Q&A with Donna Hemans about her novel TEA BY THE SEA in the New York Writers Institute!

You recently published your second novel. Congratulations!

Thank you. Publishing a book in the midst of a pandemic is a humbling experience, and all writers who published this year will likely tell the same story about opportunities that disappeared—whether expected book reviews, planned book tours, launch events, conference sessions. Despite some of the setbacks, I’ve had some opportunities to interact with readers and other writers virtually. And I hope that the best practices literary organizations and bookstores pivoted to this summer will remain and make for meaningful opportunities for more writers and readers to interact once we return to “normal.”

Donna Hemans’ heartfelt Essay: SECRETS THAT HOLD US, come read it!

“I didn’t grow up with my mother,” Mom tells me. We’re sitting on the front verandah looking out at the grass before us wilting in the afternoon sun and the dwarf coconut trees that line one side of the driveway. The coconut fronds dip with the breeze, revealing green-and yellow-husked coconuts. It’s hot on the verandah; the aluminum awning, put there years earlier to shield the sun and rain, traps the late afternoon heat as well…..

Poet David Mason featured in the Times Literary Supplement!

Author of THE SOUND: NEW & SELECTED POEMS, David Mason is published on TLS with his new poem “Antipodes.” Read a brief excerpt below:

i.m. Derek Mahon, 1941–2020

The death of the poet tenders a new start,
one’s own slate of errors wiped clean, and the day
contributes a close horizon bound in fog…

To read more, click here.

Jen Risher, author of WE NEED TO TALK: A MEMOIR ABOUT WEALTH interviewed by Bookclubz

At a time when income inequality is a huge problem, our country’s economic system is broken, and money is still a taboo subject even among those closest to us, this engaging, introspective memoir is essential reading: a catalyst for conversation that demystifies wealth and inspires us to connect. We Need to Talk: A Memoir About Wealth gives voice to an experience millions share, but no one discusses: what it’s like to be rich. 

Bookclubz Founder Anna Ford interviewed author Jen Risher about her deeply personal memoir, what inspired her to share her story, and the conversation she aims to spark.

Click here to read more.

BEYOND REPAIR: LIVING IN A FRACTURED STATE author participates in Brattleboro Literary Festival

BRATTLEBORO — Among the authors Zooming in to this weekend’s virtual Brattleboro Literary Festival is Sebastian Matthews, who wrote a book of personal essays related to his family’s recovery from a major car crash.

Matthews, of Asheville, North Carolina, is a longtime visitor of Vermont and a board member of the Vermont Studio Center. He’s a poet and son of the late poet William Matthews.

“I’m always wanted to be part of the festival,” he said.

Click here to read more.

Thank you Malden Public Library for your addition of ANIMAL WIFE to your staff picks!

Malden Public Library in Malden, MA has recently added Lara Ehrlich’s short story collection ANIMAL WIFE, to their staff picks. A thank you to them! Be sure to always check back up on your local library, you never know what you may find or information you may discover.

Jennifer Risher on list of 25 most influential people in Silicon Valley from Modern Luxury magazine!

WE NEED TO TALK: A MEMOIR ABOUT WEALTH author Jennifer Risher has been added to Modern Luxury | Silicon Valley’s list for the top 25 most influential people. What an honor to be on a list! See the other additions to the count, like Vice Presidential Nominee Kamala Harris, Steph and Ayehsa Curry and more.

The Broad Museum features Amy Uyematsu in a recent video series on L.A. talent.

Amy Uyematsu author of BASIC VOCABULARY is featured in the three-part video series entitled L.A. Intersections displaying diversity and talent with those based in Los Angeles. To watch the full playlist click here. Thank you to The Broad for helping promote diversity and talent in these trying times!

Joshua Rivkin featured in Poems.com poem of the day!

Rivkin’s piece “New Economy” was featured on Poems.com Friday, October 9th, 2020.

To read the poem in it’s entirety visit the link below.

Reema Rajbanshi & Aimee Liu’s books have been featured in Frolic!

2020 Great Group Reads Selections

Women’s National Book Association features TEA BY THE SEA:

The 2020 Great Group Reads selections have been chosen!

This year’s list features books from a wide-range of styles and from authors with diverse backgrounds.

On this list, you can find stories about social issues such as racism, immigration, LGBTQ+, mental health, and war.

Click here to read more.

Jennifer Risher’s WE NEED TO TALK: A MEMOIR ABOUT WEALTH, featured in Leadership Story Lab’s newsletter.

Read the full Jennifer Risher interview here!

“I recently received my copy of Jennifer Risher’s new book, We Need to Talk: A Memoir About Wealth in the mail and I’m excited to dig further into this topic. Why? Because, as a storyteller, I’m always interested in understanding why some topics are easy to discuss and others are stigmatized.

What do we miss out on understanding because we’re too nervous to ask questions or bring up “taboo” topics?

“Wealth doesn’t look anything like what Hollywood is selling us,” says Jennifer as she sets up her reasons for why she wants to “demystify” wealth – explaining further that it’s easy to normalize any living situation when everyone you know lives more or less exactly the same way. This same thought could be applied to almost every other major issue we talk about (or avoid talking about). What you consider to be “normal” (experiences, worldviews, lifestyle, etc.) may never be challenged if you only discuss them with others who are exactly like you.

There are a few reasons why I think we need to work harder to understand each other.

#1. The more a topic is forbidden, the bigger its appeal.: We have a natural tendency to be curious. This curiosity can be detrimental when it leads us to chase the phantom version of something we don’t understand. Story vacuums are created when we see the outline of someone’s story, but we don’t allow them to fill it in themselves. Furthermore, once a narrative is established, it can be very hard to undo. We may start to assume things such as “my wealthier friend can’t relate to my life” or “if I had more money, I’d be happier.”

#2. Comparing two opposites is an easy way to draw people into a larger conversation. Wealth has an evil twin: poverty. You can’t talk about one without mentioning the other, and, consequently, the vast income inequality that we’re facing. By highlighting opposites, we create a platform to discuss changes that should be made.

#3. Shutting down a topic kills an opportunity for connection: Jennifer Risher explains, “Even with people who have a lot of wealth, money isn’t connecting us. When money is a barrier to those connections, that’s a problem. Our silence around money just makes it more powerful than us. We aren’t able to see reality.” Whenever you avoid conversations, you can put up barriers without meaning to. There is a lot we can learn from someone who has a different perspective from ours.

This topic of wealth is particularly interesting to me right now because my research partner and I have just finished conducting 22 interviews with first generation wealth creators. I have been fascinated by the findings and I can’t wait to share them!”

If you enjoyed the interview, check out Leadership Story Lab’s website, and also look into Jennifer’s book itself here.

Amy Shearn, the author of UNSEEN CITY, has an article published on Forge.

“The news of the past few days has inspired a flurry of group texts and confused conversations among my friends and colleagues. And the general consensus is that no one knows how to feel right now…”

To read the rest of her article, click the read more option below. And do not forget to check out UNSEEN CITY.

ANIMAL WIFE featured in Fresh Ink Book Editing newsletter, read here!

From the Fresh Ink Book Editing newsletter, Maya Rock interviews Lara Ehrlich author of ANIMAL WIFE. Read the full interview below! And be sure to visit Fresh Ink Book Editing’s website!

FIVE QUESTIONS FOR LARA EHRLICH, AUTHOR OF ANIMAL WIFE

Lara Ehrlich is the author of the award-winning, just-released debut story collection Animal Wife . Below is a condensed version of a long interview over the phone.

1. Animal Wife is a book for adults, but when we initially met, you were writing for teens. Tell me about your transition from YA to adult fiction.

I thought I was writing a YA novel and wrote hundreds and hundreds of pages before I realized it wasn’t meant to be a novel. So, I cut hundreds and hundreds of pages to narrow the focus onto the mother-daughter relationship, and that’s when it became a literary fiction short story, “Animal Wife,” and that’s what created the momentum for the rest of the stories and the adult focus of the book. Also, as I started considering motherhood, a major theme of the collection, my interest starting moving to mothers from the daughters.

In a way, it was a gradual process moving from YA to adult. YA aligned with my interest in that threshold between childhood and adulthood and how scary that can be with lots of feelings of shame and anxiety, an interest which is still apparent in the collection.

The most rewarding part of the transition was finding the courage to write about women. I had always stayed away from writing about women. It was risky and scary to me and sort of vulnerable, so finding the courage to sort of turn my attention to women felt empowering.

2. The stories in the collection feel like literary fiction but contain elements from fantasy, sci-fi, horror, and magical realism. How do you feel genre influences your writing?

I don’t ascribe to that MFA rule that genre fiction isn’t literary. We’ve all heard that as writers, there’s literary fiction, and then there’s horror, sci-fi, and romance, and those are all genre fiction and somehow less than literary fiction. I don’t believe that: It’s insulting to say that horror is any less literary than straight literary fiction. I feel like it goes the other way, too: some readers see literary fiction as . . . stories that don’t have a plot and they don’t have a point . . . [they see] literary fiction as snooty or not relevant.

I didn’t really think about genre as I was writing the stories. It was more like whatever the story needed to make it come alive is what I used to bring it alive. And I love that there’s elements of horror and scifi and a little bit of romance in there with magical realism and literary fiction, and there’s flash fiction in there.

3. The collection feels quite unified, while each story can stand alone very easily. What steps did you take to connect all of them together?

I always just wanted to write a book, whether they were books of short fiction or books of long fiction. My first intention was to publish them in literary journals, because I love them, and I love short fiction, and I love that community.

But I also knew I was writing short stories toward an ultimate collection, so though I published them individually, I intended for them to then come together in a complete book. There were a couple of short stories that I wrote that I didn’t put in. For example, one had a male protagonist, and I wanted the collection to be solely from a female perspective.

When putting together the collection, for each piece, I thought where does it fit, how does it fit, and how can I adjust it so that it will fit. It was a conscious weaving together. There’s a lot of echoing, so you’ll notice certain phrases recur, like “undertoad” is in two different stories (more prominent in the one called  “The Undertoad”), and there are some elements of characters doing similar things.

For example, with “The Monster at Marta’s Back,” that story was originally a little more straight-forward. That character that Marta meets on the train was sort of just a creepy guy, and to me it didn’t feel like it fit with the rest of the collection because the stories get progressively stranger and that one stuck out in the end as more rooted in realism. I worked to make it feel much more menacing and added some ambiguity so that it felt more connected than the others as well.

4. What is your favorite story in the collection and why?

That’s like trying to choose your favorite child, which feels inappropriate. I think my favorite in the collection is “The Vanishing Point,” in which a woman builds a mechanical deer suit to live as a deer in the woods behind her childhood home. That’s the last one I wrote. That one felt like the direction I want to head in for my next project. I didn’t want to stop writing that story. It was so much fun and so exciting and one of the more challenging ones to write, too, because I had to research deer biomechanics and academia.

5. You’re a new-ish mother, and have a full-time job, and have managed to get a lot of wonderful writing done. How do you hold it all together?

Well, I’d been asking women out to lunch out before Covid and asking how do you do this and they said, “Thank you for thinking that I’m doing it all—my life is a shitshow every day.” It was so reassuring to hear that these women were struggling just as much as I was and that it wasn’t as easy as it looked.

Yes, from the outside, I have a child, and I’ve been writing a lot of things, and I give myself credit for that. I’m not going to disparage it. But you don’t do all those things at the same time. It seems like women are doing all this stuff at the same time because seemingly all at once, an essay comes out, a book comes out, then posts on Twitter, but there’s a lot of time leading up to it. The mermaid story I wrote a year ago just got published.  The short stories I wrote over eight years, and the collection is coming out now.  The full-time job I have is very demanding but has ebbs and flows, so I’m not constantly in meetings.

So all these elements can be shifted around the stovetop of life: sometimes on front burner and sometimes on back burner and sometimes falling off the stove.

If you enjoyed this interview be sure to visit Fresh Ink Book Editing’s website and subscribe to their newsletter!

ANIMAL WIFE shoutout from Bartleby’s Books in their most recent newsletter.

Red Hen Press would like to extend their most gracious thanks to Bartleby’s Books from Wilmington, Vermont. In their most recent newsletter Bartleby’s Books speaks of Lara Ehrlich’s debut short story collection ANIMAL WIFE with great respect and intrigue. To support Bartleby’s Books click the link below.