This weekend, audiences can see James D. Gish and Susan Anton during “Home for the Holidays,” a pair of free concerts that will feature original songs and holiday classics.
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Even in these days of high-tech literature delivery systems, there’s nothing like enjoying a book — or a book-related item ortwo — around the holidays. Here are some gifts that the book lover in your life will appreciate.
A professor looks at Las Vegas’ status as a “stigma city” and how it got that way.
Sure, it’s about books. Lots and lots of books. But the Las Vegas Book Festival could just as well be named the Las Vegas Ideas Festival.
Property Brothers Jonathan and Drew Scott’s first book for children offers encouragement, and even a home DIY project.
Sure, they’re lanterns rising into the nighttime sky. But for RiSE Festival participants, each lantern is a blank canvas that carries into the heavens messages, in the form of drawings or words, that express joy, pain, regret, gratitude, sorrow, hopeor any other emotion they need to feel, and share, in that moment.
Bordalo II’s work is playful and often thought-provoking. It’s not unusual for his pieces to elicit an initial chuckle, followed by a thoughtful “Oh … ”
The tribute comes from more than a dozen states and seven countries: 58 portraits, created in media and styles as wide-ranging as their points of origin by a diverse palette of artists, all of whom have volunteered their talent in service to the simple gift of remembrance.
It probably has a technical name, but let’s just call it the Four-Person Multilevel Headstand Monolith, which, after a few unsuccessful attempts, finally comes together as an impromptu tribute to the four young women who form its infrastructure.
A s the Las Vegas Philharmonic kicks off its 20th season this week, a look back through the orchestra’s first two decades reveals that its history has been as interesting as any piece of music its members have performed.