Author Archive for Abbie

Second Thursday Book Discussion Group

The Arizona Humanities Council and the Friends of the Patagonia Library will sponsor a series of book discussion groups, the second Thursday of October, February and April. The discussions, facilitated by Janet Winans, are certain to be both lively and informative. Books for each discussion will be provided on loan by the Humanities Council.

The discussion groups will meet at the Patagonia Library at 7:00pm or at another time if agreed on by the participants.

Hunger of Memory by Richard Rodriguez

Writers’ Round-up

The next Writers’ Round-up is scheduled for the afternoon of Saturday, Feb 18.
Authors with copies of their books will be present.
Cady Hall, next to the library.

Second Thursday Book Discussion Group

The Arizona Humanities Council and the Friends of the Patagonia Library will sponsor a series of book discussion groups, the second Thursday of October, February and April. The discussions, facilitated by Janet Winans, are certain to be both lively and informative. Books for each discussion will be provided on loan by the Humanities Council.

The discussion group will meet at the Patagonia Library at 7:00pm or at another time if agreed on by the participants.

Frida by

2005 American Museum of Natural History Traveling Margaret Mead Film and Video Festival, taking place on three Saturday evenings

2005 American Museum of Natural History Traveling Margaret Mead Mead Film & Video Festival
independent cultural documentaries-festival highlights
Tin ShedTheater
Saturday 7 p.m.

November 12: The Future of Food (88 min)
November 19: Afghanistan Unveiled (52min); Madame Ti Zo (Mrs. Littlebones) (60 min)
December 3: Marry Me (105 min)

November 12: The Future of Food (88 min)
Deborah Koons Garcia. 2003. 88min. Video. (U.S./Canada/Mexico)
N.Y. Premier at 2004 Margaret Mead Film & Video Festival
What will food look like for future generations? Will all plant species become private property? The Future of Food raises important questions about genetically modified food. It highlights the role of corporations and government in agriculture, and the role consumers have yet to play in determining what we will eat in the decades to come. Viewing this film, you’ll never look at food the same way again!

November 19: Afghanistan Unveiled (52 min); and Madame Ti Zo (Mrs. Littlebones) (60 min)
Brigitte Brault & Alna Women Filming Group. 2003. 52min. Video. (Afghanistan)
Filmed by the first team of women video journalists trained in Afghanistan, this rare film explores the effects of the Taliban’s repressive rule and recent U.S. military campaign on Afghani women. Shot in rural regions of the country, the filmmakers present footage of Hazara women whose lives have been decimated by recent events, and yet manage to also find moving examples of hope for the future. The film demonstrates the power of independent film to bear witness and reveal truth.

Madame Ti Zo (Mrs. Littlebones)
David Belle. 2004. 60min. (Haiti)
U.S. Premier at 2004 Margaret Mead Film & Video Festival
Madame Ti Zo, a midwife and herbal doctor, runs her own clinic in Jacmal, Haiti. This vrit-style film shot primarily in the courtyard and the thatched-roof hut where “Mrs. Littlebones” examines pregnant women, helps birth babies, and aids the steady stream of men, women, and children seeking her expertise provides an intimate look into traditional health practices.

December 3: Marry Me
Uli Gaulke & Jeannette Eggert. 2003. 105 min. (Germany/Cuba)
U.S. Premier at 2004 Margaret Mead Film & Video Festival
This intense portrayal of a transcultural marraige defies the stereotypical representation of Cuban women marrying foreign men for money and a visa. The filmmakers take us through the couple’s first two years as they struggle with unexpected obstacles. Marry Me presents a highly original observation of cross-cultural identity and alienation.

Cost: 3 evenings for $20 or $10/evening
for more information look at
http://www.amnh.org/programs/mead/travel.html
or contact
maronson@arizona.edu or info@patagoniapubliclibrary.org

“This Song Is No Less Than Thunder”

de Vie
a free Concert of New Lyrics
accompanied by the mbira dza vadzimu
7 p.m. on Sunday, November 6th
in Cady Hall, next to the Patagonia Library
342 Duquesne

for more info
de_vie@post.harvard.edu
520.604.2629
or
info@patagoniapubliclibrary.org
520.394.2921

Book study group re-starting!

Patagonia Library’s Book Study Group will recommence on October 20. This year’s theme is the perennially fascinating topic of Money.

Once again we will meet on Thursday afternoons at 3:30-5:00 in the council chambers of the town hall. Everyone is welcome, and potential members are asked to tell the Librarian that they would like a copy of the book. When you pick up a book at the Library, you will be asked for a minimum donation of $5.00 per title.

If you would like to be on the list for information and further details, please give your email address to the Librarian, libinfo@patagoniapubliclibrary.org, or directly to the convenor, Gail Eifrig, at eifrig@dakotacom.net or 455-0474.

Our schedule includes the following:
October 20: Raymond Chandler’s classic The Long Goodbye, a tale of greed, murder, deceit, loyalty and love set in a very noir-ish LA in the fifties. (Two great films for extra credit!)

November 17: Silas Marner by George Eliot

December 8: The Merchant of Venice, Shakespeare’s problematic encounter with capitalism and racism, with a good many other things as well.

January: a collection of short stories, ranging from DuMaupassant, O’Henry and Conan Doyle to Erdrich, O’Brien and Proulx.

February: The Panama Hat Trail, by Tom Miller. A non-fiction account by an accomplished writer of the economy of hat production in Central and South America. Tom is a Patagonia habitue and will in February.

March and April will have four sessions on Dickens’ Little Dorrit. Here is the great writer’s greatest unknown book, one that encompasses all he has to say about capitalism, obsession, love, vanity, hypocrisy, secrets, crime, revelation, sex, death, government, art and, yes, money. (A marvellous 6 hour film version came out in about 1990.)

Second Thursday Book Discussion Group

The Arizona Humanities Council and the Friends of the Patagonia Library will sponsor a series of book discussion groups, the second Thursday of October, February and April. The discussions, facilitated by Janet Winans, are certain to be both lively and informative. Books for each discussion will be provided on loan by the Humanities Council.

The discussion groups will meet at the Patagonia Library at 7:00pm or at another time if agreed on by the participants.

Land of Little Rain by Mary Austen October 13

Library Closed

The library will be closed Monday, Oct 10, in observance of Columbus Day.

Friends of the Library Book sale

Please join us, the second weekend of October, for the Friends of the Library book sale during the Patagonia Fall Festival. The Friends will be set up in the shade near the depot. Spend some time exploring and you will be certain to find be something special.

Funds raised from the sale support current library collection development, programs, technology, and library staff attendance at training workshops.

Young Rhythms

Oct 6: Young Rhythms: Join de Vie for a late morning of rhythm and movement for newborns, those a bit bigger and of course parents and caregivers. If possible bring spoons, spatulas, plastic containers or other potential sound creators from home.
11:00am at the Patagonia Library, 346 Duquesne.