Tag: author talk

  • Monday, November 7, 8:00 pm – Onstage Conversation with Nigella Lawson

    Enjoy behind the scenes stories of  Nigella Lawson’s “life in food.”  A resident of London, she is an internationally renowned food writer and TV chef whose successful television programs have made her a household name around the world.

    In 1998 she published her first cookbook, How To Eat, The Pleasures and Principles of Good Food. She now has twelve bestselling books to her name, including her latest, Cook, Eat, Repeat: Ingredients, Recipes, and Stories. Her books have sold more than 12 million copies worldwide.

    Her first TV series, “Nigella Bites” aired in 2000, followed by a string of successful series broadcast in the UK, USA, Australia and beyond.

    The program takes place at the Emerson Colonial Theatre, 106 Boyston Street, Boston, on November 7 at 8 pm. Tickets range from $45 – $110. Call 888-616-0272 or visit www.emersoncolonialtheatre.com

  • Friday, June 10, 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm – The Northeast Native Plant Primer: 235 Plants for an Earth-Friendly Garden

    Join Native Plant Trust Director of Horticulture Uli Lorimer, for the debut of his new book highlighting our region’s spectacular plant diversity and varied habitats. The Northeast Native Plant Primer provides a roadmap to help you to include native plants in your garden, whether you are new to gardening or a seasoned professional. For those of us who care about the natural world, the decision to plant natives in the garden is one of the most impactful and important choices we can make. With so much under threat from a changing climate, invasive species, habitat loss and fragmentation, and declining numbers of birds and insects, planting natives in your garden shows you are trying to make a difference. Native plants have the power to heal our landscapes, welcome wildlife into our gardens, and inspire us.

    The talk will be held at Garden in the Woods in Framingham on June 10 at 12:30 pm. $15 for NPT members, $18 for nonmembers. Register at www.nativeplanttrust.org

  • Thursday, February 25, 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm – The New Heirloom Garden, Online

    Enjoy a virtual lecture and Q&A session with author Ellen Ecker Ogden about her new book, The New Heirloom Garden. Join the delicious revolution by learning about heirloom vegetables, forgotten fruits, and fragrant flowers. This Tower Hill Botanic Garden Talk will take place February 25 at 6:30, and is $10 for Tower Hill members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.towerhillbg.org/author-talks/

  • Thursday, January 31, 1:30 pm – Rosemary Verey: The Life & Lessons of a Legendary Gardener

    Barbara Paul Robinson, author of Rosemary Verey: the Life and Lessons of a Legendary Gardener, will come to the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley, on Thursday, January 31 at 1:30 pm, to give an illustrated talk.

    The book recounts how Ms. Robinson, in mid-career as a New York City lawyer, took a sabbatical to work at Ms. Verey’s famous garden at Barnsley House in the Cotswalds, England. The short internship led to a longtime friendship, so the author was able to observe the rising fame of the great English gardener and to enlist Ms. Verey’s many other associates to contribute their memories to this intimate biography.  After her talk, Barbara Paul Robinson will be open to questions and to signing books. Light refreshments will be served. $10 for Mass Hort members, $15 for non-members. To register for the event, visit www.masshort.org or call Maureen Horn at 617-933-4912.

  • Monday, June 7, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Novella Carpenter

    Porter Square Books, 25 White Street, Cambridge, will host author Novella Carpenter on Monday, June 7, from 7 – 9. Carpenter, who grows greens and raises livestock on a dead-end street in the ghetto, is the author of Farm City: The Education of an Urban Farmer. For the past decade, the 38-year-old has cultivated land in the city, the last six years on GhostTown Farm, the sunny, squat lot in Oakland, California next to her rundown, coral-colored flat — complete with a back porch covered in goat poop — where she lives with mechanic boyfriend Bill and a menagerie of her so-called edible pets, including rabbits, chickens, and, on occasion, a turkey or two.

    The ‘hood is also dotted with long-shuttered businesses, drug dealers, prostitutes, multiethnic neighbors, and what Carpenter affectionately refers to as “fellow freaks.” She feels right at home there. “The neighborhood had a whiff of anarchy,” she notes in her memoir. “Spanish-speaking soccer players hosted ad hoc tournaments in the abandoned playfield. Teenagers sold bags of marijuana on the corners. The Buddhist monks made enormous vats of rice on the city sidewalk…And I started squat gardening on land I didn’t own.”

    A child of back-to-the landers, Carpenter has received stellar reviews, most notably in the New York Times, for chronicling her exploits in the urban jungle.  She’s been featured everywhere from mainstream outlets like Time, foodie circles, like Culinate, and eco-green arenas like Grist. Log on to www.portersquarebooks.com for more information.

    http://www.re-nest.com/uimages/re-nest/9-22-2009popmech.jpg

  • Tuesday, October 6, 6:00 pm – No Impact Men with Colin Beavan and David Owen

    Hear two authors speak at the Boston Public Library Abbey Room, 700 Boylston Street, on Tuesday, October 6, beginning at 6 pm.  Meet the two men who are concerned about the environment, and about leaving as little impact on the environment as possible.  No Impact Man (a book and a movie) is a deeply honest and riveting account of the year in which Colin Beavan and his wife attempted to do what most of us would consider impossible: buy nothing, waste nothing, and reduce their carbon footprint to zero – while living with a young child in a 9th floor Manhattan apartment. He’s known as the guy who went a year without toilet paper.

    In a persuasive and provocative challenge to established environmental thinking, David Owen’s Green Metropolis: Why Living Smaller, Living Closer, and Driving Less are the Keys to Sustainability challenges much of the conventional wisdom about being green and shows how the greenest place in the United States isn’t Portland, Oregon or Snowmass, Colorado, but New York, New York.  For more information, log on to www.bpl.org.

    "No Impact Man" by Colin Beavan Farrar, Straus and Giroux