William Tortolano Home » Programs » Book A Program » Reading and Discussion » Reading and Discussion Facilitators » William Tortolano
Dr. William Tortolano was a professor of fine arts and music and college organist at Saint Michael’s College for 50 years. He is an author, composer, conductor, and organist, and has performed at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. He was a visiting fellow at Cambridge University and had a fellowship at Yale in Medieval Studies.
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Phone: (802) 899-3564
Series Led by William Tortolano Canadian Cultural Diversity By Vermont Humanities | April 5, 2018
Travel through Canada with four critically acclaimed books that make manifest Canada’s cultural diversity.
Posted in Cultural and Regional Exploration , Reading and Discussion , Series
Tags: Brown , Burrington , Bye , Clift , Gerber , Hays , Heneveld , Logan , luskin , Mieder , RCohen , Schley , tortolano , Wright
Immigrants: Coming to America By Vermont Humanities | March 16, 2018
These stories capture the experience of immigrants journeying to a new land, finding their place, and feeling at home
Posted in Bridging the Generations , Reading and Discussion , Series
Tags: Berolzheimer , Brown , Cerulli , Clift , Gerber , Gonzalez , Hays , Heneveld , lang , Logan , luskin , McCloud , Mieder , RCohen , tortolano , Wizansky , Wright , Young
Portraits of the Artists By Vermont Humanities | April 5, 2018
These books feature fictional interpretations of famous artists.
Posted in For the Literary At Heart , Reading and Discussion , Series
Tags: Brown , Burrington , Bye , Cerulli , Clift , Gerber , Heneveld , lang , Logan , McCloud , Mieder , RCohen , tortolano , Turner , Wizansky , Wright , Young
Vermont Humanities*** February 19, 2018
Poet Sarah Audsley joined us at the Taconic Mountains Ramble State Park for Words in the Woods.
Humanities Camps are filled with reading and writing projects, field trips, and outdoor activities.
We won a 2020 Schwartz Prize for best public humanities programming in the U.S. for Vermont Reads 2019: “March: Book One.”
We supported Historic New England’s “More than a Market” project that explored the experiences of new Americans through food markets.
Our free public events help bring the power of the humanities to communities across Vermont.