(205) 444-7800 Mon - Thu 9-9, Fri 9-6, Sat 10-6, Sun 1-5
Southern Voices Author Conference - Plaza
Taylor Brown is the author of three novels including Fallen Land, The River of Kings and Gods of Howl Mountain (March 2018). Library Journal calls River of Kings an “intense, solidly written story of family loyalty, Southern traditions, and haunting historic landscapes.” The story of two brothers traveling down Georgia’s Altamaha River to scatter their father’s ashes alternates with scenes from the river’s past in the 1560s and is praised by Kirkus Reviews as a “literary achievement . . . powerful in concept and execution.”
Kelly Grey Carlisle is the author of We Are All Shipwrecks, a memoir of her unique upbringing and search for what happened to her mother who was murdered when she was three weeks old. In its starred review, Library Journal describes her debut work as an “exquisitely written tale of perseverance and unconditional love.” Carlisle currently teaches nonfiction writing at Trinity University and is the editor of 1966: A Journal of Creative Nonfiction.
Andrew Gross is the New York Times best-selling author of 14 suspense novels, including the recent World War II historical thrillers The One Man and The Saboteur. His latest, The Saboteur, is an espionage story based on the true story of the British and Norwegian raid that ended the Nazi efforts to acquire the atomic bomb. Known for his international best sellers including The One Man, One
Mile Under and Eyes Wide Open, Gross is also the coauthor of five #1 best sellers with James Patterson.
Lisa Ko’s debut novel The Leavers tells the story of Polly, an undocumented Chinese immigrant who never returns home from work one day, and her son, Deming, who is adopted by a pair of well-meaning white professors and renamed Daniel. Winner of the 2016 PEN/Bellwether Prize and nominated for the 2017 National Book Award, Ko’s novel echoes today’s current events such that Time.com feels that the book is as “relevant as ever as the future of immigrants in America hangs in the balance.”
Paula McLain is the author of the New York Times international best sellers, The Paris Wife and Circling the Sun. Known for her historical fiction, McLain’s latest novel Circling the Sun tells the fictionalized story of Beryl Markham, the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic from East to West. Filled with Markham’s adventures in Kenya in the 1920s as a racehorse trainer, the novel explores themes of freedom, independence, love and friendship.
Daren Wang is the founder of the Decatur Book Festival, the largest independent book festival in the country now in its 12th year. The Hidden Light of Northern Fires is his debut novel and is based on the true history of the only secessionist town north of the Mason Dixon Line. Southern Voices alumnus Ron Rash calls it a “wise and timely book” while the Richmond Times-Dispatch praises it for “rais[ing] questions of race and gender and deliver[ing] an emotional knockout.”
Born in the foothills of North Carolina, Stephanie Powell Watts’s fiction explores the lives of African Americans in small towns in the post-integration South. Her first novel, No One Is Coming to Save Us was named one of the best books of 2017 by Entertainment
Weekly, Bustle and The Chicago Review of Books. It was also chosen by Sarah Jessica Parker as the inaugural selection for the American Library Association’s Book Club Central. Often described as The Great Gatsby recast in the contemporary South, The
Washington Post says that Watts has written a “complex novel that’s entirely her own.”
Lisa Wingate is the New York Times best-selling author of 30 novels. Her latest novel, Before We Were Yours has garnered much political acclaim and has been touted by People as “a poignant, engrossing tale about sibling love and the toll of secrets.” Based on one of America’s most notorious real-life scandals, the novel tells the story of Georgia Tann, director of a Memphis-based adoption organization that kidnapped and sold poor children to wealthy families all over the country from the 1930s through the 1940s.
Choose your venue!
The Library Theatre
(RESERVED SEATING)
- OR -
The Library Plaza
(GENERAL ADMISSION)
$40 per person + processing fees
Tickets will be specific to the venue you select.
Lunch on your own. You may preorder a boxed lunch from East 59 Café by calling 205-518-6264 by February 16.
TICKETS GO ON SALE
Friday, Jan. 5
8 a.m. - 10 a.m.
online & phone sales only
Please purchase your tickets early, as we expect to sell out during this time. If any tickets remain, they will be available during regular Box Office hours M-F, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Online
Visit the Southern Voices website at www.southernvoices.info.
By phone
Call the Library Theatre Box Office at 205-444-7888.
In Person
At the Library Theatre Box Office.
Accepted forms of payment are cash, check, VISA, MasterCard, Discover and American Express.
Mail orders are not accepted.
Located in Hoover, Alabama, at 200 Municipal Drive, the Hoover Public Library has been operating since 1983. The Hoover Public Library seeks to reinvent the way communities view libraries. As the heart and soul of the Hoover community, we are more than just a library. We’re the place you come to meet your friends, experience live theater, peruse art, listen to music, entertain your children, learn about new technology, seek job searching assistance, explore your interests, find good book recommendations and much, much more. We seek to grow our patronage by offering an unparalleled customer experience.