Great Michigan Read: Emily St. John Mandel

When:
May 11, 2016 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
2016-05-11T19:00:00-04:00
2016-05-11T20:30:00-04:00
Where:
Towsley Auditorium, WCC
4800 E Huron River Dr
Ann Arbor, MI 48105
USA

Emily St. John Mandel’s Station Eleven was chosen as the 2015-16 Great Michigan Read! This event is sponsored by the Michigan Humanities Council and is free and open to the public.

Station Eleven is an audacious, darkly glittering novel about art, fame, and ambition set in the eerie days of civilization’s collapse. One snowy night a famous Hollywood actor slumps over and dies onstage during a production of King Lear. Hours later, the world as we know it begins to dissolve. Moving back and forth in time—from the actor’s early days as a film star to fifteen years in the future, when a theater troupe known as The Travelling Symphony roams the wasteland of what remains—this suspenseful, elegiac, spellbinding novel charts the strange twists of fate that connect five people: the actor, the man who tried to save him, the actor’s first wife, his oldest friend, and a young actress with the Traveling Symphony, caught in the crosshairs of a dangerous self-proclaimed prophet. Sometimes terrifying, sometimes tender, Station Eleven tells a story about the relationships that sustain us, the ephemeral nature of fame, and the beauty of the world as we know it.

Emily St. John Mandel is the author of four novels, most recently Station Eleven, which was a finalist for a National Book Award and the PEN/Faulkner Award, and won the 2015 Arthur C. Clarke Award. A previous novel, The Singer’s Gun, was the 2014 winner of the Prix Mystere de la Critique in France. Her short fiction and essays have been anthologized in numerous collections, including Best American Mystery Stories 2013. She is a staff writer for The Millions. She lives in New York City with her husband and daughter.

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