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Thanks to all who support authors

November 25, 2018 Leave a Comment

So many things to be thankful for this time of year (did someone say pie?). But the weekend before Thanksgiving underscored something for which I’m particularly grateful.

I went to Seeley Lake, about an hour northeast of Missoula, for a reading sponsored by the Alpine Artisans group, my second time there. Now, Seeley is a town of only about 1,600 people, and yet Alpine Artisans routinely turns out a wonderfully large, sharp and appreciative crowd for readings and other events.

Readings are held at Grizzly Claw Trading Co., run by Dee and Susan Baker, a store filled with work by local artists and craftspeople, and books by regional authors—and a great coffee shop, too.

The town is sandwiched between its eponymous lake and the Mission Mountains, claiming one of Montana’s most jaw-dropping settings, in a state that shrugs at the merely spectacular.

The event capped a string of readings and book signings for Silent Hearts, occasions that underscore yet again how fortunate I am to live in a place whose people, even in the smallest communities, are so supportive of writers and artists.

I hope all of those people had a wonderful Thanksgiving, filled with art and books (and pie!) and the kind of fellowship that warms the heart in this cold time of year.

Leave a Comment Tags: Readings, Silent Hearts

First international reading

November 14, 2018 Leave a Comment

 

A month ago – it’s a cliche, but it truly seems like yesterday – I found myself reading from one of my novels by the light of candles and a fragrant peat fire in the village of Cloghane (population, about three-hundred) on Ireland’s Dingle Peninsula.

 

Hayes-McCoy

Also reading that night was Felicity Hayes-McCoy, who was celebrating the September release in the U.S. and Canada of her Summer in the Garden Cafe (Harper Perennial).  It’s the second in her “Finfarren” series featuring a librarian, and set on a fictional peninsula on Ireland’s West Coast. Her books quickly went into the TBR pile; I especially liked what she had to say about focusing on the too-often unsung role of women in Ireland (OK, in every country, but that night we were focusing on Ireland), which she addresses in her memoir, A Woven Silence.

 

Hayes-McCoy and I were at a ceilidh, an evening of song and storytelling and reading and even a couple of bawdy jokes from family friend Mary O’Morain. Maybe someday the magic of those memories will wear off, but I doubt it.

Leave a Comment Tags: Readings

Writing across cultures

September 5, 2018 Leave a Comment

It’s always a bit of a risk writing about race, ethnicity, creed and culture different than one’s own.

I tell myself that my decades as a journalist, when more often than not I was reporting in such situations, honed my sensitivity – but there’s always that fear that you’ll slip from the high wire that divides patronizing from romanticizing.

So it was especially gratifying last night when Mariam and her daughter Noor showed up at my reading and book signing at the Boulder Book Store in Colorado and assured me that Silent Hearts got it right.

The fact that one of the characters in the book is named Mariam made it even better!

And I’ve already marked as “must attend” a panel at this weekend’s Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers Colorado Gold conference called “Writing characters from cultures not your own.” Because you can never pay too much attention to those details.

Leave a Comment Tags: Atria, Readings, Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers

Big book love under the Big Sky

August 28, 2018 Leave a Comment

 

Pretty sure I’ve posted along these lines before, but it bears repeating: Very little can beat the fun of readings and book-signings in small-town libraries.

I’ve had three in the last week, on the shore of Flathead Lake in Polson, in downtown Stevensville, and a couple of blocks off the main drag in Superior, and each was wonderful in its own way.

At the largest, North Lake County Public Library in Polson (population, about 5,000), several members of a short-story book club showed up and asked the pointed questions I knew to expect after attending one of their meetings earlier this year. These folks meet weekly, and are working their way through a short-story anthology. They don’t mess around, and their queries about craft were sharp and insightful.

 

At the North Valley Public Library in Stevensville (pop., about 2,000), a librarian rendered me temporarily speechless by saying my writing reminded her of James Lee Burke’s. (Cue fainting.) And fellow writer Ralaine Fagone had some great advice on how to better use my author’s page on Facebook, which generally mystifies me. Luckily, Fagone had it figured out, and generously shared her knowledge.

 

And the wonderful folks at the Mineral County Public Library in Superior (pop. 826) provide a cake with an image of a visiting author’s book, thereby ruining any claims we might try to stake as starving artists. They also moved the reading outdoors to take advantage of a bright and breezy end-of-summer day, making the occasion even more festive.

 

In each place, there were great discussions about books, and in each, I left feeling as though I’d made new friends.

I’ve heard people complain about small audiences at readings, but I’ve found those to be some of my best experiences, as the reading nearly always turns into an intimate, in-depth discussion, one that leaves me in awe of my great good fortune to be part of the passionate reading community that is rural Montana.

Leave a Comment Tags: iibraries, north lake county public library, Readings

Some Sentences, March 15 – Let the readings begin

March 15, 2017 Leave a Comment

IMG_0948March 15, 2017 – Reservations, which hit bookstore shelves a little more than a week ago, gets its first reading tonight, always a high-anxiety act. At least, it always starts off that way.

I’m like a lot of writers – my happy place is alone in a room with my keyboard and my characters. Then, sooner than I’m ever ready, the book is out and demanding its time in the sun, meaning that I’m going to have to stand up in front of people – real people – and talk. Shades of junior high terror.

But I suspect that, despite the inevitable jitters, when I read tonight at Fact and Fiction, I’ll realize as I always do that it’s really fun to talk with people about writing and reading. More than fun – it’s gratifying to live in a state with so many flourishing independent bookstores, and to see how much people care about books. So, deep breath. Here goes.

Oh, and I’m adding more readings all the time to my events page. Check it out!

Leave a Comment Tags: Events, Fact and Fiction, Readings, Reservations the novel

Some Sentences, March 2017 – Next week in North Dakota

March 2, 2017 Leave a Comment

2017 WV 2-21-2017-1

March 2, 2017 – Getting excited/nervous about next week’s events at Dickinson State University in North Dakota. Each year during March – Women’s History Month – Dickinson State features a Women’s Voices program. This year’s theme is Social Justice: Women Taking a Stand for Equity and Equality, a cause near and dear to my heart, so I was thrilled to be asked to participate.

Among many things, the program features my second novel, Dakota, set in North Dakota’s oil patch and with a decidedly feminist bent. As the Missoula Independent said in its review: “In a patriarchal world, women can either work against each other for perceived gain, or band together to lend a sister a hand.” Yes, indeed.

Leave a Comment Tags: Book tour, Readings

The myth that readings suck

September 20, 2015 Leave a Comment

 

All (well, many, many, many) authors say this: Readings are pull-your-fingernails-out-with-pliers ordeals. I myself may have said this once or a thousand times.

stagefrightWe are supposed to sensitive introverts, we writers, reveling in the fact that our job involves sitting in a little room all by ourselves for hours on end. It’s our happy place. You know what’s not our happy place? Out There.

Out There, we can’t be our awkward, tongue-tied selves. We have to have actual conversations. Wear presentable clothes. We have to comb our hair, for God’s sake. Oh, the torture.

That’s true, a little bit. But you know what? A lot more, it’s crap.

That was brought home to me last night when, after many months without any public appearances (by the time my next book, Disgraced, comes out in March, it will have been two years between books), I was invited to give a reading in Seeley Lake, Montana. The town, about an hour north of my home, is famous mostly because A River Runs Through It author Norman Maclean’s family has a cabin there. There’s good writer karma in Seeley Lake.

FullSizeRender(45)Just how good, I found out last night when – on a bluebird Saturday, when anyone with any sense would have been playing on the lake – people packed Grizzly Claw Trading Co. for the reading sponsored by Alpine Artisans Inc.

It wasn’t torture. It was terrific. We talked about books and writing, and ate homemade treats and drank wine. I got a ton of new recommendations for books to read. When I think back, that’s pretty much been my experience at every reading. Which underscores the following: It’s an unbelievable privilege to talk with folks who are part of a community of knowledgeable and enthusiastic readers.

So here’s my vow to stop whining about having to come out my cave and stand up in front of people and talk. Because it’s not a performance. It’s a conversation, and a wonderfully rich one at that. It was great to have last night’s reminder.

Leave a Comment Tags: Bookselling, Disgraced the novel, Readings

Missoula, Montana – a writing community

September 26, 2014 Leave a Comment

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David Allan Cates

The other night I went to a reading by Missoula author David Allan Cates, who was launching his new novel, his fifth, Tom Connor’s Gift, due out Oct. 15.

It was a lovely, warm  evening with lots of things going on around Missoula, but Cates packed the house at Shakespeare and Company. The crowd included fellow authors Pete Fromm (whose own new novel, If Not For This, was published last month), Peter Stark (Astoria: John Jacob Astor and Thomas Jefferson’s Lost Pacific Empire) and Victoria Jenkins (An Unattended Death), among others. In Cates’ remarks after the reading, people around the room nodded as he made much of the benefits of living in a community with such strong support for writers. Truly, sometimes I pinch myself in wonder at having landed in such a writerly place.

There is, of course, the University of Montana’s vaunted creative writing program. I’ve taken Cates’ novel-writing class at 406 Writers Workshop, a group that also holds sessions in short fiction, memoir, poetry, screenwriting and creative nonfiction. The booksellers here are wonderfully supportive of local authors. And the annual Humanities Montana Festival of the Book (Oct. 9-11 this year) packs venues around town.

More than anything, I’ve found the authors here to be unstintingly generous with newbies like me in terms of advice and mentoring. I’ve heard horror stories about the cutthroat competition in other paces and writing programs. I’m so glad I’m here instead.

Leave a Comment Tags: Book signings, Bookstores, Montana Festival of the Book, Readings

A Delaware homecoming and a reading

June 26, 2014 2 Comments

 

 

It’s been an emotionally rewarding week on the book front.

As part of a family reunion week in Delaware, I did a reading in Smyrna, the town where I grew up and went to school. But not just any run-of-the-mill reading. It was held in the Smyrna Opera House, a historic building that had fallen on hard times when I was a child. Its first floor housed the police station and library, and the second floor—home to the theater—was in disrepair. Smyrna residents rallied in recent years, raising millions of dollars to restore the building—which in its heyday hosted speeches by Frederick Douglass and William Jennings Bryant—to its former glory. I got chills standing on the same stage.

But the highlight was the fact that the reading was a joint production with my father, Tony Florio, a wildlife biologist. Earlier in the day, the state of Delaware named the wildlife refuge where we grew up in his honor. It’s now the Tony Florio Woodland Beach Wildlife Area. That evening, Dad read from his book Progger: A Life on the Marsh, an account of his years at the refuge, and I read excerpts from Montana and Wyoming, to an audience comprising former classmates and teachers and lifelong friends.

Afterward, Dad and I signed the wall in the opera house’s sound studio, adding our notes to everyone else who’s performed there since the restoration. It took me about a day to come down from the clouds. So grateful to everyone who made it possible.

2 Comments Tags: Book signings, Dakota the novel, Montana: The Novel, Readings

Book signing time, and the brain goes to mush

April 22, 2014 Leave a Comment

Before my first novel was published, I loved going to book signings. Actually, I still do, but with a whole new appreciation for the authors who do them, appreciation that increases as I set out on a new round of signings for Dakota (schedule, here).

Signings are mostly great fun. You get to read from your book, tactfully skipping the parts you wish you’d changed before the damn thing went into print.

You get to answer questions, thereby opening yourself to that awkward moment when your mind goes blank. Case in point: At a reading in Philadelphia earlier this year, someone asked me to share my favorite women mystery authors. I have some. Many, in fact. But could I remember a single one at that moment? Nope. I stuttered and stammered and generally looked like an illiterate idiot.

And you get to see old friends. That part is especially fun, and gets more fun the longer it’s been since you’ve seen them. These lovely people with their lovely familiar faces—but not quite familiar enough—approach and ask you to sign your book. (Luckily, I can name all of the people around me in Don Groff’s photo, above, from the Philadelphia reading.) My fallback—“Who would you like me to make this out to?”—never, ever works. Because inevitably the answer is, “Oh, just make it out to us.” Which forces me to confess that my brain has yet again gone to mush. I’ve learned to scan the audience ahead of time and, if I see too many not-familiar-enough faces, admit to this shortcoming ahead of time, which has resulted in relatives loudly announcing their names to me. Serves me right. 

That said, it’s a privilege to do these events and I hope those who attend feel as though they’ve gotten good value despite my stumbles. Besides, I’ve figured out a way to turn the tables—now I ask people to recommend mystery authors to me. My reading list has increased exponentially, and my blank-brain-moments decreased accordingly. Whew.

Leave a Comment Tags: Book signings, Dakota the novel, Events, Readings

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