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NAME:St. Mary's County Library
X-WR-CALNAME:St. Mary's County Library
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:12f4fea0-10bd-4862-91e4-ede80099ef3e
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DTSTAMP:20260718T213556Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250517T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250517T164500
SUMMARY:Veterans Book Group   
LOCATION:Lexington Park Library\nLexington Park Library
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Lexington Park Library;X-A
 PPLE-RADIUS=10;X-TITLE=Lexington Park Library:geo:38.2614203,-76.4571221
GEO:38.2614203;-76.4571221
DESCRIPTION:A book discussion series for veterans led by Vietnam veteran W
 ayne Karlin. Registration required\; space is limited. For more informatio
 n contact KimberlÃ© Fields at 301-863-8188 or kfields@stmalib.org..\nhtt
 ps://stmalib.libnet.info/event/13631825
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<div>This book discussion series is tailored 
 for veterans and their families. Service members of all eras\, their spous
 es\, and adult children are welcome. We will read and discuss books writte
 n in very different styles but connected by themes of war\, courage\, hono
 r\, and trauma.</div>\n<div></div>\n<div></div>\n<div>Meetings will be hel
 d at Lexington Park library on the first Saturday of the month 2-4 p.m. ex
 cept for the<em><strong> last meeting in June. It will be on the second Sa
 turday\, June 14.</strong></em> As supplies are limited\, participants may
  pick up the book one month before the meetings or borrow a copy through t
 he library.</div>\n<div></div>\n<div></div>\n<div><a href="https://www.mdh
 umanities.org/programs/veterans-book-group/">The Veterans Book Group</a> i
 s coordinated statewide by <a href="https://www.mdhumanities.org/">Marylan
 d Humanities</a> and is presented locally in partnership with St. Mary&rsq
 uo\;s County Library. Veterans Book Group is supported this year by TowerC
 ares Foundation\, Andrews Federal Credit Union\, and The Wawa Foundation.<
 /div>\n<div><hr /><strong></strong></div>\n<div><strong></strong></div>\n<
 p><strong>Monthly Reading List</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Book descriptions 
 from Amazon unless otherwise noted</strong></p>\n<p>&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><span 
 style="color: #000080\;"><strong>February 01 - <a href="http://catalog.som
 d.lib.md.us/polaris/view.aspx?title=uncertain+ground&amp\;author=klay"><em
 >Uncertain Ground</em></a> by Phil Klay</strong></span></p>\n<p>From the N
 ational Book Award-winning author of&nbsp\;Redeployment&nbsp\;and&nbsp\;Mi
 ssionaries\, an astonishing fever graph of the effects of twenty years of 
 war in a brutally divided America.</p>\n<p>When Phil Klay left the Marines
  a decade ago after serving as an officer in Iraq\, he found himself a par
 t of the community of veterans who have no choice but to grapple with the 
 meaning of their wartime experiences&mdash\;for themselves and for the cou
 ntry. American identity has always been bound up in war&mdash\;from the re
 volutionary war of our founding\, to the civil war that ended slavery\, to
  the two world wars that launched America as a superpower. What did the cu
 rrent wars say about who we are as a country\, and how should we respond a
 s citizens?</p>\n<p>Unlike in previous eras of war\, relatively few Americ
 ans have had to do any real grappling with the endless\, invisible conflic
 ts of the post-9/11 world\; in fact\, increasingly few people are even awa
 re they are still going on. It is as if these wars are a dark star with a 
 strong gravitational force that draws a relatively small number of soldier
 s and their families into its orbit while remaining inconspicuous to most 
 other Americans. In the meantime\, the consequences of American military a
 ction abroad may be out of sight and out of mind\, but they are very real 
 indeed.</p>\n<p>This chasm between the military and the civilian in Americ
 an life\, and the moral blind spot it has created\, is one of the great th
 emes of&nbsp\;<em>Uncertain Ground</em>\, Phil Klay&rsquo\;s powerful seri
 es of reckonings with some of our country&rsquo\;s thorniest concerns\, wr
 itten in essay form over the past ten years. In the name of what do we ask
  young Americans to kill\, and to die? In the name of what does this count
 ry hang together? As we see at every turn in these pages\, those two quest
 ions have a great deal to do with each another\, and how we answer them wi
 ll go a long way toward deciding where our troubled country goes from here
 .</p>\n<p>&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><span style="color: #000080\;"><strong>March 01 
 - <a href="http://catalog.somd.lib.md.us/polaris/view.aspx?title=women&amp
 \;author=kristin+hannah"><em>The Women</em></a> by Kristin Hannah</strong>
 </span></p>\n<p>From the celebrated author of&nbsp\;<em>The Nightingale</e
 m>&nbsp\;and&nbsp\;<em>The Four Winds</em>&nbsp\;comes Kristin Hannah's&nb
 sp\;<em>The Women</em>â€•at once an intimate portrait of coming of ag
 e in a dangerous time and an epic tale of a nation divided.</p>\n<p>Women 
 can be heroes.&nbsp\;When twenty-year-old nursing student Frances &ldquo\;
 Frankie&rdquo\; McGrath hears these words\, it is a revelation. Raised in 
 the sun-drenched\, idyllic world of Southern California and sheltered by h
 er conservative parents\, she has always prided herself on doing the right
  thing. But in 1965\, the world is changing\, and she suddenly dares to im
 agine a different future for herself. When her brother ships out to serve 
 in Vietnam\, she joins the Army Nurse Corps and follows his path.</p>\n<p>
 As green and inexperienced as the men sent to Vietnam to fight\, Frankie i
 s over-whelmed by the chaos and destruction of war. Each day is a gamble o
 f life and death\, hope and betrayal\; friendships run deep and can be sha
 ttered in an instant. In war\, she meetsâ€•and becomes one ofâ€•
 the lucky\, the brave\, the broken\, and the lost.</p>\n<p>But war is just
  the beginning for Frankie and her veteran friends. The real battle lies i
 n coming home to a changed and divided America\, to angry protesters\, and
  to a country that wants to forget Vietnam.</p>\n<p><em>The Women</em>&nbs
 p\;is the story of one woman gone to war\, but it shines a light on all wo
 men who put themselves in harm&rsquo\;s way and whose sacrifice and commit
 ment to their country has too often been forgotten. A novel about deep fri
 endships and bold patriotism\,&nbsp\;<em>The Women</em>&nbsp\;is a richly 
 drawn story with a memorable heroine whose idealism and courage under fire
  will come to define an era.</p>\n<p>&nbsp\;&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><span style="c
 olor: #000080\;"><strong>April 05 - <a href="http://catalog.somd.lib.md.us
 /polaris/view.aspx?title=genizah&amp\;author=karlin"><em>The Genizah</em><
 /a> by Wayne Karlin</strong></span></p>\n<p>In the novel <em>The Genizah</
 em>\, Wayne Karlin enters its pages as a character in his own novel\, reim
 agining his family's livesâ€•and fateâ€•if they had not come to 
 America but stayed in his mother's village in Poland where the rest of her
  extended family were murdered by the Nazis in 1941.</p>\n<p>Karlin commem
 orates and mourns that unutterable loss by making it present\, in the spir
 it of the words from the Passover Seder\, which asks those at the table to
  recount the story of oppression as if they had lived it. It is a phrase t
 hat calls upon the people at the table to feel\, not just to know\, what h
 appened\, as good fiction calls us to do. How can anyone who had not been 
 through the Holocaust share even a little part of such experiences? How ca
 n anyone who has not felt some of that horror reverberate in their own bon
 es try to understand the terrible massacres of our own days\, sparked by h
 atred of the Other\, in Syria\, in Myanmar\, in Israel\, in Gaza\, in Char
 leston\, and in Pittsburghâ€•in so many other places\, they overwhelm
  our ability to empathize.</p>\n<p>Karlin's answer to that question is to 
 personalize the impersonal\, to imagine what could have happened if his gr
 andparents\, and mother\, and her brothers and sisters and his father and 
 his family\, had not torn themselves away from a place they and their ance
 stors had lived for hundreds of years\, in a town and on a continent where
  they had always been unwelcome guests.</p>\n<p>&nbsp\;&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><sp
 an style="color: #000080\;"><strong>May 03 - <a href="http://catalog.somd.
 lib.md.us/polaris/view.aspx?title=for+whom+bell+tolls&amp\;author=hemingwa
 y"><em>For Whom the Bell Tolls</em></a> by Ernest Hemingway</strong></span
 ></p>\n<p>Ernest Hemingway's masterpiece on war\, love\, loyalty\, and hon
 or tells the story of Robert Jordan\, an antifascist American fighting in 
 the Spanish Civil War.</p>\n<p>In 1937 Ernest Hemingway traveled to Spain 
 to cover the civil war there for the North American Newspaper Alliance. Th
 ree years later he completed the greatest novel to emerge from &ldquo\;the
  good fight&rdquo\; and one of the foremost classics of war literature.</p
 >\n<p><em>For Whom the Bell Tolls</em>&nbsp\;tells of loyalty and courage\
 , love and defeat\, and the tragic death of an ideal. Robert Jordan\, a yo
 ung American in the International Brigades\, is attached to an antifascist
  guerilla unit in the mountains of Spain. In his portrayal of Jordan&rsquo
 \;s love for the beautiful Maria and his superb account of a guerilla lead
 er&rsquo\;s last stand\, Hemingway creates a work at once rare and beautif
 ul\, strong and brutal\, compassionate\, moving\, and wise. Greater in pow
 er\, broader in scope\, and more intensely emotional than any of the autho
 r&rsquo\;s previous works\,&nbsp\;For Whom the Bell Tolls&nbsp\;stands as 
 one of the best war novels ever written.</p>\n<p>&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><span sty
 le="color: #000080\;"><strong><span style="color: #ff0000\;">June 14 </spa
 n>- <a href="http://catalog.somd.lib.md.us/polaris/view.aspx?title=heart+f
 ed&amp\;author=carl"><em>The Heart That Fed</em> </a>by Carl Sciacchitano<
 /strong></span></p>\n<p>A brilliant graphic memoir debut\, this is a lovin
 g son&rsquo\;s exploration of his tumultuous relationship with his father\
 , told through the lens of the Vietnam War and its lasting effects long af
 ter returning home.</p>\n<p>As a college dropout amidst the tumult of the 
 1960s and the Vietnam War\, David Sciacchitano enlisted in the Air Force a
 nd volunteered to be sent overseas. An aircraft mechanic away from the fro
 nt lines\, David nevertheless experienced the chaos of war during the Tet 
 Offensive and the 1975 evacuation. But although David returned home from t
 he war with no physical injuries\, it would be as if a part of him was for
 ever left behind.</p>\n<p>Set against one of the most tumultuous events of
  the 20th century\,&nbsp\;<em>The Heart That Fed</em>&nbsp\;is a beautiful
 ly illustrated and moving story of trauma and love&mdash\;told by a son se
 eking to understand a father forever changed by PTSD and the horrors of wa
 r.</p>\n<p>&nbsp\;</p>\nhttps://stmalib.libnet.info/event/13631825
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