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<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite="">ORDINARY EVENING READING
SERIES<br>
FINAL FALL READING WELCOMES<br>
PLAYWRIGHT ROB ACKERMAN AND NOVELIST THOMAS GAVIN<br>
Tuesday, December 11, 7-8pm<br><br>
The Anchor Bar's Mermaid Room (downstairs) <br>
272 College Street at Chapel, (203) 865-1512<br><br>
<br><br>
"STEVE. What are we doing?<br>
PATTY. You invited them.<br>
STEVE. Pomegranate seeds and beeswax candles and handmade Japanese
plates. This is work, it's just work, nothing but work. This is
insane." <br>
- opening lines of <i>Disconnect</i>, a play by Rob Ackerman <br><br>
"…a bareheaded old man in carpet slippers who wore a pair of
spectacles with the glass in one frame smashed to a blind star…wandered
from one clot of firemen to another and at last climbed the steps of a
house where Schlumberger could see flames jumping in a groundfloor window
like children wanting to see out." <br>
- from <i>Kingkill</i> by novelist Thomas Gavin<br><br>
<br>
Rob Ackerman wrote Tabletop (2001 Drama Desk Award Winner for Best
Ensemble Performance) and Disconnect (produced in 2005 by The Working
Theater at Classic Stage Company). His first play, Origin of the Species,
was made into an award-winning feature film starring Amanda Peet. Rob and
his wife, author Carol Weston, live on the Upper West side with their
daughters Emme and Lizzi and a cat named Mike. <br><br>
Thomas Gavin is the author of three novels. Breathing Water, which won
the Lillian Fairchild Award; The Last Film of Emile Vico; and Kingkill,
named a Notable Book by the American Library Association and an
"Editor's Choice" by Time Magazine. His essays have appeared in
The Georgia Review, The Writer's Chronicle, Best American Essays, and
other publications, and have been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. An
excerpt from his novel in progress, Bridge of Lost Boys, appeared in
Icarus: New Writing from Around the World. An emeritus professor of
English at The University of Rochester, Gavin has taught at Middlebury
College and Delta College, and at a number of writing seminars. He has
received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Andrew
W. Mellon Foundation, and the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference. <br><br>
MARK YOUR CALENDARS<br><br>
The spring season is packed with surprises, as always, but you can always
count on an eclectic mix of poetry, fiction, non-fiction and drama from
local and further-flung writers. Look for our email about readers
for the first spring reading on Tuesday, January 22. For biographies,
links to work, and other information, visit
<a href="http://ordinaryevening.blogspot.com/">
http://ordinaryevening.blogspot.com/</a>.<br>
<br><br>
ABOUT THE ORDINARY EVENING SERIES<br><br>
Started in spring 2005, the Ordinary Evening Reading Series features both
emerging and established writers in a monthly reading at the Anchor Bar
Mermaid Room, downstairs. Borrowing its name from the poem "An
Ordinary Evening in New Haven" by Wallace Stevens, the series aims
to bring writers and audiences together in a no-fuss, informal
environment to enjoy a little storytelling on a work-night. Readings are
always on a Tuesday at 7pm, free of charge, both drinkers and teetotalers
welcome. <br><br>
<br>
-- <br>
<a href="http://ordinaryevening.blogspot.com/">
http://ordinaryevening.blogspot.com/</a><br>
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the subject line. </blockquote>
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