8th Provincetown Book Festival!

September 20th–September 22nd, 2024

FREE EVENTS FOR READERS, WRITERS, AND BOOK LOVERS

Art by Mikhail Zarovny

Meet acclaimed authors and guest speakers visiting our famed arts colony for three days of free events, including readings, interviews, conversations, and the 2024 Rose Dorothea Award presentation.

Readings, interviews, gatherings, and more

About our visiting guest authors and speakers

Featured updates about the Festival

2024 Rose Dorothea Award

The Provincetown Book Festival opens on Friday night, September 20, at 6:00 pm, at the Provincetown Library, with a reading and reception for the recipient of the Rose Dorothea Award. The Rose Dorothea Award is given annually by the Board of Library Trustees to a person with a strong connection to the Outer Cape who has made a significant contribution through the written word. The 2024 recipient is Heidi Jon Schmidt.
 
Heidi Jon Schmidt grew up on her parents’ makeshift farm in Northwestern Connecticut, graduated from Bennington College and went on to the University of Iowa Writers Workshop. She came to Provincetown for a fellowship at the Fine Arts Work Center in 1982. There she met her husband and settled with him, raising their daughter Marisa and writing five books, the last two of which are set on the Outer Cape. These are the novels The House on Oyster Creek and The Harbormaster’s Daughter.
 
Heidi has also published stories and essays in The New York Times, The Atlantic, Grand Street, and Yankee, and have been featured on National Public Radio. She has won awards including the O. Henry, the Ingram-Merrill, and the James Michener. Heidi says it is her ambition to write stories full of the feelings of real life, the surprises and poignancy of human connections, the comedy and heroism inherent in our everyday doings.

 “Reading Local”:
Six Cape Cod writers open the Festival on Saturday, September 21 at 9:30 a.m.

The Provincetown Book Festival will kick off at 9:30 a.m., Saturday, September 21, with a curated reading by local authors, chosen by writer and editor Russ Lopez.  The selected writers are A. D. Metcalfe, Steven Myerson, Rani Neutill, Kai Potter, and Virginia Reiser. The sixth reader will be Marcene Marcoux, who was selected in 2022 but was unable to attend.

 For this event, dubbed “Reading Local,” Russ Lopez reviewed more than two dozen submissions from local and regional writers in all genres. Mr. Lopez commented, “This was hard! There were [many] others who would be interesting reads, but there just isn't space.”

 A.D. Metcalfe is a member of Grub Street and sits on the Board of Directors for the Cape Cod Writers Center. She is also a host and co-producer for Books and the World, a literary cable TV and YouTube program. Her award-winning debut novel, Street, (the first in a series) was released in December of 2023. Several of her short pieces have been published in various on-line and print magazines, and her children's book, Mousebound, was published under the pen name, Leslie Ann George. She was born and raised in New York City, where her experiences continue to inspire much of her writing. For several decades, she made Provincetown her home.

 Steven Bruce Myerson is a poet, playwright, director, and performer whose work has been presented at theaters and festivals all over the Northeast, as well as on Cape Cod. On the Cape, his plays have been presented at the Barnstable Comedy Club’s Playwright Festival, for a series of monologues at WHAT, and at Provincetown Theater for the 24 Hour Plays. His lyrical play, “TO THE EXTREME!,” received a Winter Read at Provincetown Theater. As a poet, he has read at many venues on Cape Cod and at the Fine Arts Work Center where he was twice named a Summer Scholar. He is honored to have been previously chosen to read his poetry for “Reading Local.” As an actor, he premiered his solo show, “LOST LOVE POEMS,” at the Providence Fringe Festival/Wilbury Theater Group, and can be spotted in “The Gilded Age” on HBO Max.

 Rani Neutill’s memoir, Do You Know How Lucky You Are, explores life with her mentally ill Bengali immigrant mother, narrating the desperate drive to care for her, despite a history of violence and neglect, and to save her from a false prophet bent on taking advantage of her. She is a recipient of a 2022 Massachusetts Cultural Council fellowship. She has taught ethnic American, Asian American, and postcolonial literature at Harvard, Yale, and Johns Hopkins University. Currently, she teaches creative writing and Asian American literature at Tufts University and Emerson College. Her work has appeared in The New York Times Book Review, ELLE.com, Al Jazeera English, CNN, Buzzfeed, Cosmopolitan, The Washington Post, and The Los Angeles Review of Books, among other publications. She is the co-editor of the book Bangtan Remixed: A Critical BTS Reader about the K-pop group BTS, forthcoming from Duke University Press.

 Kai Potter is a writer for the Provincetown Independent and newly published author. His first  book is Noticing. The Quiet Season on Outer Cape Cod, a collection of nature essays written over the last three years. It focuses on the lesser known and very rich quiet months of the Outer Cape. Kai is an artist, writer, surfer, and landscape designer born and raised on the outer edge of Cape Cod. He grew up amongst the scrub pines, sand dunes, wild oceans, and colorful characters that shape the landscape there. He is often found wading through roadside meadows or lying flat, cheek pressed to the ground, in pursuit of a closer look.

 Virginia “Ginny” Reiser was a Senior Editor of G.K. Hall’s Large Print division in Boston after graduating from Indiana University with a degree in literature. After studying Italian cooking in Tuscany, Ginny ran Pranzo Café in Brewster as well as a successful catering business. She finally returned to her first love, which was writing. She took classes at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown and later earned her MFA in writing at Vermont College of Fine Arts. Ginny died in 2016. Her work will be read by her husband, Gary Urgonski, and his second wife, Carolyn Duch.

 Marcene Marcoux is a cultural anthropologist with a Master’s and a Ph.D. from Northwestern University. She has been a Professor of Anthropology at Framingham State University and Boston University. She is the author of Cursillo: Anatomy of a Movement. She has written extensively for China Business Weekly, publishing more than forty articles for China’s largest English business weekly, focused on leadership and strategic thinking. She also served for fourteen years on Provincetown’s Historic District Commission, dedicated to the town’s historic preservation. Marcene was chosen for “Reading Local” at the 2022 Provincetown Book Festival, but was unable to read.

Michael Cunningham, Kelly Link, Vinson Cunningham, Andre Dubus III and others to appear

We’re pleased and excited to announce that this year’s Provincetown Book Festival will feature the prestigious writers Michael Cunningham, winner of the Pulitzer prize for The Hours and author of the new novel Day, and Andre Dubus III, well-known for his many novels and author of a new memoir in essays called Ghost Dogs: On Killers and Kin!

In addition, many other wonderful authors will appear in conversation with each other, reading and speaking about the process of writing and the contents of their new books. A finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for criticism, Vinson Cunningham has just published his first novel, Great Expectations, about the campaign and subsequent White House years of a Black American president who remains nameless. You can ask him about it at the Provincetown Book Festival.

Recipient of the so-called “genius grant,” MacArthur Fellow Kelly Link has been critically acclaimed for her magical realist short stories, notably Magic for Beginners. She will be speaking about her first novel, The Book of Love, at the Festival.

For our complete schedule of author readings, conversations, and interviews, click on “Events.”

To make reservations for any or all of these events, go to Humanitix.com.

Meanwhile, we’re happy to drop more names of authors you will be able to see and hear at the upcoming Festival:

Vanessa Chan, author of The Storm We Made, a novel about Malaysian immigration;

The poet Chen Chen, whose latest collection is entitled Your Emergency Contact Has Experienced an Emergency

Stacey D’Erasmo, author of a new book of essays on art and artists, The Long Run;

Stephen McCauley, author of the novel, You Only Call When You’re in Trouble;

Adam Moss, who interviewed many writers and artists about their process for his book, The Work of Art;

Cleyvis Natera, author of the novel, Neruda on the Park, in part about gentrification;

Rebecca Orchant, co-owner of Provincetown’s own Pop & Dutch, whose new book is entitled Simmering: A Kitchen Memoir;

Jose Santiago Sanchez, whose queer debut novel Hombrecito is generating huge buzz;

National Book Award finalist Alejandro Varela, author of the LGBT novel The Town of Babylon;

Mako Yoshikawa, acclaimed novelist and author of the new memoir about her father, Secrets of the Sun.

The Provincetown Book Festival is supported by many sponsors, including the Friends of the Provincetown Library, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, Provincetown Cultural District, and the Provincetown Tourism Fund.

All events will be at the Provincetown Public Library, 356 Commercial Street in Provincetown, MA.

All are free and open to the public.
ASL interpretation available on request (deadline September 15): ncinnater@clamsnet.org

Tickets through Humanitix are strongly suggested to reserve a space.

Visit our Instagram page for latest announcements.

Questions? Please email Nan Cinnater, Book Festival Director.