Saturday, June 1, 2019 @ 1 pm
Barnes & Noble Kingston, Ulster Plaza, 1177 Ulster Ave, Kingston, NY 12401
Author Reading/signing event and songs of the Sixties with singer/songwriter Olivia Quillio.
Author: Mark Berger
Listen to host Joe Donahue speaking with Mark Berger on The Roundtable, WAMC Radio
On Monday, May 13, @ 11:30 am, the erudite and insightful interviewer Joe Donahue conversed with Mark Berger about his book Something’s Happening Here: A Sixties Odyssey from Brooklyn to Woodstock.
Listen to the interview on WAMC’s The Roundtable.
Mark Berger Reading at The Book House of Stuyvesant Plaza
Thursday, May 16, 2019 @ 6 pm
The Book House at Stuyvesant Plaza, Albany, NY 12203
Author Reading and songs of the Sixties with singer/songwriter Olivia Quillio
May 11th Book Launch at Howl! Happening, NYC
Celebrate Mark Berger’s Book Launch
Something’s Happening Here: A Sixties Odyssey from Brooklyn to Woodstock
Howl! Happening
6 East First Street, at the corner of Extra Street, NYC 10003
Yep, there is now an Extra Street in Old NYC
Musical Guest, Olivia Quillio performing songs from the Sixties
Something’s Happening Here now available for purchase!
The decade comes alive in this whirlwind ride through the Sixties that begins in Brooklyn and ends at Woodstock.
Mark’s innate and pronounced “easy writer” brilliance makes this read absorbing and moving.
Read full review at Grego Applegate Edwards, Grego’s Yakety-Yak
Something’s Happening Here is now available for purchase online at the site of your choice, or put in a request at your local bookstore!
Paperback at SUNY Press
Paperback and Kindle at Amazon
Paperback and NOOK Book at Barnes & Noble
Audiobook coming soon.
Grego Edwards Gets It
Grego Edwards is one busy writer. He’s a book and music reviewer, an essayist, and a writer. I am honored that he took the time to read, and review my memoir, Something’s Happening Here: A Sixties Odyssey from Brooklyn to Woodstock.
I am doubly pleased with Grego’s review: he gets what it’s about and he is recommending it to others.
Here are a couple of key quotes:
“Mark’s innate and pronounced ‘easy writer’ brilliance makes this read absorbing and moving.”
“The ecstasy of ‘60s lifestyle liberation can be felt between the lines and sometimes within the lines of the story.”
“He was paying attention and face it, not everybody understood like Mark obviously did.”
“Read this and appreciate some focused prose, do!”
For the full review, read on.
Thanks Grego, much appreciated.