2016 Arkansas Literary Festival dates and lineup announced

ALF 2016_textPrestigious award-winners, screenwriters, comedians, an expert witness, artists, and a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet are among the diverse roster of presenters who will be providing sessions at the thirteenth annual Arkansas Literary Festival, April 14-17, 2016. The Central Arkansas Library System’s Main Library campus and many other Little Rock venues are the sites for a stimulating mix of sessions, panels, special events, performances, workshops, presentations, opportunities to meet authors, book sales, and book signings. Most events are free and open to the public.
     The Arkansas Literary Festival, the premier gathering of readers and writers in Arkansas, will include more than 80 presenters including featured authors from approximately 24 different states and guests hailing from Canada, England, Russia, and Singapore. Each year, several of the attending authors have not visited Little Rock, Arkansas, or even the South.
     Presenters come from a wide range of backgrounds including: journalist, documentary filmmaker, economist, editor, microbiologist, national bank examiner, essayist, photographer, sports reporter, psychological examiner, musician, actress, reporter, and professor. One is co-producing Keanu Reeves’ new television show and writing an adaptation of his own book for Warner Bros. and Bradley Cooper.
     Special events for adults during the Festival include a cocktail reception with the authors, a tour of the Governor’s Mansion gardens with a wine and cheese reception, an escape room, and Readers’ Map of Arkansas launch party. Panels and sessions include genres and topics such as literary fiction, barbecue, Monopoly, female rocket scientists, travel, graphic novels, science fiction, classic literature, and a story told in playing cards.
     Children’s special events include a session by Nikki Grimes, activity hour, concert by the Kinders, and the play How the Camel Got His Hump. based on Rudyard Kipling’s Just So Stories. Festival sessions for children will take place at both the Hillary Rodham Clinton Children’s Library and Learning Center, 4800 10th Street, and the Youth Services Department at the Main Library, 100 Rock Street. Special events for teens include North Little Rock High School Readers Theater, a teen poetry competition, and a panel with three authors of books for young adults.
     Through the Writers In The Schools (WITS) initiative, the Festival will provide presentations by several authors for central Arkansas elementary, middle, and senior high schools and area colleges.
     Author! Author!, a cocktail reception with the authors, will be Friday, April 15, at 7 p.m. Tickets are $25 in advance and $40 at the door, and go on sale at ArkansasLiteraryFestival.org beginning Monday, March 15.
     This year’s Festival authors have won an impressive number and variety of distinguished awards and fellowships including: Pulitzer Prize, James Beard Award, PEN/Hemingway Award, Hugo Award, Coretta Scott King Award, Will Eisner Comic Industry Award, National Book Foundation “5 Under 35” Honoree, Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award, Dashiell Hammett Prize, Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers Selection, National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, Fulbright Fellowship, Guggenheim Fellowship, Houghton Mifflen Literary Fellowship, Arkansas Arts Council Fellowship.
     The work of this year’s Festival authors has been featured in notable publications including: New York Times, Details, McSweeney’s Quarterly, Forbes, the Paris Review, theHuffington Post, Women’s Health, Gourmet Magazine, the New Republic, the Los Angeles Times, Smithsonian, the Daily Telegraph UK, VICE, the New Yorker, Harper’s, the Atlantic, Slate, Time, Popular Science, Salon, the Best American Travel Writing, Outside Magazine, Esquire, USA Today, Reader’s Digest, Best American Essays, Best American Short Stories, Penthouse, the Nation, Best American Poetry, the Washington Post, Town & Country, the Economist, the Christian Science Monitor, National Geographic, the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Rolling Stone, GQ, Sports Illustrated, and Vogue
     The Literary Festival is presented by the Central Arkansas Library System. Sponsors include Arkansas Humanities Council, Friends of Central Arkansas Library System (FOCAL), Clinton Presidential Center, Fred K. Darragh Jr. Foundation, KUAR FM 89.1, ProSmartPrinting.com, Rebsamen Fund, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Arkansas Times, Gibbs Elementary School, Hendrix-Murphy Foundation Programs in Literature and Language, MacArthur Museum of Arkansas Military History, Museum of Discovery, Otter Creek Elementary School, UALR Department of English, Windstream, Arkansas Library Association, Christ Episcopal Church, East Harding Construction, Hampton Inn, Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center, Henderson State University, Hendrix College Project Pericles Program, University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service, Witt Stephens Jr. Central Arkansas Nature Center, Greater Little Rock Council of Garden Clubs, Capital Hotel, City of Little Rock, Et Alia Press, Consulate General of Israel to the Southwest, Literacy Action of Central Arkansas, Mayor Mark Stodola, Mollie Savage Memorial/CALS, North Little Rock High School, Plum Street Publishers, Inc., Pyramid Art Books & Custom Framing/Hearne Fine Art, Sibling Rivalry Press, Stickyz Rock ‘N’ Roll Chicken Shack, UALR Department of Rhetoric and Writing, and Whole Hog. The Arkansas Literary Festival is supported in part by funds from the Arkansas Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
     The Festival’s mission is to encourage the development of a more literate populace. A group of dedicated volunteers assists Festival Coordinator Brad Mooy with planning the Festival. Committee chairs include Kevin Brockmeier, Talent Committee; Susan Santa Cruz, Festival Guides; and Amy Bradley-Hole, Moderators.
     Visit the Festival Facebook and Twitter pages to get the latest news about the Festival. For more information about the 2016 Arkansas Literary Festival, visit ArkansasLiteraryFestival.org, or contact Brad Mooy at bmooy@cals.org or 918-3098. For information on volunteering at the Festival, contact Angela Delaney at adelaney@cals.org or 918-3095.

2015 In Memoriam – Sandy Baskin

In these final days of 2015, we pause to look back at 15 who influenced Little Rock’s cultural scene who left us in 2015.

So, let’s pretend we’re sitting in the back of Vino’s, where so many actors, musicians and rats have sort of tried to be tolerant of one another through the years, where so many beers have been slung and guitar picks (and sometimes prosthetic body parts) flung.  It’s here where Red Octopus Theatre Company first found its home and fan base, and it’s here where founder Christy Ward and former member/performer Jennifer Pierce Mathus thought it best to base our virtual tribute to the late Sandy Baskin, longtime Red Octopus director and Little Rock actress.

1515 BaskinJPM:  Hi, Christy Ward.  Smells like home in here.

CW:  Ah, yes!  Stale beer and gutter punks!  The scent of the season!

JPM:  It should be a seasonal candle.  You know, I can never call you by just your first name. That’s because of Sandy. And it’s like one word, really, especially when you speak at Sandy Baskin speed. You know what?  Let’s just pretend Sandy is running late and talk about her…..so, how did you meet Sandy?

CW: I met her one night at the “Honky Hut”, which is what we called the house Brooks Caruthers, Greg Hinspeter and various other lived in. I’d moved back from San Francisco, a year or two before. Brad Mooy, Amy Gross-Mason (both of whom where interns at The Rep) and I had just started Red Octopus and had put up a few one-acts–I had wanted to do something a little different from the work I’d done with Reponde Capite, and Brad and Amy wanted to have a little creative freedom aside from their day jobs. I knew Amy in college. We wanted a different kind of audience than the other theatres. We loved theatre and we wanted to get a younger audience who might not otherwise go see a play. So, we got a couple of nights at Vino’s, which had just opened. Allan Vennis, Henry Lee and, oh, that other guy, all owned it. So we formed Red Octopus. I wanted it to be called Little Miss Priss’ Theatre of Impertinence. But for brevity’s sake, we named it after Brad’s super cute kitchen table! We’d put on two shows, and they had played fantastically. I was really energized by the whole thing, and was planning my next show, an original piece, with music called “The Big, Big, City.” It was the first script I ever wrote. Sandy sat down next to me on the couch, and introduced herself to me. She said our mutual friend told her she should meet me, since I was doing shows at music venues, she was a theatre person, and we were both cool and funny. The friend said that, not me…

JPM: But you were….

CW: …and by the end of the night, Sandy was assistant director and firmly entrenched in RO.  I saw her pretty much every day for about ten years after that. (laughs)

So, Jennifer! I understand you’ve also done a bit of acting! Can you give me a brief idea of why you are qualified to talk about Sandy Baskin and her contributions to theatre in Arkansas?

JPM:  Am I qualified to talk about Sandy?  I guess, after 13-ish years spent either on stage with her or in collaboration with Red Octopus, I can say that Sandy Baskin kept the independent spirit alive in theater in Arkansas.  And she particularly demanded that audiences have respect for comedy in all forms. Like, she almost had a “live free or die” approach to her art.  The whole “f*** ‘em if they can’t take a joke” thing.  Her life’s work informed so many aspiring actors and comedy writers; she inspired artists to think and try and grow. At least, that’s what she did for me. And I have, as you know, appeared in a J.G. Wentworth commercial, so clearly I have developed a highly-refined approach to our craft. *throws pretend scarf over shoulder*

CW:  I see! You seem pretty qualified.  Sandy was not a founding member of Red Octopus, but she joined the company very early on and remained the driving force behind it until she passed away this year. So, what do you think Sandy brought to the table, what was it about her that drew people to the company, that kept them excited and willing to bust their asses for no monetary reward?

1515 Baskin2JPM: What I saw through the years, as newer company members would come into the group, the newbies wanted to make her laugh. They saw her as the leader of the “cool kids” theater gang, and they wanted that stamp of approval, as actors and writers. If they could crack her up, especially if they could make her break in scene, then they kinda felt like they’d graduated. It was the same with me when I started–it’s one of the reasons I baaaaarely wrote, because I thought much of what I wrote wasn’t funny enough for your or Sandy’s or Jason Gregory’s standards. It had to be good; it had to kill. Because nearly all of her sketches killed.  So many of the sketches she wrote back then are still being performed today.

And after all the “old heads” left, why do you think she cared so much about keeping RO going?

CW:  I think she just really loved comedy and her family. I don’t think she could’ve moved and left her family behind. But I don’t think she was capable of not doing shows either. I can’t imagine her doing anything else. If there had never been a Red Octopus, she would’ve wound up starting up something else like it. She found her thing. It worked perfectly with her life. She was very lucky, and I’m sure she would agree.  And I feel, as an actress, she was outstanding working in the genre of sketch comedy.

JPM: Totally. As an actor, she was completely built for comedy.  Warp-speed speech pattern, big volume, fantastic expressions, great tits. And I can say that because I’m a guy. (laughs) Sandy was a dynamo onstage and had impeccable comedic timing. Plus, she had this vintage Hollywood “look” and a kind of Lucille Ball approach. She should’ve had her own variety show.

CW: She was an encyclopedia of pop culture, from the 1920’s on. And I am not. She loved changing lyrics to songs and putting music in where ever humanly possible. And me, not so much. How did Sandy influence you as an artist?

JPM:  I can’t even begin to explain. Red Octopus was my MFA program in acting, with an emphasis in comedy. Sandy’s direction and collaboration shaped everything for me.  What do you remember most when you think of her?

CW: Laughing. And a million other things that usually ended in laughing.

JPM:  Working with her onstage was like working with someone who should’ve been on Saturday Night Live. And it was the scariest and yet safest place to be, being on stage with her.

Favorite performance of Sandy’s, go.

CW:  Vivace. Hands down the best thing she ever did. She was so fun to watch in comedy, I can’t pick one. But Vivace was a drama. It was a big stretch for her. I wanted it to be very realistic. It was very Method. I think we all went a little crazy maybe, but she was great. Really great.

Who do you think were Sandy’s major influences?

JPM:  Oh, God!  Offhand?  Tom Waits, Broadway, 1960s TV commercials, film noir, Laugh-In, Shakespeare, Valley of the Dolls, Burns and Allen, West Side Story, you, Jason Gregory.

Your favorite performance together, go.

CW:  We Have No Shame. Two woman show. So much fun. As we say today, we gave zero f*cks.

JPM:  And here’s something:  Sandy was always well aware of her femininity but still maintained a punk sort of feminist position when it came to characters and sketch themes and ideas. How do you think she found that balance?

CW:  She and I were total 3rd Wave Feminists. Sexuality and sex were fun things that were ours. She did what she wanted. Just because she was pretty, didn’t mean she was demure or stupid, and she enjoyed making that point. And she enjoyed flirting.

What was your favorite thing she wrote?

JPM:  This has been killing me since we lost her, because my favorite thing she wrote, I can’t remember the show title!  It actually wasn’t a comedy, though I loved all of her comedic writing. No, this was a two-man dramedy she wrote, starring me and Jason Gregory, a Burns-and-Allen riff that told the story of Sandy’s dear friend who developed a degenerative brain disorder and died. Gregory played the lead role, and I was basically playing the role of Sandy. It was a beautiful, heartbreaking tribute to love and loss. We rehearsed it for weeks, really intensive actor-y type work to find the characters and deliver beautifully nuanced performances. Sandy directed, and she was brilliant. And no one actually saw the show. Well, Kathy Strause saw it and maybe two other people. Because RO had at that point been doing sketch comedy full stop, throwing a heavier theatrical piece at our audience didn’t really work. I think we closed the show after two days of empty seats. And now, I’m the only one left who remembers it. God, this is a terribly depressing answer!  She would actually make fun of this answer. *dries eyes, blows nose in pretend scarf*

JPM:  How did she enrich the cultural life of this state?  What is Sandy’s legacy?  And are we really asking these questions?  Because this all still seems a bit unreal, to me.

CW:  I want Little Rock and the world to know, but mostly Little Rock, that Sandy Baskin was a major force in creating the underground culture of the city since the 90’s. This city loves live comedy, because of her. Little Rock had a sort of cultural Golden Age in the 90’s, and it was more shiny, and fun, because of her presence both on and off stage. She was a true talent who could have worked in any writer’s room in the country, and we were lucky to have had her. That’s all I have to say about that.

JPM:  Agreed.

CW:  Any final thoughts you want to share?

JPM:  I loved that Dumb Whore.  And it’s too bad if you don’t get the joke. I secretly hope Scott gets letters of protest for the use of that language.  Because that would thrill Sandy.

THE COLOR PURPLE shown and explored tonight as part of Banned Books Week

cals bbweek purpleThe Arkansas Literary Festival will celebrate Banned Books Week with an interview reenactment, a film, and a writing contest. A program based on Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award-winning novel, The Color Purple, will be presented on Wednesday, September 30, at 6:30 p.m. at the Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave. After the presentation, the 1985 film will be shown. The event is free and open to the public.

Actresses Verda Davenport Booher and Vivian Norman will reenact part of an interview with Alice Walker. The interview touches on Walker’s inspiration for the book and on the success it has had, as well as the film and the musical.

Written as a series of letters, the 1982 novel been challenged repeatedly because of language, sexuality, and violence. The film was directed by Steven Spielberg and nominated for eleven Academy Awards. A successful musical based upon the book opened on Broadway in 2005, and was nominated for ten Tony awards. Oprah Winfrey, nominated for an Oscar as best supporting actress in the film, was one of the producers of the musical. A pared-down revival of the musical is slated to open on Broadway in December, 2015.

Banned Books Week (September 27−October 3, 2015) is an annual event sponsored by the American Library Association celebrating the freedom to read. It highlights the value of free and open access to information and the freedom to seek and to express ideas, even those some consider unorthodox or unpopular. By focusing on efforts across the country to remove or restrict access to books, Banned Books Week draws national attention to the harms of censorship and books that have been targeted with removal or restrictions in libraries and schools. While books have been and continue to be banned, part of the Banned Books Week celebration is the fact that, in a majority of cases, the books have remained available. This happens only thanks to the efforts of librarians, teachers, students, and community members who stand up and speak out for the freedom to read.

The Festival’s celebration of Banned Books Week is sponsored by the Fred K. Darragh Foundation. This is the Festival’s fifth annual Banned Books Week presentation. Other titles that have been featured include The Catcher in the Rye, Lord of the Flies, The Great Gatsby, A Clockwork Orange, A Doll’s House, and The Perks of Being a Wallflower.

The Arkansas Literary Festival is a program of the Central Arkansas Library System (CALS). For more information about the 2016 Arkansas Literary Festival, visit ArkansasLiteraryFestival.org, or contact Brad Mooy at 918-3098. For information on volunteering at the Festival, contact Angela Delaney at 918-3095.

Rebecca Wells headlines first day of 12th Annual Arkansas Literary Festival

2015 ALF 1The 12th annual Arkansas Literary Festival kicks off today.

  • From 5pm to 7pm, there will be a book sale preview party at River Market Books & Gifts in the Cox Creative Center.
  • At 5:30, the exhibit “Page Turners” featuring Bryan Collier will open at Hearne Fine Art.
  •  At 6pm, there will be a Summer Reading Club Preview on the 3rd floor of the Main Library.
  •  Rebecca Wells will discuss “Divine Secrets” at 7pm on stage at the Ron Robinson Theatre. She is the author of the “Ya Ya Sisterhood” books. She will also return to Little Rock in 2016 to perform her one-woman show at the Arkansas Rep.

Through the Writers In The Schools (WITS) initiative, the Festival will provide presentations by several authors for Pulaski county elementary, middle, and senior high schools and area colleges.

Support for the Literary Festival is provided by sponsors including Central Arkansas Library System, Friends of Central Arkansas Libraries (FOCAL), Arkansas Humanities Council, Fred K. Darragh Jr. Foundation, Mosaic Templars Cultural Center, ProSmart Printing, Little Rock Family, KUAR FM 89.1, Arkansas Democrat Gazette, Sync, Arkansas Life, Clinton Foundation, MacArthur Museum of Arkansas Military History, Windstream, Arkansas Federal Credit Union, Arkansas Times, Wright, Lindsey & Jennings LLP, Hampton Inn Downtown/McKibbon Hotel Group, Capital Hotel, Historic Arkansas Museum , TransAmerica, Witt Stephens Jr. Central Arkansas Nature Center, Arkansas Library Association, Pulaski Technical College, Union Pacific, Sequoyah National Research Center, Gibbs Elementary School, Rockefeller Elementary School, Hendrix College, Hendrix College Project Pericles Program, Arkansas Women’s Forum, Philander Smith College, University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service, East Harding, University of Arkansas at Little Rock English Department, University of Arkansas at Little Rock Department of Rhetoric and Writing, Pyramid Art, Books & Custom Framing/Hearne Fine Art, Stickyz Rock ‘n’ Roll Chicken Shack, Literacy Action of Central Arkansas, Christ Episcopal Church, and Lamar Advertising. The Arkansas Literary Festival is supported in part by funds from the Arkansas Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

The Arkansas Literary Festival is a project of the Central Arkansas Library System. The Festival’s mission is to encourage the development of a more literate populace. A group of dedicated volunteers assists Festival Coordinator Brad Mooy with planning the Festival. Katherine Whitworth is the 2015 Festival Chair. Other committee chairs include Kevin Brockmeier, Talent Committee; Susan Santa Cruz, Festival Guides; Laura Stanley, Hospitality Gifts; and Amy Bradley-Hole, Moderators.

Lineup for April’s 11th Annual Arkansas Literary Festival Announced

1359064160-litfest_logoAs winter drones on, a person’s fancy may turn to thoughts of spring. Or to a good book to read by candlelight to pass the time in winter.

In any way, a certain harbinger of warmer weather will be the presence in April of the 11th annual Arkansas Literary Festival.

Prestigious award-winners, big names, writers for television shows, journalists, and artists are among the diverse roster of presenters who will be providing sessions at the eleventh annual Arkansas Literary Festival, April 24-27, 2014. The Central Arkansas Library System‘s Main Library campus and many other Little Rock venues are the sites for a stimulating mix of sessions, panels, special events, performances, workshops, presentations, opportunities to meet authors, book sales, and book signings. Most events are free and open to the public.

The Arkansas Literary Festival, the premier gathering of readers and writers in Arkansas, will include more than 80 presenters including featured authors Catherine Coulter, who has more than seventy million books in print; Congressman John Lewis, one of the key figures in the civil rights movement; best-selling authors Mary Roach, ReShonda Tate Billingsley, Curtis Sittenfeld, and artist/illustrator Kadir Nelson; musician Rhett Miller; and education expert David L. Kirp.

This year’s Festival authors have won an impressive number and variety of distinguished awards, including ten Emmy awards, multiple National Endowment for the Arts fellowships and grants, two Pulitzer Prizes, the MacArthur Foundation Fellowship (the Genius Grant), the National Book Award, the Coretta Scott King Award, the Caldecott Honor, an NAACP Image Award, an Eisner Award, a Ford Foundation Fellowship, the American Book Award, the O. Henry Prize, recognition as one of the National Book Foundation’s 5 Under 35, and much more.

Their works have been included in the New York TimesRolling Stone, Bon Appétit, Glamour, Playboy, Esquire, Vanity Fair, Slate, Mother Jones, and the Washington Post, among others.

Special events for adults during the Festival include a cocktail reception with the authors, a writing workshop with Catherine Coulter, a concert by Rhett Miller, and a presentation by an art historian which includes an Artists Buffet. Panels and sessions include genres and topics such as chocolate, lucid dreaming, graphic novels, the war in Iraq, short stories, Arkansas food, murder mysteries, football, dinosaurs, and gangsters.

Children’s special events include a storytime on the lawn of the Governor’s Mansion, a treasure hunt, a play based on The Little Engine That Could, and a Lego exhibit. Festival sessions for children will take place at both the Hillary Rodham Clinton Children’s Library and Learning Center, 4800 10th Street, and the Youth Services Department at the Main Library, 100 Rock Street.

At Level 4, the Main Library’s teen center, special events for teens include a robotics demonstration and a panel on comic book conventions.

Through the Writers In The Schools (WITS) initiative, the Festival will provide presentations by several authors for Pulaski county elementary, middle, and senior high schools and area colleges.

Support for the Literary Festival is provided by sponsors including Central Arkansas Library System; Friends of Central Arkansas Libraries (FOCAL); Arkansas Humanities Council; Department of Arkansas Heritage; Fred K. Darragh Jr. Foundation; Mosaic Templars Cultural Center; ProSmart Printing; KUAR FM 89.1; Little Rock Convention and Visitors Bureau; Arkansas Democrat Gazette; Sync; Arkansas Life; William J. Clinton Presidential Center; Oxford American; Landers FIAT of Benton; MacArthur Museum of Arkansas Military History; Arkansas Times; Wright, Lindsey & Jennings LLP; University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service; Historic Arkansas Museum ; Christ Church, Little Rock’s Downtown Episcopal Church; Witt Stephens Jr. Central Arkansas Nature Center; Arkansas Library Association; Goss Management Company, LLC; Henderson State University; Hendrix College Project Pericles Program; Pulaski Technical College; Arkansas Arts Center; River’s Edge Media; Arkansas Shakespeare Theatre; Rockefeller Elementary School; Gibbs Elementary School; Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center; Writers’ Colony at Dairy Hollow; Arkansas Governor’s Mansion; Hendrix College Creative Writing; University of Arkansas at Little Rock English Department; University of Arkansas at Little Rock Department of Rhetoric and Writing; Pyramid Art, Books & Custom Framing/Hearne Fine Art; Stickyz Rock ‘n’ Roll Chicken Shack; Literacy Action of Central Arkansas; National Park Service Central High School National Historic Site; Tales from the South; and Power 92 Jams. The Arkansas Literary Festival is supported in part by funds from the Arkansas Humanities Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Author! Author!, a cocktail reception with the authors, will be Friday, April 25, at 8 p.m.; tickets are $25 in advance, and $40 at the door, and go on sale at ArkansasLiteraryFestival.org beginning Tuesday, April 1. Author! Author! tickets will also be available for purchase at the Main Library and River Market Books & Gifts, 120 River Market Avenue.

The Arkansas Literary Festival is a project of the Central Arkansas Library System. The Festival’s mission is to encourage the development of a more literate populace. A group of dedicated volunteers assists Festival Coordinator Brad Mooy with planning the Festival. Jay Jennings is the 2014 Festival Chair. Other committee chairs include Katherine Whitworth, Talent Committee; Lisa Donovan, Youth Programs; and Amy Bradley-Hole, Moderators.

For more information about the 2014 Arkansas Literary Festival, visit ArkansasLiteraryFestival.org, or contact Brad Mooy at bmooy@cals.org or 501-918-3098. For information on volunteering at the Festival, contact Angela Delaney atadelaney@cals.org or 501-918-3095.

Ark Lit Fest this Weekend!

April 12 – 15

The Arkansas Literary Festival, the premier gathering of readers and writers in Arkansas, has expanded to include more than 95 presenters in many locations on both sides of the river from April 12-15, 2012. The Central Arkansas Library System’s Main Library campus and other venues in the River Market and Argenta Arts districts are the sites for a stimulating mix of sessions, panels, special events, performances, workshops, presentations, opportunities to meet authors, book sales, and book signings. Most events are free and open to the public.

Festival authors include New York Times columnist Jason Zinoman, Bryan Borland, Kevin Brockmeier, Frank Thurmond, Roy Blount Jr., Diana Southwood Kennedy, George Dohrmann, Deborah Crombie, Trent Stewart, Mary Monroe, Justin Torres, Greil Marcus, and more. Festival authors include winners of such awards as the Pulitzer Prize, World Fantasy Award, James Beard Foundation Award for Cookbook of the Year, Critics Choice Award for Best Family Film, American Book Award, The Heartland Prize, Truman Capote Award for Literary Criticism; Thomas Wolfe Award; National Association of Black Journalists Award, Guggenheim Fellowship, and a regional Emmy. One author was decorated with the Order of the Aztec Eagle, the highest honor given to foreigners by the Mexican Government; another was inducted into the French Legion of Honor, the highest honor bestowed on a French citizen. Many of the presenters’ works have been translated into multiple languages, optioned for television, and made into feature films.

Special events during the Festival include a cocktail reception with the authors, a book fiesta for children, cooking workshops, two films, and a street fair featuring area musicians. Panels and workshops will feature topics such as graphic novels, poetry, memoirs, romance, craft activism, electronic books and publishing trends, magazine editing, and pencil sharpening. Children’s special events include a storytime on the lawn of the Governor’s Mansion, a reading of a children’s story with illustrations and musical accompaniment at the Clinton Presidential Center, two plays, a magic show, a puppet show, and a concert by the Kinders.

Through the Writers In The Schools (WITS) initiative, the Festival will provide presentations by 17 authors for Pulaski county elementary, middle, and senior high schools and area colleges.

Author! Author!, a cocktail reception with the authors, will be Friday, April 13 at 7:30 p.m.; tickets are $25 in advance, and $40 at the door. Cooking workshop tickets are $20. All tickets go on sale at http://www.arkansasliteraryfestival.org beginning Thursday, March 1. Author! Author! tickets will also be available for purchase at all Central Arkansas Library System branches. All other Festival events are free and open to the public.

The Arkansas Literary Festival’s mission is to encourage the development of a more literate populace. A group of dedicated volunteers assists Festival Coordinator Brad Mooy with planning the Festival. Jay Jennings is the 2012 Festival Chair, with Laura Stanley serving as the Vice Chair. Other committee chairs include Katherine Whitworth, Talent Committee; Lisa Donovan & Darcy Pattison, Youth Programs; Martha Perry, Finance; and Amy Bradley-Hole, Moderators.