Money Talks

Two views of Bidenomics

I’m a no-compromise peace and justice person, for the most part. I served time in three prisons and many jails, coast-to-coast, offering nonviolent resistance to militarism, including against nuclear weapons and against the invasion of Iraq.

Joe Biden is not a peace person.

If Donald Trump is the alternative, however, I’m going to vote for Biden.

I didn’t used to be such a sellout. I voted for Barry Commoner when Ronald Reagan was running, even though Reagan was a nuclear loose cannon. A friend then told me, “OK, clearly, you are not as scared as I am.”

So finally, 40 years later, I get it. Hold my nose, no need for an herbal emetic, vote for Biden. Ugh.

Trump makes extravagant economy claims, and he leaves out Biden’s, frankly, astonishingly strong economic track record. Fact-checking Trump’s claims about “Bidenomics” vs Trump’s record result in findings from “slightly exaggerated” to false, false and more false. Campaigns are supposed to highlight candidates in their best lights, but not by lying. As we are learning from the civil case in New York, Trump’s routine practice is fraud and lies.

Should we vote based on how a president might affect our financial future? For families, it’s hard not to. For all of us, it should be one of the factors in motivating us; we should never lose sight of the rest of them, from our own values-based assessment.

As an average-income American, I at least want the facts. Looking at the record, I see that under Trump, even when he “owned” both legislative branches in the 115th Congress, he and his cronies like Mitch McConnell only managed one piece of significant legislation—giving rich people and huge corporations massive tax breaks. As for the usual lavish Trump promises about his big accomplishment, none were true. What else is new?

Do we want another four years of failures that Trump’s 2017-2021 term inflicted on us or do we want another four years of Bidenomics—low unemployment, wages increasing faster than inflation and no recession in sight?

Dr. Tom H. Hastings is coordinator of conflict resolution BA/BS degree programs and certificates at Portland State University.

Your Letters, 2/14

Hat Tip to ‘Pal’

I was really pleased to see that you used the “Locals” section of your paper to highlight Surinder “Pal” Sroa, owner of the Lotus Family of Restaurants (Pacific Sun, Jan. 24, 2024).

Lotus is one of our favorite restaurants in Marin, and they have always treated my family very well every time we eat there.

One thing I’d like to say is that their focus on helping those in need is so genuine. One night, my family and I were there, and there was a gentleman who was clearly in a bad spot who walked in and sat down at a table. The owners walked over to him, asked him what he would like to eat and fed him.

They didn’t ask him to leave and didn’t charge him for the meal. It was a wonderful thing to see from a business owner, and reaffirmed my opinions of their kindness.

Ben Lucchese

San Anselmo

Carpet-Bagger

I’ve been thinking about the article about Rusty Hicks (Bohemian, “Dis-Assembly Required,” Jan. 31, 2024) and all the special interest money coming in from outside our district to support his carpet-bagger candidacy.

We’ve heard this tale too many times. Before you know it, we’ll be getting stacks of b.s. postcards attacking our excellent and effective City Council member, Ariel Kelley.

The leader of the state’s Democratic Party should be identifying and supporting up-and-coming leaders, not using special interest money to buy the seat, which is supposed to represent Healdsburg’s interests. We have to turn out as a community, vote for our best interests and stop this ridiculous power grab.

John Thomas

Healdsburg

Comedian Chris Riggins in Marin & More

San Rafael

Comedy Champ

The San Francisco Comedy Competition’s BEST returns to the Marin Center featuring the comedy stylings of headliner and winner Chris Riggins. Recently relocated to Hollywood to capitalize on his win, Riggins so impressed comedy juggernaut Dave Chapelle that he was hired to perform as Chapelle’s opening act. “While a unique take on growing up in the Bay Area and finding humor in the struggle are the centerpiece of Chris’ act, he is relatable to people from all walks of life,” explain the show notes from the comedian’s appearance at last year’s SF Sketchfest. “While many comics can make you laugh, few can make you reflect humorously on life experiences the way that Chris does.” The Bay Area’s Stuart B. Thompson and Josef Anolin round out the bill. The laughs begin at 8pm, Saturday, Feb. 17 at the center’s Showcase Theatre, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. Tickets are $40 to $45—this show is 16 and older—and available online at bit.ly/chris-riggins.

Napa

Speed of Light

LIGHTFAST: Intertwine is an immersive, site-specific sculptural environment responding to the landscape of di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art that incorporates radical, genre-bending visual, sculptural, audio and textual elements from Feb. 24 through June 2. The four artists of LIGHTFAST are novelist and story writer Sylvia Brownrigg, cellist Monica Scott, and visual artists Christel Dillbohner and Danae Mattes. Beginning in 2020, the quartet began conversing and collecting images—musical, verbal and visual. “This exciting project continues di Rosa’s soft residency program,” says associate curator Twyla Ruby. “LIGHTFAST spent months exploring our 217-acre property, collecting images and materials, channeling its changing patterns, conditions and moods over time. The result is an immersive sculptural environment speaking to this unique site and the interchange between art and nature.” The public is invited to an opening reception from 5:30 to 7pm, Saturday, Feb. 24. For tickets, free for members and $10 for non-members, visit dirosaart.org.

San Rafael

Selfless Servants

The public is invited to the First Annual Interfaith Celebration of 5 Selfless Servants. Backstory: Four chaplains were aboard the troop ship, the Dorchester, off Greenland in February of 1943 when they were torpedoed by a German submarine. The chaplains gave up their life jackets so that others might live. Likewise, the fifth hero was a petty officer, first class, on board the Coast Guard cutter, the Comanche. As a Black man relegated to menial tasks, there was no expectation that he would volunteer for the rescue effort. He not only did so, but he worked himself to exhaustion and died as a result. This event is sponsored by The 31st CA Regiment of the United States Volunteers-America, the Marin County United Veterans’ Council and the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Marin. It begins at 2pm, Sunday, Feb. 18, at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Marin on 240 Channing Way, San Rafael.

Sonoma County

Helluva Book

The Sonoma County Library presents a virtual author talk with New York Times bestselling author Jason Mott, discussing his recent novel, Hell of a Book—described as a deeply honest, at times electrically funny, work to the heart of racism, police violence and the hidden costs exacted upon Black Americans and America as a whole. Told with a plot and characters who are said to burn into the mind, Hell of a Book is the novel Mott has been writing in his head for the last 10 years. And in its final twists, it truly becomes its title. Mott is the author of two poetry collections and four novels. His first novel, The Returned, was adapted for television and aired on ABC under the title Resurrection. Since then, his novels that followed have received various accolades and acclaim. Hell of a Book won the Sir Walter Raleigh Award for Fiction Winner, was a Carnegie Medals For Excellence Longlist nominee and the winner of the 2021 National Book Award for Fiction. The free event takes place online from 1 to 2pm on Tuesday, Feb. 20. Registration is required at bit.ly/jason-mott.

Ava DuVernay’s New Film Makes the Caste Connection

What does the act of a racist vigilante have to do with the caste system in India that works to the detriment of the Dalits, Jewish people during the Holocaust and the system of slavery that’s in the unflattering history of the United States? Ava DuVernay’s film Origin, which is based on Isabel Wilkerson’s writing journey of Caste: The Origins of Our Discontent, shows that the answer is everything.

It started in Sanford, Florida, on Feb. 26, 2012. Trayvon Martin, enacted by Miles Frost in his big-screen debut, goes to a nearby store to pick up a bag of Skittles. Trayvon is on the phone laughing and talking with a girl, describing his dream breakfast, when he notices he’s being followed. Then there’s a call from a vigilante named George Zimmerman, wherein Zimmerman describes a “boy who looks like he’s up to no good,” defies the advice of the dispatcher and then follows, confronts and kills Martin.

As a contextual note, Zimmerman was later acquitted by the same judge who sentenced Marissa Alexander to years in prison when she fired a warning shot into a wall in response to her husband, with a history of domestic violence, attacking and threatening to kill her.

In Origin, DuVernay unearths a glimpse of the mind, life and approach of Pulitzer Prize-winning author Wilkerson as she writes the book Caste: The Origins of Our Discontent. In the film, viewers are exposed to the real-life struggles of a writer as Wilkerson straddles the task of caring for her aging mother, who ends up in an assisted living facility; the desire to be on hiatus and out of the spotlight as a journalist; and the weight of being asked repeatedly by a newspaper editor to review the call Zimmerman placed to a 911 dispatcher before he deputized himself as a Latino man to take the life of a Black man in an all-white neighborhood.

While resisting the editor’s request and grappling with the weight of the modern-day racial injustice that took Martin’s life, Wilkerson talks about it with her mother, her ailing cousin and her husband, before enduring a whole lot of personal loss. Wilkerson believes the glue and the root of oppression is caste, as she ties together the struggles of the Dalit, a group of people living in intense poverty and deemed untouchable in India who are subjected to unthinkable tasks like submerging themselves in sewers to unclog tanks; the subjugation of Jewish people by Nazis; and the 13 generations of people of African descent who were subjected to slavery and treated as property.

In an interview with Democracy Now! host Amy Goodman, DuVernay makes clear that the movie is not the book, but it dramatizes the very real process that Wilkerson underwent while deep-diving into the connective tissue of oppression that allows human beings to otherize and apply hierarchies to one another based on what should be inconsequential differences of gender, belief systems, religion, caste and race. The film gives viewers a glimpse of the unglamorous, untold story of a writer doing the deep work of telling and curating the truth in a way that moves those who engage with the material to rethink everything they’ve been led to believe.

Is Origin hard to watch? Yes, it is at times. But, it is a film that has something to offer everyone, as it has the potential to validate overlooked lived experiences, inviting people to connect the dots between their own lives and the lives of others and to see the humanity in each other. It also offers relatability, as the very real cycle of life and its finiteness is a part of the backdrop that Wilkerson is forced to navigate as she continues doing the work with the writing of her book for the greater good of humanity. This film is a must-see during Black History Month and again during Women’s History Month.

Jasmine Thomas is an eighth-grade English teacher who watched the film for the second time with her parents, Audwin and Maxine from Vallejo. 

Origin did a good job of expressing complicated ideas,” Jasmine said. “As a teacher, I’m asked to fix a lot of really big problems that have gone on systemically for a long time. This film underscores the idea that it’s all connected, that there’s nothing new and we’re doomed to repeat our mistakes if we don’t learn our history. Everyone should see it—especially with it being an election year. It’s easy to get fired up over an incident, but the film shows how it’s not just one problem, but a connected series of problems relating to caste.” 

Her father, Audwin, found the film to be thought-provoking. “I need to spend some time thinking about it and the connectivity, but I thoroughly enjoyed it,” he said. “Especially in the times that we’re living in.”

Audwin, and likely everyone who has seen the film, understandably found the scenes that included footage of slave ships, a reenactment of Martin’s fatal encounter with Zimmerman and scenes exposing the injustices of the Holocaust, along with the subjugation of Dalits in India, particularly hard to watch. 

“Man has been brutal over time, and the film showed that,” Audwin said. And yet he’s glad to have seen the film, and remains optimistic. “I’ve always believed in hope. This was a great picture, but it doesn’t make or break my hope. I’m a believer, and so that makes me a person of hope.” 

Justin Iredale, from Alameda, said the film gave him an appreciation of how modern-day struggles related to history. “The film was intense at times, but it did a really good job at contrasting events and showing how oppression plays out throughout the world,” he said.

In the East Bay, Origin is showing in San Leandro, Pleasant Hill, Vallejo, Richmond, Concord and Oakland. So far it is only available in theaters, but it may eventually be available on a streaming platform. However, there’s arguably no better time than now to support this important work of heart, art, history and truth so that more films like it can make it to the big screen. In the words of Jasmine Thomas, we can “learn our history” in a compelling way so that we don’t have to be doomed to repeat versions and iterations of mistakes made by ancestors and predecessors.

To learn more about ‘Origin’ or gift someone with tickets to see it, visit: www.originfilm.com.

Free Will Astrology: Week of February 14

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Some stories don’t have a distinct and orderly beginning, middle and end. At any one point, it may be hard to know where you are. Other tales have a clear beginning, middle and end, but the parts occur out of order; maybe the middle happens first, then the end, followed by the beginning. Every other variation is possible, too. And then there’s the fact that the beginning of a new story is implied at the end of many stories, even stories with fuzzy plots and ambiguous endings. Keep these ruminations in mind during the coming weeks, Aries. You will be in a phase when it’s essential to know what story you are living in and where you are located in the plot’s unfoldment.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): As I meditate on your destiny in the near future, I sense you will summon extra courage, perhaps even fearless and heroic energy. I wonder if you will save a drowning person, or rescue a child from a burning building, or administer successful CPR to a stranger who has collapsed on the street. Although I suspect your adventures will be less dramatic than those, they may still be epic. Maybe you will audaciously expose corruption and deceit, or persuade a friend to not commit self-harm, or speak bold thoughts you haven’t had the daring to utter before.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Lately, you have been learning more than you thought possible. You have surpassed and transcended previous limits in your understanding of how the world works. Congratulations! I believe the numerous awakenings stem from your willingness to wander freely into the edgy frontier—and then stay there to gather in all the surprising discoveries and revelations flowing your way. I will love it if you continue your pilgrimage out there beyond the borders for a while longer.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): As I study the astrological omens for the coming weeks, I suspect you will feel more at home in a situation that has previously felt unnerving or alien. Or you will expedite the arrival of the future by connecting more deeply with your roots. Or you will cultivate more peace and serenity by exploring exotic places. To be honest, though, the planetary configurations are half-mystifying me; I’m offering my best guesses. You may assemble a strong foundation for an experimental fantasy. Or perhaps you will engage in imaginary travel, enabling you to wander widely without leaving your sanctuary. Or all of the above.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Of your hundreds of wishes and yearnings, Leo, which is the highest on your priority list? And which are the next two? What are the sweet, rich, inspiring experiences you want more than anything else in life? I invite you to compile a tally of your top three longings. Write them on a piece of paper. Draw or paste an evocative symbol next to each one. Then place this holy document in a prominent spot that you will see regularly. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, you are in a phase when focusing and intensifying your intentions will bring big rewards.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Actor and travel writer Andrew McCarthy hiked across Spain along the famous pilgrimage route, Camino de Santiago. On the way, he felt so brave and strong that at one point he paradoxically had a sobbing breakdown. He realized how fear had always dominated his life. With this chronic agitation absent for the first time ever, he felt free to be his genuine self. “I started to feel more comfortable in the world and consequently in my own skin,” he testified, concluding, “I think travel obliterates fear.” I recommend applying his prescription to yourself in the coming months, Virgo—in whatever ways your intuition tells you are right. Cosmic forces will be aligned with you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In the natural world, there are four partnership styles. In the parasitic variety, one living thing damages another while exploiting it. In the commensal mode, there is exploitation by one partner, but no harm occurs. In the epizoic model, one creature serves as a vehicle for the other but gets nothing in return. The fourth kind of partnership is symbiotic. It’s beneficial to both parties. I bring these thoughts to your attention, Libra, because the coming weeks will be an excellent time to take an inventory of your alliances and affiliations—and begin to de-emphasize, even phase out, all but the symbiotic ones.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Scorpio author Dan Savage says, “I wish I could let myself eat and eat and eat.” He imagines what it would be like if he didn’t “have to monitor the foods I put in my mouth or go to the gym anymore.” He feels envious of those who have no inhibitions about being gluttonous. In alignment with astrological aspects, I authorize Savage and all Scorpios to temporarily set aside such inhibitions. Take a brief break. Experiment with what it feels like to free yourself to ingest big helpings of food and drink—as well as metaphorical kinds of nourishment like love and sex and sensations and entertainment. Just for now, allow yourself to play around with voraciousness. You may be surprised at the deeper liberations it triggers.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Dear Wise Gambler: You rank high in your spacious intelligence, intuitive logic and robust fantasy life. There’s only one factor that may diminish your ability to discern the difference between wise and unwise gambles. That’s your tendency to get so excited by big, expansive ideas that you neglect to account for messy, inconvenient details. And it’s especially important not to dismiss or underplay those details in the coming weeks. If you include them in your assessments, you will indeed be the shrewdest of wise gamblers.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn golfer Tiger Woods is one of the all-time greats. He holds numerous records and has won scores of tournaments. On 20 occasions, he has accomplished the most difficult feat: hitting a hole-in-one. But the weird fact is that there were two decades (1998–2018) between his 19th and 20th holes-in-one. I suspect your own fallow time came in 2023, Capricorn. By now, you should be back in the hole-in-one groove, metaphorically speaking. And the coming months may bring a series of such crowning strokes.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Poet Anna Akhmatova (1889–1966) lived till age 76, but her destiny was a rough ride. Her native country, the authoritarian Soviet Union, censored her work and imprisoned her friends and family. In one of her poems, she wrote, “If I can’t have love, if I can’t find peace, give me a bitter glory.” She got the latter wish. She came close to winning a Nobel Prize and is now renowned as a great poet and heroic symbol of principled resistance to tyranny. Dear Aquarius, I predict that your life in the coming months will be very different from Akhmatova’s. I expect you will enjoy more peace and love than you’ve had in a long time. Glory will stream your way, too, but it will be graceful, never bitter. The effects will be heightened if you express principled resistance to tyranny.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Piscean perfumer Sophia Grojsman says, “Our lives are quiet. We like to be disturbed by delight.” To that end, she has created over 30 best-selling fragrances, including Eternity Purple Orchid, Désir Coulant (Flowing Desire), Spellbound, Volupté (Pleasure), and Jelisaveta (”God is abundance”). I bring this up, Pisces, because I believe it’s now essential for you to be disturbed by delight—as well as to disturb others with delight. Please do what’s necessary to become a potent magnet for marvelous interruptions, sublime interventions and blissful intrusions. And make yourself into a provider of those healing subversions, too.

Homework: I dare you to forgive yourself for a past event you’ve never forgiven yourself for before. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Another County, Not My Own

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Politeness purge underway

When my Jesuit accountant father ripped our family from the belly of San Francisco’s Marina District and transplanted us to Larkspur in 1955, things were different around here, in pretty much every way I can think of.

This came to mind briefly a few days ago, when not one but two very fit and much younger women dressed in exercise attire cut in front of me in the check-out line at Whole Foods in San Rafael. While it was not an unusual occurrence in grocery stores in Marin, it struck me that, in my eighth decade as a Bay Area kind of guy, I am becoming more mindful of the dramatic plunge of polite society into darkness, despair and devolution.

While I’d like to blame any number of elected officials, criminal candidates, celebrity morons, talk show hosts, pundits, airhead CEOs, idiotic fellow motorists on 101 and fit, well-dressed, much younger women, I am having a hard time identifying the root cause of the problem. It might even be self-inflicted, but this degradation feels rapid and permanent.

Because of our affluence, privilege and entitlement to live perfect lives in the face of crushing global economic disparity, Marin is a very good laboratory to study social change. The laboratory opened, in my opinion, around 1975, when a combination of factors, such as the end of the Vietnam War and the Summer of Love, the ripening of the Baby Boom, and the onsets of the diet, health and exercise movements combined to make our little Marin a magnet for rock musicians and other pleasure seekers from all around the world.

A sleepy burb in the Bay Area became a cultural symbol overnight. The brilliant parodist, Cyra McFadden of Montana, chronicled the early days of the descent in the pages of the Pacific Sun. Her piercing insights into the nature of postmodern Marin were read across Bridgeway Avenue into San Francisco. They even spawned a trashy documentary by the formerly erudite NBC News correspondent Edwin Newman.

I yearn for the halcyon days before traffic, expensive private schools, gluten-free hybrid autos, Patagonia vests, vegan leather, people driving 60 miles an hour in the 25 mph zone in front of my house, drama, grievances of the well-to-do, letting go and parcel taxes. If it feels wrong, don’t do it.

Craig Corsini lives in Marin.

Burmatown’s Jennifer Fujitani

Every time I try to go to Burmatown, there’s a crazy wait. I never regret waiting; it’s that good. Read this interview with Jennifer Fujitani while in line with me.

What do you do?

I run a restaurant with my mom in Corte Madera. We started in 2014 and love what we do. Love building a legacy together.

Where do you live?

Sausalito.

How long have you lived in Marin?

I’m a 33-years-young Chinese/Burmese/Japanese American, S.F. born. I lived in San Rafael as a kid, moved away, and now I’ve moved back to Marin from the city in 2022.

Where can we find you when you’re not at work?

Hanging out at the Sausalito Equator, Caledonia Street near Driver’s Market, Mill Valley Lumber Yard and pizza and natural wine at Watershed. Driving up to Sebastopol and Sonoma visiting new restaurants and wine bars. Peacock Gap and McGinnis Golf Range learning to golf.

If you had to convince someone how awesome Marin is, where would you take them?

Sunday Farmers’ Market, oysters along Tomales Bay, lunch at Saltwater in Inverness, music at Rocker Oysterfellers in Valley Ford, beer and pizza at The Junction by the fire pits, a glass of wine at Voyage Wines in San Anselmo.

What’s one thing Marin is missing?

Tapas. Seasonal, hype-local, farm-focused restaurants. Korean BBQ and more Asian food.

What’s one bit of advice you’d share with your fellow Marinites?

Let’s all be kind to one another and build each other up. We are so fortunate to be able to live in a beautiful part of the world. Remember to be grateful and that we are all human.

If you could invite anyone to a special dinner, who would they be?

I’d have my entire family (some have passed) to share one meal with—chaos, laughter, fighting, loving—I want it all!

What is some advice you wish you knew 20 years ago?

To live my life for myself and not what others and society expect of me—to not be scared to voice my opinions, even if it ruffles some feathers.

What is something that 20 years from now will seem cringeworthy?

TikTok trends.

Big question. What is one thing you’d do to change the world?

To eliminate hatred and instill empathy in everyone.

Keep up with Fujitani at @jfooo and @burmatown on Instagram.

Nish Nadaraja was on the founding team at Yelp, serves on the San Anselmo Arts Commission and attempts to play pickleball at Fairfax’s Cañon Club.

Your Letters, 2/7

Ex-Prez

I just don’t get it. America has an ex-president:

implicated in insurrection and sedition,

who is a philanderer and sexual predator,

who is a serial liar (nationally and internationally),

who is someone who has treated veterans, women, minorities, et al with demeaning/condescending verbiage and attitude,

who seeks to make America a vassal state to Russia,

who routinely violates the rule of law.

And, yet, a new poll shows this former president narrowly ahead of President Joe Biden in what’s shaping up to be a close contest nationally.

Should the ex-president win, then all support for veterans, women, minorities, international relations, et al should be terminated forthwith.

Gary Sciford

Santa Rosa

Broom Zoom

Regarding “‘Broom’ Doom & Gloom,” from the Jan. 31, 2024, edition of the Pacific Sun, the Fairfax and Corte Madera branches of Marin County Free Library loan out “extractigators,” a tool designed to pull up Scotch broom by the roots. The tool comes in two sizes and can be borrowed for two weeks.

Margaret Miles

Branch Manager, Fairfax Library

Reading for Valentine’s & Beyond

Whether someone is in a relationship, single or simply in love with a fictional character from that one book, Valentine’s Day is the perfect way to celebrate our community of literature-loving locals.

The lush literary landscape of Marin County has, over the years, lured many a bibliomaniac into hanging up their metaphorical laurel hat. And with such a plethora of bookworms living alongside each other, it is no surprise to see such lovely and plentiful libraries, bookstores, local authors, events and oh so much more put on each month for and by the book-devouring denizens of the North Bay.

As a species, North Bay Bookworms are fascinating to observe—they are most commonly sighted lurking between well-stocked shelves, running their fingers over the book spines and covertly smelling the pages when they think no one is looking. Due to the rainy days and long nights of winter, North Bay Bookworms have been hibernating and will, with spring, tentatively turn their sights once more toward the outdoors. Or at least they’ll think about it, especially with a holiday like Valentine’s Day on its way.

Although the actual act of reading tends to happen while one is alone, that doesn’t mean that all literary activities have to ascribe to the solitary tropes or themes of isolation—especially not during February, the month dedicated to celebrating love, connection, intimacy and community.

Luckily, Marin has somehow managed to ensure that bookworms are among the most busy bee socialites in any given city across the entire county. Between workshops, book clubs and author talks alone, choosing what fits into a full-up calendar for this February is almost hard. But in a month that’s all about love, there is no better way to celebrate than by catching up with like-minded bookworms at some or all of Marin’s upcoming literary events.

One place for local lovelorn bibliophiles to congregate is Book Passage, a lovely and lively book-centric establishment based in Corte Madera. Book Passage is best known for its continuous stream of events hosting accomplished authors, many of whom speak, provide advice and sign books for those who make the pilgrimage to the shop.

A Book Passage event to get excited about during this month of celebrating all things love is the much-anticipated appearance of the New York Times bestselling author of Come as You Are—and co-author of Burnout—Emily Nagoski, Ph.D. In a very appropriate theme for February, this Valentine’s Day, the adjacent author’s talk sees Nagoski presenting their science-backed musings and lessons on women’s sexual health and prosperity, specifically within long-term relationships.

Nagoski’s in-person appearance at the Corte Madera Book Passage location will also include a live online platform that will run simultaneously. Those interested in attending Nagoski’s Book Passage appearance, either online or at the bookstore, can tune in at 6pm on Feb. 8. Tickets for the events may be bought online for $34—this pricing includes a pre-signed book.

Another Book Passage event that fits perfectly into February’s theme of Valentine’s Day and love is the Susan B. Katz special event for kids ages three to seven. This children’s literary event is set to take place at 11am on Feb. 10 at the Corte Madera Book Passage store. At this event, Katz will read from Share Your Love, her playful book of rhymes meant to engage and teach children about the wonders of sharing love with oneself and others.

Also, on Feb. 10 at the Corte Madera Book Passage location, the Left Coast Writers will convene for their Pre-Valentine’s Day Fundraiser for the Women’s Daytime Drop-In Center in Berkeley. This All You Need is Love fundraising event will take place at 2pm, and guests can have shared refreshments, company and support.

And if anyone is feeling like a bit more of a Valentine’s adventure for voracious readers, consider catching the Larkspur Ferry to attend one of Book Passage’s many events in the Ferry Building of Marin’s sister city of San Francisco.

For those who are single and learning to love it, consider hopping across the bay on a boat to see Ph.D.-holding Bella DePaulo’s Feb. 13 appearance in the San Francisco Ferry Building. This event promises to be a perfectly appropriate place to be pre-Valentine’s Day—especially since DePaulo will be talking all about her book, Single at Heart, The Power, Freedom and Heart-Filling Joy of Single Life.

And for those who want all the literary themes of love for less cost, consider staging a meet-cute at the closest library instead. Marin County’s array of public libraries also offers up another place for book lovers to get out and about this February—and whether one is looking for friendship, romance or just a place to go that isn’t the four walls of one’s own home, libraries are always there for loitering locals (those who are both lucky in love and lovelorn alike).

For instance, the Mill Valley Public Library has an eclectic array of social occasions suitable for all sorts of bookworms to break out of their shells and into the social scene this month. The book clubs available through this library alone are incredibly in tune with the needs of a county that reads.

And for those who enjoy classic literature, the classics book club is just finishing up Agatha Christie’s A Murder Is Announced. Other book clubs include the Building Bridges to Poetry Book Club, the Civic Minded Book Club, the Crime Book Club, the Great Escape Book Club and the World Literature Book Club. Book clubs aside, on Wednesday, Feb. 7, the Mill Valley Library is hosting a crafting event for all ages to come out and create love notes for friends, family and romantic partners alike.

Book Passage is located at 51 Tamal Vista Blvd. in Corte Madera—the shop’s hours of operation span from 10am to 6pm Monday through Saturday and from 11am to 6pm Sundays. To learn more about Book Passage and its upcoming events, call 415.927.0960 or visit the Book Passage website at bookpassage.com.

The Mill Valley Public Library is at 375 Throckmorton Ave. in Mill Valley. For more information or to sign up for any and all of the workshops, book clubs and more, visit the website at millvalleylibrary.org or call 415.389.4292.

FeBREWary: San Rafael’s 2nd Annual Beer Fest

What better way to end dry January than by joining the citizens and city of San Rafael in a month-long celebration of beer?

That’s right, San Rafael’s second annual FeBREWary is here, which means it is officially time to show support for local libation-slinging businesses with a lot of beer and good cheer.

“From one end of downtown San Rafael to another is only a 20-minute walk, and there are so many cool places to grab a pint and a bite, meet a friend, listen to some music, play bingo or trivia and so much more,” said the executive director of the San Rafael Business Improvement District and the creator of San Rafael’s FeBREWary festivities, Sarah Tipple.

San Rafael’s FeBREWary celebrations span across all of downtown, from Lincoln Avenue to the West End specifically, and the participating bars, breweries, taprooms and pubs are getting on board with some cool brew-centric celebrations.

“This idea for FeBREWary in downtown San Rafael happened when I started this job in the beginning of 2022 and I’d heard about the SMART train’s Tracks to Taps program,” said Tipple. “They sent out an email and it said something like, ‘All aboard the SMART train for February 2023.’

“I thought, ‘Hey, I’m going to create a page on our downtown San Rafael website showcasing all the cool things that people can do at the highlighted breweries, taprooms and bars,” Tipple continued. “By creating a landing page to unite all the beer places in downtown San Rafael, it really gives people a place to go if they’re wandering about in February and hones in on the city’s cool beer scene too!”

The FeBREWary festivities include Pond Farm Brewing Company’s Battle of the Brewer Guild on Feb. 10, bingo on Feb. 15, a private tasting with the owners on Feb. 16, a barrel-aged bonanza spanning from Feb. 16 to 18 and a beer pong tournament on Feb. 17.

“Myself and my wife, Stephanie, we’ll be having a tasting of a gin barrel-aged Belgian peach beer along with some other beers and a chat on Friday the 16th,” said co-owner and head brewer at Pond Farm Brewing Co., Trevor Martens. “So that’ll be fun. And then all weekend we’re doing a barrel-aged bonanza with five different barrel-aged beers…and a beer pong tournament on Saturday the 17th.”

Alongside the Pond Farm Brewing Co. lineup, San Rafael’s FeBREWary includes State Room Brewing’s new brunch menu launch to match a fresh batch of IPA.

Flatiron will host Trivia and Karaoke Night on Tuesdays, Feb. 6, Feb. 13, Feb. 20 and Feb. 27. The nearby California Gold is offering a craft beer den golden hour every day until 6pm.

Cascabel plans to offer a $5 draft beer during happy hour, while the Tap Commons Tap Room will have a trivia night on the 7th. Meanwhile, the Mayflower Pub’s trivia night is every Wednesday at 7:15pm. Pint Size Lounge joins San Rafael’s FeBREWary festivities with beer deals all month. And Ranch Water Lounge has a live band lineup for the month of February.

“Having FeBREWary as a time of the year when we’re showcasing downtown San Rafael breweries, taprooms, bars and pubs is great, and it’s also something we can do all year long,” said Tipple. “But by having February as a fun program with the Tracks to Taps SMART train partnership, it starts the year off right by showcasing what downtown San Rafael has to offer.”

“I think since last year was our first year, we figured out what works and what didn’t,” said Tipple. “Next year, it would be fun to do some sort of a passport program and make it more like a scavenger hunt for beer and maybe get some sort of deal or discount, but we’ll see.”

For more information about San Rafael’s FeBREWary events, call 415.849.1874, email in**@***id.org or visit the website at downtownsanrafael.org/fe-brew-ary. Drink responsibly, and be sure to arrange public transportation home after participating in FeBREWary festivities.

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