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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (July 14, 2016)
6 // COASTWEEKEND.COM Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist comes to Astoria Oregon Humanities hosts author Isabel Wilkerson at Fort George July 21 ASTORIA — Oregon Human- ities’ 2016 Think & Drink series of provocative conver- sations with Pulitzer Prize– winning writers will come to Astoria on Thursday, July 21. Isabel Wilkerson, author of “The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America’s Great Migration” will speak at 7 p.m. at the Fort George Lovell Showroom, located at 426 14th St. Doors open at 6 p.m.; the event is free and open to all ages. Wilk- erson will join Adam Davis, executive director of Oregon Humanities. Wilkerson spent 15 years researching “The Warmth of Other Suns,” interviewing more than 1,200 people to tell the story of the nearly six million African Americans who, between 1915 and 1970, SUBMITTED PHOTO BY JOE HENSON Isabel Wilkerson won a Pulit- zer Prize in 1994. ÀHGWKH6RXWKIRUQRUWKHUQ and western cities in search of a better life. Wilkerson won the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing for her work as Chicago bureau chief of The New York Times LQPDNLQJKHUWKH¿UVW black woman in the history of American journalism to win a Pulitzer Prize and the ¿UVW$IULFDQ$PHULFDQWRZLQ for individual reporting. In her lectures and essays, she often explores connections between the Great Migration, the civil rights movement, and contemporary issues of race and power. The 2016 Think & Drink series features conversations with Pulitzer Prize winners DQG¿QDOLVWVLQ3RUWODQG Bend, Eugene, Astoria and Ashland. The series is part of the Pulitzer Prize Centennial &DPS¿UHV,QLWLDWLYHDMRLQW venture of the Pulitzer Prize Board and the Federation of State Humanities Councils in celebration of the 2016 centennial of the prize. Think & Drink is supported in part by a grant from the Oregon Cultural Trust. Com- munity partners are Literary Arts, NAACP Portland Branch 1120, Portland Alumnae Chap- ter, Delta Sigma Theta Soror- ity, Inc., Self Enhancement Inc., Astoria Public Library, and Fort George Brewery. For more information, visit prhspeakers.com Fuel your week with North Coast Food Web’s Sunday Supper cooking sessions ASTORIA — “I’d like to eat healthier and save some money, but I just don’t have time.” “When I get home from work, I’m too tired to cook.” U-Pic k 100% Natural Blueberrie s Open Daily ‘til 6 pm $2.00 lb. 113th & Sandridge N. Long Beach, WA “I never learned, and it sounds too complicated.” Sound familiar? The cooking instructors at North Coast Food Web understand. Better yet, they have a fun way to address the problem. Sunday Supper is a once- a-month opportunity to join others in cooking up scrump- tious, healthy, economical entrées to take home, freeze and pop in the oven at the end of a long day. (DFKRIWKHIRXURU¿YH entrées created will feed two people. If you have more mouths to feed, class fees FDQEHDGMXVWHGWRUHÀHFWWKH number of meals required. It’s fun, it’s easy and, at an average of $7.50 per meal per person, it’s cheap. Class includes a packet of recipes and a sit-down meal together when the work is done. Join this North Coast Food Web class from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Sunday, July 17 at 577 18th St. Go to northcoastfoodweb. org to register, or call Wendy at 503-468-0921 for more in- formation. Class size limited to 10 people. North Coast Food Web is DQRQSUR¿WRUJDQL]DWLRQGHG- icated to cultivating healthy communities and a vibrant economy through food. Author shares family history, recipes SEASIDE — At 7 p.m. Thurs- day, July 21, the Friends of the Seaside Library will host Kathleen Flinn, author of “Burnt Toast Makes You Sing Good.” The event will take place in the Community Room with book sales and signings. 7KH¿UVWOLQHIURP´%XUQW Toast Makes You Sing Good” is “I’m Swedish, which makes me sexy, and I’m Irish which makes me want to talk about it.” Thus begins a multi-generational memoir of one family’s culinary heri- tage, replete with recipes. &RRNLQJKDVGH¿QHGWKH Flinn family even before Kathleen was born. In the late 1950s, her parents left Michigan to help her Irish uncle run an Italian restau- rant in San Francisco. They returned to the Midwest and went to live on a run-down farm, where the family led a hand-to-mouth existence. The Flinn children “never had new clothes, fancy bikes, Submitted photo “Burnt Toast Makes You Sing Good” by Kathleen Flinn. or enough money for hot lunch at school.” However, between the chickens they raised and fruits and vege- tables they grew, the family never lacked for good food. In fact, cooking was the con- duit through which previous generations of her work- ing-class family expressed their love for each other. “Burnt Toast Makes You Sing Good” is a humorous DQGÀDYRUIXOWDOHVSDQQLQJ three generations. Brimming with anecdotes about her Uncle Clarence’s corn- ÀDNHFUXVWHGIULHGFKLFNHQ Grandpa Charles’s spicy San Antonio chili, and Grandma Inez’s birthday-only cinna- mon rolls, Flinn shows how meals can be memories and how cooking can be commu- nication. Flinn is the New York Times bestselling author of “The Sharper the Knife the Less You Cry” and “The Kitchen Counter Cooking School” which was named a 2012 book of the year. Her ODWHVWERRNZDVD¿QDOLVWIRU the IACP Cookbook Awards DVZHOODVWKH3DFL¿F1RUWK- west Book Award. She lives in Seattle, Washington. The Seaside Public Library is located at 1131 Broadway. For more infor- mation, call 503-738-6742. Hear art pop bossanova at KALA ASTORIA — On Friday, July 15, KALA will present OK ECHO, an art-pop ensemble from San Fransisco. Doors open at 8 p.m.; the show begins at 8:45 p.m. There is a $5 cover. OK ECHO began when $QGUHZ%R\ODQSRVWHGÀ\HUV at the San Francisco Art Institute looking for a drum- mer, and Barry Despenza responded. A transplant from Chicago, Despenza didn’t own a drum set because of his tendency to travel. Instead, he offered Boylan his skills as a cajon player, and the duo took to the streets as buskers. The pair was able to gather large crowds with their upbeat music, and they knew it was necessary to expand their line-up. Boylan met multi-media artist Jamin Reyes at a house party and asked him to play bass for SUBMITTED PHOTO OK ECHO will perform art pop July 15 at KALA. notforsale the group. Reyes had studied jazz at San Fransisco State University. Boylan also met Patti Weiss, a multilingual neuropsychologist who also happened to be a violin player. Together, they create DSRSPXVLFWKDWÀLUWVZLWK bossanova, jazz and funk. As the leader of the RXW¿W%R\ODQFRPSRVHVDQG arranges the music. He also uses the band as a platform for art and design. Fine art and items from his clothing line will be available for sale at the show, as well as OK ECHO’s debut CD.