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| Ralph Nazareth and Eleni Anastos Begetis |
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| Hoby Rosen and Alex McDonald |
From 9/11, perpetual
global wars, erosion of civil liberties, to the current nadir of what seems to
be a comprehensively regressive time, Tuesday nights at Curley’s Diner endures as an
irrepressible haven for open thought, singing and joy.
While you can scroll to
the bottom of this post for further details, this is also a good time to catch
up on other books produced by individual PA members over the last few
years:
Former Fairfield County
resident Susan Cossette Eng’s Peggy Sue Messed Up (CreateSpace, 2017) applies the home-base theme of growing up
female in a bastion of suburban conformity as a launch pad for weighing the
ethics of the Atomic Age, confronting the consequences of poverty and
inequality and highlighting Elizabeth Warren’s refusal to cringe
before Beltway patriarchy in defense of reproductive rights, among other
affecting, timely topics. Below is a video collage version of “Struldbrug
at the Wine Bar” (her musings on European musical culture), one of several engaging adaptations of her
pieces posted on her Youtube channel: 
Now
residing out-of-state, Susan collaborated frequently with fellow PA member Neddy Smith, a Norwalk-based musician, who has played both solo and with bands live
and in the recording studio in Jazz, Funk, Brazilian, Caribbean and other
genres. His positive zeal for music both as performer and as enthusiastic educator
has been extended to fiction with the publication last year of Valerie Palmary: A Small-Town Girl
(NedGJean Publishing, 2017). A novel of creative and entrepreneurial self-discovery in the aftermath of family tragedy, Neddy regards it as a prose vehicle to further his own and his company, NedGJean International's, commitment to "help guide young writers to follow their dreams with a passion for producing projects and (making their) dreams become a reality." He maintains a blog called "Words and Music".One of the earliest contributors to this blog, Enzo Malaglisi published Castelforte, his first collection, in 2017 (Xlibris), showcasing a powerful body of work dealing with desperation, love, fear, the irresistible comfort of needing things, as well as more large-scale subjects like freedom and justice—all unified by the theme of redemption. Click here to read his remarkable “At the Mercy Of a Higher Hand” from 2011.
Saturday’s Tuesday Night Live launch party is free and open to the
public; refreshments will be served (and bring your lungs, too, as there will be singing).
When:
3-6 pm
Saturday
October 20, 2018
3-6 pm
Saturday
October 20, 2018
Where:
Unitarian Universalist Congregation
20 Forest Street
Stamford, CT 06901
Unitarian Universalist Congregation
20 Forest Street
Stamford, CT 06901
Contact:
Ralph Nazareth
203-570-2168
Ralph Nazareth
203-570-2168



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