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Lit Flicks is a new monthly collaboration between Litquake and Alamo Drafthouse, presenting the best films adapted from written works, and introduced by special guests. Lit Flicks bookstore, operated by Borderlands Books, will be open at all screenings.

More films to come: Legally Blonde (based on Amanda Brown's novel) and The American Friend (based on Patricia Highsmith's Ripley's Game)

But first...in February!

Steven Soderbergh's "Out of Sight"
Tuesday, February 25 • 7:30pm

Alamo Drafthouse & Cinema SF
$16

George Clooney. Handsome, classy, and undeniably the most suave man in Hollywood. He's one smooth operator, and no film exemplifies that better than OUT OF SIGHT. As Jack Foley, Clooney plays a bank robber who escapes from prison and winds up stuck in the trunk of his getaway car with U.S. Marshall Karen Sisco (Jennifer Lopez, in arguably her best role). After she's released, Sisco remains in hot, and I mean HOT, pursuit of Foley (and who can blame her?). Based on the novel by the legendary Elmore Leonard. Special guest speaker: Eddie Muller. Talk at 7:30 pm, screening at 7:50 pm. 

Get Tickets

Zora Neale Hurston: Stories from the Harlem Renaissance
Saturday, February 8 • 2:00pm
Museum of the African Diaspora

$10 general, $5 student/senior, free for MoAD members

Co-presented with MoAD

Released just in time for Black History Month, Hitting a Straight Lick with a Crooked Stick (Amistad Press) unveils an outstanding collection of stories brought together for the first time in one volume, including eight of Hurston’s “lost” Harlem stories, which were found in forgotten periodicals and archives. With readings and discussion from UC Berkeley African American studies professor Chiyuma Elliott, poet Tonya M. Foster, and bestselling novelist Margaret Wilkerson Sexton. Moderated by writer and radio journalist Jenee Darden. Audience discussion and book sales to follow.

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Homie: Poet Danez Smith
Wednesday, January 29 • 7:00pm
JCCSF
$20, Use LITQ25 for 25% off


Co-presented with JCCSF

Award-winning poet Danez Smith (Don’t Call Us Dead) is a groundbreaking force, celebrated for deft lyrics, urgent subjects and performative power. Join Smith as they read from and share their new collection, Homie, a magnificent anthem about the saving grace of friendship at a time when our country is overrun by violence, xenophobia, and disparity, speaking from within a body defined by race, queerness, and diagnosis. 
 With Safia Elhillo and sam sax.

Get Tickets
Shoah: A Film Screening 
Monday, January 27 • 9:00am - 8:00pm

Goethe-Institut San Francisco
FREE

Co-presented by Berlin International Literature Festival and Goethe-Institut SF

January 27, International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of the Holocaust, was introduced by the United Nations in 2005 to commemorate the Holocaust and the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp in 1945. To honor this day, and remind us all of the current growing popularity of anti-Semitism, cultural institutions around the world will participate in a global film screening of Shoah, the 1985 documentary by Claude Lanzmann. With a running time of 9½ hours, both surviving victims and perpetrators of the systematic extermination of Jews by the German Reich are given time to speak on camera.


Panel discussion will take place the following day on 1/28, 7pm - 9pm, on Holocaust education.
More Info

About Litquake
Litquake, San Francisco's annual literary festival, was founded by Bay Area writers in order to put on a week-long literary spectacle for book lovers, complete with cutting-edge panels, unique cross-media events, and hundreds of readings. Since its founding in 1999, the festival has presented close to 8,650 author appearances for an audience of over 183,000 in its lively and inclusive celebration of San Francisco's thriving contemporary literary scene. Litquake seeks to foster interest in literature, perpetuate a sense of literary community, and provide a vibrant forum for Bay Area writing as a complement to the city's music, film, and cultural festivals. 2020 Dates: Oct. 8-17. www.litquake.org

Litquake is grateful for the support of the following funders who help make our programming possible. Institutional Giving: California Arts Council, California College of the Arts, California Institute of Integral Studies, Center for the Art of Translation, Chronicle Books, Craig Newmark Philanthropies, Grants for the Arts, HarperOne, Margaret and William R. Hearst III Foundation, Miner Anderson Family Foundation, Mystery Writers of America, Northern California Chapter, The Bernard Osher Foundation, Stanford Continuing Studies, Yerba Buena Gardens Festival, Zellerbach Foundation. Individual Giving: Frances Dinkelspiel and Gary Wayne, Scott James and Gerald Cain, Nion McEvoy, Craig Newmark, Letetia and James Callinan, Greg Sarris and Ellen Ullman. Media Sponsors: San Francisco Chronicle, 7 X 7, KQED, Bay Area Reporter, Johnny Funcheap, and KALW 91.7


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