Category Archives: Celebrations

Register Now for Sunshine State Book Festival

Writer’s Alliance of Gainesville, is putting on the Sunshine State Book Festival January 24 -26, 2020 in Gainesville, Florida. Author registration for table space is now available online.

The three-day festival will open with a reception at the Matheson History Museum on Friday, January 24. All events are free and open to the public. A large turnout is expected.

Saturday, a full-day book festival held at the Santa Fe College Fine Arts Hall will give authors an opportunity to interact with readers, sell and sign books. During the Saturday festival, seven presentations by well-known authors will attract additional attendees. There will also be hourly free prize drawings of books authored by festival participants.

On Sunday, a literary heritage tour will provide an experience with four of Florida’s legendary literary figures portrayed in the Gainesville area settings where they lived or worked.

Authors interested in exhibit space are encouraged to register now as table space is selling out quickly.

For further information and to register, visit the festival website at www.sunshinestatebookfestival.com

Produced by Writers Alliance of Gainesville.

Sponsored in part by Santa Fe College, Santa Fe College Foundation, and Visit Gainesville.

Scribbler’s Corner Hosts Tim Gilmore

“Don’t make me come get you.”

Here it is, as promised: the first podcast in the revived Scribbler’s Corner, coming to you now from River of Grass. Our first featured guest is psychogeographer Tim Gilmore discussing his latest book, “Repossession: Mass Shooting in Baymeadows,” and his upcoming play of the same name, to be produced by FSCJ’s Dramaworks on April 11-14.

Scribbler’s Corner at River of Grass, sponsored by Brad Kuhn & Associates, LLC and JaxbyJax Literary Arts Festival, is available on Spotify, iTunes, Stitcher, and wherever podcasts are stored. Getcha’ some!

Dead Aquarium, by Caleb Michael Sarvis

 

I recently read Dead Aquarium, a short story/novella collection by Caleb Michael Sarvis (Mastadon Publishing, 2018) while on a cruise to the Bahamas. Thoroughly exhausted, and lulled by the hum and vibration of the ship’s engines, I slept fourteen hours the first night – just what the doctor ordered, in addition to sunshine and sea breezes, to lift my spirits and give me a fresh, optimistic outlook on life.

But then I started reading Sarvis’s book.

He’s a good writer, skilled with words, with not a tired metaphor to be found. In fact, my favorite among the stories concerns a young man named Miles and his Grandpa Sly, a former copywriter trying to help his grandson avoid clichés about darkness in an essay he’s written for school. Not only could I relate to that struggle as a professor and professional writer; I also found myself heavily invested in the story as a woman who has spent the past decade losing every member of my nuclear family to the ravages of old age.

Sarvis is the kind of wordsmith that causes me to nudge my husband, snoozing in the next deck chair, to say, “Listen to this….” But he’s also young enough to be my son, and that makes me feel guilty about the kind of world my generation is leaving his – and the kind of semi-hopeless but filled-with-grim-determination attitude we’ve fostered in people his age, and that this collection reflects.

That’s not to say I didn’t enjoy the book; I did. Sarvis drops us into the lives of quirky characters at pivotal turning points in their damaged lives, and seems to be riding along with us to observe what happens. He makes us care about them, even the mad ones, and they linger after the last page has been turned, flitting in the shadows at the edge of our consciousness.

The book is dark, but it’s the kind of darkness that Grandpa Sly calls, “dark as the essence of a life looked back on.”  Read it, and tell your friends to buy it.

Then have a daiquiri, and listen to some Bob Marley. Every little thing’s gonna be all right.