A note to all those beleaguered teachers out there: “Please don’t go, we need you.” Moms out there desperately need you. Dads, they need you too. Most importantly, I really, […]
See who won at the 33rd annual Minnesota Book Awards.
Written By:
News Tribune | ×
Bookstore
Zenith Bookstore, 318 N. Central Ave., offers these book clubs. Call 218-606-1777 or go to zenithbookstore.com.
Poetry Book Club meets at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 12 to discuss Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky. Email sheila@sheilapacka.com to register.
Queering Pleasure group meets at 5:30 p.m. May 19 to discuss Kink edited by R. O. Kwon. Email books@zenithbookstore.com and type queering pleasure in the subject line. to register.
Chapter & Verse group meets at 6:30 p.m. May 20 to discuss Some Places More Than Others by Renee Watson and Evelyn Del Rey is Moving Away by Meg Medina. Email nikkie@zenithbookstore.com and type Chapter & Verse in the subject line to register.
Owls and Sharks lead the list of Minnesota Book Award winners Authors Jonathan C. Slaght and Kawai Strong Washburn were among those honored in a virtual celebration. April 29, 2021 8:01pm Text size Copy shortlink:
The Minnesota Book Awards honored writers both established and emerging Thursday night in their second consecutive virtual awards ceremony.
Here s the full list of winners:
Novel & short story: Sharks in the Time of Saviors, by Washburn (Farrar, Straus and Giroux). Seven-year-old Noa falls overboard and is carefully, tenderly returned to the boat by sharks. Washburn s story is about a working-class Hawaiian family touched by the gods.
General nonfiction: Owls of the Eastern Ice: A Quest to Find and Save the World s Largest Owl, by Slaght (Farrar, Straus and Giroux). The author spent five winters in far eastern Russia, tracking, banding and studying the rare Blakiston s fish owl in order to unde
Madonna Figura Simon
NORTH HORNELL She’s home, back with the community that has embraced her.
“We have a new child. Charlotte is like a different child. It is amazing to see the new progress and the things that she is able to do that she never did,” Chris Cavanaugh reported.
The kidney transplant was the latest physical challenge for Charlotte who was diagnosed with spina bifida and underwent fetal surgery to close her spine weeks before she was born. Complications with her kidneys ensued and required her to undergo nightly dialysis for the past three years.
During synchronized surgeries at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and the adjacent Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia last month, doctors implanted one of Chris’s kidneys into Charlotte’s abdomen. A second surgery was required when the kidney initially failed to produce urine.