Saturdays, 10 am-11:30 am Pacific, April 18 through May 16
Choose your own price
more info
Full admission for the last five weeks of the John Williams class, and all the recordings.
Full admission for the last five weeks of the John Williams class, and all the recordings.
Choose your own price
more info
Full admission for the last five weeks of the John Williams class, and all the recordings.
Full admission for the last five weeks of the John Williams class, and all the recordings.
$125.00
with fees $141.67
Choose your own price
more info
Full admission to the last five weeks of the John Williams class, plus $50 donated to financial assistance.
Full admission to the last five weeks of the John Williams class, plus $50 donated to financial assistance.
Choose your own price
more info
Full admission to the last five weeks of the John Williams class, plus $50 donated to financial assistance.
Full admission to the last five weeks of the John Williams class, plus $50 donated to financial assistance.
$175.00
with fees $197.47
Choose your own price
more info
Full admission to the last five weeks of the John Williams class, plus $100 donated to financial assistance.
Full admission to the last five weeks of the John Williams class, plus $100 donated to financial assistance.
Choose your own price
more info
Full admission to the last five weeks of the John Williams class, plus $100 donated to financial assistance.
Full admission to the last five weeks of the John Williams class, plus $100 donated to financial assistance.
$225.00
with fees $253.28
Augustus won the National Book Award in 1973.
It tells the story of what it was like being the 19-year-old boy Julius Caesar selected to succeed him, and the birth of the Roman Empire. Diligently researched and then brilliantly brought to life, it reveals the inside story — both from Augustus's private thoughts as well as the perspectives of people who knew him.
Anyone interested in the Roman Empire will relish the sensory and philosophical details, and the vividness of the account of life in those days. Anyone interested in father/daughter relationships will be fascinated to realize that the only person Augustus couldn't control was his own daughther.
After you join the club by buying a ticket, get a copy of Augustus and read to page 72. We'll discuss those first 71 pages at our first meeting.
Part 2 of the John Williams Book Club.