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X-WR-CALNAME:Collected Works Bookstore & Coffeehouse |  September 24 2010- October 24 2010
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DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20120524T014320Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100925T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100925T020000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/marta-weigle-alluring-new-mexico
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/marta-weigle-alluring-new-mexico
SUMMARY:Marta Weigle - Alluring New Mexico\: Engineered Enchantment 1821-2001
DESCRIPTION:<p>An engaging narrative history of New Mexico's 19th- and 20th century identities. Today officially known as the Land of Enchantment\, New Mexico has also been the Land without Law\, the Land of Heart's Desire\, the Land of the Well Country\, the Land of Pueblos\, and the Land of Sunshine. Since statehood in 1912 it has been dubbed the Colorful State\, the Volcano State\, the Science State\, the Space State\, and the Atomic State. Weigle explores all these and more between the opening of the Santa Fe Trail in 1821 and the Diamond Jubilee of Route 66 in 2001.</p>
 <p>
 This overview begins with the Birthplace of Montezuma at Pecos Pueblo missions and moves through the Lourdes of America at Chimayo\, Carlsbad Caverns\, Shiprock and Four Corners\, ending with White Sands and Trinity Site\, the birthplace of the atomic age. Outlaws Black Jack Ketchum and Billy the Kid\, Taos and Santa Fe art colonists\, Abiquiu's Georgia O'Keeffe\, Pancho Villa raiding Columbus\, and Roswell aliens figure among the attractions Weigle explores.  Influential publicity came from the Territorial Bureau of Immigration\, the Great Southwest corporate imagery of the AT&amp\;SF Railway and the Fred Harvey Company\, Route 66\, and the New Mexico State Tourist Bureau set up in 1935. It ends with the Department of Tourism's Essence of Enchantment ad campaign following 9/11.
 </p>
 <p>
 In its illustrations and abundant quotations from ephemeral\, newspaper\, archival and contemporary historical and popular sources\, <em>Alluring New Mexico</em> orchestrates a wide range of voices that engineered a dynamic enchantment which continues unabated in the 21st century.
 </p>
 <p>
 Marta Weigle is University Regents Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of New Mexico.  In 2005 she received the inaugural State Historian's Award for Excellence in New Mexico Heritage Scholarship from the New Mexico Historic Preservation Division.  Among her numerous New Mexico books are the co-edited volumes <em>Telling New Mexico\: A New History</em> and<em>Spanish New Mexico\: The Spanish Colonial Arts Society Collection</em> (both Museum of New Mexico Press) and the co-authored <em>The Lore of New Mexico</em> (University of New Mexico Press).
 </p>
 
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100925T150000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100925T180000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/books-market-nate-downey-harvest-rain
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/books-market-nate-downey-harvest-rain
SUMMARY:BOOKS AT THE MARKET Nate Downey - Harvest the Rain
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 AT THE SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET
 </p>
 <p>
 &quot\;This book will not only make you a true believer in the regenerative power of harvesting rain -- it will show you how. Harvest the Rain is full of practical solutions to our water shortages and points the way to a climate-resilient future. If we want thriving landscapes\, abundant food\, strong communities\, and sustainable economies\, we can start by treasuring rain.&quot\;<br />
 --Andy Lipkis\, Founder and President of TreePeople and Ashoka Fellow
 </p>
 <p>
 For more than a decade\, Nate Downey has written a popular monthly column called &quot\;Permaculture in Practice&quot\; for <em>The Santa Fe New Mexican’s</em><br />
 award-winning ‘Real Estate Guide.’ A frequent guest on public radio\, a perennial presenter at green events\, and the author of two books on water and sustainability\, Nate is a seasoned teacher\, speaker\, writer\, and businessman. Soon after he started Santa Fe Permaculture in 1992\, Nate’s wife\, Melissa McDonald\, joined his forward-thinking landscape-design firm. Since then\, their beautiful\, functional\, and ecological projects have popped up regularly in prominent publications from <em>Su Casa</em> to <em>Sunset</em>. With their boys\, Liam and Keenan\, Nate and Melissa share a backyard brimming with bees\, bunnies\, chickens\, all sorts of edible plants\, lots of harvested rain\, and a nice little patio for building community.
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100925T220000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100926T000000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/nancy-rips-high-holiday-stories-rosh-hashanah-yom-kippur-thoughts-family-faith-and-food
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/nancy-rips-high-holiday-stories-rosh-hashanah-yom-kippur-thoughts-family-faith-and-food
SUMMARY:Nancy Rips - High Holiday Stories\: Rosh Hashanah & Yom Kippur Thoughts on Family\, Faith and Food
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 The High Holidays are the most important festivals of the Jewish year\, and all Jews have their own memories of these special days. It's a time to remember\, a time to be with families\, and a time to tell stories about past generations. And you don't need to be Jewish to appreciate this\, because the 21st centruy is a much smaller world\, with many different faiths coming together. High Holiday Stories is filled with 101 heartfelt holiday remembrances\, from famous people\, and some only known in their own circle of family and friends. They recount varied Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur experiences\, from observing the holiday in the Colorado Rockies to Army bases in Iraq\, even online in L.A. The stories come from people of all ages\, all professions\, from New York to California\, New Zealoand to England.
 </p>
 <p>
 Nancy Rips is recognized as the Book Maven of the Midwest. She's a longtime bookseller and book reviewer who has always loved the Jewish Holidays. She began collecting High Holiday stories after her first book<br />
 Seder Stories was so successful. Her passion for books\, reading\, libraries\, and the Jewish tradition are infectious. In addition she's a force of nature when it comes to her regular review segments on radio<br />
 and Omaha's CBS-TV affiliate. 
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100929T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100929T020000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/three-hombres-poetry-readings-tommy-archuleta-phil-geronimo-and-christopher-johnson
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/three-hombres-poetry-readings-tommy-archuleta-phil-geronimo-and-christopher-johnson
SUMMARY:Three Hombres\: Poetry Readings by Tommy Archuleta\, Phil Geronimo and Christopher Johnson
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 Join us for an evening with some of Santa Fe's hottest rising stars of poetry.
 </p>
 <p>
 Tommy Archuleta lives in Santa Fe but still makes his way to Albuquerque three times a week to attend graduate classes at UNM and teach creative writing at an Albuquerque high school\, Amy Biehl Charter High School. Archuleta\, 44\, began writing in 2002 after several years as a musician in the bands 27 Devils Joking\, 23 More Minutes and Facedown. Now he plays with the bands Angola Farms\, Beautiful Stupid Radio and Disasterman.
 </p>
 <p>
 A native Santa Fean\, Phil Geronimo discovered at the age of 37 his love for reading and writing poetry.  Discovered by Collected Works serving coffee and espresso at a famous coffee house chain\, he also discovered a love for book selling. When not matching customers to the right book Phil can be found in restaurants and coffee shops working on his poems.  A former track &amp\; field coach at Santa Fe High School has impressed on him the need for balance with body and mind.  Come in to the bookstore and become a Friend of Phil.
 </p>
 <p>
 When not writing poetry\, Christopher Johnson can be found creating caffeinated masterpieces at Downtown Subscription.
 </p>
 
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101007T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101007T020000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/forrest-fyre-citizen-stands-war-drugs
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/forrest-fyre-citizen-stands-war-drugs
SUMMARY:Forrest Fyre - A Citizen Stands Up On the War On Drugs
DESCRIPTION:n/a
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101008T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101008T020000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/poetry-reading-jim-barnes
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/poetry-reading-jim-barnes
SUMMARY:Poetry Reading by Jim Barnes
DESCRIPTION:n/a
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101009T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101009T020000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/thomas-larson-saddest-music-ever-written-story-samuel-barbers-adagio-strings
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/thomas-larson-saddest-music-ever-written-story-samuel-barbers-adagio-strings
SUMMARY:Thomas Larson - The Saddest Music Ever Written\: The Story of Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 In <em>The Saddest Music Ever Written</em> (Pegasus\, $26.95)\, the first book to explore Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings\, music and literary critic<br />
 (and UNM School of Music alum) Thomas Larson tells the story of the prodigal composer and his seminal masterpiece\: from its composition in 1936\, when Barber was just twenty-six\, to its orchestral premiere two years later\, led by the great Arturo Toscanini\, and its fascinating history as America's secular hymn for grieving our dead. Older Americans know the Adagio from the funerals and memorials for Presidents Roosevelt and Kennedy\, Albert Einstein\, and Grace Kelly. Younger Americans recall the work as the antiwar theme of the movie Platoon and its basis for the popular DJ Tiesto remix.  
 </p>
 <p>
 In 2004\, the radio program BBC Today\, began a competition to find the saddest music in the world. After receiving more than four hundred nominations\, they listed the top five on a website for voting. Barber's Adagio won the voting with more than half the total vote\, and doubled the votes of the second place nominee\, Henry Purcell's Dido's Lament.  Larson further compares the piece's sadness to such songs as Joni Mitchell's &quot\;River&quot\; and Tom Waits' &quot\;Georgia Lee.&quot\;
 </p>
 <p>
 Larson places this iconic work in a biographical context\, and traces it through our cultural history and its evolution in our changing media. 
 </p>
 <p>
 &quot\;The Saddest Music Ever Written is about much more than a single piece of music. It is an exploration of a fascinating 20th-century composer\, a<br />
 case study in the cultural appropriation of works of art\, and an often very personal meditation on the power of music.&quot\;  -Kevin Bazzana\, author<br />
 of Lost Genius and Wondrous Strange\: The Life and Art of Glenn Gould
 </p>
 <p>
 Thomas Larson is the author of The Memoir and the Memoirist\: Reading and Writing Personal Narrative which evaluates the dramatic rise of the<br />
 memoir in the last twenty years and explores the craft and purpose of contemporary memoir writing. For twelve years\, Larson has been a<br />
 contributing writer for the weekly San Diego Reader where he specializes in investigative journalism\, narrative nonfiction\, and profiles. He is a<br />
 regular book reviewer for Contrary Magazineonline and writes reviews for other magazines and journals as well.  His personal memoir pieces<br />
 have appeared in Potomac Review\, Chicago Reader\, Cimarron Review\, Hawaii Review\, San Diego Reader\, and The Cream City Review\, where he won the<br />
 Editor's Award for Nonfiction.  Critical essays on memoir and autobiography have appeared in Boulevard\, The San Diego Union-Tribune\,<br />
 AWP Chronicle\, El Paso Review\, and other periodicals. &quot\;Skull and Roses-Reflections on Enshrining Georgia O'Keeffe&quot\; came out in Southwest<br />
 Review\, and a critical re-reading of the recently published\, unexpurgated &quot\;definitive edition&quot\; of Anne Frank's diary appeared in<br />
 Antioch Review. Larson teaches classes\, leads workshops\, and lectures on memoir and the music of Samuel Barber throughout the United States. He<br />
 is the father of two sons\, Jeremy and Blake. He and his partner\, Suzanna Neal\, live in San Diego and\, every spring\, in Santa Fe\, New Mexico.
 </p>
 
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101010T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101010T020000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/poetry-reading-cynthia-hogue-devreaux-baker
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/poetry-reading-cynthia-hogue-devreaux-baker
SUMMARY:Poetry Reading with Cynthia Hogue & Devreaux Baker
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 Cynthia Hogue has published seven collections of poetry\, most recently The Incognito Body (2006)\, Or Consequence (2010)\, both with Red Hen Press\, and When the Water Came\: Evacuees of Hurricane Katrina (University of New Orleans Press\, 2010). Among her honors are a Fulbright-Hayes Fellowship to Iceland and an NEA for poetry. Hogue received a Wurlitzer Foundation Residency Fellowship in 2009\, and a Witter Bynner Translation Residency Fellowship at the Santa Fe Art Institute in 2010. She is the Maxine and Jonathan Marshall Chair in Modern and Contemporary Poetry in English at Arizona State University.
 </p>
 <p>
 When the Water Came\: Evacuees of Hurricane Katrina features interviewpoems and photographs of Hurricane Katrina evacuees who passed through\, evacuated\, or relocated to Arizona. Poet Cynthia Hogue created poems from interviews with evacuees\, using only the interviewees’ words\, re-ordered and shaped formally and visually to communicate the depth of these individual experiences\, and to highlight the poetry of their language. Through black-and-white\, medium format photographs\, co-author<br />
 Rebecca Ross examined evacuees’ recreated present and retraced their steps to relate a poignant sense of journey and beginning again. Responding to the itinerant nature of the evacuees who participated in this project\, the artists document individual lives profoundly touched by Katrina\, in order to tell a universal story of broken lives and the courage to begin anew.
 </p>
 <p>
 Devreaux Baker has published three collections of poetry\, most recently Red Willow People (Wild Ocean Press\, 2010). Among her honors are a MacDowell Colony Fellowship\, a Hawthornden Castle International Fellowship\, three California Arts Council Grants\, and in 2009\, a Helene M. Wurlitzer Foundation Writing Fellowship. She lives in Mendocino County\, CA.
 </p>
 <p>
 One enters Devreaux Baker’s haunting new collection\, The Red Willow People\, as one would sacred terrain. These poems are spare\, tactile and textured\, but they hover between worlds\: “I do not know why the ghost of the woman from the pueblo // visits me\,” one speaker confesses. This visitation is a gift\, but it carries with it the task of journeying to that “core place // where bone meets spirit\,” “the other side of air\,” through time and “beyond knowing.” The Red Willow People is a book of visionary medicine\, for though Baker walks through “the thin field/ of grief\,” she does so to instruct and heal\, walking in a rare beauty and in magic to write these gorgeously wise poems.
 </p>
 
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101014T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101014T030000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/eddie-chuculate-cheyenne-madonna
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/eddie-chuculate-cheyenne-madonna
SUMMARY:Eddie Chuculate - Cheyenne Madonna
DESCRIPTION:<p>One stormy night in 1826\, just north of Galveston Bay\, Old  Bull\, a Cheyenne Indian who had just seen the ocean for the first time\, found  himself trying to outrace a hurricane. Lifted from his horse\, spun around\, and  thrown down in the bayou\, Old Bull rode the current into a small canyon\, and survived. He was the only one of his party to return from the expedition\,  arriving home nearly naked\, nearly hallucinating\, riding a horse.</p>
 <p>Such is the auspicious beginning to the life of Jordan Coolwater\, a distant relation  to Old Bull\, whom we meet as a boy in the 1970s\, shooting turtles on a summer  day\, and being raised by his grandparents on Creek Indian land in the house of  his great-great-grandfather\, a survivor of the &quot\;Trail of Tears.&quot\; Bearing the  burden of his ancestry\, Jordan Coolwater — from bored young boy\, to thoughtful  teenager\, struggling artist\, escaped convict\, and finally\, father—is the  subject of Eddie Chuculate's prize-winning collection of linked short stories.  The first story in the collection\, &quot\;Galveston Bay\, 1826\,&quot\; won an O'Henry Prize in 2007\, and the second\, &quot\;Yo Yo\,&quot\; received a Pushcart Prize Special Mention.</p>
 <p>Reminiscent of Denis Johnson's <em>Jesus's  Son</em>\, Chuculate's gritty\, deceptively simple  stories also recall Junot Dias and Sherman Alexie. This is not only a portrait  of a young Native American artist struggling with the two constants in his  life\, alcohol and art\, but also a portrait of America\, of its dispossessed\, its<br />
 outlaws\, and its visionaries. </p>
 <p>From the Reviews</p>
 <p>&quot\;Chuculate presents a profound disconnect between the mythology of Indian art and the present-day reality of Indian artists\, who rarely get to be artists without the cultural qualifier. He also lays bare the effects of wide-spread multi-generational addiction without making excuses for the way his characters treat each other. There are no saints in here\, and no demons\, either. <strong><em>Cheyenne Madonna</em> is a fantastic debut</strong>.&quot\;<br />
 —<em>Jennifer Levin at </em>The Santa Fe New Mexican </p>
 <p>&quot\;Chuculate writes forthright prose in a somber key\, examining without judgment the lives of Native American characters like Old Bull\, a  Cheyenne who\, in 'Galveston Bay\, 1826\,' the collection's one stand-alone story\, ventures out to see the ocean for the first time\, only to get savaged by a hurricane. Memory and will converge here to powerful effect.&quot\;<br />
 — Publishers Weekly</p>
 <p>&quot\;Every sentence is unexpected\, yet infallible…. The calm\, beautiful\, unexplaining accuracy of description carries us right through the madness of the final adventure.&quot\;<br />
 — Ursula  K. Le Guin\, author of <em>The Left Hand of Darkness</em></p>
 <p>&quot\;This is a book you'll rave about.&quot\;<br />
 — Julie  Shigekuni\, author of <em>A Bridge Between Us</em></p>
 <p>Eddie Chuculate is Creek and Cherokee Indian from Muskogee\,  Oklahoma. He has a degree in creative writing from the Institute of American  Indian Arts and is the second Native American to have held the Wallace Stegner fellowship at Stanford. He lives in Oklahoma.</p>
 
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101015T000000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101015T020000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/muse-times-two-poetry-series-lisa-chavez-joanne-dwyer
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/muse-times-two-poetry-series-lisa-chavez-joanne-dwyer
SUMMARY:Muse Times Two Poetry Series\: Lisa Chavez & Joanne Dwyer
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 Muse Times Two Poetry Series continues with Lisa Chavez &amp\; Joanne Dwyer
 </p>
 <p>
 &nbsp\;
 </p>
 <p>Joanne D. Dwyer has lived in New Mexico since 1980. She attended the College of Santa Fe\, studying with Dana Levin\, Greg Glazner\, Mark Behr and Matt Donovan. She earned a degree there in Creative Writing in 2005. In 2009 Dwyer completed an MFA with the Warren Wilson Program for writers. A recipient of a Rona Jaffe Award for emerging women writers\, she has been published in The American Poetry Review\, Conduit\, FIELD\, The Massachusetts Review\, The New England Review\, Tri-Quarterly and elsewhere.</p>
 <p>Lisa D. Chavez is a poet and memoirist.   She has published two books of poetry\:  Destruction Bay  and In an Angry Season\, and has been included in such anthologies as Floricanto Si! A Collection of Latina Poetry\, The Floating Borderlands\: 25 Years of U.S. Hispanic Literature\, and American Poetry\: The Next Generation. Her creative nonfiction has been published in Fourth Genre\, The Clackamas Literary Review and other places. She lives in the mountains in New Mexico with her husband and three dogs.</p>
 <p>
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 </p>
 
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101016T000000Z
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UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/jo-ann-mapson-solomons-oak
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/jo-ann-mapson-solomons-oak
SUMMARY:Jo Ann Mapson - Solomon's Oak
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 Jo-Ann Mapson\, the author of the beloved <em>Hank &amp\; Chloe</em>\, discusses and signs her new novel\, Solomon's Oak (Bloomsbury\, $25.00)\, the story of three people who have suffered losses that changed their lives forever\:
 </p>
 <p>
 Glory Solomon\, a young widow\, holds tight to her memories while she struggles to hold on to her Central California farm. She makes ends meet by hosting weddings in the chapel her husband had built under their two-hundred-year-old white oak tree\, known locally as Solomon's Oak. Fourteen-year-old Juniper McGuire is the lone survivor of a family decimated by her sister's disappearance. She arrives on Glory's doorstep\, pierced\, tattooed\, angry\, and homeless. When Glory's husband Dan was alive\, they took in foster children\, but Juniper may be more than she can handle alone. Joseph Vigil is a former Albuquerque police officer and crime lab photographer who was shot during a meth lab bust that took the life of his best friend. Now disabled and in constant pain\, he arrives in California to fulfill his dream of photographing the state's giant trees\, including Solomon's Oak.
 </p>
 <p>
 Jo-Ann Mapson is the author of nine previous novels\, including  <em>Hank &amp\; Chloe</em>\,<em> Blue Rodeo </em>(CBS TV movie)\, and the <em>Los Angeles Times </em>bestsellers<em> The Wilder Sisters </em>and <em>Bad Girl Creek</em>\, a book club favorite. She lives in Santa Fe\, New Mexico\, with her husband and their five dogs. Whether writing about the stark beauty of a California canyon or the poverty of an Arizona reservation\, Mapson's landscapes are imbued with life. Setting her fiction in the Southwest\, she writes about a region that she knows well\; after growing up in California and living for a time in Arizona and New Mexico\, she also attributes her focus on setting to the influence of Wallace Stegner.
 </p>
 
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101020T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101020T030000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/clare-cooper-marcus-iona-dreaming-healing-power-place
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/clare-cooper-marcus-iona-dreaming-healing-power-place
SUMMARY:Clare Cooper Marcus - Iona Dreaming\: The Healing Power of Place
DESCRIPTION:<p>A journey of healing takes Clare Cooper Marcus on a 6-month long solitary retreat to the remote Scottish Island of Iona. Here she experiences a mirroring of her soul and reflects and reviews the life that brought her here to this magical place. Her compelling memoir <em>Iona Dreaming</em> is an inspirational account of personal survival and hope in which Clare shares her recovery from a life-threatening illness\, which deepens into a contemplation of the events in her life and her physical\, emotional and spiritual healing. </p>
 <p>Clare Cooper Marcus brings both a personal and academic life-long interface with place\, environment and people. Her five previous books about human response to architecture and environment were popular with the public and well-received by the press. <em>Iona Dreaming</em> will reach out to a broad audience\: people entering retirement\, dealing with serious illnesses\, gardeners\, lovers of nature\, architects and landscape architects\, people who are becoming more heath conscious\, women who have shared the social and cultural shifts she lived through--especially those coming of age in the<br />
 60's--and all those who seek a more authentic life.</p>
 
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101023T010000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101023T030000Z
UID:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/mark-winne-conversation-rosemary-romero-food-rebels-guerrilla-gardeners-and-smart-cookin%E2%80%99-mama
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.collectedworksbookstore.com/event/mark-winne-conversation-rosemary-romero-food-rebels-guerrilla-gardeners-and-smart-cookin%E2%80%99-mama
SUMMARY:Mark Winne in conversation with Rosemary Romero - Food Rebels\, Guerrilla Gardeners\, and Smart Cookin’ Mamas
DESCRIPTION:<p>
 With the advent of industrialism and its widespread application to our food supply – factory farms\, genetic engineering\, and agricultural chemicals – the struggle between human freedom and authority has reached a critical juncture. In spite of the rapid growth of an alternative food system – local and sustainable food production\, farmers’ markets\, the public’s rising food consciousness – we become more dependent everyday on industrial agriculture whose representatives insist that it is the <em>only</em> way to feed a hungry world. In the face of such assertions\, we must ask if our dependence on such a system threatens to supplant individual self-reliance. Will personal freedom succumb finally and forever to the dominant voice of authority? Are we at risk of sacrificing our democratic voice to self-appointed governing elites? These are no longer speculative questions suitable only for philosophers\, but real-life concerns set squarely on the plate of every eater.
 </p>
 <p>
 Mark Winne’s second book\,<em> Food Rebels\, Guerrilla Gardeners\, and Smart Cookin’ Mamas\: Fighting Back in an Age of Industrial Agriculture</em> takes on the universal struggle between human freedom and authority in its relationship to food. While drawing from great thinkers like Emerson and Dostoevsky to frame his arguments\, Winne moves quickly from philosophy to action with numerous stories about “local doers.” From urban gardening heroes in Cleveland\, to feisty farmers in New England\, to lower income mothers in Texas\, Winne shows how people are reclaiming their connection to their food\, health\, land\, and governments. Along the way he finds people of every stripe whose refusal to accept their fate harkens back to a classic form of American individualism\, one that has proven itself able to fight back against systems that not only want to conquer our wallets\, but also hope to control our minds.
 </p>
 <p>
 <em>Food Rebels\, Guerrilla Gardeners\, and Smart-Cookin’ Mamas</em> challenges us to go beyond eating local food to become part of a larger solution that demands a system that sustains not just our bodies\, but also our souls.
 </p>
 <p>
 <strong>Mark Winne</strong> has worked for 40 years as a community food activist\, writer\, and trainer. From organizing breakfast programs for low-income children in Maine to developing innovative national food policies in Washington\, DC\, Winne has dedicated his professional life and writing to enabling people to find solutions to their own food problems as well as those that face their communities and the world. Of his first book\, <strong>Closing the Food Gap</strong>\, Dr. Jane Goodall said\, “It is heartening to find a book that successfully blends a passion for sustainable living with compassion for the poor.”
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