Author Book Signing Kennebunkport

NEW ENGLAND AUTHOR KRISTIN BAIR

New England Author Kristin Bair

As part of the Patsy Bray Mahoney Lecture Series, we are pleased to welcome author Kristin Bair to the Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library on Friday, February 13, at 2:30 p.m. Ms. Bair will read from her new book and discuss the writing process. Kristin Bair writes fiercely—and humorously—about women navigating (peri)menopause, marriage, motherhood, the mental load, and identity. Her fourth novel, “Clementine Crane Prefers Not To”, tells the story of a woman radicalized against the patriarchy by her very first hot flash. She also wrote “Agatha Arch Is Afraid of Everything” (a People magazine Best New Book), “The Art of Floating”, and “Thirsty”. Kristin teaches in the MA in Writing Program at Johns Hopkins University and at the Yale Writers’ Workshop, and is a fiction editor at Pangyrus, a literary magazine. A native Pittsburgher, she now lives north of Boston with her husband and two kids. To learn more, visit her website at kristinbair.com.

The Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library is located at 18 Maine Street, Kennebunkport. For further information, please call 207-967-2778 or visit www.graveslibrary.org.

AUTHOR JUDITH STILES

Join us in welcoming author Judith Stiles to the Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library on Friday, May 15, at 2 PM. She will be here to read from her new book, “Hush Little Fire”. Secrets implode, and generations of lies boil over into deadly consequences when a suspicious fire breaks out on Cape Cod. This enthralling and darkly humorous debut novel of long-buried truths will captivate readers. Ms. Stiles writes essays, fiction, and news articles for the Italian publication Ytali Global, covering all things American. Her short stories and literary essays can be found in Europa Quotidiano, Hemingway Shorts, Kenyon Review (honorable mention), Room (first place, creative nonfiction competition 2024), The Ex-Puritan, and The New York Times. She lives with her partner in crime, who helps clean up the house when their 3 kids, Julia, Jane, and Johnny, come to visit.

 

The Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library is located at 18 Maine Street, Kennebunkport. For further information, please call 207-967-2778 or visit www.graveslibrary.org.

MAINE AUTHOR GERRY BOYLE

As part of the Patsy Bray Mahoney Lecture Series, we are pleased to welcome crime novelist Gerry Boyle to the Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library on Saturday, November 1, at 2:00 p.m. Mr. Boyle will read from his books, “Hard Line” and “Robbed Blind” and discuss the writing process. “Hard Line” is an award winner for the 2025 National Independent Publisher Book Awards. His character Jack McMorrow has been in his books for over thirty years. Gerry Boyle is a prolific author known for over a dozen acclaimed crime novels, including the Jack McMorrow mystery series, which has been translated into six languages. Other McMorrow novels, including “Random Act” and “Straw Man”, were awarded the Maine Literary Award for crime fiction. With a background as a newspaper reporter and columnist, Boyle draws inspiration from his crime reporting for his writing. He resides in a small village in central Maine. Refreshments will be provided by the Graves Library Snack Team. Copies of the book will be for sale and signed after the program. Additional parking is available at the Fire Department Parking Lot (North Street).

 

The Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library is located at 18 Maine Street, Kennebunkport. For further information, please call 207-967-2778 or visit www.graveslibrary.org.

EVENING WITH ADAM HIGGINBOTHAM AND PAT CALLAGHAN AT VINEGAR HILL

The 2025 Clifford W. Burgess Fall Author Night

Author Adam Higginbotham and Pat Callaghan

October 9, at Vinegar Hill

The Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library in Kennebunkport is pleased to once again partner with Vinegar Hill for this special evening with Adam Higginbotham, author of CHALLENGER: A TRUE STORY OF HEROISM & DISASTER ON THE EDGE OF SPACE. From the New York Times bestselling author of Midnight in Chernobyl comes the definitive, dramatic, minute-by-minute story of the Challenger disaster based on fascinating new archival research and in-depth reporting—a riveting history that reads like a thriller. A masterful blend of human drama and fascinating and absorbing science, Challenger brings to life a turning point in history—and the result is an even more complex and astonishing story than we remember.

Doors open at 5:30 for the purchase of drinks, snacks, and books. The program begins at 6:30.

The author will be interviewed by former TV news anchor and journalist Pat Callgahan (WCSH-TV, Portland), who covered the Challenger story in 1986.

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

On January 28, 1986, just seventy-three seconds into the flight, the space shuttle Challenger broke apart over the Atlantic Ocean, shocking the world and killing all seven people on board. The best-selling author Adam Higginbotham will discuss his newest book, “Challenger: A True Story of Heroism and Disaster on the Edge of Space” at 6:30 p.m. on October 9 at Vinegar Hill Music Theatre in Arundel.

This third Annual Fall Author event is hosted by the Louis T. Graves Memorial Free Library in Kennebunkport, Maine and is open to the public. The annual fundraising event features nationally recognized authors and speakers (last year’s speaker was Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and celebrated teacher Richard Russo, interviewed by fellow fiction writer Tom Perrotta).

“Challenger” is the definitive, dramatic, minute-by-minute story of the doomed space shuttle based on fascinating new archival research and in-depth reporting. Millions of Americans witnessed the tragic deaths of the crew, including New Hampshire schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe. Higginbotham’s publisher (Avid Reader Press) describes the book as “a riveting history that reads like a thriller.”

The book follows a handful of central protagonists—including each of the seven members of the crew—through the years leading up to the accident, plus a detailed account of the tragedy itself and the investigation that followed. Higginbotham reveals the history of the shuttle program, the lives of the men and women whose stories have been overshadowed by the disaster, as well as the designers, engineers, and test pilots who struggled against the odds to get the first space shuttle into space.

In addition to his two books, Higginbotham has written for The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, Wired, GQ, and Smithsonian.

Tickets for the October 9 event are $50/$60 and now on sale online at vinhillmusic.com. This is a very popular fall event that sells out quickly, so buy your tickets today!

The Louis T. Graves Memorial Library is a full-service free library whose mission is to enrich the lives of all who enter its Kennebunkport historic building.

All proceeds support the library’s mission to provide free and unfettered access to knowledge and lifelong learning.

Thank you to our sponsors: Clifford W. Burgess, Vinegar Hill, Lark Hotels, Louise Hurlbutt, Wallingford Farm, Michael Kelly, and Octopus Books

SPONSOR SPOTLIGHT: CLIFFORD W. BURGESS/2025 Fall Author Night

He Loved His Family, His Town, Graves Library, and Roller Coasters

Clifford W. Burgess’ memory lives on with his family’s generous sponsorship of the Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library’s October event with award-winning author Adam Higginbotham.

Clifford Wilson Burgess quickly became a man about town when he retired as president of a large, successful photo engraving company in western Massachusetts and moved to Kennebunkport fulltime
in 1974. He and his wife, Mary, had been vacationing in Maine since 1968. Clifford had a great many passions and interests. He became deeply involved in town politics, becoming a member of the town’s Planning Board for nine years and a member of the Select Board for six years. He was also active on the Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library board and the Kennebunkport Conservation Trust.

But it was Clifford’s quirky nature that endeared him to the town’s residents. He was a self-styled Anglophile and was well known in town for walking his Airedale, Rocky, around his neighborhood sporting a tweed jacket. A graduate of Bard College, he was an omnivorous reader and a lifelong student of English history and architecture. He and Mary lived in a Tudor-style cottage that was known as The Shakespeare House. In retirement he became an accomplished oil painter, and many of his paintings grace the homes of family members and friends. Clifford had a distinctive laugh, what some might call a giggle. He loved to watch (and rewatch) The Three Stooges, giggling the whole time.

Clifford had strong opinions about things, and wrote frequent letters to the local newspapers, often disagreeing with elected officials and the other powers that be. He knew about literature, architecture, history, and politics, and he brought those subjects to bear in his lively missives. To combat the debilitating effects of acute arthritis, Clifford was always on the move, walking his dog, riding one of his several racing bikes, or swimming with friends several days a week in Dover, New Hampshire.

But to those who knew him well, one of his most charming traits was his love of roller coasters. Over the years, Mary would drive him all over so he could ride the biggest and the best roller coasters
America had to offer. He rode each roller coaster twice—one trip in the front seat and one trip in the back seat. Two completely different experiences he would tell you, a “rode scholar” on the subject.

Clifford died in 2004, but his legacy lives on. This annual fundraising event supports the free services of the Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library, a special place to Clifford and the town of Kennebunkport.
Adam Higginbotham, best-selling author of Midnight in Chernobyl, will discuss his newest book “Challenger” about the 1986 space shuttle disaster on October 9 at 6:30 p.m. at Vinegar Hill Music
Theater.

 

NEW ENGLAND AUTHOR – MEGHAN PERRY – AUGUST 15, 2 PM

We are pleased to welcome New England author Meghan Perry to the Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library on Friday, August 15, at 2:00 p.m. Ms. Perry will read from her debut novel, Water Finds a Way and talk about her writing process.

Meghan Perry is a New England author whose debut novel, Water Finds a Way, was published by Delphinium Books & Random House Audio. The novel has received numerous accolades, including a starred Kirkus Review, and an IPPY Awards silver medal. It was also featured in Newsday and Conde Nast Traveler as one of the top reads for fall. Learn more at meghanperry.com

Recently released from prison, reclusive Blake Alvares returns to the only place she ever felt safe, the now derelict Maine fishing town in which she harbored as a teen. Determined to conceal her secrets and losses, she soon finds herself dragged into others’ lives when she rents a room from an ailing widow and takes a job on a boat owned by a notorious young lobsterman named Leland.

Leland Savard is nearly broke, trying to support himself and 9-year-old Quinnie as he wrestles with a dangerous family legacy. Despite all odds, he and Blake forge a successful working partnership, and as she establishes a timid friendship with widowed Nora, Blake glimpses what it might mean to truly belong. But when Leland’s rash actions place her and Quinnie in peril, Blake feels forced to run again. On her quest for home, she must confront a daunting question: can she ever again trust in human connection?

Winner: 2025 IPPY Silver Medal, Honorable Mention: Eric Hoffer Book Award, Finalist: Foreword Reviews Book of the Year Award, Finalist: Next Generation Indie Book Award, Finalist: National Indie Excellence Award

Copies of the book will be for sale and signed after the program. Graves Library is located at 18 Maine Street, Kennebunkport, Maine. Please call the library at 207-967-2778 with any questions. Additional parking is available at the Fire Department Parking Lot (North Street).

We hope you will join us and welcome Ms. Perry to Kennebunkport.

AUTHOR STEVE HREHOVCIK ~ JULY 10, 10:30 AM

Maine author Steve Hrehovcik will be here to read his book “The Rabbit Said to the Bird” on July 10 from 10:30-11:30 AM. Told in playful verse and brought to life with vivid illustrations, this enchanting story invites readers to imagine what animals might discover—not only about themselves, but maybe even about someone they know. Copies of the book will be available for sale and signing.

The Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library is located at 18 Maine St, Kennebunkport. For more information call 207-967-2778.

FATHER/SON AUTHORS’ TALK WITH STEVE & JOSH HREHOVCIK ~ APRIL 30 @ 5:30 PM

Writers Steve Hrehovcik and Josh Hrehovcik present a “Father/Son Authors’ Talk” at the Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library in Kennebunkport on Wednesday, April 30 at 5:30 PM. Steve Hrehovcik will discuss his writing career, along with his many excursions pursuing a life in the theater, highlighted in his book Rebel Without a Clue – A Way-Off Broadway Memoir.

Josh Hrehovcik, who has published nine photo books, covering the area from Portsmouth, New Hampshire to Portland, Maine, will reveal a “miracle” that gave him a renewed enlightening perspective on what’s possible in life.

One of Steve Hrehovcik most recent writing projects is a movie script The Ghost of Barnacle Island, which is in the early stages of production. It tells the story of a young, gifted computer expert who outsmarts a ghost who has been guarding a treasure buried on Barnacle Island by the pirate Captain Kidd 300 years ago. While they start out rival, as they experience some exciting adventures, the young lad and ghost become great friends.

Each one of Josh Hrehovcik’s books features an extraordinary collection of hundreds of photographs that range from scenic ocean views, lighthouses, seasonal themes, historic buildings and signage, along with lighthearted commentary descriptions throughout each book.

Books will be available for purchase with signed copies by the authors.

The Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library is located at 18 Maine St, Kennebunkport. For more information call 207-967-2778.

LOCAL AUTHOR FREDERICK BOYLE

Genealogy expert and Maine resident, Frederick Boyle will be at the Graves Library on Wednesday, June 12 at 6:00 p.m. to talk about his new book  Early Families of Kennebunkport, Maine. Copies of the book will be for sale after the presentation.

A bit about Fred:
He was a retired teacher after thirty years at Lexington (MA) High School, where he was designated a master teacher. In recent years, he returned to teaching classes at York Senior College both in the classroom and on Zoom. In 1985, he took what had been a hobby to a professional level becoming a genealogist with a wide spectrum of clients, also giving workshops at the Springvale Public Library. With a lifetime love of theater, he joined the Sanford Maine Stage Senior Theater in the early 2000s. His greatest role was that of Ebenezer Scrooge in the musical production of Scrooge with a Twist. At 91, he found himself emoting, singing, and even dancing. Cheers for living into the nineties and the chutzpah to take on some big challenges!

AN EVENING WITH AMERICAN AUTHOR, JOURNALIST, AND PROFESSOR PAUL HENDRICKSON – JUNE 20 @ 5:00 PM

Author Paul Hendrickson

We are thrilled to welcome celebrated author Paul Hendrickson to our 13th annual Author Event on June 20 at 5:00 PM at the historic Kennebunk River Club Casino, 116 Ocean Avenue in Kennebunkport. Purchase tickets online at Eventbrite.

Paul Hendrickson is an American author, journalist, and professor. His eighth book, Fighting the Night, will be published on May 7, 2024. It is an account of his father flying Black Widow night fighters on Iwo Jima in the last part of World War II. The book will come out on the twenty-first anniversary of his father’s death.

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE!

He is the author of the 2011 New York Times best seller and National Book Critics Circle Award finalist Hemingway’s Boat: Everything He Loved in Life, and LostFor the 2004 book Bound for Glory: America in Color 1939-43, Hendrickson wrote the introduction and accompanying text. In 2003, he won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Sons of Mississippi: A Story of Race and Its Legacy. His 1996 work about Vietnam, The Living and the Dead: Robert McNamara and Five Lives of a Lost Warwas a finalist for the National Book Award. He is the recipient of writing fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Lyndhurst Foundation, and the Alicia Patterson Foundation. Before joining the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania, Hendrickson was a staff feature writer at the Washington Post from 1977 to 2001.

Hendrickson was born in California but grew up in the Midwest and in a Catholic seminary in the Deep South, where he studied for seven years for the missionary priesthood. This became the subject of his first book, published in 1983: Seminary: A Search. He is also the author of Looking for the Light: The Hidden Life and Art of Marion Post Wolcott, a finalist for the 1992 National Book Critics Circle Award.

In 2009, Hendrickson was a joint visiting professor of documentary practice at Duke University and of American studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.  Hendrickson has degrees in English from St. Louis University and Pennsylvania State University. He is married and has two grown sons and lives with his wife, Cecilia, outside Philadelphia.

“We are honored to have Mr. Hendrickson join us this year,” said Graves Library Executive Director Mary-Lou Boucouvalas. “We are also extremely grateful for the wonderful community support provided by our event sponsors. One hundred percent of the funds raised will support the ongoing operations of the Library.”

This special fundraiser is being underwritten by Spinnaker Trust, along with the Kennebunk River Club, Lupine Books,  Allyn and Norma Lamb, Mike and Denise Iafolla, Robert and Marjie Dennis, Mutasia, Billy and Rosemary Shore, John and Mary Mills, Tom and Sarah Vander Schaaff, Kitchen Chicks Catering, the Colony Hotel, Anne and Ken Raynor, Edison Press, Hurlbutt Designs, Schooner Eleanor, SoPo Wine Company, Maine & Vine, and the Wine House on Main.

The ticket price of $75 includes an autographed copy of Fighting the Night. Tickets can be purchased at Graves Library and online through Eventbrite. Call (207) 967-2778 or visit our website at www.graveslibrary.org for more information. Seating is limited.

PROGRAM FOR THE EVENING

5:00 PM – 5:45 PM                       DOORS OPEN PROMPTLY AT 5:00 PM.   RECEPTION WITH WINE AND LIGHT REFRESHMENT

5:50 PM – 6:00 PM                       WELCOME and THANK YOU TO SPONSORS

6:00 PM – 6:10 PM                       ANNOUNCEMENT OF JOYCE BUTLER STUDENT HISTORY AWARD

6:10 PM – 6:15 PM                       INTRODUCTION OF PAUL HENDRICKSON

6:15 PM – 7:00 PM                       INTERVIEW WITH PAUL HENDRICKSON

7:00 PM – 7:30 PM                       BOOK SIGNING

CARL and DAVID LITTLE – THE ART OF PENOBSCOT BAY – MAY 18 @ 2:00 PM

THE PATSY BRAY MAHONEY LECTURE SERIES PRESENTS

We are thrilled to welcome back Carl Little and David Little to the Louis T. Graves Memorial Public Library on Saturday, May 18 at 2:00 pm.  Their latest book published by Yarmouth-based Islandport Press reflects a true and beautiful representation of Maine’s Penobscot area.

For Art of Penobscot Bay, brothers David and Carl Little, well-known stewards of Maine art, have selected art and artists, from history and today, that celebrate the myriad of inlets, islands, coves, and peninsulas—the “nooks and corners” of the region. Above all, they sought out art infused with a remarkable representation of place by more than 120 artists who have embraced the area and its people. Art of Penobscot Bay includes artists from the 19th century through the 21st century, including Fitz Henry Lane, Waldo Peirce, Edward Hopper, William Zorach, John Marin, Emily Muir, Greta Van Campen, Alex Katz, Eric Hopkins, and Amy Peters Wood. Combined with text by the Little brothers, the art takes readers on a wondrous visual journey around, across, and through a breathtaking bay.

Born in New York City, Carl Little holds degrees from Dartmouth, Middlebury, and Columbia. Little is the author of more than 30 art books, including The Watercolors of John Singer Sargent, Edward Hopper’s New England, and Paintings of Maine. His book Eric Hopkins: Above and Beyond won the first John Cole Prize from the Maine Writers & Publishers Alliance in 2012. Little writes for Art New England, Hyperallergic, Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors, The Working Waterfront, Island Journal, and Ornament. In 2021 the Dorothea and Leo Rabkin Foundation honored Little with a Lifetime Achievement Award for his art writing. He lives and writes on Mount Desert Island.

 

David Little is the author of Art of Katahdin, named a “Best of New England” book by the Boston Globe in 2013. He is a co-author with his brother Carl of Art of Acadia (2016) and Paintings of Portland (2018). In 2017 he took part in a national symposium at Colby College, “Valuing the Aesthetics of Nature: The Role of the Visual Artist in the American Conservation Movement.” Little holds an M.A. and M.F.A. in painting from the University of Iowa, attended Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture (1981 and 1982), and has had residencies on Monhegan Island and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. He lives with his wife Mikki in Portland. Find more about David at www.davidlittleart.com.

 

Copies of the book will also be available for sale and signing after the event.  Light refreshments will be provided by the Graves Library Snack Team.  Please call the Library for more information on this event and the rest of the series (967-2778).

Parking is available along Maine Street, the North Street Fire Station Parking Lot, and Consolidated School (Route 9).  If the weather is bad, please check your local television stations for updates on our listings or send us an email to:  mlbgraves@gmail.com

We would also like to thank The Kennebunkport Resort Collection for being a sponsor of this event.  Your support of community non-profits is greatly appreciated!