Update from Book World

My novel came out a little more than a year ago, and it’s still having adventures. Here are a few of them.

Authors’ Roundtable at Temple Sinai


Sinai book logo
Every year, the Women of Reform Judaism of Temple Sinai in Washington, DC hold an authors’ roundtable, which brings together some 200 book lovers for a panel discussion and then an opportunity to talk with individual authors over lunch. This year I was lucky enough to be part of the event, which included:

The discussion was expertly moderated by Lissa Muscatine, co-owner of DC’s preeminent independent bookstore, Politics and Prose. Muscatine had a long career as a journalist, and was a speechwriter and top advisor to Hillary Clinton from her years as First Lady through the 2008 election through her time as Secretary of State. Those of us on the book panel felt we could have had an entire discussion solely about Muscatine’s experiences.

There’s nothing better than talking about books and writing with people who love both. If you’re in the DC area, I suggest you check out next year’s roundtable at Temple Sinai. I’ll be there – in the audience.

Book groups!

Books that Bind book group

Books that Bind book group

I’ve been having a wonderful time meeting with book groups as they discuss Her Own Vietnam. It’s fascinating to hear readers’ responses, perspectives and insights about the novel.

Being with these book groups has reinforced something I’ve always known but can still find difficult to grasp: your novel is not a finished product. It is simply the raw material that each reader will use to create her own experience. And her experience can be something you intended, or something you never imagined, or even something you wish you’d thought of. In that way, each reader turns your book into her own.

Letters from readers

Photo: Zach Pierce mu-43dotcom

Photo: Zach Pierce mu-43dotcom

Every now and then a reader will take the time to send me a personal note about their experience with Her Own Vietnam. This one is from a man who was in one of the book groups I visited. He is a West Point graduate who served in Vietnam. Everyone else in his class also deployed to Vietnam, many of them for multiple tours. Not all of them came home.

Here is his letter.

“I wanted to say how much I enjoyed reading your book and even more enjoyed the opportunity to meet you in person and be a part of the [book group] discussion. I have read the book twice and have very much appreciated it as a thoughtful and compelling description of a piece of the world that my wife and I and others affected in one way or another by the war in Vietnam experienced in the late 60s and early 70s. Those experiences were very different depending on the specific time and role, but they left a mark on those who passed through them. We were young then but grew up quickly.

“I was never in an evac hospital and my friends who were have only fragmentary recollections of their time there, but those women and men who lived that experience for a year surely had experiences that haunted them ever after that. It’s a story that has not gotten much public discussion and your book captured well what they must have felt and experienced.

“So thanks very much. There is always some strain in revisiting those times but they are always there and I find that in one way or another I revisit them several times a week – not now as traumatic memories but as experiences that color the way I look at the world.”

Haunting Legacy

Deborah Kalb is an accomplished journalist and the co-author of the influential nonfiction book Haunting Legacy: Vietnam and the American Presidency from Ford to Obama. Her co-author was none other than her father, Bernard Kalb, who covered the Vietnam War.

So I was thrilled when Deborah interviewed me for her book blog.

She reached out to me because I’m participating in the annual Temple Sinai Authors’ Roundtable on February 27th, along with three wonderful writers:

  • Michelle Brafman, Washing the Dead
  • Maureen Corrigan, So We Read On: How The Great Gatsby Came to Be and Why it Endures
  • Sarah Wildman, Paper Love: Searching for the Girl My Grandfather Left Behind

The panel discussion will be moderated by Lissa Muscatine, co-owner of DC’s venerable independent bookstore Politics and Prose.

So yes, it’s going to be book-lovers’ heaven here in Washington, DC next Saturday. If you’re in the area, please come join us.

Sinai book logo

3 lessons from writing about 30 Women Novelists You Should Know

 

Photo: Petr Dosek

Photo: Petr Dosek

One late summer afternoon, I had a great idea: I would use my blog to write about women novelists. This would be an excellent way to fill the time before my own novel was published. It could be a series of oh, let’s say 30 posts.

The first lesson

That was August 2014. My novel Her Own Vietnam was published three months later. I wrote my last post – about Vanessa Garcia, number 30 of the 30 Women Novelists You Should Know – on January 9th, 2016. So the first thing I learned about writing this series was that it took much, much longer than I ever imagined.

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One reason why it took so long is that I didn’t march from one blog post about women novelists to another, as I thought I would. Over the months my attention skipped around to blog posts on Canadian writers, to lessons of the Vietnam war, to the Movement for Black Lives, to Islamophobia, to the legacy of the Triangle fire, to the theme the historian Pamela Toler describes as “My book! My book!”

Another reason is that the 30 women novelists I featured are so damned interesting. It wasn’t enough to read a novel by each one and write about it. I had to read about the other books they’d published, interviews they’d given, essays they’d written, and articles other people had published about them. I’m now a fan of each of these novelists, ready to scarf up the next book they produce.

White woman in library

The second lesson

The second thing I learned, and this is perhaps more about social media than about writing, is that it didn’t make sense to put up a new post every couple of days, as I had planned. It takes time for readers to find your post and to share it with others. I learned to keep each blog post up for several days, promoting it via Facebook and Twitter, before moving on to the next. Sometimes the featured novelist herself would help spread the word by sending a tweet to her followers, which was always a thrill.

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The third lesson

The third thing I learned is that my cup – as in “This book isn’t my cup of tea” – is actually more capacious than I thought. For example, one of the novels I ended up loving, Pamela DiFrancesco’s The Devils That Are Here to Stay, was in a genre called Acid Western that I’d never heard of and didn’t want to try. And Mary Doria Russell took a topic in which I had zero interest – Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp, anyone? – and made it riveting.

In my youth I believed I had to finish every book I picked up. In middle age I realized that there are too many wonderful books around to spend your time on a reading experience that doesn’t delight you. If I’m not totally engaged after 50 pages, I put the book down with no guilt. While I still hold to that principle, the process of writing about these 30 women novelists has taught me to sample more widely and expect to be surprised.

 Photo: Girla Obscura


Photo: Girla Obscura

The numbers

Let me take a moment to do my own little Vida count. Of the 30 books I reviewed, 100% were written by women. Gold star for me! One hundred percent also passed the Bechdel test.

Of the 30 authors, 10 are women of color. At least six identify as LGBTQ. Of course, there is some crossover there. Twenty-nine are still living. Two of the 30 are personal friends of mine. I had read books by 10 of the 30 novelists before starting this blog series. The others have become favorites of mine only in the past year and a half. In a dozen cases, I reviewed the writer’s debut novel.

The names

Here are the 30 Women Novelists You Should Know.

  1. Carol Anshaw
  2. Kim Barnes
  3. Octavia Butler
  4. Jillian Cantor
  5. Susan Choi
  6. Sonya Chung
  7. Jennifer Haigh
  8. Rene Denfeld
  9. Masha Hamilton
  10. Elliott Holt
  11. Dara Horn
  12. Lily King
  13. Caroline Leavitt
  14. Zelda Lockhart
  15. Andrea Levy
  16. Brenda K. Marshall
  17. Laura McBride
  18. Jill McCorkle
  19. Celeste Ng
  20. Mary Doria Russell
  21. Wendy Lee
  22. Pamela DiFrancesco
  23. Shelley Ettinger
  24. Emily Gray Tedrowe
  25. Susmita Bhattacharya
  26. Tayari Jones
  27. Stephanie Feldman
  28. Natalie S. Hartnett
  29. Jane Summer
  30. Vanessa Garcia

What’s next?

I don’t think I’ll be starting any long blog series anytime soon. But I’ll continue to write about books by women authors and to give away copies of novels I particularly enjoyed.

In fact, right now I’m giving away a copy of Vanessa Garcia’s White Light. Check out #30 if you’re interested. (And you should be!) Next up will be Casualties, the brand new novel by Elizabeth Marro.

What else should I be reading or writing about? Tell me your ideas. I’m open to anything, as long as it starts with a story.

WhiteLight_Cover_Web

Update from book world

I had a fantastic experience on July 7th, reading from Her Own Vietnam for a lively crowd at Busboys and Poets restaurant in Washington, DC. The book talk was hosted by DC’s premier independent bookstore, Politics & Prose, which runs a jewel of a bookstore inside Busboys.

Here are a few of my favorite photos from the event.

Reading from Her Own Vietnam at Busboys and Poets on July 7th, 2015.

Reading from Her Own Vietnam at Busboys and Poets on July 7th, 2015. (Photo: Kate Patterson)

The crowd was engaged, and the Q&A was great. (Photo: Kate Patterson)

The crowd was engaged, and the Q&A discussion was fascinating. (Photo: Kate Patterson)

Stylish stack of Her Own Vietnam on the front counter. (Photo: Janet Coleman)

Stylish stack of Her Own Vietnam on the front counter. (Photo: Janet Coleman)

As a writer, you spend most of your time alone behind a computer. It was a delight to talk about my book with a room full of interested – and interesting – people.

Update from book world

indiefab-silver-imprintSparkling in silver

I’m thrilled to tell you that Her Own Vietnam has won the Silver in Foreword Reviews’ INDIEFAB Book of the Year Awards in its category (war and military fiction). The award, which was selected by a panel of librarians and booksellers, was announced on June 26. This is the first literary award I’ve ever won, and the first (of many, no doubt) for my publisher, Shade Mountain Press.

Let’s get together

If you live in the Washington, DC area, please come to my reading and book talk about Her Own Vietnam on Tuesday, July 7th at 6:30 pm. The event will be at Busboys and Poets on 14th and V, hosted by Politics and Prose, which has a bookstore within the restaurant. The reading is free and you’ll meet cool people there.

Busboys and Poets

We’ve got winners!

As you may know, I’ve been giving away free books by women writers through this blog and through my newsletter, Being Bookish. Here are this month’s winners.

Congratulations to G.R. of Minneapolis, MN, who won a free copy of The Normal State of Mind by Susmita Bhattacharya.

And congratulations to H.F. of Louisville, KY, who won a free copy of Fugitive Colors by Lisa Barr.

Want some free books? Check this blog, or you can sign up for the newsletter here if you’d like the free book opportunities to come to your inbox. July’s giveaway book is the fabulous novel The Angel of Losses by Stephanie Feldman.

Angel of Losses