Thursday, April 26, 2012

Social Painting Party Monday 4/30 6-8pm




ASPIRING ARTISTS TO SWARM AT BEEHIVE BOOKS ON APRIL 30


            A new art-as-entertainment concept called "Social Painting" has arrived in Delaware and will be launched at Beehive Books on Monday, April 30, from 6 p.m.-8 p.m.
           
            "I can assure you that no artistic talent is needed,” said Kay Carroll, owner of Art Nest, the studio hosting the party. “Our featured artworks are chosen to promote spontaneity, skill development and excellent outcomes. It's a lot of fun and a unique opportunity to surprise yourself and keep the evidence.” 

            Social Painting Studios have emerged throughout the nation and have become a popular alternative to more typical destinations for an evening out. Studios host short workshops, often referred to as parties, for those hoping to get to know their inner artist, said Carroll. Party goers receive all supplies, aprons and instruction from a professional art Instructor.

            Guidance is offered to guests through each phase in the completion of their own acrylic painting on canvas, which is theirs to keep. 
           
            The cost is $25 per person, payable by cash or check at the event. To register or receive more information, contact Kay from Art Nest Studios at 614-832-8246 or email yournest4art@yahoo.com

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Anne Tyler fans UNITE! at 2pm this Saturday 4/7

Join us for a reading from Anne Tyler's new novel (No, sorry, she won't be here) but fans are invited to read a selected passage from her new book and stick around to discuss her books and your favorites among them. 

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Robert Olmstead Reading and Book Signing Tuesday 3 April @ 7pm

Join us for a special reading with Robert Olmstead on the day his new novel, The Coldest Night, is released.   A book signing and wine reception will follow the reading.
Henry Childs is just seventeen when he falls into a love affair so intense it nearly consumes him. But when young Mercy’s disapproving father threatens Henry’s life, Henry runs as far as he can—to the other side of the world.

The time is 1950, and the Korean War hangs in the balance. Descended from a long line of soldiers, Henry enlists in the marines and arrives in Korea on the eve of the brutal seventeen-day battle of the Chosin Reservoir—the turning point of the war—completely unprepared for the forbidding Korean landscape and the unimaginable circumstances of a war well beyond the scope of anything his ancestors ever faced. But the challenges he meets upon his return home, scarred and haunted, are greater by far.

Robert Olmstead’s riveting new novel is not only a passionate story of love and war, it is a timeless story of soldiers coming home to a country with little regard for, and even less knowledge of, what they’ve confronted. Through his hero, Olmstead reveals an unspoken truth about combat: that for many men, the experience of war is the most enlivening, electric, and extraordinary experience of their lives.



Robert Olmstead is the author of seven previous books. Coal Black Horse was the winner of the Heartland Prize for Fiction and the Ohioana Award, and was a #1 Book Sense pick and a Border’s Discover pick. Far Bright Star was the winner of the Western Writers of America Spur Award. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and an NEA grant, and is a professor at Ohio Wesleyan University.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Songs Worth Singing, A Night With Steve Stockman

Wednesday, March 28th @ 8:00 PM

A special after-hours event- Come explore the power of folk music to address the big questions of life, the human condition, and faith. Rev. Steve Stockman, author of Walk On: The Spiritual Journey of U2 will discuss various folk artist like Over the Rhine, Mumford and Sons, and Chrisy Moore. Moore s...ings in his song North and South of the River, "some songs are not worth singing". This evening will examine songs that do provide thoughtful reflection on ourselves and the world around us.
Songs performed LIVE by "For Crying Out Loud". Refreshments will be served.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Robert Flanagan Reading Monday 3/26 @ 7pm

Please join us on Monday, March 26 at 7 p.m. as Delaware author Bob Flanagan reads from his new short story collection, Fight Night.

Flanagan is the author of the acclaimed Marine Corps novel Maggot and the short story collections Naked to Naked Goes and Loving Power. Born in Toledo, he studied at the University of Chicago and served as Professor of English and Director of the Creative Writing program at Ohio Wesleyan University, retiring in 2010. He lives in Delaware with his wife, Katy, and works out in a basement gym featuring a heavy bag, a peanut bag (“speed bag”) and a boom-box.

Nan Byrne, a writer and producer, has high praise for Fight Night. “Like a perfect left hook hitting America’s mid-section, Flanagan’s new collection of stories packs a powerful wallop,” she said. “Inside this book you will find spit and towel tales of the bruised and battered, jammed-fingered, broken-down and bloody-nosed, but still-resilient souls who come out swinging in that “cap down and collar up” corner of the universe where glory dreams collide with the hard-knock life. From the salty reminisces of a worn-out prize fighter to the liquid dreams of a youngster steeling for his first schoolyard fight, Flanagan’s brutally-honest prose floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee sent straight to the heart.”

Fight Night was recently published by XOXOX, located in Gambier, Ohio.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Thursday 3/22 @ 7pm Book Talk & Signing Wisdom Literature and the Dead Sea Scrolls

Please join us for a book talk and discussion with biblical scholar and MTSO Faculty member John Kampen.

He will speak on the Dead Sea Scrolls and his recent book Wisdom Literature.


Wisdom Literature is the first comprehensive commentary on the wisdom texts from the Dead Sea Scrolls. Kampen relates the body of wisdom literature discovered at Qumranto the larger wisdom tradition, to apocalyptic literature, to the Hebrew Scriptures, and to the New Testament, and he shows how these texts fit into and enhance our understanding of the complex social and intellectual history of Second Temple Judaism.

John Kampen is the Dunn Professor of Biblical Interpretation at the Methodist Theological School in Ohio. A recognized scholar of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the New Testament, he is the author of The Hasideans and the Origins of Pharisaism: A Study of 1 and 2 Maccabees and coeditor of a number of research volumes, the best known of which is (with Moshe Bernstein) Reading 4QMMT: New Perspectives on Qumran Law and History. He also is the author of numerous research articles and has served as co-chair of the Qumran Studies section of the Society of Biblical Literature.

For reviews for his book check out:    Eerdmans John Kampen

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Thurs 2/23 @ 7pm In or Out? Talk & Discussion

In or Out?

Discussions about faith tend to hover around this sort of a question - are you in?  Or maybe, more real for most of us - are you out?  If that's the primary way we think about faith and/or religion, then we are required to define and defend boundaries in order to determine who's on the inside and who's on the outside.  That kind of discourse is incredibly hostile and divisive - and ultimately not very helpful to anyone.  BUT, what if there was a different way to consider faith.  What if the boundaries weren't the primary way by which we should consider a life of faith?  What if there was a more authentic way to talk about our spiritual journeys as individuals and communities?  What if that way even provided a framework for humble discussion?  Come and find out....

Join in the discussion led by Robb Morgan of the Delaware City Vineyard Pastoral Team.

Friday, February 10, 2012

New Delaware Book! Book Signing & Talk Friday 2/10 @ 5-7pm

It's here!  The new book about Delaware has finally arrived and we are celebrating with a book signing and talk with Author Jeff Darbee.  Mr. Darbee and the folks from the Delaware County Historical Society will be at the Beehive Friday 2/10 from 5-7pm to sign books.                                                                                       Mr. Darbee will give a brief talk about the book at 7pm.


Please join us to welcome this wonderful new book about our fair city recently published by Arcadia Press as part of their Images of America series.  It has wonderful old photographs and tells the story of our city and county.  A great gift for friends and family or for your local history-loving sweetheart!

Sunday, January 29, 2012

If you liked the Hunger Games check this out

Review of Legend by Marie Lu
By Erin MacLellan, Beehive Staff



So you’ve finished the Hunger Games series, and after that thrilling, heart-rending ride, what do you read now?

There are plenty of dystopian young adult novels out there, but it’s taken me a long time to find one that captured my interest. And here it is: “Legend” by Marie Lu, a fast-paced blend of action and science fiction, with characters you care about: 15-year-old Day, an outlaw fighting the government, and 15-year-old June, a brilliant soldier hired to hunt down Day. It’s the first in a planned trilogy, and even if the writing is not as stellar as The Hunger Games, it’s still an exciting read.

The futuristic story is set in Los Angeles in the Republic of America, ruled by a dictator who wages war against the eastern Colonies. The poor live in plague-stricken slums, and the rich live sheltered and apart, in a society where the highest calling is to serve the military. At age 10, every child is tested in the Trials, and those who score well go off to military school while those who fail are dispatched to labor camps or worse.
June is the only person to have made a perfect score on her Trials, so she is trained in an elite military school and given every advantage. Day, meanwhile, failed his Trial and ran away, living in the shadows so he can watch over his family and launch attacks against the repressive Republic.

Their two fates collide after June’s brother is killed in an attack led by Day, and June is sent to track Day and bring him to justice. The story, told in alternating chapters by June and Day, has plenty of pulsing action to keep you turning the pages, but there’s also a sweetness and complexity to both characters that saves them from being superhero caricatures. Eventually romance blossoms between June and Day, but their different causes ensure that they’ll be ripped apart – even as they learn devastating secrets about their families and the Republic that make them question everything they are working for.

I wanted to love this book like I adored the Hunger Games, but it just doesn’t have the superb writing and emotional depth of that book. In fairness, Lu is a first-time author who is 27 years old, and Suzanne Collins, author of the Hunger Games, is a long-time writer with many books to her credit. Still, I’ll be waiting to read the next installment in the Legend series, and knowing that the movie rights are already sold, I’ll be eager to see the film, too.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

From Ethiopia to Palestine - Wed 1/25 @ 7pm -- Farewell Claire!

Join us as Claire Everhart, Global Village Collection intern, gives a quick recap of her Run Across Ethiopia (2011), including a few highlights from the documentary made of this endeavor: When We Run, AND discusses her upcoming Run Across Palestine (Feb 2012) and 6 month internship in Jenin. Come with questions about Palestine - she will answer them in her blog!  This will be an informal setting and some refreshments will be served. Wednesday, Jan 25th, 7pm, Beehive Books & Global Village

Most of all, it's a chance for us to thank Claire for her good work in our community, wish her well in her new endeavors, and stay in touch and learn through her new experiences as she goes global!

Check out more info about the Run Across Palestine at onthegroundglobal.org