Articles by: Charleston Currents

REVIEW:  Lafayette in the Somewhat United States

REVIEW: Lafayette in the Somewhat United States

Reviewed by Jennifer Lively: Sarah Vowell’s latest work, Lafayette in the Somewhat United States, published last fall, quickly found an audience among readers whose daily lives have been inundated with stories regarding the Founding Fathers. From the latest Broadway sensation, Hamilton, and talk of changing the face on the $20 bill, to patriotic bellows seeking to “make America great again,” the country’s revolutionary lore is seemingly at an all-time high.

by · 06/27/2016 · 1 comment · Features, Reviews
SUMMEY:  The Emanuel Nine, one year later

SUMMEY: The Emanuel Nine, one year later

By Elliott Summey | June 17, 2015, was a night that changed Charleston’s history and landscape forever. Although it started as a normal weekday for most of us as we tended to our families, late meetings and dinner, it became anything but normal.

While at a local hospital visiting a family member who had a stroke less than 24 hours before, I received a phone call about the events that had just unfolded at the Mother Emanuel AME Church. What was said on that phone call would never explain the sights and sounds that our first responders and those on the scene heard and saw firsthand.

by · 06/27/2016 · Comments are Disabled · My Turn, Views
GOOD NEWS:  Institute to focus on environment, health, justice

GOOD NEWS: Institute to focus on environment, health, justice

The day-long Community Leaders Institute (CLI) will start 10 a.m. July 16 in the auditorium of Charleston County Public Library, 68 Calhoun St., Charleston, to explore localized impacts of climate change that require community-level action. Also in Good News: Marcus Amaker is city’s first poet laureate; Votes sought for USS Yorktown; Reducing recycling contamination.

by · 06/27/2016 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
PHOTO:  Joyful sounds

PHOTO: Joyful sounds

The joyful sounds of the Imani Milele Children’s Choir from Uganda filled the air last week as officials renamed the St. Andrews Regional Library in West Ashley after the late librarian Cynthia Graham Hurd, who died in the Emanuel AME Church massacre last year. The event, held on what would have been Hurd’s birthday, brought tears to some, but the children’s choir’s sounds brought smiles and delight to those who attended.

by · 06/27/2016 · Comments are Disabled · Photos
MYSTERY:  Made of glass and wood

MYSTERY: Made of glass and wood

Light pierces through this architecturally-important, glass-roofed structure, but where is it? Third correct guess wins a pair of ticket vouchers to a game with the winning Charleston RiverDogs. Send your best guess to: editor@charlestoncurrents.com — and make sure to include the name of the town in which you live. (Photo by Avery Brack.)

by · 06/27/2016 · Comments are Disabled · Mystery Photo, Photos
CALENDAR, June 20+:  From new library name to new beer festival

CALENDAR, June 20+: From new library name to new beer festival

On the calendar for June 20, 2016 and beyond: Renaming of the St. Andrews library, BrewMoo Beer Festival, Carolina Day lecture, bird walks.

by · 06/20/2016 · Comments are Disabled · calendar
REVIEW:   Big Little Lies

REVIEW: Big Little Lies

Big Little Lies, a novel by Liane Moriarty; Reviewed by Pamela Felton | Jane Chapman is a young, single mother moving into a new community with her inscrutable little boy, hoping to start a new life. She leaves behind a hurtful past full of secrets that eventually unravel in the novel as she is taken under the wings of her new friends, Madeline and Celeste. But her past is not the only thing that unravels.

by · 06/20/2016 · Comments are Disabled · Features, Reviews
FOCUS: 8 S.C. facts to know for Carolina Day

FOCUS: 8 S.C. facts to know for Carolina Day

By Jeff Quinton | June 28 is Carolina Day in South Carolina. The Battle of Sullivan’s Island took place on June 28, 1776. Troops in the South Carolina Militia successfully repelled an attack from the Royal Navy on Charleston Harbor. The S.C. troops occupied an unfinished fort (Fort Sullivan, later renamed Fort Moultrie after the militia commander) made of logs from palmetto trees and the spongy nature of the wood helped repel the British cannonade. The 2nd South Carolina Regiment and the 4th South Carolina Artillery occupied the fort that day.

by · 06/20/2016 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
GOOD NEWS:  Charleston Social Media Day to be June 30

GOOD NEWS: Charleston Social Media Day to be June 30

Staff reports | The third annual Charleston Social Media Day (#CHSYOU) on June 30 will include an educational component — panel discussions on crisis communications in Charleston and #squadgoals on how to work with the social community, bloggers and online influencers. The event, which will be held 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Charleston Museum, is a celebration of social media platforms and their use in the promotion of Charleston as a tech-forward city.

by · 06/20/2016 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
MYSTERY:  Government building

MYSTERY: Government building

Not to state the obvious, but this is a pretty impressive government building somewhere, but where? And what is it? Send your best guess to: editor@charlestoncurrents.com — and make sure to include the name of the town in which you live.

by · 06/20/2016 · Comments are Disabled · Mystery Photo, Photos