

Book of Days
Directed by Ashly Will When a suspicious death rocks a small Missouri town, one woman decides the truth is worth more than the community's peace. It's a riveting American thriller, part murder mystery, part moral reckoning.
Time & Location
May 08, 2026, 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Columbia Center For the Arts, 215 Cascade Ave, Hood River, OR 97031, USA
About
In the heart of a small Missouri town, Ruth Hoch has landed the role of a lifetime: Joan of Arc in the local community theater's production of Saint Joan. But when her employer, the powerful owner of the town's cheese factory, is killed in what everyone calls a hunting accident, Ruth can't shake the feeling that something is terribly wrong.
As she digs deeper, she finds a community more comfortable with comfortable lies than with dangerous truth. Neighbors close ranks. Secrets multiply. And Ruth, like the saint she's been cast to play, must decide how far she's willing to go for what she knows is right.
Winner of the American Theater Critics Association Award for Best New Play, Book of Days is Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Lanford Wilson at the height of his powers. a razor-sharp, deeply American thriller that weaves murder mystery, community drama, and moral reckoning into a single unforgettable evening.
Fridays & Saturdays at 7pm | Sundays at 2pm | May 8–23
"Wilson sees the world clearly and represents it without grudge-bearing or edulcoration, and keeps the play moving forward with unflagging vivacity in plot and subplots alike." — John Simon, New York Magazine
"A wonderfully executed black comedy that burrows slowly beneath the cherry surface of contemporary American small-town life, and down into the darker impulses that underpin it. You don't know whether to laugh or be appalled by much of what you see, so you laugh and are appalled." — Alistair Highet, Hartford Advocate
"A significant addition to the Lanford Wilson canon… combines Wilson's signature character-based whimsy with an atypically strong narrative and politically charged underpinnings." — Chris Jones, Variety
"Lively storytelling by one of our best playwrights." — Lawrence DeVine, Detroit Free Press