Library plans events to celebrate
During the month of January the library will be celebrating Jane Austen with displays and a variety of programs, including movies, a Regency Period Costume Demonstration and a Bollywood Bance Demonstration.
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Category : novels
January is Jane Austen Month
Fictional Armchair Travel
This summer’s weather has certainly made it harder to wander from home, and our bank accounts are lower than expected so international travel this summer may be a luxury few of us can truly afford. Instead, venture mentally from your porch swing or comfortable sofa into some fictional depictions of some real places for crime and detection.
In A Carrion Death by Michael Stanley, enjoy the exotic beauty of Botswana as Detective Kubu unravels a mystifying murder and uncovers a very tangled web of conspiracy. Continue »
Author Hallie Ephron Speaks Feb. 11
Author, book reviewer and writing teacher Hallie Ephron will speak at Beebe Library, 345 Main St., Wakefield on Wednesday, February 11, at 7 p.m.
Ephron’s newest book is a gripping psychological novel, “Never Tell a Lie.” Publishers Weekly called it “stunning” and “a deliciously creepy tale of obsession.”
She is also the co-author of a series of mystery novels written with Donald Davidoff, a neuropsychologist at Harvard’s McLean Hospital. Under the shared pseudonym G.H. Ephron, they penned a series of five mysteries featuring fictional forensic neuropsychologist Peter Zak and investigator Annie Squires.
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Finding First Fiction
Beebe Library suggests trying some new authors in the New Year
It is January — a new year, the first week and the first month of the New Year. In that spirit, this is a great time to try something new or read a new author. There is an abundance of good debuts from excellent writers available this year at the Beebe Library.
Due out this month is Erica Bauermeister’s The School of Essential Ingredients. This is a tasty novel that tells the story of a different character in each section. According to Booklist, “the effect is a series of pearl-like vignettes stretched out along a narrative string.” Both the unifying character (and clever plot device) is each character’s participation in a cooking class run by Lillian, a restaurateur who encourages her cooks to use their senses as well as the recipes.
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Author Jennifer Haigh to Speak at Beebe Library
Thursday, December 4, at 7 p.m.
(Photo by Asia Kepka)
Novelist and short story writer Jennifer Haigh will speak at Beebe Library on Thursday, December 4, at 7 p.m. Her first book, Mrs. Kimble, won the 2004 PEN/Hemingway Award for debut fiction. Her second, Baker Towers, was a New York Times bestseller and won the PEN/L.L. Winship Award for outstanding book by a New England author. Her latest novel is The Condition.
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Fictional Feasts
As we get closer to Thanksgiving and the gateway to the winter holidays, it becomes more difficult to find time for pleasure reading. However, if you do find yourself with time on your hands and craving something with a Thanksgiving theme or setting, look over our Thanksgiving Fiction list, or our Edible Fiction list, because this holiday is all about the food!
Looking for dysfunction in someone else’s family? In Suzanne Berne’s Ghost at the Table, Thanksgiving at a perfect colonial house in Concord, Massachusetts marks a reunion between the three Fiske sisters. Cynthia, the youngest, is an author writing a book about Mark Twain’s daughters in this portrait an unraveling family, set against the famous nineteenth-century author’s own family dysfunction.
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