As soon as the semester ends and students flock back to Chicagoland, it’s time to celebrate Friday Night Live events, Urbana and Champaign markets, PostMark, quiet evening walks on the quad and in the parks, and, of course books ! Summer reading season is upon us and it’s time to pick out what you’re going to read on vacation or at the pool or in your corner chair by the window. Even if you’re not a big reader, browsing at our local bookstores is just flat out fun. While books and book-related events dominate May, there are plenty of arts events and happenings. Here are a few of them.

Book Clubs at The Lit



Books. Brunch. Bar. I — literally — do not need anything else. And yet, The Lit offers so much more. Host to book clubs, special events, readings, and children’s story time, The Literary will be hoppin’ all of May. Here’s a taste of the Literary’s offerings for May. All events are free but it’s always smart to call ahead for details.

Book Club: An Unquiet Mind by Kay Redfield Jamison
Th May 16th at 7:30 p.m.

Book Club: Hijab Butch Blues by Lamya H
Sa May 18th at 4 p.m.

Literary Trivia
F May 24th at 6:30 p.m.

Coven Book Club: Slewfoot: A Tale of Bewitchery by Brom
Sa May 25th at 5:30 p.m.

Knit Night: Knit and crochet the night away!
Su May 26th at 5 p.m.

Urbana’s Station Theatre presents Describe the Night , directed by Latrelle Bright



Playwright Rajiv Joseph won the Obie Award for Best New American Play in 2018 with his epic, Describe the Night. Joseph’s play spans several decades with a story woven together by soldiers, poets, babushkas, and journalists. A mix of actual historical figures and imagined counterparts tackle Russian history by placing truth and fantasy in a recipe served up with literal and metaphorical leeches. Loosely based on elements of Jewish writer Isaac Babel’s life and work in Soviet Russia, the play is ambitious and I very much look forward to seeing how Latrelle Bright stages it at our Station Theatre in Urbana.

Book Launch: Mid-Continent Modern: The Champaign School of Mid-Century Architecture



May is stacked with book events and I am geeking out about this one. Everything about it sounds fun (let’s recall I am a lifelong researcher and English teacher so factor that into my definition of fun ). I adore mid-century architecture, book launches, and the Krannert Art Museum.

This book documents the contributions of architects Jack Sherman Baker, John Gordon Replinger, A. Richard Williams, Robert Louis Amico, and Jeffery S. Poss to the Midwest’s built environment. All were keenly aware of the prairie landscape of Central Illinois, its vast vistas, and the prismatic forms of houses, barns, and granaries that punctuate the horizon. Mid-Continent Modern: The Champaign School of Mid-Century Architecture tells the story of their work, and the people who live, use, and care for these buildings. The authors will be available to sign books at the event.

Cicadapalooza at the Vault Art Gallery in Tuscola



This looks to be a delightful day of family-friendly arts and crafts while learning more about the onslaught of these “harmless” critters as they make their way up from the ground to their mating perches in our trees. The day will include rock painting, acoustic music, and plenty of refreshments. Maybe there’s a fun craft to make out of molted cicada shells. You go ahead. I’m going to be hiding in my house wrapped in netting the whole time these things are screaming in my yard.

Forty-four years strong and Fame is still one of the best summer films



Part of 92.5’s Rewind Film Series, the historic Virginia Theatre will be showing 1980’s Fame , starring Irene Cara, Gene Anthony Ray, Debbie Allen, and Lee Curreri. Fame premiered in the summer of 1980 and has been reworked several times as both a television show and a stage musical. Glee ? High School Musical ? Those wouldn’t have existed without Alan Parker’s brilliant film about teens, talent, and tenacity. I just wish it was on a double-bill with Flashdance .

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