Monday, August 3, 2020
Literary Tourism Lawrence, Kansas
Literary Tourism Lawrence, Kansas I moved to Kansas for love five years ago. Little was I expecting Lawrenceâs legendary local arts scene, which came as a complete and welcome shock. Besides the quirky annual Art Car Parade and Busker Fest, tons of cool literary events go on around town all year long. (And over half of Book Riotâs full-time staff have lived in Lawrence at one time or another, too. How could it get any more literary than that?) Here are some of my very favorite local bookish happenings. Come visit us and check âem out. William Burroughs House In 1981, William Burroughsâ boyfriend lured him to Lawrence, KS, to get him away from the drugs and drama of New York City life. Today you can visit his remote bungalow at 1927 Learnard Avenue (check out the photo gallery). Burroughs spent the last 16 years of his life in Lawrence, forever putting his stamp on the local scene and bringing through visitors like Allen Ginsberg, Norman Mailer, Hunter S. Thompson, Timothy Leary, Patti Smith, and Kurt Cobain. He would have turned 100 this year, and the city celebrated with exhibits, events, and even a beer brewed in his honor by Free State Brewery. The Campbell Conference The University of Kansas has a pretty rockinâ Gunn Center for the Study of Science Fiction, and the annual Campbell Conference is its premier event. Usually held in June or July, organizers present the Campbell Award and bring in lots of professional and amateur speculative fiction authors, round table discussions, and book signings. The Gunn Center has a lecture series, too, and has been key in bringing in sweet authors like Max Brooks and Cory Doctorow for public events. Nerd Nite Lawrence Do you have a Nerd Nite in your town? Lawrence does, and itâs bananas fun. Described as âTED talks with spirits and small bites,â anywhere from 60 100 local ânerdsâ gather at a bar once a month to hear three mini-lectures from smarty pants townies on the subjects theyâre passionate about. While Nerd Nite Lawrence isnât exclusively literary, itâs seen its fair share of goofy PowerPoints on Ray Bradbury, William Faulkner, Cormac McCarthy, Flannery OâConnor, Marilynne Robinson, Daniel Woodrell, Sam Shepard, Charles Portis, Diane Williams, Christopher Isherwood, Timothy Egan, and comics. And youâll probably bump into the good folks of⦠PBR Book Club If you like beer with your books, PBR Book Club is the local hangout for you. This co-ed group of 20 or so gets together at a downtown bar once a month to drink cheap beer and have irreverent discussions about books like Americanah, Underworld, Ready Player One, 2666, Cloud Atlas, The Goldfinch, and 1Q84. There are beer coozies, too. (And they secretly donât mind if you drink good beer.) Downtown Bookstore Culture Downtown Lawrence hosts a constellation of three indie bookstores, a comic shop, a public library, and a used bookstore all within three blocks of each other, right near 7th Massachusetts Streets. Not bad for a town of 90,000. The Raven has a cool Big Tent reading series that brings in three indie authors each month to strut their stuff, and itâs easy to lose track of time in the stacks at Astrokitty Comics and The Dusty Bookshelf, too. Signs of Life skews inspirational and Christian, and has the biggest best space for reading quietly over coffee. For childrenâs books, you canât beat The Toy Storeâs huge second floor collection. Or how about a local âzine from the cool kids at Wonder Fair Gallery? Meanwhile, no one can wait for the fancy new Lawrence Public Library to reopen downtown this summer. Local librarians will keep bringing in awesome authors like Marilynne Robinson, Tony Horwitz, Daniel Woodrell, Candice Millard, and Maggie Stiefvater, but in a big new beautiful space with a free music recording studio, coffee shop, comfy reading nooks, gallery spaces, and a grassy outdoor performance plaza. Best yet: no one would be surprised if you bumped into local authors Patricia Lockwood, Laura Moriarty, Mary OâConnell, Tessa Gratton, or maybe even Sara Paretsky while trekking from one downtown bookish destination to another. Langston Hughes Legacy Langston Hughes was born in 1902 and lived in Lawrence during his formative childhood years from 1903-1915. The City of Lawrenceâs motto is taken from a Hughes poem â" âWe have tomorrow / Bright before us / Like a flame⦠â â" and is on a plaque outside City Hall. Visit Watkins Museum of History in downtown Lawrence to see a small exhibit on Langston Hughes legacy in Lawrence. University of Kansas A vibrant university goes hand in hand with a vibrant literary culture. Here are a few of the most wonderful bookish things about KU: KU Hall Center for the Humanities: Meet authors like Junot Diaz, Sarah Vowell, Stephen Greenblatt, Jamaica Kincaid, Mary Oliver, Jeanette Walls, and Edwidge Danticat, all for free at the Humanities Lecture Series! KU Libraries: Visit all of the university libraries, but specifically Watson Library, which keeps all its books INSIDE the walls. Literally. The making-out-in the-stacks fantasy doesnât get any better than that. And the Spencer Research Library has a bunch of rad old books. KJHK Sunflower Reading Series: Listen to KUs weekly literary student radio show featuring short stories, plays, slam poetry, nonfiction, essays, science fiction, and more. SUA the Lied Center: What, you want more, you gluttonous bookworm you? Fine. Student Union Activities and the Lied Center have been known to host A-List authors like Max Brooks and David Sedaris. Lawrence Arts Center Lawrence is lucky to have a local arts center that supports not just visual arts, but also dramatic arts, music, film, literature, and beyond. LAC hosts a monthly themed story slam à la The Moth; they curate a Poetry off the Page series each spring thats been known to involve gorilla suits and poetry mailboxes; and theyve recently brought in literary crossovers John Waters and Marc Maron for public events. Most excitingly of all, Lawrence Arts Center just won a half million dollar grant from ArtPlace America for a new downtown arts corridor just east of Massachusetts Street. The project will embed public art in the streetscape, emphasizing human-scale, walkability, inter-modal paths, natural elements and images and ideas of people who live and work in the neighborhood. COOL. Places To Read Want nothing more than a quiet place to read? Try South Park on a warm May day, Potter Lake in view of the Campanile, The Bourgeois Pig, the overlook at Clinton Lake, or a neighborhood porch. Save
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