Brian Burns

Lewis Ginter: Richmond’s Gilded Age Icon

Original air date: August 12, 2011

“As a war hero, philanthropist and entrepreneur, Lewis Ginter was many things to Richmond. Performing integral missions for “Stonewall” Jackson and Robert E. Lee, Ginter was commended for gallantry on the battlefield and became affectionately known as the “Fighting Commissary.” After the war, Ginter was the first major marketer of the hand-rolled cigarette in America. He developed one of America’s first streetcar suburbs and built the magnificent Jefferson Hotel, a symbol of Richmond’s ambition and prosperity. But beyond the well-known history of this River City icon, there are many aspects of his personal and professional life that few know about. Join local writer Brian Burns as he delves into the hidden history of Ginter’s extraordinary life to fill in the gaps between Ginter the man and Ginter the legend.”

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Jack R. Johnson

An Animal’s Guide
to Earthly Salvation

Original air date: May 27, 2011

“An assistant at an urban veterinary clinic, Jeffrey Rawlings has decided to take a break from graduate studies and instead pulls nightshift at an animal hospital while studying the modern philosophers ¾ “from Kierkegaard to Marx” ¾ to no avail: wounded animals hound his existence. Jeffrey’s hypochondriac mother may be dying of ovarian cancer, his money-hungry sister needs bucks for her 40-year-old husband’s braces, and a heroin- hooked runaway is set on his seduction. Meanwhile, the neighborhood transvestite swears he is Billie Holiday raised from the dead. But the worst comes when his perpetually indiscrete Uncle Raymond winds up getting shot. Soon enough, Jeffrey learns, it’s not just the animals that need a cure.”

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Tameka B. Hobbs

To Collect, Protect, and Serve:
Behind the Scenes at the Library of Virginia

Original air date: April 22, 2011

“The Library of Virginia is the oldest cultural institution in the state and the official archive (a place where history is kept) and library of the Commonwealth. In the book To Collect, Protect, and Serve: Behind the Scenes at the Library of Virginia, Archie the Archivist, Libby the Librarian, and Connie the Conservator guide young readers through a visit to the Library of Virginia.”

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Elizabeth Thalhimer Smartt

Finding Thalhimers

Original airdate: January 21, 2011

“Finding Thalhimers traces the author’s obsessive quest to find the true story of her father’s family and their beloved department store. Riveting and poignant, this multigenerational narrative weaves together history, biography, and memoir into an unforgettable portrait of an ambitious American retail family.” – findingthalhimers.com

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Gene Cox

Six Pigs in a Tub:
A Grammar Repair Kit

Original air date: January 7, 2011

“People who understand correct grammar demand it. Those who don’t, assume it’s unnecessary.  So I turned to humor to convey the message. The most often asked question is about the title, “Six pigs in a Tub.”  I usually respond by saying, you have to buy the book to find out. But my little quip has not worked well so I will explain.  Pigs are individual things and are therefore numbered. There ARE six pigs in a tub.  But there IS six gallons of water in the tub. Six gallons is a singular measurement of something…..in this case, the water. If you look in the tub you will see that there ARE six pigs in it, but there IS six gallons of water….a singular measurement.

Correcting someone’s grammar is dangerous. It’s almost as bad as challenging someone’s politics or religion.  But with a little help from my pigs, I have taken on a matter that most people don’t care about.” – Gene Cox

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