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Week of February 2

Black History Month; Author Events with Sebastian Seung,
Nadine Cahodas, Bill Press, and Tim Weiner

Popular Destinations
Click a link below to skip down to the relevant section

Upcoming Events Offsite Events
Classes
Signed Book of the Week
Children and TeensMusic

 

Click here for our online events calendar and to preview events through February.
Members always save 20% on our author event books. Click here to register!


Thursday, February 9
10:30 a.m. Emily Jenkins - Toys Come Home(Schwartz & Wade, $16.99)
5 p.m., Bethesda Library, E. Lockhart - Real Live Boyfriends(Ember, $8.99)
7 p.m. Arthur Goldwag - The New Hate(Pantheon, $27.95)

Friday, February 10
7 p.m. Sebastian Seung - Connectome: How the Brain's Wiring Makes Us Who We Are (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $27)

Saturday, February 11
1 p.m. Nadine Cohodas - Princess Noire: The Tumultuous Reign of Nina Simone (Univ. of North Carolina, $22)
6 p.m. Bill Press - The Obama Hate Machine: The Lies, Distortions, and Personal Attacks on the President - and Who Is Behind Them (Thomas Dunne, $26.99)

Sunday, February 12
5 p.m. Rabbi Fred N. Reiner - Standing at Sinai: Sermons and Writings (Authorhouse, $18)

Monday, February 13
7 p.m. Matthew Aid - Intel Wars: The Secret History of the Fight Against Terror (Bloomsbury Press, $28)

 

 

Tuesday, February 14 – No Events
Happy Valentine’s Day!

Wednesday, February 15
7 p.m. Tim Weiner - Enemies: A History of the FBI (Random House, $30)

Thursday, February 16
5 p.m. Bethesda Library, Panel of Authors for Teens - Marie Lu, Beth Revis, Andrea Cremer, and Jessica Spotswood
7 p.m. Jamal Joseph - Panther Baby(Algonquin, $23.95)

Friday, February 17
7 p.m. Timothy Stanley & Pat Buchanan - The Crusader: The Life and Tumultuous Times of Pat Buchanan (Thomas Dunne, $27.99)

Saturday, February 18
1 p.m. Sally Denton - The Plots Against the President: FDR, A Nation in Crisis, and the Rise of the American Right  (Bloomsbury Press, $28) – CANCELLED
6 p.m. Rebecca Mackinnon - Consent of the Networked: The Worldwide Struggle For Internet Freedom  (Basic Books, $26.99)

Sunday, February 19
5 p.m. Mary Dudziak - War Time: An Idea, Its History, Its Consequences(Oxford Univ., $24.95)


The Scoop from Brad and Lissa


 

Black History Month

February 9, 2012

There are far too many superb works of literature by African American writers to fit into a single display at Politics & Prose or to be confined to a single month of celebration. Nonetheless, we appreciate the opportunity afforded by Black History Month to pay special tribute to black writers – novelists, poets, journalists, intellectuals, politicians, performing artists, and social critics – whose ideas and creative imaginations enrich the cultural life of our communities and our country.

Among our timeless favorites are the iconic works of Zora Neale-Hurston, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, and Langston Hughes. Given that this year Black History Month is focused on women’s contributions to history and culture, we take this moment to salute a younger generation of extraordinarily talented African American women writers, including ZZ Packer, Tayari Jones, Danzy Senna, and Heidi Durrow.

We also call your attention to works of fiction and non-fiction that reflect the wide range of experiences and voices comprising the African American literary community today: Isabel Wilkerson’s The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America’s Great Migration; Gil Scott Heron’s posthumously published memoir, The Last Holiday; Manning Marable’s seminal biography, Malcolm X; Donna Britt’s Brothers and Me; Henry Louis Gates, Jr’s Life Upon These Shores: Looking at African American History, 1513 – 2008; Randall Kennedy’s The Persistence of the Color Line: Racial Politics and the Obama Presidency; Walter Mosley’s All I Did Was Shoot My Man, and the just published How To Be Black, a “satirical race manual” by social critic and editor at The Onion, Baratunde Thurston. These are but a handful of books and authors who deserve mention.

Coming up this month at Politics & Prose are several author events that reflect the continuing richness of African American literary talent. On Thursday, February 16, Jamal Joseph will read from his book, Panther Baby, a deep, unvarnished, and compelling tale of his own journey from Harlem to leadership of his local Black Panthers chapter to prison and then to the halls of academe. And on February 25, we will host Mark Long, Jim Demonakos, and Nate Powell, who have co-written and illustrated a new graphic novel, The Silence of Our Friends, a semi-autobiographical tale about the experiences of two families – one black and one white – in Texas during the struggle for civil rights in the 1960s.

As important as Black History Month is, there is no reason to limit to February one’s appreciation, or celebration, of the vast contributions by African Americans to our history and culture. Indeed, we hope you will enjoy the wonderful books we have noted here -- as well as many others by African American writers -- today, tomorrow, this year, and throughout your lives.

Happy reading.

Brad and Lissa

 

Politics & Prose Travel


Flowers

 

P&P is organizing a trip to the Philadelphia International Flower Show on Sunday, March 4. This year's theme is "Hawaii: Islands of Aloha". Click here for more information and to register for the trip online.

Politics & Prose Classes


ClassesIt’s not too late to register for Christopher Griffin’s class on Literary Washington, which begins on Friday Feb. 17 and runs for six weeks, from 6 to 8 p.m.

The first in an occasional series on the literature of South Asia will be held on Friday, March 2, from 1-3 p.m., and will involve an In-Depth Analysis of Rohinton Mistry’s A Fine Balance, taught by journalist and filmmaker Alexandra Viets.

There are still spaces available in:

New spring classes will be announced soon, but enrollment is already open for:

For more information about these classes click the hyperlinks to our website. For other classes, please visit: http://www.politics-prose.com/classes/2012-classes. Keep an eye out—information about new 2012 Spring classes will be available soon!

  • Susan Coll

Book Notes


Bridal Registry

Baby Shower and Wedding Registries

The new P&P wishlist feature on our website is great for birthdays, school libraries, wedding registries, and baby showers. Or use it to keep track of a collection of books that you might like for a rainy day.

An "Add to Wish List" button now appears alongside the "Add to Cart" button on product pages and book lists on our website. When you are logged into your online P&P account, pressing this button will add the book to your wishlist.

  • Users can email their wishlist to friends and family, along with a custom message.
  • The wishlist supports product quantities - useful for schools or charitable organizations which might want more than one of each item on a list.
  • When another user makes a purchase for you from your wishlist, your list is updated. The item is marked as "Fulfilled" on the list, and the add to cart button is removed.
  • Users can search for wishlists by email address. Visit politics-prose.com/wishlist/searchto find a friend’s wishlist
    Because this is the "Beta" format, we look forward to future updates:
  • Google eBooks cannot be added to wishlists at this time. In the meantime, giving eBooks as gifts can be accomplished with a Politics & Prose Gift Card.
  • Only 1 wishlist per user. (You do have the option of creating additional usernames and wishlists if you have multiple email addresses.)
  • The "Add to Wish List" button will not appear in search results. You have to click the book from the search results to look at the detailed book page and then add it to your wishlist.
  • You will not be notified when something is purchased from your list.

- Andrew Getman

Bestsellers


 

Bestseller

All Politics & Prose Weekly Hardcover Bestsellers are 20% off for Members.
Click here to see what the community is reading and which of our hardcover fiction and non-fiction books we are discounting this week.

These are our top two titles.

Strategic Vision: America and the Crisis of Global Power, by Zbigniew Brzezinski (Basic Books, $26)
The Orphan Master's Son , by Adam Johnson (Random House, $26)

Click here for more of our bestsellers.

 


New In Paperback


New Paperback

Snowdrops, by A.D. Miller (Anchor, $15)
A finalist for the Man Booker Prize last year, Snowdrops reflects the Russia’s beautiful, tragic, nostalgic, and sometimes heartless complexity. It begins as a hard-bitten noir, almost farcically so, with a dead body and an impossibly gorgeous pair of women; but the story quickly evolves into an honest and evocative homage to the flaws and strengths of the Russians as they have moved from the bitter years of Stalinism to the hope and idealism of the thaw and perestroika to the uncertain present. Snowdrops is an entirely probable year in the life of a British expatriate lawyer who develops relationships with guileless ex-Soviet pensioners, glamorous youth, and thuggish members of the newly moneyed set and is led through a labyrinth of legal and illegal profiteering in Moscow. - Andrew Getman

Vaclav & Lena, by Haley Tanner (Dial Press, $15)
The children of Russian emigrés, Vaclav & Lena (Dial, $15) find comfort in their common origins, comradery in their attempts to navigate the English language, and purpose in their ambition to create a magic act in Brighton Beach. Then Lena disappears—and it’s not an act. The path to solving the mystery of Lena’s whereabouts will make you laugh and cry as Vaclav grows older and eventually uncovers the hidden truths behind the scenes of his friendship with Lena. Haley Tanner perfectly captures the wonder and possibilities of an imaginative childhood, one complicated by the incomprehensible, protective, and sometimes cruel behavior of adults. - Andrew Getman
Click here to read more of our staff reviews online. Or stop by the store to meet our booksellers and see our freshly updated staff favorites wall!



Graphic Novels


Graphic Novels

The Annotated Sandman, Volume 1 by Neil Gaiman and Leslie S. Klinger (Vertigo, $49.99)
Can't get enough Sandman? Have you collected all the trade paperback volumes, and even all the Absolute volumes? Well, just to show you how amazing and deep and intelligent this series really is, enter The Annotated Sandman. This oversize volume collects the first 20 issues of this award winning, groundbreaking series, with extra wide margins for the wealth of historical, anecdotal, literary and mythical annotations that can fit. Leslie S. Klinger worked in full cooperation with Neil Gaiman on this (along with Gaiman's original scripts for the series) so you get a lot of inside information you wouldn't have elsewhere.

Tintin: The Complete Companion by Michael Farr (Last Gasp, $35)
Michael Farr, the leading British expert on all things Tintin, gives us a book by book companion to Hergé’s comic masterpiece. With a wealth of information from Hergé’s archives, prepare yourself for a slew of reference photos, facts, anecdotes, and the real-life antecedents to Tintin’s adventures. Hergé was a keen observer (and strange predictor) of both world events and human drama, and this companion will undoubtedly reaffirm why Tintin remains one of the greatest comic creations ever. 

Click here for more graphic novel reviews.
Writers Room DC
A small team of local writers plans to create an ideal space for writing, right here in DC - with a launch date in the spring of 2012. The name of the project is Writers Room DC. Many cities now have writing rooms of the kind envisioned in this case—quiet spaces equipped with Wi-Fi, well-designed work stations and ergonomic desk chairs. Generally, there’s a little comfortable furniture for sitting and contemplating. New York alone has six such writing rooms, some with waiting lists. If you’re interested, please go to www.writersroomdc.com.


Signed Book of the Week


Romney
The Real Romney

Signed by Michael Kranish and Scott Helman

First editions, first printings.
Hardcover – January 2012
(HarperCollins, $27.99)

 


eBooks of the Week


 

Ebooks


Politics & Prose sells electronic books for most electronic devices.
 Click here for instructions.

This week we are featuring new eBook releases from HarperCollins.

Night, by Elie Wiesel (HarperCollins, $9.99)
ONE OF THE ESSENTIAL BOOKS OF OUR TIME IS NOW AVAILABLE AS AN E-BOOK

Read Elie Wiesel’s terrifying, powerful account of his survival in Nazi concentration camps.
Night is Elie Wiesel’s masterpiece, a candid, horrific, and deeply poignant autobiographical account of his survival as a teenager in the Nazi death camps. This translation by Marion Wiesel, Elie’s wife and frequent translator, presents this seminal memoir in the language and spirit truest to the author’s original intent. And in this preface, Elie reflects on the enduring importance of Night and his lifelong, passionate dedication to ensuring that the world never forgets man’s capacity for inhumanity to man.

Michael Chabon's classic novel The Yiddish Policemen's Union ($11.99) and his book of personal essays Manhood for Amateurs ($9.99) are now available as e-books for the first time. To see these and other books by Michael Chabon for your Nook, iPad, Sony Reader, or other digital reading device, visit our Michael Chabon eBook page

All eight novels (so far) of Armistead Maupin’s legendary Tales of the City series are finally available in e-book format! To celebrate, HarperCollins has lowered the price of the first novel, Tales of the City, to just 99 cents! Visit Armistead's Politics & Prose eBook page to download the books and begin-–or continue-–your adventures with Mary Ann, Mouse, Brian and the other denizens of Mrs. Madrigal’s apartment house at 28 Barbary Lane.

 

Coming Soon to Your Favorite Bookstore


Click here for our online events calendar and to preview events through March.
Members always save 20% on our author event books. Click here to register!

Events 1

Thursday, February 9, 10:30 a.m.

Emily Jenkins
Toys Come Home: Being the Early Experiences of an Intelligent Stingray, a Brave Buffalo, and a Brand-New Someone Called Plastic
(Schwartz & Wade, $16.99)
The third installment in Jenkins’s Toy Trilogy explains in six vignettes how the now-familiar StingRay, Lumphy the buffalo, and Plastic the ball came to live with their owner, referred to simply as the Girl. With black-and-white illustrations by Caldecott-Award winner Paul Zelinsky, this tale of toy adventure and misadventure charms. Ages 6-8

Thursday, February 9, 5 p.m.

at Bethesda Library
7400 Arlington Road, Bethesda, MD
E. Lockhart
Real Live Boyfriends: Yes. Boyfriends, plural. If my life weren't complicated, I wouldn't be Ruby Oliver
(Ember, $8.99)
In the fourth volume of the Ruby Oliver Quartet, the high-school senior is without a boyfriend. But not only has she lost Noel, her reputation is ruined, her home life is a mess, and she can’t concentrate on her college applications. To try to understand what’s going on, Ruby makes a documentary about love and popularity. Ages 14 and up

Thursday, February 9, 7 p.m.

Arthur Goldwag
The New Hate: A History of Fear and Loathing on the Populist Right (Pantheon, $27.95)

The author of Cults, Conspiracies, and Secret Societies here examines the latest strain of extremist thought. Typified by “Birthers” and “Truthers” (i.e., the government allowed the 9/11 attacks to happen), current right-wing theories are both more prevalent and more vehement than were similar notions of the past. Nonetheless, Goldwag shows that these tendencies have deep roots in American history.

Friday, February 10, 7 p.m.

Sebastian Seung - Connectome: How the Brain's Wiring Makes Us Who We Are (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $27)
If mapping the human genome was one route to identity, another lies in charting the brain’s circuitry. Seung, an MIT neuroscience professor, describes the ambitious project of tracing the connections among neurons and synapses that compose each brain’s unique wiring, a project that, if successful, could reveal new information about personality, memory, and disorders such as autism and schizophrenia.

Events

Saturday, February 11, 1 p.m.

Nadine Cohodas - Princess Noire: The Tumultuous Reign of Nina Simone (Univ. of North Carolina, $22)
In her acclaimed life of Nina Simone, Cohodas, author of Queen: The Life and Music of Dinah Washington, charts the musician’s performing career, her civil rights activism, friendships with luminaries such as Lorraine Hansberry and James Baldwin, and the mental illness that undermined her. Join us for the paperback release.

Saturday, February 11, 6 p.m.

Bill Press - The Obama Hate Machine: The Lies, Distortions, and Personal Attacks on the President - and Who Is Behind Them (Thomas Dunne, $26.99)
In this follow-up to Toxic Talk, his look at the right-wing media’s control of the political debate, Press focuses on how the right’s rhetoric has escalated to the point of slander. While personal attacks on a president are nothing new, Press argues that the volume of unsubstantiated assertions against President Obama—often driven by corporate interests—breaks new ground.

Sunday, February 12, 5 p.m.

Rabbi Fred N. Reiner - Standing at Sinai: Sermons and Writings (Authorhouse, $18)
Senior Rabbi of Temple Sinai from 1985 to 2010 and past president of the Washington Board of Rabbis and the Mid-Atlantic Region of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, Reiner has long been a dedicated and distinguished leader in the Jewish community. This selection of his writings charts the history of Temple Sinai, his own spiritual and intellectual developments, and poses crucial questions about values and beliefs for the next generation.

Monday, February 13, 7 p.m.

Matthew Aid - Intel Wars: The Secret History of the Fight Against Terror (Bloomsbury Press, $28)
Impressive as it was, the successful strike against bin Laden was the exception to, rather than the rule of, U.S. military-intelligence operations, Aid argues. In his comprehensive look at the country’s massive spy network, from policy to technology, personnel to budget, the author of Secret Sentry, investigates the gap between the resources devoted to intelligence and the often disappointing results.

Tuesday, February 14 – No Events

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Events

Wednesday, February 15, 7 p.m.

Tim Weiner - Enemies: A History of the FBI (Random House, $30)
Weiner won the National Book Award for Legacy of Ashes, his history of the CIA. His new book is an equally penetrating investigation of the FBI, with particular focus on its secret intelligence operations. Generally thought of as a kind of police force, the Bureau has in fact long carried on the surveillance activities of a national security agency.

Thursday, February 16, 5 p.m.

Panel of Authors for Teens
at Bethesda Library

7400 Arlington Rd.

Bethesda, Maryland
Join four writers for a discussion about the challenges and rewards of writing for young adults. Participants include Marie Lu, whose new novel is Legend; Beth Revis, author of A Million Suns, the second volume in her Across The Universe Trilogy; Andrea Cremer, who concludes her Nightshade Trilogy with Bloodrose; and Jessica Spotswood, whose Born Wicked inaugurates her Cahill Witch Chronicles.

Events

Thursday, February 16, 7 p.m.

Jamal Joseph - Panther Baby (Algonquin, $23.95)
Joseph started life as Eddie and was an honor student when he joined the Black Panthers at age fifteen. A year later he was incarcerated at Rikers Island. Exonerated and released in 1971, he became a Panther leader, but later spent twelve years at Leavenworth where he earned three degrees. Now chair of the film department at Columbia, Joseph tells his amazing life story in this new autobiography.

Friday, February 17, 7 p.m.

Timothy Stanley & Pat Buchanan - The Crusader: The Life and Tumultuous Times of Pat Buchanan (Thomas Dunne, $27.99)
A sharp observer of American politics from across the pond, Stanley, an Oxford historian, has the necessary critical distance to deliver a thorough and balanced account of the life of Pat Buchanan, the controversial conservative, three-time presidential candidate, and Republican insider who became a populist outsider. Stanley will be joined by Pat Buchanan.

Saturday, February 18, 1 p.m.

Sally Denton - The Plots Against the President: FDR, A Nation in Crisis, and the Rise of the American Right  (Bloomsbury Press, $28) – CANCELLED
In her latest history, the author of books on Helen Gahagan Douglas, John and Jesse Frémont, and Las Vegas, turns to the early years of FDR’s first presidential term. As Roosevelt struggled to implement his bold New Deal reforms, he faced attacks from both right and left, contending with an assassination attempt by an anarchist and with the Wall Street Putsch orchestrated by wealthy businessmen.
THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELLED AT THE AUTHOR'S REQUEST DUE TO AN UNFORSEEN SCHEDULING CONFLICT. THE EVENT WILL NOT BE RESCHEDULED.

Saturday, February 18, 6 p.m.

Rebecca Mackinnon - Consent of the Networked: The Worldwide Struggle For Internet Freedom  (Basic Books, $26.99)
In her call-to-action to keep digital frontiers open, MacKinnon, co-founder of Global Voices Online and a Fellow at the New America Foundation, heralds the opportunities—political, personal, and economic—made possible by social media, even as she issues an urgent caution against allowing corporate and national interests to abridge digital freedoms.

Sunday, February 19, 5 p.m.

Mary Dudziak - War Time: An Idea, Its History, Its Consequences(Oxford Univ., $24.95)
 “Wartime” was once considered exceptional—an interruption to the norm that was peacetime. But as Dudziak, USC professor of law, history, and political science, observes in her thought-provoking study, the U.S. has been involved continuously in various overseas armed conflicts for the past century. Given this new, never-ending nature of war, what are the implications for law, politics, and culture?

P&P Customers Are Also Invited To . . .


Politics & Prose sells books at many book signing parties and events. The events below are open to the public; however, reservations and tickets should be acquired from the hosting organization. Please contact offsite@politics-prose.com if you are planning an event and would like us to supply the books.

Friday, February 10, 7:30 p.m.

Pico Iyre

 

National Geographic Live!
1600 M Street NW
Pico Iyer - The Man Within My Head (Random House, $25.95)
Travel writer Pico Iyer brings a unique perspective to the issues of cultural globalization. His essays appear in National Geographic Traveler, Time, and Harper's, and he has written a dozen books, including The Open Road: The Global Journey of the 14th Dalai Lama. Join Iyer and Traveler magazine's Don George, former global travel editor of Lonely Planet Publications, for a conversation about the challenges and rewards of letting yourself be vulnerable in foreign places.

Read notes from an earlier Nat Geo Live event with Pico Iyer and Don George and read an article by Pico Iyer from the New York Times.

Sunday, February 12, 11 a.m.

Offsite

Water Street Gym
3255 K St. NW
Jeff HorowitzSmart Marathon Training: Run Your Best Without Running Yourself Ragged (Velopress, $18.95)
Water Street Gym invites you to kick off your spring training with Jeff Horowitz and Velopress. Horowitz is a certified running and triathlon coach, a personal trainer, and has run more than 150 marathons across 6 continents.

Refreshments will be provided. For more information, call 202.812.505 or e-mail trish@waterstreetgym.com.

Monday, February 13, at 7 p.m.

Englander

Sixth & I Synagogue
600 I Street NW
Metro: Gallery Place/Chinatown
Nathan Englander - What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank (Knopf, $29.95)
The eight stories that comprise What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank display a gifted young author grappling with the great questions of modern life. The title story is a provocative portrait of two marriages in which the Holocaust is played out as a devastating parlor game. “Everything I Know About My Family on My Mother’s Side” is suffused with an intimacy and tenderness that break new ground for a writer who continually expands the parameters of what he can achieve in the short form.

Tickets are $8 in advance, $10 the day of the event, or receive 2 FREE tickets with the purchase of the book through Sixth & I ($25). Purchase here. If you have questions, please call 202.408.3100.

Thursday, February 16, at 6 p.m.

Folger

Folger Shakespeare Library
201 East Capitol Street SE
Gigi Bradford, Louisa Newlin - Shakespeare’s Sisters (Folger Library, $19.99)

Dr. Michael Witmore, director of the Folger Shakespeare Library, cordially invites you to an evening with Rita Dove, Linda Gregerson, Elizabeth Nuñez, Linda Pastan, Jacqueline Osherow, and Jane Smiley. Contributors to the chapbook published in conjunction with the Folger exhibition Shakespeare’s Sisters: Voices of English and European Women Writers, 1500-1700

At 6 p.m., there will be an exhibition viewing and at 7 p.m., there will be readings from Shakespeare’s Sisters in the Gail Kern Paster Reading Room. The conversation will be moderated by Gigi Bradford and Louisa Newlin, editors of the Shakespeare's Sisters chapbook

Chapbooks will be available for purchase and a signing will follow the reading. Tickets are available for purchase online or call the box office at 202.544.7077.

For additional information about the Celebration of 1,000 Years of Women Writers,

visit www.folger.edu/womenwriters

Saturday, February 25, 9 a.m. -1:30 p.m.

Author Roundtable

Temple Sinai Women of Reform Judaism's
Annual Authors Roundtable
3100 Military Road, NW

Featuring Ramona Ausubel - No One is Here Except All of Us (Riverhead, $26.95) In 1939, at the suggestion of a girl, families in an isolated Romanian Jewish village try to save themselves from war through sheer force of imagination;

Deborah Kalb - Haunting  Legacy: Vietnam and the American Presidency from Ford to Obama (Brookings, $29.95)

Bernice Steinhardt - Memories of Survival (Hyperion, out of print)  The art and story of the author’s late mother, Esther Nisenthal Krinitz, a Holocaust survivor who depicted her experiences as a young girl in Poland in a series of fabric panels;

Natalie Wexler - The Mother Daughter Show (Fuze, $19.95) A satirical novel about mother-daughter relationships and private school culture inspired by the author’s experience as a parent at Sidwell Friends.

After registration and coffee, join us for a 9:30 a.m. Shabbat service in the Bet Am, led by Rabbi Jessica Oleon.  At 10:30 a.m., a discussion with the authors, will be moderated by Marla Romash. 

The Roundtable will be followed by a catered lunch and the chance to meet with the authors in small conversation groups.  Books will be available for sale and signing.

Tickets are $15 per person which includes coffee and snacks before the event and a complimentary lunch. Reservations must be received by Monday, February 20. 
Click here to purchase onlineor mail your check, payable to TSWRJ, to Helene Sacks, 4 Magnolia Parkway, Chevy Chase, MD 20815.  Please include your sandwich choice (corned beef, tuna fish, turkey, or vegetarian) on your check or online reservation.

Click here for more information or contact Carole Brand at csbrand@verizon.net or 301-657-2547.

Monday, March 19, 7 p.m.

FoerSixth & I
600 I Street, NW
Metro: Gallery Place/Chinatown

Jonathan Safran Foer
New American Haggadah(Little, Brown, $29.99)

Read each year around the seder table, the Haggadah recounts through prayer, song, and ritual the story of Exodus, when Moses led the Israelites out of slavery in Egypt to wander the desert for forty years before reaching the Promised Land.

Now, Foer has orchestrated a new way of experiencing and understanding one of our oldest and sacred stories, with a new translation of the traditional text by Nathan Englander and commentary by major Jewish writers and thinkers Jeffrey Goldberg, Lemony Snicket, Rebecca Newberger Goldstein, and Nathaniel Deutsch.

Tickets are $12 or receive 2 FREE tickets with the purchase of the book through Sixth & I ($30). Purchase here. If you have questions, call 202.408.3100.

From the Children and Teens' Department


Chldrens

Children's Book of the Week
(20% off for everyone through February 15)
What sweet names do your parents call you? If you’re American, maybe you’re “honey” or “pumpkin.” In Australia, you might be “possum” or “flossie.” A French mother might call her baby “mon lapin (my rabbit),” a German father might tuck his “Butzilein (little kiss)” into bed, and an Ethiopian grandmother might read a story to “yeinay filiklik (my bubble of joy).” Jacqueline K. Ogburn has catalogued these Little Treasures: Endearments from Around the World(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $16.99) in a picture book whimsically illustrated by Caldecott medalist Chris Raschka, creating the perfect way to say “I love you” to your littlest valentine.  Ages 2 and up.  – Dana Chidiac

 

Children’s Blast from the Past
(20% off for Members through February 15)

Flip is not happy about being sent away from her father to an all-girls boarding school in Switzerland. She is miserable, but a bright spot appears in the form of a new, unlikely friend. She meets Paul walking on the mountain and the two immediately connect, but his life remains a mystery to Flip. Originally published in 1949, Madeleine L’Engle’s And Both Were Young (Square Fish, $9.99) is a quietly romantic story of first love and healing in post-World War II Europe.  Ages 12 and up.

Teen Panel

Join us for our teen author panel at the Bethesda Library on February 16 at 6 p.m. Four writers will discuss the challenges and rewards of writing for young adults. Participants include Marie Lu, whose new novel is Legend; Beth Revis, author of A Million Suns, the second volume in her Across The Universe Trilogy; Andrea Cremer, who concludes her Nightshade Trilogy with Bloodrose; and Jessica Spotswood, whose Born Wicked inaugurates her Cahill Witch Chronicles.

Read about - and buy - more of our favorite books for children and teens by clicking here.
Click here to see the Children and Teens' Department 2011 Favorites.

 

 

Story Hour
Each Monday at 10:30 a.m., BearSong offers storytelling and guitar music for children from birth to 5 years old. Click here to sign up to receive email updates.  We will inform you of special story hours, changes or cancellations.
Please join us on Monday, February 20, 2012 for a special musical story hour with Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer.  We will meet at our usual time: 10:30 a.m., but we will meet upstairs. 

 

Markdown Books


 

Markdown



Almost as long as there’s been life and death, there’s been cancer. In his comprehensive The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer, the physician, researcher - and Pulitzer Prize-winning author - Siddhartha Mukherjee tells the story of this dreaded disease. He delves back to the earliest reports of cancer in history, looks at how society and medicine have responded, traces the effects of this seemingly incurable illness on human civilization, and profiles some of the many individuals who have battled this scourge. Available in paperback, $9.98.

The inimitable Mexican artist Frida Kahlo dressed as colorfully as she painted. She didn’t just wear clothes - she created dazzling costumes, and they are on display in Self Portrait in a Velvet Dress - Frida’s Wardrobe: Fashions from the Museo Frida Kahlo. With glossy full-color photographs that offer close looks at details of fabrics, embroidery, beadwork, and more, this album clinches the case for fashion as high art. It’s also a biography in images, matching photos of restored garments with those of Kahlo wearing the outfits while she worked, went out, or rested in bed. The accompanying essays by art historians, curators, and textile restorers discuss the clothes and their various roles in Kahlo’s  life. Available in hardcover, $9.98.

The Comanche were the most powerful Native American fighters, and their resistance to European westward expansion led to forty years of warfare. S.C. Gwynne tells their remarkable story in Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches. And who was Quanah Parker? In a parallel story line, Gwynne recounts the Comanches’ kidnapping of nine-year-old Cynthia Ann Parker, who gained renown (or infamy) as the “White Squaw” who refused to leave the tribe until forced to by the Texas Rangers. Her mixed-blood son, Quanah, was the last Comanche chief. Available in hardcover, $7.98.

Please call us at 202-364-1919 or stop by the store to shop for these and other discounted titles.

  • Laurie Greer

Music News


nina Simone

NINA SIMONE EVENT THIS SATURDAY

This Saturday, February 11, at 1 p.m., Nadine Cahodas will talk about her biography of Nina Simone, Princess Noir. As part of the presentation, Ms Cahodas will show two rare performances: the first TV footage of Nina Simone, from 1959, and a 1964 excerpt from the Steve Allen Show, in which she talks about and performs “Mississippi Goddam.”

We will also be selling two other related titles:
The Definitive Collection (Hip-O, $12.98), which features 20 songs.
Live in ’65 and ’66 (Jazz Icons DVD, $19.99), filmed in concert.

 

Songbook

THE AMERICAN SONGBOOK CONTINUES

Amy Cervini, Digging Me, Digging You (Anzic, $16.98) – Amy Cervini’s album is a wonderful tribute to singer, pianist, and composer Blossom Dearie, who died in 2009. Ms Cervini chooses some Blossom Dearie originals (“I Like You, You’re Nice,” “Hey John”), songs by composers Ms Dearie championed such as Dave Frishberg and, of course, great standards that she made her own, like the slowed-down “Tea for Two,” or the romping “Down with Love.” A cute ending to the album is Bob Dorough’s “Figure Eight” from Schoolhouse Rock—arranged for eight cellos. Ms Cervini is accompanied by such great players as Bruce Barth on piano, Anat Cohen on clarinet, and Matt Wilson on drums.

Meredith d’Ambrosio, By Myself (Sunnyside, $16.98) – Ms d’Ambrosio’s album is also a tribute—to the composer Arthur Schwartz and his lyricists (primarily Howard Dietz, but Yip Harburg, Maxwell Anderson, and Johnny Mercer are also here). This is a solo album, with Ms d’Ambrosio singing and playing piano on such gems as the title tune,  “Dancing in the Dark,” “Haunted Heart,” and “You and the Night and the Music.”

Paul McCartney, Kisses on the Bottom (Hear Music) – As he tells it in the liner notes, Paul McCartney still has strong memories of neighbors and friends singing the happy American tunes gathered around the piano played by his father in post-war Liverpool. His heartfelt tribute to the songs of his parents’ generation is beautifully produced: Diana Krall and her band play backup (with guest John Pizzarelli on guitar) and lush orchestrations by Johnny Mandel and Alan Broadbent. Songs include “Bye Bye Blackbird” (complete with the rarely sung verse), “It’s Only a Paper Moon,” and “Inchworm.”

Music

EVENTS: BEN ALLISON AT ATLAS AND THE ELLINGTON FESTIVAL AT STRATHMORE

The Atlas Performing Arts Center on H Street, NE, has an exciting list of jazz and new music events this spring (see http://atlasarts.org/ ).
Next Wednesday, February 15, bassist Ben Allison brings his quartet. Allison has put out two of the best CDs of jazz in the past few years, last year’s Action Refraction, and 2009’s Think Free (both on the Palmetto label).

The Strathmore is at the very start of their ambitious “Discover Ellington” festival, with a family day open house, lectures, and many concerts, including an “Ellington Songbook” with Brian Stokes Mitchell; and Ellington’s “Sacred Concert” with the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra, and the tap-dancing Manzari Brothers.
Please look for the details at www.Strathmore.org/discoverellington  .

Two other concerts in the series I’m looking forward to:

Next Thursday, February 16, pianist Robert Glasper will play a solo program of Ellington and other composers in the Strathmore Mansion.
His next project, Black Radio (Blue Note Records) by the Robert Glasper Experiment, will be released on February 28.

On Saturday, February 18, Arturo O’Farrill will lead the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra in “Big Band Ellington: Duke Goes Latin,” with clarinetist Paquito D’Rivera.
Mr. O’Farrill’s latest CD is 40 Acres and a Burro (Zoho Records).

Click here for more news and reviews. Please call us at 202-364-1919 or email me at agoldinger@politics-prose.com to order these CDs.

  • András Goldinger

The Most Thoughtful Gift


HeartThe best Valentine’s Day gift is thoughtful, literary and utterly unique: When you give the gift of Book-a-Month, the special reader in your life will receive a handpicked book all year round. Long after February’s roses have wilted and the chocolate turned to cavities, your valentine will receive monthly books chosen by expert booksellers!

Our Book-a-Month Program is tailored specifically to your taste, each book handpicked by booksellers based on the information you provide: your reader’s interests and hobbies, and their favorite books and writers. Is your sweetheart an art historian with a yen for mysteries set in Southeast Asia? Or a lawyer addicted to presidential biographies? Or simply someone in search of the elusive, entirely transporting good read? Our reading-addicted, review-devouring staff of bookworms has you covered. Click here to see what people are saying about Book-a-Month!

Does your valentine refer to “built-in bookshelves” in a respectful hush or disappear from dinner parties to peruse the host’s library? Help your sweetheart build an impressive, irreplaceable library through the P&P Signed First Editions Club and we’ll send an autographed first printing every month. We’ll bring you the best, most exciting new titles from writers who inspire us with contagious enthusiasm. Sign up now and start with two of 2012’s most buzzed-about books: The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson (January) and What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank by Nathan Englander (February). Both programs are also available for children.

Call us at 202.364.1919 or e-mail at Bookamonth@politics-prose.com and SignedFirstEditions@politics-prose.com for more information.

  • Liz Sher & Michael.Patrick.Allen

Book Groups


P&P's book groups meet monthly and are free and open to the public.

Thursday, February 2, 7:30 p.m.

Capital James Joyce Club
The beginning of Ulysses, by James Joyce, and the last five cantos of Dante’s Divine Comedy

Monday, February 6, 7:30 p.m.

Classics
The Ramayana, told by William Buck
March 5 selection: Prometheus Bound and the Suppliants, by Aeschylus

Tuesday, February 7, 7 p.m.

Travel
Monsoon, by Robert Kaplan
March 6 selection: Masque of Africa, by V.S. Naipaul

Wednesday, February 8, 7 p.m.

Lez Read
The Last Nude, by Ellis Avery
March 14 selection: Wingshooters, by Nina Revoyr

Thursday, February 9

Fantasy, 6:30 p.m.
Bridge of Birds, by Barry Hughart
March 8 selection: Mythago Wood, by Robert Holdstock

Science Fiction, 7:30 p.m.
Old Man's War, by John Scalzi
March 8 selection: Ender’s Game, by Orson Scott Card


Click here to learn more about what our in-store book groups are reading.

To receive monthly updates about suggestions for private book groups as well as book groups at Politics & Prose, click here to add "Monthly Book Group Recommendations and News" to your mailing lists!



News from the Coffeehouse


 

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