8622 N. Lombard St., Portland, OR 97203 * 503-283-0032 * info@stjohnsbooks.com * TU 10-6, WED-SAT 10-8, SUN 12-5, MON CLOSED *
8622 N. Lombard St., Portland, OR 97203 * 503-283-0032 * info@stjohnsbooks.com * TU 10-6, WED-SAT 10-8, SUN 12-5, MON CLOSED *
| Sat | ||
|---|---|---|
Start: 11:00 am
End: 1:00 pm
Wallace Swenson will visit to meet the public and sign copies of his new novel, Morgan's Pasture, in advance of his Sunday reading.
Child psychologist Will Border retreats to the summer of his thirteenth
year after a traumatic event forces him to reexamine childhood events
and the choices he made in becoming a man. A period piece set in 1950s
rural America, Morgan’s Pasture guides young adult readers in
examining their own roles in life as they develop into loners,
followers, or even reluctant leaders like Will. With one eye on child
psychology and the other on plain common sense, Morgan’s Pasture
offers a unique perspective on the growth of a boy and the longing of a
man for a mythic peaceful pasture, not as a place to live, but as a
reason to.
Employed from the age of twelve, Wallace J. Swenson
swept floors and cleaned pool hall spittoons during his rural Idaho
boyhood, and was a meteorologist and computer systems specialist during
his twenty years in the U.S. Air Force. He supervised a 911 center for
a few years and then designed, built, and managed an Emergency
Operations Center at a nuclear testing facility for another half-dozen
years. An award-winning poet, novelist, and short-story writer, he
lives and works where he grew up. Morgan’s Pasture is Swenson’s first published novel.
Start: 12:00 pm
End: 1:00 pm
n its second year, the Market Day Poetry Series, hosted by St. Johns Booksellers in conjunction with the St Johns Farmers Market, takes place every Saturday of the Market, June 5th through September 25th. Series coordinator dan raphael, who has been arranging poetry readings in Portland since the late 70’s, finds poets–many of whom are involved in other reading series–to host individual readings and find two other co-readers. This provides a broad diversity of readers from Portland’s rich and multi-styled poetry scene.
| ||