The
Poetry of Ezra Pound
Friday, October 30th from 12 pm to 1 pm
Library of Congress
Thomas
Jefferson Building (Whittall Pavilion – Ground Floor)
101
Independence Ave SE
Washington, D.C. 20540
Poets Elizabeth
Arnold and Charles
Bernstein will
celebrate the birthday of poet Ezra Pound by reading selections from his work
and discussing his influence on their own writing. This event is free and open
to the public and will feature a display from the Library’s collections. Free admission.
Paula Hawkins – The Girl on the Train
Friday,
October 30th at 7 pm
Politics & Prose Bookstore and
Coffeehouse
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20008
In
her debut novel, Hawkins uses three different narrators to explore how little
any of us really know about the lives of others. This rich psychological
thriller centers on Rachel, who, in brief glimpses from a daily commuter train,
finds what looks to her like an ideal marriage. She herself is still reeling
from a nasty divorce, drinking way too much, and in fact commutes to a job she
only pretends still to have. Then the woman she’s envied goes missing, and
Rachel is implicated in the disappearance by her ex-husband, who claims Rachel
was drunk and out of control near where the woman was last seen—but Rachel
remembers nothing. Hawkins is the former deputy personal finance editor of the Times of London. She will be in
conversation with journalist, author, and Book Maven Bethanne Patrick. Free admission.
ASL Open Mic Night
Friday,
October 30th from 11 pm to 1 am
Busboys
and Poets (5th and K location)
1025 5th St NW
Washington, D.C. 20001
On this night, American Sign Language users are
invited to recite a poem, song, short skit, or jokes. Come out and enjoy the
wonderful environment while you eat, drink, and socialize. Great for those
learning American Sign Language. Hosted by NatPlu. $5 cover.
Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar - Mycroft Holmes
Saturday, October 31st at
11 am
Politics & Prose Bookstore and
Coffeehouse
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20008
In his first novel for adults, the NBA legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar focuses
on Sherlock’s older, smarter but, according to Arthur Conan Doyle, less
industrious, brother. In 1870, Mycroft is working hard at the War Office in
London and already showing a distinct knack for international diplomacy. When
news of strange deaths in Trinidad sends him overseas to investigate, he’s
drawn into a puzzle that may involve supernatural beings. Abdul-Jabbar is the
author of On the Shoulders of Giants
and, not-incidentally, a long-time fan of the Holmes mysteries, Note: this is a
signing only. The line for this signing will form outside the bookstore
beginning at 10 am. No posed photos will be allowed, but customers may take
photos as they move through the signing line. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar will be
signing books only, no memorabilia.
Kate Gavino - Last
Night's Reading: Illustrated Encounters with Extraordinary Authors
Saturday, October 31st at 1 pm
Politics & Prose Bookstore and
Coffeehouse
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20008
For recent readings in and around New York City, Kate Gavino’s colorful
collection of Tumblr postings is surely the next-best thing to being there. The
Brooklyn-based writer and illustrator captures the liveliest quotes, presented
as beautiful, hand-lettered characters along with an equally vivid drawing of
the author. Ranging from major venues with major writers to ambient-rich
holes-in-the-wall, these unique reports on the literary scene show us why we
love going to readings. Free admission.
Alex Mar - Witches
Of America
Saturday, October 31st at 3.30 pm
Politics & Prose Bookstore and
Coffeehouse
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20008
Alex Mar’s commentaries have appeared
in journals including Slate, Elle, and Oxford American; in her documentary film, American Mystic, the journalist revealed herself as a skeptic
fascinated by believers. Her first book continues her film’s exploration of
contemporary paganism, chronicling both intimate rituals and mass-gatherings of
witches. Following her subject into the deep dark woods as well as into the
urban headquarters of organized societies, Mar works to elucidate the role of
spirituality—and of Wicca practices in particular—in a secular world. Free
admission.
Tom Gjelten - A
Nation of Nations: A Great American Immigration Story
Saturday, October 31st at 6 pm
Politics & Prose Bookstore and
Coffeehouse
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20008
Published to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Immigration and
Nationality Act—a period during which the foreign-born population of the U.S.
has tripled—Tom Gjelten’s third book tells the national story through the
microcosm of Fairfax County, Virginia. He follows families from Korea, Bolivia,
and Libya as they face cultural and racial stereotyping, economic challenges,
and other obstacles. A long-time NPR correspondent, regular panelist on
“Washington Week” and the author of Bacardi
and The Long Fight for Cuba,
Gjelten has won awards for his work on both overseas events and domestic
issues. Free admission.
Steven Hill - Raw Deal: How the "Uber Economy"
And Runaway Capitalism Are Screwing American Workers
Sunday,
November 1st at 1 pm
Politics
& Prose Bookstore and Coffeehouse
5015
Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington,
D.C. 20008
The author of Europe’s Promise takes a hard look at new businesses like Uber, Airbnb,
and TaskRabbit—and finds them wanting. Arguing against the sharing economy as a
model, Steven Hill shows how this libertarian economic model is unfair to
workers who are less likely to find full-time employment and more likely to
work as contractors at low compensation. Hill suggests an economic model
focused on the individual, not the workplace, is a fairer deal for America’s
labor force, which also faces displacement from robots and automation. Currently
a senior fellow with New America, Hill is a long-time journalist and
commentator. His work has been featured in The Washington Post, The Guardian,
the BBC, and C-Span. Free admission.
Raoul
Wientzen - The Assembler of Parts
Sunday, November 1st from 2
pm to 4 pm
The Writer's Center
4508 Walsh Street
Bethesda, MD 20815
"In this astonishing first novel, 7-year-old, physically disabled Jess
reviews her brief, tumultuous life from heaven via films provided by The
Assembler, a supreme being who, for mysterious reasons, declined to
give her thumbs, several bones, a whole heart and the gift of hearing."
—Kirkus Review. Raoul Wientzen reads from The Assembler of Parts, winner of the McLaughlin Esstman Stearns First Novel Prize. The reading will be
followed by a reception and book signing. Free admission.
Linda
Pastan - Insomnia: Poems
Sunday, November 1st
at 5 pm
Politics & Prose Bookstore and Coffeehouse
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20008
In her new work, Linda Pastan visits the
dark/remorseless/ stations of the night, doing so with her signature lucidity
and grace. Maryland’s Poet Laureate from 1991 to 1995, is one of contemporary
poetry’s most honored figures. Her list of accolades includes a Pushcart Prize,
a Dylan Thomas Award, the Di Castagnola Award, and the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize.
Two of her collections, Carnival Evening and PM/AM, were finalists for the National Book Award. Free
admission.
Upshur
Street Books Turns One!
Sunday, November 1st
from 6 pm to 8 pm
827 Upshur St NW
Washington, D.C. 20011
One year ago on November
1st, Upshur Street Books became a part of the D.C. literary community. Since
then, many people have contributed to make the bookstore a success. A new
independent, community bookstore is an achievement to be proud of. Help
celebrate! The party will be held on the third floor of the forthcoming Slim’s
Diner. There will be music by Paperhaus and Sean Barna, food, drinks, special
discounts, and delightful bookish conversation. The bookstore will be open from
10 am to 9 pm. Free admission.
Rebecca
Goldfield, Matt Dembicki, Mike Short, and Evan Keeling - Captive Of Friendly Cove: Based on the Secret Journals Of John Jewitt
Sunday, November 1st
at 6:30 pm
Busboys and Poets (Brookland location)
625 Monroe St. NE
Washington, D.C. 20017
In this new work, based on real life
events as recorded by British sailor John Jewitt, the creative team of Rebecca
Goldfield, Matt Dembicki, Mike Short, and Evan Keeling pairs early 19th-century adventure with 21st-century graphic
tale-telling. Jewitt spent three years as a captive of the Mowachaht First
Nation of Nootka Sound. The book chronicles his capture and the fraught years
spent oscillating between assimilating to survive and keeping hope of an eventual
escape. Goldfield is an award-winning documentary filmmaker whose work has
appeared on PBS and National Geographic. Her previous collaboration with
Keeling, founding member of the D.C. Conspiracy, and the graphic artist
Dembicki, resulted in District Comics, which was one of The Washington Post’s Best
Books of 2012. Free admission.
*SPARKLE* Queer Open Mic
Sunday, November 1st from 8 pm to 10 pm
Busboys and Poets (14th & V
location)
2021 14th St, NW
Washington, D.C. 20009
*SPARKLE* open mic poetry
is a queer-friendly and focused reading series that has featured an array of
LGBT-dedicated poets. Hosted by Regie Cabico and Danielle Evennou. $5 cover.
Lenore
Myka - King of the Gypsies &
Virginia Pye - Dreams of the Red Phoenix
Monday, November 2nd
at 6:30 pm
Busboys and Poets (Takoma location)
235 Carroll St. NW
Washington, D.C. 20012
Winner
of the G. S. Sharat Chandra Prize for Short Fiction, Lenore Myka’s first book
focuses on life in post-communist Romania, which she experienced in the
mid-1990s as a Peace Corps volunteer teaching English. Together, this
collection of stories tracks the impact of recent political and economic
changes through several strata of Romanian society, especially the
disenfranchised, traumatized, and, in side trips to America, émigrés. Virginia Pye,
author of River of Dust, draws on her family’s past
for her second novel, set in 1937 China. As the Japanese invade, Shirley, a
recently widowed American missionary, has to decide where her loyalties lie.
Torn between wanting to see her son safely out of the fray, yet drawn to the
idealism of the Chinese (and of one Red Army soldier in particular) she first
offers her home as a clinic and nurses the wounded, then, as her son faces
increasing ostracism as a “foreign devil,” decides to flee while she still can.
Ru Freeman and Contributors
- Extraordinary Rendition
Monday,
November 2nd at 6:30 pm
Busboys
and Poets (14th & V location)
2021
14th St, NW
Washington,
D.C. 20009
This anthology of work by 65 American writers seeks to
counter the dehumanizing aspects of mainstream reporting on Palestine with work
that reflects the complexities and immediate reality of the situation. Ru Freeman
will discuss the role of anthologies in political change with Ashley Dawson,
editor of Against Apartheid: The Case for
Boycotting Israeli Universities.
Freeman is a Sri Lankan and American activist, Huffington
Post blogger, and prize-winning author of several novels, including On Sal Mal Lane. Readers: Nate Brown, a widely published fiction
writer and web editor for American Short Fiction, and Susan Muaddi Darraj, a widely
anthologized short-story writer and winner of the 2014 AWP Grace Paley Award
for her forthcoming collection of short fiction, A Curious Land: Stories from Home.
Play
Reading: After the Blood
Monday, November 2nd
from 6:30 pm to 9 pm
Busboys
and Poets (5th and K location)
1025 5th St NW
Washington, D.C. 20001
Enjoy a stage reading of
the play After the Blood. Directed by
Eleanor Holdridge, the story follows two D.C. activists protesting the bombing
of Gaza as they share secrets and cultivate a romance while painting banners
late into the night. But one of the women is keeping a big secret to herself. Free
and open to all!
Alison
Bass – Getting Screwed
Monday, November 2nd
at 6:30 pm
Kramerbooks
1517
Connecticut Avenue, NW
Washington,
D.C.
20036
Alison Bass weaves the true
stories of sex workers with the latest research on prostitution into a gripping
journalistic account of how women (and some men) navigate a culture that
routinely accepts the implicit exchange of sex for money, status, or even a
good meal, but imposes heavy penalties on those who make such bargains
explicit. Along the way, Bass examines why an increasing number of middle-class
white women choose to become sex workers and explores how prostitution has
become a thriving industry in the twenty-first-century global economy.
Situating her book in American history more broadly, she also discusses the
impact of the sexual revolution, the rise of the Nevada brothels, and the
growing war on sex trafficking after 9/11. Free admission.
T. J. Stiles - Custer's Trials: A Life on the Frontier of a
New America
Monday,
November 2nd at 7 pm
Politics
& Prose Bookstore and Coffeehouse
5015
Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington,
D.C. 20008
T. J. Stiles won
multiple awards for his debut biography on Jesse James. With his next work, The First Tycoon, a life of Cornelius Vanderbilt, he earned both the
Pulitzer and the National Book Award. Now, in his eagerly awaited third book,
Stiles reveals new facets of General George Armstrong Custer. Looking at
Custer’s experience both as a public figure and as the husband of a highly
educated woman, Stiles presents a complex man whose strengths and weaknesses
often conflicted. Vanderbilt is both iconic of the Wild West and at odds with
the larger socio-cultural changes going on around him. Free admission.
Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor - Welcome To Night Vale
Monday, November 2nd
at 7 pm
Sixth and I Historic
Synagogue
600 I St NW
Washington, D.C.
20001
Carrying on the tradition of The Twilight Zone and Twin
Peaks, Night Vale brought the
American Gothic to poD.C.asts in 2012 and became a #1 iTunes Comedy poD.C.ast.
With Welcome to Night Vale,
co-writers Joseph Fink, who created the series, and Jeffrey Cranor, a
playwright, give their indelibly creepy town a book-length treatment. Bringing
out facets of the place and its characters other formats can’t, this written
episode revolves around the cryptic “King City,” an unexplained phrase that
somehow holds the key to Diana’s shape-shifting. Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor
will be in conversation with Linda Holmes, host of NPR's entertainment and
pop-culture blog, Monkey See and NPR
poD.C.ast Pop Culture Happy Hour. 1
Ticket: $15; 1 Book and 1 Ticket: $25; $23 for P & P members; 1 Book and 2
Tickets: $35; $33 for P & P members.
Monday Night Open Mic Poetry hosted by KaNikki J
Monday,
November 2nd at 2015 from 8 pm to 10 pm
Busboys and Poets (Shirlington location)
4251 South Campbell Avenue
Arlington, VA 22206
For two hours, audiences can expect a diverse
chorus of voices and a vast array of professional spoken word performers, open
mic rookies, musicians, and a different host every week. $5 cover.
Monday
Night Open Mic hosted by E-Baby
Monday, November 2nd from 9 pm to 11 pm
Busboys and Poets (Takoma location)
235 Carroll St. NW
Washington, D.C. 20012
For two hours, audiences can expect a diverse
chorus of voices and a vast array of professional spoken word performers, open
mic rookies, musicians, and a different host every week. $5 cover.
Kennedy
Odede and Jessica Posner - Find Me
Unafraid: Love, Loss, and Hope in an African Slum
Tuesday, November 3rd at 6:30 pm
Busboys and Poets (Brookland location)
625 Monroe St. NE
Washington, D.C. 20017
Kennedy Odede and Jessica
Posner take turns narrating this story of their efforts to improve conditions
in one of Kenya’s worst slums. Odede founded the nonprofit Shining Hope for
Communities (SHOFCO) when he was still a teenager, and Posner joined him in
2007—the first white person to live in Kibera. The two met when Posner was a
Wesleyan undergraduate on a semester abroad in Kenya, where Odede had grown up.
Later, they married, Odede completed his formal education in the U.S., and the
couple founded a much-needed school for girls. The school now has an enrollment
of 140. SHOFCO has continued to grow and includes a women’s health clinic, an
AIDS information center, a library, and other services, with a similar project
scheduled to open in Mathare. Free admission.
Sara Benincasa – D.C.
Trip
Tuesday, November 3rd
at 6;30 pm
Busboys and Poets (14th & V
location)
2021 14th St, NW
Washington, D.C. 20009
An
award-winning comedian, Sara Benincasa made her literary debut with Agorafabulous, a memoir relating her
struggle with agoraphobia that was at once illuminating about a disabling
malady and very funny. She moved into fiction with Great, and now her second novel takes on
the classic high school class trip to the nation’s capital. Follow an
inexperienced teacher trying to manage both her students and her love life, and
a pair of sophomores eager to try anything. Benincasa will be in conversation
with Dave Zirin, The Nation’s sports editor
and the author of several books, including A People’s History of Sports and Brazil’s Dance With the Devil.
Free admission.
Mehrsa Baradaran – How the Other
Half Banks
Tuesday,
November 3rd at 6:30 pm
Kramerbooks
1517
Connecticut Avenue, NW
Washington,
D.C.
20036
The
United States has two separate banking systems today—one serving the well-to-do
and another exploiting everyone else. How the Other Half Banks contributes to the growing
conversation on American inequality by highlighting one of its prime causes:
unequal credit. Mehrsa Baradaran examines how a significant portion of the
population, deserted by banks, is forced to wander through a wild west of
payday lenders and check-cashing services to cover emergency expenses and pay
for necessities all thanks to deregulation that began in the 1970s and
continues decades later. Free admission.
Julie Checkoway - The Three-Year Swim Club: The Untold Story of Maui's Sugar Ditch Kids and
Their Quest for Olympic Glory
Tuesday,
November 3rd at 7 pm
Politics
& Prose Bookstore and Coffeehouse
5015
Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington,
D.C. 20008
A documentary filmmaker with an extensive creative writing
background, Julie Checkoway devotes her first book to the story of one of the
world’s most unlikely sports triumphs. In 1937 a visionary schoolteacher on
Maui turned his impoverished, malnourished students into amateur swimmers—and
coached them into true athletes. By 1940, when this Japanese-American swim-team
struggled against racism as well as physical privations, they not only
persevered, but triumphed. Free admission.
Tuesday Night Open Mic hosted by Twain
Dooley
Tuesday, November 3rd from 9 pm to 11 pm
Busboys and Poets (14th & V location)
2021 14th St, NW
Washington, D.C. 20009
http://www.busboysandpoets.com/events/event/tuesday-night-open-mic-hosted-by-twain-dooley7342
Tuesday, November 3rd from 9 pm to 11 pm
Busboys and Poets (14th & V location)
2021 14th St, NW
Washington, D.C. 20009
http://www.busboysandpoets.com/events/event/tuesday-night-open-mic-hosted-by-twain-dooley7342
For
two hours, audiences can expect a diverse chorus of voices and a vast array of
professional spoken word performers, open mic rookies, musicians, and a
different host every week. $5 cover.
Tuesday Night Open Mic hosted by
Rebecca Dupas
Tuesday, November 3rd from 9 pm to 11 pm
Busboys and Poets (Takoma location)
235 Carroll St. NW
Washington, D.C. 20012
http://www.busboysandpoets.com/events/event/tuesday-night-open-mic-hosted-by-rebecca-dupas5378
Tuesday, November 3rd from 9 pm to 11 pm
Busboys and Poets (Takoma location)
235 Carroll St. NW
Washington, D.C. 20012
http://www.busboysandpoets.com/events/event/tuesday-night-open-mic-hosted-by-rebecca-dupas5378
For
two hours, audiences can expect a diverse chorus of voices and a vast array of
professional spoken word performers, open mic rookies, musicians, and a different
host every week. $5 cover.
Fred
Bowen - Out Of Bounds
Wednesday, November 4th
at 10:30 am
Politics & Prose Bookstore and Coffeehouse
(Children’s and Teens’ Dept)
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20008
Nate’s soccer team,
the Strikers, lost out last year to archrivals The Monarchs. This time around,
the boys are determined for things to be different. When it comes down to a
split-second decision between making a goal and being a good sportsman, Nate disappoints
his teammates—but can he still help the Strikers make it to playoffs? Ages 8–11.
Free admission.
Mark
Weisbrot - Failed: What the Experts Got
Wrong About the Global Economy
Wednesday, November 4th from 5:30 pm to
8 pm
Busboys
and Poets (5th and K location)
1025 5th St NW
Washington, D.C. 20001
Mark Weisbrot is
Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. Failed analyzes why important economic
developments of recent years have been widely misunderstood, and in some cases,
almost completely ignored. First, in the Eurozone, Weisbrot argues that the
European authorities' political agenda played a very important role in
prolonging the Eurozone's financial crisis and pushing it into years of recession
and mass unemployment. The second central theme of Failed explores practical alternatives to prolonged economic
failure. Drawing on the history of other financial crises, recessions, and
recoveries, Weisbrot argues regardless of initial conditions, there have been
and remain economically feasible choices for governments of the Eurozone to
greatly reduce unemployment, including the hardest hit, crisis-ridden country
of Greece. Free admission.
Stefanie
Haeffele-Balch - Community Revival in the
Wake of Disaster: Lessons In Local Entrepreneurship
Wednesday, November 4th
at 6:30 pm
Busboys and Poets (Takoma location)
235 Carroll St. NW
Washington, D.C. 20012
Along with her
co-authors, Stefanie Haeffele-Balch shows how entrepreneurship of a particular kind is key
to restoring strong and viable communities hit by natural disasters. Using
examples from Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy, the authors link entrepreneurs’
abilities to rebuild social networks, provide essential goods and services, and
foster hope in a brighter future with the implementation of social changes that
can promote greater stability than what many communities experienced before the
disaster. Free admission.
Roy Scranton – Learning
to Die in the Anthropocene
Wednesday, November 4th
at 6:30 pm
Kramerbooks
1517
Connecticut Avenue, NW
Washington,
D.C.
20036
Coming
home from the war in Iraq, U.S. Army private Roy Scranton thought he'd left the
world of strife behind. Then he watched as new calamities struck America,
heralding a threat far more dangerous than ISIS or Al Qaeda: Hurricane Katrina,
Superstorm Sandy, megadrought, the shock and awe of global warming. Rising
seas, spiking temperatures, and extreme weather imperil global infrastructure,
crops, and water supplies. Conflict, famine, plagues, and riots menace from
every quarter. From war-stricken Baghdad to the melting Arctic, human-caused
climate change poses a danger not only to political and economic stability, but
also to civilization itself, and to what it means to be human. Scranton will be
in conversation with Jonathan Wilson, environmental reporter for WAMU. Free
admission.
Charlie Savage - Power Wars:
Inside Obama's Post-9/11 Presidency
Wednesday, November 4th at 7 pm
Politics & Prose Bookstore and
Coffeehouse
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20008
http://www.politics-prose.com/event/book/charlie-savage-power-wars-inside-obamas-post-911-presidency
In Takeover Savage built on his extensive coverage of post-9/11
legal policy issues to chronicle the Bush administration’s efforts to expand
presidential power. In his second book, the Pulitzer Prize-winning New
York Times Washington
correspondent focuses on the gap between Obama’s promises to curb the war on
terror and the reality of the increase in drone warfare, detentions, and
surveillance that have been implemented on his watch. Along with his deep research
into current policy-making, Savage provides an overview of the key decisions
and events of the last several decades that have led to today’s national
security state. Free admission.
Wednesday Open Mic Poetry
Wednesday,
November 4th from 9 pm to 11 pm
Busboys
and Poets (5th and K location)
1025 5th St NW
Washington, D.C. 20001
For two
hours, audiences can expect a diverse chorus of voices and a vast array of
professional spoken word performers, open mic rookies, musicians, and a different
host every week. $5 cover.
Meg Medina - Mango, Abuela Y Yo (En Español)
Thursday,
November 5th at 10:30 am
Politics
& Prose Bookstore and Coffeehouse
(Children’s
and Teens’ Department)
5015
Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington,
D.C. 20008
Cuando Abuela viene a vivir en los Estados Unidos
con Mia y sus padres, es difícil comunicarse: su abuela no habla
inglés muy bien y Mia tampoco sabe mucho español. Al principio pasan casi
todo el tiempo en silencio, pero después Mia y su madre compran un loro
llamado Mango. Él, Abuela, y Mia aprenden nuevas palabras juntos y
aprenden a quererse también. Edades
4–7. Gratuito.
Flora Fraser - The Washingtons: George and Martha, "Join'd by Friendship, Crown'd
by Love"
Thursday, November 6th at 7 pm
Politics & Prose Bookstore and
Coffeehouse
5015 Connecticut Ave. NW
Washington, D.C. 20008
In
her sixth biography, Flora Fraser chronicles a domestic partnership that helped
set the tone for a nation. Giving equal treatment to both of this country’s
founding parents, Fraser traces the mutually supportive George and Martha
Washington from their courtship and life at Mount Vernon through the war years,
and on to their creation of the roles of President and First Lady. Fraser will
be in conversation with Diana Walker, long-time White House photographer whose
most recent book is Hillary:
The Photographs of Diana Walker. Free admission.
Thursday Night Open Mic
hosted by E-baby
Thursday,
November 5th from 9 pm to 11 pm
Busboys
and Poets (Hyattsville location)
5331
Baltimore Ave
Hyattsville,
MD 20781
For
two hours, audiences can expect a diverse chorus of voices and a vast array of
professional spoken word performers, open mic rookies, musicians, and a
different host every week. $5 cover.
1 comment:
I would like to recommend reading The Girl on the Train: A Novel.
I finished reading it today, and I think its a very good book.
I ordered mine off Amazon and they delivered it in only 2 days.
Here is the link for the book on Amazon:
The Girl on the Train: A Novel
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