Friday, July 30, 2010
An evening of alliterative libations, satiric snacks, metaphoric music, and writing on the walls in support of the Boston Book Festival.
Join us for a beer and wine open bar, hors d'oeuvres, and prizes.
Tuesday, August 10th
7:00 p.m - 9:00 p.m.
Middlesex Lounge
315 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139
Reserve your seat today with a donation of $25 or more.
FEATURING
Comedic Performance by bestselling author REIF LARSEN, "The Page is an Old Horse: The Future of Books in a Digital Age"
Generating poetry with MIT professor NICK MONTFORT, a computer, and you!
Space is extremely limited, so don't wait! Your donation ensures that the Boston Book Festival can continue to present the highest caliber authors and thought leaders to the readers in our city and beyond at no charge.
More events to help support the Boston Book Festival coming soon!
Deborah Z Porter Emily D'Amour Pardo
Posted by Emily D'Amour Pardo on 07/30 at 01:20 PM
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Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Time to charge up your eReader, bound to the bookstore, or locate your library card. The Boston Book Festival on October 16 will be a Literary Lollapalooza. A Woodstock of Writers. A Bookish Bonnaroo. Over 100 world-class novelists, thought leaders, children's authors and illustrators, poets, scientists, technologists, memoirists, and more will be presenting at the BBF. Literary super stars and up-and-coming authors alike will share the stage all in one incredible, breathless -- and might we say -- festive day. Here's just a sample of our literary rockstars:
This is just a small sample of our star-studded line-up. Check back later in the summer for the complete 2010 list!
Wednesday, June 09, 2010
The Boston Book Festival proudly announces a new initiative, One City One Story. We will distribute, free of charge, 30,000 bound copies of a short story by a well-known Boston author. With the aim of making literature accessible, One City One Story gives a new spin to all-city reading groups. The author will appear at the BBF on October 16 and will lead discussions of the story. Details to be announced, so stay tuned.
This year, the Boston Book Festival will host over 100 renowned authors and thought leaders – Nobel and Pulitzer Prize-winners among them – discussing everything from Architecture to Ants to Antony & Cleopatra (and that’s just the A’s!). This fascinating and accomplished group represents the most creative and eclectic line-up we could assemble in one place at one time. You will definitely want to read these minds.
Now that you are dying to hear who will be center stage at this year’s festival, we are going to keep you in suspense until June 23 when we go public with our program. Sign up on the homepage for BBF email up-dates to be the first to know our star-studded literary line up!
Posted by Emily D'Amour Pardo on 06/09 at 01:56 PM
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Thursday, February 04, 2010
Get out your date book or open up iCal right now because you really don't want to miss this:
The second annual Boston Book Festival will take place Saturday, October 16, 2010.
2009 was a huge hit - 12,000+ readers of all ages from across New England, 90+ award-winning authors and presenters, 30+ free indoor events, and 40+ outdoor exhibitors. It was so great, in fact, that the Boston Globe Magazine recently named the Boston Book Festival Best of the New 2010.
Click below to watch the just-released highlight video from BBF09.
Video Production by: Paula Aguilera, Jonathan Williams, The Boston Phoenix, WGBH
Photography by: Norman Lang, Matt Teuten, Mike Ritter
And Boston Book Festival 2010 will be bigger and even better with more beautiful venues, exciting exhibitors, fun events for children and, of course, dozens of fascinating presentations by leaders in every field. We hope you will join us once again in Copley Square for the second edition of the Boston Book Festival.
At Boston Book Festival headquarters, we're working feverishly to raise money and confirm presenters, and you can expect more announcements in the coming months (including information on participating authors!)
So, save the date, tell your friends, and happy reading!
Posted by Emily D'Amour Pardo on 02/04 at 09:32 AM
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Monday, December 21, 2009
In our opinion, these cold dark nights are just perfect for curling up (Snuggie, anyone?) with a good book and a cup of your favorite steaming beverage. And getting books are just as fun as giving them (not just because they are easy to wrap!). So we’ve compiled a list of 2009 recommendations from some Boston Book Festival friends and colleagues to help you with gift ideas for that reader on your list (even if that reader is you.)
Here’s what we’re saying about some of our favorites:
Debbie Porter, Founding President, Boston Book Festival
The Glass Room by Simon Mawer
“A novel ostensibly about a house – a glass house built in Czechoslovakia between the wars – that represents everything its owners feel about a future that appears bright with the promise of enlightenment and modernism both for themselves and their country. But the enormous forces of history and shattering personal truths of the inhabitants of the glass house blow apart the dream. A 2009 Booker Prize finalist The Glass Room’s plot will keep you reading and the ideas will keep you thinking.”
Emily D’Amour Pardo, Executive Director, Boston Book Festival
Invisible by Paul Auster
“At once a riveting psychological page-turner and a philosophical exploration of the truth of memory, Invisible is a coming-of-age story that showcases Auster’s inventiveness and ability to create characters that will stay with you long after you finish the book.“
Richard Russo, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and author of That Old Cape Magic
Safe From The Neighbors by Steve Yarbrough
“Steve Yarbrough's Safe From the Neighbors is the best book I've read in quite a while. I loved the way its intimate, private narrative merges with a larger public one.”
Helene Atwan, Director, Beacon Press
Annie John by Jamaica Kincaid
“I’m currently rereading Jamaica Kincaid’s pitch perfect first novel, Annie John, which is almost like reading poetry. I recommend reading it while reclining on a sofa without any distractions. And you won’t need the bon-bons.”
Not Quite Paradise: An American Sojourn in Sri Lanka by Adele Marie Barker
“For the adventurous (armchair) traveler, I also recommend one of our books, just out, Not Quite Paradise: An American Sojourn in Sri Lanka; appropriate reading as the fifth anniversary of the tsunami approaches on 12/26.”
Esmond Harmsworth, founding partner, Zachary Schuster Harmsworth Literary Agency
The Hypochondriacs: Nine Tormented Lives by Brian Dillon
“My favorite 2009 book has only come out in Ireland and it is very quirky, Brian Dillon's The Hypochondriacs: Nine Tormented Lives, a book on famous, mostly literary and artistic hypochondriacs, from Proust to Andy Warhol, James Boswell and Charlotte Bronte. It turns out that Proust was not a hypochondriac at all: in the late 19th century, allergies and asthma were considered psychosomatic illnesses, and one popular cure was to burn pungent powders and inhale the smoke, which Proust did every day in his cork lined room. Not surprisingly this did not help his severe asthma.”
Elinor Lipman, bestselling author of Then She Found Me and The Family Man
How I Became A Famous Novelist by Steve Hely
“When I reviewed How I Became A Famous Novelist for the Washington Post last summer I wrote, "I may have read a funnier book in the last 20 years, but at this moment I'm hard-pressed to name it."
John Taylor "Ike" Williams, The Kneerim & Williams Agency
Union Atlantic by Adam Haslett
"Haslett paints a portrait of Capitalism's effect on American life as good as Henry James did of Class "
Union Atlantic will be released on 2/9, so you’ll have to pre-order, but remember, good things come to those who wait!
Joyce Linehan, President, Ashmont Media
Nobody Move by Denis Johnson
“I didn’t read a lot of new books in 2009 – spent much of the year revisiting criminally underappreciated British fiction writer Jonathan Coe. But I did love Denis Johnson’s Nobody Move, a noir so black it could function as parody.”
Mike Swartz, Creative Director, UpStatement
Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work by Matthew B. Crawford
“Crawford's reflection on the satisfaction of physical work doesn't just center on the fact that it's manual labor, but on the idea that diagnosing a motorcycle engine's busted tappets is just as intellectual (and perhaps more so) than most work that requires "higher" education. Highly reminiscent of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, Crawford's 'Chautauqua' asserts that there is an inherent honesty and feeling of worth that comes from clear-cut thinking and fixing. My life as a web designer is pretty much the digital equivalent of small engine repair, but with less leather and much more cursing.”
Karen Wulf, Executive Director, PEN New England
36 Arguments for the Existence of God: A Work of Fiction by Rebecca Newberger Goldstein
“36 Arguments for the Existence of God: A Work of Fiction is further proof that Rebecca Goldstein, celebrated philosopher and novelist, can do it all. It has everything you want in a book: great writing, captivating characters, sharp observations, and serious subject matter artfully presented, beautifully told. It is the perfect argument for why fiction matters: it’s about everything that matters most, and I will be giving it to everyone who matters to me.”
And last, but certainly not least, Tom Perrotta, bestselling author of Election, Little Children, and The Abstinence Teacher, and Judith Donath of Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society both gave two thumbs up (so that’s a total of four thumbs!) to:
Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth by Apostolos Doxiadis and Christo H. Papadimitriou
Tom:
“I'm not a regular reader of graphic novels, but I've read a few great ones over the years--Fun Home, by Alison Bechdel, of course, and Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi, to name two. To this select group, I'd like to add Logicomix, which is a beautifully written and illustrated account of some of the important intellectual and emotional events in the life of Bertrand Russell. It's challenging, thought-provoking, and a deeply engaging book that turns the life of the mind into a gripping adventure.”
Judith:
“There is something about the graphical form that invites self-reference, and Logicomix, with its interludes of conversations among author and artists, and its references to mathematicians as superheroes, is even more self-conscious than most. But it also does an extraordinary job of turning the development of 20th century philosophical logic into a riveting story, and in the process makes the math clearer than many texts do. It's a bit ironic that a book about the search for absolute truth plays fast and loose with facts - but it's intermingled examination of the relationship between logic and madness make even the breaks from reality into part of the plot.”
Posted by Emily D'Amour Pardo on 12/21 at 09:31 AM
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Monday, December 07, 2009
Just in time for the holidays, the BOSTON BOOK FESTIVAL STORE is now open for business! We have a limited supply of 2009 T-shirts on sale for just $12.
We think the little ones in your life will look especially adorable sporting Literally Amazing or Ask Me What I'm Reading t-shirts this holiday season!
All shirts are American Apparel, made from 100% cotton right here in the USA. They come in kid's, women's and men's sizes, infant through adult XXL. (CLICK HERE for a size guide)
We also have a limited supply of 2009 commemorative posters SIGNED by Chip Kidd, Boston Book Festival canvas tote bags, and the very amusing (and wildly popular) reading specs t-shirt.
Order by December 18, and we'll get them to you in time to give to all book enthusiasts on your list - those who made it to the Festival and especially those who did not. Next year they'll know better than to miss the excitement!
Posted by Emily D'Amour Pardo on 12/07 at 03:51 PM
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Thursday, November 05, 2009
It’s been one year since Barak Obama delivered his victory speech to an ecstatic crowd in Chicago’s Grant Park. It seems only fitting, then, that the first Boston Book Festival podcast posted on bostonbookfest.org (and there will be many more to come!) is The Obama Year, an evaluation of the 44th President’s first year in office by some of the country’s leading scholars.
NPR and WBUR’s On Point host Tom Ashbrook leads an illuminating discussion with a panel of fascinating speakers with diverse areas of expertise and experience. Jack Beatty is senior editor of The Atlantic, news analyst for On Point and winner of an American Book Award. He is joined by David Gergen, advisor to presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan and Clinton, editor-at-large for U.S. News & World Report and Senior Political Analyst for CNN. Lani Guinier, Bennett Boskey Professor of Law and the first woman of color appointed to a tenured professorship at Harvard Law School, weighs in as well. Also providing his perspective is Michael E. Porter, the Bishop William Lawrence University Professor at Harvard Business School and author of 18 books including Redefining Health Care and On Competition.
A riveting assessment delivered to a capacity crowd in the Boston Public Library’s Rabb Lecture Hall, The Obama Year was so popular that we at the BBF were flooded with requests following the event for recordings and transcripts, even by the lucky few who were able to experience the discussion first-hand.
Enjoy your front-row seats to The Obama Year… as Tom Ashbrook puts it in his opening remarks:
“Today, we will ask, on the evidence of that year, if this transformative figure is emerging as a transformative president. We’ll ask what we’ve learned about Barak Obama and the implications of his governing style and policy instincts, and we’ll ask what we’ve learned about ourselves as a nation, as a polity, in the first year of Obama.”
Video Production by: Paula Aguilera, Jonathan Williams, The Boston Phoenix, WGBH
Posted by Emily D'Amour Pardo on 11/05 at 05:04 PM
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Tuesday, November 03, 2009
As we look ahead to the 2010 Boston Book Festival (can you believe we've already started to think about 2010?), we want to know what worked -- and what didn't -- this year.
Be entered to win a Sony Reader Pocket Edition when you fill out our ONLINE SURVEY by Thursday, November 5 at 2:00 p.m. EST.
We've already given away three Sony Readers to lucky festival-goers, and this is your last chance to win!
Congratulations to our contest winners:
Day-of Twitter Winner (#bbf09): Renato Beninatto
Pre-Festival Twitter Winner (#bbf09): Allison Trzop
Facebook Fan Winner: Erica Truncale
Posted by Emily D'Amour Pardo on 11/03 at 10:48 AM
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Saturday, October 24, 2009
Thank you to everyone who participated for making the inaugural Boston Book Festival a huge success.
Posted by Emily D'Amour Pardo on 10/24 at 09:23 PM
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Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Spread the word by inviting your friends to events at the Boston Book Festival using Facebook and Twitter - and you'll be entered to win a Sony Reader Pocket Edition™.
We have four to give away, courtesy of Sony! There are four ways to win:
1-Send a tweet on Twitter mentioning a Festival topic and using #bbf09 in your message between now and 6:00am EST on October 24. The Book Festival handle is @bostonbookfest and our main url is bostonbookfest.org. The more you tweet #bbf09, the more likely you are to win!
2-Tweet during the Festival (from 8:00am until 9:00pm EST on October 24) using #bbf09 in your messages.
3-Become a Boston Book Festival Facebook fan - one lucky fan will win. Please post about the Festival on your status update.
4-Fill out and submit an evaluation card after any session, including your contact information, and you'll be automatically entered to win.
Winners will be notified via Facebook, Twitter or phone after October 25 and must provide a mailing address within one week of notification. Staff, family members of staff, event producers, paid contractors, partners, and advisors of the Boston Book Festival and Sony are not eligible to win.
Priced under $200, the Sony Reader Pocket Edition™ provides the perfect reading companion for people of every age. Available in silver, blue and rose, the Reader Pocket Edition features a 5-inch display and an elegant, lightweight design that's easy to slip into a purse, jacket pocket, gym bag...or holiday stocking.
Get instant access to more than a million titles from the Sony eBookstore using easy software that is both Mac and PC compatible
Download borrowed eBooks from your local library
Tote up to 350 books with you at any time - without breaking your back
Reduce eye strain when reading with the Reader's E-Ink® technology, a paper-like screen display that makes you feel like you're reading a traditional book
Read without your glasses by taking advantage of three adjustable font sizes
Find the Sony Reader online and at retail outlets, such as Sony Style, Target and Borders nationwide
Have any more questions about the Sony Reader? Attend the Boston Book Festival session The Future of Reading: Books without Pages? from 1:30-3:00pm at the Boston Public Library's Rabb Lecture Hall and you can ask one of the presenters, Steve Haber, President of Sony's Digital Reading Division. He is responsible for the global direction and development of Sony's Reader Digital Book, Sony's eBook Store in the US and relationships with affiliate book stores overseas.
Posted by Emily D'Amour Pardo on 10/20 at 05:43 PM
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