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Show C-2 Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, January 5-8, 2019 The Park Record Book club creates dialogue 2 FOR 1 ENT R ÉES Offer Expires January 9, 2019 Not valid with any other offers or promotions. Not valid on take out orders. Good with the purchase of a second, single item of equal or lesser value. Reservations are recommended. No separate checks. Please present coupon prior to ordering. A 20% service charge will be added to the bill before the discounted amount. as always we are OPEN to the PUBLIC 435-649-5900 | 1765 Sidewinder Drive | LespriPrime.com TANZI PROPST/PARK RECORD C Katrina Kmak, left, Park City Library youth services librarian, and Kate Black, library assistant, have started an LGBTQ+ book club that meets the second Wednesday of the month. The club gives teens a safe place to discuss LGBTQ issues and themes that are found in literature. T h Monthly meeting discusses LGBTQ books and authors SCOTT IWASAKI The Park Record Katrina Kmak, Park City Library’s youth and Spanish services librarian, and Kate Black, a library assistant, wanted to begin to facilitate dialogue around the LGBTQ themes that have become more and more present in young adult fiction as public conceptions of gender and sexuality identity have changed. So, they formed an LGBTQ+ book club geared toward teens that meets the second Wednesday of each month at Lucky Ones Coffee, located at the library. The next meeting will be from 4:305:30 p.m. on Jan. 9. “We wanted to create a club where people can come with a book or graphic novel that they have read,” Black said. “People don’t even have to have a book in mind or to have read an LGBTQ book to come and participate.” The goal is to create a safe space place to discuss LGBTQ literature, she said. “I would love this club to be diverse and include books from a wide array of LGBTQ voices,” Black said. “And it’s always a bonus when the books we talk about are written by an LGBTQ author.” During last month’s meeting, Black shared Emily M. Danforth’s “The Miseducation of Cameron Post,” a novel that spawned a film adaptation of the same name that made waves at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. “I also brought in a few adult fiction books and graphic novels, and introduced them to the club,” she said. In addition to discussing the books, the topic turned to classic literary figures who identified as LGTBQ, whether openly or not. “So many of them – Alice Walker, James Baldwin, Virginia Woolf and Oscar Wilde – are LGBTQ, but you wouldn’t really know it,” Black said. Other topics discussed included “queer coding” and “queer baiting,” concepts derived from reading works between the lines. Authors use queer coding when their characters are written with attributes that allude to LGBTQ traits without explicitly referencing their sexuality, according to Black and Kmak. It’s always a bonus when the books we talk about are written by an LGBTQ author...” Kate Black, LGBTQ+ Book Club They both feel queer baiting is more negative and quoted the LGBT Fiction Guide (lgbtfiction. com) as a resource for the following definition. “Queer baiting is a term coined for a relatively recent socio-cultural phenomenon in which people in the media (usually television and films) add or play up homoerotic tension between two same-sex characters to attract queer viewers and others interested in seeing more LGBT representation with no intention of ever giving the characters a romantic or sexual relationship in canon.” An example of queer coding is the relationship between Idgie Threadgoode and Ruth Jamison in “Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe,” a novel pub- lished by Fannie Flagg in 1987, according to Kmak. “The relationship insinuates a lesbian relationship without naming it -- most likely due to the era in which it was published,” she said. Queer baiting examples include the Sherlock Holmes fandom that include movies, books and TV, especially the BBC TV version, Black said. “(They have) taken issue with the homoeroticism played up between Sherlock and Watson to increase ratings,” she said. “They are doing it for sensationalism or to exploit the LGBTQ community.” While the idea of creating an LGBTQ+ book club had been percolating in Black’s mind, she was spurred on by her interactions with some of the Park City Library’s patrons. “I’m part of the LGBTQ community, and people have come in and ask if there would ever be an LGBTQ+ book club here,” she said. “So I know it’s been on people’s minds.” Kmak said the club fits in with the Park City Library’s mission. “Libraries strive to support intellectual freedom, and we give people the opportunity to read anything they want at anytime,” she said. “We also strive to have our patrons to get educated about anything as well. As someone who isn’t LGBTQ, I think this is a wonderful opportunity for members of our community or visitors of our community to learn about diverse populations.” LGBTQ+ Book Club When: 4:30-5:30 p.m. on the second Wednesday of the month Where: Lucky Ones Coffee at the Park City Library, 1255 Park Ave. Cost: Free Web: parkcitylibrary.org STEM CELL THERAPY FOR PAIN PRESENTED BY: Join us for Our Seminars Held at our Park City Office Tuesday, January 8th — 12:00pm Tuesday, January 15th — 12:00pm Tuesday, January 22nd — 12:00pm Tuesday, January 29th — 12:00pm JOHN LAWRENCE M.D. DO YOU SUFFER FROM… REGAN ARCHIBALD, LAC, DIPL OM Board Certified Physicians specializing in Regenerative and Functional Medicine • Tendonitis • Dementia • Autoimmunity • Chronic Pain • Thyroid Issues • Lung Issues • Nerve Damage • Inflammation Call Today 435-640-1353 Find out if Surgery-Free, stem cell treatments can help relieve your joint pain and get your life back! • Back Pain • Knee Pain • Shoulder Pain • Hip Pain • Osteoarthritis • Neuropathy • Plantar Fasciitis East West Health 1790 Sun Peak Dr., #A-102 Park City, UT 84098 |