New At The Library THE BOOKWORM -...

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VERMILLION — Charles Nauman and Jerry Wilson will read from and sign their re- cent books of fiction at 7-9 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 24, at Washington Street Arts Center, 202 Washington Street in Vermillion. A reception and book signing will follow the reading. The event is free and open to the public. “Pola: The Mysterious Communications of a Gone Woman,” is Charles Nauman’s first novel. His narrative, set in the Black Hills, ex- plores the corrosive impact of violence on the mind and the struggle of Pola to over- come the traumatic assassination of a man she deeply loved. Influenced by Nauman’s own experience living in the Black Hills and doing art therapy with film in mental health centers, the book offers a vi- sion of healing through the sympathetic work of a psy- chotherapist who strives to understand a woman’s way of thinking and her need for nature’s healing. Nauman is a film maker as well as an au- thor of prose and poetry. His novel bears some resem- blance to his film “Johnny Vik” (honored at Cannes, Lo- carno and the Prix L’Age D’Or in Brussels). Among his other films are “Tatonka,” an American Film Festival Blue Ribbon winner and the “Critic’s Choice” for a BBC-TV reprise; and “Tarahumara: Festival of the Easter Moon” (selected for several international festi- vals including Bilan du film ethnographique, Musee de l’Homme, Paris. Nauman and his wife, Grete Bodøgaard, a tapestry artist, share a live-in studio in Yankton County. “Blackjacks and Blue Dev- ils” is Jerry Wilson’s first book of fiction. Born in Okeene, Okla., near the Cheyenne-Arapaho land his great-grandfathers took in the Run of 1892, Wilson grew up roaming Oklahoma’s blackjack woods and Cimarron River coun- try, attending country school, milking cows and working in the oil field. His childhood ex- periences and his years serving in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War provided some of the seeds and settings for his stories. Wilson, who has lived in South Dakota for more than 30 years, has worked as a univer- sity professor, as managing editor of South Dakota Magazine, and currently serves as a Clay County commissioner. His earlier books include “American Artery: A Pan American Journey” and “Waiting for Coyote’s Call: An Eco-memoir of the Missouri River Bluff.” He and his wife Norma Wilson, a poet, live in a geo-solar house they built in rural Ver- million. The event is sponsored by Vermillion Area Arts Council. Friday, 9.16.11 ON THE WEB: www.yankton.net RIVER CITY: [email protected] 2B PRESS DAKOTAN river city MMC’s ‘Paddlefish’ Is Now Available The fifth annual issue of Mount Marty College's national literary journal “Paddlefish” is now avail- able. The current issue includes stories, essays and poetry from award-winning authors such as George Bilgere, Amanda Bradley, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, James Cih- lar, Richard Robbins, and David Lee amongst others. Subscribing to “Paddlefish” will enable Mount Marty College to continue to publish future issues. Copies are also available for purchase in the Mount Marty cam- pus bookstore. To purchase a copy of the 2011 journal or to subscribe to the 2012 “Paddlefish,” send $12 to: Mount Marty College, c/o PADDLEFISH, 1105 W 8th Street, Yankton, SD 57078. Make checks payable to Mount Marty College (Paddlefish in memo line). Back issues of the 2007, 2008, and 2010 “Paddlefish” are also available. Specify which issue you are ordering or if you are inter- ested in a subscription. The submission period for the next “Paddlefish” will be Nov. 1, 2011-Feb. 29, 2012. No previously published work will be accepted. “Paddlefish” is a member of the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses. Parking Restrictions Set For RibFest There will be no parking in the RibFest Event Area on Third Street from east of the alley between Broadway and Cedar Street to Douglas Avenue, east of the Dou- glas Avenue and Third Street inter- section until Capitol Street, and north of Third Street on Walnut Street from 3 a.m. Sept. 17 until approximately midnight of the same date. Remove your vehicle prior to this time. Call 605-760-4696 or visit www.historicdowntownyankton.co m for more information. Old-Time Tunes At Gayville Hall Sept. 17 GAYVILLE — Gayville Hall presents “An Evening of American Popular Songs: 1900-1949,” star- ring John and Susan McNeill, Gary Lewis and Dave Napier, at 8 p.m. on Saturday, September 17, in Gayville. The show will feature tunes from bygone times that many re- member fondly, including “Bill Bai- ley” (1902) and “Wabash Cannonball” (1904) through “Back in the Saddle Again,” “Sioux City Sue,” and “Get your Kicks on Route 66” from the 1940s. The McNeills, of Springfield, have been the musical hosts at Gayville Hall since 2001. They sing and play guitar, bass, harmonica, and drums. Lewis, on 4-string banjo, and Napier, on baritone and other sax- ophones, are both from Sioux City. Gayville Hall is located at 502 Washington Street in Gayville. Call 605-267-2859 for ticket informa- tion. YCTC Auditions Set For Sept. 22-23 The Yankton Children’s Theatre Company is holding auditions for its upcoming production of “The Best Christmas Pageant Ever” on Sept. 22-23 at the old Elks Build- ing, 407 Walnut. Auditions are set for 6-9 p.m. Performance dates will be Nov. 25-27, which is Thanksgiving weekend. This will be a family production so YCTC will be auditioning actors from ages 4 to 80. There will be cold readings from the script as well as singing a Christmas carol. For more information, call 605 660-6414. ADULT BOOKS The Burning Soul by John Connolly; Fiction Dark Predator by Christine Feehan; Fiction End of Days by Robert Glea- son; Fiction The Homecoming of Samuel Lake by Jenny Wingfield; Fiction The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh; Fiction The Mercy by Beverly Lewis; Fiction Murder on Sister’s Row by Victoria Thompson; Fiction New York to Dallas by J.D. Robb; Fiction Nothing Daunted by Dorothy Wickenden; Fiction 1105 Yakima Street by Deb- bie Macomber; Fiction The Perfect Suspect by Mar- garet Coel; Fiction Plugged by Eoin Colfer; Fic- tion Prey by Linda Howard; Fic- tion The Race by Clive Cussler; Fiction The Storm at the Door by Stefan Merrill Block; Fiction The Stranger You Seek by Amanda Kyle Williams; Fiction Twenty Thirty by Albert Brooks; Fiction In My Time by Dick Cheney; Nonfiction YOUNG ADULT BOOKS Demon Glass by Rachel Hawkins; Fiction Evernight by Claudia Gray; Fiction Hex Hall by Rachel Hawkins; Fiction I Am J by Chris Beam; Fic- tion Red Moon Rising by Peter Moore; Fiction The Sky Is Every Where by Jandy Nelson; Fiction Vampire Academy by Richelle Mead; Fiction JUNIOR BOOKS The Black Heart Crypt by Christ Grabenstein; Fiction Here Lies Linc by Delia Ray; Fiction Liar, Liar by Gary Paulsen; Fiction Mudshark by Gary Paulsen; Fiction Wolves of the Beyond, Books 1-3 by Kathryn Lasky; Fic- tion EASY BOOKS Presenting Talllulah by Tori Spelling; Fiction New At The Library Here’s what’s new at the Yankton Community Library this week: “The Last Deployment: How a Gay, Ham- mer-Swinging Twentysomething Survived a Year in Iraq” by Bronson Lemer; © 2011, Uni- versity of Wisconsin Press; 223 pages ——— BY TERRI SCHLICHENMEYER They’ve become as familiar to you as your own living room: auditoriums filled with uni- formed, spine-straight soldiers on their way to deployment, or smiling men and women, arms full of family, on their way home. And no matter what auditorium they’re in, no matter which small town or big city, you can bet that the first group is wondering what the second group has seen. They may never know, though, because much is buried and more is classified. But mili- tary secrets aren’t the only ones kept in times of war. In the new book “The Last Deployment” by Bronson Lemer, you’ll learn one of them. Bronson Lemer was “probably the last per- son anyone expected to join the military.” But, as the oldest of six children, he wanted to get away from North Dakota and “the army ... hap- pened to be at the right place at the right time.” Lemer was still in high school when he joined the National Guard. Five years later, on Jan. 20, 2003, his cell phone rang. Though he was months away from getting out of his Guard obligation and was “tired of it,” Lemer learned that he was being deployed. His “horrible decision” to join the National Guard was turning into something he never thought he’d have to worry about: Lemer was a gay soldier under a Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy. But in going to Iraq, he knew he had to learn to rely on his fellow soldiers, and vice versa. So he tried to relax as he traveled with them to Colorado and, later that spring, to Kosovo, then to Iraq. Lemer went along with the jokes, the girlfriend talk, and the “adoles- cent” behavior. He participated in anything that banished the boredom of guard duty, building, cleaning duty, and outhouse duty. He emailed a former love, and longed for home. As a few months’ tour of duty stretched into a year, Lemer began to notice something: deployment was taking its toll on everybody. The men and women who left the States were not the same people who came home from Iraq. And neither was Lemer. Over the past decade, you’ve undoubtedly seen lots of TV and read many words about the War in Iraq. But just wait until you get your hands on “The Last Deployment”... Author Bronson Lemer’s memoir of being a gay man in the military is half sass and half sad with a few heart-pounding moments but no blood-and-guts. His story moves between idyllic memories of his growing up and warm feelings for his bunkmates and co-soldiers, while readers are also placed in the center of the boredom of waiting, the frustration of not knowing, and the dismay of hiding in order to be accepted. Lemer’s is a wonderfully descrip- tive, wryly humorous, heart-crushing story, and I couldn’t put it down. With the repeal this month of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, this is timely and definitely worth a read. If you love a soldier, your country or both, “The Last Deployment” is a book you’ll want to tell everybody about. 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YOUR CHOICE! **with qualifying mattress set purchase. See store for details. Advertised mattress specials cannot be combined with any other advertised or unadvertised offer. All prices are final, no further reductions may be taken. Special offers available for a limited time and while quantities last. Financing may be available, subject to credit approval and minimum purchase requirements. An amount equal but not limited to sales tax and delivery charges must be paid at the time of purchase. All items may not be exactly as shown in this advertisement and may not be on display in all showrooms. Style and selection may vary. Although every precaution is taken, some errors may occur in print. We reserve the right to correct any such errors. The #1 Furniture Retailer in the Area! A Division Of Furniture Outlets USA unclaimedfreightfurniture.com Sioux Falls 6600 West 12th St. 334.9027 Mitchell 1500 North Main 996.9820 Yankton 2320 Broadway 665.3446 Watertown 17 West Kemp 886.5883 Pierre 540 South Garfield 224.7200 Sioux City 2500 Transit Ave. 274.5926 Fargo 2520 South University Dr. 237.3360 Aberdeen 3315 6th Ave. SE 225.0812 **See store for details. Minimum purchase required. FREE delivery FREE set-up FREE removal ** ** ** Fiction-Reading Event Featuring Nauman, Wilson Slated Nauman Wilson

Transcript of New At The Library THE BOOKWORM -...

VERMILLION — Charles Nauman andJerry Wilson will read from and sign their re-cent books of fiction at 7-9 p.m. Saturday,Sept. 24, at Washington Street Arts Center,202 Washington Street in Vermillion.

A reception and book signing will followthe reading. The event is free and open to thepublic.

“Pola: The Mysterious Communications ofa Gone Woman,” is Charles Nauman’s firstnovel. His narrative, set in the Black Hills, ex-plores the corrosive impact of violence onthe mind and the struggle of Pola to over-come the traumatic assassination of a manshe deeply loved. Influenced by Nauman’sown experience living in the Black Hills anddoing art therapy with film in mental health

centers, the book offers a vi-sion of healing through thesympathetic work of a psy-chotherapist who strives tounderstand a woman’s wayof thinking and her need fornature’s healing. Nauman isa film maker as well as an au-thor of prose and poetry. Hisnovel bears some resem-blance to his film “JohnnyVik” (honored at Cannes, Lo-carno and the Prix L’Age D’Or in Brussels).Among his other films are “Tatonka,” anAmerican Film Festival Blue Ribbon winnerand the “Critic’s Choice” for a BBC-TVreprise; and “Tarahumara: Festival of the

Easter Moon” (selected forseveral international festi-vals including Bilan du filmethnographique, Musee del’Homme, Paris.

Nauman and his wife,Grete Bodøgaard, a tapestryartist, share a live-in studioin Yankton County.

“Blackjacks and Blue Dev-ils” is Jerry Wilson’s firstbook of fiction. Born in

Okeene, Okla., near the Cheyenne-Arapaholand his great-grandfathers took in the Run of1892, Wilson grew up roaming Oklahoma’sblackjack woods and Cimarron River coun-try, attending country school, milking cows

and working in the oil field. His childhood ex-periences and his years serving in the U.S.Army during the Vietnam War provided someof the seeds and settings for his stories.

Wilson, who has lived in South Dakota formore than 30 years, has worked as a univer-sity professor, as managing editor of SouthDakota Magazine, and currently serves as aClay County commissioner. His earlier booksinclude “American Artery: A Pan AmericanJourney” and “Waiting for Coyote’s Call: AnEco-memoir of the Missouri River Bluff.”

He and his wife Norma Wilson, a poet, livein a geo-solar house they built in rural Ver-million.

The event is sponsored by VermillionArea Arts Council.

Friday, 9.16.11ON THE WEB: www.yankton.net

RIVER CITY: [email protected] PRESS DAKOTANriver city

MMC’s ‘Paddlefish’Is Now Available

The fifth annual issue of MountMarty College's national literaryjournal “Paddlefish” is now avail-able. The current issue includesstories, essays and poetry fromaward-winning authors such asGeorge Bilgere, Amanda Bradley,Maria Mazziotti Gillan, James Cih-lar, Richard Robbins, and DavidLee amongst others.

Subscribing to “Paddlefish” willenable Mount Marty College tocontinue to publish future issues.

Copies are also available forpurchase in the Mount Marty cam-pus bookstore.

To purchase a copy of the 2011journal or to subscribe to the 2012“Paddlefish,” send $12 to: MountMarty College, c/o PADDLEFISH,1105 W 8th Street, Yankton, SD57078. Make checks payable toMount Marty College (Paddlefishin memo line).

Back issues of the 2007, 2008,and 2010 “Paddlefish” are alsoavailable. Specify which issue youare ordering or if you are inter-ested in a subscription.

The submission period for thenext “Paddlefish” will be Nov. 1,2011-Feb. 29, 2012. No previouslypublished work will be accepted.

“Paddlefish” is a member of theCouncil of Literary Magazines andPresses.

Parking RestrictionsSet For RibFest

There will be no parking in theRibFest Event Area on Third Streetfrom east of the alley betweenBroadway and Cedar Street toDouglas Avenue, east of the Dou-glas Avenue and Third Street inter-section until Capitol Street, andnorth of Third Street on WalnutStreet from 3 a.m. Sept. 17 untilapproximately midnight of thesame date. Remove your vehicleprior to this time.

Call 605-760-4696 or visitwww.historicdowntownyankton.com for more information.

Old-Time Tunes AtGayville Hall Sept. 17

GAYVILLE — Gayville Hallpresents “An Evening of AmericanPopular Songs: 1900-1949,” star-ring John and Susan McNeill, GaryLewis and Dave Napier, at 8 p.m.on Saturday, September 17, inGayville.

The show will feature tunesfrom bygone times that many re-member fondly, including “Bill Bai-ley” (1902) and “WabashCannonball” (1904) through “Backin the Saddle Again,” “Sioux CitySue,” and “Get your Kicks onRoute 66” from the 1940s.

The McNeills, of Springfield,have been the musical hosts atGayville Hall since 2001. They singand play guitar, bass, harmonica,and drums.

Lewis, on 4-string banjo, andNapier, on baritone and other sax-ophones, are both from Sioux City.

Gayville Hall is located at 502Washington Street in Gayville. Call605-267-2859 for ticket informa-tion.

YCTC Auditions SetFor Sept. 22-23

The Yankton Children’s TheatreCompany is holding auditions forits upcoming production of “TheBest Christmas Pageant Ever” onSept. 22-23 at the old Elks Build-ing, 407 Walnut. Auditions are setfor 6-9 p.m.

Performance dates will be Nov.25-27, which is Thanksgivingweekend.

This will be a family productionso YCTC will be auditioning actorsfrom ages 4 to 80. There will becold readings from the script aswell as singing a Christmas carol.

For more information, call 605660-6414.

ADULT BOOKS• The Burning Soul by John

Connolly; Fiction• Dark Predator by Christine

Feehan; Fiction• End of Days by Robert Glea-

son; Fiction• The Homecoming of

Samuel Lake by Jenny Wingfield;Fiction

• The Language of Flowersby Vanessa Diffenbaugh; Fiction

• The Mercy by BeverlyLewis; Fiction

• Murder on Sister’s Row byVictoria Thompson; Fiction

• New York to Dallas by J.D.Robb; Fiction

• Nothing Daunted byDorothy Wickenden; Fiction

• 1105 Yakima Street by Deb-bie Macomber; Fiction

• The Perfect Suspect by Mar-garet Coel; Fiction

• Plugged by Eoin Colfer; Fic-tion

• Prey by Linda Howard; Fic-tion

• The Race by Clive Cussler;Fiction

• The Storm at the Door byStefan Merrill Block; Fiction

• The Stranger You Seek byAmanda Kyle Williams; Fiction

• Twenty Thirty by AlbertBrooks; Fiction

• In My Time by Dick Cheney;Nonfiction

YOUNG ADULT BOOKS• Demon Glass by Rachel

Hawkins; Fiction• Evernight by Claudia Gray;

Fiction• Hex Hall by Rachel

Hawkins; Fiction• I Am J by Chris Beam; Fic-

tion• Red Moon Rising by Peter

Moore; Fiction• The Sky Is Every Where by

Jandy Nelson; Fiction• Vampire Academy by

Richelle Mead; FictionJUNIOR BOOKS

• The Black Heart Crypt byChrist Grabenstein; Fiction

• Here Lies Linc by Delia Ray;Fiction

• Liar, Liar by Gary Paulsen;Fiction

• Mudshark by Gary Paulsen;Fiction

• Wolves of the Beyond,Books 1-3 by Kathryn Lasky; Fic-tion

EASY BOOKS• Presenting Talllulah by Tori

Spelling; Fiction

New At The LibraryHere’s what’s new at the Yankton Community Library this week:

“The Last Deployment: How a Gay, Ham-mer-Swinging Twentysomething Survived aYear in Iraq” by Bronson Lemer; © 2011, Uni-versity of Wisconsin Press; 223 pages

———BY TERRI SCHLICHENMEYER

They’ve become as familiar to you as yourown living room: auditoriums filled with uni-formed, spine-straight soldiers on their wayto deployment, or smiling men and women,arms full of family, on their way home.

And no matter what auditorium they’re in,no matter which small town or big city, youcan bet that the first group is wonderingwhat the second group has seen.

They may never know, though, becausemuch is buried and more is classified. But mili-tary secrets aren’t the only ones kept in timesof war. In the new book “The Last Deployment”by Bronson Lemer, you’ll learn one of them.

Bronson Lemer was “probably the last per-son anyone expected to join the military.” But,as the oldest of six children, he wanted to getaway from North Dakota and “the army ... hap-pened to be at the right place at the righttime.”

Lemer was still in high school when hejoined the National Guard.

Five years later, on Jan. 20, 2003, his cellphone rang. Though he was months away fromgetting out of his Guard obligation and was“tired of it,” Lemer learned that he was beingdeployed. His “horrible decision” to join theNational Guard was turning into something he

never thought he’d have to worry about:Lemer was a gay soldier under a Don’t Ask,Don’t Tell policy.

But in going to Iraq, he knew he had tolearn to rely on his fellow soldiers, and viceversa. So he tried to relax as he traveled withthem to Colorado and, later that spring, to

Kosovo, then to Iraq. Lemer went along withthe jokes, the girlfriend talk, and the “adoles-cent” behavior. He participated in anythingthat banished the boredom of guard duty,building, cleaning duty, and outhouse duty. Heemailed a former love, and longed for home.

As a few months’ tour of duty stretchedinto a year, Lemer began to notice something:deployment was taking its toll on everybody.The men and women who left the States werenot the same people who came home fromIraq.

And neither was Lemer.Over the past decade, you’ve undoubtedly

seen lots of TV and read many words aboutthe War in Iraq. But just wait until you get yourhands on “The Last Deployment”...

Author Bronson Lemer’s memoir of being agay man in the military is half sass and halfsad with a few heart-pounding moments butno blood-and-guts. His story moves betweenidyllic memories of his growing up and warmfeelings for his bunkmates and co-soldiers,while readers are also placed in the center ofthe boredom of waiting, the frustration of notknowing, and the dismay of hiding in order tobe accepted. Lemer’s is a wonderfully descrip-tive, wryly humorous, heart-crushing story,and I couldn’t put it down.

With the repeal this month of Don’t AskDon’t Tell, this is timely and definitely worth aread. If you love a soldier, your country orboth, “The Last Deployment” is a book you’llwant to tell everybody about.

THE BOOKWORM

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**with qualifying mattress set purchase. See store for details. Advertised mattress specials cannot be combined with any other advertised or unadvertised offer. All prices are final, no further reduct ions may be taken. Special offers available for a limited time and while quantities last. Financing may be av ailable, subject to credit approval and minimum purchase requirements. An amount equal but not limit ed to sales tax and delivery charges must be paid at the time of purchase. All items may not be exactly as shown in this advertisement and may not be on display in all showrooms. Style and selection may var y. Although every precaution is taken, some errors may occur in print. We reserve the right to correct any such errors.

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Fiction-Reading Event Featuring Nauman, Wilson Slated

Nauman Wilson