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CANCELED: A Conversation about Place in Fiction and Art ~ featuring Mary Alice Monroe and Delia Owens

Updated: Aug 14

A Conversation about Place in Fiction and Art originally scheduled for Sunday, August 18th has been canceled due to unforeseen circumstances.

The event will be rescheduled for a later date. 

Refunds for the full ticket price will be issued from Ticketleap.

Refunds will be initiated today and will likely take a few days to show on your account.

Should you have any questions regarding your refund, please call Lanier Library at 828.859.9535.

We apologize for any inconvenience caused and will keep you posted on plans for the rescheduled event.

Thank you for your understanding and for your continued interest in the programming of Lanier Library and Upstairs Artspace.






The Lanier Library and Upstairs Artspace Gallery are excited to invite you to "A Conversation about Place in Fiction and Art" featuring authors Mary Alice Monroe and Delia Owens on Sunday, August 18 at 3 pm at Upstairs Artspace, 49 S. Trade. St., Tryon. A reception will follow. Tickets for this exclusive event are $35 per person and will go fast! Limit 2 tickets per person.




This event is held in conjunction with the gallery's current show, Analogues: North & South, Photographs by Tema Stauffer. Stauffer's works in the gallery's upstairs level are part of an exhibition titled, "Southern Fiction," which examines the lived environments of famous Southern authors including Alice Walker, Eudora Welty, Flannery O'Connor and William Faulkner, whose kitchen at his home, Rowan Oak, in Oxford, Miss., is pictured below.


Mary Alice Monroe is the New York Times bestselling author of 27 books, including her latest instant bestseller, The Summer of Lost and Found. Nearly 8 million copies of her books have been published worldwide, and she’s earned numerous accolades and awards, including induction into the South Carolina Academy of Authors’ Hall of Fame.


Delia Owens is the co-author of three internationally bestselling nonfiction books about her life as a wildlife scientist in Africa including Cry of the Kalahari. She has won the John Burroughs Award for Nature Writing and has been published in Nature, The African Journal of Ecology, and many others. Her first novel Where the Crawdads Sing was made into a major motion picture in 2022.



Kitchen Curtains, Rowan Oak, Oxford, Mississippi, 2018

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