A Publication of Humanities Tennessee

Dirty Boys

May 18, 2012 With his debut story collection, The Beautiful Wishes of Ugly Men, Knoxville resident Adam Prince joins ranks with Norman Mailer, Harry Crews, George Singleton, and other writers who explore the darker side of American maleness. Prince and his wife, Charlotte Pence, will read from their new books on May 19 at Union Avenue Books in Knoxville. The event begins at 2 p.m.

The Music of Suffering

May 10, 2012 “If you haven’t already found a woman who will break your heart, find one,” writes Ron Rash in his new novel. “The suffering will be good for you.” A spare, lyrical novel, The Cove juxtaposes the legendarily haunted and severe environs of the Blue Ridge Mountains with the simmering anxiety of the Great War. Rash will read from and discuss The Cove at Nashville Public Library on May 16, as part of the Salon@615 series . The event will begin with a reception at 6:15 p.m., followed by a reading at 6:45. Both are free and open to the public.

How Much Pain Should One Person Endure?

May 7, 2012 Nashville medical examiner Samantha Owens lost her husband and children in the 2010 flood. Since then, she has managed to survive by keeping her world small and by containing her grief in a series of compulsive behaviors. But that control is shattered when she’s asked to come to Washington DC to do a second autopsy on the body of a former boyfriend. So begins A Deeper Darkness, the first book in a new suspense series by J.T. Ellison, author of the popular Taylor Jackson mysteries. J.T. Ellison will discuss A Deeper Darkness on May 12 at Mysteries & More in Nashville at 2 p.m.

Native Tracks

May 3, 2012 Red Weather, the debut novel by poet Janet McAdams, tracks the story of Neva, a young mixed-race woman who’s searching for her parents. Lyrical and vivid, the mystery unfolds in Central America, in the capital of the small, fictional Coatepeque. There, mounting violence against the country’s indigenous people provides a menacing backdrop to Neva’s crisis of identity, mirroring her lifelong sense of uncertain belonging. Janet McAdams will appear at Union Ave. Books in Knoxville on May 13 at 2 p.m.

Getting Inquisitive in France

May 2, 2012 In The Inquisitor’s Key, Bill Brockton, the fictional incarnation of Bill Bass, world-famous founder of the University of Tennessee’s Body Farm, travels to France, where ancient bones draw him into a very modern murder mystery. In their seventh outing, Jon Jefferson and Bill Bass, the writing team known as Jefferson Bass, have juxtaposed fourteenth-century religious fervor with twenty-first-century science. And if any combination of pursuits can prove deadly, it’s science and religion. Bass and Jefferson will be promoting The Inquisitor’s Key during May at several Tennessee venues.

The Collusion of Fact and Fiction

May 1, 2012 Nashvillian Gary Slaughter combines personal memory with extensive research in the creation of his Cottonwood novels, which are based on his own childhood during World War II. Slaughter grew up in Owosso, Michigan, near a German prisoner-of-war camp, and his novels begin with this little-remembered facet of American life during the war years. The final book in the series, Cottonwood Summer ’45, brings the novel’s young protagonists, Jase and Danny, to Nashville as they continue their adventures.

The Collusion of Fact and Fiction

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