The Fairfax County Public Library, George Mason
Transcription
The Fairfax County Public Library, George Mason
Pulitzer Winner RICHARD RUSSO International Bestseller JODI PICOULT Poet MARTÍN ESPADA Essayist EULA BISS Thriller Writer SOPHIE HANNAH Orphan Train Author CHRISTINA BAKER KLINE The Fairfax County Public Library, George Mason University, and the George Mason University Bookstore present September 11-18, 2014 G 703-993-3986 G www.fallforthebook.org @fallforthebook #fallforthebook Download the new FftB app! The printing of this program has been underwritten by a generous grant from Sweet Sixteen! With a full decade and a half behind us, Fall for the Book is well past its coming of age, but we always appreciate a good celebration—and our 2014 festival offers plenty of reasons to celebrate. From some of the best-known and best-loved writers on the planet to the literary stars of tomorrow, Fall for the Book welcomes a wide range of authors and thinkers: novelists, poets, and playwrights; essayists, critics, and memoirists; historians, biographers, and journalists; and both children’s book and young adult authors— providing something for all ages and interests and serving to bring together a tightly knit community of readers from throughout the region. Highlights this year include the winners of Fall for the Book’s four major awards: G Novelist Jodi Picoult, recipient of the 2014 Mason Award, which celebrates authors who have made an extraordinary contribution to connecting literature to the wide reading public • Friday, September 12, at 7:30 p.m. in the Concert Hall, Center for the Arts, on George Mason’s University’s Fairfax, VA, Campus G Martín Espada, recipient of the 2014 Busboys and Poets Award, presented to a contemporary poet and paying tribute to Langston Hughes, who worked as a busboy at the Wardman Park Hotel in Washington, D.C., during the 1920s before he gained recognition for his writing • Saturday, September 13, at 5:30 p.m. in Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts, on Mason’s Fairfax Campus G Essayist Eula Biss, recipient of the 2014 Mary Roberts Rinehart Award, presented each year to a woman writer specializing in nonfiction and commemorating the life and work of Rinehart, who for 45 years prior to her death in 1958 was one of America’s most popular writers • Monday, September 15, at 7:30 p.m. in Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts, on Mason’s Fairfax Campus. G Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Richard Russo, recipient of the 2014 Fairfax Prize, sponsored by the Fairfax Library Foundation and honoring outstanding literary achievement as well as other contributions to the larger literary culture • Wednesday, September 17, at 7:30 p.m. in Harris Theatre on Mason’s Fairfax Campus. Beyond those award-winners, the festival also welcomes Christina Baker Kline, author of Orphan Train, which has become a book club sensation; Sophie Hannah, whose new mystery The Monogram Murders marks the first time Agatha Christie’s estate has authorized a book featuring Christie’s characters; novelist Roxana Robinson and journalist David Finkel, a Pulitzer Prize winner and MacArthur “Genius” Grant recipient, discussing their writings on Iraq War veterans making troubled returns to the homefront; a panel of experts including Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Brigid Schulte, sociologist Melissa Milkie, and psychologists Beth Cabrera and Todd Kashdan talking about our overwhelmed, overworked lives; and the second annual Haute Cuisine at the Hylton event, featuring some of the region’s and nation’s leading cookbook authors and food writers at Mason’s Prince William Campus— with tastings! You’ll find these events and so much more—over 150 authors in all—in the pages ahead, with programs not only at the festival’s base at George Mason University’s Fairfax, Virginia, campus, but at nearly two dozen venues throughout Virginia, DC, and Maryland. Thanks to these partnering locations and to the generous support of our sponsors, the festival continues to maintain high standards of excellence and to fulfill its missions of G Advancing children’s education and developmental skills G Making literature fun G Connecting readers and authors G Building community G Encouraging cultural diversity and awareness BOOK SALES George Mason University Libraries Pohick Regional Library Johnson Center, Rooms 234, 243, and 244, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA Thursday, September 11 and Friday, September 12, 10 a.m.–7 p.m. 6450 Sydenstricker Road, Burke, VA Member Preview Sale: Thursday, November 6, 3–6 p.m. G Friday, November 7, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. City of Fairfax Regional Library G Saturday, November 8, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Adult Books: September 19–21 (no children’s books) G Friday, September 19, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Virginia Room Sale, with Civil War, Virginia history and genealogy books: September 19-20 only, hours above (no Sunday bag sale) Burke Centre Library 5935 Freds Oak Road, Burke, VA Member Preview Sale: Wednesday, September 17, 3–6 p.m. Public sale: G Thursday, September 18, 1–9 p.m. G Friday, September 19, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. G Saturday, September 20, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. George Mason Regional Library 7001 Little River Turnpike, Annandale, VA Thursday, September 25, 5–9 p.m. Friday, September 26, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. Saturday, September 27, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Sunday, September 28, noon–5 p.m. For updated information, bookmark www.fallforthebook.org or download the new FftB app to get the latest updates on what promises to be yet another landmark year. G Sunday, November 9, 1–4 p.m Richard Byrd Library 7250 Commerce Street, Springfield, VA Thursday, December 4 to Saturday, December 6 — check branch for hours. G Saturday, September 20, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. G Sunday, September 21, 1–3 p.m. (Bag Day, $5 per bag) Oakton Library 10304 Lynnhaven Place, Oakton, VA Thursday, October 16 to Saturday, October 18 — check branch for hours. www.fallforthebook.org 7:30 p.m. Public Sale: Monday, September 15, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. 10360 North Street, Fairfax, VA Children’s Books: Saturday, September 13, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. PREVIEW EVENT: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 EXHIBITIONS Call and Response Collaborative Exhibition: “In 24 hours, everywhere the dawn rises again” Fenwick Gallery, Fenwick Library September 1–30; Gallery Talk, Wednesday, September 17, 3–5 p.m. Call & Response: a collaboration between writers and visual artists, in which one calls and one responds. The result is a set of paired works, resonating with each other, demonstrating the interplay of artistic media, and speaking of our times. Call & Response is a collaboration between George Mason University’s School of Art and the university’s MFA program in poetry. World War I Photographs from the Arthur E. Scott Collection Concert Hall Lobby, Center for the Arts Throughout the Festival A specially curated exhibit of World War I-era photos, drawn from the Arthur E. Scott photograph collection (Collection #C0096) in the Special Collections and Archives section of the George Mason University Libraries, marks the centennial of the start of that war that was supposed to be the war to end all wars. Northern Virginia j.talks: Naomi Schaefer Riley Location To Be Announced Why are young people dropping out of religious Naomi Schaefer institutions? Can anything Riley be done to reverse the trend? In Got Religion?: How Churches, Mosques, and Synagogues Can Bring Young People Back, Riley—a former Wall Street Journal editor and writer whose work focuses on higher education, religion, philanthropy, and culture—examines the reasons for the defection and how some communities are successfully addressing the problem. Riley is also the author of God on the Quad and The Faculty Lounges. Note: This is a ticketed event. Contact the JCCNV at boxoffice@jccnv.org or 703.537.3000 for details. Presented by the Jewish Community Center of Northern Virginia in partnership with NOVA Tribe. Events take place in various buildings on George Mason University’s Fairfax Campus, 4400 University Dr., Fairfax, Va., except where otherwise indicated. All events are free, except where noted. Download the FftB app to build your personal schedule of event favorites! 1 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 Fall for the Book’s opening day commemorates in part the anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks. In addition to partnering with George Mason University’s Day of Service—which concludes with a candlelight vigil at 9:11 p.m. outside the Center for the Arts—the festival also welcomes U.S. Army veteran Luis Carlos Montalván, who will reflect on the relationship between wounded soldiers and service dogs, and novelist Roxana Robinson and journalist David Finkel in a joint appearance discussing veterans’ returns to the homefront. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 Book Award in Autobiography/ Memoir for his inspirational memoir Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him, which portrays the bond between a man and his dog during truly desperate times. Sponsored by the Loudoun County Public Library. Memoirist Anna WhistonDonaldson Roxana Robinson 10 a.m. Mason’s Day of Service Kick-Off Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Fairfax Mayor R. Scott Silverthorne will be joined by a member of Mason’s central administration to thank the 2014 Mason Nation’s 9/11 Day of Service community organizers, observe a presentation of the colors by the Mason Army ROTC Color Guard, and officially launch the day’s festivities. 11 a.m.–1 p.m. George Mason University’s Service Fair Johnson Center North Plaza Are you interested in getting involved in your community? Meet with several local community partners, discover various service opportunities, and learn more about the issues facing our immediate community. Sponsored by Mason’s Social Action and Integrative Learning. 7 p.m. Memoirist Luis Carlos Montalván Rust Library, 380 Old Waterford Road NW, Leesburg, VA The 17-year veteran of the U.S. Luis Carlos Montalván Army, who served in multiple combat tours in Iraq, won the USA Best 2 One More Page Books, 2200 N. Westmoreland Street, #101, Arlington, VA Twice named one of BlogHer’s Voices of the Year, WhistonDonaldson is the author of Rare Bird: A Memoir of Loss and Love, a mother’s story in the face of unfathomable loss and her journey of hope in the aftermath. 7:30 p.m. Novelist Roxana Robinson and Journalist David Finkel Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Two great writers, two different David Finkel genres, one compelling subject. Robinson’s latest novel, Sparta, studies the estrangement of an Iraq War vet trying to return home to the country he’s been fighting for. Thank You For Your Service by David Finkel, a Pulitzer Prize winner and MacArthur “Genius” Grant recipient, builds on his extensive research into the challenges faced by American soldiers and their families in war’s aftermath. Together, these writers offer unique insight into one of today’s most pressing issues. Novelist and Historian Winston Groom Pohick Regional Library, 6450 Sydenstricker Road, Burke, VA The author of Forrest Gump brings his superior storytelling skills to the tales of three great pilots and their experiences in World War II. The Aviators: Winston Groom Eddie Rickenbacker, Jimmy Doolittle, Charles Lindbergh, and the Epic Age of Flight charts the triumphs and tragedies of these legendary men and celebrates not just a dramatic era in the history of flight but also the stellar achievements of that “greatest generation.” Sponsored by the Friends of the Pohick Regional Library. Science Writers Sam Kean and Carl Zimmer The Alden at the McLean Community Center, 1234 Ingleside Avenue, McLean, VA Sam Kean Frequent NPR guests Carl Zimmer, New York Times columnist and author of books including Evolution: Making Sense of Life, and Sam Kean, author of books including The Tale of the Dueling Neurosurgeons: The History of the Human Brain as Revealed by True Stories of Trauma, Madness, and Recovery, discuss topics in popular science and read from their works. Sponsored by the Fairfax County Public Library and the McLean Community Center. Carl Zimmer 9 p.m. Mason Nation 9/11 Day of Service: Candlelight Ceremony Mason Pond, Outside Center for the Arts A candle will be lit for each of the 2,977 victims who perished in the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States. A moment of silence will be observed at 9:11 p.m. to remember the victims. The candlelight vigil is a tradition organized by Fourth Estate, Mason’s student news outlet, and is the official closing program for the Mason Nation 9/11 Day of Service. fall for the book festival 2014 10:30 a.m. Playwright Julia Jarcho Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza The OBIE Award-winning playwright and director discusses the craft of Julia Jarcho playwriting with specific attention to her work Grimly Handsome. A staged reading of the play will take place at 8 p.m. in Harris Theatre, featuring actors from the original production. Noon Historian Tim Grove Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza In A Grizzly in the Mail and Tim Grove Other Adventures in American History, the chief of museum learning at the National Air and Space Museum offers behind-the-scene perspectives on some landmark historical monuments—and moments— of American history as he visits sites such as Harpers Ferry, Fort McHenry, the Ulm Pishkun buffalo jump, and the Lemhi Pass on the Lewis and Clark Trail, and traverses time and space from 18th-century Williamsburg to the 21st-century Kennedy Space Center, and from Cape Canaveral on the Atlantic to Cape Disappointment on the Pacific. Sponsored by Mason’s Department of History and Art History. 1:30 p.m. Memoirist Kristin Battista-Frazee Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Kristin BattistaFrazee In The Pornographer’s Daughter: A Memoir of Childhood, My Father, and Deep Throat, Battista-Frazee—whose father Anthony Battista was indicted by the federal government for www.fallforthebook.org distributing the now famous porn film Deep Throat—offers an insider’s glimpse into the events that made pornography so popular and reveals what it was like to come of age against the backdrop of the pornography business. 3 p.m. Defying Gravity Panel Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Elizabeth Word Gutting, Veronica Li, Mary Claire Mahaney, Judith O’Neill, Valerie O. Patterson, and Sally Toner share their contributions to Defying Gravity, the sixth anthology in the Grace & Gravity series of fiction by Washington, DC-area women, published by Paycock Press and edited by Richard Peabody. The Washington Independent Review of Books praised the collection’s “ear for witness over comfort or safety. And like the author party that Peabody imagines in the introduction, in that gathering of witnesses and testimony there’s a deep satisfaction.” Moderated by Beth Konkoski. 4:30 p.m. Novelist Catherine Bell Catherine Bell Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza The Winner of the Washington Writers Publishing House Fiction Prize, Bell’s Rush of Shadows explores the clash between natives and settlers in 19th century California through the unlikely friendship of two women, one white, one Indian. Children’s Book Author Chris Grabenstein Burke Centre Library, 5935 Freds Oak Road, Burke, VA The multiple Anthony and Agatha Award-winning author shares his new puzzle mystery, Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library, which plunks a dozen Chris Grabenstein sixth-graders into the middle of a futuristic library for a night of nonstop fun and adventure. With a judicious nod toward Roald Dahl’s classic Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Grabenstein’s latest has already won him another Agatha and is a finalist for this year’s Anthony for Best Children’s/Young Adult Novel. Sponsored by the Friends of the Burke Centre Library. 7:30 p.m. MASON AWARD PRESENTATION: Jodi Picoult Concert Hall, Center for the Arts Novelist Jodi Picoult accepts the 2014 Mason Award, celebrating authors who have made an extraordinary contribution to connecting literature to the wide reading public. Jodi Picoult is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of twenty-one novels; her upcoming book, Leaving Time, will be published in October. In addition to her writing, Picoult works with a number of charity organizations to encourage reading and both artistic and athletic activities, including the Writer’s Council for the National Writing Project, Positive Tracks/ Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth, and the the Trumbull Hall Troupe, a New Hampshirebased teen theater group that performs original musicals to raise money for local charities. Sponsored by George Mason University Libraries. 3 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 continued 8 p.m. Staged Reading: Grimly Handsome Harris Theatre OBIE Award-winning playwright Julia Jarcho directs a staged reading of her play Grimly Handsome, featuring actors Jenny Seastone Stern, Pete Simpson, and Ben Williams, who appeared in the original production at the Incubator Arts Project at New York’s St. Mark’s Church. Old Firestation Poetry Reading Timothy Donnelly Dorothea Lasky Old Firestation #3, 3988 University Drive, Fairfax, VA A long-time tradition at Fall for the Book, the annual Old Firestation reading welcomes the best and brightest young poets to the stage. This year’s event features three fabulous up-and-coming poets: Timothy Donnelly, author of Twentyseven Props for a Production of Eine Lebenszeit and The Cloud Corporation, which the Poetry Foundation praised for its “mix of sprawling, cinematic subjects and literary traditions”; Dorothea Lasky, author of four full-length collections, AWE, Black Life, Thunderbird, and Rome, and praised by The Huffington Post as “undoubtedly one of the nation’s most talented younger poets”; and Roger Reeves, whose debut collection King Me was praised as “sophisticated and breathtaking” by the Los Angeles Review of Books. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 Fiction Writers Nathan Leslie and Pat Spears The Writer’s Center, 4508 Walsh Street, Bethesda, MD Northern Virginia Community Nathan Leslie College professor Leslie is the author of eight books of fiction, including his new story collection Sibs, which Gargoyle founder Richard Peabody called “twenty-one stories that read like The Odyssey on Oxycontin.” Spears’ novel Dream Chaser, follows a suddenly single father struggling to build a better relationship with his three children and continues Pat Spears the author’s passion for capturing “the marginal voices of men and women whose lives often teeter on the edge of human disaster and social acceptability.” 11:30 a.m. Loud Fire Reading Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts The graduate student reading series for Mason’s MFA program presents a selection of readers from the current ranks of creative writing students. Novelist Miranda Beverly-Whittemore Arts Plaza Tent, Outside Center for the Arts The author of The Effects of Light and Set Me Free scores big with her third novel, Bittersweet, an instant critical and popular success which Library Journal praised as “a suspenseful tale of corruption and bad behavior among wealthy New Englanders” and which Entertainment Weekly compared to Gone Girl “with its exploration of dark secrets and edge-of-your-seat twists.” Miranda BeverlyWhittemore Crime Writers Kate Flora and Neely Tucker Mason Hall Tent, Outside Center for the Arts Flora, former assistant attorney general for the State of Maine and the author of twelve books, both novels and true crime, explores how authorities from New Brunswick, Canada, and Spend the weekend at Fall for the Book! As events continue throughout the region all weekend, Fall for the Book is also settling in for two day-long series of events in a true festival atmosphere on Saturday and Sunday. On Saturday, fifteen events take place at the Center for the Arts and on the Arts Plaza on Mason’s Fairfax Campus—featuring fiction, nonfiction, and poetry by some of the most brilliant writers of our day, a book fair of local literary journals and presses, and food trucks on the front drive; Saturday parking is free in Mason’s Lot K near the event sites. Then on Sunday, the focus shifts to the rich and diverse world of writing today—romance, self-publishing, and one of the biggest book club sensations of the year—with most events at the Sherwood Center, 3740 Old Lee Highway, in the City of Fairfax; parking there is also free. Come for one event or enjoy the full day! Roger Reeves 4 fall for the book festival 2014 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 continued Maine collaborated to catch a suspected serial killer in Death Dealer: How Cops and Cadaver Dogs Brought a Killer to Justice. Tucker, a Washington Kate Flora Post reporter, drew on the 1990s Princeton Place murders for his debut novel, The Ways of the Dead, which takes an investigative journalist from the highest halls of DC power to the city’s seediest underbelly. Where do fact and fiction collide or converge? Two writers working in each genre offer first-hand perspectives. Neely Tucker Novelist Allegra Jordan Arts Plaza Tent, Outside Center for the Arts An innovation consultant who has led marketing at Allegra Jordan USAToday.com, handled crisis communications for the Enron investigation, and codeveloped a Google Glass app, Jordan offers a debut novel, The End of Innocence, about an American student and a German poet who meet at Harvard on the eve of World War I and then find their new relationship challenged as the war’s demands escalate. Novelist Louis Bayard Novelist Susan Coll Susan Coll Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts The author of Acceptance and Beach Week returns with The Stager, a comedy of rabbits and real estate in the D.C. suburbs that Washingtonian praised as “not a plain parody of suburban dysfunction but the work of a very good comic novelist subverting conventional structure and perspective.” Novelist Ed Falco Mason Hall Tent, Outside Center for the Arts Fresh on the heels of his bestselling book The Family Ed Falco Corleone, a prequel to Mario Puzo’s The Godfather, Falco delves into another story of gangsters in the Great Depression, Toughs, based in part on real-life characters and historical events. www.fallforthebook.org 2:30 p.m. Short-Story Writers Rebecca Lee and Laura van den Berg Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Lee, a professor of creative writing at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and the author of novel The City Is a Rising Tide, shares a selection from her new book of short stories, Bobcat, which bestselling novelist Ben Fountain likened to “the unflinching, cumulatively devastating precision of Chekhov and Munro, peeling back layer after layer of illusion until we’re left with the truth of ourselves.” Van den Berg’s latest collecLaura van den Berg tion, The Isle of Youth—which explores the lives of vulnerable, dangerous, and unforgettable women—has been named a “Best Book of 2013” by more than a dozen venues, including NPR, The Boston Globe, and O, The Oprah Magazine. Rebecca Lee 2 p.m. 1 p.m. began her own research into the science of sound, language acquisition, brain plasticity, and deaf culture. The result, I Can Hear You Whisper: An Intimate Journey through the Science of Sound and Language, was praised by People magazine as “painstakingly researched and emotionally charged.” Sponsored by the Oakton Library Friends. Richard Byrd Library, 7250 Commerce Street, Springfield, VA Louis Bayard Having ascended to the “the upper reaches of the historical-thriller league” (Washington Post) for literary thrillers including The Pale Blue Eye, The Black Tower, and The School of Night, Bayard ups the ante further with Roosevelt’s Beast, a taut tale about president Teddy Roosevelt and his son on a legendarily ill-fated expedition to the Amazon—and tasked with tracking an elusive beast terrorizing a local Amazonian tribe. Sponsored by the Friends of the Richard Byrd Library. Memoirist and Science Writer Lydia Denworth Oakton Library, 10304 Lynnhaven Place, Oakton, VA When her two-year-old Lydia Denworth son was diagnosed with a significant and progressive hearing loss, journalist Denworth—a former Newsweek reporter and professor of journalism at Fordham University— Events take place in various buildings on George Mason University’s Fairfax Campus, 4400 University Dr., Fairfax, Va., except where otherwise indicated. All events are free, except where noted. Download the FftB app to build your personal schedule of event favorites! 5 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 continued 2:30 p.m. Poets Betsy Andrews and Jen Coleman Arts Plaza Tent, Center for the Arts Two alumni of Mason’s MFA Betsy Andrews program share selections of poetry— Andrews from collections including The Bottom, Jen Coleman winner of the 42 Miles Press Poetry Prize, and New Jersey, winner of the Brittingham Prize in Poetry, and Coleman from her first full-length collection, Psalms for Dogs and Sorcerers. Literary Critic Maureen Corrigan Mason Hall Tent, Center for the Arts Corrigan, book critic for NPR’s “Fresh Air” and a regular Maureen Corrigan reviewer for The Washington Post, takes on one of the great masterpieces of American literature in So We Read On: How The Great Gatsby Came to Be and Why It Endures— exploring “Gatsby’s surprising debt to hard-boiled crime fiction, its rocky path to recognition as a ‘classic,’ and its profound commentaries on the national themes of race, class, and gender.” punch in 2014, delivering critically acclaimed works in two genres. Her debut novel, An Untamed State, traces the harrowing physical and emotional journey of a Haitian woman kidnapped for ransom, and her first collection of essays, Bad Feminist, cements her place as a keen-eyed social and cultural critic. As Time Out New York wrote, “Alternately friendly and provocative, wry and serious, [Gay’s] takes on everything from Girls to Fifty Shades of Grey help to recontextualize what feminism is—and what it can be.” Sponsored by Mason’s African and African American Studies. Gazing Grain Chapbook Reading Arts Plaza Tent, Center for the Arts Gazing Grain Press, a project of Fall for the Book and alumni Anne Lesley Selcer of Mason’s MFA program, honors Anne Lesley Selcer, whose collection from A Book of Poems on Beauty won the press’s third annual poetry chapbook contest, selected by judge Dawn Lundy Martin. Kevin McLellan, whose manuscript Before the Door was the runner-up, will also share a selection from his work. This reading celebrates inclusive feminist poetry and promotes socially conscious work in today’s literary community. A Kevin McLellan reception follows the reading. Sponsored by Gazing Grain Press. Novelist Bruce Holsinger 4 p.m. Novelist and Essayist Roxane Gay Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Gay has delivered a one-two 6 Bruce Holsinger Roxane Gay SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 continued Mason Hall Tent, Center for the Arts Holsinger, a professor of English at the University of Virginia, draws on his scholarship in medieval literature to craft his debut historical thriller, A Burnable Book, in which Geoffrey Chaucer tasks fellow poet John Gowar with tracking down “a seditious work that threatens the stability of the realm.” Washington Post critic Ron Charles proclaimed, “Puzzlemeisters will love this.” 5:30 p.m. BUSBOYS AND POETS AWARD PRESENTATION: Martín Espada Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Martín Espada will accept the 2014 Busboys and Poets Award, presented to a contemporary poet in conjunction with Busboys and Poets, a restaurant, bookstore, fair trade market, and gathering place based in Washington, DC; the award pays tribute to Langston Hughes, who worked as a busboy at the Wardman Park Hotel in Washington, D.C., during the 1920s before he gained recognition for his writing. Espada has published more than fifteen books as a poet, editor, essayist, and translator. His latest collection of poems, The Trouble Ball, is the recipient of the Milt Kessler Award, a Massachusetts Book Award and an International Latino Book Award. His previous book of poems, The Republic of Poetry, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. A former tenant lawyer in Greater Boston’s Latino community, Espada is currently a professor in the Department of English at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. Sponsored by Busboys and Poets. fall for the book festival 2014 5:30 p.m. Novelist Bret Anthony Johnston Mason Hall Tent, Center for the Arts Johnston, director of creative writing at Harvard, is the author of the novel Remember Me Like This, a Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers selection, and the awardwinning Corpus Christi: Stories, which was named a Best Book of the Year by The Independent (London) and The Irish Times. 7 p.m. Stillhouse Press: The Salon Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Stillhouse Press, a new publishing venture recently launched by Mason’s MFA Program in Creative Writing, hosts a literary salon, highlighting new literary works in a blend of reading and conversation. A 7 p.m. reception (see suggested donation below) precedes a 7:30 p.m. conversation featuring Roxane Gay, author of the debut novel An Untamed State and the essay collection Bad Feminist; Ronna Wineberg, author of the debut novel On Bittersweet Place, published by Northern Virginia-based independent Ronna Wineberg publisher Relegation Books; and Mary Kay Zuravleff, reading from Helen on 86th Street and Other Stories, the forthcoming debut of local writer Wendi Kaufman, and the first book from Stillhouse Press. Independent public relations representative and consultant Lauren Cerand hosts this latest installment of the Stillhouse Sessions cultural series, featuring the best in locally produced culture and craft publishing, in combination with nationallyrecognized talent and timeless storytelling. www.fallforthebook.org SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 Admission to the reception requires a suggested donation of $20 ($10 for students) for food, drink, and a Stillhouse tote bag; proceeds benefit Stillhouse Press. 8 p.m. Fall for the Book: Nightfall Party Room Adjacent to One More Page Books, 2200 N. Terry Irving Westmoreland Street, #101, Arlington, VA In the spirit of the Noir at the Bar events taking place nationwide, Fall for the Book joins One More Page Books in hosting an after-hours Dana King party with area writers working at the darker end of the suspense spectrum, not just edge-of-your seat thrilling but unnervingly edgy as well. Participants include Nik Korpon Bruce Holsinger, author of A Burnable Book; Terry Irving, author of Courier; Dana King, whose A Small Sacrifice is currently a finalist for this year’s Shamus Laura Ellen Scott Awards; Nik Korpon, author of Stay God, Sweet Angel; Elisa Nader, whose Escape From Eden was a finalist for the 2014 Thriller Awards; Laura Ellen Scott, Kieran Shea author of Death Wish-ing; Kieran Shea, author of Koko Takes a Holiday; and Steve Weddle, author of Country Hardball. E.A. Aymar, author of I’ll Sleep When Steve Weddle You’re Dead, emcees the evening’s entertainment. Also at your service: Professor Cocktail, aka David J. Montgomery, author of Zombie Horde and the E. A. Aymar forthcoming Classic Cocktails, among other bar guides. David J. Montgomery 12:30 p.m. Falling for the Story Reading Sherwood Center Rehearsal Room, 3740 Old Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA A hallmark of each year’s festival, the annual Falling for the Story event features the literary stars of tomorrow—student writers sharing original works published in Falling for the Story, Northern Virginia Writing Project’s yearly anthology of exemplary work from local elementary, middle, and high schools, published by Fall for the Book. Sponsored by the Northern Virginia Writing Project. 1:30 p.m. Children’s Authors Jamey Long and Katrina Moore Sherwood Center Rehearsal Room, 3740 Old Lee Highway, Fairfax VA Long is the author of the popular Possum’s History and Holiday series, whose recent titles include A Possum’s Expedition: Lewis & Clark and Sacagawea. Moore’s debut book is So Long Gnop-Jiye, a heartwarming story about a child’s journey from China to the United States. Katrina Moore 2 p.m. Retail Historian Michael Lisicky Old Town Hall, 3999 University Drive, Fairfax, VA Drawing on his own personal archive of newspaper Michael Lisicky stories about department stores—perhaps the largest such resource in the country—Lisicky has already penned books about Gimbels, Wanamaker’s, Hutzler’s, and more, and now he turns his attention to Woodward & Lothrop: A Store Worthy of the Nation’s Capital— 7 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 continued featuring interviews with store insiders, vintage photographs, and time-tested recipes. Sponsored by the Fairfax Museum and Visitor Center. Virginia Romance Writers: Unconventional Love Madeline Iva Historical Novelist Pamela Bauer Mueller Reston Regional Library, 11925 Bowman Towne Drive, Reston, VA The three-time Georgia Author of the Year has already earned three more awards for her latest historical novel, Lady Unveiled: Catherine Greene Miller, 1755-1814. The dramatic story of how the wife Pamela Bauer of Revolutionary War General Mueller Nathanael Greene became instrumental in the invention of the cotton gin won the regional literature category at the 2014 Great Southeast Book Festival, the Wild Care category at the San Francisco Book Festival, and the Young Adult category at the New York Book Festival. Novelist Carla Buckley Rust Library, 380 Old Waterford Road NW, Leesburg, VA The author of The Things That Keep Us Here, a Thriller Carla Buckley Award finalist, and Invisible returns with The Deepest Secret, about a mother who will go to all lengths necessary to protect a son afflicted with a rare medical condition. People called it “smart and thrilling” and Publisher’s Weekly gave it a starred review for its “intricate suspense and surprise of a thriller, along with rich characterizations and nuanced writing.” Sponsored by the Loudoun County Public Library. 8 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 continued Laura Kaye Tracey Livesay Carl Riden Shara Lanel Sherwood Center Art Room, 3740 Old Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA The first of two discussions hosted in conjunction with the local chapter of Romance Writers of America explores what romance suggests about a changing America. Panelists include Madeline Iva, whose novella “Sexsomnia” appears in Lady Smut’s Book of Dark Desires; Laura Kaye, author of a dozen books of paranormal romance and romantic suspense, including Hard to Hold on To; Tracey Livesay, author of The Tycoon’s Socialite Bride; and Carl Riden, professor of sociology at Longwood University and author of Reading Women’s Lives: An Introduction to Women’s Studies. Moderated by Shara Lanel, whose ten novels include Icy Seduction. 3 p.m. The Craft of Suspense The Writer’s Center, 4508 Walsh Street, Bethesda, MD James Grady How do writers create suspense in their novels? Why are we compelled to stay up late at night, turning pages? Going beyond clichéd plotlines—the smoking gun and the ticking bomb—writers Allison Leotta create suspense through structure, language, characters, and places. Four acclaimed suspense writers discuss the craft A. X. Ahamd that underlies their work: James Grady, Mad Dogs; Bethanne Patrick Allison Leotta, Speak of the 3:30 p.m. Devil; Ed Falco, Toughs; and A.X. Ahmad, The Last Taxi Ride. The discussion will be moderated by Bethanne Patrick. The Secrets of Self-Publishing Sherwood Center Rehearsal Room, 3740 Old Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA Mary Buford Hitz Get a detailed look inside the world of self-publishing: the mechanics, pros, cons, and challenges Elaine C. Jean Paul N. Jean of producing and marketing your book. Panelists include Mary Buford Hitz, author of Riding to Camille: A Novel of Love and Perseverance through One of Virginia’s Most Devastating Storms; Elaine C. Jean and Paul N. Jean, author and photographer of Carpe Weekend: 52 Day Trips and Adventures near Washington, DC; and Nevin Martell, author of Freak Nevin Martell Show without a Tent: Swimming with Piranhas, Getting Stoned in Fiji and Other Family Vacations. Moderated by Meredith Maslich, CEO of Possibilities Meredith Maslich Publishing Company. Novelist Ronna Wineberg Jewish Community Center of Northern Virginia, 8900 Little River Turnpike, Fairfax, VA Wineberg is the author of the collection Second Language—winner of the New Rivers Press Many Voices Project Literary Competition and runner-up for the 2006 Reform Judaism Prize for Jewish Fiction—and the novel On Bittersweet Place, published by Northern Virginia-based Relegation Books and following the coming of age of a young Russian Jew whose family flees their homeland in the Ukraine after the October Revolution. fall for the book festival 2014 Virginia Romance Writers: From Sweet to Heat Gail Barrett Lori Dillon Terri Osburn Pamela Palmer Pamela Palmer Hope Ramsay Sherwood Center Art Room, 3740 Old Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA The second discussion hosted in conjunction with the local chapter of Romance Writers of America examines how romance authors deal with love and lust on the page. Panelists include Gail Barrett, winner of RWA’s Golden Heart Award and author of thirteen novels, most recently A Kiss to Die For and Seduced by His Target; Alexa Day, whose debut Illicit Impulse was a finalist in the erotica category for the 2014 EPIC E-Book awards; Lori Dillon, whose novel Fire of the Dragon was an Amazon Time Travel Romance bestseller; Terri Osburn, a Golden Heart finalist who writes the Anchor Island contemporary romance series; Pamela Palmer, the author of sixteen novels including both the Vamp City and Feral Warriors series; and Hope Ramsay, twotime Golden Heart finalist and author most recently of Inn at Last Chance. 4:30 p.m. Young Adult Books: Now and Then One More Page Books, 2200 N. Westmoreland Street, #101, Arlington, VA Award-winning writers of YA fiction discuss their recent works, their readers, and the growing YA market—and tackle that persistent question of whether adults should be reading YA at all. Gigi Amateau’s last novel, Come August, Come Freedom: The Bellows, the Gallows, and the Black General Gabriel, won the 2013 Library of Virginia www.fallforthebook.org People’s Choice Award and was named a 2013 Jefferson Cup Honor Book. Edwin Fontanez draws on magical realism to craft Gigi Amateau his novel The Illuminated Forest, about a 12-year-old returning to his grandparents’ island in the wake of family tragedy. Kristen Lippert-Martin’s debut novel, Tabula Rasa, is a sci-fi thriller Edwin Fontanez about a young girl fighting to retain snatches of her past after a memory elimination procedure. Meg Medina received the 2013 CYBILS fiction award and the Kristen LippertMartin 2014 Pura Belpré Author Award for her newest young adult novel, Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass. And A.B. Westrick’s Brotherhood—the story of a Meg Medina young boy’s coming of age during Post-Civil War Reconstruction—is an ALA/YALSA 2014 Best Book for Young Adults, won the NCSS 2014 A. B. Westrick Notable Trade Book Award, and was named a Jane Addams 2014 honor book for older readers. 6:30 p.m. Virginia Opera Outreach Director Glenn Winters Sherwood Center Main Hall, 3740 Old Lee Highway, Fairfax, VA As part of Virginia’s Operation Opera—the largest opera education program in America— Winters, Virginia Opera’s community outreach musical director and author of The Opera Zoo: Singers, Composers, and Other Primates, offers enhanced perspectives on this extraordinary art form for both long-time enthusiasts and firsttime attendees. Sponsored by the City of Fairfax Commission on the Arts. Poet Linda Hogan Busboys and Poets, 1025 5th Street, NW, Washington, DC Split This Rock, the DC-based organization that calls poets to a greater role in public life and Linda Hogan fosters a national network of socially engaged poets, hosts Chickasaw poet Hogan for a reading and discussion of her work, including poems from her latest collection, Dark. Sweet. New and Selected Poems. Please note that this is a ticketed event: $5 per person, with proceeds benefitting Split This Rock. 5:00 p.m. Novelist Christina Baker Kline Sherwood Center Main Hall, 3740 Old Lee Hwy, Fairfax, VA The author of five novels, Kline discusses her #1 New York Times bestseller, the Depression-era Orphan Train, a powerful tale of upheaval and resilience about a young Irish immigrant who, as a child, is sent away from New York on a train that regularly transported unwanted and abandoned children from the East Coast to the farmlands of the Midwest. Kirkus called the book a “dramatic, emotional story from a neglected corner of American history,” and Publisher’s Weekly praised it as “a heartfelt page-turner.” Sponsored by the Fairfax Library Foundation. 9 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 Noon Short Story Writer Kevin Clouther Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Clouther, a creative writing professor at Stony Brook Kevin Clouther University and at Johns Hopkins, shares a story from his debut collection, We Were Flying to Chicago—which prompted Booklist to call him “an ‘old’ talent—meaning, his sophistication in treatment and technique and his wise observations of the human condition have the feel of an author who has the experience of several story collections behind him.” 1:30 p.m. Novelist Alan Michael Parker Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Parker, a professor at Davidson College and winner of the North Carolina Book Award, among other honors, offers 99 linked stories about disappearing townsfolk in his latest book, The Committee on Town Happiness, which Pulitzer Prize winner Robert Olen Butler praised as “smart and funny and oddly touching and ravishingly beautiful.” Alan Michael Parker 2:15 p.m. Architect and Novelist Charles Belfoure Charles Belfoure 10 Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, 4210 Roberts Road, Fairfax, VA Belfoure’s The Paris Architect— TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 continued named a “must-read” by the New York Post—details the work of a gentile architect devising hiding places for Jews in occupied Paris during World War II. Sponsored by Osher Lifelong Learning Institute. her World War II trilogy with Across a War-Tossed Sea, the tale of two London boys who escape the Blitz by travelling to Virginia—only to find that the war has crossed the Atlantic as well, with U-boats just off the coast and Nazi POWS right around the corner. 3 p.m. Medical Ethicist Sigrid Fry-Revere Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza The founder and president of the Center for Ethical Solutions, Sigrid Fry-Revere who has taught bioethics and law at the University of Virginia and George Mason University, became the first Westerner to witness firsthand Iran’s organ procurement system. In The Kidney Sellers: A Journey of Discovery in Iran, she delves deep into Iranian culture to examine the medical ethics of compensating organ donors. Young Adult Novelists L.M. Elliott and Kathryn Erskine Robinson High School, 5035 Sideburn Road, Fairfax, VA Erskine, whose novel Mockingbird won the National Book Award and whose last novel Seeing Red recently earned an honorable mention for the Library of Virginia’s 2014 Literary Awards, steps back to the Middle Ages for her newest book, The Badger Knight, about 13-year old boy who runs off to battle to prove he’s a man. Elliott, author of Under A War-Torn Sky and A Troubled Peace, completes 4:30 p.m. Nonfiction Writer Angie Chuang Mason Global Center Ballroom Chuang, a professor of journalism at the American Angie Chuang University School of Communication, took on a daunting assignment in the weeks after the 9/11 terrorist attacks: “find the human face of the country we’re about to bomb.” Her five-year journey into the lives of the Shirzai family from Afghanistan also leads her into an examination of her own family of immigrants from Taiwan, their history and their troubled place in the shadow of the American Dream. Sponsored by INTO Mason. Poet Linda Hogan L. M. Elliott Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza The Chickasaw poet, former Writer in Residence for The Chickasaw Nation, and Professor Emerita from the University of Colorado shares selections from her work, including poems from her latest collection, Dark. Sweet. New and Selected Poems. Sponsored by Split This Rock. 6 p.m. Novelists—and Twins!—Richard and Robert Bausch Kathryn Erskine Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Fall for the Book is pleased to host a very rare joint reading by undoubtedly the most famous writing fall for the book festival 2014 twins in the nation. Richard Bausch—winner of the PEN/ Malamud Award, the Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Richard Bausch and the Rea Award for the Short Story and a former Mason MFA professor—reads from his new novel Before, During, After, the tale of a troubled love affair amidst the backdrop of the 9/11 attacks. Robert Bausch— winner of the John Dos Passos Award in Literature and a longtime professor at Northern Virginia Community Robert Bausch College—samples his forthcoming novel Far as the Eye Can See, which explores another relationship in the aftermath of national tragedy: a white man and a mixed-race woman struggling to find some shared humanity in the years after the U.S. Civil War. 7 p.m. Biographer Marc Leepson Rust Library, 380 Old Waterford Road NW, Leesburg, VA The prolific biographer and historian, who has Marc Leepson written about the Marquis de Lafayette, Confederate General Jubal Early’s march on Washington, Monticello, and the history of the American Flag, will read and discuss his latest work, What So Proudly We Hailed: Francis Scott Key, A Life, the first biography of the author of “The Star-Spangled Banner” in more than seventy-five years. Sponsored by the Loudoun County Public Library. www.fallforthebook.org 7:30 p.m. MARY ROBERTS RINEHART AWARD PRESENTATION: Eula Biss Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Eula Biss will receive this year’s Mary Roberts Rinehart Award, presented each year to a woman writer specializing in nonfiction; the award commemorates the life and work of Rinehart, who for 45 years prior to her death in 1958 was one of America’s most popular writers. Biss is the author most recently of On Immunity: An Inoculation, which “investigates the metaphors and myths surrounding our conception of immunity and its implications for the individual and the social body” and tackles the question “Why do we fear vaccines?” Previous books include The Balloonists and Notes from No Man’s Land: American Essays, which received the Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize and won the 2009 National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism. Sponsored by the Mary Roberts Rinehart Foundation. 7:30 p.m. Poets Karla Kelsey and Brian Teare Research Building I, Room 163 Kelsey is the author of four books of poetry: Knowledge, Forms, The Aviary; Iteration Nets; and A Conjoined Book, which continues the lyric investigation of her first two books. Teare is the author of four critically acclaimed books as well: The Room Where I Was Born, Sight Map, the Lambda Award-winning Pleasure, and Companion Grasses, one of Slate’s best poetry books of 2013 and a finalist for the Kingsley Tufts Award. Sponsored by Mason’s Creative Writing Program. 10:30 a.m. Historian Peter Stearns Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Editor-in-chief of The Journal of Social History since 1967, professor of history at George Mason University since 2000, and former Mason provost, Stearns has authored or edited more than 125 books, most recently Peace in World History, in which he examines how societies throughout history have sought peace. Sponsored by Mason’s Department of History and Art History. Peter Stearns Noon Historian Alan Rems Alan Rems Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Rems was selected as the Author of the Year by the U.S. Naval Institute in 2008 for his article about the mysterious death of a Marine general in the South Pacific in 1943. The research he did for that article eventually led him to his first book, South Pacific Cauldron: World War II’s Great Forgotten Battlegrounds. Sponsored by Mason’s Department of History and Art History. Events take place in various buildings on George Mason University’s Fairfax Campus, 4400 University Dr., Fairfax, Va., except where otherwise indicated. All events are free, except where noted. Download the FftB app to build your personal schedule of event favorites! 11 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 continued Noon Historian Denise A. Spellberg Research Hall, Room 163 In Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an: Islam and the Founders, Spellburg, a professor of history and Middle Eastern studies at the University of Texas at Austin, reveals how Jefferson’s interest in Islam played a pivotal role in the development of the United States—with Jefferson drawing upon Enlightenment ideas about the toleration of Muslims to fashion a practical foundation for governance in America. Sponsored by Mason’s Ali Vural Ak Center for Global Islamic Studies. 1:30 p.m. Better Said Than Done: A Panel Discussion Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Members of the storytelling troupe Better Said Than Done, performing Thursday, September 18, at the Auld Shebeen in downtown Fairfax, offer a behind-the-scenes glimpse of their work with “Living to Tell about It: A Panel Discussion on the Art of True, Personal Storytelling.” Moderated by Shawn Westfall, the panel includes storytellers David Supley Foxworth, Jessica Piscitelli Robinson, and Ellouise Schoettler. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 continued a senior military intelligence officer, combat veteran of Afghanistan, and Foreign Service officer for the U.S. Department of State—informs his new book, Seriously Not All Right: Five Wars in Ten Years, a work that is part military and diplomatic memoir, and part story of personal redemption and service after service. Everyone Is Gay Founders Dannielle Owens-Reid and Kristin Russo Research Hall, Room 163 Begun as an advice website with an emphasis on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer/ questioning (LGBTQ) youth, Everyone Is Gay promotes equality and peer advocacy, provides outreach to examine how LGBTQ issues intersect with other communities, and utilizes laughter, honesty, and dialogue as tools toward creating a better. In their latest work, This Is A Book for Parents of Gay Kids, Owens-Reid and Russo draw on their work with Everyone Is Gay and rely on an accessible Q&A format to offer a go-to resource for parents hoping to communicate better with their gay children. Sponsored by Mason’s LGBTQ Resources. Dannielle Owens-Reid and Kristin Russo 4:30 p.m. 3 p.m. Nonfiction Writer Ron Capps Ron Capps 12 Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Capps’ quarter-century of work for the U.S. government—as Poetic and Intellectual Freedom: A Panel Discussion Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza The Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here is a literary and visual arts project with cultural festivals planned for January–March 2016 at George Mason University and throughout the area. Exhibits, readings, films, and numerous interactive public programs will commemorate the 2007 bombing of Baghdad’s historic bookselling street. In advance of that project, panelists draw on their own experiences to speak about the value of a free exchange of ideas and knowledge. Panelists include Elliott Colla, author of Baghdad Central and director of Arabic and Islamic Studies at Georgetown University; Sumaiya Hamdani, Sumaiya Hamdani professor of Middle Eastern Studies at George Mason University; Sarah Browning, director of Split This Rock; Zein ElAmine of Maryland’s Young Scholars Program and assistant director of the Jimenez-Porter Writers’ House at the University of Maryland; and Mousa Al-Nasseri, a merchant from AlMutanabbi Street in Baghdad, Iraq. The panel will be moderated by Helen Frederick and Terry P. Scott. Novelist Porochista Khakpour Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Iranian-American critic and novelist Khakpour, author of Sons and Other Flammable Objects, delivers a bold fabulist novel, The Last Illusion, about a feral boy coming of age in New York, based on a legend from the medieval Persian epic The Shahnameh, the Book of Kings. Porochista Khakpour Folklorist Lisa Gabbert Research Building I, Room 163 Gabbert’s latest book, Winter Carnival in a Western Town: Identity, Change, and the Good Lisa Gabbert of the Community, examines the questions surrounding the McCall, Idaho, winter carnival: How does a fall for the book festival 2014 community define itself to others—and to itself? How do civic celebrations connect with tradition and look toward the future? Where and how do culture and commerce meet and interact? Still Writing—a meditation on the artistic process and searching look at her own creative life—is both a lodestar for aspiring scribes and an eloquent memoir of the writing life. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. Mystery Writers of America: Murder & More Literary Scholar Linda Janet Holmes Harris Theatre Four area mystery writers discuss their newest books and the mystery genre: E.A. Aymar, Mason alumnus and author of I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead; Barb Goffman Barb Goffman, Macavity Award-winning short story writer with her debut collection Don’t Get Mad, Get Even; Mary Miley, historian and author of the Roaring Twenties Mary Miley mystery series, including The Impersonator, winner of the 2012 Mystery Writers of America Best First Crime Novel award, Kathryn and the soon-to-be-released O’Sullivan Silent Murders; and Kathryn O’Sullivan, a playwright and professor at Northern Virginia Community College, whose mystery debut Foal Play won Donna Andrews the Malice Domestic Best First Traditional Mystery Novel Competition. Moderated by Donna Andrews, Agatha, Anthony, Barry, and Lefty Award-winning author of the Meg Langslow series, most recently including The Good, The Bad, and the Emus. Sponsored by the Mid-Atlantic Chapter of Mystery Writers of America. E. A. Aymar Memoirist Dani Shapiro Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Shapiro is the bestselling author of five novels and three memoirs. Her newest memoir Sherwood Regional Library, 2501 Sherwood Hall Lane, Alexandria, VA Linda Janet Holmes The author of A Joyous Revolt: Toni Cade Bambara, Writer and Activist, the first-ever, full-length biography of Bambara, remembers the life and work of this seminal writer and activist and discusses her lasting impact on African American literature and culture. 7:30 p.m. Poet and Essayist Lia Purpura and Novelist Maud Casey Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Lia Purpura Purpura is the author of seven collections of essays, poems, and translations, most recently including the essay collection Rough Likeness, described by Phillip Lopate as “an astonishment—a book to savor, read slowly, smile at, sigh at, and cherish,” and of the forthcoming poetry collection It Shouldn’t Have Been Beautiful. Casey is the Maud Casey author of three novels, The Man Who Walked Away, The Shape of Things to Come, and Genealogy, and a collection of stories, Drastic. Historian Timothy M. Gay George Mason Regional Library, 7001 Little River Turnpike, Annandale, VA The award-winning author of Assignment to Hell: The War against Nazi Germany Timothy M. Gay with Correspondents Walter Cronkite, Andy Rooney, A.J. Liebling, Homer Bigart, and Hal Boyle shifts his attention to another tense tale from World War II: Savage Will: The Daring Escape of Americans Trapped behind Nazi Lines recounts the harrowing ordeal and heroic rescue of American medics and nurses whose plane crashed in Albania in 1943. Sponsored by the Friends of the George Mason Regional Library. 7:30 p.m. Sophie Hannah Debuts New Agatha Christie Harris Theatre The internationally bestselling author of nine psychological thrillers—from Little Face to The Telling Error (recently published in the UK)— makes history this fall for writing the first-ever new Agatha Christie novel not penned by Christie herself. Fully authorized by the Christie estate, The Monogram Murders features the return of iconic detective Hercule Poirot, the Belgian detective introduced to the world in 1920’s The Mysterious Affair at Styles. It has been 38 years since Agatha Christie’s last novel, Sleeping Murder, was published in 1976 and 39 years since the final Poirot, Curtain. Hannah appears the day after Christie’s 124th birthday. Let there be cake! Sponsored by the Mid-Atlantic Chapter of Mystery Writers of America. Dani Shapiro www.fallforthebook.org 13 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 Noon Nonfiction Writer Guillermo Fesser Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza In 2002, Spanish television and Guillermo Fesser radio journalist Fesser quit his morning talk show—and its million-plus listeners—for a sabbatical year in Rhinebeck, NY. One Hundred Miles from Manhattan, the memoir of his life in Rhinebeck, offers not just an affectionate portrait of small town America but also a wry outsider’s view of the larger country and its often quirky culture. 1:30 p.m. Sociologist Earl Smith Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Rubin Distinguished Professor Earl Smith of American Ethnic Studies at Wake Forest University, Smith has written eight books, addressing issues from race relations, social stratification, violence against women, and family dynamics to globalization and sports. His most recent book Race, Sport, and the American Dream, is the culmination of a long-term research project investigating the scope and consequences of the deepening relationship between African American males and the world of sports. 2:15 p.m. Historian Jane Hampton Cook Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, 4210 Roberts Road, Fairfax, VA On the heels of last year’s 14 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 continued American Phoenix, about John Quincy and Louisa Adams and the War of 1812, this popular historian returns to that war and one of its longest-lasting legacies in her new book America’s Star-Spangled Story: Celebrating 200 years of the National Anthem, 1814-2014. Sponsored by Osher Lifelong Learning Institute. 3 p.m. Publishing Alternatives: A Panel Discussion Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza P.J. Devlin Today’s world offers writers myriad fresh opportunities outside of traditional publishing ventures—and three authors take the stage to share their Jenny Drummey experiences pursuing some of those opportunities. P.J. Devlin has published her first book, Wissahickon Souls: A Wissahickon Creek Story, set in 19th-century Philadelphia, through Possibilities Publishing, which positions itself “between traditional publishing and self-publishing.” Jenny Drummey’s Unrequited, which promises that “memories are Amanda Holmes Duffy better with the Zimblist Holistic Recliner,” was published by Rebel ePublishers, specializing in ebooks and print-on-demand. And Amanda Holmes Duffy’s I Know Where I Am When I’m Falling was published by Oak Tree Press, whose mission is to “design, produce, distribute, and promote excellent books by authors largely ignored or abandoned by corporate publishing conglomerates.” Call and Response Gallery Talk 2nd Floor Conference Room, Fenwick Library Mason professors Susan Tichy and Helen Frederick moderate a panel featuring contributors to the Call and Response Collaborative Exhibition “In 24 hours, everywhere the dawn rises again,” on view throughout September in the Fenwick Gallery, Fenwick Library. Sociologist James Joseph Dean Research Building I, Room 163 In Straights: Heterosexuality in a Post-Closeted Culture, Dean, a professor of sociology at Sonoma State University, explores how straight James Joseph Dean Americans make sense of their sexual and gendered selves in a culture that is more accepting of lesbians and gay men, that has seen a proliferation of LGBTQ media representation, and that has witnessed the attainment of a range of legal rights for samesex couples. Sponsored by Mason’s Women and Gender Studies Program. 4:30 p.m. Novelist Jenny Offill Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Offill has followed Last Things—a New York Times Notable Book of the Year and Jenny Offill a finalist for the L.A. Times First Book Award—with Dept. of Speculation, an unconventionally told tale that offers a portrait of a marriage and a rumination of the mysteries of intimacy, trust, and faith. Fairfax Prizewinning author Michael Cunningham has Jane Hampton Cook fall for the book festival 2014 said that “Jenny Offill’s Dept. of Speculation resembles no book I’ve read before. If I tell you that it’s funny, and moving, and true; that it’s as compact and mysterious as a neutron; that it tells a profound story of love and parenthood while invoking (among others) Keats, Kafka, Einstein, Russian cosmonauts, and advice for the housewife of 1896, will you please simply believe me, and read it?” 6 p.m. Mason MFA Alumni Reading Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Lisa Ampleman Alumni of Mason’s MFA program in creative writing share readings from their recently published works. Participants include Lisa Ampleman, author of the poetry collection Full Cry; which Matt Burriesci won the Stevens Manuscript Competition; Matt Burriesci, author of the forthcoming Alyson Foster novel Nonprofit and the forthcoming memoir Dead White Guys: A Father, His Daughter, and the Great Books of the Western World; and Alyson Foster, author of the novel God Is an Astronaut. 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Real Life 101: “Overwhelmed” Founders Hall, George Mason University, 3351 Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA Brigid Schulte The title of Brigid Schulte’s new book—Overwhelmed: Work, Love, and Play When No One Has the Time—will likely resonate with the experience of many adults, especially working parents, in today’s fast-paced world. What factors lie at the root of this issue? And what Todd Kashdan Beth Cabrera moves can we make to ease our seemingly overtaxed schedules? Schulte, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist for the Washington Post, joins industrial and organizational psychologist Beth Cabrera, Mason professor Todd Kashdan, author of The Upside of Your Dark Side: Why Being Your Whole Self—Not Just Your “Good” Self—Drives Melissa Milkie Success and Fulfillment, and sociologist Melissa Milkie, co-author of Changing Rhythms of American Family Life, for a panel discussion on this pressing and pervasive problem. Sponsored by Burke & Herbert Bank. FAIRFAX PRIZE PRESENTATION: Richard Russo Harris Theatre Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Richard Russo accepts the 2014 Fairfax Prize, which honors outstanding literary achievement and celebrates contributions to the larger literary landscape, including generously giving personal time and talents to the development of literature and literary endeavors; mentoring younger writers; and/ or giving special service to the community of writers. Russo is the author of seven novels—including 2001’s Pulitzer Prizewinning Empire Falls and his most recent book, Elsewhere—and one collection of short stories. Sponsored by the Fairfax Library Foundation. 7:30 p.m. Poet Peter Streckfus Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts The award-winning poet and Mason professor shares Peter Streckfus selections of his work, including poems from his two collections: Errings, winner of Fordham University Press’s 2013 POL Editor’s Prize, and The Cuckoo, winner of the Yale Series of Younger Poets competition in 2003. Events take place in various buildings on George Mason University’s Fairfax Campus, 4400 University Dr., Fairfax, Va., except where otherwise indicated. All events are free, except where noted. Download the FftB app to build your personal schedule of event favorites! www.fallforthebook.org 15 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 Noon Historian Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Spanning 300 years of Roxanne DunbarOrtiz history and focusing on the descendants of the fifteen million people who originally inhabited this land, DunbarOrtiz’s An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States challenges the founding myth of the country and significantly reframes how we view our past. Sponsored by Mason’s Office of Diversity, Inclusion, and Multicultural Education. 1:30 p.m. Comics Scholar Sheena Howard Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Howard, a professor in the Sheena Howard Department of Communication and Journalism at Rider University in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, is the author of Black Queer Identity Matrix: Towards an Integrated Queer of Color Framework and of Black Comics: Politics and Race of Representation, which recently won the Will Eisner Award for Best Scholarly/Academic Work at the 2014 Comic-Con International. Sponsored by Mason’s African and African American Studies. Anthropologist Amy Shuman The HUB, Front Ballroom The classical heroic narratives seem to fail us in the Amy Shuman contemporary world and instead, more often, people acclaimed for their heroism refuse the label. In some cases, emerging 16 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 continued from a traumatic, violent situation as a hero simply doesn’t seem possible, and in others people feel that their responses to danger or trauma are ordinary human, rather than heroic, acts. Based on her work with people applying for political asylum in the U.S. and the U.K, Shuman, author of Other People’s Stories: Entitlement Claims and the Critique of Empathy, will discuss how the study of folklore can provide significant understandings of the political asylum experience. Sponsored by Mason’s Women and Gender Studies. 3 p.m. Women and Gender Studies Scholar Wendy S. Hesford The HUB, Front Ballroom In her latest book, Spectacular Rhetorics: Human Rights Visions, Recognitions, Feminisms, Hesford, a Wendy S. Hesford professor of English at The Ohio State University, explores the use of visual images and rhetoric in documentary films, photography, and theater to construct certain bodies, populations, and nations as victims for Western audiences and to incorporate them into human rights discourses on topics including torture and unlawful detention, ethnic genocide, and rape as a means of warfare, migration, and the trafficking of women and children, the global sex trade, and child labor. Sponsored by Mason’s Women and Gender Studies Program. Theatre Critic W. B. Worthen Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Professor in the Department W. B. Worthen of Theatre at Barnard College, the acclaimed author of several books on drama and performance theory has most recently written Shakespeare Performance Studies, which explores the interfaces between the origins of Shakespeare’s writing as literature and as theatre; the modes of engagement with Shakespeare’s plays for readers and spectators; and the function of changing performance technologies on our knowledge of Shakespeare. contemporary novelist who may be writing a sequel to Sherwood Anderson’s classic Winesburg, Ohio, and the second following the hero of Anderson’s own book as he arrives in Chicago at the turn of the previous century— each man’s story offering a counterpoint to the other and together providing a portrait of America then and now. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. Psychologist Todd Kashdan Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Mason psychology professor Todd Kashdan Kashdan discusses his latest book, The Upside of Your Dark Side: Why Being Your Whole Self—Not Just Your “Good” Self—Drives Success and Fulfillment, which draws on years of scientific research and a wide array of real-life examples including sports, the military, parenting, education, romance, business, and more to show how anger fuels creativity, guilt sparks improvement, self-doubt enhances performance, selfishness increases courage, and accessing the full range of emotions and behavior make us better suited for whatever situations we face. A reception precedes the event at 3:30 p.m. Sponsored by Mason’s Center for the Advancement of Well-Being. 4:30 p.m. Keith Donohue Johnson Center Meeting Room D The bestselling author of The Stolen Child, The Angels of Destruction, and Centuries of June returns with his eagerly awaited fourth novel, The Boy Who Drew Monsters, about a 10-year-old boy trapped inside his own world, whose drawings blur the lines between fantasy and reality—for himself and everyone around him. Master of Fine Arts Fellows Reading Research Building I, Room 163 Students in Mason’s nationally ranked MFA program—including poets Anya Creightney and Alyssa Dandrea; fiction writer Ah-reum Han; and nonfiction writer Alexandra Ghaly— share samples of the work that helped them win fellowships for their final year of graduate school. Sponsored by Mason’s Creative Writing Program. Haute Cuisine at the Hylton Novelist Porter Shreve Porter Shreve Novelist Keith Donohue Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Center Plaza Shreve’s latest work, The End of the Book, offers two tales in alternating chapters: the first about an aspiring fall for the book festival 2014 Hylton Performing Arts Center, George Mason University, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas, VA Fall for the Book hosts its second annual celebration of fine food, superior drink, and the various stories behind the scenes of every aspect from farm to table—and even beyond. A 6:15 p.m. food writing workshop with Jason Shriner www.fallforthebook.org of the Aubergine Chef, an online baking and pastry blog, is followed by a 7 p.m. reading by Laura Florand, international bestselling and award-winning author of the Amour et Chocolat series, including The Chocolate Thief, The Chocolate Kiss, and more. At 7:30 p.m., individual stations open for tastings, demonstrations, and discussions by a variety of chefs and food celebrities including: Robert Kingsbury of Kingsbury Chocolate and Confections, distributed throughout Northern Virginia and DC; Dave Lefeve of The Cock and Bowl in Occoquan, VA, making recipes included in his wife Claudia Lefeve’s novels; Belinda Miller, whose children’s fantasy novel Phillip’s Quest, Book I: Winterfrost features whimsical recipes; Miguel Pires, owner of Zandra’s Taqueria in Manassas, VA; Amy Riolo, author of an award-winning series of Mediterranean cookbooks and star of the syndicated “Culture of Cuisine” videos; Jason Shriner of the Aubergine Chef; Joe Yonan, Washington Post food and travel editor and author most recently of Eat Your Vegetables: Bold Recipes for the Single Cook; and representatives of Heritage Brewing Company in Manassas. Also appearing are the recently appointed Prince William County Poet Laureates Robert Scott and Alexandra “Zan” Hailey, talking about their work and community projects. Sponsored by Write by the Rails, the Prince William Chapter of the Virginia Writers Club. David Supley Foxworth, Karen Lee, Pierce McManus, Miriam Nadel, and Ellouise Schoettler—promising true and unforgettable tales from each teller’s own experiences. Mystery Writers A.X. Ahmad and Monica Bhide One More Page Books, 2200 N. Westmoreland Street, #101, Arlington, VA A. X. Ahmad After debuting The Caretaker at One More Page at our last festival, Ahmad returns this year with a second novel featuring an Indian Army officer turned amatuer sleuth, The Last Taxi Ride—named by Bethanne Patrick in Monica Bhide Washingtonian as one of the summer’s top books. Bhide—an award-winning cookbook author and expert on Indian cuisine—tries her hand at another genre with the publication of her first short story in the anthology Singapore Noir. 7:30 p.m. Poet Mary Szybist 7 p.m. Better Said Than Done: An Evening of Storytelling The Auld Shebeen, 3971 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, VA Join members of the storytelling troupe Better Said Than Done—the “best performing arts company” by Virginia Living Magazine—for a night of “Reading, Writing, and Art: Stories about the Person, Process, and Performance of Art.” Hosted by founder Jessica Piscitelli Robinson, the evening’s entertainment features storytellers Richard Barr, Ann Cavazos Chen, Mary Szybist Research Building I, Room 163 Szybist’s first book, Granted, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award, and her second, Incarnadine, won the 2013 National Book Award for Poetry—with the award committee describing the collection as “a religious book for nonbelievers, or a book of necessary doubts for the faithful.” 17 FESTIVAL AT-A-GLANCE (By Genre & Topic) Here you’ll find Fall for the Book’s many events organized by category for greater ease in planning. Find your favorite genre or subject, then find out who will be at this year’s Fall for the Book to speak on that topic or represent that genre. Complete information is listed in the full calendar. All events below take place Thursday-Thursday, September 11-18. AWARD PRESENTATIONS Friday — Mason Award presentation to Jodi Picoult Saturday — Busboys and Poets Award Presentation to Martín Espada Monday — Mary Roberts Rinehart Award presentation to Eula Biss Wednesday — Fairfax Prize Presentation to Richard Russo FICTION Thursday, Sept. 11 — Roxana Robinson, Sparta. Friday — Catherine Bell, Rush of Shadows; Defying Gravity Panel with Elizabeth Word Gutting, Veronica Li, Mary Claire Mahaney, Judith O’Neill, Valerie O. Patterson, and Sally Toner; Nathan Leslie, Sibs; Jodi Picoult, Leaving Time; Pat Spears, Dream Chaser. Saturday — Louis Bayard, Roosevelt’s Beast; Miranda Beverly-Whittemore, Bittersweet; Susan Coll, The Stager; Ed Falco, Toughs; Roxane Gay, An Untamed State; Bret Anthony Johnston, Remember Me Like This; Allegra Jordan, The End of Innocence; Rebecca Lee, Bobcat; Neely Tucker, The Ways of the Dead; Laura van den Berg, The Isle of Youth; Ronna Wineberg, On Bittersweet Place. Sunday — A.X. Ahmad, The Last Taxi Ride; Gail Barrett, Seduced by His Target; Carla Buckley, The Deepest Secret; Alexa Day, Illicit Impulse; Lori Dillon, Fire of the Dragon; Ed Falco, Toughs; James Grady, Mad Dogs; Mary Buford Hitz, Riding to Camile: A Novel of Love and Perseverance Through One of Virginia’s Most Devastating Storms; Madeline Iva, “Sexsomnia”; Laura Kaye, Hard to Hold on To; Christina Baker Kline, Orphan Train; Shara Lanel, Icy Seduction; Allison Leotta, Speak of the Devil; Tracey Livesay, The Tycoon’s Socialite Bride; Pamela Bauer Mueller, Lady Unveiled: Catherine Greene Miller, 1755-1814; Terri Osburn, 18 Home to Stay; Pamela Palmer, Wulfe Untamed; Hope Ramsay, Inn at Last Chance; Ronna Wineberg, On Bittersweet Place. Monday — Richard Bausch, Before, During, After; Robert Bausch, Far as the Eye Can See; Charles Belfoure, The Paris Architect; Kevin Clouther, We Were Flying to Chicago; Alan Michael Parker, The Committee on Town Happiness. Tuesday — E.A. Aymar, I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead; Maud Casey, The Man Who Walked Away; Elliott Colla, Baghdad Central; Barb Goffman, Don’t Get Mad, Get Even; Sophie Hannah, The Monogram Murders; Mary Miley, The Impersonator; Kathryn O’Sullivan, Foal Play; Porochista Khakpour, The Last Illusion. Wednesday — Matt Burriesci, Nonprofit; P.J. Devlin, Wissahickon Souls: A Wissahickon Creek Story; Jenny Drummey, Unrequited; Amanda Holmes Duffy, I Know Where I Am When I’m Falling; Alyson Foster, God Is An Astronaut; Jenny Offill, Dept. of Speculation; Richard Russo, Elsewhere. Thursday, Sept. 18 — A.X. Ahmad, The Last Taxi Ride; Monica Bhide, Singapore Noir; Keith Donohue, The Boy Who Drew Monsters; Laura Florand, The Chocolate Kiss; Mason MFA Fellow Ah-reum Han; Porter Shreve, The End of the Book. POETRY Friday — Timothy Donnelly, The Cloud Corporation; Dorothea Lasky, Rome; Roger Reeves, King Me. Saturday — Betsy Andrews, The Bottom; Jen Coleman, Psalms for Dogs and Sorcerers; Martin Espada, The Trouble Ball; Kevin McLellan, Before the Door; Anne Lesley Selcer, from A Book of Poems on Beauty. Sunday — Linda Hogan, Dark. Sweet. New and Selected Poems. Monday — Linda Hogan, Dark. Sweet. New and FOLKLORE Tuesday — Lisa Gabbert, Winter Carnival in a Western Town: Identity, Change and the Good of the Community. Saturday — Lydia Denworth, I Can Hear You Whisper: An Intimate Journey through the Science of Sound and Language; Roxane Gay, Bad Feminist. Selected Poems; Karla Kelsey, A Conjoined Book; Brian Teare, Companion Grasses. Thursday, Sept.18 — Amy Shuman, Other People’s Stories: Entitlement Claims and the Critique of Empathy. Tuesday — Lia Purpura, It Shouldn’t Have Been Beautiful. HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY Sunday — Elaine C. Jean and Paul N. Jean, Carpe Weekend: 52 Day Trips and Adventures near Washington, DC; Nevin Martell, Freak Show Without A Tent: Swimming with Piranhas, Getting Stoned in Fiji and Other Family Vacations. Thursday, Sept. 11 — Winston Groom; The Aviators: Eddie Rickenbacker, Jimmy Doolittle, Charles Lindbergh, and the Epic Age of Flight. Monday — Eula Biss, On Immunity: An Inoculation; Angie Chuang, The Four Words for Home. Friday — Tim Grove, A Grizzly in the Mail and Other Adventures in American History. Tuesday — Ron Capps, Seriously Not All Right: Five Wars in Ten Years; Lia Purpura, Rough Likeness; Dani Shapiro, Still Writing. Wednesday — Lisa Ampleman, Full Cry; Peter Streckfus, Errings. Thursday, Sept. 18 — Mason MFA Fellows Anya Creightney and Alyssa Dandrea; Prince William County Poet Laureates Alexandra “Zan” Hailey and Robert Scott; Mary Szybist, Incarnadine. CHILDREN’S AND YOUNG ADULT Friday — Chris Grabenstein, Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library. Sunday — Gigi Amateau, Come August, Come Freedom: The Bellows, The Gallows, and the Black General Gabriel; Falling for the Story reading; Edwin Fontanez, The Illuminated Forest; Kristen Lippert-Martin, Tabula Rasa; Jamey Long, A Possum’s Expedition: Lewis & Clark and Sacagawea; Meg Medina, Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass; Katrina Moore, So Long GnopJiye; A.B. Westrick, Brotherhood. Monday — L.M. Elliott, A Troubled Peace; Kathryn Erskine,The Badger Knight. Sunday — Michael Lisicky, Woodward & Lothrop: A Store Worthy of the Nation’s Capital. Monday — Marc Leepson, What So Proudly We Hailed: Francis Scott Key, A Life. Tuesday — Timothy M. Gay, Savage Will: The Daring Escape of Americans Trapped Behind Nazi Lines; Linda Janet Holmes, A Joyous Revolt: Toni Cade Bambara, Writer and Activist; Alan Rems, South Pacific Cauldron: World War II’s Great Forgotten Battlegrounds; Denise A. Spellberg, Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an: Islam and the Founders; Peter Stearns, Peace in World History. Wednesday — Jane Hampton Cook, America’s Star-Spangled Story: Celebrating 200 years of the National Anthem, 1814-2014. Thursday, Sept. 18 — Belinda Miller, Phillip’s Quest, Book I: Winterfrost. Thursday, Sept. 18 — Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States. ART/PERFORMANCE LITERARY CRITICISM Friday — Julia Jarcho, Grimly Handsome. Saturday — Maureen Corrigan, So We Read On: How The Great Gatsby Came to Be and Why It Endures. Sunday — Glenn Winters, The Opera Zoo. Wednesday — Call and Response Gallery Talk. COOKING/FOOD Thursday, Sept. 18 — Haute Cuisine at the Hylton with Laura Florand, Alexandra “Zan” Hailey, Robert Kingsbury, Dave and Claudia Lefeve, Belinda Miller, Miguel Pires, Amy Riolo, Robert Scott, Jason Shriner, Joe Yonan, and representatives from Heritage Brewing Company. fall for the book festival 2014 Thursday, Sept. 18 — W. B. Worthen, Shakespeare Performance Studies. MEMOIR AND CREATIVE NONFICTION Thursday, Sept. 11 — Luis Carlos Montalván, Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him; Anna WhistonDonaldson, Rare Bird: A Memoir of Loss and Love. www.fallforthebook.org Wednesday — Matt Burriesci, Dead White Guys: A Father, His Daughter, and the Great Books of the Western World; Guillermo Fesser, One Hundred Miles from Manhattan. Thursday, Sept. 18 — Mason MFA Fellow Alexandra Ghaly. PLAYWRITING Friday — Julia Jarcho, Grimly Handsome. POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS [PREVIEW EVENT] Monday, September 8 — Naomi Schaefer Riley, Got Religion?: How Churches, Mosques, and Synagogues Can Bring Young People Back. Saturday — Kate Flora, Death Dealer: How Cops and Cadaver Dogs Brought a Killer to Justice. Monday — Sigrid Fry-Revere, The Kidney Sellers: A Journey of Discovery in Iran. Thursday, Sept. 11 — David Finkel, Thank You For Your Service. Tuesday — Poetic and Intellectual Freedom Panel with Mousa Al-Nasseri, Sarah Browning, Elliott Colla, Zein El-Amine, and Sumaiya Hamdani. Thursday, Sept. 18 — Wendy S. Hesford, Spectacular Rhetorics: Human Rights Visions, Recognitions, Feminisms. PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY Tuesday — Dannielle Owens-Reid and Kristin Russo, Everyone Is Gay. Wednesday — Beth Cabrera; James Joseph Dean, Straights: Heterosexuality in a Post-Closeted Culture; Todd Kashdan, The Upside of Your Dark Side: Why Being Your Whole Self—Not Just Your “Good” Self—Drives Success and Fulfillment; Melissa Milkie, Changing Rhythms of American Family Life; Brigid Schulte, Overwhelmed; Earl Smith, Race, Sport, and the American Dream. Thursday, Sept. 18 — Sheena Howard, Black Comics: Politics and Race of Representation; Todd Kashdan, The Upside of Your Dark Side: Why Being Your Whole Self—Not Just Your “Good” Self— Drives Success and Fulfillment. STORYTELLING Tuesday — Better Said Than Done Panel with David Supley Foxworth, Jessica Piscitelli Robinson, and Ellouise Schoettler. Thursday, Sept. 18 — Better Said Than Done Storytelling with Richard Barr, Ann Cavazos Chen, David Supley Foxworth, Karen Lee, Pierce McManus, Miriam Nadel, Jessica Piscitelli Robinson, and Ellouise Schoettler. SCIENCE Thursday, Sept. 11 — Sam Kean, The Tale of the Dueling Neurosurgeons: The History of the Human Brain as Revealed by True Stories of Trauma, Madness, and Recovery; Carl Zimmer, Evolution: Making Sense of Life. Saturday — Lydia Denworth, I Can Hear You Whisper: An Intimate Journey through the Science of Sound and Language. WRITING AND PUBLISHING Sunday — Self-Publishing Panel with Mary Buford Hitz, Elaine C. Jean and Paul N. Jean, and Nevin Martell. Wednesday — Publishing Alternatives Panel with P.J. Devlin, Jenny Drummey, and Amanda Holmes Duffy. 19 EVENTS THROUGHOUT THE REGION Fairfax The Auld Shebeen Better Said Than Done Storytelling with Richard Barr, Ann Cavazos Chen, David Supley Foxworth, Karen Lee, Pierce McManus, Miriam Nadel, All events below take place away from the Jessica Piscitelli Robinson, and Ellouise Schoettler, Thursday, September 18, 7 p.m. festival’s base at George Mason University’s Fairfax, Virginia campus. Days of the week Jewish Community Center of Northern Virginia Novelist Ronna Wineberg, On Bittersweet Place, correspond to the festival dates: Thursday, Sunday, 3 p.m. September 11–Thursday, September 18, with one The Old Firestation 3 preview event on Monday, September 8. Check Poets Timothy Donnelly, Dorothea Lasky, and Roger out the full listing in this program for complete Reeves, Friday, 8 p.m. information. Old Town Hall VIRGINIA Retail Historian Michael Lisicky, Woodward & Alexandria Lothrop: A Store Worthy of the Nation’s Capital, Sherwood Regional Library Sunday, 2 p.m. Literary Scholar Linda Janet Holmes, A Joyous Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Revolt: Toni Cade Bambara, Writer and Activism, Architect and Novelist Charles Belfoure, The Paris Tuesday, 7 p.m. Architect, Monday, 2:15 p.m. Annandale Historian Jane Hampton Cook, America’s StarGeorge Mason Regional Library Spangled Story: Celebrating 200 years of the Historian Timothy M. Gay, Savage Will: The Daring National Anthem, 1814-2014, Wednesday, 2:15 p.m. Escape of Americans Trapped Behind Nazi Lines, Robinson High School Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Young Adult Novelists L.M. Elliott, A Troubled Peace, and Kathryn Erskine, The Badger Knight, Arlington Monday, 3 p.m. One More Page Books Memoirist Anna Whiston-Donaldson, Rare Bird: A Sherwood Center Memoir of Loss and Love, Thursday, September 11, Falling for the Story Reading, Sunday, 12:30 p.m. 7 p.m. Children’s Book Authors Jamey Long, A Possum’s Young Adult Panel with Gigi Amateau, Edwin Expedition: Lewis & Clark and Sacagawea and Fontanez, Kristen Lippert-Martin, Meg Medina, and Katrina Moore, So Long Gnop-Jiye, Sunday, 1:30 p.m. A.B. Westrick, Sunday, 4:30 p.m. Virginia Romance Writers Panel with Madeline Mystery Writers A.X. Ahmad, The Last Taxi Ride, Iva, Laura Kaye, Shara Lanel, and Tracey Livesay, and Monica Bhide, Singapore Noir, Thursday, Sunday, 2 p.m. September 18, 7 p.m. Self-Publishing Panel with Mary Buford Hitz, George Mason University, Founder’s Hall Elaine C. Jean and Paul N. Jean, and Nevin Martell, Real Life 101 Panel with Beth Cabrera, Todd Sunday, 3 p.m. Kashdan, Melissa Milkie, and Brigid Schulte, Virginia Romance Writers Panel with Gail Barrett, Wednesday, 7 p.m. Alexa Day, Lori Dillon, Terri Osburn, Pamela Palmer, and Hope Ramsay, Sunday, 3:30 p.m. Burke Burke Centre Library Novelist Christina Baker Kline, Orphan Train, Children’s Book Author Chris Grabenstein, Escape Sunday, 5 p.m. from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library, Friday, 4:30 p.m. Virginia Opera Outreach Director Glenn Winters, Pohick Regional Library Sunday, 6:30 p.m. Novelist and Historian Winston Groom, The Leesburg Aviators: Eddie Rickenbacker, Jimmy Doolittle, Rust Library Charles Lindbergh, and the Epic Age of Flight, Memoirist Luis Carlos Montalván, Until Tuesday: A Thursday, September 11, 7:30 p.m. Fall for the Book offers events at various locations throughout Northern Virginia, DC, and Maryland— bringing great writers from across the nation and around the world to your backyard! 20 Wounded Warrior and the Golden Retriever Who Saved Him, Thursday, September 11, 7 p.m. Novelist Carla Buckley, The Deepest Secret, Sunday, 2 p.m. Biographer Marc Leepson, What So Proudly We Hailed: Francis Scott Key, A Life, Monday, 7 p.m. Manassas Hylton Performing Arts Center Haute Cuisine at the Hylton Event with Laura Florand, Alexandra “Zan” Hailey, Robert Kingsbury, Dave Lefeve, Belinda Miller, Miguel Pires, Amy Riolo, Robert Scott, Jason Shriner, Joe Yonan, and representatives from Heritage Brewing Company, Thursday, September 18, 6 p.m. McLean Alden Theatre Science Writers Sam Kean, The Tale of the Dueling Neurosurgeons: The History of the Human Brain as Revealed by True Stories of Trauma, Madness, and Recovery, and Carl Zimmer, Evolution: Making Sense of Life, Thursday, September 11, 7:30 p.m. FALL FOR THE BOOK VIRTUAL PASSPORT Travel around VA, MD, and DC with Fall for the Book this September 11-18. At each event you visit, check in via Facebook* at Fall for the Book and start racking up those digital passport stamps! Collect any 6 stamps and be entered to win some awesome prizes! One grand prize winner will receive a Barnes & Noble Nook, and two runnersup will win a bundle of signed books from this year’s winners of the Fairfax Prize, Mason Award, Busboys and Poets Award, and Mary Roberts Rinehart Award. G “Like” us on Facebook! www.facebook.com/FallfortheBook G Follow us around the blogosphere for more awesome content: @FallfortheBook (on Twitter and Instagram!), Fallforthebook.tumblr.com G Use #FallfortheBook on all your social media streams because we’ll be re-tweeting/blogging our favorite pictures and tweets! *Only official check-in’s to Fall for the Book will be counted. Oakton Oakton Library Memoirist and Science Writer Lydia Denworth, I Can Hear You Whisper: An Intimate Journey through the Science of Sound and Language, Saturday, 2 p.m. Reston Reston Regional Library Historical Novelist Pamela Bauer Mueller, Lady Unveiled: Catherine Greene Miller, 1755-1814, Sunday, 2 p.m. Springfield Richard Byrd Library Novelist Louis Bayard, Roosevelt’s Beast, Saturday, 2 p.m. MARYLAND Bethesda The Writer’s Center Fiction Writers Nathan Leslie, Sibs, and Pat Spears, Dream Chaser, Friday, 8 p.m. Craft of Suspense Panel with A.X. Ahmad, Ed Falco, James Grady, and Allison Leotta, Sunday, 3 p.m. WASHINGTON, DC Busboys and Poets Poet Linda Hogan, Dark. Sweet. New and Selected Poems, Sunday, 6:30 p.m. fall for the book festival 2014 An All GMU-Alumni Reading and Discussion on Post-MFA Work + Life with Nicole Louise Reid, Graham Foust, and Yelizaveta Renfro Monday, October 6th at 7:30 p.m. Grand Tier III, Center for the Arts Fall for the Book, the region’s oldest and largest celebration of literature, reading and fun, thanks its generous sponsors and partners: University Life Sponsors: University Libraries African and African American Studies Creative Writing Program Center for the Advancement of Well-being Department of History and Art History Women and Gender Studies Ali Vural Ak Center for Global Islamic Studies The Friends of the INTO Mason Pohick Regional Library LGBTQ Resources Office of Diversity, Inclusion, and Multicultural Education Friends of the Richard Byrd Library Programming Partners: English Department Honors College Living Learning Community Mason Service Council Writing Center School of Art Social Action and Integrative Learning Robinson High School The Harambee Readers