Grand Opening: The Eagle & the Butterfly Books
In celebration of the brick and mortar opening of Evansville’s newest healing arts bookstore, The Eagle & the Butterfly Books in Goosetown, downtown Evansville, you are invited to a collective healing experience and short presentation at the Koch Planetarium and Evansville Museum. From the comfort of your seat, you will hear a bit about the bookstore and go on a sensory journey (guest presenters to be announced!).
There will be time remaining afterwards to connect with others, enjoy food and a live DJ set, and purchase books as desired. Admission fee is $7 and will go towards the price of a book purchase at the event, online (code to be provided) or during store hours, Saturdays 9 AM to 12 PM at 300 Adams Avenue.
Please share widely with your social work and healing arts colleagues!
Academics, therapists of any kind, bodyworkers, and don’t forget about the aestheticians, nail artists, hair stylists and any other artists whose healing touch always leaves you feeling like new. As well as the clients who are deep in their healing journey. This offering is for all of us.
About The Eagle & the Butterfly Books
The Eagle & the Butterfly Books is the sister business to Here Too Healing Arts Services. Founded by healing justice advocate, astrologer, somatic social worker, healing arts practitioner and IU School of Social Work adjunct faculty member Lee-Ann Assalone, both businesses are social enterprises built to align healing work with the realities of life in paradigms of social inequality. Within the context of a living Earth in a vast universe, with a vision of collective liberation, both businesses offer tools to imagine and live in to new futures and possibilities.
The Eagle & the Butterfly Books was created to support clinical and academic social workers, non-profit organizations, teachers, healing arts folks, and individuals on a healing journey in bridging the divide between micro need and macro reality.
In understanding how our individual challenges fit within a larger social context, perhaps we ask new questions. Perhaps we are equipped to release the fantasy of individual health in a sick society, and take new steps towards collective healing. So that our healing journeys themselves support the culture building that will serve us all.