Chapter 16
A Community of Tennessee Writers, Readers & Passersby

Ghost Town

Ashley Crownover highlights Nashville’s haunts in a new book for young readers

nashvillebooAshley Crownover invites the ghost of Hank Williams to guide children on a tour of Nashville’s haunted spots in her new picture book, Nashville Boo! She will haunt Nashville’s East Side Story herself with a special Halloween party and book-signing on October 29 at 5 p.m.

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A Uniquely Tennessee Take on the Haunted House

Girl meets house, house has ghosts, in Cherie Priest’s new novel

the-family-plot-cover_priestf16With the continued existence of her family’s Nashville salvage business hanging in the balance, Dahlia Dutton leads a work team to dismantle an old house—an old haunted house—in Chattanooga in Cherie Priest’s delightfully spooky The Family Plot.

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Ravening on Ahead

In his debut collection, Noah Warren accepts human limitations

In The Destroyer in the Glass, poet Noah Warren calmly considers the great mysteries of life and death. He will read at Vanderbilt University in Nashville on November 1 at 7 p.m. The event, part of the Gertrude Vanderbilt and Harold S. Vanderbilt Visiting Writers Series, is free and open to the public.

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All Corners of the World

In a new picture book, Kate DePalma and Tessa Strickland celebrate the cultures of children

the-barefoot-book-of-children_fc_rgb_72dpiHow do children around the world live? It’s more than a little bit daunting to tackle that question in a picture book for children, but that’s precisely what Kate DePalma and Tessa Strickland do, and with success, in The Barefoot Book of Children.

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2016 Southern Festival of Books

It was a perfect weekend in October for readers and writers

Whether you missed the festival, or just want a chance to remember the fun, here’s a quick look back at the 28th annual Southern Festival of Books

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Telling the Whole Story

In work and life, Dorothy Allison defies narrow categories

bastardoutofcarolinaWhether she’s writing about her tough, spirited characters or her own difficult life, Dorothy Allison seems determined to defy all narrow categories, seeking instead to express the full complexity of human experience. Allison, who serves as the 2016 Acuff Chair at the Center of Excellence for the Creative Arts at Austin Peay State University, will speak on October 27 at 8 p.m. in Clement Auditorium on the APSU campus. The event is free and open to the public.

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