Loading Events

« All Events

  • This event has passed.

Rental Partner: Seattle Arts & Lectures and Ted Chiang present

Kelly Link

Love, Hope, and Other Four Letter Words

This event has already occurred
Date:
Monday, October 28
Time:
7:30 pm PDT
Cost:
$7 - $115

Venue

The Great Hall
1119 Eighth Avenue (enter on Eighth Avenue)
Seattle, 98101 United States
+ Google Map

Organizer

Seattle Arts & Lectures

Email
grajendran@lectures.org
View Organizer Website

Note: A livestream for this event will also be available.

Live Captioning will be available for this event. 

Presented by Seattle Arts & Lectures. For questions about this event, please contact grajendran@lectures.org or call (206) 621-2230.

Black and white headshot of Kelly Link (with fair skin and short wavy blonde hair)
Rentals

The Book of Love showcases Kelly Link at the height of her powers, channeling potent magic and attuned to all varieties of love—from friendship to romance to abiding family ties—with her trademark compassion, wit, and literary derring-do. Readers will find joy (and a little terror) and an affirmation that love goes on, even when we cannot.

Q&A with Community Curated Series director Ted Chiang.

Read More

In The Book of Love, welcome to Kelly Link’s incomparable Lovesend, where you’ll encounter love and loss, laughter and dread, magic and karaoke, and some really good pizza. Late one night, Laura, Daniel, and Mo find themselves beneath the fluorescent lights of a high school classroom, almost a year after disappearing from their hometown, the small seaside community of Lovesend, Massachusetts, having long been presumed dead. Which, in fact, they are.

With them in the room is their previously unremarkable high school music teacher, who seems to know something about their disappearance—and what has brought them back again. Desperate to reclaim their lives, the three agree to the terms of the bargain their music teacher proposes. They will be given a series of magical tasks; while they undertake them, they may return to their families and friends, but they can tell no one where they’ve been. In the end, there will be winners and there will be losers.

But their resurrection has attracted the notice of other supernatural figures, all with their own agendas. As Laura, Daniel, and Mo grapple with the pieces of the lives they left behind, and Laura’s sister, Susannah, attempts to reconcile what she remembers with what she fears, these mysterious others begin to arrive, engulfing their community in danger and chaos, and it becomes imperative that the teens solve the mystery of their deaths to avert a looming disaster.

Kelly Link, a MacArthur “Genius Grant” fellow, is the author of the collections Get in Trouble, Stranger Things Happen, Magic for Beginners, and Pretty Monsters. She and Gavin J. Grant have co-edited a number of anthologies, including multiple volumes of The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror and, for young adults, Monstrous Affections. She is the co-founder of Small Beer Press. Her short stories have been published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The Best American Short Stories, and Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards. She has also received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Link was born in Miami, Florida. She currently lives with her husband and daughter in Northampton, Massachusetts.

Ted Chiang, this year’s Community Curated Series director, has won four Hugo, four Nebula, and six Locus Awards, and his fiction has been reprinted in Best American Short Stories. His first collection Stories of Your Life and Others has been translated into twenty-one languages, and the title story was the basis for the Oscar-nominated film Arrival. His second collection Exhalation was chosen by The New York Times as one of the 10 Best Books of 2019.

Upcoming Events

Rental Partner: Philharmonia Northwest presents

Children’s Concert

Star Wars & Peter and the Wolf — With Lisa Bergman, Narrator and Michael Wheatley, Conductor

Town Hall Seattle and Northwest Center for Creative Aging present

Erika Crichton with Rebecca Crichton

Here’s to the Future! An Intergenerational Conversation about Aging