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SUMMARY:Friends & Foundation of the Rochester Public Library Books Sandwiched In Talks (streamed to Mendon Public Library)
DESCRIPTION:Mendon Public Library will stream these Tuesday Book Talks.  
 \n\nStop by the Mendon Public Library to watch each live stream. 
 \n\nSeptember 9\n\nHomestand: Small Town Baseball and the Fight for the 
 Soul of America by Will Bardenwerper\n\nBatavia\, New York hosted its first 
 professional baseball game in 1897. Despite decades of deindustrialization 
 and evaporating middle-class jobs\, the Batavia Muckdogs endured. When 
 Major League Baseball shut them down in 2020\, the town fought back\, 
 reviving the Muckdogs as a summer league team comprised of college players. 
 Homestand captures the essence of small town life and the values of modern 
 America. (62)\n\nReviewer: Dan Mason\, General Manager of the Rochester Red 
 Wings. The 2025 baseball season marked Dan’s 36th season with the 
 Rochester Red Wings and his 30th as the club’s General Manager.\n\n 
 \n\n\n\nSeptember 16\n\nBox Office Poison: Hollywood’s Story in a Century 
 of Flops by Tim Robey\n\nRobey offers an entertaining alternative history 
 of Hollywood through a century of its most notable flops. “Fusing 
 Hollywood history\, industry analysis and passionate\, deeply informed film 
 criticism\, Robey draws sharp distinctions between maligned masterpieces 
 and outright catastrophes\, yet embraces them all with the same generosity 
 of spirit and knowledge.”— Justin Chang\, film critic\, The New Yorker. 
 (56)\n\nReviewer: Scott Pukos\, Director of Communications for the Little 
 Theatre. A former award-winning newspaper reporter\, and television news 
 producer\, Scott currently works at The Little where he talks about indie 
 films\, popcorn\, and hosts Movies and a Microphone: The Little’s 
 podcast.\n\n \n\n\n\nSeptember 23\n\nWarhol’s Muses: the Artists\, 
 Misfits\, and Superstars Destroyed by the Factory Fame Machine by Laurence 
 LeamerLeamer explores the lives of ten complex\, unconventional women 
 Warhol dubbed his “Superstars\,” who inspired and starred in his 
 legendary underground films. Set in Manhattan during the turbulent\, 
 transformative 1960’s\, the historical biography examines Warhol’s 
 obsession with celebrity and uncovers intimate details about the life and 
 work of one of the most legendary artists of all time. (57)\n\nReviewer: 
 Don Hyatt is a Librarian Assistant in the Central Arts division and has a 
 background in art and photography. He works with all ages teaching 
 photography and does freelance photography. His work can be seen at 
 Donaldjhyatt.com\n\n \n\n\n\nSeptember 30\n\nAbundance by Ezra Klein and 
 Derek Thompson\n\nImagining the year 2050\, Klein and Thompson write “The 
 world has changed. Not just the virtual world … The physical world\, too: 
 its houses\, its energy\, its infrastructure\, its medicines\, its hard 
 tech. How different this era is from the opening decades of the 
 twenty-first century\, which unspooled a string of braided crises … For 
 years\, we constrained our ability to solve the most important problems. 
 Why?” (67)\n\nReviewer: As Foodlink’s Chief Impact Officer\, Mitch 
 Gruber has the opportunity to lead many innovative\, nationally-renowned 
 programs like the Curbside Market and Career Fellowship. Mitch also serves 
 as a City Councilmember and holds a PhD in American history from the 
 University of Rochester.\n\n \n\n\n\nOctober 7\n\nDeath of the Author by 
 Nnedi Okorafor\n\nIn this unique book-within-a-book\, Zelu – a disabled 
 Nigerian American woman – writes a wildly successful Sci-Fi novel set in 
 Chicago\, Lagos\, and space\, where androids and AI wage war in the 
 aftermath of human civilization. Unlike anything you’ve read 
 before\,\n\nDeath of the Author is a surprisingly cutting\, heartfelt drama 
 about art\, love\, identity\, connection\, and humanity. (56)\n\nReviewer: 
 Edward Ashton is the author of seven novels\, including MICKEY7 (the basis 
 for Bong Joon-ho’s “Mickey 17”) and AFTER THE FALL\, forthcoming from 
 St. Martin’s Press (February  2026).\n\n \n\n\n\nOctober 14\n\nEveryone 
 Who is Gone is Here: The United States\, Central America\, and the Making 
 of a Crisis by Jonathan Blitzer\n\nFleeing persecution\, crime\, or 
 hunger\, hundreds of thousands of people arrive every year at the US-Mexico 
 border: a high percentage come from El Salvador\, Guatemala\, and Honduras. 
 Using forensic and unprecedented reporting\, Blitzer braids personal 
 stories of Central Americans attempting to navigate U.S. immigration 
 policies with those trying to regulate them and those advocating for 
 changing them. (57)\n\nReviewers: Paige Hauser (pictured) and Rachel 
 Saper\, Attorneys at The Legal Aid Society of Rochester.\n\n 
 \n\n\n\nOctober 21\n\nBibliophobia: A Memoir by Sarah Chihaya\n\nUtilizing 
 titles such as Anne of Green Gables\, Possession\, A Tale for the Time 
 Being\, and The Last Samurai as her own personal manuals\, Chihaya explores 
 her childhood\, racial and cultural identity\, experiences with “harmful 
 practices of survival” and depression\, as well as the myriad ways books 
 can influence readers who become obsessed with them. (55)\n\nReviewer: 
 Tyler Barton is a writer\, teacher\, literary advocate\, and author of 
 Eternal Night at the Nature Museum (Sarabande Books) and The Quiet Part 
 Loud (Split/Lip Press).\n\n \n\n\n\nOctober 28\n\nIs a River Alive? by 
 Robert Macfarlane\n\nFocusing on three landscapes in Ecuador\; south-east 
 India\; and Canada\, Macfarlane explores the ancient idea that rivers 
 should be recognized as living beings in imagination and law. “This book 
 is a journey into an idea that changes the world – the idea that a river 
 is alive. What does such a recognition mean for perception\, law and 
 politics?” (57)\n\nReviewer: Semi-retired journalist Steven Orr was a 
 reporter at the Democrat and Chronicle\, specializing in the environment 
 and conservation. He is a board member of Genesee RiverWatch\, a non-profit 
 that works to improve water quality and public access to the Genesee 
 River.\n
LOCATION:Mendon - Jacobs Family Reading Room\, Mendon Public Library
ORGANIZER;CN="Kelly Paganelli":MAILTO:Kelly.Paganelli@libraryweb.org
CATEGORIES:Book Talk
CONTACT;CN="Kelly Paganelli":MAILTO:Kelly.Paganelli@libraryweb.org
STATUS:CONFIRMED
UID:LibCal-15256375
URL:https://calendar.libraryweb.org/event/15256375
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