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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE -- March 5, 2008 The Great Michigan Read exhibit in Plainwell March 7 - 24 Exhibit featuring Hemingway’s early years in Michigan and his Nick Adams Stories (LANSING)----The Michigan Humanities Council (MHC) announces that the exhibit, Up North with the Hemingways, will be on public display at the Charles Ransom District Library in Plainwell (180 S. Sherwood Ave., Plainwell) from March 7 through March 24, 2008. The exhibit is part of The Great Michigan Read, launched in July by the Michigan Humanities Council to help address the decline in reading literature. The exhibit will visit 29 sites, including Plainwell, in the state of Michigan through July 7, 2008 (see below or log onto the website, www.greatmichiganread.org). Hours to view the exhibit in Plainwell are Mondays through Thursdays from 10 a.m. – 9 p.m.; Friday and Saturdays from 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.; and Sundays from 1 – 5 p.m. In addition to hosting the exhibit, the Charles Ransom District Library will host a community-wide book discussion of The Nick Adams Stories on Tuesday, March 11, at 7 p.m. For more information about the exhibit and the book discussion, contact 269-685-8024 or visit www.ransomlibrary.org. The touring exhibit includes references to original artifacts about Ernest Hemingway’s life and his writings that pertain to his time in Northern Michigan. There are four themes as a focus of each exhibit: Northern Michigan in the early 1900s, the Hemingway family, Ernest Hemingway, and The Nick Adams Stories. The Great Michigan Read touring exhibits were funded in part by the MHC and the Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs, and were created by the Clarke Historical Library at Central Michigan University and the Michigan Hemingway Society. “The Michigan Humanities Council is pleased to reach a wider audience with The Great Michigan Read programs by making available a touring exhibit about The Nick Adams Stories and Ernest Hemingway,” said Janice Fedewa, executive director of the Michigan Humanities Council. "The Clarke Historical Library hopes the touring exhibits will help people explore and understand some of the complex themes in The Nick Adams Stories and how the stories relate to Hemingway's years in Michigan," stated Dr. Frank Boles, director of the Clarke Historical Library at Central Michigan University. About The Great Michigan Read The MHC is the first organization to implement a program for an entire state to read one of Hemingway's works. To date, more than 180 organizations and more than 130 communities across the state are participating in The Great Michigan Read. Reader's guides, bookmarks, posters, and other opportunities are available to participating cultural organizations. Additional activities include radio and television features, podcasts, speakers' bureau, driving tours, a website resource (www.greatmichiganread.org), and grant programs to help engage communities in literature. And, Valerie Hemingway, author of Running with the Bulls, a memoir of her years as Ernest Hemingway’s secretary and her later marriage to his son, Gregory Hemingway, will tour six cities in Michigan from April 23-29, 2008 (Lansing, Hamtramck, Grand Rapids, Marquette, Traverse City, Saginaw). The Great Michigan Read Touring Exhibit Schedule 2007
2008
The MHC invites people to share their personal stories about Ernest Hemingway and his time in Michigan. Stories can be submitted at www.greatmichiganread.org/memories.php and may be published on the Internet and in a future MHC newsletter. Additional information is available at www.greatmichiganread.org or by contacting the MHC at 517-372-7770. Up North with the Hemingways was made possible by Michigan Humanities Council, Clarke Historical Library at Central Michigan University, Michigan Hemingway Society, and Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs. The Michigan Humanities Council, founded in 1974, is a private, non-profit organization funded in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities. |
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