engagement with her and her co-authors\, visit www.tessiecastillo.com. \nTARA T. GREEN is an award-winning scholar and professor of African American and African Diaspora Studies at the University of North Carolina in Greensboro. She is the author and editor of six books\, including Love\, Activism\, and the Respectable Life of Alice Dunbar-Nelson and See Me Naked: Black Women Defining Pleasure During the Interwar Era. She is from the suburbs of New Orleans. \nLYNDEN HARRIS is the founder of Hidden Voices\, a radically inclusive\, participatory\, and co-creative collective committed to a more just and compassionate world. For twenty years\, Lynden has collaborated with underrepresented communities to create award-winning works that combine narrative\, performance\, mapping\, music\, digital media\, and interactive exhibits. During her decades facilitating community connections\, Lynden developed a participatory workshop model to empower change through collective visioning and collaborative action. This process facilitates a dynamic exchange between documentary\, art\, and community that allows for a multiplicity of voices and a multiplexity of understandings. The former Artistic Director of ArtsCenter Stage\, Lynden was a founding Cultural Agent for the US Department of Arts and Culture and member of the MAP Fund Class of 2017 for Serving Life: ReVisioning Justice. Lynden is a 2020-21 Fellow with A Blade of Grass\, the 2020 recipient of the Ann Atwater Theater Award\, and the 2020 North Carolina Playwriting Fellow. Her music theater work-in-development\, A GOOD BOY\, is currently a semifinalist for the National Music Theater Conference. RIGHT HERE\, RIGHT NOW: Life Stories from America’s Death Row was published by Duke University Press in 2021. \nJOE KILLIAN is a senior investigative reporter at N.C. Policy Watch. His work takes a closer look at government\, politics and policy in North Carolina and their impact on the lives of everyday people. Before joining Policy Watch\, Joe worked in daily newspapers for more than a decade covering cops\, courts\, local and state government\, congressional campaigns and national political conventions. He has worked at the Bristol Press in Bristol\, Connecticut; The Cape Cod Times in Hyannis\, Massachusetts\, and The News & Record in Greensboro\, NC. His work has appeared in daily and weekly papers\, magazines and digital-first publications across the state and country. He is currently working on a book about the politicization of the North Carolina’s public university system. \n  \nSponsored by PEN America NC Piedmont Chapter
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/journalism-and-activism/
LOCATION:International Civil Rights Center & Museum\, 134 SElm Street\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27401
CATEGORIES:IBPOC Authors,Non-Fiction,Social Justice
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T150000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T213002Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220522T025341Z
UID:8731-1653228000-1653231600@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Sounding Bodies: Identity\, Injustice\, and the Voice
DESCRIPTION:Advanced registration for this event is closed. However\, you may "walk-up" and register onsite.  \n\n\n	 \n	\n		\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nSounding Bodies presents a powerful model of how the seemingly disparate disciplines of philosophy and voice/speech training can\, in conversation with each other\, generate illuminating insights about our vocal lives and identities. Utilising the framework of feminist philosophy\, authors Ann J. Cahill and Christine Hamel approach the phenomenon of voice as a lived\, sonorous and embodied experience marked by the social structures that surround it\, including systemic forms of injustice such as ableism\, sexism\, racism\, and classism. By developing novel theoretical constructs such as “intervocality” and “respiratory responsibility\,” Cahill and Hamel cut through the static between theory and praxis and put forward exciting theories on how human vocal sound can perpetuate — and challenge — persistent inequalities. With ANN CAHILL\, CHRISTINE HAMEL\, and TONA BROWN. Hosted by AUDREY SMITH. \nYou may also be interested in:\n• $ WORKSHOP Writing from the Body with Nicole Lungerhausen\n•  The Truth about Disability: What We Don’t Talk About\n• A Musical Thriller: Brendan Slocumb and Tona Brown in Conversation \n  \nANN CAHILL is Professor of Philosophy at Elon University\, US\, and the author of Overcoming Objectification: A Carnal Ethics (2010) and Rethinking Rape (2001). Her research interests lie in the intersection between feminist theory and philosophy of the body\, and she has published on topics such as miscarriage\, beautification and sexual assault. \nCHRISTINE HAMEL currently serves as head of the BFA Acting Program at Boston University School of Theatre where she is an Assistant Professor of Voice and Acting. She is a professional actor\, voice/dialect coach\, and director whose credits include work on Broadway\, off-Broadway\, and regional theatre. A Designated Linklater Voice Teacher certified in the Michael Chekhov acting technique\, she founded Femina Shakes\, an initiative committed to feminist interpretations of Shakespeare exploring a wide range of gender identities unconstrained by the limitations of conventional gender narratives. \nTONA BROWN Vocalist\, violinist\, entrepreneur\, and teacher Tona Brown has an international performance career throughout the United States\, Canada\, and Europe as a violinist and mezzo-soprano. Ms. Brown is also an advocate for transgender issues in the arts\, often speaking and performing at colleges and universities. She is the first transgender woman of color to perform the National Anthem for a sitting President at the LGBT Leadership Gala Dinner for former President Barack Obama at the Sheraton in NYC. She is also the first transgender woman to headline at Carnegie Hall in a program of African-American composers with an all-inclusive LGBT cast of performers. Ms. Brown graduated from the Governor’s School for the Arts\, a prestigious high school for gifted and talented students. She was formally educated at the Shenandoah University and Conservatory of Music\, studying violin performance with minors in viola\, piano\, and voice. For Shenandoah University’s 2021 production of “Suor Angelica”\, she recorded an opera movie\, playing the role of La Zia Principessa. Ms. Brown will be performing in a lead transgender role as Hannah After in the opera “As One” by Laura Kaminsky with the Lowell Chamber Orchestra under the direction of Orlando Cela in the fall of 2021. Ms. Brown was also asked to do a masterclass on Transgender Voices by the Virginia National Association of Teachers. She teaches private lessons to students with her company Aida Studios. \nAUDREY SMITH is a nonfiction writer and a producer for North Carolina Public Radio – WUNC. She earned an MFA in Nonfiction Writing from Oregon State University and a Master’s degree in Secondary English Language Arts Education from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Audrey is a producer of Embodied\, WUNC’s radio show and podcast about sex\, relationships\, and health\, and is a bookseller at Scuppernong Books.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/sounding-bodies/
LOCATION:Scuppernong Books\, 304 S Elm Street\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27401
CATEGORIES:LGBTQIA,Non-Fiction,Social Justice
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T150000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T210840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220522T025353Z
UID:8498-1653228000-1653231600@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Lost & Found & Forgetting: Memoir as an Act of Moving Forward
DESCRIPTION:Advanced registration for this event is closed. However\, you may "walk-up" and register onsite.  \n\n\n	 \n	\n		\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nWith KATHRYN SCHULZ and ALEXIS ORGERA. These two memoirs examine the pain of losing fathers\, but something else is found in the process of loss\, in the process of writing\, and in the process of thinking about loved ones. These are powerful looks at how vital an engagement with a difficult past becomes to a hopeful future. As a bonus\, moderator CASEY CEP has a prominent role in one book’s reengagement with life. \nYou may also be interested in: \n• Memoir Plus: A Conversation on Hybrid Memoir\n• $ WORKSHOP Down the Rabbit Hole of Your Own Life: A Creative Writing Lab with Laurie Stone\n• Lost Mothers: Memoirs of Longing\n• $ WORKSHOP Writing from the Body with Nicole Lungerhausen\n• A Conversation with Ann Hood & Julia Ridley Smith \nKATHYRN SCHULZ is a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of Being Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error. She won a National Magazine Award and a Pulitzer Prize in 2015 for “The Really Big One\,” an article about seismic risk in the Pacific Northwest. Lost & Found grew out of “Losing Streak\,” which was originally published in The New Yorker and later anthologized in The Best American Essays. Her other essays and reporting have appeared in The Best American Science and Nature Writing\, The Best American Travel Writing\, and The Best American Food Writing. A native of Ohio\, she lives with her family on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. \nALEXIS ORGERA is a poet-writer\, book editor\, and publisher living in North Carolina. She’s the author of two poetry collections in addition to Head Case: My Father\, Alzheimer’s & Other Brainstorms (Kore Press\, December 2021). Her work can be found in literary magazines like the Bennington Review\, Black Warrior Review\, Carolina Quarterly\, Chattahoochee Review\, Conduit\, Denver Quarterly\, Green Mountains Review\, Gulf Coast\, Hotel Amerika\, Indianapolis Review\, Interim\, Massachusetts Review\, Passages North\, Prairie Schooner\, Third Coast\, and elsewhere. \n\nCASEY CEP is a staff writer at The New Yorker. Her first book\, Furious Hours: Murder\, Fraud\, and the Last Trial of Harper Lee\, was an instant New York Times bestseller\, and is available in paperback\, hardcover\, as an e-book\, and as an audiobook
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/lost-found-forgetting/
LOCATION:Van Dyke Performance Space\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:LGBTQIA,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T150000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T205914Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220522T025404Z
UID:8503-1653228000-1653231600@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Immigration and Refugee Matters
DESCRIPTION:Advanced registration for this event is closed. However\, you may "walk-up" and register onsite.  \n\n\n	 \n	\n		\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n													Professor Diya Abdo\, a Palestinian woman whose grandmother once sought refuge in Jordan\, saw the need for a more inclusive approach to help refugees arriving in America. In 2015\, she started the Every Campus a Refuge program\, which has since spread to six other universities in the US\, providing free housing to refugees on campus\, language tutoring\, assistance with job searches\, and an army of volunteers\, many of whom are students in Guilford's ECAR minor. Photo taken April 5\, 2018.\n											\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nAs the world continues to displace people in astonishing numbers\, Abdo and Haqq bring the personal stories of individual lives effected by the continuing inhumane actions and responses to human suffering. With DIYA ABDO and ELISHEBA HAQQ. Hosted by DR. JOHN COX.  \nYou may also be interested in:\n•  Borderlands and Crossroads: Writing\, Racism\, and Asian American Life \nDIYA ABDO is the first daughter and granddaughter of Palestinian refugees born in their country of displacement\, Jordan. A graduate of Yarmouk University\, she earned master’s and doctorate degrees from Drew University. She is a full professor in the English department of Guilford College\, where she founded the first chapter of Every Campus A Refuge (ECAR)\, which aims to host global refugees. Diya is the recipient of several national community engagement awards\, including the 2021 J.M.K. Innovation Prize for her work with ECAR. She lives in Greensboro\, NC\, with her partner\, daughters\, and cats. \nELISHEBA HAQQ was born in Chandigarh\, India\, but was brought up in Minnesota\, USA. She earned her MFA in Creative Writing from Fairleigh Dickinson University and currently teaches writing at Rutgers University. Her work has appeared in A Letter for my Mother\, Gateways\, She.knows.com\, and NJ Monthly. An RN by profession\, she has also been published in Creative Nursing and Journal of Nursing Education and Practice. \n\nDR. JOHN COX is a professor of Global Studies and History at UNC Charlotte\, where he directs the university’s genocide & human rights studies center. He has lectured and published widely on racism\, genocide\, human rights\, and resistance. \n  \n 
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/immigration-and-refugee-matters/
LOCATION:Greensboro History Museum\, 130 Summit Avenue\, GREENSBORO\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:API Authors,IBPOC Authors,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220322T192856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220522T025439Z
UID:8490-1653220800-1653226200@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Fred Chappell: I Am One of You Forever
DESCRIPTION:Advanced registration for this event is closed. However\, you may "walk-up" and register onsite.  \n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nWith and introduction from Ruth Dickey\, Executive Director of the National Book Foundation. A viewing of the documentary film by Dr. Michael Frierson\, a filmmaker and professor of media studies at UNCG. The movie follows the life and literary accomplishments of Fred Chappell\, who is considered one of North Carolina’s most important writers. Chappell taught in UNCG’s creative writing program for more than 40 years and authored a dozen books of verse\, two story collections\, and eight novels. He was the Poet Laureate of North Carolina from 1997-2002. \nYou may also be interested in:\n• Whatever Wholeness Means: Poetry in an Age of Separation \n \n \nRUTH DICKEY  has spent 25 years working at the intersection of community building\, writing\, and art\, and is currently the Executive Director of the National Book Foundation. \n 
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/fred-chappell/
LOCATION:Van Dyke Performance Space\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Documentary,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220522T123000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T202542Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220522T025451Z
UID:8480-1653219000-1653222600@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Images of Justice and Power
DESCRIPTION:Advanced registration for this event is closed. However\, you may "walk-up" and register onsite.  \n\n\n	 \n	\n		\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nThree artists explore the representation of social justice activism and empowerment through photography and art\, documenting the changing face of the social justice landscape and celebrating the success of a movement. With MALAIKA ADERO\, ST. CLAIR DETRICK-JULES\, and ROBERT SHETTERLY. Hosted by RODNEY DAWSON. **The ICRCM requires all guests to wear face coverings. View policy under “Museum Protocols”.** 4/5/22 \nCompanion event: Truth Tellers documentary showing\n\nYou may also be interested in:\n• An Conversation with Nikole Hannah-Jones\n• A Conversation on Publishing for People of Color \nMALAIKA ADERO\, author of Vice President Kamala Harris: Her Path to the Whitehouse\, A Black Woman Did That: 43 Groundbreaking\, Bar-raising\, World-Changing Women\, and Up South\, is a writer\, editor\, literary agent\, and owner of Adero’s Literary Tribe\, LLC\, a book development company. She lives in New York City and Atlanta. \nST. CLAIR DETRICK-JULES\, author of My Beautiful Black Hair: 101 Natural Hair Stories from the Sisterhood\, is an award-winning filmmaker\, photographer\, and Brown University graduate. She captures personal stories and intimate moments centering Black liberation\, immigrant justice\, and women’s rights. An Afro-Caribbean artist who remains rooted in her community\, St. Clair grounds her work in radical love\, joy and the knowledge that a more just world is possible. Her work has been featured in Allure Magazine\, The Washington Post\, Washingtonian Magazine\, Byrdie\, and BuzzFeed News\, among others. \nROBERT SHETTERLY is a self-taught artist living on the coast of Maine. Until 9-11 he was primarily a surrealist painter and printmaker. However\, deeply distressed about the propaganda leading up to the Iraq War in 2003\, he began a series of portraits he calls Americans Who Tell the Truth. There are now approximately 260 of them. They travel to schools \, colleges\, museums\, libraries and churches all over this country teaching the necessity of courageous citizenship to close the gap between our ideals and our actions. \n\nRODNEY DAWSON is the Curator of Education for the Greensboro History 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. He is responsible for a variety of the Museum’s virtual experiences\, including the Juneteenth celebration and a forthcoming Holocaust program.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/images-of-justice-and-power/
LOCATION:International Civil Rights Center & Museum\, 134 SElm Street\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27401
CATEGORIES:Documentary,IBPOC Authors,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T203000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220201T203549Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220517T122740Z
UID:8141-1653159600-1653165000@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:A Conversation with Nikole Hannah-Jones
DESCRIPTION:**THIS EVENT IS SOLD-OUT** \n  \n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nA Conversation with NIKOLE HANNAH-JONES is the culminating event in the History Of Redlining In East Greensboro: Conversations About Our City’s Past And Present series. This keynote event for the F.D. Bluford Library series will take place as part of the 2022 Greensboro Bound Literary Festival. Nikole Hannah-Jones\, The New York Times Magazine and creator of The 1619 Project will be in conversation with DR. JELANI FAVORS. Hannah-Jones is the Pulitzer Prize-winning creator of The 1619 Project\, Knight Chair in Race and Journalism at Howard University\, and MacArthur Genius Award Winner. Dr. Jelani M. Favors is the Henry E. Frye Distinguished Professor at N.C. A&T and the award-winning author of Shelter in a Time of Storm. Their conversation will be a wide-ranging discussion about Professor Hannah-Jones’ work to chronicle “the decades-long failure of the federal government to enforce the landmark 1968 Fair Housing Act” and her latest book\, The 1619 Project. \nThe History of Redlining in East Greensboro: Conversations About Our City’s Past and Present was created by F.D. Bluford librarians Carlos Grooms\, Katie Kehoe\, Harvey Long\, and James Stewart at N.C. A&T State University in collaboration with Dudley High School\, Greensboro Bound\, and The Greensboro Public Library. Greensboro Bound\, F.D. Bluford Library at N.C. A&T State University\, and NC Humanities generously supported this project with funds. \nNIKOLE HANNAH-JONES  is a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter covering racial injustice for The New York Times Magazine and creator of the landmark 1619 Project. The New York Times‘s 1619 Project commemorates the 400th anniversary of the beginning of slavery in what would become the United States by examining slavery’s modern legacy and reframing the way we understand this history and the contributions of black Americans to the nation. Nikole’s lead essay\, “Our Democracy’s founding ideals were false when they were written. Black Americans have fought to make them true\,” was awarded the 2020 Pulitzer Prize. Nikole also has written extensively about school resegregation across the country and chronicled the decades-long failure of the federal government to enforce the landmark 1968 Fair Housing Act. In 2016\, Nikole Hannah-Jones co-founded the Ida B. Wells Society for Investigative Reporting\, a training and mentorship organization dedicated to increasing the ranks of investigative reporters of color. \nDR. JELANI M. FAVORS is the Henry E. Frye Distinguished Professor of History at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University. In 2019\, Dr. Favors released his first book entitled Shelter in a Time of Storm: How Black Colleges Fostered Generations of Leadership and Activism\, which was published by the University of North Carolina Press. Shelter in a Time of Storm was the recipient of the 2020 Stone Book Award presented annually by the Museum of African American History in Boston\, the 2020 Lillian Smith Book Award given yearly by the\nSouthern Regional Council and the University of Georgia Libraries\, and it was one of five finalists for the 2020 Pauli Murray Book Prize presented by the African American Intellectual History Society. Dr. Favors’ research and commentary have appeared in several publications and\nmedia outlets\, including CNN\, C-SPAN\, MSNBC\, The Washington Post\, MarketWatch\, The Atlantic\, The Root\, The Chronicle of Higher Education\, The Point\, and The Conversation. Dr. Favors earned his Ph.D. in History and his M.A. in African American Studies from The Ohio State University. He is a graduate of North Carolina A&T State University where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in history with honor.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/nikole-hannah-jones/
LOCATION:Harrison Auditorium\, NC A&T\, 1009 Bluford Street\, Greenbsoro\, NC\, 27401
CATEGORIES:IBPOC Authors,Non-Fiction,Social Justice
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T163000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220322T194208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220418T195223Z
UID:8421-1653147000-1653150600@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:King of the Blues
DESCRIPTION:*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nGreensboro Bound partners with the Carolina Blues Festival to bring an engaging conversation with DANIEL de VISÉ on the life and legacy of B. B. King. De Vise\, whose previous book\, Andy and Don: The Making of a Friendship and a Classic American TV Show\, was a Greensboro hit\, is a meticulous researcher and passionate lover of the blues\, which makes him an ideal conversation partner for Blues Festival director ATIBA BERKLEY. \nDANIEL de VISÉ is the author of the critically acclaimed Andy and Don: The Making of a Friendship and a Classic American TV Show and The Comeback: Greg LeMond\, The True King of American Cycling and a Legendary Tour de France\, and coauthor of I Forgot to Remember: A Memoir of Amnesia. He shared a 2001 Pulitzer Prize for his journalism and has worked at the Washington Post and Miami Herald\, among other newspapers. He lives in Maryland. \nATIBA BERKLEY is a former vocal performer & business manager whose interest in remaining close to the stage led him to the art of Sound Engineering almost two decades ago. He started HUMbl Media Svcs in a basement in the Glenwood neighborhood of Greensboro\, North Carolina in 2001. He has since worked for numerous production companies and organizations and helped to produce some of the world’s largest public events as a freelancer & production team leader. These events include multiple Olympic Games\, NFL Super Bowls\, NBA events\, NHL events\, National commercials and Television Broadcasts. These experiences sparked in him a desire to share his unique and diverse skills with his local community. Atiba honed his skills to curate public cultural events. In his volunteer life Atiba donates his time as the President and Acting Executive Director of the Piedmont Blues Preservation Society. He manages the Carolina Blues Festival and numerous community and cultural programs. He has served on the programming committee for the both the National Folk Festival and North Carolina Folk Festival\, Artist in Residency selection committee for Downtown Greensboro Parks\, Inc\, Logistics Coordinator for Greensboro Juneteenth Celebration\, & Technical Director for This Community Sings at Carolina Theatre of Greensboro to name a few.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/king-of-the-blues/
LOCATION:Stephen D. Hyers Theater\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, GREENSBORO\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T163000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220322T193500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220405T112159Z
UID:8424-1653147000-1653150600@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:County of Terror: Alamance in the 19th Century
DESCRIPTION:Jaki Shelton Green\n											\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.*\nYou may also be interested in:\n• An Conversation with Nikole Hannah-Jones\n• Images of Justice and Power\n• Truth Tellers documentary presentation\n•A Conversation on Publishing for People of Color\n• Whatever Wholeness Means: Poetry in an Age of Separation\n \n ALEX ALBRIGHT examines the reign of terror the Klan brought to Alamance County to undermine political gains by black people after the Civil War. The family of NC poet laureate JAKI SHELTON GREEN lived in Alamance at the time and suffered the white riotous rage. \nALEX ALBRIGHT A Graham native and UNCG alum\, Alex taught for 37 years in the English Department at East Carolina University\, where he founded the North Carolina Literary Review and served as director of creative writing. His 2013 book The Forgotten First: B-1 and the Integration of the Modern Navy was a finalist for a Montaigne Medal. He has received the R. Hunt Parker Award for contributions to North Carolina literature\, the John Tyler Caldwell Award for the Humanities\, and\, with his wife\, Elizabeth\, the Brown-Hudson Award for preserving folk and community traditions. He and Elizabeth operate Fountain General Store near their home in Fountain\, North Carolina. \nJAKI SHELTON GREEN ninth NC Poet Laureate\, teaches Documentary Poetry at Duke University Center for Documentary Studies. She is an Academy of American Poet Laureate Fellows\, author of eight books of poetry\, and recently appointed as the Poet Laureate in Residence at the NC Museum of Art. \nBRIAN LAMPKIN is an owner of Scuppernong Books and one of the founders of the Greensboro Bound Literary Festival. He is the author of The Tarboro Three: Rape\, Race\, and Secrecy and performs with the band The Difficulties.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/county-of-terror/
LOCATION:Greensboro History Museum\, 130 Summit Avenue\, GREENSBORO\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:IBPOC Authors,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T150000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T201131Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220414T155404Z
UID:8494-1653141600-1653145200@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:The Truth about Disability: What We Don't Talk About
DESCRIPTION:*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nAround 20% of Americans live with a disability\, but for many disability remains a taboo subject. Too often\, the complex experiences of the disabled are reduced to pity or inspiration. On this panel\, three disabled authors of poetry\, fiction\, and nonfiction discuss their work and what we don’t talk about when we talk about disability. With EMILY MALONEY\, KAY ULANDAY BARRETT\, and JT HILL. Hosted by JT HILL. \nYou may also be interested in:\n•  Sounding Bodies: Identity\, Injustice\, and the Voice\n• Borderlands and Crossroads: Writing\, Racism\, and Asian American Life\n•  Whatever Wholeness Means: Poetry in an Age of Separation \nEMILY MALONEY is the author of COST OF LIVING (Henry Holt\, 2022). Her work has appeared in Glamour\, Virginia Quarterly Review\, Best American Essays\, and the American Journal of Nursing\, among others. In addition to her work as an ER tech\, she has worked as a dog groomer\, horse trainer\, pastry chef\, general contractor\, tile setter\, and catalog model and sold her ceramics at art fairs. She has twice been awarded a MacDowell Fellowship and lives in Evanston\, Illinois. \nKAY ULANDAY BARRETT is a poet\, essayist\, cultural strategist\, and A+ napper. They are the winner of the 2022 Foundation for Contemporary Arts Cy Twombly Award for Poetry and a recipient of a 2020 James Baldwin Fellowship at MacDowell. Their second book\, More Than Organs (Sibling Rivalry Press\, 2020) received a 2021 Stonewall Honor Book Award by the American Library Association and is a 2021 Lambda Literary Award Finalist. They have received fellowships from VONA Voices\, Monson Arts\, Macondo\, and The Lambda Literary Review. They have featured at The United Nations\, The Lincoln Center\, The Hemispheric Institute\, Symphony Space\, Brooklyn Museum\, Dodge Poetry\, The Poetry Foundation\, The School of the Arts Institute\, Manchester PRIDE\, Sesame Street\, & more. Their contributions are found in The New York Times\, Poetry Magazine\, Academy of American Poets\, Colorlines\, Asian American Literary Review\, The Advocate\, Al Jazeera\, NYLON\, Vogue\, The Rumpus\, The Lily\, VIDA Review\, and elsewhere. Currently\, they serve as a curator at The Asian American Writer’s Workshop. \nJT HILL Hill is the author of a memoir\, Blind Man’s Bluff\, coming July 2021 from W. W. Norton. His fiction debut\, Academy Gothic\, won the Nilsen Literary Prize for a First Novel. His essays have been listed as Notable in the 2019 and 2020 editions of Best American Essays\, and his fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Prairie Schooner\, Writer’s Digest\, Story Quarterly\, and Hobart\, among others. He serves as fiction editor for the literary journal Monkeybicycle and contributing editor for Literary Hub\, where he writes a monthly audiobooks column. He lives in Greensboro\, North Carolina with his wife.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/the-truth-about-disability/
LOCATION:Stephen D. Hyers Theater\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, GREENSBORO\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:API Authors,IBPOC Authors,LGBTQIA,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction,Poetry
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T190905Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220405T112204Z
UID:8403-1653134400-1653139800@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Lost Mothers: Memoirs of Longing
DESCRIPTION:*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nWith ELISHEBA HAQQ and MEGAN CULHANE GALBRAITH. Hosted by LEE ZACHARIAS. \nYou May also be interested in:  \n• Memoir Plus: A Conversation on Hybrid Memoir\n• $ WORKSHOP Down the Rabbit Hole of Your Own Life: A Creative Writing Lab with Laurie Stone\n• $ WORKSHOP Writing from the Body with Nicole Lungerhausen\n• Lost & Found & Forgetting: Memoir as an Act of Moving Forward\n• A Conversation with Ann Hood & Julia Ridley Smith\n•Borderlands and Crossroads: Writing\, Racism\, and Asian American Life\n•Immigration and Refugee Matters \n  \nELISHEBA HAQQ was born in Chandigarh\, India\, but was brought up in Minnesota\, USA. She earned her MFA in Creative Writing from Fairleigh Dickinson University and currently teaches writing at Rutgers University. Her work has appeared in A Letter for my Mother\, Gateways\, She.knows.com\, and NJ Monthly. An RN by profession\, she has also been published in Creative Nursing and Journal of Nursing Education and Practice. \nMEGAN CULHANE GALBRAITH is a writer\, visual artist\, and adoptee. She is the author of The Guild of the Infant Saviour: An Adopted Child’s Memory Book (Mad Creek Books/Ohio State University Press\, May 2021) a hybrid memoir-in-essays that pairs narrative with images to weave a personal and cultural history of adoption as it relates to guilt\, shame\, grief\, identity\, and memory itself. She connects her experiences to those of generations of adoptees\, to the larger stories America tells about sex and motherhood\, and to the shadows those stories cast on us all. She was named one of the “5 Over 50” by Poets & Writers in 2021. Her work was Notable in Best American Essays 2021 and 2017 and her writing and art have featured in BOMB\, HYPERALLERGIC!\, The Believer\, Tupelo Quarterly\, ZZYZYVA\, Hobart\, Longreads\, Hotel Amerika\, Catapult\, and Redivider\, among others. She has been awarded fellowships by The Saltonstall Foundation\, The Virginia Center for the Creative Arts\, and The Horned Dorset Colony. Megan is a graduate of and the Associate Director at the Bennington Writing Seminars and the founding director of the Governor’s Institutes of Vermont Young Writers Institute. \n\nLEE ZACHARIAS is the author of a collection of short stories\, a collection of essays\, and four novels. Her third novel\, Across the Great Lake\, a 2019 Notable Michigan Book\, won a silver medal in literary fiction from the Independent Publisher Awards\, the 2019 Sir Walter Raleigh Award\, the 2020 Philip H. McMath Book Award. Her fourth novel\, What a Wonderful World This Could Be\, was a finalist for the 2021 American Fiction Awards and has been chosen as a Distinguished Favorite by the 2021 NYC Big Book Awards and the 2022 Independent Press Awards.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/lost-mothers/
LOCATION:Stephen D. Hyers Theater\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, GREENSBORO\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:IBPOC Authors,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T123000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T190450Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220415T155607Z
UID:8400-1653132600-1653136200@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Upon Her Shoulders: Native Women and the South
DESCRIPTION:Mary Ann Jacobs\n											\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n													Cherry Beasley\n											\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nWith a focus on southeast Native women\, Beasley and Jacobs share stories from an anthology they edited on justice\, spirit\, and community. With DRS. CHERRY BEASLEY and MARY ANN JACOBS. Hosted by ROBIN MIURA. \nCHERRY BEASLEY\, PhD\, RN\, FAAN is an experienced nurse stiving to impact the health of populations from rural settings\, underserved area and indigenous communities. As an educator\, her longest tenure at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. Dr. Beasley\, a native of Pembroke and an active member of the Lumbee Tribe\, was the first nursing faculty member hired at UNCP and has been instrumental in the development and growth of nursing and health profession programs at UNCP\, where she is the chief officer for the McKenzie-Elliott School of Nursing and the interim Dean of the College of Health Sciences. Dr. Beasley is a recipient of the coveted UNC Board of Governor’s Award for Teaching Excellence. Dr. Beasley finds synergy in her research and service interests by focusing on health care decision making and health care behaviors of rural and/or minority populations. Dr. Beasley works extensively with populations in participatory community outreach and research to address health disparities and to improve the quality of health care in rural communities. She is using participatory methodologies to address poor health outcomes experienced by populations with excessive death and disabilities. Most recently her work has focused on the drives of health including poverty\, empowerment\, food sovereignty\, and environmental justice\, and disparities of health data. Her strongly committed to others understanding the value\, culture and healthcare needs of rural\, minority or underserved populations\, led her being selected as the inaugural appointment as Anna Belk Endowed Professor for Rural and Minority Health. Dr. Beasley is the proud mother of a son\, Zeb and his wife Katie\, and a daughter\, Mary-Joyce and her husband Brian. She is very excited to be the grandmother of five. \nDR. MARY ANN JACOBS is an associate professor and chair of American Indian Studies at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. She teaches courses with a focus on American Indian Studies\, American Indian identity\, education\, and cultural competency. She was previously the director of American Indian Studies at California State University\, Long Beach (1990–1996) and an assistant professor of social work at San Diego State University (2005–2007). Dr. Jacobs is the co-editor of one book and the author of several peer-reviewed articles\, book sections\, and reports dealing with American Indian women\, STEM education for American Indian (AI) students\, historical trauma\, foster care\, racial identity\, Chicago’s AI community\, AI lesbians and gays\, child welfare policies for Indigenous children\, and decolonizing methods. Dr. Jacobs\, her husband\, and children are enrolled members of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina. Dr. Jacobs and her husband attend Mt. Airy Baptist Church in Pembroke. \nROBIN MIURA is Senior Editor and Associate Publisher at Blair and has worked in publishing for more than 20 years. She has worked with all types of books\, but her passion is literary fiction and creative nonfiction. She is also a founding editor of the online magazine South Writ Large.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/upon-her-shoulders/
LOCATION:Greensboro History Museum\, 130 Summit Avenue\, GREENSBORO\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:IBPOC Authors,Literary Fiction,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T110000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T154535Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220512T220320Z
UID:8391-1653127200-1653130800@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Writing Toward Justice: Non-Fiction as a Call to Action
DESCRIPTION:*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nJournalists and writers from different backgrounds discuss the importance of engaging equity\, criminal justice\, and community. The press\, and citizen journalists\, provide witness on systemic issues impacting local communities.  A conversation with DR. BENJAMIN GILMER\, WANDA SMALLS LLOYD and PHOEBE ZERWICK. Hosted by DEONNA KELLI SAYED. This panel is in partnership with the PEN America NC Piedmont Chapter. \nYou may also be interested in:\n• Writing Toward Justice: Non-Fiction as a Call to Action\n• An Conversation with Nikole Hannah-Jones\n• Images of Justice and Power\n• Truth Tellers documentary presentation \nBENJAMIN GILMER\, MD\, is a family medicine physician and medical educator. He is an International Albert Schweitzer Fellow for Life and associate professor in the department of family medicine at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine at Chapel Hill and at the Mountain Area Health Education Center (MAHEC). A former neurobiologist turned rural family doctor\, Dr. Gilmer has lectured widely about medical ethics\, rural health\, and the intersection of medicine and criminal justice reform. He is a passionate teacher of medical education and leads MAHEC’s Rural Health Initiative\, a program to inspire and train students to pursue rural medicine. The Other Dr. Gilmer is his first book\, resulting from a true story he told on This American Life with Sarah Koenig\, now one of its most listened to podcasts. The story has inspired Benjamin to be an advocate for prison and mental health reform. He lives with his wife\, Deirdre; their two children\, Kai and Luya; and their dog\, Prince Peanut Butter\, in Asheville\, North Carolina. \nWANDA LLOYD parlayed her passion for storytelling when she transitioned from journalism to writing non-fiction. Her memoir\, COMING FULL CIRCLE: From Jim Crow to Journalism\, was published in 2020. The book is an engaging\, charmingly written self-reflective volume of stories about growing up as an African American girl in the Jim Crow South\, where despite her segregated circumstances\, she dared to become a daily newspaper journalist. She not only became a journalist\, but her career took her to some of the highest levels of newsroom positions\, and included her work as an editor at The Washington Post and USA Today. She also launched and led university journalism programs as a way to prepare future journalists of color. When Lloyd retired after more than eight years as executive editor of the Montgomery Advertiser in Alabama’s capital city\, she accepted a position as associate professor and chair of the Department of Journalism and Mass Communications at Savannah State University. A newspaper editor for more than four decades\, she now writes from her home in Savannah\, Georgia\, the city where she grew up in the 1950s and 1960s. In 2020\, Lloyd co-edited (with novelist Tina McElroy Ansa) MEETING AT THE TABLE: African-American Women Write on Race\, Culture and Community\, a collective of essays written after the tragic deaths of George Floyd\, Breonna Taylor\, Ahmaud Arbery and others. Lloyd and Ansa are also co-executive producers and co-hosts of the podcast\, 2 Old Chicks Who Know a Lot of Sh*t! on Spotify and YouTube. Spelman College\, her alma mater\, awarded Lloyd an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters in 2016. In 2019 she was inducted into the National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame. \nPHOEBE ZERWICK is an award-winning investigative journalist\, narrative writer\, and college teacher. Her writing has appeared in O\, The Oprah Magazine; National Geographic; The Nation; the Winston-Salem Journal; and Glamour\, among other publications. Her work has been recognized by the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University\, Investigative Reporters and Editors\, the Society of Professional Journalists\, Columbia University\, and the North Carolina Press Association and featured in the HBO documentary The Trials of Darryl Hunt. She is the director of the journalism program at Wake Forest University. \nDEONNA KELLI SAYED is an author\, TEDx speaker\, and performer based in Greensboro\, North Carolina. Her short stories and essays are featured in numerous online journals and anthologies. She is the PEN America North Carolina Piedmont Representative and works for the North Carolina Writers’ Network. \n  \n  \n  \n  \nSponsored by PEN America NC Piedmont Chapter
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/writing-toward-justice/
LOCATION:Van Dyke Performance Space\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:IBPOC Authors,Non-Fiction,Social Justice
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220521T110000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T153814Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220405T112115Z
UID:8389-1653127200-1653130800@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Borderlands and Crossroads: Writing\, Racism\, and Asian American Life
DESCRIPTION:*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \nThree Asian-American authors use their work to discuss the rise in violence toward Asian-Americans while exploring the complex joys and responsibilities of writing and identity. With MICHAEL CROLEY\, H’RINA DeTROY\, and THIEN-KIM LAM. Hosted by SAYAKA MATSUOKA. \nYou may also be interested in:\n• Immigration and Refugee Matters\n• Afternoon Delight \nMICHAEL CROLEY is the author of Any Other Place: Stories\, winner of the James Still Award from the Fellowship of Southern Writers and the Weatherford Award. He is also the co-editor (with Jack Shuler) of Midland: Reports from Flyover Country. His reporting\, stories\, and essays have appeared in Esquire\, The New York Times\, Bloomberg Businessweek\, VQR\, The Paris Review\, Kenyon Review\, LitHub\, Narrative\, and elsewhere. He is the recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts\, the Ohio Arts Council\, the Kentucky Arts Council\, and the Sewanee Writers’ Conference. He teaches at Denison University and is on the visiting faculty at the Vermont College of Fine Arts.\n \nH’RINA DeTROY is a Montagnard American writer based in Brooklyn. She was the recipient of the 2020 Cafe Royal Cultural Foundation Grant in Literature and a 2019 Emerging Writer Fellowship at Aspen Word in Memoir. Roxane Gay selected her essay entitled “The Vengeance of Elephants” for the 2017 Curt Johnson Prose Prize in Creative Nonfiction for December Magazine. She holds a Master of Arts in Journalism and MFA in Creative Writing from Hunter College. She’s a teacher and working with the Montagnard Dega Association and the city of Greensboro\, she created the ground-breaking workshop\, “Apocalypse Never: Writing Our Origin Stories and Imaginative Futures as Montagnard Americans.” A contributing editor for DiaCRITICS\, she focuses amplifying Montagnard and other indigenous\, ethnic minority voices of Southeast Asian diasporas. \nTHIEN-KIM LAM writes stories about Vietnamese characters who smash stereotypes and find their happy endings. A recovering Type-Asian\, she guzzles cà phê sữa đá\, makes art\, and bakes her feelings to stay sane. Thien-Kim is also the founder of Bawdy Bookworms\, a subscription box that pairs sexy romances with erotic toys. She’s been featured on Jezebel\, NPR\, BBC America\, and Glamour. Her debut novel Happy Endings is now available\, and her forthcoming book will be released in 2022. \n  \nSAYAKA MATSUOKA is a freelance journalist and managing editor for Triad City Beat\, an alternative weekly newspaper based in Greensboro covering the Triad. She was born in NY but raised in Greensboro. She writes mostly for the paper these days\, about anything from cultural events and food to right-wing extremism and police brutality.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/borderlands-and-crossroads/
LOCATION:Stephen D. Hyers Theater\, Greensboro Cultural Center\, 200 N Davie Street\, GREENSBORO\, NC\, 27401\, United States
CATEGORIES:API Authors,IBPOC Authors,Literary Fiction,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction,Romance,Short Stories
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220520T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220520T180000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20220325T150911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220520T154152Z
UID:8381-1653066000-1653069600@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Memoir Plus: A Conversation on Hybrid Memoir
DESCRIPTION:This event is SOLD OUT.\n\n\n	 \n	\n		\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n\n	\n\n	\n\n		\n		\n			\n															\n		\n\n	\n\n		\n	\n\n	\n	\n	\n\n	\n\n\n  \n**THIS EVENT IS SOLD OUT**\n  \n*All events are FREE\, but we do ask that you please register so that we can monitor attendance and venue capacity.* \n  \nHow can bringing other genres and forms into memoir enrich the text? How close must memoir adhere to the facts? What is a memoir\, anyway? LAURIE STONE and ALEXIS ORGERA will use their own work to enlarge our idea of the genre and telling the story of our own lives. Hosted by STEVE MITCHELL. \nYou may also be interested in:\n• $ WORKSHOP Down the Rabbit Hole of Your Own Life: A Creative Writing Lab with Laurie Stone\n• Lost Mothers: Memoirs of Longing\n• $ WORKSHOP Writing from the Body with Nicole Lungerhausen\n• Lost & Found & Forgetting: Memoir as an Act of Moving Forward\n• A Conversation with Ann Hood & Julia Ridley Smith\n \nLAURIE STONE Laurie Stone is author of six books books including recently Streaming Now\, Postcards from the Thing that is Happening (Dottir Press\, 2022)\, Everything is Personal\, Notes on Now (Scuppernong Editions\, 2020)\, and My Life as an Animal\, Stories (Northwestern University Press/Triquarterly Press\, 2016). She was a longtime writer for the Village Voice\, theater critic for The Nation\, and critic-at-large on Fresh Air. She won the Nona Balakian prize in excellence in criticism from the National Book Critics Circle and two grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts. She has published numerous stories in such publications as n + 1\, Waxwing\, Tin House\, Evergreen Review\, Electric Lit\, Fence\, Open City\, Anderbo\, The Collagist\, Your impossible Voice\, New Letters\, TriQuarterly\, Threepenny Review\, and Creative Nonfiction. In 2005\, she participated in “Novel: An Installation\,” writing a book and living in a house designed by architects Salazar/Davis in the Flux Factory’s gallery space. She has frequently collaborated with composer Gordon Beeferman in text/music works. The world premier of their piece “You\, the Weather\, a Wolf” was presented in the 2016 season of the St. Urban concerts. Her next book will be The Love of Strangers\, a collection of linked stories. Her website is: lauriestonewriter.com. \nALEXIS ORGERA is a poet-writer\, book editor\, and publisher living in North Carolina. She’s the author of two poetry collections in addition to Head Case: My Father\, Alzheimer’s & Other Brainstorms (Kore Press\, December 2021). Her work can be found in literary magazines like the Bennington Review\, Black Warrior Review\, Carolina Quarterly\, Chattahoochee Review\, Conduit\, Denver Quarterly\, Green Mountains Review\, Gulf Coast\, Hotel Amerika\, Indianapolis Review\, Interim\, Massachusetts Review\, Passages North\, Prairie Schooner\, Third Coast\, and elsewhere. More at alexisorgera.com. \nSTEVE MITCHELL\, a writer and journalist\, has published in CRAFT Literary\, entropy\, december magazine\, Southeast Review\, among others. His novel\, Cloud Diary\, is published by C&R Press. His book of short stories is The Naming of Ghosts from Press 53. He has a deep belief in the primacy of doubt and an abiding conviction that great wisdom informs very bad movies. He’s co-owner of Scuppernong Books in Greensboro\, NC.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/stone-orgera/
LOCATION:Scuppernong Books\, 304 S Elm Street\, Greensboro\, NC\, 27401
CATEGORIES:Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T190000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
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
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T180000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
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:20210516T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T160000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
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:20210516T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T150000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
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:20210516T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
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:20210516T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210516T110000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
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:20210515T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210515T160000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20210401T071157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210510T161316Z
UID:5613-1621090800-1621094400@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Issac Bailey & Bakari Sellers
DESCRIPTION:Essayist ISSAC BAILEY author of Why Didn’t We Riot: A Black Man in Trumpland\, and CNN commentator BAKARI SELLERS\, author of My Vanishing Country\, review the life of African Americans in post-Trump America and in the South. They address traumas that shaped their lives: Dylan Roof and Mother Emmanuel AME\, African American accommodation of whites\, the myths and truths that made Donald Trump president\, reparations\, and the changes we must make to end 400+ years of systemic racism. Hosted by STEPHEN COLYER.  [rsvp required; see below]  \nPurchase books from our official bookseller\, Scuppernong Books\, by clicking book image above. \nBAKARI SELLERS is a CNN political analyst and was the youngest-ever member of the South Carolina state legislature. Recently named to TIME’s “40 Under 40” List\, he is also a practicing attorney fighting to give a voice for the voiceless.\nAuthor Website\n \nISSAC BAILEY is a veteran journalist who has won numerous writing and reporting awards and has conducted investigations that led to changes in the way the S.C. Department of Social Services handles child protection cases. He is also a certified guardian ad litem and has served as the legal representative in Family Court for children in distress and has spent several years mentoring troubled youth in a variety of capacities. Bailey is Davidson College’s Batten Professor and taught journalism and applied ethics at Coastal Carolina University for several years.  He is married to Dr. Tracy Bailey\, founder and executive director of non-profit literacy organization\, Freedom Readers\, and has two teenaged children. Bailey’s 2018 book\, My Brother Moochie\, which discusses the effects of the criminal justice system on black families\, has received critical acclaim and has been featured in the New York Times.\nAuthor Website\n\nSTEPHEN COLYER is the Greensboro Literary Organization Board Treasurer and one of the founders of Greensboro Bound. He has been thrilled to see an idea crystallize\, grow and become a valued part of our community’s arts ecosystem. His interest in book fairs/literary festivals stemmed from a 21 year sojourn in Miami where he attended and then volunteered with Miami Book Fair\, the largest literary festival in the United States. He lives in Jamestown\, NC with his wife Sandra and their dog\, Missy.
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/bailey-sellers/
LOCATION:VIRTUAL
CATEGORIES:Adult,Memoir/Personal Essay,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210515T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210515T130000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20210401T071859Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210421T203648Z
UID:5602-1621080000-1621083600@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Love\, Justice\, and Healing with Sharon Salzberg & Omid Safi
DESCRIPTION:Join us in a discussion on love\, justice\, and healing with SHARON SALZBERG and OMID SAFI.  Host MOLLY SENTELL HAILE will explore how ideas of radical love and loving kindness relate to our personal lives\, pandemic living\, and social change. Sharon Salzberg is a central figure in the field of meditation and a world-renowned teacher and author of eleven books\, including the New York Times bestseller Real Happiness and\, most recently\, Real Change: Mindfulness to Heal Ourselves and the World. Omid Safi\, translator and editor of Radical Love: Teachings from the Islamic Mystical Tradition\, is a professor of Islamic studies at Duke University and leads Illuminated Tours interfaith journeys. Both Safi and Salzberg have been columnists for On Being\, a website and public radio program that explores what it is to be human and how we want to live.[rsvp required; see below] \nPurchase books from our official bookseller\, Scuppernong Books\, by clicking book image above. \nSHARON SALZBERG is a meditation pioneer and industry leader\, a world-renowned teacher\, and New York Times bestselling author. As one of the first to bring meditation and mindfulness into mainstream American culture over 45 years ago\, her relatable\, demystifying approach has inspired generations of meditation teachers and wellness influencers. Sharon is co-founder of The Insight Meditation Society in Barre\, MA\, and the author of eleven books\, including the New York Times bestseller\, Real Happiness\, now in its second edition\, her seminal work\, Lovingkindness\, and her newest book\, Real Change: Mindfulness To Heal Ourselves and the World. Sharon’s secular\, modern approach to Buddhist teachings is sought after at schools\, conferences\, and retreat centers worldwide. Her podcast\, The Metta Hour\, has amassed over 3 million downloads and features interviews with the top leaders and thinkers of the mindfulness movement and beyond. Sharon’s writing can be found on Medium\, On Being\, the Maria Shriver blog\, and Huffington Post.\nAuthor Website \nOMID SAFI is a teacher in the Sufi tradition of Radical Love. He is a professor at Duke University specializing in Islamic spirituality and contemporary thought. Omid has published extensively on the foundational sources of Islam and Sufism. His Memories of Muhammad is a biography of the Prophet Muhammad. His most recent book is Radical Love: Teachings from the Islamic Mystical Tradition (published by Yale). He has been invited by the family of Dr. King to speak at Ebenezer Church on the relevance of Dr. King for today’s America\, and has delivered the Martin Luther King keynote in the annual national MLK service.  His Illuminated Tours have taken more than a 1\,000 friends from over twenty countries to Turkey and Morocco since 2002\, and he is now offering Illuminated Courses for online offerings on spiritual traditions open to seekers of all backgrounds.\nAuthor Website \nMOLLY SENTELL HAILE’s short stories and nonfiction have appeared in or are forthcoming in Oxford American\, The North Carolina Literary Review\, O. Henry Magazine\, Jabberwock Review\, and elsewhere. She was awarded the 2020 Doris Betts Fiction Prize\, has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize\, and was a notable in The Best American Nonrequired Reading. A graduate of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro’s MFA in Creative Writing\, she currently teaches creative writing classes for people with cancer\, survivors\, and caregivers at Hirsch Wellness Network in Greensboro and is at work her first novel. \n  \nThis presentation is sponsored by
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/salzberg-safi/
LOCATION:VIRTUAL
CATEGORIES:Adult,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210515T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210515T120000
DTSTAMP:20260410T142943
CREATED:20210401T072046Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210510T161738Z
UID:5596-1621076400-1621080000@greensborobound.com
SUMMARY:Hidden Histories with Lisa Levenstein & Shanna Greene Benjamin
DESCRIPTION:Join the discussion with SHANNA GREENE BENJAMIN and LISA LEVENSTEIN  about memory\, the public persona and the private individual\, the biographer/historian’s relationship to her subject(s)\, and the intersectionality of sexism\, racism\, and economic inequality. Benjamin’s Half in Shadow gives a full and surprising picture of the life of Nellie Y. McKay (1930-2006)\, an American literary scholar best known for her collaboration with Henry Louis Gates\, Jr. on The Norton Anthology of African American Literature. McKay\, a Black working-class woman\, kept much of her private life in secret\, creating a public persona as one of many strategies she used to navigate the primarily white male American academy while simultaneously lifting up Black scholarly and literary voices in the academy. Levenstein’s They Didn’t See Us Coming: The Hidden History of Feminism in the Nineties takes a closer look at a time when many (including the cover of Time magazine) declared feminism dead. Instead\, Levenstein uncovers a vital (and overlooked) transition period when multiracial and grassroots organizers across the globe (re)shaped the women’s movement. Hosted by ANN CAHILL.  [rsvp required; see below] \nPurchase books from our official bookseller\, Scuppernong Books\, by clicking book images above. \nDR. SHANNA GREENE BENJAMIN  is a biographer and scholar who studies the literature\, lives\, and archives of Black women. Dr. Benjamin earned her Ph.D. in English and M.A. in Afro-American Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison; she received a B.A. in English from Johnson C. Smith University—a historically Black college in Charlotte\, North Carolina.  She is also a Mellon Mays undergraduate fellow who now serves on the UNCF/Mellon Board of Advisors. Dr. Benjamin currently lives with her family in Charlotte\, North Carolina.\nAuthors Website \nDR. LISA LEVENSTEIN is Director of the Women’s\, Gender\, and Sexuality Studies Program and Associate Professor of History at UNC Greensboro. Her first book\, A Movement Without Marches\, won the Kenneth Jackson Book Award. She lives in Chapel Hill\, NC.\nAuthor Website \nDR. ANN CAHILL is a professor of philosophy at Elon University. Her research interests lie at the intersection of feminist theory and philosophy of the body\, and her scholarship has addressed topics such as sexual assault\, miscarriage\, beautification\, and sex work. Her forthcoming book\, Sounding Bodies: Identity\, Injustice\, and the Voice\, co-authored with Christine Hamel\, explores the social\, political\, and ethical meanings of voice as human-generated sound. \nThis event is sponsored by \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n 
URL:https://greensborobound.com/event/levenstein-benjamin/
LOCATION:VIRTUAL
CATEGORIES:Adult,Non-Fiction
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR