Events

Wednesday February 10, 2010
Start: 7:15 pm
End: 9:00 pm

This month's book is To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf

Thursday February 11, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Princess Zindaba Nyirenda

 

Ta-Lakata: The Tears of Africa

 

Granddaughter of the Tumbaka tribe chief Mphamba of Lundazi in Zambia, Princess Zindaba “Zindie” Nyirenda was raised in an elite and privileged environment during Zambia’s economic boom years. As a young woman, Zindie relocated to the United States, and then watched in horror as life in her homeland rapidly disintegrated under economic devastation and the influx of AIDS/HIV. Unwilling to sit on the sidelines, Zindie founded a non-profit organization to equip and empower local leaders in remote areas and neglected villages of Africa. Today Princess Zindie is a graduate student at Roosevelt University and was keynote speaker at the 2007 World AIDS Day conference in Illinois.

 

Friday February 12, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Sarah Blake

 

The Postmistress

 

Two women, an American postmistress in Franklin, Massachusetts, and a British radio journalist, are entrusted to deliver information to the newlywed wife of an American doctor in London at the dawn of WWII.  For different reasons both decide not to do so, each betraying her solemn commitment to deliver news. A new novel with extraordinary relevance to the way we live now, that is less a war novel than an examination of how people cope with the knowledge of unspeakable inhumanity in the world as they go about their daily lives. Booklist, in a starred review, predicted that “Blake’s emotional saga of conscience and genocide is poised to become a bestseller of the highest echelon.”

Sunday February 14, 2010
Start: 12:01 pm

Due  to publisher error this event has been postponed until Sunday, March14th at 4:30 pm

Tuesday February 16, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:30 pm

This month's book is Mudbound by Hillary Jordan

Wednesday February 17, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm

Kevin and Hanna Salwen

 

The Power of Half: One Family’s Decision to Stop Taking and Start Giving Back

Co-sponsored by The Hunger Project

 

The Salwens were a typical family caught up in pursuing the American Dream – providing a good life for their children, accumulating more and more stuff, doing their part, but not really feeling it, until 14-year old Hannah Salwen spotted a homeless man alongside a glistening Mercedes.  Her subsequent epiphany inspired the Salwens to sell their spacious Atlanta home and donate half of the proceeds to a worthy charity. In the process, they hoped to make the world better in some small way, never expecting how much they would gain from the experience. This event is co-sponsored by The Hunger Project, a global non-profit committed to the sustainable end to world hunger.           

Friday February 19, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Robyn Okrant

 

Living Oprah: My One-Year Experiment to Walk the Walk of the Queen of Talk

 

On January 1, 2008, Robyn Okrant, a 35-year-old Chicagoan, embarked on a unique one-year mission: to live every aspect of her life as Oprah Winfrey directed. From creating vision boards, practicing guided meditation, and participating in the Best Life Challenge; to learning to live with cellulite, de-cluttering her home, and buying “necessities” such as leopard flats and a fire pit, Okrant followed every piece of advice offered through The Oprah Winfrey Show, O: The Oprah Magazine, and Oprah.com. Her blog tracking the project attracted more than half a million visitors; now she’s compiled the experience in this funny, captivating and provocative memoir.

 

Saturday February 20, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:30 pm

Sappho’s Salon: A Provocative Night of Lesbian Diversions

Featuring Ifa Bumi, Barrie Cole and DJ SpinNikki

 

$7-$10 sliding admission includes food and wine

 

This month’s installment of our popular salon night for lesbians and their friends features the performance work of two outstanding queer artists. Barrie Cole, deemed “Chicago’s Champion of Lyrical Oddness” by the Chicago Reader, has had her plays, monologues, and collaborative performances staged throughout Chicago and elsewhere. Atlanta-based lesbian erotic writer, performance poet and musician Ifa Bumi is author of the collection Liquid Toffee, and the spoken word CD, Museotry. She’ll be joined by a collaborative dancer. As always, DJ SpinNikki will play us in and out of sets.

All proceeds benefit the artists and the Women’s Voices Fund.

 

Sunday February 21, 2010
Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

This month's book is Impossible Motherhood by Irene Vilar

Sunday February 28, 2010
Start: 2:00 pm
End: 4:00 pm

Violence as the Ultimate Trump Card: What it means to be the Slayer
Eps to Watch:
Prophecy Girl, Season 1, Episode 12
Anne, Season 3, Episode 1
Restless, Season 4, Episode 22
The Weight of the World, Season 5, Episode 21
Showtime, Season 7, Episode 11
End of Days, Season 7, Episode 21

Essays to read:
"Feminism and the Ethics of Violence: Why Buffy Kicks Ass", by Mimi Marinucci
found in Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Philosophy, edited by James South

"What would Buffy do?: Feminist ethics and epistemic violence", by
Shannon Craigo-Snell
http://www.ejumpcut.org/archive/jc48.2006/BuffyEthics/index.htm

Friday March 5, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Friday, March 5

7:30 p.m.

Nancy Stohlman

Searching for Suzi

            When Suzi, a thirty-something ex-stripper now married with kids, begins to question how she arrived at this point in her life, her search for herself means accepting her sexuality in all its contradictions and claiming herself. Denver-based writer Stohlman, who is founder and co-editor of the annual flash fiction collection, Fast Forward, reveals Suzi’s story in a novel-in-flashes.

Sunday March 7, 2010
Start: 3:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

This month's book is My Antonia by Willa Cather

Start: 4:30 pm
End: 6:00 pm

Sunday, March 7

4:30 p.m.

Neena B. Schwartz

A Lab of My Own

            What was it like to be a woman scientist battling the “old boys’ network” during the 1960s and ‘70s? In her new memoir, Neena Schwartz, a prominent neuroendocrinologist based at Northwestern University, tells all. Mixing details and anecdotes from her personal life as an out lesbian, with the socio-political history of American women in science in the later 20th century, Schwartz makes a case for mentoring young women in science, and why it matters that women both do and teach scientific study.   

Friday March 12, 2010
Start: 7:30 pm

Friday, March 12

7:30 p.m.

Staceyann Chin

The Other Side of Paradise            We are thrilled to once again be hosting the electrifying spoken word artist Staceyann Chin, this time to celebrate the paperback release of her searing and groundbreaking memoir, The Other Side of Paradise. Following a tradition of fierce Caribbean lesbian writers that includes Audre Lorde and Michelle Cliff, Chin’s narrative charts her course from the heartbreak and tragedy of her Jamaican childhood, to her thriving adult like in New York City. Dorothy Allison raves, “[Chin] shows me a culture I knew far too little about – the everyday life of young people in Jamaica and the threat of violence over anyone who might be too independent or queer or outrageous. How wonderful that this outrageous, talented, determined woman has given us her story.”

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