BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:AddEvent BEGIN:VEVENT UID:55e62f5c3ae64 DTSTAMP;TZID=UTC:20170225T180638Z DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20161104T153000ZZ SEQUENCE:0 TRANSP:OPAQUE DTEND;TZID=UTC:20161104T180000ZZ LOCATION:Charleston Marriott SUMMARY:The Post and Courier Fall Book & Author Event DESCRIPTION:THIS EVENT IS SOLD OUT. Thank you.The Post and Courier will host the 24th Annual Fall Book and Author Luncheon on November 4,2016.  Featuring best-selling authors Jane Green, Ron Rash, Linwood Barclay ,William Alexander and Mary Norris. \n  \n    \nJane Green  is the author of 17 novels, with 16 New York Times Bestsellers, including her latest, “Summer Secrets.” She is published in over 25 languages, and has more than 10 million books in print worldwide. A former journalist in the UK, she has had her own radio show on BBC Radio London, and is a regular contributor on radio and TV.  \n      \nRon Rash is an award-winning New York Times bestselling novelist as well as a poet and short story writer. Raised in western North Carolina, Rash has been described as a significant Appalachian writer who has the ability to find the universal within the particulars of place. His latest novel, “The Risen,” was released this fall and tells the story of two brothers whose lives are irrevocably changed by the events of a long-ago summer. \n \n  \n    \nLinwood Barclay is the #1 internationally bestselling author of 13 novels, including “Trust Your Eyes,” “A Tap on the Window,” “No Time for Goodbye” and “No Safe House.” His latest, “Broken Promise,” is the first of a trilogy about his fictional upstate New York town Promise Falls. \n  \n  \n  \nWilliam Alexander is a regular contributor to The New York Times op-ed page and the best-selling author of “The $64 Tomato,” “52 Loaves: A Half-Baked Adventure” and his latest “Flirting with French” about the pitfalls of trying to become fluent in French at the age of 57. \nThe Minneapolis Star Tribune says of his most recent book “Flirting with French", “It's a fun ride with some laugh-out-loud moments, some life lessons and even some research that say it might not be pointless to try to learn a language in middle age.” \n  \n  \n  \nMary Norris  has worked for the New Yorker for more than 30 years. She has also written for The Talk of the Town and for newyorker.com. In her book “Between You & Me, Confessions of a Comma Queen,”  Norris reflects on her career, the oft-debated quirks of New Yorker style, the serial comma and the joys of a well-sharpened pencil.                             END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR