Showing posts with label author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author. Show all posts

Monday, February 24, 2014

My Coffee with Andre


Pat Gorton, Dndre Dubus, and Pam Jacobson February 22, 2014 "My Coffee with Andre"
Patricia Gorton (AAUW) and Pam Jacobson (Rowley Library)
with Andre Dubus III at recent author event they organized
"What a great event! I am so pleased with how everything went, the turnout was awesome, the refreshments were perfect, just a great day." [Pam]

The "Coffee With Andre Dubus" author event with Andre Dubus III, held on Saturday, February 22, at the Rowley Public Library, was a huge success. There was a great article about Andre Dubus on the front page of the Georgetown Record written by the editor of the Ipswich Chronicle, who had a long telephone interview with Andre. Many attendees came because they had read about the talk in the newspaper.

We had just fifty reservations before the event, but we set up seventy chairs and most, if not all, were occupied for the talk. We sold all the books we had and could have sold more. As this was a fund-raiser for the North Shore and Newburyport Branches of the American Association of University Women and the Friends of the Rowley Public Library, we are very pleased with the results.

Andre’s talk was one of his best. The audience applauded him long and loud. He did not talk about his new book “Dirty Love” but he read a short story which he wrote about knitting, written at about the time he had his first girlfriend and about his love for his aunt, his mother’s older sister, for whom he learned to knit a scarf. He inspired us.

He spoke about family being so important in his life and that both sides of his extended family lived in Louisiana. They visited Louisiana each summer, driving down in an old car.

We know form “Townie” that he learned to fight with his fists while growing up. He later turned to boxing, a legitimate sport. Interestingly, the guys with whom he spent most of his youth, have all passed away.

There were many young women in attendance on Saturday. That was a nice surprise.

Andre held an individual conversation with each of us as he signed copies of his books after the talk. 

Event Announcement: Coffee With Andre Dubus III on Saturday, Feb. 22, 10 a.m., at the Rowley Public Library, 141 Main St., Rowley ADMISSION $15, not including book purchase

Coffee With Andre Dubus III is a fund-raiser for the North Shore and Newburyport Branches of the American Association of University Women and the Friends of the Rowley Public Library. Refreshments will be served, including homemade muffins and coffee cakes, fresh fruit, juices, coffee, tea, and hot chocolate. AAUW funds will go to its Educational Opportunities Fund, which provides more than $4.5 million in funding for more than 250 fellowships, grants and special awards to outstanding women and groups, and the funds raised for the library will go to library programs that serve the public.

Dubus will talk about his newest book, a best seller, "Dirty Love." The books may be bought either before the event or at the event and will be signed by the author. A 10 percent discount will be given to those who purchase the book before the event. Reservations and book purchases can be made by contacting Pamela Jacobson, director of the Rowley Public Library, at 978-948-2850 or online at rowleylibrarydirector@gmail.com . Mail a check made out to Friends of the Rowley Public Library, to the library at 141 Main St., Rowley, MA 01969. The discounted book charge is $23.35.

The national website address for the AAUW organization is www.aauw.org.



Monday, April 16, 2012

Coffee With Author Edith Pearlman

Edith Pearlman will speak about her award winning book of short stories, “Binocular Vision” on Saturday, May 5, 10 AM at Georgetown Peabody Library, on Maple Street. Coffee, Juice and home made baked goods will be served at this fund-raiser at the cost of twelve dollars. The event is co-sponsored by the North Shore and Newburyport branches, American Association of University Women and the Friends of the Georgetown Peabody Library. For reservations, contact Linda Britt, 978-531-6116.

AAUW’s share of the proceeds will be awarded to a local college student to attend the National Conference of College Women Student Leaders.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Coffee With Andre Dubus lll, Saturday, May 21, 10 AM, Georgetown Peabody Library


Coffee With Andre Dubus lll, Saturday, May 21, 10 AM, Georgetown Peabody
Library, Lincoln Park, Georgetown, MA

With the Friends of the Georgetown Peabody Library, North Shore and Newburyport Area Branches AAUW, we will welcome nationally recognized author and long time friend and supporter of AAUW, Andre Dubus lll to speak about his new book “TOWNIE” on Saturday, May 21, 10 AM at the Georgetown Peabody Library.

Refreshments will be served, including juices, coffee, tea, bagels, home
made muffins and coffee cakes. The cost of attending is twelve ($12.00)
dollars.

Reservations can be made by sending a check made out to AAUW, and mailed to
Judy Donovan (Tel. (978) 535-1544).

AAUW's share of the profit from the event is a grant to attend the National
Conference of College Women Student Leaders, which will be awarded to Deb
Woods, an individual member of AAUW from Beverly. Deb is a graduate student
at Boston University studying Women's Health Internationally. Deb has just
returned from Zululand, where she conducted research for her thesis.Deb is
Massachusetts Chair of CARE. Her  registration fee of $395.00 and the
cost of her airplane flight will be awarded to her.


Publisher's Weekly has written the following review of Andre's book, "Townie". "Long before he became the highly acclaimed author of "House of Sand and Fog", Dubus shuffled and punched his way through a childhood and youth that was full of dysfunction, desperation, and determination. Just after he turned twelve, Dubus' family fell rapidly into shambles after his father, the  prominent writer Andre Dubus, not only left his wife for a younger woman, but also left the family in distressing poverty on the violent and drug infested side of their Massachusetts mill town.

For a few years, Dubus escaped into drugs, embracing the apathetic "no-way-out" attitude of his friends. After having his bike stolen, and being slapped around by some of the town's bullies, while watching his brother and mother humiliated by some of the town's thugs, Dubus started lifting weights at home and boxing at the local gym.

Modeling himself on the Walking Tall sheriff, Buford Pusser, Dubus paid back acts of physical violence. Ultimately, he decided to take up his pen and write his way up from the bottom and into a new relationship with his father. In this gritty and gripping memoir, Dubus bares his soul in stunning and page-turning prose.