Tayari Jones, author portrait
© Julie Yarborough

Tayari Jones

TAYARI JONES is the author of four novels, most recently An American Marriage, which was an Oprah’s Book Club selection and also appeared on Barack Obama’s summer reading list and his year-end roundup. It won the Women’s Prize for Fiction, the Aspen Words Literary Prize, and an NAACP Image Award and has been published in two dozen countries. Jones is the C.H. Candler Professor of English and Creative Writing at Emory University and lives in Atlanta.
Kin: Oprah's Book Club

Tue Apr 14 | 04:00 PM
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Wed Apr 15
Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema
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Wed Apr 22 | 07:00 PM
Patricia A. Whelan Theatre, Central Library
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Thu Apr 23 | 07:00 PM
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Books

Kin: Oprah's Book Club

Events

Tue Apr 14 | 04:00 PM
THE BRUCE HOTEL
89 Parkview Dr
Stratford, ON N5A4R5
Google Map

Wed Apr 15
Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema
506 Bloor St W
Toronto, ON M5S 1Y3
Google Map

Wed Apr 22 | 07:00 PM
Patricia A. Whelan Theatre, Central Library
800 3 Street SE
Calgary, AB T2G 2E7
Google Map

Thu Apr 23 | 07:00 PM
Revue Stage
1601 Johnston St
Vancouver, BC V6H 3S2
Google Map

Announcing Oprah Winfrey’s “The Books That Help Me Through”

Kicking off on Monday, October 26th and running through Monday, November 30th, Oprah Winfrey’s “The Books That Help Me Through” will feature 7 titles—5 of which are Penguin Random House titles—that have provided her solace during uncertain times. This series will be featured on Oprah’s Book Club, Twitter & Instagram accounts. Each week will be

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Banned Books Week Is 9/26 – 10/2

It’s time for another celebration of the right to read! Join the ongoing and imperative mission by working with booksellers to feature titles whose value has been contested at local and national levels. 

This year’s honorary (and inaugural) chair of Banned Books Week, Jason Reynolds: “To censor a book is to damage the framework in which we live,” adds Reynolds. “Any time we eliminate or wall off certain narratives, we are not getting a whole picture of the world in which we live. And navigating the world in a way that is closed-off, closed-minded, is poisonous. It means that we limit our vocabulary, which complicates how we communicate with one another. We have to celebrate stories and ensure that all books have a space on the shelves and the opportunity to live in the psyches of our children, as they grow into the human beings who will inherit this wonderful place.” 

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