The Columbus Dispatch
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Richard Thompson: The guitarist and songwriter has a new memoir: “Beeswing: Losing My Way and Finding My Voice, 1967-1975,” recounting his experiences during the turbulent 1960s. In a virtual event presented by Gramercy Books, Thompson will be interviewed at 7 p.m. Tuesday by Alec Wightman whose Zeppelin Productions has promoted singer-songwriter concerts in Columbus since 1995. Admission costs $5. The admission fee will be waived with the purchase of Thompson’s new book. Go to www.eventbrite.com or www.gramercybooksbexley.com.
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Stephen Post: The Columbus Metropolitan Library will present a live chat about kindness why it is good for your health and your community with the co-author of “Why Good Things Happen to Good People: How to Live a Longer, Healthier, Happier Life by the Simple Act of Giving.” The virtual event will begin at 7 p.m. Wednesday. To register, visit www.columbuslibrary.org.
A visit from a prison guard to Ohio’s attorney general sets in motion a deep-reaching investigation in “The Sacrifice of Lester Yates,” an exciting political thriller by Columbus author Robin Yocum.
In Yocum’s 2011 “Favorite Sons,” Hutchington “Hutch” Van Buren was the prosecuting attorney for Summit County, but when he was 15, he lived in a little town near Steubenville, and he and three friends were involved in an accident that killed another boy. The man who was convicted of the boy’s murder threatened to ruin Hutch’s chances to become Ohio’s attorney general, but Hutch came clean and won the election.
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