Here is a listing of events designed for book lovers. Information is subject to change or cancellation without notice. Additions or changes to this listing must be submitted at least 10 days in advance of Sunday publication to Bookmark, Las Vegas Review-Journal, P.O. Box 70, Las Vegas, NV 89125. For more information, call 383-0306.
There’s an intriguing political nuance to “Red Dead Redemption.” It lets us see what America might have looked like when our nation was a libertarian fantasy land.
The strip club is dark enough to obscure faces but not the shape of a woman gyrating on a platform, entertaining three men at the bar.
CUTTING CLASSES: With both the Clark County School District and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas facing big budget shortfalls, local education is smarting. Some local business groups and businesspeople are expressing concern, arguing that without a well-educated work force, commerce will suffer.
A bad day at work for Gene Altobella Sr. once meant nearly getting blown to bits from a booby-trapped safe.
At a special Wednesday night screening of “Sex and the City 2,” one moviegoer was dressed as Samantha, a character from the show, but she may have taken her impression a bit too far.
Republican Sue Lowden has the best chance of defeating U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, according to a new poll for the Review-Journal that also suggests the Democratic incumbent could beat Tea Party favorite Sharron Angle in the fall despite being as unpopular as ever.
Since taking office during an unprecedented and controversial midnight inauguration on Jan. 1, 2007, Gibbons has guided Nevada during its deepest recession and drawn fire from allegations of marital infidelity, incompetence and perceived political gaffes.
The young Salvadoran, shackled at the wrists and ankles, had only one question for the judge.
