Events

Wednesday July 14, 2010
Start: Jul 14 2010 19:30
End: Jul 14 2010 21:00

On December 10th 2009, The Washington Post
published a front-page profile of Helena that was hugely popular and
prompted responses from The Huffington Post, Jezebel, and Racialicious.
In the article, “Single Minded Success,” Helena explained her work,
life and love: “What I am trying to say about single black women is,
you don't know them as well as you think you do. They may not know
themselves as well as they think they do.” 

Her first book, a memoir told in parts titled Bitch Is the New Black, chronicles
Helena’s journey from the kidnapped daughter of the town lesbian to the
Washington reporter who can’t remember a single senator’s name, to the
girl who runs her love life on G-chat. “I’m pretty much pants-ing
myself here,” says Helena about Bitch Is the New Black,
“daring folks to look at the hole-ly Hanes of my life as a metaphor for
the rest of the women who look like me or think like me.”  

The film rights to Bitch Is the New Black have already been optioned by Grey's Anatomy
creator Shonda Rhimes, who will produce the project for Fox Searchlight
Pictures. Helena will write the screenplay. Rhimes called the book
“outrageously funny and heartbreakingly honest.”  Don't miss your chance to meet this hilarious and provocative author.  

Thursday July 15, 2010
Start: Jul 15 2010 19:30
End: Jul 15 2010 21:00

Charis & Cliterati pair up to present an inviting and fierce open
mic & reading series on the 3rd Thursday of every month. Hosted by
the anarchic spoken word team of Karen G and Theresa Davis, members of
the Art Amok Slam Team, this series cultivates the voices of authors,
novices and an assortment of poets, songstresses and storytellers

Saturday July 17, 2010
Start: Jul 17 2010 10:30
End: Jul 17 2010 12:00

The Akoma Book Club (of Women Healing Women) is open to any woman
seeking camaraderie with like-minded women for fun, self-empowerment
and growth. Even if you haven't read the book, but are willing to talk
about the principles in the book, you can join us for a lively discussion. July's book pick is The Survivor Personality by Al Siebert. When faced with adversity, tragedy, or just bad karma, what makes one
person crumble, another survive, and another thrive? Al Siebert first
became interested in this question when he discovered that World War II
combat survivors were less like Sylvester Stallone in Rambo and more like Alan Alda playing Hawkeye, the irreverent M.A.S.H.
surgeon. Years of subsequent research taught Seibert that those who
survive (and thrive) often respond to challenge with humor, wisdom, and
mental and emotional flexibility. No, life isn't fair, but Siebert
shows us the tricks to regaining our stability in a world that seems
hell-bent on knocking us off track.

Wednesday July 21, 2010
Start: Jul 21 2010 19:30
End: Jul 21 2010 21:00

Join us for a very special Faiths and Feminisms with Dr. Bobbi Patterson, professor of Religion at Emory University as she shares her faith journey.

Daily living can be tough – 
even amid joys and dancing.  I thought by trying to ignore the
things that set me off, I’d be kinder and gentler with others and
myself.  But it turns out that by learning to let go of my perfectionism,
I gained more insight into my “imperfections.”  Those trigger
points of irritation and despair became invitations to healing and wholeness. 

Insights from Christian and Buddhist
contemplative traditions drew me to this journey of practicing imperfection.
I am learning practices that help me open up to the fullest experiences
of living alone and with others, listening completely to conflict, discerning
sources of pain, and realizing the causes of my own suffering. 
How helpful this seeming paradox is: to become motivated for compassion’s
sake to embrace stability in imperfection for love.  

Thursday July 22, 2010
Start: Jul 22 2010 19:30
End: Jul 22 2010 21:00

Don't miss this very special evening with Clark University professor Daniel Omotosho Black, whose new novel, A Perfect Peace, explores the complexities of gender and sexuality in one rural southern African American family.

Emma Jean Peace had always wanted
a girl, but after birthing her sixth boy, she swore she would never
be pregnant again as she is going through “the change.”  Unexpectedly,
she becomes pregnant yet again and gives birth to her seventh boy in
May of 1940.  Possessed by her wish to have a daughter and angry
at God for so denying her, Emma Jean declares the baby is her daughter
at last, naming her Perfect.  She then threatens her midwife to
keep her secret from her family and the community.   

When Perfect turns eight, Emma Jean
tells her bewildered daughter, “You was born a boy. I made
you a girl. But that ain't what you was supposed to be. So, from now
on, you gon' be a boy. It'll be a little strange at first, but you'll
get used to it, and this'll be over after while.”  From this
point forward, his life becomes a bizarre kaleidoscope of events. 
Meanwhile, the Peace family is forced to question everything they thought
they knew about gender, sexuality, unconditional love, and fulfillment.  

Monday July 26, 2010
Start: Jul 26 2010 18:30
End: Jul 26 2010 20:30

This facilitated group is open to all writers of fiction and creative
non-fiction who want a serious group to provide constructive criticism,
motivational exercises, and interpersonal accountability to keep their
writing on track. We do in group exercises and critiques with an eye
towards individual improvement and the eventual goal of
publication. Writers are encouraged to bring copies of their work to
share for critique. Please direct inquiries to elizabeth@chariscircle.org.

Wednesday July 28, 2010
Start: Jul 28 2010 19:00
End: Jul 28 2010 20:30

This facilitated group discusses books which feature queer characters/storylines as well as a strong attention to literary craft and style. July's pick is The Big Bang Symphony by Lucy Jane Bledsoe, the author of several books including the novel, Biting the Apple. Her newest novel, The Big Bang Symphony: a Novel of Antarctica
is a story about three women - a geologist, a composer, and a galley
worker - who have taken jobs in Antarctica. As they each fall in love
and into trouble, their lives become more and more entwined - until one
crisis binds them in friendship for life. Come with questions prepared to email the author! 

Wednesday August 04, 2010
Start: Aug 4 2010 19:30
End: Aug 4 2010 21:00

Join us in welcoming local food activist Hayley Richardson as she shares her experiences of helping to organize the campaign for safe, affordable, and legal access to street food in the Atlanta metro area. Don’t think street vending is a social justice issue? Hayley will change your mind as she illustrates the many economic, social, and culinary benefits a thriving street vending market would bring to Atlanta. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn more about this movement and how you can get involved!

Thursday August 05, 2010
Start: Aug 5 2010 19:30
End: Aug 5 2010 21:00

Join us in welcoming four very important baseball scholars: Dorothy Seymour Mills (A Woman's Work: Writing Baseball History with Harold Seymour & Chasing Baseball: Our Obsession with Its History, Numbers, People and Places); Christina Kahrl (Co-founder of Baseball Prospectus );Judith Testa (Sal Maglie: Baseball’s Demon Barber); and Cecilia Tan (The 50 Greatest Yankee Games, 50 Greatest Red Sox Games, White Flames, and The Hot Streak.) Don’t miss your chance to talk baseball with four of the sport’s greatest scholars and writers, all of whom just happen to be women.

Dorothy Seymour Mills is the co-author of the first scholarly books of baseball history, published over the years 1960-1990 under the name of her
husband and colleague, Harold Seymour. Her autobiography, A Woman's Work: Writing Baseball History with Harold Seymour, was published
in 2004. Her latest book, Chasing Baseball: Our Obsession with Its History, Numbers, People and Places is already in its second printing. Mills, an independent scholar, has published a total of 25 books on various subjects.

Christina Kahrl is one of the co-founders of Baseball Prospectus, and is currently the executive editor of the think tank's website, BaseballProspectus.com. Her regular column covering major-league transactions has been an online staple for 15 years, and she is one of just
two people to have contributed to every edition of Baseball Prospectus' New York Times bestselling baseball annual. She is a member of the Baseball Writers Association of American, having been elected in 2008 as one of the first four on-line columnists to be voted into the organization. She lives in Chicago.

Judith Testa grew up in the New York City area as a Brooklyn Dodger fan. She swore off baseball when the Dodgers moved to LA and went on to
receive a doctorate in Renaissance art history from the University of Chicago. After retiring from a career as an art history professor, she returned to her childhood interest in baseball and, remembering Maglie as a fascinating baseball character from her childhood, decided to write a biography of him.

Cecilia Tan is a writer and editor living in the Boston area, but her first love was the New York Yankees. She also played baseball for several
years in the women's hardball leagues of New England. She is the author of many books of fiction and nonfiction including *The 50 Greatest Yankee Games, 50 Greatest Red Sox Games, White Flames, and The Hot Streak.

Saturday August 07, 2010
Start: Aug 7 2010 08:00
End: Aug 7 2010 11:00

Want to spruce up your favorite feminist hang out? Join us to clean inside and out and tend our garden. Email Charisvolunteers@yahoo.com if you are interested in volunteering. Feisty feminists, food, fun and, of course, cleaning supplies will be provided!

Monday August 09, 2010
Start: Aug 9 2010 18:30
End: Aug 9 2010 20:30

This facilitated group is open to all writers of fiction and creative non-fiction who want a serious group to provide constructive criticism, motivational exercises, and interpersonal accountability to keep their writing on track. Writers are encouraged to bring copies of their work to share for critique. For more info, contact Elizabeth@chariscircle.org.

Thursday August 12, 2010
Start: Aug 12 2010 19:30
End: Aug 12 2010 21:00

Let award-winning professional organizer and author, Judith Kolberg, help you on your road to a less-cluttered and more productive life. Just in time for the new school year or for your fall cleaning, you’ll discover Judith’s top tips for getting your life (or at least some of your stuff) in order! Whether your are chronically disorganized, or just need some good suggestions Judith is sure to provide some helpful hints!  

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