Sunday, April 23, 2023

The Best Author Talk Ever!


 Monday, Leila Motley, author of Nightcrawling, the youngest Booker Prize finalist ever, captivated the sold-out Alley theater audience with a reading from Nightcrawling, her debut novel about a young, impoverished woman caught up in a sexual abuse scandal involving officers from the Oakland police department.  She gave a short reading but what was really impressive was her own background story. She has lived every writer's dream. Writing from "as soon as I learned to write," probably around seven years old, she sold Nightcrawling when she was 18. When she was enrolled in a literature class at Smith College, she mentioned to her professor, acclaimed author Ruth Ozeki, that she'd written a novel.  Ozeki asked to see it and when she read the manuscipt, referred Motley to her own agent. 13 editors clamored to buy it and at the book auction, Oprah appeared.  She'd read the manuscript and wanted to feature this teenager's book on her show.  Can you believe this is real?  The book came out last year, became an instant best seller and was nominated for the prestigious Booker Prize. What was equally amazing was this young woman's poise during the interview after her reading.  She pointed out that at many events, she's too young to join the other presenters at a bar.  She says she's not too worried about the proverbial "sophomore slump" that many authors experience when their second books don't live up to the promise of the first.  Nightcrawling is raw and gritty and at times almost painful to read, but who cares?  It's one in a million.  What will Leila Motley accomplish in the next five or ten years, I'm expecting great things. 

Sunday, April 16, 2023

INPRINT SENIOR MEMBER WORKSHOP CELEBRATION: A READING

                              You're invited to a reading at the Evelyn Rubenstein Jewish Community Center 

                                                     5601 S. Braeswood, Board Room, 1st Floor

                                                                Sunday, April 23 at 3:00 pm

                                                    Tickets are free but reservations required

Join us to celebrate the stories of the senior memoir class as we give readings of our work, sharing pieces                                   about our lives, families, communities and neighborhoods.

Sunday, April 9, 2023

Cathing Up

 Where have I been these last few months?  Sick most of January (not COVID, an infection), working on a writing project in February and on taxes in March,  But now it's April and I am ready to catch up.

First, Happy 60th birthday to my son Michael.  He checked and it's the only time in his whole life that his birthday has been on Easter.  But it's always on Passover.  We're having a family luncheon to celebrate next Saturday.

Between bouts of illness and writing and taxes, I watched the Oscars--disappointing. Everything, or Anywhere or Whatever made no sense to me.  I watched March Madness--disappointing.  The Houston Cougars bombed out and so did the Texas Longhorns.

I have been streaming Yellowjackets (spoiler alert--they feasted on their friend) and Succession (another spoiler alert--Logan Roy is dead)  I've read a great non-fiction book, Underlands.  It's beautifully written but you have to be interested in what lies under the earth and the oceans and cities and bridges.  I loved it!  I read just one novel--Kane and Abel, about two men whose paths cross throughout their lifetimes.  

My memoir class is doing a reading at the JCC on April 23 at 3:00.  My essay is House of Memories.


 

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