Public Events — Open Book (2024)

Public Events — Open Book (1)

Upcoming Events

Jun

14

Join us for an exhibition reception celebrating For/Word with twenty of MCBA’s Artist Collective members.. Explore artists’ books, prints, and paper on view in the gallery, ask questions, and stay for refreshments.

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Jun

1

Book Launch event for Dr Sheila Sweeney PhD

GENERATIONAL TRANSFORMATION
Unapologetically Healing

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May

22

Exchange: sliding scale suggested donation of $5-$25. No one turned away for lack of funds.

Performance type: whatever wants to be expressed. Poetry, essay, song, interpretative dance. You bring it.

Set limit: 5-7 minutes (You will be lovingly contained, so please time/practice what you’re going to share)

Sign up at the door.

Start prepping now. Tell your friends. Stock up on Kleenex. Get ready to be moved. I can't wait to see you there.

https://fb.me/e/4b7BMr95x

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May

19

Join us for a free public talk with artist Susan Iverson as she demystifies the experience of writing and publishing a book as a visual artist.

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May

18

to May 19

Explore our venue for events & meeting rentals, visit the bookstore & gift shop, grab some a beverage at FRGMNT coffee and be a part of this free city-wide celebration of history, architecture, and culture.

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May

7

As AI advances at shocking speed, what is the future of humanity? How should people develop skills that will still be useful in a world filled with automation? The speaker, Carnegie Mellon math professor Po-Shen Loh, traveled to 100 cities last year, speaking with (and learning from) 250 audiences on this topic, on a tour which was even covered by the Wall Street Journal.

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Apr

28

Between three sections of Basquiat-inspired vignettes, “Tartarus” offers the reader an unflinching look into Chapman’s emerging understanding of his relationship to Black masculinity through familial ties, the oscillation between nihilism and hope, and the ever present tensions felt moving through a state which sees the existence of your body as an inherent danger.

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Mar

28

Join us for the launch of Black Swallowtail, Arleta Little’s first book of poetry, a collaboration with artist Ta-coumba Aiken!

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Mar

26

"Mapping the Interconnected Medieval World: Diasporic Communities and Their Books," Dr. Suzanne Conklin Akbari (The Institute for Advanced Study)

More Information and Registration

Note: A reception will precede the lecture and begin at 6:00 pm. The lecture will begin at 7:00 pm. Both events are open to the public.

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The Hatmaker's Wife

by Lauren Yee

March 7-10 and 14-17 at Open Book

Open Book Performance Hall

Thursday, Friday shows at 7:30pm
Saturday, Sunday shows at 4pm

Audio-Described – Mar 14
ASL-Interpreted – Mar 16

More information on Ten Thousand Things website

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Feb

11

Come one, come all! Celebrate the season of love with thoughtful gifts from local artists! Over 30 venders will be present, each with their own unique work.

This event centers LGBT, BIPOC, and disabled artists, and all of the creators identify as at least one of these. This is a masked event to help protect the health of our community, and there will be free masks available at the entrance.

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Feb

3

Join us for the exciting book launch party celebrating the debut release of Black Women, Ivory Tower by Twin Cities-raised and University of MN alum, Dr. Jasmine L. Harris!

This in-person event will take place in the Open Book Performance Hall. With a happy hour mingle time, book excerpt reading, open Q&A and discussion with the author, and books available for purchase and signing thanks to Black Garnet Books.

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Jan

17

Exchange: sliding scale suggested donation of $5-$25. No one turned away for lack of funds.

Performance type: whatever wants to be expressed. Poetry, essay, song, interpretative dance. You bring it.

Set limit: 5-7 minutes (You will be lovingly contained, so please time/practice what you’re going to share)

Sign up at the door.

Start prepping now. Tell your friends. Stock up on Kleenex. Get ready to be moved. I can't wait to see you there.

https://fb.me/e/10XN8bE3E

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Dec

20

Exchange: sliding scale suggested donation of $5-$25. No one turned away for lack of funds.

Performance type: whatever wants to be expressed. Poetry, essay, song, interpretative dance. You bring it.

Set limit: 5-7 minutes (You will be lovingly contained, so please time/practice what you’re going to share)

Sign up at the door.

Start prepping now. Tell your friends. Stock up on Kleenex. Get ready to be moved. I can't wait to see you there.

https://fb.me/e/14ivWXIEn

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Dec

7

Join us for the December entry in our monthly Faculty/Student Reading Series, where we host a local faculty writer from the University of Minnesota's Creative Writing MFA Program and a student writer, offering a chance for emerging local writers to place their work in conversation with an established writer. For this final reading of the Fall 2023 semester, MFA candidate Jordan Young will be reading with Kathryn Nuernberger, author of TheWitch of Eye.

This reading will also feature an exclusive student discount on all purchases in the bookstore, where anyone attending with a valid student ID will receive 10% off as our show of appreciation for the Twin Cities student writing community.

About the readers

Jordan Youngis a nonfiction writer from South Florida. Her essays explore relationships, race, cruelty and beauty. Her work can be found in Roxane Gay'sThe Audacity. Jordan holds a BA in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago and is currently an MFA candidate in Creative Writing at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities.

Kathryn Nuernbergeris an essayist and poet who writes about the history of science and ideas, renegade women, plant medicines, and witches. Kathryn Nuernberger’s latest book is TheWitch of Eye, which is about witches and witch trials. She is also the author of the poetry collectionsRUE,The End of PinkandRag & Bone, as well as a collection of lyric essays,Brief Interviews with the Romantic Past. Her awards include the James Laughlin Prize from the Academy of American Poets, an NEA fellowship, and notable essays in theBest Americanseries. She teaches poetry and nonfiction for the MFA program at University of Minnesota.

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Dec

6

Join local writer Elmer Lovrien for a celebration of his recent book “The World of Others.” Takes place in room 203 at Open Book. All are welcome.

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Nov

25

Join us for the 2nd Annual Small Business Saturday Artist & Writer Mart at Open Book. Presented by Open Book, Minnesota Center for Book Arts, Milkweed Editions, Weavers Guild of MN, the Loft Literary Center, and Doorway Massage. There will be hands-on art and writing activities, chair massages, and over 50 artists and writers selling unique items perfect for those on your shopping list, or for you!

Free to attend. Takes place on the 2nd floor of Open Book. Masks strongly encouraged.

Click here for more about participating artists and writers.

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Nov

16

Join us for the November entry in our monthly Faculty/Student Reading Series, where we host a local faculty writer from the University of Minnesota's Creative Writing MFA Program and a student writer, offering a chance for emerging local writers to place their work in conversation with an established writer. For this month's reading, MFA candidate Natalie Dalea will be reading with Kim Todd, author of Sensational: The Hidden History of America's "Girl Stunt Reporters."

This reading will also feature an exclusive student discount on all purchases in the bookstore, where anyone attending with a valid student ID will receive 10% off as our show of appreciation for the Twin Cities student writing community.

About the readers

Natalie Dalea is a midwestern mestiza artist. She is pursuing an MFA in creative nonfiction at the University of Minnesota. Her writing works to heal family wounds, with a thematic focus on feminism, faith, and forgiveness. Her essays can be found with The Offing, Pidgeonholes, Between Cities, and MN Artists. Her journalism can be found with WBEZ, The Chicago Reader, and The Portalist.

Kim Todd is the award-winning author of several books, including Sensational: The Hidden History of America's “Girl Stunt Reporters”, Chrysalis: Maria Sibylla Merian and the Secrets of Metamorphosis, and Tinkering with Eden: A Natural History of Exotic Species in America, winner of the PEN/Jerard Award and the Sigurd Olson Nature Writing Award. Her essays and articles have appeared in Smithsonian, Salon, Sierra Magazine, Orion, and Best American Science and Nature Writing anthologies, among other publications. She is a member of the MFA faculty at the University of Minnesota and lives in Minneapolis with her family.

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Nov

15

Exchange: sliding scale suggested donation of $5-$25. No one turned away for lack of funds.

Performance type: whatever wants to be expressed. Poetry, essay, song, interpretative dance. You bring it.

Set limit: 5-7 minutes (You will be lovingly contained, so please time/practice what you’re going to share)

Sign up at the door.

Start prepping now. Tell your friends. Stock up on Kleenex. Get ready to be moved. I can't wait to see you there.

https://fb.me/e/2NHJquCVK

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Nov

3

In honor of Maya Williams' release of eir poetry collection, Refused a Second Date, join us to get engaged with sexual health resources from Family Tree Clinic and hear poems from Maya's book. The evening will consist of Family Tree Clinic sharing their work, and Maya sharing poems that will lead to a Q&A about queerness, interpersonal relationships, mental health, and sex, Event starts at 6 pm and will conclude at 8 pm in room 203 at Open Book. Masks are highly recommended. Capacity is 40 people. There will be no food at this event, so we encourage you to eat beforehand.

Author Bio: Maya Williams (ey/they/she) is a religious Black multiracial nonbinary suicide survivor who is currently the poet laureate of Portland, Maine. Refused a Second Date is eir second full-length collection. Maya's debut collection Judas & Suicide was selected as a finalist for the New England Book Award in July 2023. Maya was one of three artists of color selected to represent Maine in The Kennedy Center's Arts Across America series in 2020. Maya was also selected as one of The Advocate's Champions of Pride in 2022. You can follow more of their work at mayawilliamspoet.com

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Nov

1

TONIGHT’S EVENT IS CANCELED.

Join us for a special panel discussion in our monthly event series Milkweed Presents! For this conversation,torrin a. greathouse, author of the incredible poetry collectionWound from the Mouth of a Wound, curates a panel of (yet-to-be-announced) local guest QTBIPOC poets to read their work and talk about what community means to them.

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Oct

27

to Oct 28

New Editions is a biennial pop-up showcase and sale of new artists’ prints and publications in the Main Gallery at MCBA. Kicking off with a ticketed preview party on Friday night, the sale continues on Saturday, featuring artists’ books, photo books, chapbooks, zines, broadsides, and hand-printed work by artists from around the country.

New Editions offers something for everyone, from art lovers to longtime collectors, with items listed at a variety of price points.

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Oct

24

Join writer Mary Carroll Moore as she celebrates the launch of her newest novel A Woman’s Guide to Search and Rescue. Mary will be in conversation with Loft teaching artist and author Kate St. Vincent Vogl about creative risk. The Twin Cities jazz duo, JazzLove, will offer live music and Mary Carroll Moore will join them for a song from her novel.

Event is at 6:30 pm in the Open Book Performance Hall. Everyone is welcome.

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Oct

22

Come to the First Annual Midwest Queer & Trans Zine Fest on Oct. 21-22, 2023 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day. Celebrate LGBTQ History Month by joining us on the second floor of the Open Book Building in downtown Minneapolis.

The Midwest QT Zine Fest brings together queer and trans artists, zine makers, collectives, and small presses to share their work with zine enthusiasts and LGBTQ community members. Over 70 local and regional exhibitors will have their work for sale, ranging from hand-made zines to small-run publications. The Midwest QT Zine Fest strives to be a new hub for the exchange of queer zines and related materials in the region and an opportunity for queer and trans zinesters and artists to engage one another. This zine fest is co-hosted by the Tretter Collection in GLBT Studies at the University of Minnesota Libraries and Late Night Copies Press. Free to attend.

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Oct

21

Come to the First Annual Midwest Queer & Trans Zine Fest on Oct. 21-22, 2023 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day. Celebrate LGBTQ History Month by joining us on the second floor of the Open Book Building in downtown Minneapolis.

The Midwest QT Zine Fest brings together queer and trans artists, zine makers, collectives, and small presses to share their work with zine enthusiasts and LGBTQ community members. Over 70 local and regional exhibitors will have their work for sale, ranging from hand-made zines to small-run publications. The Midwest QT Zine Fest strives to be a new hub for the exchange of queer zines and related materials in the region and an opportunity for queer and trans zinesters and artists to engage one another. This zine fest is co-hosted by the Tretter Collection in GLBT Studies at the University of Minnesota Libraries and Late Night Copies Press. Free to attend.

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Oct

20

Join us for an incredible event as McKnight fellow J.C. Hallman presents his latest book of nonfiction, Say Anarcha, at Milkweed Books. Hallman will read from Say Anarcha—his book unearthing the story of the enslaved woman known as "The Mother of Gynecology" and the dangerous, experimental surgeries conducted on her—and discuss the book with Dr. Rahel Nardos of the University of Minnesota's Center for Global Health and Social Responsibility and Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health.

We invite you to join us at this special reading at Milkweed Books, our brick-and-mortar independent bookstore located on the first floor of Open Book, at 7 p.m. for an unforgettable event.

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Oct

19

Join us for the October entry in our monthly Faculty/Student Reading Series, where we host a local faculty writer from the University of Minnesota's Creative Writing MFA Program and a student writer, offering a chance for emerging local writers to place their work in conversation with an established writer. For this month's reading, MFA candidate John Lapine will be reading with Krys Malcolm Belc, author of The Natural Mother of the Child: A Memoir of Nonbinary Parenthood.

This reading will also feature an exclusive student discount on all purchases in the bookstore, where anyone attending with a valid student ID will receive 10% off as our show of appreciation for the Twin Cities student writing community.

About the readers

John LaPine is an MFA candidate in Poetry at the University of Minnesota. He earned his MA in creative writing & pedagogy from Northern Michigan University (NMU), where he volunteered as an associate editor of creative nonfiction & poetry for the literary journal Passages North, and worked as an intern at Graywolf Press. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in: The Rising Phoenix Review, Hot Metal Bridge, The /Temz/ Review, Glass: A Journal of Poetry, Under the Gum Tree, Rhythm & Bones, Midwestern Gothic, & elsewhere. His first chapbook of essays, An Unstable Container, is forthcoming from Bull City Press.

Krys Malcolm Belc is the author of The Natural Mother of the Child: A Memoir of Nonbinary Parenthood (Counterpoint) and the flash nonfiction chapbook In Transit (The Cupboard Pamphlet). His essays have been featured in Granta, Guernica, The Rumpus, Brevity, and elsewhere. Krys is the memoir editor of Split Lip Magazine. He lives in Philadelphia with his partner and their four young children.

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Oct

18

Exchange: sliding scale suggested donation of $5-$25. No one turned away for lack of funds.

Performance type: whatever wants to be expressed. Poetry, essay, song, interpretative dance. You bring it.

Set limit: 5-7 minutes (You will be lovingly contained, so please time/practice what you’re going to share)

Sign up at the door.

Start prepping now. Tell your friends. Stock up on Kleenex. Get ready to be moved. I can't wait to see you there.

https://fb.me/e/2NHJquCVK

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Oct

14

to Oct 15

Two showings at Open Book:

Saturday, October 14, 2023 7–9 p.m.
Sunday, October 15, 2023 2–4 p.m.

Grounded in Langston Hughes’ 1935 poem, Let America Be America merges spoken word and dance. The work is inspired by chants of “Make America Great Again”, posits the premise that America has never been great … for all.

Salon #1 is an intimate presentation of excerpts from the full work, in homage to the salons of the Harlem Renaissance featuring spoken word by spoken word artists Theo Langason and Jandeltha Rae; with a musical score by Queen Drea. Join Threads to explore what it means and will mean for America to truly be America, and share your ideas with the creators about what you‘ve seen and how it relates to what America is to you.

Info about all performances of Let America Be America and to get tickets, visit https://www.threadsdance.org/performances/

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Oct

7

Milkweed Editions and Liquid Music present an evening of music, poetry, and conversation with JJJJerome Ellis.

“A lyrical celebration of and inquiry into the intersections of blackness, music, and disabled speech.” —Claudia Rankine

Liquid Music joins forces with Milkweed Editions to present a multidisciplinary book launch event celebrating JJJJJerome Ellis’s forthcoming Aster of Ceremonies—a work exploring what rites we need now and how poetry, astir in the asters, can help them along.

What is the relationship between fleeing and feeling? How can the voices of those who came before—and the stutters that leaven those voices—carry into our present moment, mingling with our own? Through the grateful invocations of ancestors and their songs, Ellis rewrites history, creating a world that blooms backward, reimagining what it means for Black and disabled people to have taken, and to continue to take, their freedom.

The evening will feature live music and readings from Ellis, followed by a conversation facilitated by neurodivergent poet Chris Martin—curator of Milkweed Editions‘ Multiverse series, a literary series devoted to different ways of languaging.

Attendees will have first access to purchase Aster of Ceremonies ahead of its publication in October. JJJJJerome will be available to sign books after the event at a post-reception social hour with refreshments.Tickets are free with a suggested donation of $10. All proceeds will go towards supporting the artist's visit to Minneapolis.

Tickets available at this link. More information available here.

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Oct

7

Join us at Milkweed Books as we partner with PeoplesPoetryMN to host over 30 local poets for the return of a Twin Cities tradition: The Great Twin Cities Poetry Read! Each poet will have three minutes to read a poem of their choosing before passing the torch to the next, creating a marathon reading that spans as many different forms of poet—established and emerging, experimental and spoken word—as we can fit into a single event.

Founded by Matt Mauch in 2008, the GTCPR was envisioned as a “for us, by us” adventure, with as many people as possible playing a part in making it happen. Over the years, several organizers and venues have worked annually to make the GTCPR a tradition in the poetry scene up through 2019. Now, after a four year hiatus, organizers Chavonn Williams Shen, Natalie Marlin, and Anthony Ceballos are bringing the Great Twin Cities Poetry Read back to life with that same mission at the forefront, aiming to offer as wide a platform for the local poetry community as possible.

Our list poets for this event includes: Allison Blevins, Alice Paige, Ash Wynter, Celina McManus, Clarence White, Daphne DiFazio, Elizabeth Tannen, Erin Sharkey, Gen Del Raye, Halee Kirkwood, J. Bailey Hutchinson, Jada Brown, Jessica Zick, Kate Kyser, Kris Bigalk, Larissa Larson, Lenora Magee-Howard, Lisa Yankton, LM Brimmer, Lynette Reini-Grandell, Marlin M. Jenkins, Mary Moore Easter, Matt Mauch, Merle Geode, Michael Kleber-Diggs, Michael Moore, Michael Torres, Moheb Soliman, Oliver D. Allen, Paula Cisewski, Peter Mason, Raine Ngo, Roy Guzman, Zang Xiong, and Zibiquah Denny.

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Public Events — Open Book (2024)

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