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About The Siuslaw news. (Florence, Lane County, Or.) 1960-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 2016)
S EPT . 24, 2016 • F LORENCE F ESTIVAL OF B OOKS 17 Best-selling suspense novelist is keynote speaker Popular crime thriller author Phillip Margolin kicks off the 2016 Florence Festival of Books as the Keynote Speaker. You can hear his talk at the Florence Events Center at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 23. Tickets are $8 in advance or $10 at the door. If you’re a reader of mysteries, then you already know who Phillip Margolin is. Margolin was a criminal defense attorney in the Portland area from 1972 until 1996, when he started writing full-time. His first book, “Heartstone,” was nominated for an Edgar for best original paper- AUTHOR PHOTO BY ANTHOINY GEORGIS back by the Mystery Writers of Phillip Margolin will be the keynote speaker at this year’s Florence Festival America. of Books. His second novel, “The Last Innocent Man,” was made into an HBO movie, and his next Times bestsellers. Next came “After Dark,” a Novel, “Gone, But Not By now, he’s written 19 books Book of the Month Club selection Forgotten,” was sold to more than and then “The Burning Man,” — all bestsellers. And that 25 foreign publishers and made includes “Violent Crimes,” which which became a Reader’s Digest into a mini-series starring actress condensed book. Of his first seven came out earlier this year to the Brooke Shields. delight of his fans. novels, five became New York LEWIS E. BIRDSEYE Lewis E. Birdseye earned a PhD from Colum- bia and has been an educator for much of his life. In addition he has worked as a high- rise construction worker, a professional river guide on the Chatooga River, has run 15 marathons and several ultra mara- thons, and has toured by bicycle much of Europe, from above the Arctic Cir- cle in Norway, to the islands of the Aegean Sea. He lives in Eugene, Oregon with his hospitalist wife, where together they tend to their organic garden. He is the author of fi ve works of fi ction: VASTATION, THE UNSUBDUED FOREST, IN MY BEGIN- N ING, THE GATE OF IVORY, and THE GATE OF HORN. His life-long wish has been to be a poet or a river otter, living on a wild and scenic river far from the madding crowd. Nearly all of his books are con- temporary crime thrillers, except for “Worthy Brown’s Daughter,” which came out in 2014. It is an historical drama set in 19th-cen- tury Oregon that combines a heartbreaking story of slavery and murder with classic Margolin plot twists. You won’t want to miss hearing Margolin — Oregon’s John Grisham — talk about his books and how he goes about writing them. And there’ll be time for questions and answers and an opportunity to buy his books and have them signed. Margolin will also have a table with books available for sale at the authors and publishers book fair on Saturday, Sept. 24, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For tickets to hear Margolin, call the FEC at 541-997-1994. —Judy Fleagle, Co-founder & Secretary Florence Festival of Books Joe R. Blakely Th e Drain Black Sox of Oregon vs Th e Alpine Cowboys of Texas by Joe R. Blakely (2016) – 101 pages In the 1950s small town semi-pro baseball ignited in popularity and blazed across our country like no other sport in history. Two teams epitomized this exciting era: Th e Drain Black Sox of Oregon and Alpine Cowboys of Texas. When these two teams collided for the national semi-pro championship in 1958 in Wichita, Kansas, it produced one of the most rip- roaring games ever played in semi-pro history. Outfi elder, Dan Luby said, “it was magic.” $14.95 Rebellion, Murder and a Pulitzer Prize by Joe R. Blakely (2015) – 218 pages Llewellyn Banks, the so-called dictator, tried to take over the Medford and Jackson County government in 1933. Th e chaos he created climaxed when he murdered the popular Medford Constable, George Prescott. Th is sensa- tional trial was moved from Medford to Eugene, Oregon. It pitted the most respected lawyers in the state against each other. As the trial unfolds, so does the story of the Jackson County Rebellion. $17.95