Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Left Coast Writers Book Launch Series, 5:30pm
Linda Watanabe McFerrin and Laurie McAndish King
Monticello Inn, 121 Ellis Street, San Francisco, CA
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Left Coast Writers Book Launch Series, 5:30pm
Linda Watanabe McFerrin and Laurie McAndish King
Monticello Inn, 121 Ellis Street, San Francisco, CA
Monday, December 11, 2006
Left Coast Writers Reading Series, 6pm
Book Passage, Ferry Plaza, San Francisco, CA
Monday, December 4, 2006
Left Coast Writers Literary Salon, 7pm
Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera, CA
Monday, November 13, 2006
Left Coast Writers Reading Series, 6pm
Anita Jones-Roehrick, Mardi Louisell
Book Passage, Ferry Plaza, San Francisco, CA
Ted is a San Francisco-based literary agent and a member of the Association of Authors’ Representatives, Ted represents a wide range of journalists, scholars and other authors of intelligent, adult nonfiction, with a particular interest in current affairs, biography, history, business, science, environment, pop culture, lifestyle, travel, health and medicine.
Ted has broad experience on both the business and editorial sides of publishing. Before opening the agency he held several senior publishing positions in licensing, marketing, PR and business development, including VP Marketing & Business Development at Nolo Press and the head of electronic publishing and licensing for Miller Freeman.
Ayelet Waldman’s mystery series, the Mommy-Track Mysteries, published by Berkley Prime Crime, a division of Penguin Putnam, draws on her experience of the sunny SoCal world of mall-hopping and Mommy-and-Me, and her working familiarity with the criminal mind, with courtrooms and jail cells, with a darker Los Angeles of drug dealers and bank robbers, gangbangers and boiler-room scam artists, that she gained during her time as a criminal defense attorney.
Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, the daughter of first- and second-generation Japanese-American parents, was born in 1934 in Inglewood, California. During World War II, when more than 110,000 Japanese-Americans were interned in camps set up by the U.S. government, Houston and her family spent nearly four years in one of those camps, Manzanar, located in the desert between California and Nevada. Her book, Farewell to Manzanar, co-authored with James D. Houston, is the true story of her family’s experience during and after internment. Houston has also written a novel, The Legend of Fire Horse Woman, as well as many essays and short stories first collected in Beyond Manzanar: Views of Asian American Womanhood and now widely anthologized. She is the recipient of numerous honors, including the Humanities Prize and the Christopher Award, both for the screenplay Farewell to Manzanar; an award from the National Women’s Political Caucus and the Wonder Woman award; the U.S.-Japan Cultural Exchange Fellowship; an Arts American Traveling Lectureship in Asia; and a Rockefeller Foundation residency at Bellagio, Italy. Houston lives in Santa Cruz, California, with her husband and three children.
Gail Tsukiyama was born in San Francisco, California to a Chinese mother from Hong Kong and a Japanese father from Hawaii. She attended San Francisco State University where she received both her Bachelor of Arts Degree and a Master of Arts Degree in English with the emphasis in Creative Writing. Most of her college work was focused on poetry and she was the recipient of the Academy of American Poets Award. She is also the first author to receive the Asia Pacific Leadership Award from the Center of the Pacific Rim and the Ricci Institute. A resident of the San Francisco Bay Area, she has been a part-time lecturer in Creative Writing at San Francisco State University, as well as a freelance book reviewer for the San Francisco Chronicle. During 1997 to 1999, she sat as a judge for the Kiriyama Book Prize and is currently Book Review Editor for Pacific Rim Voices.
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Charles E. Toombs practices in the areas of tax, business and real estate law. He counsels clients in different areas of sophisticated tax planning for their business and investments. He advises clients in matters regarding organizing, operating, merging and dissolving various business entities with particular emphasis on those clients involved in the construction industry. He advises clients in matters involving intellectual property, including trademark law and acts of unfair competition. He also advises nonprofit entities on operational issues and compliance with applicable tax requirements. Mr. Toombs represents clients regarding issues before the State Board of Equalization, the State Franchise Board, and the Internal Revenue Service.
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For two years, Michael Shapiro roamed the world interviewing leading travel writers where they live. He met Jan Morris in Wales, Tim Cahill in Montana, Frances Mayes in Tuscany, and Peter Matthiessen at the east end of Long Island. He caught up with
Pico Iyer in California and met Bill Bryson in New Hampshire just before Bryson moved back to England. The result is “A Sense of Place: Great Travel Writers Talk About Their Craft, Lives and Inspiration,” a fascinating collection of conversations ranging from how travel has deepened each writer’s understanding of the world to how these authors developed the skills and discipline to succeed as writers. Shapiro also interviewed Paul Theroux, Isabel Allende, Simon Winchester, Arthur Frommer, Redmond O’Hanlon, Jonathan Raban, Rick Steves, and others.
Shaffer loves to travel and turn her travels into art. She has
performed with the California Shakespeare Festival, Theatre
Works, A Traveling Jewish Theatre, and other companies as well as
touring worldwide with her solo shows, Miss America’s Daughters
and the award-winning Let My Enemy Live Long! Her most recent
play, Baby Taj, which premiered in 2005, was named one of the Top
Ten Shows of the Year by the “SF Chronicle,” the “Oakland
Tribune,” and the “San Jose Mercury News”; it was also nominated
for a National Theatre Critics Steinberg Award.
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Terry Ryan, the sixth of Evelyn and Kelly Ryan’s ten children, is the author of The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio: How My Mother Raised 10 Kids on 25 Words on Less (Simon & Schuster).Â
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She is the writing half of the cartooning team of T.O. Sylvester, whose single-panel cartoons have appeared in the pages of The San Francisco Chronicle,Â
Ms. Magazine, Mother Jones, Saturday Evening Post, Saturday Review, Boy’s Life, Datamation, Vegetarian Times, Bay Guardian, San Francisco Magazine, Women’sÂ
Glib Cartoon Calendars, and a number of textbooks and anthologies. T.O. Sylvester’s literary cartoons ran weekly in the San Francisco Chronicle for 16 years (1983-1999).Â
Terry Ryan, the sixth of Evelyn and Kelly Ryan’s ten children, is the author of The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio: How My Mother Raised 10 Kids on 25 Words on Less (Simon & Schuster).Â
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She is the writing half of the cartooning team of T.O. Sylvester, whose single-panel cartoons have appeared in the pages of The San Francisco Chronicle,Â
Ms. Magazine, Mother Jones, Saturday Evening Post, Saturday Review, Boy’s Life, Datamation, Vegetarian Times, Bay Guardian, San Francisco Magazine, Women’sÂ
Glib Cartoon Calendars, and a number of textbooks and anthologies. T.O. Sylvester’s literary cartoons ran weekly in the San Francisco Chronicle for 16 years (1983-1999).Â
Anneli is a UC Berkeley graduate, a journalist, a coauthor of five offbeat travel books with her husband Kristan Lawson (most recently “California Babylon” and “Weird Europe”), and an author of three books, the latest of which is Party of One: the Loners’ Manifesto. She is also a columnist for crimemagazine.com and a book reviewer for the San Francisco Chronicle. You can visit Anneli’s website at www.annelirufus.comÂ
Jeff Phillips is a Senior Travel Editor at Sunset Magazine and has written for a number of national magazines. His articles on travel and the environment have been recognized with four Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Awards.Â
MELBA PATILLO BEALS is a dynamic keynote speaker, coach, author,
and a former news reporter for KQED and NBC-affiliate, KRON-TV
with numerous appearances on Oprah Winfrey, Fresh Air, Good
Morning America and C-Span’s Booknotes. She is the author of
“Warriors Don’t Cry” and “White is a State of Mind.”
Â
In 1957, while most teenage girls were listening to Buddy Holly’s
“Peggy Sue,” watching Elvis gyrate and collecting crinoline
slips, a 15-year-old MELBA PATTILLO was escaping the hanging rope
of a lynch mob, dodging lighted sticks of dynamite, and washing
away burning acid sprayed into her eyes by segregationists
determined to prevent her from integrating Little Rock’s Central
High School. As a teenager, she was caught up in the center of a
civil rights firestorm which stunned this nation and altered the
course of history.
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SUSAN (SUZY) PARKER, an award-winning freelance writer andÂ
outdoor enthusiast, is the author of “Tumbling After: PedalingÂ
Like Crazy After Life Goes Downhill,” a memoir that tells theÂ
story of how her life changed in a split second when a freakÂ
cycling accident left her husband, Ralph, permanently paralyzedÂ
below the shoulders. In this memoir devoid of self-pity and toldÂ
with candor and wry humor, Suzy chronicles the transformation ofÂ
her household into an oddball family of caretakers.Â
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Suzy Parker reports on life with Ralph in the “San FranciscoÂ
BRAD NEWSHAM has taken four global back-packing trips and turned
two of them into memoirs: “All the Right Places” (Random House,
1989) and “Take Me With You” (Travelers Tales, 2000). From 2002
to 2005, he was the driving force behind Backpack Nation, a
non-profit organization he founded in order to “transform the
West’s roughly 3 million travelers into an army of global
ambassadors, and thereby help to save our world.”
Â
For the past 21 years, Brad has worked as a San Francisco taxicab
driver (”No, I was never the Chronicle’s ‘Night Cabbie’,” he
says). He is currently working on a book about a year behind the
wheel.
Â
Wes “Scoop” Nisker is author of the enduring classic Crazy WisdomÂ
and the widely acclaimed Buddha’s Nature, and is Editor-in-ChiefÂ
of the Buddhist journal Inquiring Mind. For the past twenty-fiveÂ
years he has been both a popular San Francisco Bay Area radioÂ
personality and a nationally known Buddhist meditation teacher.Â
PAUL McHUGH, is the outdoors feature writer for the “SanÂ
Francisco Chronicle,” and the editor of “Wild Places: 20 JourneysÂ
into the American Outdoors” (Foghorn Press, 1996), a book aboutÂ
North American journeys. Paul is also the author of “The SearchÂ
for Goodbye-to-Rains” (Daedalus Books, 1980). His love of theÂ
outdoors originally was developed in the flatlands of theÂ
Everglades and the Florida Keys. Ski mountaineering, as well asÂ
sea kayaking (he won a surf kayak world championship with TeamÂ
USA in 1988), are among his passions. Paul will talk about his recentÂ
Boston born Harvard grad Malcolm Margolin founded Heyday Books in 1974. Heyday publishes books on California history, natural history, literature, travel and Native American life. A talented author–his works include numerous books, essays, and articles–Malcolm is also the recipient of many honors and awards including The Fred Cody Award for lifetime achievement from the Bay Area Book Reviewers Association and a California Council award for the Promotion of History “in recognition of efforts to preserve and advance the history of California Indians.” He is the founder of Clapperstick Institute, co-founder of The Inkslingers and Native California network and serves on the board of the California Studies Association, River of Words, the San Francisco Bay Area Book Council, the Yosemite Association, Save the Bay and the Djerassi Resident Artists Program. The books that he has written include The East Bay Out: A Personal Guide to the East Bay Regional Parks, The Earth Manual: How to Work on Wild Land Without Taming It, The Way We Lived: California Indian Reminiscences, Stories and Songs and The Ohlone Way: Indian Life in the San Francisco-Monterey Bay Area. The books that he has published are too numerous to mention. He is an extremely popular lecturer and presenter. He also publishes News from Native California and was the original publisher of Bay Nature.Â
Krista Lyons-Gould is the VP of Editorial for Avalon PublishingÂ
Group and works in APG’s California division, in Emeryville,Â
overseeing editorial and production for the travel referenceÂ
imprint, Avalon Travel Publishing, and for the trade imprint,Â
Seal Press. Most of her time is focused on Seal Press, which isÂ
dedicated to publishing important books by and for women for theÂ
last 25 years, from “Getting Free,” the first book to announceÂ
domestic violence as an issue, and women’s travel anthologies,Â
such as “France, A Love Story: Women Write About the FrenchÂ
Get the INSIDE SCOOP on “What We’re Looking For” from aÂ
publisher’s point of view from LINDY HOUGH, Publisher andÂ
Editorial Director of North Atlantic Books and Frog. Ltd. NorthÂ
Atlantic Books, located in Berkeley, has consistently been ratedÂ
as one of the 10 Fastest Growing Independent Publishers of theÂ
last ten years nationwide by Publishers Weekly. Hough spends muchÂ
of her time on product acquisitions.Â
Â
Lindy Hough is a poet and fiction writer who founded NorthÂ
Atlantic Books in 1977 with her husband, Richard Grossinger.Â
Tess Uriza Holthe has a Bachelor’s in accounting. She was born and raised in San Francisco. When the Elephants Dance is her first novel, inspired by her family’s first hand account of World War II Philippines. She is currently finishing a second novel.
SUSAN GRIFFIN is a well-known writer and poet, known for
combining genres in innovative and powerful forms. Her latest
work, “The Book of the Courtesans: A Catalogue of Their Virtues,”
was published in 2001. Sierra Club Books published “Woman and
Nature,” a work that is considered an environmental classic, in a
new edition in 2000. “A Chorus of Stones: The Private Life of
War,” a finalist for both the Pulitzer Prize and the National
Book Critics Award, won the prestigious BABRA award and was a New
York Times Notable Book for 1992. Her essays on gender and
society were collected in “The Eros of Everyday Life,” in 1994.
Bronx-born Jeff Greenwald moved west when he was 19 and has lived in Oakland, California for the past 15 years. Since 1979 he has traveled throughout the world, working as a writer, photographer and visual artist.
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His first book, Mr. Raja’s Neighborhood: Letters from Nepal, was published in 1985; many consider it a “cult classic” of Asian travel literature. Shopping for Buddhas, published in 1990, was reissued by Lonely Planet in 1996. The revised edition won the Lowell Thomas Gold Medal for Best Travel Book of the Year and has been translated into five languages. The Size of the World: Once Around Without Leaving the Ground – a chronicle of his nine-month, 29,172-mile, around the world overland voyage – was a national bestseller in 1995, while Future Perfect, Greenwald’s quirky look at the impact of Star Trek on global culture, appeared in 1998.
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Don George has been a pioneering travel writer and editor for more than two decades. Currently the global travel editor for Lonely Planet, Don writes the award-winning “Traveler at Large” column for lonelyplanet.com and serves as Lonely Planet’s global spokesperson, working with print, radio and TV journalists, editors and producers around the world. Prior to joining Lonely Planet, Don was travel editor at the San Francisco Examiner and Chronicle and then founded and edited Salon.com’s travel site, “Wanderlust.” He has edited four anthologies, including Lonely Planet’s highly acclaimed The Kindness of Strangers and A House Somewhere: Tales of Life Abroad, and has published more than 600 articles in magazines and newspapers around the globe. Don has received dozens of awards for his writing and editing, including, most recently, the 2002 Pacific Area Travel Association’s Gold Award for Best Travel Article and the Society of American Travel Writers 2002 Lowell Thomas Award. In two and a half decades of wandering, he has visited more than 60 countries; he has also worked as a teacher in Athens, a translator in Paris and a TV talk show host in Tokyo. Don is co-founder and chairman of the annual Book Passage Travel Writers Conference and has been a Visiting Lecturer at the University of California, Berkeley, Graduate School of Journalism; he frequently speaks about travel writing and travel industry issues around the world. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife and two children.Â
Catherine Fowler has more than 20 years of experience in book and
Internet publishing. She has worked for such prestigious
companies as Random House, Simon & Schuster, Doubleday, Excite
and WebMD. With the inception of Redwood Agency, Fowler is
focusing on the core of her expertise:Â the development of
informative and fun products, working with talented writers and
editors, and negotiating contracts.
Â
Daniel Ellsberg was born in Detroit in 1931. After graduatingÂ
from Harvard in 1952 with a B.A. Summa cum Laude in Economics, heÂ
studied at Cambridge University, spent three years in the U.S.Â
Marine Corps, serving as rifle platoon leader, operationsÂ
officer, and rifle company commander, and earned his Ph.D. inÂ
Economics from Harvard University in 1962.Â
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Ellsberg became a strategic analyst at the RAND Corporation andÂ
served as a consultant to the Department of Defense and the WhiteÂ
House specializing in problems of the command and control ofÂ
Janis Cooke Newman is a writer whose essays and travel storiesÂ
have appeared on Salon.com, in several Travelers’ Tales editions,Â
and in various magazines and newspapers across the country. SheÂ
is the author of the memoir, “The Russian Word for Snow” (St.Â
Martin’s Press; 2001). Her historical novel, “Mary,” about the mostÂ
confounding woman in American history, Mary Todd Lincoln, will beÂ
published in September 2006 by MacAdam/Cage.Â
After 10 years of varied employment as a bike messenger, waitress, typesetter, Alaskan cook and bike shop manager, Alison read one of those annoying career help books, Jobs for English Majors and Other Losers, and discovered copy editing. She realized it was something she had been doing automatically for years, much to the chagrin of friends and coworkers, and decided to try to get paid for it. She got a job at the Phoenix Journal in the East Bay, then Diablo Magazine, then the Chronicle. She started as senior editor with the magazine in 1998 and was named editor the day before her second maternity leave a year and a half ago. A voracious reader, Alison’s been working ever since to make the San Francisco Chronicle Magazine into something she would spend time on a Sunday morning reading. Alison has launched many a literary career in the Bay Area. With a readership estimated at over 1,000,000, her publication has tremendous reach. Alison will share an editor’s point of view,Â
The day after the World Trade Center was destroyed, TAMIM ANSARY
sent an anguished e-mail to twenty friends discussing the attack
from his perspective as an Afghan American. The message reached
millions. Born to an Afghan father and American mother, Ansary
grew up in the intimate world of Afghan family life and emigrated
to San Francisco thinking he’s left Afghan culture behind
forever. At the height of the Iranian Revolution, however, he
took a harrowing journey through the Islamic world, and in the
years that followed, he struggled to unite his divided self and
to find a place in his imagination where his Afghan and American
identities might meet. This inner journal is chronicled in his
beautifully written memoir, “West of Kabul, East of New York.”
Â
BRUCE ANDERSON is the editor of VIA, a travel magazine (with aÂ
circulation of three million readers) for AAA members in fiveÂ
western states. He has been the editor of VIA since DecemberÂ
1998. Anderson, formerly a writer-reporter for Sports IllustratedÂ
magazine for 10 years, also served as the editor of StanfordÂ
magazine. During his five-year tenure at Stanford, the magazineÂ
twice won the Robert Sibley Magazine of the Year Award, an honorÂ
presented by Newsweek to the nation’s best college or universityÂ
publication. Anderson has also written articles for SportsÂ
Born in Peru, Isabel Allende was the daughter of diplomats and raised in Chile. She is the author of the novels Portrait in Sepia, Daughter of Fortune, The Infinite Plan, Eva Luna, Of Love and Shadows, and The House of the Spirits. Additional works include the short story collection The Stories of Eva Luna, and the memoirs Paula, Aphrodite: A Memoir of the Senses, and My Invented Country. City of the Beasts is her first novel in a trilogy for young readers. She lives in California with her husband.Â
A former publicity director for Simon and Schuster, Alice comes equipped with 30 years experience in publishing. She is now an independent publicist and publishing consultant whose successes include four simultaneous New York Times bestsellers, a first-time author launch (Douglas Wood, author and illustrator of Old Turtle) that resulted in the sale of 800,000 copies and a Literary MarketPlace Outside Services Award for Advertising, Promotion and Publicity.Â
ASJA PANEL: BOOK EDITOR INSIGHTS: PROPOSE, PUBLISH, PUBLICIZE:
HOW TO MAKE YOUR BOOK SUCCEED
NOV. 2 Â 7PMÂ Â MECHANICS INSTITUTEÂ Â SAN FRANCISCO
_____________________________________________________________
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Pitching book ideas to publishers is easier now than it ever has
been. So says, Alan Rinzler, who will address ASJA members Nov. 2
in San Francisco. Yet, he adds, most book proposals fall wide of
the mark. Rinzler, executive editor at Jossey-Bass — along with
Roger Freet, senior editor at HarperSanFrancisco — will reveal
how writers can make use of new information and technologies on
Monday, November 6, 2006
Left Coast Writers Literary Salon, 7pm
Perry Garfinkel
Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera, CA
In the tradition of JEFF GREENWALD and WES (SCOOP) NISKER, an evening with PERRY GARFINKEL is an event you don’t want to miss.
While JEFF GREENWALD treated us to spellbinding tales as he shopped for the perfect Buddha and WES NISKER filled us with wisdom and laughter as he shared pieces from his “The Big Bang, the Buddha and the Baby Boom,” PERRY GARFINKEL will share his worldwide hunt to discover the heart of Buddhism and the secrets he learned about writing and self along the way.
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Left Coast Writers Book Launch, 5:30pm
Adina Sara
Monticello Inn, 121 Ellis Street, San Francisco, CA
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Left Coast Writers Book Launch, 5:30pm
Don Hanlon Johnson
Monticello Inn, 121 Ellis Street, San Francisco, CA
Discovering the Heart of Copper Canyon
A lone Tarahumara woman sits in the shade of the trees on the edge of the cliff above our hotel. I watch her from the hotel terrace about a hundred yards below. I can tell who she is from the bright pink skirt, yellow print blouse and the green scarf that frames her dark hair and skin. She sits quietly after a long day of weaving baskets and dealing with tourists – a difficult transition for a shy tribal woman whose culture is not open or aggressive.
Monday, October 2, 2006
Left Coast Writers Literary Salon, 7pm
Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera, CA
Monday, October 9, 2006
Left Coast Writers Reading Series, 6pm
Lissa Rovetch, Pamela Bass, Jasmine Darznik
Book Passage, Ferry Plaza, San Francisco, CA
Monday, July 10, 2006
Left Coast Writers Reading Series, 6pm
Susan Alcorn, Pat Bracewell, Natalie Galli, Laurie McAndish King, Judy Zimola
Book Passage, Ferry Plaza, San Francisco, CA
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
Left Coast Writers Book Launch, 5:30pm
Sharon Rivkin
Monticello Inn, 121 Ellis Street, San Francisco, CA
Monday, September 18, 2006
Left Coast Writers Reading Series, 6pm
Greg Fuller, Ann Harrington
Book Passage, Ferry Plaza, San Francisco, CA
Monday, September 11, 2006
Left Coast Writers Literary Salon, 7pm
Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera, CA
Saturday, August 26, 2006
Left Coast Writers Members’ Gala, 6pm
Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera, CA
For info: leftcoastwriters@aol.com
Thursday, August 17, 2006 to Sunday, August 20, 2006
Book Passage Travel Writers & Photographers Conference
Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera, CA
For info: www.bookpassage.com
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Left Coast Writers Book Launch, 5:30pm – 6:30pm
Susan Alcorn
Monticello Inn, 121 Ellis Street, San Francisco, CA
Monday, August 14, 2006
Left Coast Writers Reading Series, 6pm
Tami Casias, Patricia Henley, Mardi Louisell, Cristie Marcus
Book Passage, Ferry Plaza, San Francisco, CA
© 1993 Christine Krieg
My story begins with a community of a thousand men and women. Okay, okay, mostly men and let me tell you, I didn’t mind that one bit! We were traversing the east coast of Tassie (that’s Aussie slang for Tasmania, that island to the south of Australia that once got left off an official map. That ought to tell you a thing or two about how isolated some of the folks here might feel. Who can blame them for doing things their own special way?)
Monday, August 7, 2006
Left Coast Writers Literary Salon, 7pm
Brad Newsham
Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera, CA
Monday, July 3, 2006
Left Coast Writers Literary Salon, 7pm
Melba Patillo-Beals
Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera, CA
LEFT COAST WRITERS(tm) BOOK LAUNCH PARTY SHOWCASING: TOM DeMOTT and
his new book, “Into the Hearts of the Amazons: In Search of a
Modern Matriarchy” (University of WI Press, May 2006)
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21 || MONTICELLO INN – SF || 5:30 – 6:45PM
__________________________________________
“Into the Hearts of the Amazon” is the story of a writer who
comes of age during the women’s revolution. Outwardly, he
sympathizes when the women he cares for blame corporate greed,
hunger and war on an oppressive patriarchy. But inside, he is
stung, and wonders: Would life be any better in a matriarchy? In
search of an answer to this question, TOM DEMOTT travels to a
remote corner of southern Mexico where, according to some, a
modern-day matriarchy still thrives.
NEXT UP AT THE JUNE LEFT COAST WRITERS(tm) SALON: JAMES DALESSANDRO,
Author of “1906, A Novel,” Poet, Screenwriter, and Documentary
film maker of “The Damnedest, Finest Ruins”
TOPIC:
MONDAY, JUNE 5, 2006 || BOOK PASSAGE – CORTE MADERA || 7PM
______________________________________
Every disaster has a story. Set during the great San Francisco
earthquake and fire, “1906″, written by JAMES DALESSANDRO, is a
page-turning tale of political corruption, vendettas, romance,
rescue—and murder—based on recently uncovered facts that
forever changed our understanding of what really happened. His
documentary film, now out on DVD, “The Damnedest, Finest Ruins,”
is a riveting documentary of the most dramatic event in American
history outside of war. Written and directed by Dalessandro, it’s
narrated by acclaimed actor Peter Coyote.
MAY 27
Saturday, May 27 || 10:30am – 5:00pm
SUSAN GRIFFIN WRITING WORKSHOP: THE MUSIC OF IT
A workshop on sound in poetry and prose
Susan Griffin
904 Keeler Ave
Berkeley CA 94708
FOR INFO: Call 510.528.9296 from 10 am until 5 pm or
Email: mailto:ninong@comcast.net
JULY – AUGUST
TRAVELING VISUALLY
FEATURING THE WORK OF MARSHA BLACK
Reed’s Cameras
1524 Locust Street
Walnut Creek, CA
For info: 925 934 7207
www.visualtravels.com
AUGUST 5
Saturday, August 5 || 10:00-4:00Pm
CONNIE HALE WORKSHOP: MASTERING CRAFT: MANUSCRIPT CLINIC
Book Passage – FERRY PLAZA
One Ferry Plaza #46 Ferry Plaza
San Francisco
For Info and Registration: http://www.bookpassage.com
AUGUST 7
Monday, August 7 2006 || 7:00 – 9:00p.m.
LEFT COAST WRITERSâ„¢ LITERARY SALON featuring BRAD NEWSHAM,
around-the-world backpacker and author of “Take me With You,” and
ramrod for Backpack Nation.
Book Passage
51 Tamal Vista Blvd.
Corte Madera
For Info: http://www.leftcoastwriters.com
JULY 10
Monday, July 10 2006 || 7:00 – 9:00p.m.
LEFT COAST WRITERS(tm) LITERARY SALON Featuring MELBA PATILLO-BEALS,
inspirational speaker, coach and author of “Warriors Don’t Cry”
Book Passage
51 Tamal Vista Blvd.
Corte Madera
For Info: http://www.leftcoastwriters.com
JULY 13 – 16
Thurs.-Sun. July 13-16, 2006
BOOK PASSAGE MYSTERY WRITERS CONFERENCE
Book Passage
51 Tamal Vista
Corte Madera
For Info and Registration: http://www.bookpassage.com
JULY 15
Saturday, July 15 || 10:00 – 4:00pm
JANIS COOKE NEWMAN’S “GETTING INTO PRINT” COURSE
Book Passage – FERRY PLAZA
One Ferry Plaza #46 Ferry Plaza
San Francisco
For Info and Registration: http://www.bookpassage.com
JULY 17
Book Passage – FERRY PLAZA
One Ferry Plaza #46 Ferry Plaza
San Francisco
For Info: http://www.bookpassage.com
JUNE 3 – 10
Sat.-Sat. June 3 – 10
ROBIN SPARKS’ WRITING WORKSHOP IN TURKEY: “Learn to Write the
Personal Travel Story” with LARRY HABEGGER
Deposit: $500 (payable through PayPal)
Cost: $2495 (everything but air)
For Info and Registration: Robin@robinsparks.com
JUNE 5
Monday, June 5 || 7:00 – 9:00PM
LEFT COAST WRITERS(tm) SALON FEATURING: JAMES DALESSANDRO, author of
“1906: A Novel”
Book Passage
51 Tamal Vista
Corte Madera
For Info: http://www.leftcoastwriters.com
JUNE 10
Saturday, June 10 || 9:00 A.M. – 11:00 A.M.
CRICKET’S BOOKS AND GIFTS PRESENTS:
“How To Become A Published Author/Poet: A to Z”
Hosted by: MARK SHAW
Cricket’s Books and Gifts
40 Princess St
Sausalito
FEE: $45.00 Fee Includes Free Copy of Book On Grammar
TO RESERVE YOUR SPOT: Limited Seating – Call 415.331.1233 for
Reservations
JUNE 11
Sunday, June 11 || 7pm
JAMES DALESSANDRO READING AND BOOK SIGNING FOR “1906″ +
DOCUMENTARY FILM PREVIEW: “THE DAMNEDEST FINEST RUINS”
Book Passage-Corte Madera
51 Tamal Vista Blvd.
Corte Madera
For Information: http://www.bookpassage.com
JUNE 12
Monday, June 12 || Readings: 5:30-7:00PM/Networking 7:00-8:00PM
LEFT COAST WRITERS(tm) READING SERIES & NETWORKING
TOPIC: Queer Tales – Gay and Lesbian Writings
READERS: KUNAL MUKHERJEE, CERRIDUEN FALLINGSTAR and others
Book Passage – FERRY PLAZA
One Ferry Plaza #46 Ferry Plaza
San Francisco
For Info: http://www.leftcoastwriters.com
JUNE 12
Monday, June 12 || 7pm
GEORGIA HESSE LECTURE: “FROM LISBON TO ROME ON THE PRINSENDAM”
Book Passage – FERRY PLAZA
One Ferry Plaza #46 Ferry Plaza
San Francisco
For Info and Reservation: 415.927.0960 X400
JUNE 17
Saturday, June 17 || 9:00AM – 3:00PM
LINDA WATANABE McFERRIN COURSE: “Writing for Publication”
Book Passage – FERRY PLAZA
One Ferry Plaza #46 Ferry Plaza
San Francisco
For Info: http://www.leftcoastwriters.com
JUNE 21
Wednesday June 21 || 5:30 – 6:45PM
LEFT COAST WRITERS(tm) BOOK LAUNCH PARTY SHOWCASING: TOM DeMOTT and
his new book, “Into the Hearts of the Amazons: In Search of a
Modern Matriarchy” (University of WI Press, May 2006)
Monticello Inn
121 Ellis Street (corner of Ellis & Powell)
San Francisco
For Info: mailto:leftcoastwriters@aol.com
MAY 17
Wednesday, May 16 || 5:30 – 6:45PM
LEFT COAST WRITERS(tm) BOOK LAUNCH PARTY SHOWCASING:
“FLOATING THROUGH FRANCE: LIFE BETWEEN LOCKS ON THE CANAL DU
MIDI.” New travel anthology by edited by LCW member BARBARA
EUSER, featuring LEFT COAST WRITERS(tm) faculty members, JOANNA
BIGGAR and LINDA WATANABE McFERRIN and writers, CONNIE BURKE,
CRISTIE MARCUS, APRIL ORCUTT, and MARY JEAN PRAMIK
Monticello Inn
121 Ellis Street (corner of Ellis & Powell)
San Francisco
For Info: mailto:leftcoastwriters@aol.com
MAY 20
Saturday, May 20 || 4PM
BARBARA EUSER reading and book signing for “FLOATING THROUGH
FRANCE: LIFE BETWEEN LOCKS ON THE CANAL DU
MIDI,” new travel anthology edited by LCW member BARBARA
EUSER, featuring faculty members LARRY HABEGGER, JOANNA
BIGGAR and LINDA WATANABE McFERRIN and writers, CONNIE BURKE,
CRISTIE MARCUS, APRIL ORCUTT, and MARY JEAN PRAMIK
Book Passage
51 Tamal Vista Dr.
Corte Madera
For Info: http://www.bookpassage.com
MAY 20
Saturday, May 20 || 9:00AM – 3:00PM
LARRY HABEGGER course: “Crafting the Personal Travel Story”
Book Passage-Ferry Plaza
One Ferry Plaza #46 Ferry Plaza
San Francisco
For Info: http://www.bookpassage.com
MAY 23
Tuesday, May 23 || 6:30PM
Reading and book signing for “FLOATING THROUGH FRANCE: LIFE
BETWEEN LOCKS ON THE CANAL DU MIDI,” new travel anthology edited
by LCW member BARBARA EUSER, featuring LEFT COAST WRITERS(tm) faculty
members, JOANNA BIGGAR and LINDA WATANABE McFERRIN and writers,
CONNIE BURKE, CRISTIE MARCUS, APRIL ORCUTT, and MARY JEAN PRAMIK
Zebulon’s Lounge(now known as SoHo) – Music Venue Wine Bar
Art Gallery
21 Fourth Street
Petaluma, California
For Info: (707) 769-7948
JAMES DALESSANDO, was the co-founder of the Santa Cruz Poetry
Festival, the nation’s largest literary event for four years and
which brought together Ken Kesey, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Charles
Bukowski, Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder, Bob Kaufman and musicians
like Charles Lloyd and Anthony Braxton. He has published four
books: poetry in Canary In A Coal Mine, the highly acclaimed San
Francisco murder mystery Bohemian Heart (St. Martin’s Press),
true crime (Citizen Jane), and his new novel, 1906, an epic
recreation of the great San Francisco earthquake and fire. He is
a 20-year veteran of the Writer’s Guild of America, West, and has
written the screenplays for all three of his books, including
1906, which was sold to Warner Brothers after a heated Hollywood
bidding war. He is currently writer and co-director, with
four-time Oscar winner Ben Burtt, of The Damnedest Finest Ruins,
a feature documentary about the 1906 earthquake. He is also
co-executive producer and screenwriter of Citizen Jane for Wolper
Productions and Court TV, producer and co-writer, with Lidia
Fraser, of Draconin, a trilogy of novels and animated feature
films. He teaches the longest-running screenwriting course in San
Francisco and served as the writer for the award-winning House of
Blues Radio Hour. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.
by Cheryl McLaughlin
It was one of those third-shift nights. I was done with the busyness of the day and the silence of nighttime surrounded me like a huge bubble—that safe place where I could finally hear myself think—when I sat down to write yet another practical, bulleted how-to article, “The 7 Keys to Managing Competitive Stress.” But this wasn’t just any article. It was an opportunity, for I was one of the few professionals—and the only woman—asked to be a contributor to The Sport Psychology Manual for Coaches, a publication which would be used to train coaches throughout the country. Once again, I was up against a should have been done yesterday deadline and I was praying for clarity.
MONDAY May 8, 2006
Left Coast WritersTM Reading and Networking, 6pm
Book Passage, Ferry Plaza, San Francisco, CA
For info: leftcoastwriters@aol.com
With articles ranging from experiencing the culture shock of Japan and chronicling the lives of survivors of Hiroshima, to choosing the world’s worst airport, finding solitude in Tahoe’s Emerald Bay, and packing puffins, geysers and the Blue Lagoon in to a 72-hour stopover in cool, hot Iceland, John Flinn is not only well-known for being a world traveler and writer, he has the insider tips on writing, submitting, and getting YOUR work published in the San Francisco Chronicle and other newspapers. John Flinn is the Travel Editor at the San Francisco Chronicle, and he is one of the key faculty members for this year’s Book Passage Travel Writers & Photographers Conference.
Kevin Smokler is one of the nation’s leading thinkers on the future of contemporary
literature, publishing and the arts at large. He is the founder of The Virtual Book Tour
and editor of Bookmark Now: Writing in Unreaderly Times (Basic Books, June 2005),
an anthology that features this generation’s most intriguing young authors writing on the
state and future of literature in our media-saturated 21st century. Smokler’s essays and critiques have appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, the Baltimore Sun, The Believer, Ready Made and on National Public Radio. Smokler also lectures nationwide (at Book Expo America, The Commonwealth Club, among other venues) on the future of reading and publishing, the literary life and the role of technology in the arts. His publishing consultancy serves such clients as Time Warner Book Group, Harper Collins, Mental Floss magazine and the Idea Festival.
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Jennifer L. Leo is a Chinese-American who was born with a gift
for gab and a hunger for an everlasting craps game (which
probably explains her recent move to Las Vegas). Editor of
Travelers Tales (San Francisco) titles, “Whose Panties Are
These?,” “More Misadventures from Funny Women on the Road” and
the best-selling “Sand in My Bra and Other Misadventures: Funny
Women Write from the Road,” Jen is also the co-editor of “A
Woman’s Path.”
Firoozeh Dumas moved with her family from Abadan, Iran, to Whittier, California, at the age of seven. With great humor and a sense of adventure, Dumas chronicles the American journey of her wonderfully engaging family in Funny In Farsi: A Memoir Of Growing Up Iranian In America, which was selected as a finalist for the PEN award in the Creative Nonfiction category. In a series of deftly Drawn scenes, we watch the family grapple with American culture in a story of Identity, discovery and family love. You may have heard Firoozeh’s commentaries on NPR. Dumas graduated from the University of California at Berkeley. She lives with her husband and children in Northern California.
Georgia I. Hesse was founding travel editor of the San Francisco Examiner and held that position on the S.F. Examiner-Chronicle for 20 years. She has contributed to several anthologies, is a co-author of travel guides to France and California published by Fisher and by Berlitz, and teaches travel writing and related courses at Book Passage in Corte Madera. Georgia holds the Chevalier/Ordre de la République from Tunisia and the Ordre du Mérite from France. She is a graduate of Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota, and attended the University of Strasbourg, France, on a Fulbright scholarship. She claims to have been born on Crazy Woman Creek near Buffalo, Wyoming.
For more information, visit www.whereintheworld-scribe.com.
Sheldon Siegel graduated from the Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California at Berkeley in 1983. He has been in private practice in San Francisco for over twenty years and specializes in corporate and securities law with the firm of Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP. His four novels, Special Circumstances, Incriminating Evidence, Criminal Intent and Final Verdict, have all been national best sellers. His fifth novel, The Confession, will be released August 2004. His books have sold millions of copies worldwide and have been translated into seven languages.
He lives in Marin County with his wife, Linda, and twin sons, Alan and Stephen. He is at work on his next Mike Daley story.
Larry Habegger, executive editor of Travelers’ Tales, has been writing about travel since 1980. He has visited almost fifty countries and six of the seven continents, traveling from the frozen Arctic to equatorial rain forest, from the high Himalayas to the Dead Sea. In the early 1980s he co-authored mystery serials for the San Francisco Examiner with James O’Reilly, and since 1985 their syndicated column, “World Travel Watch,” has appeared in newspapers in five countries and on WorldTravelWatch.com. As series editors of Travelers’ Tales, they have worked on some seventy titles, winning many awards for excellence. Larry regularly teaches the craft of travel writing at workshops and writers conferences, and he lives with his family on San Francisco’s Telegraph Hill.
Visit www.larryhabegger.com for more information.
Oscar Villalon has been the Book Editor for the San Francisco Chronicle since 2001. He has been with the paper since 1996, and has been Deputy Book Editor and a copy editor for “Datebook.”Oscar is currently a member of the jury for the annual California Book Award and serves as a member of the National Book Critics Circle. Prior to working at The Chronicle, Oscar was a news editor at the Glendale News Press in Los Angeles, California.
WEDNESDAY April 19, 2006
Left Coast Writers Book Launch Series, 5:30pm
Susan Reynolds
Monticello Inn, 121 Ellis Street, San Francisco, CA
For info: leftcoastwriters@aol.com
Journalist Constance Hale grew up in Hawaii but left the islands to get a bachelors degree from Princeton and a masters from the Graduate School of Journalism at UC-Berkeley. Hale worked as a reporter and editor at the Oakland Tribune, the San Francisco Examiner, Wired, and Health and her freelance journalism has appeared in those publications, as well as in Honolulu, HotWired, and the Atlantic Monthly. Her travel essays have been published in several anthologies, Via, the Miami Herald, the San Francisco Chronicle, and the Los Angeles Times. Hale is the author of two popular books on language, Sin and Syntax and Wired Style. Once dubbed, “Marion the Librarian on a Harley,” Hale speaks extensively about the craft of writing, sin and syntax, and the intersections of language and technology. She is on the faculty of UC-Berkeley Extension, Book Passage, and the Writing Salon.
Wednesday, May 17, 2006
Left Coast WritersTM Book Launch, 5:30-6:30pm
TBD
Monticello Inn, 121 Ellis Street, San Francisco, CA
For info: leftcoastwriters@aol.com
An evening with Wes “Scoop” Nisker is a guaranteed good time, full of his trademark zaniness and wacky wisdom! Nisker will wax eloquent on cosmic conundrums, and talk about and read from his latest book, The Big Bang, the Buddha and the Baby Boom: The Spiritual Experiments of My Generation.
Wes “Scoop” Nisker is author of the enduring classic Crazy Wisdom and the widely acclaimed Buddha’s Nature, and is Editor-in-Chief of the Buddhist journal Inquiring Mind. For the past twenty-five years he has been both a popular San Francisco Bay Area radio personality and a nationally known Buddhist meditation teacher.
Fran Gage owned Fran Gage Pâtisserie Française in San Francisco for ten years. The bakery consistently won critical acclaim locally and nationally for its pastry, bread, and chocolates. She closed the bakery following a fire in 1995 and now writes about food. Her first book, Bread and Chocolate, My Food Life In & Around San Francisco , (Sasquatch Books, 1999) is a collection of stories about food with recipes to match. A Sweet Quartet, Sugar, Almonds, Eggs, and Butter , (North Point Press, 2002) is a book celebrating the building blocks of pastry making, including recipes. Excerpts from both books were chosen for Best Food Writing . Her most recent book is Williams-Sonoma Cake . Fran is a charter member of the Baker’s Dozen and a co-author of The Baker’s Dozen Cookbook . She also writes frequently for Saveur , and Fine Cooking and has contributed to The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America and Gastronomica.
For over 20 Years Michael Johnson has been training people to do good in public radio. But baby, that’s not all. Michael’s produced music shows for 13 years on KALW and KPFA in San Francisco. He was the associate producer for the Peabody Award Winning NPR series Lost and Found Sound, editor and digital mix engineer for Spirits of the Present: The Legacy from Native America for Radio Smithsonian (PRI) carried on over 500 stations across the US and Canada (APR), and associate producer for the documentary series Legacies: Tales From America.
Mark Routhier is the Literary Manager at the Magic Theatre. Founder and Artistic Director of San Francisco’s Mettle Theatre, 1989-1999, Routhier produced, wrote, directed, designed, and/or acted in 25 productions nationwide. His plays Scrap, Jam, Drunken Grownups, They Shall Inherit (formerly A Curious Christmas), and Someguy were produced by Mettle Theatre. His Bay Area directing credits include Ionesco’s Exit The King with American Citizens’ Theatre, Someguy, Drunken Grownups, and Ellen McLaughlin’s Iphigenia and Other Daughters with Mettle Theatre, Sam Shepard’s Cowboy Mouth with Mostly Grounded Theatre Co., readings of Alice Tuan’s Last of the Suns, and Talila Baron’s Corpus Delicti for the Magic Theatre. Routhier has directed for the Young California Writers Project, and will be directing a one-man show called The Bone Man of Benares by Terry Tarnoff with Encore Theatre in September, 2004. Routhier, who holds an MFA in Dramatic Writing from NYU, is working on a new play, and currently teaching a popular course, “From Page to Stage,” at Marin-based Book Passage.
Poet, travel writer, novelist and workshop leader Linda Watanabe McFerrin is a contributor to numerous journals, newspapers, magazines, anthologies and online publications including the Washington Post, the San Francisco Chronicle Magazine, Modern Bride, Travelers’ Tales, and Salon.com. She is the author of two poetry collections and the editor of the 4th edition of Best Places Northern California.
MONDAY April 10, 2006
Left Coast Writers Reading and Networking, 6pm
Book Passage, Ferry Plaza, San Francisco, CA
For info: leftcoastwriters@aol.com

The Citizens for Local Control, Corte Madera, a small but determined group who appeared before the Corte Madera Town Council and who are working behind the scenes to block the Barnes & Noble lease have organized a peaceful, nonconfrontational protest at the Town Center on Saturday, March 25 between 12pm – 2pm. The goal is to show the owners and managers of Town Center the opposition to their decision to the Barnes & Noble lease.
>From the Citizens for Local Control, Corte Madera:
“We expect a crowd of at least 100 people at the March 25th demonstration, including senior citizens, mothers with strollers, families and students from local schools, and various members of the community. There will also be a strong media presence.
IT’S ABOUT TIME!
Four or five years ago, TONI WEINGARTEN wrote a feature story for “Cruising World,” a sailing magazine. They paid her for it but she never saw it in print until….she opened the October 2005 issue of the magazine and saw her story! Now, that’s being in the writing game for the long haul!
Joyce Jenkins is a noted Bay Area poet and the editor of “Poetry Flash,” the producer/sponsor of the Northern California Book Reviewers and the Northern California Book Awards. “Poetry Flash” is a non-profit literary arts organization and an important communication forum and vehicle for generating audiences and interest in literary issues and events. They publish quality reviews, poems, interviews and essays, as well as trade, submission and award information for all creative writers of both poetry and fiction. “Poetry Flash” also carries the most comprehensive listing of literary events in the West; their Calendar is an indispensable guide to the literary scene in all of California, as well as in the Southwest and the Pacific Northwest.
Gail Tsukiyama
Publisher: St. Martin’s Press
ISBN#: 0312316089
Price:
PB/HC: PB
Distribution:
A short blurb:
Your website/links:
Tess Uriza Holthe
Publisher: Penguin Group(PB)/ Crow/Random House (HC)
ISBN#: 0142002887
Price: $14.00
PB/HC: PB/HC
Distribution: Penguin Group
A short blurb: Once in a great while comes a storyteller who can illuminate worlds large and small, magical and true to life. When the Elephants Dance introduces us to the incandescent voice of Tess Uriza Holthe, who sets her remarkable first novel in the waning days of World War II, as the Japanese and the Americans engage in a fierce battle for possession of the Philippine Islands. The Karangalan family and their neighbors huddle for survival in the cellar of a house a few miles from Manila. Outside the safety of their little refuge the war rages on—fiery bombs torch the beautiful Filipino countryside, Japanese soldiers round up and interrogate innocent people, and from the hills guerillas wage a desperate campaign against the enemy. Inside the cellar, these men, women, and children put their hopes and dreams on hold as they wait out the war, only emerging to look for food, water, and medicine.
Firoozeh Dumas
Publisher: Random House Trade Paperbacks
ISBN#: 0812968379
Price:
PB/HC: PB
Distribution:
A short blurb: In 1972, when she was seven, Firoozeh Dumas and her family moved from Iran to Southern California, arriving with no firsthand knowledge of this country beyond her father’s glowing memories of his graduate school years here. More family soon followed, and the clan has been here ever since.
Author Name: Jane Strauss
Cover Art: Yes
Book Title(s): Enough is Enough! Stop Enduring and Start Living Your Extraordinary Life
Publisher: Jossey-Bass
ISBN#: 0787979880
Price: $22.95
PB/HC:
Distribution: amazon.com, Barnes & Nobles
A short blurb: Are you hindered by fearful, limiting thoughts?: I’m not smart enough . . . It’s too late for me . . . I can’t do this alone. Do you long for more joy, challenge, or fulfillment? Does life just feel too difficult? When you merely endure life, you are surviving, not thriving. You feel resigned rather than inspired. And chances are you know something is missing . . . but you don’t know what to do about it.
by Robin Sparks
There are the plans you have for your journey, and the plans your journey has for you.
Things to do in San Rafael, Argentina:
1. Get an appendectomy.
We were watching the gauchos gallop into town when it was decided that I should see a doctor. I’d felt queasy all day, but, when it began to hurt when I breathed, I knew it was more than the bottle of Malbec wine we’d drunk the night before.
By Deborah Griffin
Roadworks: Deborah
I pressed the bumper sticker onto my dashboard. Good Girls Go to Heaven, Bad Girls Go Everywhere. It was my mantra for the trip I was about to take. For the first time in my life I would be on the road with no destination. Every other trip I’d taken was charted to within an inch of its life, mapped and reserved ahead with a quota of miles per day. Not this one. Part spiritual quest, part art journey, this would be a trip with time to think, to make decisions about the rest of my life. On the passenger seat lay a new journal, its smooth pages ready to record with words and sketches the adventures that lay before me.
By Marsha Black
By December of 2001, a quiet blanket of winter white covered Yosemite Valley. The event was so unusual that it made the local news for a week, catching the attention of Bay Area residents, including my husband and myself.
I think most of us needed relief from the personal and national disasters of 2001. We certainly did. Mentally and physically exhausted, our enthusiasm and energy flagged. Our bodies ached. Instinctively, we turned to Yosemite’s familiar retreat, hoping that the pristine beauty would refill our spiritual and physical reserves.
By Nancy E Rapp
In the fall of 2003 I found myself intrigued by the lyrics of Loreena McKennitt’s song,
Dante’s Prayer.
Cast your eyes on the ocean
Cast your soul to the sea
When the dark night seems endless
Please remember me.
I wondered what it was that McKennitt wanted us to remember about Dante, who was, to me, a rather mysterious figure from the Middle Ages. I did a little research into the historical Dante Alighieri, and some of what I discovered struck me as significant in today’s post-9/11 world.
by Claire Savage
When I first heard about the trip to the Arctic, visions of polar bears, reindeer, and jolly old Santa Claus danced in my head. Childhood fairy tale scenes of The North Pole were all I knew of land and sea beyond latitude 50 degrees north, having never ventured farther north than Vancouver, British Columbia. In spite of my fairy tale images I still feared the journey to this remote hinterland. Would the barren landscape and frigid temperatures be too much to bear?
Terry Ryan, the sixth of Evelyn and Kelly Ryan’s ten children, is the author of The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio: How My Mother Raised 10 Kids on 25 Words on Less (Simon & Schuster). She is the writing half of the cartooning team of T.O. Sylvester, whose single-panel cartoons have appeared in the pages of The San Francisco Chronicle, Ms. Magazine, Mother Jones, Saturday Evening Post, Saturday Review, Boy’s Life, Datamation, Vegetarian Times, Bay Guardian, San Francisco Magazine, Women’s Glib Cartoon Calendars, and a number of text books and anthologies. T.O. Sylvester’s literary cartoons ran weekly in the San Francisco Chronicle for 16 years (1983-1999). With the publication of the hardback of The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio by Simon and Schuster in 2001, Terry toured the country to promote the book, appearing on The Today Show, CBS Sunday Morning, Rosie O’Donnell, and NPR’s Weekend Edition of All Things Considered. The paperback was published in April 2002, and Terry again went on a cross-country tour. The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio – which has also been published in Great Britain, Australia, Korea, and China—will soon be made into a movie produced by DreamWorks and Revolution Studios, starring Julianne Moore. For more information, visit www.theprizewinner.com.