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Elbin Library Partners with Community to Present Festival of Books  

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WST LIBERTY, W.Va., Oct. 31, 2016 — The Elbin Library has partnered with the Wheeling Arts and Cultural Commission, the Ohio County Public Library and the Wheeling National Heritage Area to present the third annual Upper Ohio Valley Festival of Books, which begins today.

“We are featuring Jayne Anne Phillips and we’ve waited two years to bring her to the area. She’s incredible. She’s the professor of creative writing at Rutgers and she’s from Buchanan. She’s top-notched. We are so excited,” said Elbin Library Director Cheryl Harshman, who has been involved in the Festival planning for all three years of its existence.Upper Ohio Valley Festival of Books

“Phillips’ novel, Quiet Dell, is really a modern spin on a Davis Grubb novel, Night of the Hunter. Grubb was from Moundsville and I’ll be presenting a Lunch with Books program on Grubb on Election Day, Nov. 8,” she said. The Festival of Books takes place at a variety of venues from Oct. 31 through Nov. 12.

All programs are free and open to the public.

The keynote speaker, national bestselling author Jayne Anne Phillips, will appear at the festival’s finale at the Ohio County Public Library on Saturday, Nov. 12 at 1 p.m.

A West Virginia native who has written five award winning novels and two short story collections, Phillips will be reading from her fifth novel, Quiet Dell, which Stephen King has called “a brilliant fusion of fact and fiction” and “the novel of the year…a compulsively readable story.” The book is based on the true story of the infamous 1931 murders committed in West Virginia by con man Harry Powers (the same crimes on which the great Moundsville author, Davis Grubb, based his novel, “Night of the Hunter”). The tragedy was one of the first nationally sensationalized crimes in America.

Phillips is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships, and a Bunting Fellowship. She is distinguished professor of English and director of the Rutgers Newark MFA Program at Rutgers-Newark, the State University of New Jersey.

The festival’s launch event, also at the Ohio County Public Library at 7 p.m. on Halloween, will feature author Paul Hertneky who grew up in Ambridge, Pa., a steel town just 30 miles northwest of Pittsburgh. Hertneky’s book of essays, “Rust Belt Boy: Stories of an American Childhood,” portrays the last gasp of the industrial north where European immigrants had raised families and built communities, but saw the end of their way of life looming on the horizon.

Hertneky has written for the Boston Globe, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, NBC News, and National Public Radio. He serves on the faculty of Chatham University.

Jayne Anne Phillips, author

This year the organizers have expanded the festival’s reach by partnering with the Brooke County Public Library, the Marshall County Public Library, Oglebay Institute’s Towngate Theatre and Cinema, West Liberty University, West Virginia Northern Community College, and the Wheeling Artisan Center, all locations that will be hosting programs and workshops between Nov. 1 and Nov. 11, under the umbrella of the Upper Ohio Valley Festival of Books.

“We are very pleased to be able to add these wonderful new partners and to make this festival truly inclusive of the Upper Ohio Valley, as its name suggests,” said Harshman, also a member of the History and Literature Committee of the Wheeling Arts and Cultural Commission. The full schedule includes:

All Upper Ohio Valley Festival of Books programs and workshops are free and open to the public. For more information, visit its Facebook page.

Additional funding for the Upper Ohio Valley Festival of Books has been provided by the West Virginia Library Commission and the Center for the Book and private donors. The project is supported in part by the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act, administered in West Virginia by the State Librarian.


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