Other places of entertainment, events and the arts:
Novel reading
Author Rhona Weaver, under the auspices of the Central Arkansas Library System, will read and sign copies of his novel “A Sacred Duty,” Monday at 5:30 p.m., at the Adolphine Fletcher Terry Library, 2015 Napa Valley Drive, Little Rock. It’s the sequel to his debut novel “Clean Crime,” “A Noble Calling,” after Win Tyler, a new FBI special agent stationed in Yellowstone National Park. A third book in the series is underway.
WordsWorth Books will provide copies of both books for purchase; reserve copies at wordworthbookstore.com or by calling (501) 663-9198. For more information on the event, call (501) 228-0129 or email [email protected]
Weaver is a retired marsh and farmland appraiser who had a 35-year career in agricultural real estate and founded a program for at-risk children in Arkansas. She is a graduate of the University of Arkansas, a Sunday school teacher and an avid gardener.
Pride panel
Wednesday at 6 p.m., the Clinton Presidential Center, 1200 President Clinton Ave., Little Rock, will host a pride month debate with the Rev. Frederick A. Davie, senior strategic advisor to the president of Union Theological Seminary; Father James Martin, Jesuit priest, general editor of America: The Jesuit Review of Faith & Culture, and consultant to the Vatican Department of Communication; and Sarah Wilke, director of global relations at the Institute for Discipleship. They will discuss the responses of their religious communities to questions about human sexuality. It will be moderated by Frank Lockwood, editor of Religion of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Admission is free. Register at tinyurl.com/354xj7jz.
He is part of the Clinton Center’s Distinguished Frank & Kula Kumpuris lecture series. Sponsors also include the Clinton Foundation, the Clinton School of Public Service at the University of Arkansas and AT&T.