Showing posts with label Free Library of Philadelphia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free Library of Philadelphia. Show all posts

"People are so interesting." Elizabeth Strout/ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE

Thursday, May 4, 2017

Monday evening I headed to the Free Library of Philadelphia to join friends for an evening celebrating Elizabeth Strout. I'd seen Miss Strout, years before, in a small classroom at Swarthmore College, but that was before her great fame, before the HBO adaptation of Olive Kitteridge, before last week's New Yorker profile. I'd just had a rather unfortunate encounter with another famous writer the week before, and I was hoping, how I was hoping, that great fame had not dented Strout's original charm.

That fame had not made her immune to the questions her readers wish to ask.

Good news for all of us: It has not. In conversation with the always-delightful Laura Kovacs, Strout was smart, precise, concise. "Right," she'd say, touching her glasses, and that would say it all. Then she'd say a little more, and we were with her. The entire, sold-out audience was.

More than once, Strout commented on how interesting people are, and I could imagine her on subways, in restaurants, over coffee, listening for the odd and beautiful articulations of nearby strangers falling in and out of love, hope, despair. What we love about Strout, and what is so gorgeously apparent in her newest linked fiction collection, Anything is Possible, is her ability to marinate even the crustiest characters with moments of moving reverie and meaningful hesitations. Maybe they aren't always the most pleasant, honest, well-meaning people, but they come from hard places and they still seek the dazzle of sun-struck snow or maternal affection or a place where they might confess.

They are still so very human, so very interesting, and when they hurt, when they act hurt, we cannot blame them. We're glad to find them again, set off in different light, at a different angle, a few stories later.

It is in the seemingly smallest of exchanges that so much devastating beauty happens. Here, in "Mississippi Mary," a mother and daughter reconnect in a small Italian town. They've not seen each other for four years. The daughter, trying to be hip, has arrived in a too-tight pair of jeans. They have been thinking toward each other, these characters, but also speaking past each other. They have spent time in the ocean, the mother in her yellow two-piece suit, the daughter in her conservative one-piece. Then there is this moment. They are discussing those jeans.

And then Angelina—oh bless her soul—began to really laugh. "Well, I don't like them. I feel like a jerk in them. But I bought them special, so you'd think I was, you know, sophisticated or something." Angelina added, "In my one-piece bathing suit!" Both of them laughed until they had tears in their eyes, and even then they kept on laughing. But Mary thought: Not one thing lasts forever; still may Angelina have this moment for the rest of her life.
To try to define, in academic fashion, just why this hits so hard would be impossible. But we don't need to dissect it. We just need to embrace, and I can't think of a reader out there who would not embrace this book.

During the open question period, a fan asked Strout something about the other writers to whom Strout had been compared. Strout wavered, then returned to the suggested notion of Alice Munro, a comparison she liked a lot.

I'd like to share two others: Louise Erdrich, in her early books. Kent Haruf in all of his.

Small moments. Big heart. Wise writing that gets out of its own way.

That's what Strout delivers.

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Podcast/Videocast at the Free Library, with LOVE and Marciarose

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Marciarose Shestack, didn't we have ourselves a time last evening, at the Free Library of Philadelphia?

With greatest thanks to Siobhan, Andy, and Jason, to Gary, to Kevin, to my husband and father, to my friends, to all those who joined us there on a starry night, to everyone who asked a question, to all of you who stood in line.

A podcast can be found here.

A video stream of the reading and conversation can be found here.

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At the Free Library of Philadelphia this Wednesday evening, with Marciarose Shestack, for LOVE

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Yesterday, following a long walk through the rain and the wind, I was greeted by the gorgeous pioneering news woman Marciarose Shestack at her eloquent Philadelphia home. We were meeting as friends. We were meeting, too, to plan our coming evening at the Free Library of Philadelphia, when we'll be talking about our mutual love for our city (and its surrounding areas) and about my new book, Love: A Philadelphia Affair.

That event is this coming Wednesday at 7:30, at the Free Library.

The details for the event are above.

A video interview and reading from Love are available here.

We would love to see you there.

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let's talk about LOVE: my video interview with Gary Kramer of Temple University Press

Monday, August 24, 2015






What a pleasant thing it was to travel to the city, to meet my friend and Temple Press publicist Gary Kramer for an extended stroll through favorite places, and to be introduced to Dan Marcel, a talented videographer, photographer, and filmmaker, who created two separate videos.

First is my interview with Gary, about the making of Love: A Philadelphia Affair

The second provides a partial city tour—particularly Locust Walk, 30th Street Station, and Schuylkill Banks—as well as brief readings from the book.

Love, which has been kindly endorsed by some of Philadelphia's great leaders, will launch in early September. On October 7, at 7:30, I'll be celebrating its release on the Free Library of Philadelphia stage with broadcast legend Marciarose Shestack. Please consider joining us there. 

Dan Marcel is a marvel—well-named, I've told him. You can find out more about his Marcelevision Media here; I highly recommend him. Please listen, too, to the original song, "Trailing Whispers," written and performed for the second production by Dan's mother, Susan.

Gary Kramer (who is not just Temple's publicist but a powerhouse film critic, a Salon.com writer, a Bryn Mawr Film Institute lecturer, among other things):. You made this happen and I could talk to you forever. Thank you.

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Marciarose Shestack, broadcast pioneer, will join me at the Free Library, to launch Love: A Philadelphia Affair

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

This, up there—the gorgeous woman seated beside Tom Snyder—is Marciarose Shestack.

The first woman to anchor a prime time daily news show in a major market (famously rivaling Walter Cronkite in the ratings). The face of ABC, KYW, Noon News, and her own "Marciarose Show." A film and theater critic. A woman who regularly sat with presidents. A credible and beloved analyst of culture, history, and politics.

Marciarose—still gorgeous. Once my mother's friend, and, today, my own.

How grateful I am to her, then, that she has accepted my invitation to join me on the Free Library of Philadelphia stage as I launch Love: A Philadelphia Affair (Temple University Press) on October 7, at 7:30.

I hope that you will join us—and take this opportunity to meet this Philadelphia legend on a night dedicated to Philadelphia love.

With thanks to Andy Kahan, always, for opening the door.

Love will go on sale on September 7.

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Launching LOVE at the Free Library of Philadelphia, Radnor Memorial Library, and Main Point Books

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Love will be available in September from Temple University Press, in time for the Pope's Love is Our Mission visit to Philadelphia. I'll be launching the book officially at the Free Library of Philadelphia on October 7, then celebrating again at Radnor Memorial Library and Main Point Books.

It would make me happy to see you. 

Look for my story this weekend in the Philadelphia Inquirer's special Papal Visit issue.

October 7, 2015, 7:30 p.m.
Launch of Love: A Philadelphia Affair
Free Library of Philadelphia
Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, PA

October 20, 2015
, 7:30 p.m.
Radnor Memorial Library
A Celebration of One Thing Stolen
and Love: A Philadelphia Affair
114 W. Wayne Avenue
Wayne, PA 19087

October 25, 2015, 4 p.m.
Love: A Philadelphia Affair signing
Main Point Books
1041 W. Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr, PA

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the kindness of others, toward LOVE: A PHILADELPHIA AFFAIR

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

 

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“Once again Beth Kephart enlightens her readers about her love affair with Philadelphia in her new book, Love. She explores the everyday and historical aspects of the City of Brotherly Love and brings them to life. Simplistic, beautifully chosen words engage the reader, painting a picture of the ordinary and making it extraordinary—and truly authentic. Well done and well worth the read.”

Jack Ferguson, President and CEO, Philadelphia Convention and Visitors Bureau



Love is a lovely literary tour of places and spaces in and around Philadelphia. Kephart does a wonderful job of drawing you into her emotional connections to neighborhoods, to transportation routes, to some of the truly fascinating and iconic buildings around this ever-changing city, and to places that draw you outside Philadelphia—but not so far that you cannot return quickly. Her lyrical prose instantly unites you with streets you’ve walked down before—but now with a bit more attention to details than you ever considered before. Seen through Kephart’s eyes and words, Philadelphia is a place of new beginnings.”

—Siobhan A. Reardon, President and Director, Free Library of Philadelphia



In her new book, Love, Beth Kephart beautifully captures the heart and soul of our city. She captures its complexity by writing eloquently about its beauty, the respect for the past, the resilience of its citizens, and an embrace of creativity and innovation unfolding at the speed of light. Setting an extraordinary backdrop of some of our city’s and region’s most beloved sites, Kephart paints a picture of an area where the past, present, and future come together to create a unique and wonderful place that is exciting for those of us who live here and a great treat for those who travel here from across the country and the globe.”

—Jane Golden, Executive Director, City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program

 

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Welcoming the nation's librarians to Philadelphia, and celebrating our own Free Library (and Chronicle Books)

Saturday, January 25, 2014


Last evening, I hardly felt the cold as I walked from 30th Street Station to the Warwick Hotel. The nation's librarians have come to my very own city for ALA Midwinter. So has Chronicle Books. And there I was, headed off toward a Chronicle-librarian vortex, with my mother's coat keeping me warm.

I found Chronicle's Ginee Seo, Lara Starr, Sally Kim, and my fabulous editor Tamra Tuller in the ballroom (note: these women are fashionistas!!). I also found Miss Adorable Herself, Lisa Morris-Wilkey, who made sure I would recognize her by the shimmer of that little pin she wears in her hair. The Grand Duke Walter was in the midst, as well as a librarian with a last name infinitely familiar to me—Novotny. It was a grand night as Chronicle's spring list was reviewed. I yearned to take every noted book home with me.

Asked to talk briefly about Going Over, I wanted to talk, most of all about Chronicle Books, which has been so extraordinarily generous to me. They keep placing surprises in my path. They keep thinking past me. I ask for nothing, and yet they appear with gifts. It is an extraordinary team. One example: Last week, a number of bloggers began to write to me, letting me know that Going Over ARCs had been sent their way. Facebook notes went up. Twitter feeds shimmered. And no one had ever said, Beth, we are going to do this for you, or, Beth, look what we did for you. It just got done.

So I am grateful to Chronicle Books, and I am grateful to Tamra Tuller, who brought me there and remains such a good friend, and I am grateful to the librarians who have come through this chilly weather to be in my city. I have written a love letter to a very particular Philadelphia library in this weekend's Inquirer—written my thanks to a program and to an individual, Andy Kahan, who makes sure that Philadelphians get their cultur-ating share of literature. But I hope that all librarians visiting my city today will know the love goes out to them, too.

I'll be back down in the city on Sunday, signing You Are My Only, now released as a paperback, for Egmont USA. Start time is 3 PM. I hope to see you, too.

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Two Truth Podcasts: The Free Library of Philadelphia and Voices in the Family

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

I'm not going to lie: I was nervous. Nervous (and privileged) to stand before the Philadelphians who had come to help me launch Handling the Truth at the Free Library of Philadelphia on August 6th, and nervous to sit in the company of the very famous Dr. Dan Gottlieb on the WHYY show, "Voices in the Family."

I suspect those nerves were easily detected.

(Are you nervous? Dr. Gottlieb asked me, as the show was about to tape. Yes, I said. Good, he said. I'm always nervous when my guests aren't nervous.)

Still, that evening and afternoon will always remain in my memory as important moments, rare ones. I share the podcasts here.

The Free Library of Philadelphia (thank you, Andy Kahan and Laura Kovacs)

Voices in the Family (thank you, Dan Gottlieb and Jennifer Lynn)

And thanks to all who came and listened.

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an unforgettable evening at the Free Library of Philadelphia

Wednesday, August 7, 2013







In this case, the photos almost say it all. Except that they can't express my deepest gratitude to the many, many Philadelphians who came out to the Free Library of Philadelphia last night to help me celebrate the launch of Handling the Truth. Together we read and workshopped and talked memoir and truth. Laura Kovacs, an endearing (and quite beautiful) hostess, led my husband and me to the Great Green Room, where I studied the posters of a fraction of the many authors who had gone before me. I could hear the build out there in the auditorium—the room starting to fill. But it wasn't until I pulled back the curtain and saw so many kind faces that my heart (which has been playing tricks on me for weeks) truly surged.

So thank you—Andy Kahan of the Free Library, whose idea this was, and Laura and the entire staff and Joseph Fox Bookstores, which was my first bookstore, when I moved into the city years ago. And thank you, Marciarose Shestack, the first woman in this country to anchor a prime time daily news show in a major market, often surpassing a certain Walter Cronkite in the ratings category. You were a dear friend to my mother. It meant the world to see you out there.

A podcast of this event is available here.

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today is the day, the winner is, and thank you, Serena, for this amazing review of Handling the Truth

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

I took my corporate work outside for an hour yesterday—needed the air, needed to get my heart to stop pounding so hard. This little fellow greeted me. "What the heck are you up to?" he said.

Today I'm up to releasing Handling the Truth: On the Writing of Memoir. I cannot believe this day has finally come. I know that there have been other Beth books before this one—and certainly this book could not have been written without the knowledge I'd gained from writing the memoirs, the poetry, the history, the fiction, too. Still, somehow, Handling feels like the very first book. The jangle of nerves. The hopes. That sense of expectation. Here, in this book, are the things I've learned, the things I've taught, the books I've loved, and the students who inspire me. Also my mother, father, husband, son.

It's all here. Jangles. Tangles. Nerves.

That is one of the reasons I am particularly grateful to Serena Agusto-Cox for helping me celebrate this day with her absolutely beautiful reflections on this book. Serena came to my event in Alexandria, VA, and bought her copy there. She has been gracious ever since, sending me notes as she read through. I know how much time she spent putting together her review, and so, for that reason especially, I encourage you to read it here.

My favorite part:
She shares her favorite places, her favorite music, her favorite memoirs, and her students’ work, and she begs that anyone interested in writing memoir do it because the story must be told and is relate-able to someone outside the self.  Writing the genre requires the writer to be as honest with herself as she can be and to fill the gaps in memory with facts from documents or cross-referencing conversations and moments with those that share the memory.  Reading this reference memoir is like getting to know Kephart on a personal level, but it’s also about getting to know the writer inside you — the one that wants to write the book but doesn’t know where to start.  Although this advice is geared toward those who wish to write their own personal histories, there is sage advice for other writers — fiction writers struggling with what tense to put their book in, for example.
Thank you to all of you who have cheered me on in this endeavor. Thank you to those who will join me this evening at the Free Library of Philadelphia, 7:30, for a reading and workshop. Those who want to know more about the book—or read my students' work, or read about new memoirs I've loved, or see some of the reviews—please visit this dedicated Handling the Truth page

Finally, a few days ago, I put into motion a Handling contest, asking readers to name their favorite memoirs. Such intriguing titles came forth—everything from Crossing the Moon, Angela's Ashes, Wild, and The Thing About Life is That One Day You'll Be Dead to The Glass Castle, The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating, two Joan Didions, and several mentions of Anne Lamott's Operating Instructions. But the winner, randomly chosen (and not by me) is .... Kim Nastick, who chose Joan Didion's Blue Nights, a book I do write about in Handling.

Kim, send me a note and I'll get you a signed copy.




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Beth asks Beth: A Handling the Truth Interview

Monday, August 5, 2013

Back in December, I sat down and asked myself a few questions about teaching and truth. I don't know who felt more nervous—the interviewee or the interviewer. But I share the essence of that little just-girls chat below, on the eve of the launch of this book, the galleys for which I have held in my hand for close to a year. I am so eager for tomorrow—eager for the book, eager to celebrate authors I love and the students who inspire me, and eager to see some of you at the Free Library of Philadelphia for a talk and workshop (start time is 7:30 PM).

The Handling the Truth giveaway is still live. More about the contest here. And more about the book here.



What is memoir, and what is not?

Real memoirists write to discover a life, to understand its meaning, to share what has been learned, to reach beyond themselves.  They do not write to pronounce, proclaim, accuse, retaliate, lecture, or self glorify.  They leave therapy to the paid professionals.

Why write a book like this now? Hasn’t the memoir form morphed and leaked into a catchall phrase?

Yes, HANDLING is a brave endeavor.  But what was my choice, really?  I fully believe that memoir, done right, can heal, uplift, and instruct.  That it is an embattled form of community, worthy of defense and explanation.

Can you really teach someone to write memoir?


I believe that you can help aspiring memoirists discover their purpose as writers, frame their lives against the backdrop of meaningful questions, and identify and wield the most telling details.  I have been amazed by the engineers who emerge from my classroom as talented and ultimately published young memoirists.  I have been gratified to watch the journeys of young and old writers—those who weren’t sure at first, and who became sure in time.

What are the biggest mistakes memoir writers make?  Why does it matter that they get those things right?

So much to say here, and so little room.  Perhaps it’s easiest to say this:  Beginning memoirists tend to believe that just because something happened to them, that something will be of interest to others.  But it’s never the thing that happened that matters most.  It’s what has been learned, and how the learning has been shaped.

Which memoirs have been most influential for you?


The first memoir I read was Natalie Kusz’s extraordinary Road Song.  I still teach that book, and I still cry when I read it.  Running in the Family (Michael Ondaatje), The Duke of Deception (Geoffrey Wolff), Just Kids (Patti Smith), Let’s Take the Long Way Home (Gail Caldwell)—I’m afraid I could go on and on here.  As for those who have written about the making of memoir, I am a giant Patricia Hampl fan and Vivian Gornick was quite smart in her delineation of the situation and the story.

Can you ever really tell the truth?

We can tell our truth.  That’s all we’ve got.  We know when we start to exaggerate.  We know when we “lie” to make things fit or to make the story turn out a certain, perfectly symmetrical, deeply self-congratulatory way.  We know when what we write will not resonate with others who have lived the adventure alongside us.  We know what we are doing.

Do you always hurt someone when you write a memoir?


You don’t have to.  There are those who haven’t.  But goodness, it is a difficult, dangerous, so slippery slope.  We forget that even when we write out of love and toward love, we can hurt simply by freezing another in time, by not giving them room to change on the page.

Why do beauty and authenticity still matter?

How could they not?  What do we have without beauty?  What can we trust in the absence of the authentic?  What good are we, especially as writers, if we do not aspire toward both?

What is the difference between memoir and autobiography?


Memoir yearns to understand what a life means.  Autobiography merely tells you, most often in chronological fashion, what happened.  The first celebrates our shared human condition.  The second shouts, Look at me.

What do you ultimately want readers to take away from HANDLING THE TRUTH?


I have written this book for both readers and writers, for teachers and students, for the questing souls out there.  If I have to name one single thing that I hope readers will take away from this (beyond all the books I recommend and hope they will read), it is this:  Truth matters. It can change a life.

If you could recommend one memoir that every aspiring memoirist should read, what would it be? Why?

Running in the Family by Michael Ondaatje, because this extraordinary book proves how powerful—and wholly artistic—memoir can be.  Running is a poem, a pastiche, a collage, a plot, a confession.  It stretches our idea of the form.  It changes every time that we read it, just like life itself.
 
What do teachers of memoir do?

I have learned the answer to this question over time.  Teachers of memoir create a safe space for truth telling.  They ask the right questions and generate the kinds of exercises (which may involve cameras, food, long walks, photographic research) that enable minds to travel backward through time and to emerge, in the present, with a deepened understanding of both self and others (and, of course, the world).  Teachers of memoir suggest the right books to read.  They listen before they assert.  They never judge another’s experience, only help shape it into art.

Is it good, as a writer, to be and feel vulnerable?

Absolutely.  Vulnerability is, in many ways, the key to writing memoir.  All true memoirists reckon honestly with the imperfect, the splintered, the flawed.  All true memoirists are human.

Have we run out of topics, as memoirists? 

I might have thought we had run out of topics, but then I started teaching at Penn.  The personal stories my students tell are so original, heartbreaking, and surprising that I just hold my breath and wait and receive. 

A Muslim-Hindu young man, born in Canada, writes about what it is to become an American.  A young woman writes of watching her best friend die in a tragic accident.  Another writes of her young obsession with cooking, another of the loss of a young brother.  A young man writes of his struggle with religion, another writes of his obsession with power training, another writes of the aftermath of a breakup of an almost-secret relationship, another writes of stepping out into the world as a gay man, another writes of his love for his mother, another writes of nearly dying and worrying for his mother’s soul.  These stories are sui generis because they have only been lived once, this specifically, and this specifically detailed. 

Memoir reminds us of just how significant and particular and ripe with potential each one of us is.

You have a chapter titled “Do You Love?” in Handling the Truth.  What’s that about?

It’s sort of simple, really.  If we don’t know what we love, what we’re passionate about, what makes us crazy with desire, what we yearn for, we’re not ready to write memoir.  Autobiography, maybe.  But not memoir.

Is the first-person pronoun the only way to write memoir?

Isn’t it great that the answer to this question is no?  Memoirs come in second person, third person, even graphic art or photographically assisted formulations—and any manner of variation.  I’m very insistent that my students find their right truth-telling form.  I ask them to read memoirists like Mark Richard, Dorothy Allison, and Alison Bechdel before they go too far.

You have written eight acclaimed novels for young adults and have two more set to launch.  Yet you teach memoir at Penn.  Why?  Why not teach writing for children?

I get asked this question a lot.  I write novels for young adults because my students remind me, again and again, of just how intelligent they are, how searching, how open to new kinds of stories, how deserving of them.  I write novels for young adults because I believe, so firmly, in the imagination of the young, in its generosity.  I love to write the teen story that transcends—that speaks to every generation.

But I feel I have a responsibility, as one who has also written and studied memoir, to teach these young minds what happens when you begin to frame a true story, when you begin to speak truthfully about yourself.  There are a whole lot of ways to get “truth telling” wrong.  And there can be consequences even when you get it right.  If I can protect somehow, if I can caution, if I can help my students live their real lives with even greater integrity, then that is what I am drawn to do. 

It’s hard to put into words just how much I love my students.  I feel I can serve them best by teaching memoir, on the one hand, and by writing stories that I hope will help broaden their worlds, on the other.

Basically, I’m privileged to live in both worlds.




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Handling the Truth: Get Your Copy, Free

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Here, in this amazing, one-time-only deal, Beth Kephart (whom Kelly Simmons calls a Jedi Master, and that's praise enough for me) is offering One Free Copy (note the All Caps) of Handling the Truth to some fortunate United States dwelling soul.

All The Fortunate has to do is type the name of his/her favorite memoir (gotta be sure it's an actual memoir) into the comment box here. On August 6th, I will ask my favorite child to choose a number. That number will be linked, indelibly, to the giftee.

So, go at it, folks. You have until midnight, August 5th. On August 6th, Handling Launch Day, I'll reveal the winner here (and list and comment upon your favorite memoirs).

I'd love it if you spread word, in the meantime, about this book—my return, after so many years, to writing for adults. And I'd love, too, to see you sometime. Some of my upcoming events are listed below. My first official event is at the Free Library of Philadelphia, this coming Tuesday, where I'll be talking and workshopping and maybe even dancing, if there is wine enough. Jilly and Joy and Chippy are promising to be there. You doubt me? Here's proof.

All right. The floor is yours.

August 6, 2013, 7:30
Launching Handling the Truth
with a memoir workshop
Free Library of Philadelphia

Philadelphia, PA

August 8, 2013, Noon
Reflecting on the Great George Childs
(and Dr. Radway)
Ardmore Rotary Club
Merion Cricket Club
Haverford, PA

 
August 30/August 31 2013
Decatur Book Festival
Appearing with Stacey D'Erasmo

Conducting memoir workshop
Atlanta, GA
Details on the Writers Conference here.


September 7, 2013, 10 AM - noon
BookPassage Memoir Workshop
51 Tamal Vista Blvd.
Corte Madera, CA 94925


September 7, 2013, 3 PM

 Books Inc. Memoir Workshop
Opera Plaza
601 Van Ness
San Francisco, CA

 
September 8, 2013
Redwood Writers Workshop
Memoir Workshop
Flamingo Conference Resort and Spa
Santa Rosa, CA 95405

September 17, 2013, 7 PM
Dr. Radway Launch
Radnor Memorial Library
Radnor, PA

September 22, 2013
Chestnut Hill Book Festival
Chestnut Hill, PA
(details to come)


October 3, 2013, 6 PM
University of Pennsylvania Bookstore
Memoir Workshop/Handling the Truth
Philadelphia, PA

October 10, 2013
Bryn Mawr College
Elizabeth Mosier's Writing for Children Class
(Dr. Radway)
Bryn Mawr, PA


October 19, 2013
Big Blue Marble Bookstore
Reading with Liz Rosenberg
Philadelphia, PA


October 20, 2013
Memoir Festival
Rosemont College
Rosemont, PA
(details to come)


November 9, 2013, 9 AM to Noon
Bank Street Writers Lab Mini-Conference: The Nitty-Gritty

Opening Keynote: Beth Kephart on the teaching of truth
In a half-day program featuring an esteemed panel of reviewers and a study of mentor texts
Bank Street College of Education
610 West 112th Street
New York, NY 10025


March 12, 2014, 8 PM
Elizabeth Boatwright Coaker Visiting Writers Series
Converse College
Spartanburg, SC 


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Jilly Joy and Chippy are headed to the Free Library, to see Beth Kephart

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

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Look who is headed to the Free Library of Philadelphia on August 6th, starting at 7:30, to celebrate the launch of Handling the Truth: On the Writing of Memoir! It's Jilly Joy and Chippy, our forest friends. Chippy thinks Kephart should be, at the very least, stylish. Jilly Joy can see past Kephart's style fatigue.

I'm going to be there, too, and I hope you'll join us. It should be a fun night of reading, writing, thinking. But it'll only be fun if you're there.

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Philadelphia's Literary Legacy: now up at the Philadelphia International Airport

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

My dear friend Mike Cola—former president at Shire, bird lover, nest finder, renaissance kind of guy—wrote yesterday to say that, upon passing through the Philadelphia International Airport, he had found my book looking back at him.

I could not be more stunned, nor more grateful, to be one of the fifty authors included. I look forward to the official unveiling next Tuesday morning with my city's mayor, the head of the Free Library, and others. I think I'll have to get my hair done.

The official release:

Philadelphia’s Literary Legacy:

Selected Authors, Playwrights, and Poets –
From Writers of the Declaration of Independence to Present Day
In Partnership with the Free Library of Philadelphia
Terminal A-East, ticketed passengers

Since the writing of the nation's Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, Philadelphia has been home to many celebrated authors. This exhibition is a visual overview of Philadelphia's rich literary past and present. Given the theme, librarians from the Free Library of Philadelphia were invited to select 50 authors, playwrights, and poets from various eras and genres that represent the breadth of the region’s literary creativity. 


The Philadelphia area is proud to have nurtured literary excellence since the birth of the nation with authors like Charles Brockden Brown, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Paine to 19th century writers such as Louisa May Alcott, W.E.B. DuBois, George Lippard, and Owen Wister. The Philadelphia region has continued to foster modern authors including Lloyd Alexander, Pearl S. Buck, Margaret Mead, and James Michener  to today’s contemporary authors, playwrights, poets, and children’s book illustrators including the world renowned Berenstain’s, Sandra Boynton, Lorene Cary, Noam Chomsky, Quiara Alegría Hudes, Solomon Jones, Ken Kalfus, Sonia Sanchez, Lisa Scottoline, Jennifer Weiner, and David Wiesner.


All of the authors represented in the exhibition are award-winning, best-selling writers. Collectively, their literary achievements include the Nobel Prize for Literature, Pulitzer Prizes for Literature, Pulitzer Prizes for Drama, Caldecott Medals for the year’s most distinguished American picture book for children, and Newbery Medals for the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children.


From romance novels, historical novels, urban fiction, and journalism to science fiction, Gothic fiction, young adult fiction, children’s book illustration, comics, and books about linguistics, civil rights, and anthropology -- these 50 authors exemplify Philadelphia’s diverse literary legacy and continued contributions to the regional, national, and international literary culture.

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headed to California and other bookish events

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Friends of this blog know how much I love California—the sun, the ocean cliffs, the people. I was so happy, therefore, to be invited to conduct a memoir workshop at the great BookPassage in Corte Madera. I'll be out there in early September, and I'd love to see you there. The details are here, below, along with a few other events that have cropped up in the meantime—events that will touch on everything from Small Damages, Dangerous Neighbors, and Dr. Radway's Sarsaparilla Resolvent to memoir writing, Philadelphia, and the boutique marketing communications firm I run.

Please join us if you can.

March 22, 2013, 5 - 7 PMPost-Penn Perspectives Panel
Sweeten Alumni House
University of Pennsylvania

Philadelphia, PA

March 24, 2013, 1 - 4

No-Foolin' Mega-Signing At Books of Wonder
New York, New York
For Details click here.

April 10, 2013, 7 PM
Feature Author Book Club Dinner
Harleysville Books
Harleysville, PA


May 22, 2013, 2 PM 

Strange and Familiar Places in YA Fiction (a panel)
Drexel University Week of Writing

Philadelphia, PA

July 27, 2013, 3:30 - 5:00 PM

 Launching Small Damages paperback/Memoir Workshop
with Debbie Levy
Hooray for Books
Old Town Alexandria, VA

August 6, 2013
Launching Handling the Truth
with a memoir workshop
Free Library of Philadelphia
(details to come)

Philadelphia, PA

September 7, 2013, 10 AM - noon
BookPassage Memoir Workshop
51 Tamal Vista Blvd.
Corte Madera, CA 94925


October 20, 2013
Talking Memoir with Linda Joy Myers @
Rosemont College
(details to come)

Read more...

The Philadelphia Literary Legacy Exhibition: happiness-inducing news

Monday, February 25, 2013

Earlier today I was writing to two special friends—Ruta Sepetys and A.S. King—and in both notes, for very different reasons, I was writing about how important it is to me to be seen as a Philadelphia writer. I love this city. I write about it whenever I can—in Philadelphia Inquirer stories, in novels (I'm at work on a Philadelphia/Florence-centric novel as we speak), in books like Flow. I've seen this city struggle, I've seen it emerge, I've walked it in sleet and in sun. I believe in it.

Imagine how amazed and delighted I was, therefore, to receive a note from Leah Douglas, who is the director of exhibitions at the Philadelphia International Airport. Her note read, in part, like this:
For 2013, I am organizing an exhibition that provides a visual overview of Philadelphia's rich literary past and present. Given the theme, I invited librarians from the Free Library of Philadelphia to create a list of 50 Philadelphia-area authors/poets/playwrights (either born in the Philadelphia region or who lived a portion of their lives in the Philadelphia area). And, hopefully you will be pleased to know that your name was included on the list.
Leah tells me that the exhibition will be launched on July 2 and live for a year in Terminal A. The unveiling ceremony will be attended by Mayor Nutter, Airport CEO Mark Gale, and President and Director of the Free Library Siobhan Reardon, among others.

And yes, I'm going to be there.

The photo above was taken last Thursday evening, as I left the Penn campus. I had been working with a student for part of the afternoon and then attending an event with my father, a Penn alum. I was headed to the train, on the phone with my son, who is a city lover, too. "I hope you can see this night; the light is amazing," I was saying. I held the phone and I held my camera and I took this crooked shot.

But look at the light. That's how I feel.

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Handling the Truth: notes on the launch journey

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Later this year, on August 6th, Handling the Truth, my book about the making of memoir, the students I've taught, the many memoirs I've read, and the lessons I've learned, will be released by Gotham. 

I'll be celebrating its release on launch day at the main branch of the Free Library of Philadelphia, where I will be offering not just a reading but a workshop opportunity.

Between now and then I'll be blogging about the new exercises I'm giving to my current University of Pennsylvania memoir class, the new/old memoirs I'm reading, and the debate that continues to swirl around this form.  I'll notch these new exercises, reviews, and commentary onto the dedicated Handling page after they appear here, so that that page will then serve as a supplemental repository.

Because no book about writing, especially, is ever really done.

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