Thomas wrote:With the kind of reverence I give to the library system, that sounds really great--although, I am sure there are no royalties connected to it

I donated a copy to my local library and the following week a local women's group asked me to speak at one of their meetings. I haven't a clue what I shall say. I'll take all good suggestions.
Watch out for those womens groups - you'll just be eye-candy for them
I guess people are generally looking to be informed, occasionally amused and generally have a sense that you knew your stuff but were at ease with them. Invite questions at the end and be prepared to do some book signing.
In terms of what you say, a bit of background to why you came to write the book, some anecdotes related to what's in there, one or two points you really want to get across (I always think of them as "if you take nothing else away, remember this"). In any talk, a little bit of humour settles you and the audience, not jokes but maybe a humorous story or experience.
I still carry a prompt card in with me to talks / presentations, even though I've usually practised exactly what I want to say. The prompt allows me a little confidence boost/backup, or even an opportunity to venture from the planned path and know where I'm coming back to. The prompt can be as simple as a set of 6-10 bullet points (even single words for each), to something slightly more detailed. I often don't look at the prompt for the whole time I'm talking
I went to a presentation by a guy called Peter Jordan this week (local mushroom expert). Stuff I remembered
- A couple of stories about fly agaric (used by the Norse berserkers before battle to raise strength and send them into a frenzy; his advice when someone in UK took it, was to put him in a straightjacket and then rope him to the bed - they didn't do the latter and he tore the straightjacket in two)
- Story about how he went from picking mushrooms with his grandfather, to picking some for the pub and to that pub becoming known as "the mushroom pub"
- His passion for nature, using and appreciating what was there and how certain europeans have retained this more than we have.
- His aspirations to write nature books for children to restore the knowlwedge that's been lost
- The key to mushroom picking is positive identification. I knew this anyway I guess, but the point was well stressed.
- The story of how he showed some aborigines in Australia a mushroom they could safely eat that they believed you couldn't (and from their recollection, no-one had eaten before).
- Why you carry a stick to see of wild boar in Italy - not because you could fend it off (you probably couldn't), but because they're short sighted and if you see one you hold the stick like a gun - which they assume it is & hence scarper!
Plenty more I can recall, but I guess these stuck out well, so might give you some idea of the sort of stuff that sticks in the mind.
Hope this helps
Ian
p.s. found our first (definitively identified) poisonous mushroom on the way to the talk. Not deadly, but would make you ill.