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MEET THE WRITER: Former Arroyo Grande resident and Cal Poly student Rachael Herron, now of Oakland, returns to read from ‘Pack Up the Moon,’ her new novel about a tangled family drama with a hopeful ending. She appears on Saturday, March 8, at 11 a.m. in the SLO Barnes & Noble, and she’ll answer questions after the reading as well as sign copies of her book. Credit: PHOTO BY DAN HARDESTY
Abe Gibson
Garden Gallery employee
“You think you know, but you have no idea.”
MEET THE WRITER: Former Arroyo Grande resident and Cal Poly student Rachael Herron, now of Oakland, returns to read from ‘Pack Up the Moon,’ her new novel about a tangled family drama with a hopeful ending. She appears on Saturday, March 8, at 11 a.m. in the SLO Barnes & Noble, and she’ll answer questions after the reading as well as sign copies of her book. Credit: PHOTO BY DAN HARDESTY
Linda Jaramillo
retired
“A great mom.”
SEE THE WORK: Just Looking Gallery (746 Higuera St., SLO; 541-6663) features the work of Dennis Mukai, which appeared in retrospective last Saturday, Feb. 22.
Maya Weeks
student
“I don’t want a tombstone. I plan to be cremated and spread in the ocean.”
SEE THE WORK: Just Looking Gallery (746 Higuera St., SLO; 541-6663) features the work of Dennis Mukai, which appeared in retrospective last Saturday, Feb. 22.
Bradford Smith
student
“I want my face carved into the tombstone in 3D with an inscription that says I died doing something heroic, whether I did or not.”