Events

« January 01, 2010 - January 31, 2010 »
 
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Start: 7:00 pm

Could you sum up your life in 6 words? Thousands have, inspired by the bestseller Not Quite What I Was Planning: Six Word Memoirs by Writers Famous and Obscure. Now the editing team behind the bestselling book is back with a sequel with even more micro-memoirs. Meet Larry Smith, editor of Smith Magazine, and the publication's memoirs editor, Rachel Fershleiser and find out how the phenomenon got started and where it's going.

Do you have a 6-word memoir of your own? Bring it along! You might get to read it at the event. 

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01 / 20
Start: 7:00 pm

Think you know everything about the Super Bowl? Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Packers beat writer Bob McGinn has compiled the ultimate reference for the ultimate sports event. His new book is a phenomenal in-depth collection of facts, records, stories, and information from players, coaches, team executives, scouts and more, including Bill Bellicheck. Combining the taut, driving prose and unique statistical approach
that has made McGinn one of the ground-breaking football writers
working today, The Ultimate Super Bowl Book forgoes the glitz of the
game and is instead a work of football scholarship that will delight
readers with its hardcore analysis and accounts of what really happened
on the field that day.

Football fans, don't miss your chance to meet Bob McGinn at this free event. 

01 / 21
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01 / 23
Start: 2:00 pm

Enjoy a taste of Bay View’s Boulevard Ensemble Studio Theatre right here in Mequon when Boulevard actors perform a dramatic reading of William Shakespeare’s comedic play All's Well that Ends Well.  In this short preview (the play will be performed at the Boulevard from February 10- March 14), the performers will showcase two scenes from the play. Stick around for a Q&A with the actors and Boulevard artistic director, Mark Bucher. For one afternoon, all the store’s a stage, and you’re invited!

More about the play from our friends at The Boulevard Ensemble Studio Theatre:

 

Boulevard Ensemble Studio Theatre, located at 2252 South Kinnickinnic, continues its 24th season of producing dynamic, exciting theatre by staging the Milwaukee premiere of a "lost" Shakespeare play titled LOVE'S LABOR'S WON (Wednesday, February 10th through Sunday, March 14th, 2010).

Also known as ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL, this rare and wonderfully bittersweet romance tells the tale of a physician's daughter, Helena (Shannon Nettesheim), who is deeply in love with the fickle, aloof Betram (Chad Laudonio). Betram, the son of the Countess of Rossillion (Karen Ambrosh), is far above Helena in social status and is immeasurably beyond her reach romantically. Helena can either accept her restricted social standing (and a life of spinsterhood) or discover a way to simultaneously lift herself from her less than noble status, achieve social mobility, and win Betram's unresponsive heart.

Shakespeare's heroine must accomplish all this while curing the ailing King of France (Charles Hanel) from his mysterious fatal disease, confront the Countess of Rossillion (Betram's mother and Helena's protector and guardian) about loving Betram, and solve the conundrum of Betram's challenge (that he will never consider her as his wife until she can get his late father's bequeathed ring off his finger and carry his child). Bertram's challenge seems impossible to conquer as Betram has sworn to the Countess that he will never remove his late father's ring and has publicly stated that he will never lie with Helena and will never allow himself to have relations with her.

Also included in this romantic entanglement are: Betram's mentor and ne'er-do-well braggart, Parolles (David Flores); the Countess' sly and sarcastic clown Lavatch (Mark Ninneman); the King's counsel, Lord Lafew (Douglas Smedbron), the lovely Italian girl whom the young Betram desires and pursues, Diana (Melissa Keith); the Dumaine brothers who serve the King of France (Paul Madden and Hugh Blewett); and the Countess' handmaiden, Violetta (Jamieson Hawkins). Other local Milwaukee actors round out the large cast.

According to scholars and researchers, writers contemporary with Shakespeare refer to a delightful comedy titled LOVE'S LABOUR'S WON, which has never been found nor discovered. But recent writings and critical conjecture surmise that the title refers to a Shakespeare play already known to the public, and that LOVE'S LABOUR'S WON is an early draft of either MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING or ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL. Scholars debate over which script is more likely to be the missing script, but due to the beauty of passages of ALL'S WELL and the complexity of the lyrical poetry, it is judged to be the more likely successor to the title than the earlier MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING. Viewed from this perspective, ALL'S WELL's disparate story lines (fairy tale romanticism versus Freudian battle of the sexes) and disparate styles (lyricism versus low comedy) no longer "battle" each other but actually complement each other.

Shakespeare's script, then, transitions from the "troubled" script (a title which some scholars have given this diffuse stylistic puzzle) and, like a pointalistic painting viewed from a distance, becomes a lovely, delightful  theatrical "charm bracelet" (many delightful parts which link to an eye-catching -- and often -- stunning whole).       

01 / 24
01 / 25
Start: 7:00 pm

Join us in welcoming Robert Goolrick to Next Chapter Bookshop. Goolrick's novel, A Reliable Wife, was the very first book we recommended to you way back in April, 2009. In this masterful story set in rural Wisconsin in 1909, Ralph Truit waits for the woman who answered his ad for a 'reliable wife.' The woman he gets is not at all what he expected. As Lanora puts it:

"In this gothic tale set in Wisconsin, Goolrick has created a satisfying novel full of twists and secrets. The novel opens as a wealthy but lonely business man is waiting for the arrival of his wife. She is not a traditional wife--this marriage was arranged through the mail and is more of a business transaction than a romance. Nobody in this novel is who they seem; the characters are deeply flawed and their secrets are astounding. Just as the snow melts and reveals the dirt and muck underneath, this story slowly melts away layers to reveal these characters for their raw and true selves. Goolrick has written a darkly nuanced tale with an ending that will not disappoint!" -Lanora Hurley

Bring your book club to this free event!

Note: the paperback version is due out in early January. The hardcover edition is still available and on our shelves.

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Start: 2:00 pm

You may recognize John St. Augustine from his Powerthoughts! vingettes on Oprah & Friends Radio. The midwestern radio veteran (St. Augustine also produces Dr. Mehmet Oz’s program on the same network) is back with a new book about making the most of the little moments in our lives. Small slices of time go unnoticed. We go about our days never realizing how much information missed moments contain. They are packed with lessons about living life to its fullest. John St. Augustine explains how to make the most of them by living in the present while creating future moments that have depth, meaning, and purpose.

 

01 / 31
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