Story Hour: L is for Library (ages 3–5)
Story Hour: L is for Library (ages 3–5)
3–5 year-olds and their grown-ups are invited to join us for a Story Hour full of facts, fiction, and fun!
3–5 year-olds and their grown-ups are invited to join us for a Story Hour full of facts, fiction, and fun!
Take a dive into the Library's archives and discover our rich 104-year history during this expert-led presentation.
3–5 year-olds and their grown-ups are invited to join us for a Story Hour full of facts, fiction, and fun!
This interactive program features songs, rhymes and stories in English for very young children.
Take a dive into the Library's archives and discover our rich 104-year history during this expert-led presentation.
Join us for an evening of food and friendly competition!
Join the creators of the book The Animal Games in Paris for a reading and art demonstration!
Practice creative writing, meet other teens, and share your work.
Novelists Ayşegül Savas and Chris Knapp discuss their respective novels, The Anthropologists and State of Emergency.
3–5 year-olds and their grown-ups are invited to join us for a Story Hour full of facts, fiction, and fun!
Ivy Pochoda and Katherine Pancol discuss Pochoda's latest thriller, Sing Her Down, a disastrous game of cat-and-mouse between a prisoner and her former cellmate.
Take a dive into the Library's archives and discover our rich 104-year history during this expert-led presentation.
Join filmmaker Lisa Molomot for a discussion of her award-winning documentary Missing in Brooks County, about migrants on the U.S.-Mexico Border
3–5 year-olds and their grown-ups are invited to join us for a Story Hour full of facts, fiction, and fun!
Is populism on the rise or in retreat in the U.S. and Europe?
Take a dive into the Library's archives and discover our rich 104-year history during this expert-led presentation.
Participate in movie trivia and games, then enjoy a screening of an action film.
Psychoanalyst Jamieson Webster discusses her forthcoming book On Breathing: Care in a Time of Catastrophe.
3–5 year-olds and their grown-ups are invited to join us for a Story Hour full of facts, fiction, and fun!
For the first Entre Nous event of the rentrée, the American Library in Paris and the Institute for Ideas and Imagination will host at Reid Hall a conversation between two of the greatest contemporary literary voices: Colm Tóibín and Guadalupe Nettel.
Journalist Simon Kuper discusses his new memoir, Impossible City: Paris in the Twenty-First Century, with fellow journalist Pamela Druckerman
How are women writers writing about the body today? A Festival America event with Lauren Groff, Isabela Figueiredo, Szilvia Molnar, and Rachel Donadio.
Take a dive into the Library's archives and discover our rich 104-year history during this expert-led presentation.
Put on your running shoes, and join us for a game of Capture the Flag!
Join us for a morning event dedicated to music and movement!
Find your voice and craft a compelling college admission essay.
Journalist Cody Delistraty contemplates our changing understanding of grief in his new book The Grief Cure: Looking for an End to Loss.
3–5 year-olds and their grown-ups are invited to join us for a Story Hour full of facts, fiction, and fun!
Edel Rodriguez discusses his graphic memoir Worm: A Cuban American Odyssey, a coming of age story of a family’s displacement in exile.
Take a dive into the Library's archives and discover our rich 104-year history during this expert-led presentation.
Participate in movie trivia and games, then enjoy a screening of a scary film.
Friends of the Library (50€ – 249€) will receive invitations to unique, donor-only programs.
Folio Society (250€ – 1 999€) supporters will be invited to the annual Book Award ceremony, as well as donor-only programs.
Gutenberg Society (2 000€ – 9 999€) patrons will have the opportunity to host a dinner with an Evenings with an Author sponsored by GRoW @ Annenberg speaker, as well as all the benefits listed above.
Ex Libris Lux Society (10 000€ and above) sponsors will be invited to an annual dinner with Ex Libris Lux donors and Library leadership, as well as all the benefits listed above. They will also be invited to an exclusive cocktail dînatoire with our Gala speaker.
A charitable gift from your estate is simple to implement and is easy to change if you should need to access the assets during your lifetime. If you would like to include a gift to the Library in your will, ask your estate planning attorney to add this suggested wording to your will or living trust. Please make sure to use the Library’s correct legal name appears in all final documents as: The American Library in Paris Inc.
Unrestricted Gift: I give, devise, and bequeath to the American Library in Paris Inc, (insert dollar amount) Dollars* to be used for its general purposes.
Residuary Bequest: I give, devise, and bequeath to the American Library in Paris Inc , (insert percentage amount) percent of the residue of my estate to be used for its general purposes.