ALBANY, NY (09/25/2018) (readMedia)-- Albany, NY - Paul Grondahl, Director of the New York State Writers Institute at the University at Albany, will be the featured speaker at a Friends of the New York State Library event on Monday, October 15, 2018 as part of a year-long celebration of the 200th anniversary of the founding of the New York State Library.
Grondahl will discuss his biography Corning: Albany Icon, Albany Enigma, which was a source for the current off-Broadway production of Sharr White's "The True." The program is scheduled to begin at 12:15 p.m. in the Librarians' Room on the 7th floor of the State Library, 222 Madison Avenue, Cultural Education Center, Albany.
The event is free and open to the public. Preregistration is encouraged but not required. For more information, call 518-474-2274 or visit http://www.nysl.nysed.gov/programs/.
Grondahl, a former longtime reporter at the Albany Times Union, where he still contributes a weekly column, will talk about his decades-long association with the State Library. He has made great use of one of the state's most important cultural resources since he arrived in the capital city for graduate school in English at UAlbany in 1981.
Grondahl joined the Times Union in 1984 and wrote many stories about the State Library over the years, including profiles of the past three State Librarians: Joseph Shubert, Janet Welch, and Bernard Margolis. As the author of political biographies about Albany Mayor Erastus Corning 2nd and Theodore Roosevelt, Grondahl made extensive use of the State Library archives during his research. In particular, for his Roosevelt biography, Grondahl dug into the extensive Roosevelt collection of Lyall Squair, a retired Syracuse librarian. The State Library acquired Squair's collection in 1998.
"The New York State Library is an extraordinary resource for historians, journalists, researchers and the general public. It is a crown jewel in the Empire State and we should mark in a meaningful way its 200th anniversary," Grondahl said. "It is one of the nation's great research libraries and I am reminded of the historical importance and extraordinary reach of New York State each time I call up a book from the stacks, inspect a rare letter or manuscript, undertake online research or stop by to hear a scholar speak at the State Library," he said.
"I am a proud bearer of a New York State Library card and I appreciate the privileges all borrowers receive," Grondahl said. "I am especially grateful for the Friends of the New York State Library for their tireless volunteer efforts. I thank all of them for their devotion to our state's literary and cultural heritage."
The talk is co-sponsored by the Friends of the New York State Library and the NYS Writers Institute.
For more information on the Writers Institute, visit https://www.nyswritersinstitute.org
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