Eliot Pattison

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

WEDNESDAY JUNE 3, 7pm – Crime Fiction
ELIOT PATTISON

author of The Lord of Death ($24.00 Soho)

Shan Tao Yun is an exiled Chinese national and a former Beijing investigator on parole from the Tibetan gulag to which he had been consigned as punishment. He is ferrying a corpse on muleback over the slopes of Chomolungma—Everest—at the request of a local wisewoman who says the gods have appointed this task to him, when he encounters what looks like a traffic accident. A government bus filled with imprisoned illegal monks has overturned. Then Shan hears gunfire. Two women in an approaching sedan have been killed. One is the Chinese minister of tourism; the other, a blond Westerner, organizes climbing expeditions. Though she dies in his arms, Shan is later met with denials that this foreigner is dead.

Shan must find the murderer, for his recompense will be the life and sanity of his son, Ko, imprisoned in a Chinese “yeti factory” where men are routinely driven mad.

Praise for the Tao Yun Shan series:

“Majestic.” — The New York Times Book Review

“A powerful picture of courage in the face of tyranny.” — The Washington Post

“Nothing I’ve read or seen about how China has systematically crushed the soul of Tibet has been as effective.” — Chicago Tribune

Eliot Pattison is an international lawyer based near Philadelphia. His five previous Shan novels, set in Tibet, The Skull Mantra (St Martins 1999), Water Touching Stone (2001), Bone Mountain (2002), Beautiful Ghosts (2004), and Prayer of the Dragon (2007), have been critical and commercial successes. He won the Edgar for Best First Novel and was nominated for the CWA Golden Dagger.

Bill Ayers, Bernadine Dohrn, and Haki Madhubuti

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

THURSDAY MAY 28, 7pm – Non- Fiction
at The ARCH STREET UNITED METHODIST CHURCH,

55 North Broad Street, 215-568-6250

WILLIAM C. AYERS and BERNADINE DOHRN
authors of Race Course: Against White Supremacy ($19.95 Third World Press)

White supremacy and its troubling endurance in American life is debated in these personal essays by two veteran political activists. Arguing that white supremacy has been the dominant political system in the United States since its earliest days – and that it is still very much with us – the discussion points to unexamined bigotry in the criminal justice system, election processes, war policy, and education. The book draws upon the authors’ own confrontations with authorities during the Vietnam era, reasserts their belief that racism and war are interwoven issues, and offers personal stories about their lives today as parents, teachers, and reformers.

William C. Ayers is a distinguished professor of education and a senior university scholar at the University of Illinois-Chicago. He is the author of To Teach: The Journey of a Teacher and Fugitive Days, a memoir about his life with his wife, Bernardine Dohrn. Bernardine Dohrn is the director of the Children and Family Law Justice Center and a clinical associate professor of law at Northwestern University. She is the coauthor of A Century of Juvenile Justice and Zero Tolerance.

and HAKI R. MADHUBUTI
author of Liberation Narratives: New and Collected Poems 1966-2009 ($29.95 Third World Press)

Haki R. Madhubuti: Poet. Publisher. Editor. Educator. Innovative Entrepreneur. Activist. Founder and President of Third World Press. Spanning a long career, these poems helped define and sustain a movement that added music and brash street language to traditional poetics. Like Amiri Baraka (aka LeRoi Jones), this poet and social activist has long combined the personal and the political by adding anger, activism, and outside art to well-crafted poems. Spoken-word poetry (which recently garnered the author a Grammy nomination) and “message” poetry aimed at community healing are innovations in the later works, and as a whole the poems provide an overview of emerging Black culture as they borrow language from Black consciousness, hip-hop, political speeches, and motivational talks. Haki R. Madhubuti has been a pivotal figure since the 1960s in advocating a strong black literary tradition. He is the founder of Third World Press, the founder and director emeritus of the Gwendolyn Brooks Center for Black Literature and Creative Writing, and the director of the MFA degree program in creative writing at Chicago State University. He is the author of Claiming Earth: Race, Rage, Rape, Redemption, Groundwork: New and Selected Poems, and YellowBlack: The First Twenty-One Years of a Poet’s Life.

Live Radio Broadcast on 900AM WURD

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

WEDNESDAY MAY 20, 5pm – Non-Fiction
Live Radio Broadcast: WRITING FOR OUR LIVES 5-7pm on 900AM WURD

w/ A. BRUCE CRAWLEY, MICHAEL DAYS, and IRV RANDOLPH
with a performance by BASSEY IKPI

Sponsored by:
Laborers’ District Council of the Metropolitan Area of Philadelphia and Vicinity

Art Sanctuary kicks off the 25th Annual Celebration of Black Writing Festival with a special panel discussion broadcast on 900AM WURD. Three Philadelphia leaders will answer the questions how has a book saved a life and how can great writing help our community? Come and be a part of our live radio audience, then stay for a performance by Nigerian-born spoken word artist and HBO Def Poetry alumn Bassey Ikpi. If you can’t join us in person, tune into 900AM WURD.

Panelists: A. Bruce Crawley, President, Millenium 3 Management, Inc., Michael Days, Editor, Philadelphia Daily News, Irv Randolph, Managing Editor, The Philadelphia Tribune

Welcome to The Moonstone Arts Center

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

The Moonstone Arts Center is expanding Moonstone’s traditional programming of authors, poetry, and political discussions, with new programs of music, theater, comedy, film and writing workshops. We are beginning a program to help emerging poets publish their work, and will offer chapbook editing, design and printing. Our space is available for other organizations to rent or co-produce programs. In addition to the Moonstone Poetry Series we now host Poets & Prophets and the Poetic Arts Project of Philadelphia. Music programs are being developed with Lucky Old Souls, Ian O’Beirne and Rustic Music. Writing workshops include a poetry workshop with Leonard Gontarek, a fiction workshop with Philadelphia Stories, and a non-fiction workshop with Susan Perloff. Moonstone is also producing Thomas Paine: The Forgotten Founding Father, with public lecturers, an essay contest in the high schools, and a panel discussion on the 200th anniversary of his death on June 8, 2009, with historians and Paine scholars, Eric Foner, Jack Fruchtman, and Harvey Kaye. For more information see: www.forgottenfoundingfather.net

Moonstone is also adding an annual membership component and new services. In the past, Moonstone events were hosted by Robin’s Book Store, which also underwrote many of Moonstone’s expenses. Now that Robin’s has shrunk, it can no longer do this. Moonstone is also supported by grants from The Barra Foundation, the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, the Pennsylvania Humanities Council, the Samuel S. Fels Fund and the William Penn Foundation. However, foundations are cutting back and some are not funding projects anymore at all but are rather only offering support for “structural development.” What this means in practice is that these foundations want the non-profit organization to now have “earned income” in order to fund their projects and to no longer be dependent on “contributed income.”
This also means that organizations like Moonstone have to begin to have “products” to sell, as well as charging admission to events in order to pay for the expenses of running the organization. We are meeting this challenge both with increased programming – some of which will have cover charges, products and services for sale – and through annual memberships. Our current products include our 2009 Poetry Ink Chapbook, available for only $10.00 and copying services available on our new copy machine. Membership for 2009 is a mere $10.00 and with it you get a copy of the chapbook for free – or, to put it another way, if you buy a copy of the chapbook you become a member automatically. Having a membership offers you discounted entry to Moonstone events.

What is Moonstone? Why be a member? Many people who have attended our programs are not aware of Moonstone’s history and other activities. Founded in 1983, Moonstone is a 501 (C)3, arts and education organization whose mission is to stimulate communication across the barriers of language, gender, ethnicity, and age, utilizing the arts and the concept of multiple intelligences as a guide in both our preschool and our adult programs. We create programs based on the philosophy that the arts, creativity, and imagination are essential aspects of life and learning. We believe that the artistic process is critical in understanding how people think and interact with our world and that learning is a life long activity. Moonstone Inc. currently operates the Moonstone Preschool and the Moonstone Arts Center.
Moonstone preschool uses a unique arts-based curriculum that is based on Howard Gardner’s educational theories of multiple intelligences (MI). MI theory asserts that human cognitive competence is best described in terms of a set of abilities, talents, and mental skills that each child develops at different rates based on biological and cultural influences. These “intelligences” include music, bodily-kinesthetic, logical-mathematical, linguistic, spatial, interpersonal, and intrapersonal intelligences.
Moonstone’s programming for adults includes about 200 events a year with over 300 artist-participants and over 4000 attendees. In the interest of involving under-served populations, we created five tracks which consist of group readings and individual presentations. These are Black Ink, Philadelphia Ink, Poetry, Red Ink, and Women’s Ink.
For 18 years, we produced the Celebration of Black Writing before turning it over to Arts Sanctuary in 2002 and we produced The Paul Robeson Festival for ten years beginning in 1989. Moonstone’s El Festival Cubano ran for three years before ending due to the fact that we could no longer gets Cubans into the country. We also produced a one man play on Clarence Darrow, a four-part series on Thomas Paine’s Legacy: Three Centuries of Revolution in Philadelphia and Richard Wright Week in Philadelphia featuring his daughter Julia Wright and poet Lamont Steptoe. Thank you for being a part of Moonstone.

Thomas Paine and the Promise of America

Friday, May 8th, 2009

Moonstone Inc. & The Historical Society of Pennsylvania Present

Thomas Paine: The Forgotten Founding Father Part 4

Thomas Paine and the Promise of America

A Presentation by Harvey J. Kaye

Wednesday April 22, 2009, 6pm

Historical Society of Pennsylvania
1300 Locust Street, RSVP 215-732-6200 ext. 412

Thomas Paine Lithe

“I couldn’t put the thing down! The story of Thomas Paine – then and now, for the man and his ideas are very much alive
today – stirs the heart, moves the mind, and routs the demon
of despair. The best political book of the year!”

Bill Moyers

“Kaye’s lucid work helps create the free citizen’s memorial
to Thomas Paine, who is still shamefully unacknowledged by
the democratic republic that he lived and died to bring about.”

Christopher Hitchens

Harvey J. Kaye is Ben and Joyce Rosenberg Professor of Social Change and Development and Director of the Center for History and Social Change at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. He is author of Why Do Ruling Classes Fear History? and Other Questions, The Powers of the Past, The British Marxist Historians, Thomas Paine: Firebrand of the Revolution, and Thomas Paine and the Promise of America.

Schedule of Thomas Paine events

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Join us to celebrate the life and work of one of Thomas Paine, one of America’s most influential and radical yet under-appreciated citizens. We will be holding monthly lectures, sponsoring a high school writing contest, and celebrating Paine’s life on the 200th anniversary of his death, June 8, 2009.


Wednesday February 4, 2009: “Thomas Paine: Apostle of Freedom”

6:00 pm
Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1300 Locust Street

A presentation on Thomas Paine by Jack Fruchtman.


Tuesday March 10: “Teaching Thomas Paine”

3:00 pm
School District of Philadelphia, 440 N. Broad Street,
call 215-400-5719 for reservations

An Act 48 credit presentation on teaching Thomas Paine for English and history high school teachers by Jack Fruchtman.


Wednesday, March 11: “Thomas Paine and Revolutionary America”

10:00 am
Central High School – students only

6:00 pm
St. Peter’s Church – open to the public – 3rd & Pine

A lecture on Paine in American and his work: Common Sense and The Crisis by Jack Fruchtman.


Wednesday, April 1: “Thomas Paine In Europe”

10:00 am
University City High School – students only

6:00 pm
Moonstone Arts Center – 110A S. 13th St.

A lecture on Paine in Europe and his work: The Rights of Man, Age of Reason, and Agrarian Reform by Jack Fruchtman.


Wednesday, April 22: “Thomas Paine and the Promise of America”

6:00 pm
Historical Society of Pennsylvania – open to the public
13th & Locust – 215-732-6200 ext. 412 for RSVP

A lecture on “Thomas Paine and the Promise of America,” looking at Thomas Paine’s influence throughout American history, by Harvey Kaye.


Thursday, April 23: “Thomas Paine and the Promise of America”

10:00 am
Northeast High School – students only

A lecture on “Thomas Paine and the Promise of America,” looking at Thomas Paine’s influence throughout American history, by Harvey Kaye.


Saturday, May 30: “I am Thomas Paine”

2:00pm
Free Library of Philadelphia – 19th & Vine Sts
open to the public

The twelve finalists in Moonstone’s Thomas Paine Essay Contest read their essays. Two winners will be chosen who will then present their essays at the June 8 panel discussion.


Monday June 8:
“We Have It In Our Power To Begin The World Over Again”

6:00 pm
Drexel University, Mitchell Auditorium, Bossone Building – Market St. between 31st and 32nd open to the public.

A panel discussion on the life and influence of Thomas Paine featuring: Eric Foner, Jack Fruchtman, Harvey J. Kaye, as well as the two winning authors of our high school writing contest.

This event will be filmed for broadcast on public and educational television and will be followed by a reception.


Check out our Sponsors page for more information on our venues and partners!


Presented by Moonstone, Inc.
110A S. 13th Street, Philadelphia – (215) 735-9600

Co-Sponsored by The Office of College and Career Awareness of the School District of Philadelphia, The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, St. Peters Church and the Henry George School.

Funded by the Pennsylvania Humanities Council, with additional support from the Samuel S. Fels Fund, the Barra Foundation, and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.