Come join us for an Author @ the Library talk this June at Mid-Manhattan Library to hear distinguished non-fiction authors discuss their work and answer your questions. Author talks take place at 6:30 p.m. on the 6th floor of the Library, unless otherwise noted. You can also request the authors' books by clicking on the book cover images below.
Library expert John G. Palfrey, Jr. argues that libraries must make the transition to a digital future as soon as possible—by digitizing print material and ensuring that born-digital material is publicly available online.
Evelyn Kanter, a freelance writer, photographer, and guidebook author and editor, explores the most exciting and most affordable destinations to visit this summer, fall, and beyond.
Joan Kramer and David Heeley, who have produced many acclaimed documentary profiles together, share their insiders' view of some of the famous and powerful Hollywood personalities they knew.
Steve Lohr, a technology reporter for The New York Times, chronicles the rise of Big Data, addressing cutting-edge business strategies and examines the dark side of a data-driven world.
Tom Glynn, a librarian at Rutgers University, traces the history of New York City's early public libraries and their evolution within the political, social, and cultural worlds that supported them.
Author and veteran fashion journalist for The Wall Street Journal, Teri Agins, takes on the glitter and stardust transforming the fashion industry, and where it is likely to take us next.
Robert Hellmann discusses how to win over audiences and land new business by employing Hellmann Career Consulting's "RESULTS" methodology for presentations.
Stacy Bass, photographer and author of "Gardens at First Light" and "In The Garden," celebrates a spectacular selection of private gardens in subtle and enchanting ways, all shot at the break of day.
Elena Gorokhova, author of two memoirs, a teacher, and a contributor to newspapers and literary magazines, relates her story of a unique balancing act and a family struggle: three generations of strong women with very different cultural values.
Behind the Historic Architecture of Manhattan--One Building at a Time The author of the popular blog, "Daytonian in Manhattan," Tom Miller, investigates the back stories of Manhattan's architecture and monuments.
In celebration of the origins of LGBT culture and New York City’s Pride Week, Robert Beachy, an associate professor of history, explores how the uninhibited urban sexuality in pre-Weimar Berlin affected, and in a way shaped, our modern understanding of homosexuality.
Charles Kaiser, a former reporter for The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and a former press critic for Newsweek, tells the heroic true story of the three youngest children of a bourgeois Catholic family who worked together in the French Resistance.
Author, journalist, and educator W. Joseph Campbell leads a trip back in time, to 1995, and describes the important features and realities of contemporary life that can be traced to 1995 and its watershed moments.
Tuesday
June 30, 2015
6:30 p.m.
Of Pride and Protest: Gay Travel
Around the World Michael Luongo, freelance writer, editor, photographer, and New York University travel writing professor features a romp around the gay world, focusing on pride marches and LGBT neighborhoods throughout the United States, Europe, and Latin America, along with visits to other parts of the globe.
If you'd like to read any of the books presented at our past author talks, you can find book lists from our January 2013–June 2015 Author @ the Library programs in the BiblioCommons catalog.