Area Arts Events: 06-19-15

Steve Kaminsky featured in Woodlands lunch show
PERRYSBURG –  Steve Kaminsky  will perform  June 24 at 12 noon in a  lunch time concert in the shelter
area of Woodland Park, 201 E. Boundary.   
A singer, songwriter and guitarist Kaminsky described has style as similar to Gordon Lightfoot, with a
little Joe Cocker mixed in.
Kamimsky and his wife, Kristen, operate Artforms Gallery on downtown Perrysburg. He is a jeweler and
engraver and she is a glassblower.
For more information contact  Main Art-ery at 419 324 4758 or email  [email protected]
The House Band at home on farmers market stage
PERRYSBURG – The House Band will be performing their spontaneous blend of rootsy rock, folk and blues 
June 25 at 7 p.m. on the Commodore lawn in conjunction with the farmers market.
 The House Band  describes its  style as  "rock, blues, folk, and country in one big bowl of
soup!"
 Performing will be John Grafing, trumpet, Mark Williams, drums, Mark Karamol, vocals and guitar, Wes
Linenkugel, on keyboard, mandolin, bass and other string instruments, and Isaac Snyder, guitar.
‘Fat Girl’ author Gibbons to sign books at bookstore
PERRYSBURG – Brittany Gibbons, blogger and author, will sign copies of her book "Fat Girl Walking:
Sex, Food , Love, and Being Comfortable in Your Skin…Every Inch of It" at Books-A-Million Levis
Commons, June 27 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.  
In the book Gibbons sets out to destroy the ridiculous myth that every woman who is overweight hates her
body and herself.
Anesa Miller’s novel ‘Our Orbit’ honored
Anesa Miller is the recipient of a Creative Writing Fellowship from the Ohio Arts Council.
Her debut novel, "Our Orbit," will be released from Booktrope Publishing on June 23 and is a
finalist in the Next Generation Indie Book Awards for Best Regional Fiction.
Miller studied writing at Kenyon College and the University of Idaho. She also has training in Russian
language and literature. She currently divides her time between Bowling Green  and the Pacific
Northwest.
"Our Orbit" is literary fiction about four children from the poor side of town of an
Appalachian town who are separated after their mother’s untimely death and their father’s arrest for
anti-government activity.