Literary calendar for week of Aug. 31

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BURES/MILLER: Frank Bures talks about “Pushing the River: An Epic Battle, a Lost History, a Near Death, and Other True Canoeing Stories” in conversation with Scott Miller, leader of team Missouri River Speed Record, setting the Guinness world record for paddling the entire 2,350-mile length of the Mississippi River. 6 p.m. Tuesday, Next Chapter Booksellers, 38 S. Snelling Ave., St. Paul.

CRACKED WALNUT: As part of its “Expression!” fall poetry festival, this chapter of the League of Minnesota Poets hosts a reading by members of the Cracked Walnut poetry workshop. 10 a.m. Saturday, Highland Park library, 1974 Ford Parkway, St. Paul.

MARK DOTEN: Minnesota native and librettist presents “Whites: Stories.”  7 p.m. Thursday, Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin  Ave. S., Mpls.

KLECKO/HAMPL: Poet Danny Klecko, whose latest collection is “We Talked About New York,” teams with Patricia Hampl, retired University of Minnesota professor, award-winning writer and winner of a MacArthur “genius” grant to talk about their experiences in the Big Apple and whatever else they find interesting. “You are going to hear two of St. Paul’s most important divas,” Klecko promises. 6 p.m. Sept. 7, Next Chapter Booksellers, 38 S. Snelling Ave., St. Paul.

(Courtesy of Running Wild Press)

WILLIAM LOVING: California-based author discusses his novel “Blue Earth River” with author James C. Nelson.  A former journalist at the Minneapolis Star Tribune and Los Angeles Times, Loving tells a heartfelt story about a couple in a small Minnesota town that publishes a beloved advice column written by Molly. When she descends into dementia, her husband takes over the column, offering more in-your-face advice. Set during the Trump years, the story embodies divisions in the town, drugs, alcohol, global capitalism and more. 7 p.m. Thursday, Next Chapter Booksellers, 38 S. Snelling Ave., St. Paul.

POETRY READING: With Minnesotans Sandra Sidman Larson (“And Now What Shall We Do? A Memoir in Poetry”) and Margaret Hasse (“Belongings”). 4 p.m. Sept. 7, SubText Books, 6 W. Fifth St., St. Paul.

POETRY NIGHT: With Minnesotans Joyce Sutphen and Connie Wanek. 7 p.m. Wednesday, Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls.

LAUREN ROBERTS: Internationally bestselling Michigan-based author discusses her novella “Fearful: A Powerless Story,” set within the world of her Powerless trilogy and a companion to the first book, “Fearless.” 7 p.m. Sept. 7, Hopkins Center for the Arts, 1111 Mainstreet, Hopkins, presented by Magers & Quinn. Ticketed event. Go to magersandquinn.com.

What else is going on

“Speculative Whiteness: Science Fiction and the Alt-Right” by Jordan S. Carroll, published by the University of Minnesota Press, won a World Science Fiction Hugo award for best related work. Carroll’s book makes the connection between the alt-right and some strands of science fiction. Carroll, who lives in the Pacific Northwest, defines “alt-right” as a fascist movement.

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Minnesota’s first K-pop convention coming to St. Paul RiverCentre

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St. Paul RiverCentre will host what organizers are touting as Minnesota’s first K-pop convention on Saturday, Sept. 6, beginning at 11 a.m.

The event will feature music performances, dances, influencers, beauty and food vendors and merchandise. Performers include Ted Park, BE:MAX and Big Ocean, with influencer Beom Han also appearing.

KPopMinneCon will celebrate the Korean pop music community in the Midwest, according to presenter MNKPopConnect.

President and founder Toby Vang and COO Andrew Melendres said they discovered a strong K-pop dance community in the Midwest and grew tired of traveling to conventions on the coasts. Vang founded MNKPopConnect in 2022 and now they are launching their own K-pop convention in St. Paul.

“We want to convey that experience for our fans and help bring the presence of K-pop and the dance culture to the Midwest,” Vang said.

This will be the first major K-pop gathering in the Twin Cities and the largest of its kind in the Midwest, according to Vang. Minnesota is home to one of the largest populations of Korean adoptees in the U.S., with an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 residents. Melendres says he’s amazed by how K-pop fans show up for concerts and exchange gifts out of love for the genre. He adds that Midwest hospitality makes the event fun, and Minnesota fans are the most welcoming.

“Here, it’s so much more diverse because people identify with the music and identify with the community so much more. For me personally, I think that’s what’s going to make this one stand out,” Melendres said.

Vang and Melendres said the convention will offer an all-in-one ticket covering both entry and concert access, with flexible in-and-out privileges. Activities include panels, dance challenges, and Korean and Asian food trucks serving a variety of cuisines.

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Photo gallery: After 67 years in St. Paul, USS Ward gun moving to museum

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The gun that fired the first American shot of World War II will be moved from its longtime home in St. Paul this week, exactly 80 years after that defining conflict of the 20th century came to an end.

The destroyer USS Ward’s No. 3 deck gun, which a crew of St. Paulites used to sink a Japanese submarine off Pearl Harbor in Hawaii on the morning of Dec. 7, 1941, has been on display outside the Veterans Service Building on the Capitol mall for 67 years.

On Tuesday — the anniversary of Japan’s 1945 surrender to the Allied Powers — the gun will be transferred to the Minnesota Military & Veterans Museum at Camp Ripley in Little Falls, where it will take pride of place in a new 20,000-square-foot facility that is expected to open next fall, said Randal Dietrich, the museum’s executive director.

“The first thing visitors will see is this Ward gun,” he said. “It’s an opportunity and an obligation to do right by our World War II veterans — to make sure that history is preserved for the benefit of generations to come.”

The 11,000-pound gun, which was loaned to the state of Minnesota by the U.S. Navy in 1958, has served as the backdrop for World War II veteran reunions, Pearl Harbor Day commemorations and other events over the years. But decades spent exposed to the elements have taken their toll.

The state’s Capitol Area Architectural and Planning Board approved the gun’s removal earlier this year after a months-long review process.

“We are losing it to time and the weather,” Dietrich said. “The gun that announced American entry into World War II is an important artifact. It needs to be indoors and professionally preserved.”

The museum, which has taken over the loan of the gun from the state, will spend the next 12 to 18 months restoring it before installing the gun as part of an exhibit that will tell the story of the Naval reservists from St. Paul who crewed it during the war. The gun remains the property of the Navy.

Dietrich asks members of the public who would like to attend the removal ceremony on Tuesday to RSVP at mnvetmuseum.org/vjday-rsvp.

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Skywatch: So much going on this September

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Sadly, summer comes to an end this month. But the great news for stargazing this September is that there’s so much happening in the heavens and along with that, there’s still plenty of great summer constellations to see. Sunsets are also earlier.

The full moon this month is next Sunday. Most years, the September full moon is considered the annual harvest moon, but this one is a bit too early to be labeled as such. By definition, the harvest moon is the closest full moon to the autumnal equinox. So, the next full moon on Oct. 6 will officially be the Harvest Moon for 2025.

Saturn is returning to the early evening sky just in time for autumn. On Sept. 21, Saturn reaches what’s known as opposition, when Saturn and  Earth are at their minimum distance from each other this year, just over 795 million miles. Believe it or not, that’s considered close for Saturn. During opposition, Saturn and the sun are at opposite ends of the sky, making Saturn available all night long, rising in the east at sunset and setting in the west at sunrise. Oppositions between Saturn and Earth happen every 378 days as Saturn and Earth travel in their respective orbits around the sun.

To the naked eye, Saturn will appear as a moderately bright star barely above the eastern horizon toward the end of evening twilight. It’s easy to spot since it’ll be the brightest star-like object in that part of the sky. As tempting as it is to train your telescope on Saturn early in the evening, you’re better off waiting until at least 10 or 11 p.m. to let it get higher in the sky, above the blurring effects of our atmosphere close to the horizon. Over the last year or so, viewing Saturn through a telescope has been a bit of a bummer because its beautiful but very thin ring system, composed mainly of ice, has been nearly on edge from our vantage point on Earth. This happens about every 14 years. The good news is that the angle of the ring system will very gradually begin to open up by early December and will continue that trend until 2032. In the meantime, though, the good news is that with the ring system pretty much out of the way, you can easily see many of Saturn’s moons, especially Titan, its largest satellite.

(Mike Lynch)

The very best time for serious evening stargazing this September will be the last two and a half weeks of the month. That’s when the moon and all its light will be out of the evening sky. This is prime Milky Way galaxy time. Now, every single star we see in the sky is part of our home galaxy and relatively speaking, fairly nearby. But if you live in the dark countryside or can travel away from light pollution, you’ll see much more. Look for a milky ribbon of light reaching across the entire sky from the southwest to the northeast horizon, nearly bisecting the entire celestial dome. That’s the Milky Way band, the combined light of billions and billions of stars that make up the plane of our own Milky Way Galaxy. The brightest part of the band is on the southwest side near the horizon, where there’s a constellation that really looks like a teapot tipping toward the right. That’s the constellation Sagittarius, which, according to Greek mythology, is a centaur, a half-man, half-horse shooting an arrow. That bright puff of steam above the spout of the teapot is in the direction of the center of the Milky Way galaxy, about 26,000 light-years away. That area of downtown Milky Way would be a whole lot brighter except there’s a lot of opaque gas and dust in the way.

Elsewhere in the evening sky is a mixture of both summer and autumn constellations you can explore with the help of the attached map. Among them in the northern sky are Ursa Major and Minor, the Big and Little Bears, respectively. There’s also a sideways “W” in the northeast that outlines the throne of Cassiopeia the Queen. The great autumn constellation, Pegasus the winged horse, is rising in the eastern sky after sunset. Look for the big diamond of stars that outlines the torso of Pegasus. This is called the “Square of Pegasus.”

Attached to the left side of the big diamond is the constellation Andromeda the Princess, and within that is the Andromeda Galaxy. That’s the next-door neighbor of our Milky Way Galaxy, more than 2 million light-years away. You should be able to spot it with binoculars or a small telescope, appearing as a faint patch of light. If it’s really dark where you are you may even spot it with the naked eye.

Enjoy the longer nights of September.

Mike Lynch is an amateur astronomer and retired broadcast meteorologist for WCCO Radio in Minneapolis/St. Paul. He is the author of “Stars: a Month by Month Tour of the Constellations,” published by Adventure Publications and available at bookstores and adventurepublications.net. Mike is available for private star parties. You can contact him at mikewlynch@comcast.net.

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