Events
Richard North Patterson discusses his new thriller Fall From Grace ($26.00). Using his training as a CIA operative, Adam Blaine seeks to find the truth of his father’s death, even if it means exposing his own family member as the killer and discovering secrets about himself he was never supposed to know. Patterson’s many acclaimed books include In the Name of Honor. Priority seating with book purchase.
Priority seating with purchase of the book
Join us as Anne Lamott and son Sam Lamott discuss Some Assembly Required: A Journal of My Son’s First Son ($26.95). Lamott enters a new and unexpected chapter of her own life: grandmotherhood. Stunned to learn that her son, Sam, is about to become a father at 19, Lamott begins a journal about the first year of her grandson Jax’s life. In careful and often hilarious detail, Lamott and Sam—about whom she first wrote so movingly in Operating Instructions—struggle to balance their changing roles with the demands of college and work, as they both forge new relationships with Jax’s mother, who has her own ideas about how to raise a child.
Lynn Sherr presents Swim: Why We Love the Water ($25.99). Swimming enthusiast Sherr explores every aspect of the sport, from
the biology of swimming to the fame of Esther Williams; from turquoise
pools and wild water to the training of Olympians; and she reveals the
secret of buoyancy so that anyone can avoid the example of the English
poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, who lamented, “Why can’t I swim, it seems so
very easy?” When his friend, the biographer Edward John Trelawny, said,
“because you think you can’t,” Shelley plunged into Italy’s Arno River
and dropped like a rock. With Swim, you can avoid that happening to you. Sherr was an award-winning correspondent for more than 30 years at ABC News.
Join us for a gin and tonic as Monte Schulz speaks easy about his new novel, The Big Town ($29.99). A novel of the Jazz Age, The Big Town is the story of a failed businessman whose dreams of prosperity hinge on the secret proposition of a millionaire industrialist and a dangerous relationship he finds with a poor orphan girl chasing love in the great American metropolis. "Those who savor authentic details of a bygone era will be rapt by
Schulz’s delightful displays of staccato, wise-guy diction (‘Say,
hatchet face, what’s the dope?’) and his cascading sheets of period
description that set the scenes." -- Booklist
"Beautifully written and thoroughly researched, a veritable time-machine that whirled me through time to the dirty back roads of the American midwest in the year before the Depression. Did I mention how good the writing is? The writing is excellent… This book is a masterpiece of setting and storytelling." -- Cory Doctorow
Monte Schulz received his M.A. in American Studies from UCSB. He published his first novel, Down By the River, in 1990, and spent the next twelve years writing a novel of the Jazz Age — This Side of Jordan. He wrote it for his father, the late cartoonist, Charles M. Schulz. It is followed by The Last Rose of Summer and a third book in the trilogy, The Big Town.
Katherine Jenkins talks about Lessons From the Monk I Married ($15.00). Jenkins went to Korea on a whim, hoping to find the answers to her deepest questions about peace and her purpose in life. During her first months there, she sought out a remote temple, where she unknowingly crossed paths with an unassuming Buddhist monk. Months later, they met again by chance—and fell in love.
Reserve by phone: (415) 927-0960, ext. 1
48-hour advance registration required - Class limited to six
You’ve
written a brilliant story and can’t wait to hear what others think.
You’re stuck and need a critique. What to do? Bring your manuscript—a
picture book, a chapter, or even just an idea (ten-page limit) and we’ll
workshop on the spot. Amy Novesky is an independent children’s book editor, author, and experienced workshop leader.
Admission $120 per person/ $195 per couple SOLD OUT!
Can't attend the event? Order a
signed copy - Email orders@bookpassage.com
Ambush Review and Book Passage celebrate National Poetry Month! Join co-editors Bob Booker and Patrick Cahill with contributors Katherine Hastings, Kit Kennedy, Roy Mash, Todd Melicker, Nancy Wakeman and others for an afternoon of experimental and innovative poetry for the 21st century. Come and be ambushed!
Gallery Reception: Sat., Apr. 14, 5:30-7:00 pm
On Display April-May
Susan Hall,
born and raised in Point Reyes Station, moved to New York and spent
over 20 years living and working in New York City before returning to
her home town. Since then she has been painting and drawing the beauty
of Point Reyes. She has shown her work in major museums and galleries,
including the Whitney Museum of Art in New York City and the San
Francisco Museum of Art.
Chana Wilson presents Riding Fury Home: A Memoir ($17.00), which spans 40 years of the intense, complex relationship between Chana and her mother—the trauma of their early years together, the transformation and joy they found when they both came out in the 1970s, and the deep bond that grew between them.
So, you’re ready for an exciting alternative to the modern day BS that has you stressed out and working harder than ever? Ever wished you had access to the “control, alt, delete” button for your brain? Come to our fun and enlightening workshop and we’ll show the wonders of a Feng Shui-ed mind! Yes, you can learn how to declutter your mind so that you use the least amount of energy to generate maximum success. When you discover how to harmonize your energy with universal energy, the results are amazing and your enthusiasm for life expands exponentially! Local experts in holistic health and dynamic motivational speakers, Maureen Raytis, L.Ac. and Jill Lebeau, MFT have provided fun, engaging and inspirational workshops to thousands of people around the Bay Area.
Whether you write fiction or non-fiction, inaccuracies will sink your book into the chasm of sloppy writing and lazy work habits. Learn the skills for fast, reliable Internet search techniques that boost your book out of the slush pile. Geri Spieler is an author and investigative reporter. Geri has written for LA Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and Forbes. She is the author of the fourtime award winning Taking Aim at the President: The Remarkable Story of the Woman Who Shot Gerald Ford. She is a research associate at Stanford University.
Introduced by Nancy Roen
Kenny Johnson presents The Last Hustle ($16.45). For 31 years, Johnson was a hustler, thief, and pimp. But he had a persistent seed of spiritual longing. Kenny spent much of his life in prison, but eventually his desire for lasting freedom would drive him to find a power that would free him forever.
Mastering Children’s Writing
A New Workshop Salon Led by Andrea Alban
2nd Sunday each month • Corte Madera
5:00-8:00
pm • $180 per year (annual membership comes with one free private
consultation with Andrea, a $60 value!) or $30 per monthly meeting
Spark
your imagination and polish your manuscript in a community of
enthusiastic writers. Listen to an engaging craft presentation, practice
new writing and editing techniques, give and receive peer feedback, and
go home to your desk with a monthly assignment — energized and
inspired. Craft topics will include style and voice, point of view,
characterization, fictional time and place, plot and story arc, and the
art of revision. We will also explore manuscript submission, book
promotion, and establishing an online presence and platform as a writer.
Andrea Alban is the author of nine books including The Happiness Tree and a YA novel, Anya’s War. She holds a B.A. in Creative Writing.
Sixteen Rivers Press poets Jacqueline Kudler and Judy Hablesky talk about Easing Into Dark and Space Gap Interval Distance. Kudler’s poems trace a delicate and tensile arc. Halebsky’s experience of living in Japan infuses her poetry with dance, haiku, and Japanese imagery.
Seven Mondays: Apr. 16-June 4 (no class May 28)
This class will incorporate French cinema into a French conversation course. You watch the movies in the comfort of your home. In class there will be discussions and exercises related to the film. Films are selected to provide a wide range of exposure to French culture. Students should view “Le retour de
Martin Guerre” (“The Return of Martin Guerre”) prior to the first class. Required text: Mise en Scene, By C. Krueger, E. Weber and B. Martin. Genevieve Blaise-Sullivan has taught French at College of Marin for over 30 years. She is a French native from Paris and graduated from the Sorbonne with degrees in French, Russian, and Bulgarian.
SOLD OUT - Thank you!
Join us as we welcome legendary chef Jacques Pépin. In Essential Pépin, a book that celebrates his 60 years in food, the world's most famous cooking teacher shares his most favorite recipes from the the thousands he has created throughout his career. They include Onion Soup Lyonnaise-Style (which Jacques enjoyed as a young chef while bar-crawling in Paris); Linguine with Clam Sauce and Vegetables (a frequent dinner chez Jacques); Grilled Chicken with Tarragon Butter (which he makes indoors in winter and outdoors in summer); Five-Peppercorn Steak (his spin on a bistro classic); Meme's Apple Tart (which his mother made every day in her Lyon restaurant); and Warm Chocolate Fondue Souffle (part cake, part pudding, part souffle, and pure bliss). Essential Pépin spans the many styles of Jacques's cooking: homey country French, haute cuisine, fast food Jacques-style, and fresh contemporary American dishes. The books also includes a searchable DVD demonstrating every cooking technique you'll ever need. Join us for a fabulous evening you won't forget as we raise a toast with this true culinary legend! The price includes the meal, coffee, tax, tip & a signed copy of the author’s book. Dinner will include wines from Trione Winery.Can't attend the event? Order a signed copy
Clint Hill & Lisa McCubbin discuss Mrs. Kennedy and Me: An Intimate Memoir ($26.00). For four years, from the election of John Fitzgerald Kennedy in November 1960 until after the election of Lyndon Johnson in 1964, Clint Hill was the Secret Service agent assigned to guard the glamorous and intensely private Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy. During those four years, he went from being a reluctant guardian to a fiercely loyal watchdog and, in many ways, her closest friend. Now, looking back fifty years, Clint Hill tells his story for the first time, offering a tender, enthralling, and tragic portrayal of how a Secret Service agent who started life in a North Dakota orphanage became the most trusted man in the life of the First Lady who captivated first the nation and then the world.
Clint Hill is a former United States Secret Service agent who was in the presidential motorcade during the John F. Kennedy assassination. Hill remained assigned to Mrs. Kennedy and the children until after the 1964 presidential election, and he was then assigned to President Lyndon B. Johnson. He retired in 1975.
Lisa McCubbin is an award-winning journalist who has been a
television news anchor and reporter, hosted her own radio show, and spent more
than five years in the Middle East as a freelance writer. She is the
coauthor of the New York Times bestseller The Kennedy Detail.
Visit her at www.lisamccubbin.com.
Eight Tuesdays: Apr. 17-June 5
This class is for students who want to gain proficiency and confidence communicating in French using nuances and idiomatic expressions. “En Bonne Forme” book offers selections from French speaking authors, past and present and review of French grammar. Articles from the French press and videos from TV5 will also be discussed in class. Required texts: En Bonne Forme and Schaum’s Outline of French Grammar (4th or 5th edition). Genevieve Blaise-Sullivan has taught French at College of Marin for over 30 years. She is a French native from Paris and graduated from the Sorbonne with degrees in French, Russian, and Bulgarian.
Delia Ephron talks about her novel The Lion Is In ($24.95). Three women on the run take refuge in a roadside nightclub and come face-to-face with a lion. One’s a runaway bride and kleptomaniac, one’s a recovering alcoholic, and one’s a minister’s wife. The lion is a retired circus performer. Ephron’s movies include The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, You’ve Got Mail, Hanging Up (based on her novel), and Michael.
Join us for a special Earth Day event as David Milarch discusses The Man Who Planted Trees: Lost Groves, Champion Trees, and An Urgent Plan to Save the Planet ($25.00), by Jim Robbins. Twenty years ago, Milarch, a nurseryman with a penchant for hard living who is the subject of Robbins' new book, had a vision: angels came to tell him that the earth was in trouble. Its trees were dying, and all human life was in jeopardy. The solution, they told him, was to clone the champion trees of the world and create a kind of Noah’s ark of tree genetics.
David Milarch will be giving away tree clones at this event.
Jim Robbins, who will not be able to attend this event, is a frequent contributor to the science section of The New York Times. He has written for Smithsonian, Audubon, Scientific American, Discover, and Condé Nast Traveler.
Bill Clegg presents Ninety Days: A Memoir of Recovery ($24.99). This is the excruciating and eye-opening story of one man’s struggle, but it offers an unvarnished look at the painful journey of stops and starts that all addicts —and their loved ones—share. A book that any person whose life has been touched by the devastation that is addiction—and the battle that is recovery—should have. Bill Clegg will be in conversation with David Sheff, the author of Beautiful Boy ($14.95).
This class is canceled.
Three Thursdays: Apr. 19-May 3
Dominican University credit available
What’s next year’s seafood trend? What sort of flavors will be hip in homemade sodas? In this food writing class we’ll create pitches for articles that will get your foot into the doors of top publications. We’ll research topics, find angles, craft a query letter, and write a polished article. Maria Finn is a regular contributor to Sunset magazine. She also writes for The Wall Street Journal, Wine Spectator, Saveur, Gastronomica, and many other places.
Anat Baniel talks about Kids Beyond Limits: The Anat Baniel Method for Awakening the Brain and Transforming the Life of Your Child With Special Needs ($16.00). Supported by the latest brain research, The Anat Baniel Method uses simple, gentle movements and focus to help any child who has been diagnosed with autism, Asperger’s Syndrome, ADHD, Cerebral Palsy, or other developmental disorders. Baniel guides parents through the essentials of the method.
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Special for kids!
Gianna Marino talks about Meet Me at the Moon ($16.99). When Mama Elephant must leave Little One, the young elephant is worried. Who will care for Little One? Who will sing Mama’s special songs? When will she return? Mama is very reassuring —Little One will hear her song on the wind and feel her love in the warmth of the sun.
Edgar Award-winning Anne Perry discusses her latest novel Dorchester Terrace ($26.00). Perry’s latest work invites us not only into the secret places of Britain’s power but also into the innermost sanctums of the fin de siecle Austro-Hungarian Empire. Perry is the acclaimed author of Bethlehem Road and Death of a Stranger.
Jenny Lawson presents / talks about / discusses / reads from / has something to say about and generally speaks on the subject of her new book Let’s Pretend This Never Happened ($25.95). Join Book Passage for this exclusive Northern California event. Oh, and did we mention taxidermy may be involved....
What's it all about? Well, let's say Lawson realized that the most mortifying moments of our lives — the ones we’d like to pretend never happened — are in fact the ones that define us. In Let’s Pretend This Never Happened, the author takes readers on a hilarious journey recalling her bizarre upbringing in rural Texas, her devastatingly awkward high school years, and her relationship with her long-suffering husband, Victor. Chapters include: “Stanley the Magical, Talking Squirrel”; “A Series of Angry Post-It Notes to My Husband”; “My Vagina Is Fine. Thanks for Asking”; “And Then I Snuck a Dead Cuban Alligator on an Airplane.” Pictures with captions (no one would believe these things without proof) accompany the text.
With this already bestselling book internet sensation Jenny Lawson, aka The Bloggess, makes her literary debut. Recommended for fans of Tina Fey and David Sedaris — "Even when I was funny, I wasn't this funny" — Augusten Burroughs.
Susan Katz presents My Mama Earth ($16.99). Watch the wonder experienced by a small boy as he journeys through the world, taking in the many gifts of nature. With a simple, lyrical narrative, Katz celebrates the three-way relationship between Mama Earth, a mother and a child, making this an intimate picture book to share with little ones.
Elizabeth Weil presents No Cheating, No Dying: I Had a Good Marriage. Then I Tried to Make It Better ($25.00).
PLEASE NOTE THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELLED DUE TO ILLNESS!
Weil examines major universal marriage issues by bravely recounting her own hilarious, messy, and sometimes difficult relationship. She seeks out the advice of financial planners, psychoanalysts, therapists, household management consultants, priests, rabbis, and the US government.
Sandra Feder talks about Daisy’s Perfect Word ($14.95). Curly-haired Daisy loves words and compiles lists of her favorites in a notebook. When Daisy’s beloved teacher must move to another town, Daisy decides to give her the ultimate gift: the perfect word. But with so many good words to choose from, finding just the right one isn’t easy.
Dominican University credit available
Learn how to weave the magic of history through writing with Barbara Quick, author of the bestselling novel Vivaldi’s Virgins and new young adult novel A Golden Web. Barbara will provide tips and techniques for doing historical research and will discuss the elements of place and time in stories.
Journalist John Stossel presents No, They Can’t: Why Government Fails-But Individuals Succeed ($27.00). Utilizing his three decades in journalism, Stossel combines sharp insights, common sense, and documented facts to debunk conventional wisdom and challenge popular opinion about the role of our nation’s government. Stossel was previously co-anchor of ABC’s 20/20, and is now a commentator for Fox News.
This dynamic workshop by Marney Makridakis, ArtellaLand.com founder and author of Creating Time: Using Creativity to Reinvent the Clock and Reclaim Your Life, explores the concept of kairos (non-linear, numinous time) through creative writing and art. In this inspiring adventure, you’ll explore new dimensions of time as you create mixed-media artwork to represent your own inspiring awareness and ability to redefine time to be anything you want it to be. Note: this workshop has a small supply list.
Optional Supplies:
(bring whatever you have and can easily carry. You can share with others if necessary)
- Paintbrushes or sponge brushes (whatever you have on hand; there will be extras to share)
- A few favorite colors of paint
- Pens and markers
Eric Jerome Dickey discusses his latest novel An Accidental Affair ($25.95). James Thicke is a man with a violent streak who has channeled his intensity into twin passions—his success as a screenwriter and his marriage. While filming his latest script, James receives a video of his wife caught in the most compromising of situations. Dickey is the author of Chasing Destiny.
Mark April 23 on your calendear and on next year’s calendar as well, because it is the official World Book Day as designated by UNESCO. Why April 23? Because that’s the date of Cervantes’ death as well as the date of Shakespeare’s birth and death (We agree. That sounds a bit creepy.)
On April 23, the thousands of volunteers who have signed up as World Book Night volunteers will be branching out all over the U.S. and the U.K. So if you’re standing at a bus stop and someone offers you a book, take it with a smile.
There’s a group of volunteers that will be setting out from Book Passage as part of this celebration. But if you want to meet them, you should probably drop by our Marin store around 6:30 pm on Wednesday, April 18, which is the day when they’ll be picking up the books that they’ll be giving out later in the week. Come on by, have a little refreshment, and wish them well.
For more info see: worldbooknight.org
Spending the night in Paris? The precious hours can slip away faster than a good bottle of Bordeaux. Nicolas Wolff provides an overview of everything a night in Paris has to offer: museums, walks, underground movie theaters, jazz clubs and, of course, food and wine. Bring questions about your upcoming trip and get expert, tailored advice. Nicolas Wolff grew up in Paris and teaches French.
Christopher Tilghman and Peter Cameron talk about The Right-Hand Shore ($27.00), a novel that confronts the dilemmas of race, family, and forbidden love in the wake of America’s Civil War, and Coral Glynn ($24.00), a novel exploring how quickly need and desire can blossom into love and then transform itself again.
Daniel Handler is the author of the literary novels The Basic Eight, Watch Your Mouth, and, most recently, Adverbs. Under the name Lemony Snicket he has also written a sequence of books for children, known collectively as A Series of Unfortunate Events, which have sold more than 53 million copies. His intricate and witty writing style has won him numerous fans for his critically acclaimed literary work and his wildly successful children’s books. His newest book, with illustrations by Maira Kalman, is Why We Broke Up. It was named a 2012 Michael L. Printz Honor Book by the ALA.
Maggie Stiefvater is an artist, and musician and the New York Times bestselling author of The Wolves of Mercy Falls trilogy. Her latest novel, The Scorpio Races, was also named a 2012 Michael L. Printz Honor Book by the ALA, a New York Times Notable Children’s Book, and The New York Times Book Review raved, “[Stiefvater] not only steps out of the young adult fantasy box with The Scorpio Races but crushes it with pounding hooves….If The Scorpio Races sounds like nothing you’ve ever read, that’s because it is.”
John Corey Whaley grew up in Springhill, Louisiana, where he learned to be sarcastic and to tell stories. He has a B.A. in English from Louisiana Tech University, as well as an M.A in Secondary English Education. He started writing stories about aliens and underwater civilizations when he was around ten, but now writes realistic YA fiction, including Where Things Come Back - which was given the 2012 Michael L. Printz Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature by the ALA. He is a very picky eater and has never been punched in the face. His favorite word is defenestration, which is the inspiration for his second book.
in conversation with John Lescroart
Melanie Thorne talks about her novel Hand Me Down ($25.95). It begins with Liz’s mother swearing, “I would never hurt you, Liz.” This act propels Liz between guest beds in two states searching for a safe home. All the while, Liz is burdened by her stake in a bleak pact with a deceitful adult attempting to force her to tell the truth about the darkest of her circumstances.
Join us for the culminating event for One Book One Marin 2012. Marin County residents started reading and discussing the 2012 selection, Michael David Lukas’ The Oracle of Stamboul in January. Michael Krasny is an author, professor of English, and host of KQED’s Forum.
(includes lunch & a signed book)
Call (415) 927-0960, ext. 1 to reserve
Join Julia Alvarez for lunch as she discusses A Wedding in Haiti, a story about three of Alvarez’s most personal relationships—with her parents, with her husband, and with a young Haitian boy known as Piti. A teenager when Julia first met him in 2001, Piti crossed the border into the Dominican Republic to find work. Julia, impressed by his courage and charmed by his smile, has over the years come to think of him as a son, even promising to be at his wedding someday. When Piti calls in 2009, Julia’s promise is tested. Alvarez is the author of In the Time of the Butterflies and How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents.
Be sure and check out this interview with Julia Alvarez on Shelf Awareness.
Book
Passage hosts literary luncheons with celebrated authors at our Marin
store. These events are catered by the outstanding Insalata’s Restaurant
of San Anselmo.
Doron Weber presents Immortal Bird: A Family Memoir ($25.00). Born with a congenital heart defect that required surgery when he was a baby, Damon Weber lives a big life with spirit and independence that have always been a source of pride to his parents, Doron and Shealagh. But when Damon is diagnosed with a new illness as a teenager, his triumphant coming-of-age tale turns into a darker and more dramatic quest: his family’s race against time and a flawed heath care system.
Terri Glass, Marin Coordinator for California Poets in the Schools will host a lively reading celebrating selected student poets from all over the county. Poet Teachers, Karen Benke, Lea Aschenas, Sasha Eakle, Claire Blotter, Kathy Evans, giovanni singleton, and Brian Kervin will be on hand to introduce their students. Come hear these talented children surprise you and feed your heart.
THIS CLASS HAS BEEN CANCELLED
Thinking about reentering the workforce, but don’t know how to begin? This workshop is for moms who are ready to get back to work. Whether you want a job while the kids are in school, or you’re an empty nester, you will need to reassess your wants, needs and opportunities. Come to an interactive supportive group with networking, goal setting and action steps. Linda Lesem is a Certified Career Counselor and Life Coach with “Moms in Transitions” and Alison Berka has an MBA in marketing and has worked for nonprofits in marketing and fundraising.
This is your chance to fix short stories that are “almost there”—the little heartbreakers that are still not exactly right. Often it just takes a slight adjustment, but sometimes it takes a sharp kick—this class offers both. Molly Giles is a novelist and short story writer. She teaches at the University of Arkansas and is an editor for Penguin Putnam. Giles has worked with Amy Tan and many other successful writers.
Marika Blossfeldt presents Essential Nourishment. Blossfeldt's thoughtful holistic approach to nutrition combined with her extensive knowledge of natural ingredients make for a pleasurable read. In her well-articulated book, she considers all aspects of food: eating, nutrition, spirituality, ritual and social connection. Her tables for cooking grains and legumes take the guesswork out of preparing these important foods from scratch.
Elizabeth Gilbert signs copies of At Home on the Range (or, How to Make Friends with Your Stove) ($24.00). While moving into a new house, Gilbert, author of Eat Pray Love, found an old cookbook by her great-grandmother, Margaret Yardley Potter. This new edition of Yardley’s cookbook features a spirited introduction by Gilbert, who discovers she has much in common with her great-grandmother. Buy a book and get it signed.
Lynn Andrews discusses her novel Coming Full Circle:Ancient Teachings for a Modern World ($17.95). Shamanic, philosophical, and inspirational teaching from the Sisterhood of the Shield are now condensed into one very important book. The author reminds us that there is no beginning and no end to the circle of life. She shows that there is a spiritual solution to every one of life’s problems.
VIP Pre-Party 6:30 pm
Tickets start at $50
Visit www.notesandwords.org for more information about the Notes & Words Essay Contest and tickets for the Oakland event.
Join us for the annual Oakland event celebrating literary and musical talent. Book Passage is a proud sponsor of Notes & Words 2012, where writers and musicians share the stage at The Fox Theater in Oakland to benefit Children’s Hospital & Research Center Oakland, including the fantastic pediatric care now available at the Larkspur Specialty Clinic.
What does it take to write a book review that will get published? Former S.F. Chronicle Book Editor and ZYZZYVA Managing Editor Oscar Villalon shows how to write a smart, entertaining book review. He explains what works best in long and brief reviews, what to keep in mind when assessing a book, and how to shape the tone of your review.
Victoria Sweet talks about God’s Hotel: A Doctor, A Hospital, and a Pilgrimage to the Heart of Medicine ($27.95). San Francisco’s Laguna Honda Hospital is the last almshouse in the country, a descendant of the “Hotel-Dieu” (God’s hotel) that cared for the sick in the Middle Ages. Ballet dancers and rock musicians, professors and thieves—anyone who had fallen, or, often, leapt, onto hard times—and needed extended medical care-ended up here. So did Sweet, who came for two months and stayed for 20 years.
Rabbi Michael Lerner talks about Embracing Israel/Palestine ($17.95). This work presents Lerner’s continuing attempt to explain the current struggles between Israel and Palestine in a way that is sympathetic to both sides and provides a strategy to building a lasting peace based on acceptance, generosity, and open- hearted reconciliation.
Join us for the documentary film Holy Land Hardball from 7th Art Releasing and hear from its co-director, Brett Rapkin, and pitcher Aaron Pribble, Tamalpais High School teacher and author of Pitching in the Promised Land.
IMPORTANT: Registration closes at 5:00pm on Saturday, April 28. For reservations before then, please call (415) 927-0960 ext. 1 and request to speak with a manager.
Admission $115 per person
Introduced by Dave Eggers
Join Elizabeth Gilbert, the bestselling author of Eat, Pray, Love,
for a tribute to our mothers and our mother's mothers. For decades,
they cooked and celebrated life in the kitchen. That was true for
Margaret Yardley Potter, Gilbert's great grandmother and a longtime
cooking columnist in the early decades of the 20th century. An accomplished cook and an
epicurean adventurer in her day, Potter encouraged interest in farmer's markets, ethnic
foods, and other approaches far ahead of their time.
Be it luck or fate, Gilbert recently stumbled upon her great grandmother's
collection of recipes. She has now revived this heirloom collection and
given it new life in a lovely new edition from McSweeney's, At Home on the Range. [ For more about this remarkable book, check out this just published Huffington Post interview with Elizabeth Gilbert.]
"This
book is a beautiful time capsule that looks back to the roots of
American gastronomy, when the values of gardening and fresh ingredients
were the primary inspiration. Margaret Yardley Potter's warm, witty
stories and recipes show us that our great-grandmothers instinctually
understood that food is central to a life well-lived." - Alice Waters
Don't miss this very special event! Elizabeth Gilbert will be introduced by McSweeney's publisher Dave Eggers, who will speak a bit about
ScholarMatch, the organization to which a portion of the proceeds of this new book are being donated. Tickets are $115 per person.
Price includes meal, wine, coffee, tax, tip, & a signed copy of the
book. Proceeds benefit the educational nonprofits 826 National and
ScholarMatch.
Can't attend the event? Order a
signed copy
Six Mondays, Apr. 30-June 11 (No class May 28)
Develop reading, writing, listening and speaking skills. Readings include examples of Italian poetry, plus short stories and plays by Moravia, Calvino, and Ginzburg.
Spending the night in Paris? The precious hours can slip away faster than a good bottle of Bordeaux. Nicolas Wolff provides an overview of everything a night in Paris has to offer: museums, walks, underground movie theaters, jazz clubs and, of course, food and wine. Bring questions about your upcoming trip and get expert, tailored advice. Nicolas Wolff grew up in Paris and teaches French.
Seven Tuesdays: May 1-June 12
This
class is for beginners and for those who have previously had some
exposure to German. You’ll focus on conjugating verbs in the present
tense, declension of nouns, articles, and your ability to carry on a
simple conversation with a native German speaker. Hamid Emami has a
Masters from the University of Hamburg, and he is fluent in German,
English, French, Spanish & Farsi. He has taught German for many
years.
Melina B. Jampolis M.D. discusses The Calendar Diet: A Month by Month Guide to Losing Weight While Living Your Life ($16.95). If you've ever been on a diet, you probably noticed that life got in the way. Holidays, weekends, summer barbeques, and vacations can derail the most dedicated dieter's efforts. The Calendar Diet delivers easy-to-follow diet advice and more.
Melina B. Jampolis, M.D. Dr. Melina is one of only several hundred board certified physician nutrition specialists in the United States. She was the host of Fit Tv's Diet Doctor and has served as the diet and fitness expert for CNN.com since 2008. Her first book, The No Time to Lose Diet was released in 2007.
San Geronimo Valley School students from the first through sixth grades read their original poems — poems about their lives, their interests, their worries, and the natural world. Almost all of the work presented at this special event will be read for the first time in public. Come meet the future poets of America!
San Geronimo Valley Elementary School is located in San Geronimo, CA and is one of two elementary schools in the Lagunitas Elementary School District. It is a public school that serves students in grades K-6.
Six Wednesdays, May 2-June 6
Develop listening, speaking and reading skills through literary texts, news clippings, and film. The class covers the subjunctive and other grammatical structures.
Six Meetings: May 2, 9, 17, 23, 30 and June 6
The idea of Islamic Art as being aniconic is entirely mistaken. We shall examine many fascinating figurative paintings that tell intriguing stories. The heyday of Islamic civilization was the millennium from the 7th century to the 17th century when Central Asia and Persia were the pivots of transcontinental trade in luxury goods such as silk, paper, ceramics and spices. We’ll look at mosques, madrasas, caravanseries, and palaces as well as painting, book illustrations and textiles Recommended Reading: Islamic Art and Architecture, by Robert Hillenbrand (Thames and Hudson).
Rajesh Parameswaran reads from I Am an Executioner: Love Stories ($24.95), a funny, riotous and wildly original fiction debut. These nine stories focus on the power of love and the love of power, two urgent human desires that inevitably, and sometimes calamitously, intertwine. This book “… gets the pulse racing from word one. Bravo!” — Gary Shteyngart
“To claim that an author has written inventive stories about love conjures up many possibilities, but none will compare to the fertile imaginings of Rajesh Parameswaran. His debut collection, I Am an Executioner, is filled with the voices of astonishing characters — a misunderstood tiger, a strip mall con man who opens a medical clinic with only library texts to guide him, an executioner, a surveillance agent, a pompous railway manager, and more — whose pitch-perfect stories recalibrate the notion of love and power with dark humor and unbearable tenderness.” — Walter Mosley
Six Wednesdays: May 2-June 6
Everybody writes poetry, it sometimes seems. It’s the discerning readers that are scarce. “To have great poets,” Walt Whitman said, “there must be great audiences, too.” In this reading group we look at English-language poetry of many styles and periods, taking nobody’s word for it about what is “great.” What makes poetry tick? What makes a poem worth the effort of reading it? How do we enjoy and judge the seemingly obscure or difficult poem? Widely-published local poet and author John Hart co-edits the venerable all-poetry journal Blue Unicorn, now in its 34th year.
Hollister Rand discusses I'm Not Dead, I'm Different: Kids in Spirit Teach Us About Living a Better Life on Earth ($14.99). Working as a medium for the last 15 years, Rand has reached out to many loved ones, including fathers, mothers, sisters, brothers and children. She talks about what she feels these spirits are saying, claiming that they still have things to say to those they have left behind.
Rand is clairvoyant, clairaudient and clairsentient (meaning that she can see, hear and feel the presence of spirits as well as get a sense of their personalities, emotions, physical attributes and illnesses). An internationally renowned medium, Rand is known for her extraordinarily detailed work; she provides specific messages from loved ones living in the spirit world with feeling, heart, and grace.
Kim Henderson speaks on 50 Simple Steps to Save the World's Rainforests ($10.95). Despite the very best conservation and environmental policy-making efforts, some 80,000 acres of tropical rainforest disappear each day. If action is not taken now, experts estimate that the world's rainforests will mostly disappear within 50 years. This new book tells what you can do to help.
Kim Henderson grew up in the rural Santa Monica Mountains of California where she developed a deep love of nature. As both a member of The Green Patriot Working Group and managing editor of Freedom Press, she is intimately involved in environmental, health and conservation issues.
Ron Rash reads from The Cove ($26.99). The New York Times bestselling author of Serena returns to Appalachia, this time at the height of World War I, with the story of a blazing but doomed love affair caught in the turmoil of a nation at war. This lyrical tale, as mesmerizing as its award-winning predecessor, shows once again a novelist at the height of his powers.
Ron Rash is the author of the 2009 PEN/Faulkner finalist and New York Times bestselling novel Serena, in addition to three other prizewinning novels, One Foot in Eden, Saints at the River, and The World Made Straight; four collections of poems; and four collections of stories, among them Burning Bright, which won the 2010 Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award, and Chemistry and Other Stories, which was a finalist for the 2007 PEN/Faulkner Award. Twice the recipient of the O. Henry Prize, he teaches at Western Carolina University.
Special for kids! Or just about anybody!! Trenton Lee Stewart talks about The Extraordinary Education of Nicholas Benedict ($17.99). Before there was a Mysterious Benedict Society, there was a somewhat ordinary narcoleptic genius named Nicholas Benedict. Meet the boy who started it all... and prepare yourself for adventure, danger, cleverness, and dry wit — lots of dry wit!
Trenton Lee Stewart is the author of the award-winning and New York Times bestselling Mysterious Benedict Society series. A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, he lives with his wife and two sons in Arkansas.
Six Fridays: May 4-June 8
Emphasis is on building vocabulary and using basic structures in conversation. Gisella Petrone
has a Masters degree from the University of Calabria. She has taught
English, Italian, Latin, Roman History, and Italian cooking.
Classicist Madeline Miller reads from The Song of Achilles ($25.99), her epic retelling of the Trojan War. This thrilling, moving, and blisteringly paced tale of gods, kings, immortality and the human heart is a dazzling feat of imagination and “A startlingly original work of art” (Ann Patchett) sure to be one of the most talked about debuts of the year.
Madeline Miller was born in Boston. She attended Brown University, where she earned her BA and MA in Classics. For the last ten years she has been teaching and tutoring Latin, Greek and the works of Shakespeare to high school students. She also studied in the Dramaturgy department at Yale School of Drama, where she focused on the adaptation of classical texts to modern forms. The Song of Achilles is her first novel.
Dominican University credit available
The new wave of nature writing emphasizes the relationship between outer landscapes and the inner terrain of psyche and soul. In this workshop, we will focus on the natural world in order to turn inwards. We’ll review nature writing by Terry Tempest Williams, Barry Lopez, and Gretel Ehrlich and discuss our own experiences to find nature’s metaphors and craft our personal stories in striking new ways. Mary Reynolds Thompson is founder of Write the Damn Book. She is author of Embrace Your Inner Wild: 52 Reflections for an Eco-Centric World, as well as numerous essays on eco-spirituality.
See the jewelery designs of a distinctive local artist • Coffee and tea will be served
Since 1996 Che Bella Designs has been providing beautiful jewelry to clients all over the world. Belinda Wickwire pours her heart into every piece that she makes. Her business is small and personal, and every piece is handmade by her in her Marin County studio.
Wickwire began designing jewelry at age of fifteen, purchasing her first metal-smith equipment and learning the techniques of jewelry making. At twenty, she went to work for Tiffany & Co. where she refined her skills and learned the business of retail jewelry. During that time she obtained a graduate Gemologist degree from The Gemological Institute of America.
Your website is your store window for potential clients. Learn how to maximize the qualities that will engage website visitors and add sales punch to your homepage. In this roll-up-your-sleeves clinic, you’ll receive individual coaching on how to make your website more attractive, valuable and accessible. You’ll leave with specific actions that you—or your Webmaster—can easily implement. Bring your laptop, your URL, and a notepad, and get ready to look anew at your online presence. Keith Bailey is an author of seven business books and a branding and marketing specialist who has worked with some of the most prestigious companies in the world, including Oracle, Microsoft, Marriott Hotels and Lufthansa.
Barry Spitz discusses To Save A Mountain The 100-Year Battle For Tamalpais ($29.95). Why does Marin County, inside one of the nation's most populous metropolitan areas, have so much public open space? Marin author Spitz tells the colorful story of how Mt. Tamalpais was transformed from all-private ownership during the 20th century. This event is co-sponsored with Tamalpais Conservation Club.
Barry Spitz is the author of nine local interest outdoors and history books, including histories of Mill Valley, Marin, and San Anselmo.
The time when book deals were made during a leisurely publisher’s lunch is long dead. Publishers are owned by multimedia conglomerates now and the acquistion of books is a business decision. Book editors decide to publish a non- fiction book almost exclusively based on the book proposal. This class will teach you how to write an effective book proposal. We will discuss the basic structure of the proposal and the points that you need to make to convince an acquisition editor to acquire your book. We will also discuss how to write an effective query letter that will grab the attention of a literary agent. Andy Ross is a literary agent in Oakland. He founded the Andy Ross Agency in 2009. Prior to becoming an agent, Andy owned the legendary Cody’s Books in Berkeley for 30 years. Check out Andy’s website at www.andyrossagency.com and read his blog, “Ask the Agent” at www.andyrossagency.wordpress.com.
Francis Tapon discusses The Hidden Europe: What Eastern Europeans Can Teach Us ($25.99). Yearning for a European adventure, but feeling Western Europe too tame, Tapon spent three years visiting all 25 countries in Eastern Europe at least twice. The result is an insightful, inspiring and humorous look at a very old though newly emerging part of the world.
Francis Tapon was born in San Francisco, where he attended the French American International School for 12 years. He is fluent in French and Spanish, and struggles with Italian, Portuguese, Slovenian, and Russian. The Hidden Europe is the second book in the author’s WanderLearn Series. In 2012-2015, Tapon plans to visit every country in Africa and write a book about his experience in 2016. He is also the author of Hike Your Own Hike: 7 Life Lessons from Backpacking Across America.
Deborah Michel reads from Prosper in Love ($15.00). This debut novel is both a richly detailed comedy of manners and an insightful look at modern marriage. It tells the story of a couple whose love is meant to last forever, until it doesn’t. “A charming novel! Michel writes with intelligence, humor, and grace about the tricky terrain of marriage.” — Ellen Sussman
Deborah Michel, a former magazine editor and freelance writer, lives in Palo Alto and has worked at a long list of publications including House Beautiful, Premiere, and the Los Angeles Times Magazine. She worked as an editor and nightlife columnist for Avenue Magazine, was the west coast correspondent for Spy, and served as a contributing editor at Buzz.
Agatha Hoff presents Judge* Hoff, Jesus Loves You, but the Rest of Us Think You're an A**hole! ($12.95), an account of the author’s 20 years as a San Francisco Court Commissioner. From prostitutes she recognized on a first-name basis to out-of-towners trying to navigate the big city, Hoff depicts life with a keen eye and wry sense of humor.
Early in her legal career, Agatha worked in poverty law where clients often abandoned her for a “real lawyer” (someone they paid). When she became a real lawyer, her personal injury clients termed it “the armpit of the law.” When she was appointed a court commissioner, her favorite moniker was a “fascist terrorist cross-dressed in the cloak of justice.” When at last a British tourist called her “Your Worship,” she thought she’d retire before it went to her head. Her new book is a compilation of her “Tales from the Bench” column for San Francisco Attorney Magazine.
Renowned art historian Nancy Boas talks about David Park: A Painter's Life ($49.95). Park, a transplanted Bostonian turned ground-breaking West Coast painter, led the way in creating what became known as Bay Area Figurative Art — a daring move at a time when Abstract Expressionism dominated the art world. "An enthralling read." — San Francisco Magazine
Nancy Boas is the author of The Society of Six: California Colorists and a contributor to the exhibition and catalog Facing Eden: 100 Years of Landscape Art in the Bay Area. She was Adjunct Curator of American Paintings at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.
Joan Frank reads from Make it Stay ($26.00), a moving reflection on the nature of friendship and love, how past informs present, and of life’s magnificent interconnectivity. Recounting three love stories, this new novel deftly weaves a tale that illuminates the lives of its characters, especially their imperfections and desires when revealed in the least expected moments.
Joan Frank is the author of four prior books of fiction. She is a MacDowell Colony Fellow, Pushcart Prize nominee, winner of the Richard Sullivan Prize, Dana Award, Michigan Literary Fiction Award, Iowa Writing Award, and Emry's fiction award, and recipient of grants from the Barbara Deming Memorial Fund and Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation. She has taught Creative Writing at San Francisco State University and lives in Northern California.
Editor Kim Stanley Robinson and illustrator Tom Killion discuss In the Sierra: Mountain Writings by Kenneth Rexroth ($16.95). The late San Francisco poet wrote about the Sierra Nevada better than anyone. Progressive in his environmental ethics, Rexroth’s poetry and prose described the way Californians have long experienced and long loved the High Sierra.
Poet-essayist Kenneth Rexroth (1905-1982) was a high-school dropout, disillusioned ex-Communist, pacifist, anarchist, rock-climber, critic and translator, Catholic-Buddhist spiritualist and central figure of the San Francisco Renaissance and Beat scene. Kim Stanley Robinson is the Hugo and Nebula prize–winning author of the Mars Trilogy as well as a trilogy of novels about climate change that go under the title Science in the Capital. Tom Killion is a much admired artist whose woodcuts and prints have been inspired by the rugged scenery of Marin County and Northern California.
Eleni Gage reads from her new novel Other Waters ($25.99). "A Jane Austen-ish plot gets a delicious Indian accent in this effervescent novel . . . in this exotic, mysterious setting, cultures collide, love grows more complicated and Maya finally discovers just whom – and where – she is really meant to be." – Caroline Leavitt
"In a first novel of impressive ambition, this fine young writer dives into deep waters, giving the reader a story that explores the tug of family ties that occasionally feel more like shackles, the legacy of a culture that both nourishes the soul, and curses it. Writing with assurance and an unblinking eye for the telling detail, Gage explores what it means to be a woman of two cultures, and sometimes of neither. Other Waters is a story that manages to be deeply satisfying in its description of a foreign land and at the same time, universal in what it tells us about family, culture, and the quest — that knows no geographic boundaries — for love." — Joyce Maynard
Eleni Gage writes regularly for InStyle, Real Simple, Travel+Leisure, and Elle, among others, and her work has appeared in The New York Times, and Parade. A graduate of Harvard University and Columbia University’s MFA Program, she now lives in Miami, Florida.
Steve Coll talks about Private Empire: ExxonMobil and American Power ($36.00), the first hard-hitting examination of the largest and most powerful private corporation in the United States. Coll, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner, investigates the notoriously secretive corporation and reveals the true extent of its enormous economic and political influence.
Steve Coll, winner of a 1990 Pulitzer Prize for explanatory journalism, has been managing editor of the Washington Post since 1998. He covered Afghanistan as the Post's South Asia bureau chief between 1989 and 1992. Coll is the author of four books, including On the Grand Trunk Road and The Taking of Getty Oil.
Continuation of grammar and language immersion through conversation. Must have prior Spanish experience to speak to instructor to join.
Mark Sundeen's work has appeared in The New York Times, Outside, National Geographic Adventure, and The Believer. He is the author of Car Camping and The Making of Toro, and co-author of the New York Times bestselling North by Northwestern. He lives in Montana and Utah.
Benjamin Busch talks about Dust to Dust ($26.99), an extraordinary memoir about ordinary things: life and death, peace and war, the adventures of childhood and revelations of adulthood. Busch — a decorated infantry officer, actor on The Wire, and son of novelist Frederick Busch — has crafted a book to stand with the finest work of our finest writers.
Benjamin Busch was born in Manhattan and grew up in rural New York State. He is an actor, a photographer, a film director, and a U.S. Marine Corps infantry officer who served two combat tours in Iraq. He played the role of Officer Anthony Colicchio on the HBO series The Wire and has appeared on Homicide, The West Wing, and Generation Kill. His writing has been featured in Harper's and has been twice nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He has also been a guest commentator on NPR's All Things Considered. He lives on a farm in Michigan.
6 Tuesdays: May 8 - June 12
A very basic introduction for students who have never studied Spanish. Study guide can be purchased onthe first day of class.
Don't miss the fun! Book Passage is pleased to present A Summer Lovin' Book Tour special event for younger readers in San Francisco! Come meet three new authors as they celebrate the publication of their new books. Jenny Han celebrates the publication of We'll Always Have Summer ($9.99). Morgan Matson celebrates the publication of Second Chance Summer ($16.99). And Jessi Kirby celebrates the publication of In Honor ($16.99).
Jenny Han has her master's degree in creative writing from the New School. Her previous books include Shug and The Summer I Turned Pretty. She lives in New York City, and works part time as a school librarian. /// Morgan Matson also received her MFA in Writing for Children from the New School. She was named a Publishers Weekly Flying Start author for her first book, Amy & Roger’s Epic Detour, which was also recognized as an ALA Top Ten Best Book for Young Adults in 2011. She lives in Los Angeles. /// Jessi Kirby is a former English teacher and librarian, as well as a wife, mom, beach lover, runner, and lover of contemporary YA, strong coffee, and dark chocolate. In that order.
Garry Marshall discusses My Happy Days in Hollywood ($25.00). Once called a "legend in his own time slot," Marshall has been among the most successful comedy writers, directors, and producers for more than five decades. His new memoir details his involvement with some of the most beloved TV sitcoms of all-time, The Odd Couple, Happy Days, Laverne & Shirley, and Mork & Mindy.
Garry Marshall is a veteran producer, director, and writer of film, television, and theater. He learned his craft writing jokes for Lucille Ball, Dick Van Dyke, and Danny Thomas. He also directed some of America’s favorite romantic comedies including The Flamingo Kid, Pretty Woman, and The Princess Diaries.
For this special event, Garry Marshall will be in conversation with Lori Marshall, his daughter and co-author. Lori Marshall has written eleven produced children’s plays, co-written two books, and contributed to the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and Chicago Tribune. Like her father, she is a graduate of Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. She has been writing with her father since the eighth grade, when he helped her punch up an English paper on Franz Kafka.
S.G. Browne reads from Lucky Bastard ($23.00). Meet Nick Monday: a private detective who’s more Columbo than Sam Spade, more Magnum P.I. than Philip Marlowe. As San Francisco’s infamous luck poacher, Nick doesn’t know whether his ability to swipe other people’s fortunes with a simple handshake is a blessing or a curse.
S.G. Browne is the critically acclaimed author of Fated and Breathers, which has been optioned by Fox Searchlight with Diablo Cody (Juno) producing. He grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area, spending most of his formative years in Fremont. From 1984 to 1989 he attended the University of the Pacific in Stockton, where he majored in business organization and management and eventually realized that he wanted to be a writer. We are glad he did.
Paul French talks about Midnight in Peking: How the Murder of a Young Englishwoman Haunted the Last Days of Old China ($26.00). "Clue by clue, Paul French uncovers the truth of a bizarre murder case that shocked Peking in 1937. Fascinating and irresistible. I couldn't put it down." – John Berendt, author of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
Paul French lives in Shanghai, where he is a business advisor and analyst. He frequently comments on China for the English-speaking press around the world. French studied history, economics, and Mandarin at university and has an M.Phil. in economics from the University of Glasgow.
Pushcart Prize nominee Elizabeth Percer reads from her debut novel, a coming-of-age story titled An Uncommon Education ($24.99). A young woman learns that college isn't the bastion of solidarity and security she had imagined. Amid hundreds of other young women, she is consumed by loneliness — until the day she sees a girl fall into the freezing waters of a lake.
Elizabeth Percer is a transgenre author and a recovering academic, as well as a three-time nominee for the Pushcart Prize and has twice been honored by the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Foundation. She received a BA in English from Wellesley and a PhD in arts education from Stanford University, and completed a postdoctoral fellowship for the National Writing Project at UC Berkeley.
Michael Grant has spent much of his life on the move. Raised in a military family, he attended ten schools in five states, as well as three schools in France. Even as an adult he kept moving; he became a writer in part because it was one of the few jobs that wouldn’t tie him down. His dream is to spend a whole year circumnavigating the globe and visiting every continent. He lives in Marin County.
**CANCELLED**
Dominican University credit available
In this workshop for women, you’ll learn to listen for your own voice and nurture it. Molly Fisk looks at writers like Mary Oliver and Anne Lamott to show why they have connected with women so deeply. Using model poems, prose excerpts, playful writing exercises, and discussion, participants will discover what to say in a uniquely personal way. Fisk is a lecturer, teacher, and a fellow with the National Endowment for the Arts. She is the author, most recently, of the poetry collection The More Difficult Beauty. Molly will present new exercises, teach you to quiet the voices in your head, and take the class into in-depth discussion. New and returning students are welcome.
Elena Mauli Shapiro was born and raised in Paris, France in an apartment below the real-life Louise Brunet's. She has a BA from Stanford University in English and French, an MFA in Fiction Writing from Mills College, and an MA in Comparative Literature from UC Davis. This novel was a finalist for the 2009 Bakeless literary prize.
Spiritual memoir uses the raw material of your life to reveal the deeper intelligence of your soul’s journey. The class provides a relaxed space in which to write and to receive supportive feedback. You will be encouraged to reach down into events or themes in your life and feel, intuit, and express the deeper layers of wisdom and healing. Beginners and advanced writers are welcome. Roger Housden is the author of 20 books. His newest title is Ten Poems to Say Goodbye.
Jennifer Futernick discusses I Never Expected This Good Life ($14.00). More moving and wonderfully strange than Futernick’s certainty at age seventeen that she would never be happy is her effortless joy in being proved wrong. Her response has been to teach herself thankfulness, and here she has produced a book making it an art form.
Jennifer Futernick holds a B.A. in Humanities from U.C. Berkeley and an M.L.S. from San Jose State. She was a research librarian for over twenty years. Currently a poet and freelance editor, she lives in San Francisco.
2:00 pm • Group Run
3:00 pm • Event
Dean Karnazes runs into the store (literally!) to talk about RUN! 26.2 Stories of Blisters and Bliss ($15.99). In the follow-up to his bestselling Ultra-Marathon Man, the world-renowned ultra-marathoner chronicles his nearly unbelievable exploits in gripping detail as he runs for days on end without rest and across some of the most exotic and inhospitable places on earth.
Dean Karnazes was named by Time magazine as one of the Top 100 Most Influential People in the World. A New York Times bestselling author, he has written for Runner’s World and Men’s Health and lives in the San Francisco Bay area. “The undisputed king of the ultras, who has not only pushed the envelope but blasted it to bits.” — Philadelphia Inquirer
Hal Mooz is cofounder of a training and consulting company dedicated to project management, systems engineering, systems management, and related disciplines. He consults to government agencies and private organizations.
Left Coast Writers book launch: Kirby Surprise discusses Synchronicity: The Art of Coincidence, Choice, and Unlocking Your Mind ($16.99). The experience of meaningful coincidences is universal. They are reported by people of every culture, every belief system, and every time period. This new book examines the evidence for the human influence on the meaningfulness of events.
Dr. Kirby Surprise received his doctorate in counseling psychology from the Institute for Integral Studies. He works in an advanced outpatient program for the State of California where he assesses, diagnoses, and treats clients with psychotic and delusional disorders. He lives in the San Francisco Bay area.
Two poets read from their work. National Book Award finalist David St. John reads from The Auroras: New Poems ($24.99), a long-awaited collection from a poet of wild imagination and formidable accomplishment. Debut poet Anna Journey reads from If Birds Gather Your Hair for Nesting ($16.95), a spellbinding collection by a poet of kindred feverish imagination.
David St. John is the author of ten collections of poetry, including Study for the World's Body: New and Selected Poems, which was a finalist for the National Book Award, as well as Where the Angels Come Toward Us, a volume of essays, interviews, and reviews. He is the co-editor, with Cole Swenson, of American Hybrid: A Norton Anthology of New Poetry. He teaches at the University of Southern California and lives in Venice Beach.
Anna Journey's poetry collection, If Birds Gather Your Hair for Nesting (Georgia, 2009), was selected by Thomas Lux for the National Poetry Series. She’s received a fellowship in poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts and currently teaches creative writing at the University of Southern California. Her second book, Vulgar Remedies, is forthcoming in the fall of 2013.
April is swell but May and June are just possibly even better — it’s warmer, drier, and still spring! Join David Downie and Don George in conversation about “Springtime in Paris.” “I have walked some of the city’s streets with him, and reading this book is just as tactile an experience.” — Michael Ondaatje on Downie’s Paris, Paris: Journey into the City of Light ($15.00).
David Downie’s book Paris, Paris is now into its 9th printing. An irreverent, witty romp featuring 31 short prose sketches of people, places and daily life in the City of Light it’s illustrated with striking B&W photos by Alison Harris. A native San Franciscan, Downie has lived in Paris, Burgundy, Rome and on the Italian Riviera since 1986. He’s the author of a dozen books — crime novels, travel, food — including the critically acclaimed Food Wine Rome, also lavishly illustrated by Harris’s photos. The photographer will be on hand with the catalogue of her latest photo show, Chiaroscuro.
Left Coast Writers book launch: Lindy Hough presents Wondrous Child: The Joys and Challenges of Grandparenting ($19.95). “The delightfully honest essays of Wondrous Child illuminate the warm and loving yet complicated (even occasionally fraught) relationships between parents, grandparents, and the children they all love. It's a must-read across the generations.” — Ayelet Waldman
Contributors to this anthology will join editor Lindy Hough.
A journalist and dance critic, Lindy Hough has taught writing and literature in colleges and universities in Michigan, Maine, Vermont, and California. She cofounded the Berkeley-based mind/body/spirit publishing company North Atlantic Books with Richard Grossinger in 1974, and was publisher and editorial director for many years. She coedited Nuclear Strategy and the Code of the Warrior: Faces of Mars and Shiva in the Crisis of Human Survival and is the author of five books of poetry, including the recent Wild Horses, Wild Dreams: New and Selected Poems 1971–2010.
Kevin Wilson reads from The Family Fang ($13.99), a novel described by Ann Patchett as a "comedy, a tragedy, and a tour de force.” Annie and Buster Fang have spent most of their adult lives trying to distance themselves from their famous artist parents. But when a bad economy and bad personal decisions converge, the two siblings have nowhere to turn but their parents.
Kevin Wilson is the author of the collection, Tunneling to the Center of the Earth, which received both an Alex Award from the American Library Association and the Shirley Jackson Award. His fiction has appeared in Ploughshares, Tin House, One Story, and elsewhere, and has appeared in four volumes of the New Stories from the South: The Year's Best anthology. He lives in Sewanee, Tennessee where he teaches fiction at the University of the South and helps run the Sewanee Writers' Conference.
Rachel Dratch was a cast member on Saturday Night Live for seven seasons; she was known for her popular recurring characters which included Boston teens Sully and Denise; Sheldon, the junior-high-school boy; the Lovers (with Will Ferrell, as two pretentious professors); and Debbie Downer, a depressed woman who creeped others out with disturbing non sequiturs. Girl Walks into a Bar is her first book. She plans on writing a 20-volume set about her life (and doing appearances at Book Passage, we hope, for all twenty), and selling them door-to-door like encyclopedias.
Ben Fountain is the author of Brief Encounters with Che Guevara. He has received the PEN/Hemingway Award, a Whiting Writers' Award, an O. Henry Prize, and two Pushcart Prizes among other honors and awards. His fiction has been published in the Paris Review, Harper's, Zoetrope: All-Story, and Stories from the South: The Year's Best, and his nonfiction has appeared in the New York Times and elsewhere. He lives in Dallas, Texas.
Admission $25 per person (includes breakfast and a book)
Michael Sandel discusses What Money Can't Buy: The Moral Limits of a Market. In this timely work, a political philosopher takes on one of the biggest ethical questions of our time: Is there something wrong with a world in which everything is for sale? And if so, how can we prevent market values from reaching into spheres of life where they don’t belong?
Please note: This special early morning Business Breakfast takes place in Caleruga Hall at Dominican University. Admission is $25.00 and includes breakfast and a copy of the book. Further information and ticket availability HERE.
Michael J. Sandel is the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government at Harvard University. His work has been the subject of television series on PBS and the BBC. His most recent book is the international bestseller Justice: What’s the Right Thing to Do?
We’ll read three unforgettable stories by three giants of the genre: Bartleby the Scrivener (Herman Melville), Guests of the Nation (Frank O’Connor), and Carried Away (Alice Munro). We’ll take a good look at how craft and content meet in these stories that address some of life’s most elemental and mysterious and unsolvable aspects of being, Love, War, and Loneliness. We’ll also discuss the techniques these writers employ and how they can help us write better stories. Peter Orner is the author of Love and Shame and Love, Second Coming of Mavala Shikongo, and Esther Stories. Orner’s fiction and nonfiction has appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, Granta, The Paris Review, McSweeney’s, The Southern Review, The Forward, The San Francisco Chronicle, and Ploughshares.
Isha Judd talks about Love Has Wings: Free Yourself from Limiting Beliefs and Fall in Love with Life ($14.95). In her book, Isha teaches a simple system that shows how to find the luminous state of mind she calls “love-consciousness,” in which every moment of life — even the most challenging and frustrating — can be filled with love, peace, and self-acceptance.
Isha Judd is the founder of Isha Educating for Peace and the author of Why Walk When You Can Fly? She travels throughout the world teaching diverse groups, including prisoners, ex–guerrilla soldiers, troubled youths, and the general public. Born in Australia, she now lives in Uruguay.
4 Thursdays: May 17 - June 7
A very basic introduction for students who have never studied Spanish. Study guide can be purchased on the first day of class.
Bill Bradley discusses We Can All Do Better ($24.99). In response to the financial meltdown and intensifying political gridlock which have overtaken the country, a widely admired former United States Senator, Presidential candidate and NBA athlete offers his own concise, personal review of the state of the nation. We can do better. Here’s how.
Bill Bradley served in the U.S. Senate from 1979-1997 representing the state of New Jersey. In 2000, he was a candidate for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States. Before serving in the Senate, he was an Olympic gold medalist in 1964 and a professional basketball player with the New York Knicks from 1967-1977 during which time they won two NBA championships. Bradley is also the author of six books on American politics and culture.
New York Times bestselling author Steve Berry reads from The Columbus Affair ($27.00), a new thriller which features a disgraced investigative journalist, a scholarly fanatic, a 500-year-old mystery, and a hidden treasure with explosive political significance which challenges everything we thought we knew about Christopher Columbus and the discovery of America.
Steve Berry is the New York Times bestselling author of The Jefferson Key, The Emperor’s Tomb, The Paris Vendetta, The Charlemagne Pursuit, The Venetian Betrayal, The Alexandria Link, The Templar Legacy, The Third Secret, The Romanov Prophecy, The Amber Room, and other works. He has 14 million books in print, which have been translated into 40 languages and sold in 51 countries.
Explore the creative and exciting world of children’s books in this insightful seminar. Learn how to generate story ideas, develop plot and characters, and find an illustrator. Sharpen your writing talents, and develop a story. Investigate ways to approach editors and agents. Discuss the nature of the publishing industry, how to research the market, and methods for presenting your work professionally. Discover the secrets of making the final sale, and get the best financial reward for your writing. Ying Compestine’s award-winning books include Revolution is Not a Dinner Party.
Tickets $55 (includes lunch & a signed book)
Call (415) 927-0960, ext. 1 to reserve
Join Marcia Clark for lunch as she reads from and talks about Guilt by Degrees ($25.99). Harrowing, smart, and entertaining, Guilt by Degrees is a thrilling ride through the LA courts with an unforgettable character, Rachel Knight. "It's no big surprise that Marcia Clark knows her way around a courtroom, and a murder mystery — but she's also a terrific writer and storyteller." — James Patterson
Marcia Clark is a former prosecutor for the State of California, County of Los Angeles, in the O.J. Simpson murder case. She has written a bestselling nonfiction book, Without a Doubt, about the case, and is a frequent media commentator on legal issues. Now a Special Correspondent for Entertainment Tonight, Clark provides coverage of high profile trials and contributes a column for The Daily Beast.
Book Passage hosts literary luncheons with celebrated authors at our Marin store. These events are catered by the outstanding Insalata’s Restaurant of San Anselmo.
If you have a fantastic idea for a book, or are currently developing your masterpiece and are interested in learning how to market it, join this informative workshop and discover what you need to know to get your manuscript published. Learn what editors look for, how to create a winning book proposal, and how to sell your idea before you’ve completed your project. Find out how to convince a reputable publisher to publish your book, and whether you should hire an agent or negotiate a contract yourself. Ying Compestine’s award-winning books include Revolution is Not a Dinner Party.
Bethanie Deeney Murguia is also the author and illustrator of Buglette, The Messy Sleeper. She lives with her family in Sausalito, California.
Augusten Burroughs is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Dry, Magical Thinking, A Wolf At The Table, Possible Side Effects, and a novel, Sellevision. His Running with Scissors remained on the New York Times bestseller list for over two consecutive years and was made into a Golden Globe-nominated film starring Annette Bening. Twice named to Entertainment Weekly's list of the funniest people in America, Burroughs has also been the subject of a Vanity Fair cover story and a Jeopardy! answer. His books have made guest appearances in two James Patterson novels, one Linkin Park music video, numerous television shows, and a porn movie.
EXTREMELY LIMITED SPACE!
PLEASE CALL STORE TO REGISTER: (415) 927-0960, ext. 1
Calling all fourth grade girls...this is the “play-shop” for you. We’ll erect a tent of wonder, make magic word tickets, experiment with poems and mini story “blasts,” and take our creations home. All materials provided. All that’s required is a sense of wonder and a willingness to surprise yourself. Karen Benke has inspired kids’ creative journeys in the form of poem-making for 17 years as a California Poet in the Schools and has authored a collection of poems, Sister, and a new book for kids and kids-at-heart, Rip the Page! Adventures in Creative Writing. Class limited to 15.
John Bateson presents The Final Leap ($29.95). The Golden Gate Bridge, which celebrates its 75th anniversary, is one of the most beautiful structures in the world. It's also the most deadly. Weaving together drama, politics and design against the backdrop of Bay Area life, this new book is the first ever written on a tragic subject which has touched many lives, including the staff at Book Passage, who last year lost a member of our bookselling family to a suicide off the bridge.
John Bateson is Executive Director of the Contra Costa Crisis Center in Contra Costa County, California and the author of Building Hope. He has served on the steering committee of the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. In 2007 he was appointed to a blue-ribbon committee charged with creating the California Strategic Plan on Suicide Prevention.
Mastering Children’s Writing
A New Workshop Salon Led by Andrea Alban
2nd Sunday each month • Corte Madera
5:00-8:00
pm • $180 per year (annual membership comes with one free private
consultation with Andrea, a $60 value!) or $30 per monthly meeting
Spark
your imagination and polish your manuscript in a community of
enthusiastic writers. Listen to an engaging craft presentation, practice
new writing and editing techniques, give and receive peer feedback, and
go home to your desk with a monthly assignment — energized and
inspired. Craft topics will include style and voice, point of view,
characterization, fictional time and place, plot and story arc, and the
art of revision. We will also explore manuscript submission, book
promotion, and establishing an online presence and platform as a writer.
Andrea Alban is the author of nine books including The Happiness Tree and a YA novel, Anya’s War. She holds a B.A. in Creative Writing.
Novelist and anthologist Victoria Zackheim and contributors present Exit Laughing: How Humor Takes the Sting Out of Death ($18.95). This is more than a collection of twenty-four personal stories, written by some of our country's finest authors, on the subject of death and humor. It's a reminder that all of us approach “the end” in very different ways.
Among the contributors expected to participate in this event are Sherry Glasser, Barbara Lodge, Zoe Carter, Bonnie Garvin, Kathi Kamen Goldmark, and Sam Barry.
Victoria Zackheim is author of The Bone Weaver, a novel, and the editor of five anthologies including The Other Woman, which was on the national bestseller list in Canada for several weeks. Her play based The Other Woman will begin a six-week theater run in summer 2012.
A Detroit native and a recipient of both Guggenheim and National Endowment for the Arts fellowships, Leo Litwak has written two novels, two works of nonficition, a short story collection, and articles for national publications. His 2001 war memoir, The Medic, was a Los Angeles Times and San Francisco Chronicle Book of the Year. Litwak was a professor at San Francisco State University for more than thirty years.
Julia Ross, M.A., is executive director of Recovery Systems, a clinic that treats mood, eating, and addiction problems with counseling, nutrient therapy, and biochemical rebalancing.
Two-time Booker Prize winner Peter Carey reads from The Chemistry of Tears ($26.00), a story of secret grief assuaged, an automaton, a man and woman who can never meet, an affair, and the fate of the warming world brought to incandescent life in a haunting new novel from one of the most admired writers of our time. Carey’s books include the bestselling Oscar and Lucinda.
Peter Carey is the author of eleven previous novels and has twice received the Booker Prize. His other honors include the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and the Miles Franklin Literary Award, which he has won 5 times. Born in Australia, he has lived in New York City for twenty years.
Paul Goldstein reads from his new legal thriller, Havana Requiem ($26.00). Fueled by alcohol and legal brilliance, Michael Seeley once oversaw his law firm’s most successful litigation. Until it all fell apart. Recklessness and overreach cost him his wife, his job, and likely the life of his last client…. Then a renowned Cuban musician enters his office with a simple request.
Paul Goldstein is the Lillick Professor of Law at Stanford University and the author of two previous novels.
Craig Johnson is the author of the bestselling Walt Longmire mystery series. He lives in Ucross, Wyoming, population twenty-five. Yes, that's right, 25.
THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELLED.
Linda Gray Sexton talks about Half in Love: Surviving the Legacy of Suicide ($15.95). After the agony of witnessing her mother's multiple — and ultimately successful — suicide attempts, Linda Gray Sexton, daughter of the acclaimed poet Anne Sexton, struggles with an engulfing undertow of depression. Here, she speaks about the need to escape the legacy of suicide.
This special event is co-sponsored by National Alliance of Mental Illness (NAMI). This is a fundraiser. Book Passage will donate a portion of proceeds from book sales during the event to NAMI San Francisco.
A gifted writer in her own right, Linda Gray Sexton has written four novels; her first memoir Searching for Mercy Street was published to critical acclaim.
Arlie Hochschild is the author of The Time Bind, The Second Shift, and The Managed Heart. She is a professor of sociology at the University of California, Berkeley and her articles have appeared in Harper's, Mother Jones, Psychology Today and elsewhere. She lives in San Francisco.
Admission $115 per person/ $185 per couple
Call (415) 927-0960, ext. 1 to reserve
Join Cindy Pawlcyn, one of America's leading
chef's, for what we know will be a very special event! Twice nominated
as the James Beard Best Chef in California, Pawlcyn is rocking the food
world with her new cookbook, Cindy's Supper Club.
It's
no secret that legions of fans flock to Pawlcyn's restaurants for her
globally influenced signature dishes. What is not so well known is that
Cindy has turned her passions for cooking and travel into a popular
supper club, where she creates an adventurous menu celebrating a
different international cuisine each week. Cindy's Supper Club has
become a destination event, presenting a world tasting tour on a plate.
Pawlcyn's new book, drawn from the weekly menus of her supper clubs, is a
collection of 125 complete recipes and menus from around the globe - as well as a delicious delight.
Pawlcyn
helped make the Napa Valley a destination for food and wine in Northern
California. Today, her trio of restaurants - Mustard’s Grill, Cindy’s Backstreet Kitchen, and Brassica - are as much loved among locals as
they are popular with visitors. Besides owning three of region's popular
restaurants, Pawlcyn is also the author of four award-winning cookbooks
including Mustard's Grill Napa Valley Cookbook, Big Small Plates, and Cindy Pawlcyn's Appetizers. She received a James Beard award for Mustards Grill Napa Valley Cookbook and is the author of Fog City Diner Cookbook.
Don't miss this event! Tickets are $115 per person / or $185 per couple. Price includes meal, wine, coffee, tax, tip, & a signed copy of the book.
Eugenia Bone speaks about Mycophilia: Revelations from the Weird World of Mushrooms ($25.99). Engrossing, earthy, surprising, and packed with up-to-date science and cultural exploration, Mycophilia is part narrative and part primer for foodies, science buffs, environmental advocates, and anyone interested in learning more about ‘shrooms.
Eugenia Bone is an author and a food writer who has been featured in numerous national publications. She writes a blog on preserving foods for the Denver Post, and lives in New York City.
Captain Chesley B. Sullenberger III is a retired airline pilot, speaker, consultant and the author of the New York Times bestseller Highest Duty. He was named one of Time's 100 Most Influential People, and has been a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley's Center for Catastrophic Risk Management.
Susan Morse was educated at Williams College and has worked as an actress in L.A. and New York. She now lives in Philadelphia. She has edited fiction, although this book is nonfiction. Mostly. She promises.
Cosponsored by CUESA
Ani Phyo presents Ani's 15-Day Fat Blast: The Kick-Ass Plan to Get Lighter, Tighter, and Sexier . . . Super Fast ($24.00). On Saturday mornings, chefs and cookbook authors lead free cooking demonstrations using seasonal ingredients from the Farmers Market. Join us out front of the Ferry Building in the Farmer's Market for tips, recipes, and a sample. We’ll be there with the books.
After culinary school, Mona Talbott was hired by Alice Waters to work at Chez Panisse and the Edible Schoolyard program. She later worked at Eli Zabar’s Vinegar Factory and EAT stores in New York and consulted for Hillary Clinton at her home in Chappaqua, New York. In 1999, Talbott began working for photographer Annie Leibovitz, and in 2004, she was hired by Bette Midler’s New York Restoration Project to design a children’s gardening and cooking program. Since 2007, Talbott has been executive chef at the Rome Sustainable Food Project. She is the author of Biscotti.
In the context of two very different 1960s communities, two UC Santa Cruz faculty members will discuss the overlapping theme of the desire for community, and also the desire for freedom from it. Karen Yamashita discusses I Hotel ($19.95), a multi-voiced fusion of prose, playwriting, graphic art, and philosophy which spins an epic tale of America’s struggle for civil rights. Micah Perks discusses her Pagan Time: An American Childhood ($15.95), a memoir about the 1960s which also conveys the texture of those wild times.
Karen Tei Yamashita is the author of four previous novels and the recipient of an American Book Award and the Janet Heidinger Kafka Award. I Hotel was a finalist for the 2010 National Book Award. A California native, Yamashita teaches at the University of California-Santa Cruz. Micah Perks is also the author of a novel, We Are Gathered Here. She has been twice nominated for a Pushcart Prize and currently lives in Santa Cruz where she also teaches at the University of California-Santa Cruz.
Yamashita and Perks codirect the Living Writers Series at UC Santa Cruz, which brings visiting writers, poets and publishing professionals to campus to give students an in-depth look into the world of the working writer.
Roger Housden
May 28 to June 5,
2012
A unique and leisurely journey through southern England and the landscape that inspired Jane Austen, Thomas Hardy, TS Eliot, Wordsworth, and Shakespeare.
While visiting their homes and the places that inspired them, Roger will draw from the work of these authors as a guide for our own soul's journey.
We visit Jane Austen's house in Hampshire, as well as the City of Bath; Thomas Hardy's home in the county town of Dorchester, and Stonehenge along the way. Then to the village of East Coker, location for one of TS Eliot's Four Quartets, and Tintern Abbey, the subject of Wordsworth's famous poem. We spend a day at Hay on Wye Literature Festival, the greatest festival of its kind in the world, which takes place every year in the Welsh border country. After visiting Stratford on Avon we shall attend a performance at the Globe Theatre in London, and then spend our final day visiting our own choice of London's great sights. We never drive more than a hundred miles in a day at most, and usually much less, so this is indeed a leisurely pilgrimage with no early starts.

Cost:
$3750
Maximum participants: 12 Includes all hotels ( 3x3 star and 2x5 star), tips for hotel staff, seven
dinners, six breakfasts, group transport by minibus, airport transfers, services
of Roger Housden and Braeda Horan.
Not included: international airfare,
lunches, all beverages except for included breakfasts.
Full
itinerary and registration form:
Download Itinerary
You can email Roger at info@rogerhousden.com. Visit Roger on the Web at www.rogerhousden.com.
About Roger Housden:
Roger
Housden has written some twenty books, including the best-selling Ten
Poems series, three travel books, the novella Chasing Rumi, and a
book on Rembrandt. All his books, whatever the subject, encourage us to ask
questions that help us to live into the best that we are. His Ten Poems
series has shown many thousands of readers how literature can be a guide for the
soul. He will be assisted by his partner, English designer Braeda
Horan.
Anne Cherian’s earlier novel, A Good Indian Wife, won the South Asian Excellence Award. She lives in Los Angeles, California.
Thomas McNamee talks about The Man Who Changed The Way We Eat: Craig Claiborne and the American Food Renaissance ($27.00). In the 1950s, America was a land of overdone roast beef and canned green beans — a gastronomic wasteland. Many restaurants relied on frozen ingredients, and served bogus “continental” cuisine. One man helped changed all that.
Thomas McNamee is the author of Alice Waters and Chez Panisse. His writing has been published in The New Yorker, Life, The New York Times, and The Washington Post. He lives in San Francisco.
Buzz Bissinger is the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of four books, including the New York Times bestseller 3 Nights in August and Friday Night Lights, which has sold two million copies and inspired a film and TV franchise. He is a contributing editor for Vanity Fair and a sports columnist for The Daily Beast. He has written for The New Republic, Time and many other publications.
Ambassador and political insider Henry Crumpton discusses The Art of Intelligence ($27.95). This legendary CIA spy and counterterrorism expert tells the spellbinding story of his high-risk, action-packed career while illustrating the growing importance of America's intelligence officers and their secret missions.
With the rank of ambassador at large, Henry Crumpton served as the coordinator for counterterrorism at the U.S. Department of State from August 2005 until February 2007. Crumpton joined the Central Intelligence Agency in 1981 and spent most of his twenty-four-year career working undercover in the foreign field. He is the recipient of the Distinguished Intelligence Medal, the CIA's highest award for achievement.
3 Minute Reads
from San Francisco Grotto Writers
50+ Writers, 3 Minutes Each!
Joins us for a fast-paced and irreverent evening, showcasing new work from the students of the San Francisco Writer's Grotto writing classes. On this Friday evening, both fiction and nonfiction writers will read their work — but only for 3 minutes each! Their instructors (Grotto authors) will enforce the time limit. Join us for wine, fun, and fresh new writing.
Melanie Gideon reads from Wife 22 ($26.00). For fans of Helen Fielding’s Bridget Jones’s Diary and Allison Pearson’s I Don’t Know How She Does It comes an irresistible novel of a woman losing herself . . . and finding herself again in the middle of her life. Wife 22 is praised by Elizabeth Berg as a book “… wise in matters of the heart.”
Melanie Gideon is the bestselling author of The Slippery Year: A Meditation on Happily Ever After, which was named an NPR and San Francisco Chronicle best book of the year. She is also the author of two young adult novels: Pucker and The Map That Breathed. Gideon was born and raised in Rhode Island, and now lives in the Bay Area.
Please note new date and time!
Bring your laptop! Blogger extraordinaire Sophie Epstein, from the young adult book blog MrsMagooReads.com, teams up with her mother Liz Epstein (Jane Austen Literary Salon) as they present their ever-popular blogging workshop—now with a twist! Beginning bloggers of all ages are invited to learn how to start a blog, how to attract readers, how to position your blog, and much more. New to this workshop, using Blogger.com as a platform, you will receive hands-on help to create your own blog before you leave class!
Special teen event! Stages on Pages presents five YA authors reading from their work. Don’t miss Gretchen McNeil (Possess), Kim Culbertson (Instructions for a Broken Heart), Elise Allen (Populazzi), Stasia Kehoe (Audition), and Katherine Longshore (Gilt) debut new fiction for young adults.
Lindsay Whiting shows the Sonoma Collage Studio method—a process in which artists create collages and then hang them up to engage with the work. It provides a direct and powerful way of approaching your inner world and imagination by combining the art of collage with the art of dialogue. The class format is hands-on practice using magazines, calendars, and images. Whiting has six years of experience in collaging at the Sonoma Collage Studio. She is the author of Living into Art: Journeys Through Collage. New and continuing students welcome! Artists should bring 5-7 favorite magazines to cut for making a finished collage. Pre-cut images okay. Bring images to share. $5 materials fee due to instructor during first class.
Pulitzer Prize winner Richard Ford reads from Canada ($26.99), a deeply affecting new novel of boundaries traversed, of innocence lost and reconciled, and of the mysterious and consoling bonds of family. Told in spare, elegant prose both resonant and luminous, Canada is a masterwork of haunting, even spectacular vision from one of our great writers.
Richard Ford is the acclaimed author of the Bascombe novels, which include The Sportswriter and its sequels, Independence Day — the first novel to win the Pulitzer Prize and the PEN/Faulkner Award — and The Lay of the Land, as well as the short story collections Rock Springs and A Multitude of Sins, which contain many widely anthologized stories.
Anthony DeBenedict discusses his debut novel Culpable Innocence: The American Dream Reprised ($25.95). Set in the 1960s and against the backdrop of the Vietnam War, this recently published novel traces the story of Regis Fallen as he attempts to secure the promise of his American birthright in the midst of racial, political, and military strife.
Born in Philadelphia, Anthony DeBenedict grew up in California. He was drafted and sent to Vietnam, and for his service was awarded the Bronze Star. Upon his return to the States, DeBenedict pursued a career in systems development.
Ayesha Mattu talks about Love, InshAllah: The Secret Love Lifes of American Muslim Women ($15.95). Romance, dating, sex and Muslim women? In this groundbreaking collection, 25 writers sweep aside stereotypes and share stories of their search for love — from singles' events and online dating to college flirtations and arranged marriages, all with a Muslim twist. For this special event, Ayesha Mattu will be joined by local contributor and comedian, Zahra Noorbakhsh.
Pakistani-American Ayesha Mattu is a writer and international development consultant. Her writing has appeared in The Huffington Post, CNN.com, the International Museum of Women, Religion Dispatches, and the award-winning blog, Rickshaw Diaries. She was selected a Muslim Leader of Tomorrow by the UN Alliance of Civilizations and the ASMA Society in 2009. She lives in Northern California.
Everyone has a unique life story, so whether you’re writing for publication or to give the gift of family history to your children and grandchildren, you’re never too young or too old to write your memoirs. In this half-day course, Mary will show you how to find your personal voice, help you decide what to put in and what to leave out, and teach you techniques to make your memoir vivid and compelling. Mary Mackey is the New York Times bestselling author of 14 novels. Her latest novel is The Widow’s War.
Special for kids! Gena Dawn reads from The Rainbow’s Journey ($19.95), a children’s book that uses colorful photography and rhyming poetry to take children on a magical journey through the cultures and landscapes of South and Southeast Asia. The book tells the tale of a young Rainbow who travels across the world – and discovers rainbow colors wherever she goes!
Gena Dawn is an art educator and travel photographer based in San Francisco. Brad Kane is a writer in the entertainment industry. In 2009-2010, they spent a year traveling in Asia, where their adventures inspired The Rainbow’s Journey.
Dr. Tricia Hellman Gibbs, MD, is a member of the 2008 San Francisco Wexner Heritage group and co-founder of the San Francisco Free Clinic, a clinic providing free care to the medically uninsured. She is also a former member of the United States Ski Team and, along with her husband, Dr. Richard Gibbs, 1998 California Family Physician of the Year.
Make ‘em laugh, make ‘em cry, make ‘em come back for more. Whether you’re writing literary fiction, mysteries, or romance novels, you need to learn the secret of creating lively, realistic, compelling dialogue that will make your readers feel as if they’re eavesdropping on a great conversation. Are your characters speaking woodenly right now or (worse yet) refusing to speak at all? Don’t worry. Mary is ready to share the secret of creating dialogue that will jump off the page and into your readers’ hearts and minds. Mary Mackey is the New York Times bestselling author of 14 novels. Her latest novel is The Widow’s War.
Marta Fuchs discusses Legacy of Rescue: A Daughter's Tribute ($30.00). Fuchs’ father was one of 100 Hungarian Jews saved by Zoltán Kubinyi, the commanding officer of their forced labor battalion. This memoir, illustrated with family photographs, is in part a tribute to Kubinyi — a devout Seventh Day Adventist posthumously honored as a Righteous Among the Nations.
Marta Fuchs was born in Hungary and escaped with her family to the U.S. in the wake of the ’56 Revolution. She is a professional librarian and Director of Library Services at Drew School in SF and a licensed Marriage & Family Therapist in Albany. She is the author of Fragments of a Family: Remembering Hungary, the Holocaust, and Emigration to a New World.
Poets John Miatech (What the Wind Says) and Rebecca Radner (What you least expect - selected poems 1980 – 2011) read from their recent books. Each are gifted writers. Each are veterans of the local poetry scene. Each will surprise. Each will delight.
John Miatech has been writing since 1969, and was recent poetry award winner at the San Francisco Writer’s Conference in 2012. Rebecca Radner's work has appeared in numerous publications, anthologies and textbooks. For more than 20 years she reviewed books regularly for the San Francisco Chronicle.
Photographer William Carter presents his fifth book, Causes and Spirits: Photographs from Five Decades ($60.00). Both autobiography and a study of people, both photojournalism and fine art photography, Carter’s images capture something beneath their surface – whether he was shooting Iraqi Kurds for LIFE, the streets of London for Women's Wear Daily, or nudes or the American West for exhibit.
"Watch any mother kneeling beside her toddler, pointing and explaining what they are looking at. Our urge to see, and to connect, starts there." – William Carter
William Carter graduated from Stanford University in 1957. He became a professional photographer, writer and editor while concurrently pursuing fine art photography. He has worked as a book editor, free-lance photographer, and jazz musician (even touring with Turk Murphy). Carter's photographs have been widely exhibited in the U.S. and Europe, and are in the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. and elsewhere.
Allison Wenglin Belger presents The Power of Community: CrossFit and the Force of Human Connection ($24.95). The power of community is about making lives better and helping people achieve their goals. Psychologist Belger describes the importance of group affiliation – of having a network of mutual support and human connection in the midst of our hectic lives.
Allison Wenglin Belger grew up in a suburb of New York City where she was introduced to the pleasures and rigors of training and competing in varsity sports. With her husband, Dr. Belger owns four CrossFit affiliate gyms in Northern California where she juggles management of the family business, her work as a licensed psychologist and fitness coach, and her role as mom to two young daughters.
Brian Doherty speaks about Ron Paul's rEVOLution: The Man and the Movement He Inspired ($26.99). An enigmatic and surprising politician, Representative Ron Paul is unique among Republican candidates. He has strong traditional conservative bona fides. But he is an equally passionate advocate for such progressive-left stances as ending the drug war.
Brian Doherty is a senior editor at Reason magazine. He is the author of three previous books, including Radicals for Capitalism: A History of the Modern American Libertarian Movement and Gun Control on Trial. His work has appeared in the Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, and National Review, among other publications.
New Bay Area Voices read from their work: writers Liz Demi Green (Flinging Singing Things), Chris Carosi (Bright Veil), Keely Hyslop (Things to Say to Pirates on Nights When I Miss You), Fia Maxwell (If We Could Friends on Facebook You Would Know How Much I Love You), Janey Smith (Animals), and Jeff von Ward (Mormonia: Stories) present new work recently published.
This session will be taught in French.
Spending the night in Paris? The precious hours can slip away faster than a good bottle of Bordeaux. Nicolas Wolff provides an overview of everything a night in Paris has to offer: museums, walks, underground movie theaters, jazz clubs and, of course, food and wine. Bring questions about your upcoming trip and get expert, tailored advice.
“Even though I know Paris fairly well he provided me with many new places of interest to check out on my trip there this Fall. His handouts are super detailed and will be very useful too” one student reported.
Nicolas Wolff grew up in Paris and teaches French.
Acclaimed science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson reads from his new novel, 2312 ($25.99). Scientific and technological advances have opened gateways to an extraordinary future. Earth is no longer humanity's only home; new habitats have been created throughout the solar system. In 2312, however, events will force humanity to confront its past, present, and future.
Kim Stanley Robinson is a winner of the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus Awards. He is the author of eleven previous books, including the bestselling Mars trilogy and the critically acclaimed Fifty Degrees Below, Forty Signs of Rain, The Years of Rice and Salt, and Antarctica - for which he was sent to the Antarctic by the U.S. National Science Foundation as part of their Antarctic Artists and Writers' Program. He lives in Davis, California.
Will Allen discusses The Good Food Revolution ($26.00). In this new book, a pioneering urban farmer and MacArthur “Genius Award” winner points the way to building a new food system that can feed — and heal — broken communities. An eco-classic in the making, The Good Food Revolution is the story of a grassroots movement that is changing the way our nation eats.
After retiring from professional basketball and executive positions at Kentucky Fried Chicken and Procter & Gamble, Allen cashed in his retirement fund for a two-acre plot a half mile away from Milwaukee’s largest public housing project. The area was a food desert with only convenience stores and fast-food restaurants to serve the needs of local residents.
Four Wednesdays: June 6 - 27
Have you always wanted to write but weren’t sure where to begin? Do you think you don’t have the time or the discipline? Leslie Keenan
has 28 years’ experience in helping people uncover and release their
ideas. She has worked on over 80 published books. She knows what it
takes to get a book from the first glimmer of an idea into its published
form. A student wrote, “Leslie is inspiring, compassionate and has a
natural gift for creating a safe place for a writer. She’s like a living
life preserver.”
"If it weren't for Leslie
Keenan's courses at Book Passage, I would never have written a word of
fiction, and I would never have been published. To this day, I still use
the tools she gave me for understanding my process, finding my voice,
and fighting my fears."
-Tammy Kaehler, author of Dead Man's Switch, Poisoned Pen Press
Anthony Swofford talks about Hotel, Hospitals, and Jails: A Memoir ($26.99). Following the success of Jarhead, Swofford assumed he had exorcised his military demons — but as every veteran knows, that isn't exactly how it works. In these searing, courageous pages, Swofford struggles to make sense of what his military service meant, and what his life should become.
Anthony Swofford served in a U.S. Marine Corps Surveillance and Target Acquisition/Scout-Sniper platoon during the Gulf War. After the war, he was educated at American River College; the University of California, Davis; and the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop. His fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Harper's, Men's Journal and other publications; his memoir Jarhead was a major New York Times bestseller, and the basis for the movie of the same name.
David Talbot, author of the New York Times bestseller Brothers: The Hidden History of the Kennedy Years, is the founder and CEO of Salon. He lives in San Francisco.
Alison Bing talks about Italy and her two published travel guides Discover Italy ($24.99) and Lonely Planet Italy ($25.99). If you have an interest in Rome, Milan, The Italian Lakes, Venice, Tuscany, Naples, Sicily, or Sardinia not to mention Italian food, great art, the Forum in Rome, the Grand Canal in Venice, Pompeii or the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, then don’t miss this event. Carpe diem.
Alison Bing has written and contributed to many travel guides.
Calories — too few or too many — are the source of health problems affecting billions of people in today's globalized world. In Why Calories Count ($29.95), Marion Nestle and Malden Nesheim explain what calories are and how they work, both biologically and politically. The authors also offer some candid advice: Get organized. Eat less. Eat better. Get political.
Marion Nestle and Malden Nesheim will be in conversation with Clark Wolf.
Marion Nestle is Paulette Goddard Professor in the Department of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health and Professor of Sociology at New York University. She is the author of What to Eat and Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health; Safe Food: The Politics of Food Safety; and Pet Food Politics: The Chihuahua in the Coal Mine. Malden Nesheim is Professor Emeritus of Nutritional Sciences at Cornell University. He is coauthor (with Marion Nestle) of Feed Your Pet Right: The Authoritative Guide to Feeding Your Dog and Cat and (with Ann L. Yaktine) of the Institute of Medicine report Seafood Choices: Balancing Benefits and Risks.
3 Minute Reads
from San Francisco Grotto Writers
50+ Writers, 3 Minutes Each!
Joins us for a fast-paced and irreverent evening, showcasing new work from the students of the San Francisco Writer's Grotto writing classes. On this Friday evening, both fiction and nonfiction writers will read their work — but only for 3 minutes each! Their instructors (Grotto authors) will enforce the time limit. Join us for wine, fun, and fresh new writing.
Nell Freudenberger reads from her new novel The Newlyweds ($25.95), a powerful, funny, richly observed tour de force by one of America’s most acclaimed young writers: a story of love and marriage, secrets and betrayals, that takes us from the backyards of America to the back alleys and villages of Bangladesh.
“Wise, timely, ripe with humor and complexity, The Newlyweds is one of the most believable love stories of our young century.” — Gary Shytengart
“Freudenberger draws women's complex lives as brilliantly as Austen or Wharton or Woolf, and, with The Newlyweds, has given a performance of beauty and grace.” — Andrew Sean Greer
“A
big, complicated portrait of marriage, culture, family, and love.
Freudenberger never settles for an easy answer, and what she delivers is
a story that feels absolutely true. Every minute I was away from this
book I was longing to be back in the world she created.” —Ann Patchett
“Exceptional . . . Here is an
honest depiction of life as most people actually live it: Americans and
Asians, Christians and Muslims, liberals and conservatives.
Freudenberger writes with a cultural fluency that is remarkable and in a
prose that is clean, intelligent, and very witty.” — David Bezmozgis
Nell Freudenberger is the author of the novel The Dissident and the story collection Lucky Girls, winner of the PEN/Malamud Award and the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction from the American Academy of Arts and Letters; both books were New York Times Book Review Notables. A recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Whiting Award, and a Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Fellowship from the New York Public Library, she was named one of Granta’s Best Young American Novelists and one of The New Yorker’s “20 Under 40.”
People aren’t simply vehicles for stories, they are the stories—that’s true of novels, memoirs, screenplays, or even nonfiction. Through discussion & writing exercises, Martha Engber shows what makes a character irresistible and unbelievable. Engber is an editor, and author of the novel Wind Thief and Growing Great Characters from the Ground Up.
Join me for a three hour, hands on workshop in which you will learn how to keep your relationship on a loving track. We’ll use personal examples to flesh out common struggles that we all go through in our search to make our relationships more loving. To get the most out of the workshop it would be best to read Who’s Talking Now? The Owl and the Crocodile, $24.95. Seymour Boorstein, M.D., Psychiatrist/Psychoanalyst has been in practice in Marin for 50 years. He is a Professor of Psychiatry at UCSF Medical School.
Cosponsored by CUESA
Ruta Kahate presents Quick-Fix Indian: Easy, Exotic Dishes in 30 Minutes or Less ($16.99).On Saturday mornings, chefs and cookbook authors lead free cooking demonstrations sing seasonal ingredients from the Farmers Market. Join us out front of the Ferry Building in the Farmer's Market for tips, recipes, and a sample. We’ll be there with the books.
Calories — too few or too many — are the source of health problems affecting billions of people in today's globalized world. In Why Calories Count ($29.95), Marion Nestle explains what calories are and how they work, both biologically and politically. The author also offer some candid advice: Get organized. Eat less. Eat better. Get political.
Marion Nestle is Paulette Goddard Professor in the Department of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health and Professor of Sociology at New York University. She is the author of What to Eat and Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health; Safe Food: The Politics of Food Safety; and Pet Food Politics: The Chihuahua in the Coal Mine.
Morton Beebe is a world-renowned documentarian of San Francisco. His photographs have been published in various magazines throughout his career, which has spanned more than fifty years. Peter Beren, literary agent and publishing consultant, is the author of six books.
Dixon Long discusses Markets of Paris 2nd Edition ($18.95). The food scene in Paris has changed dramatically since 2006, when Markets of Paris was published. Markets are held in the same locales — but many have undergone a transformation led by a new generation focused on local and organic produce. This new edition revisits & updates the entire market scene.
Dixon Long is a novelist and short story writer, as well as the author of the first edition of Markets of Paris, and Markets of Provence. He has lived in Paris and Provence, and now lives in the Bay Area.
Left Coast Writers book launch: Editors Joanna Biggar & Linda Watanabe McFerrin discuss Wandering in Bali: A Tropical Paradise Discovered ($14.95). This collection of varied tales, some mystical, some funny, some terrifying — are each told in a different, highly personal voice. From temples to Balinese feasts to classical music and dance, the writers here sample and share the multiple faces of Bali.
Joanna Biggar is a writer, journalist, and teacher who has published fiction, poetry, personal and travel essays and hundreds of feature articles for newspapers and magazines. She has traveled solo in the most remote corners of China, chaired a school board in Ghana, worked as a journalist in Washington, DC, and taught school kids in Oakland, California, where she lives.
Poet, travel writer and novelist Linda Watanabe McFerrin has been traveling since she was two and writing about it since she was six. A contributor to numerous journals, newspapers, magazines, anthologies and online publications, she is the author of poetry collections, award-winning novels and a short story collection, and the editor of a travel guidebook and literary anthologies.
Jon Young is on the leading edge of animal tracking and understanding bird language. He has been exploring animal communication for 35 years and was mentored by the famous tracker Tom Brown Jr. as well as a tribal elder in Africa.
Discover how writing scenes for the stage is different from writing scenes for the page. This workshop will introduce you to the 3 Ds: Discovery, Decision, Doing that form the basis for powerful stage scenes. In addition, we will explore the concept of character masks: What face(s) do characters present to the world? What is the back story behind them? How do these masks crumble, melt, and fade as the action of the play progresses? You will be guided through short evocative writing exercises. Nina Solomita, MFA, has had plays produced in Massachusetts and California; her monologues were published in the ICWP Mother-Daughter Series, and she has taught playwriting at Pacific Repertory Theatre, Carmel.
Olin Dodson is a licensed psychotherapist, and Founder and Executive Director of the Melissa Project, a non-profit corporation assisting Cystic Fibrosis treatment in Costa Rica. He holds graduate degrees from San Francisco Theological Seminary (Theological Studies) and Sonoma State University (Psychology), and recently returned from his 15th trip to Central America.
