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You are here: Home / Archives for Julianna Holshue

What the Body Holds: It’s Shame and It’s Pleasure, In Person, Discussion, Reading, and Mixer

By Julianna Holshue

Wednesday, September 13 at 6 P.M. at The Mechanics Institute

WHAT THE BODY HOLDS: Its Shame & Its Pleasure: A Discussion & Reading with Memoirist, Isidra Mencos, and fiction writer, Leslie Kirk Campbell

A co-sponsored in-person event with our friends at the Mechanics’ Institute.

The event will end with a Q & A with the audience.

 

After the reading, mix with authors, members of the WNBA-SF, and those of the Mechanics Institute. 

Campbell and Mencos will discuss what drew them to write books that investigate the topic of the female body. They will share ways women (themselves included) have felt shame about their bodies and how both societal expectations and abject repression (political, religious, and/or gender-based) affect women’s attitudes toward their bodies—including how women may self-repress as a consequence of external oppression. Finally, they will broach how their protagonists came to a point of acceptance of their bodies, opening to pleasure.

Each of these three topics will be illustrated with short readings from their books. The event will end with a Q & A with the audience. A reception with light refreshments will follow.

 

Mencos‘s memoir, Promenade of Desire: A Barcelona Memoir, narrates a young woman’s journey from repression to liberation in tandem with Spain’s transition from dictatorship to democracy. As the country transforms itself, the shy María Isidra evolves into the alluring Isadora, whose passion for books and salsa dancing sustains her as she discovers what it means to be lustful and loved and reclaims her whole self. Promenade of Desire has won a Silver Medal for Multicultural Non Fiction from the Independent Publisher Book Awards 2022, among other honors.

PRAISE FOR PROMENADE OF DESIRE: “A brave and unblinkingly honest portrait of a young woman’s sensual and sexual awakening in the face of censure and repression, and her refusal to be held back by the constraints of her family, culture, and religion. The same joyful spirit that expresses itself in Mencos’ love of dancing shines through in her story of her own personal dance into a brave new world beyond the one her mother prescribed for her. Her story is shameless, in the very best sense of the word.”

–Joyce Maynard, New York Times best-selling author of Labor Day, To Die For, and Count The Ways

“…Unique and Intriguing…” Julia Scheeres
“Page-turning…Vivid…Gutsy…” Aaron Shulman

 

Leslie Kirk Campbell‘s short story collection, The Man with Eight Pairs of Legs, investigates the ways people both succeed and fail to reconcile their sense of self, their deepest passions, and their own loneliness, through friendship, love, and their own damaged bodies; and how, when confronted with an unexpected encounter with a stranger outside their familiar sphere of reference, a troubled person can experience profound change. At its core, The Man with Eight Pairs of Legs is about body-memory, the way we hold our pasts on our skin, visibly – bruises, scars, tracks, tattoos – and invisibly, over generations. In small towns and cities across the US, characters reckon with their body’s relationship to grief, illness, technology and genocide. Three of the eight stories focus on the violation of women’s bodies and the risky decisions we make when pushed to the extreme.

PRAISE FOR THE MAN WITH EIGHT PAIRS OF LEGS:
Marvelous…sexy…harrowing…both timeless and timely.
Anthony Doerr, All the Light You Cannot See & Cloud Cuckoo Land
 
A meaningful and utterly devastating collection…
cements Campbell as a leading short story writer. 
BuzzFeed
 
A tour de force…Campbell’s stories slap us awake.
San Francisco Chronicle
 
 
Isidra Presenting on a AWP 2023 Panel

Isidra Presenting on a AWP 2023 Panel

Isidra Mencos was born and raised in Barcelona. She spent her twenties experimenting with the new freedoms afforded by the end of Franco’s dictatorship in Spain, bouncing from man to man and job to job while immersing herself in books and dancing. She freelanced for prestigious publishing houses, traveled the world as a tour leader, and worked for the Olympic Committee. In 1992 she moved to the US to earn a PhD in Spanish and Latin American contemporary literature at UC Berkeley, where she taught for twelve years. She also developed her own business as a writer and editor for Spanish-speaking media. From 2006 to 2016 she worked as Editorial Director of the Americas for BabyCenter, the leading global digital resource for parents, and managed teams in several countries. In 2016 she quit her job to dedicate herself to writing. Her work has appeared in The Chicago Quarterly Review, Front Porch Journal, The Penmen Review, WIRED, The Huffington Post, and Better After Fifty among others. Her essay “My Books and I” was listed as Notable in The Best American Essays Anthology. Today Isidra lives in Northern California with her husband and son.

 

Leslie Kirk Campbell‘s short story collection, The Man with Eight Pairs of Legs won the 2020 Mary McCarthy Prize for Short Fiction (Sarabande). The collection is a 2022 Women’s National Book Association Great Group Reads Selection, a 2022 Foreword INDIES winner in short fiction, and a finalist for American Book Fest’s 2022 Best Book Awards for Short Story. Campbell’s short stories have won first-place awards at Arts & Letters, Briar Cliff Review, Southern Indiana Review, and The Thomas Wolfe Review. She is also the author of Journey into Motherhood: Writing Your Way to Self-Discovery (Riverhead). A native Californian, she teaches at Ripe Fruit Writing, a creative writing program she founded in San Francisco in 1991.

 

 

Registration Information: 

FREE to WNBA members, members use code WNBA

General admission sliding scale: $5-10

Register HERE for this event 

How to Market as a Creative

By Julianna Holshue

Thursday, August 31, 12 P.M. PDT- A FREE Virtual Event 

 

How to Market as a Creative

 

A Lunch and Learn with Claire Jones On Zoom 

 

Unable to attend? No worries. Register anyway and receive the replay!

 

 

 

Join Claire E. Jones for a powerful workshop on marketing yourself as a creative. Learn how to monetize your passion and attract a loyal community of supporters. Explore the key concept of marketing, Relationships > Transactions, and gain insights into leveraging social media DMs, effective networking, and building an email list with freebies, Facebook groups, and registration pages. Prioritize authentic connections to grow your audience and unlock the path to success!

 

Claire E. Jones is an author and small publisher who is committed to changing the world for the better through inclusive stories and practices. As an established small business and entrepreneurship expert of 17 years, she has founded and launched four of her own businesses and now mentors other creatives, visionaries, and innovators in achieving their goals in less time with less stress. She is the owner of Clairjoyance Publishing LLC, a small publisher in Seattle WA committed to changing the world for the better through inclusive stories and practices. She shares a range of diverse novels, planners, and journals with the world from Seattle WA, where she lives with her precious pup, Karma.

 

To register, please fill out the form below:

Sorry. This form is no longer available.

 

Writing Success Guaranteed with Michael Larsen

By Julianna Holshue

Thursday, July 27, 12 P.M. PDT- A FREE Virtual Event

Writing Success Guaranteed: How to Use Your Superpowers to Build a Career Doing What You Love

A Lunch and Learn with Author Coach Michael Larsen on Zoom 

Unable to attend? No worries. Register anyway and receive the replay!

Bestselling romance author and BookTok superstar, Colleen Hoover, uses her two most irresistible superpowers to guarantee her success: She writes books her readers love, and she is as devoted to her readers as she is to her writing.

Now is the best time ever to be a writer. One reason is that you have 14 superpowers that will guarantee your success.

Mike will tell you about how these superpowers can help you transform your writing, your career, and your life. Here’s a sneak peek at some of the topics he’ll be discussing: 

  • Goals: Create Literary, Publishing, & Personal Goals & Plans to Achieve Them 
  • Writing: Develop Your Craft: Read, Write, and Share
  • Sell Your Book Before You Write It: Writing a Proposal That Excites Agents and Editors
  • The Hooks, The Book & The Cook: The 3 Parts of an Irresistible Query Letter

Mike looks forward to answering your questions about your idea, proposal, platform, promotion plan, query letter, publishing options, goals, and your plans to achieve them.

You are welcome to write him with questions after the event. If you want feedback on your work, you may email your query letter, your phone number, and the first page of your proposal or manuscript to larsenpoma-at-aol.com.

Mike hopes that this event leads to starting a writing-for-change critique group, online or off. Please email him if you’re interested.

We hope to see you there! 

Mike Larsen loves helping adult fiction and nonfiction writers achieve their goals by adding value to their readers’ lives. Mike brings half a century of writing, agenting, and publishing experience to the challenge. He and his wife, Elizabeth Pomada, worked in publishing in New York before moving to San Francisco and starting Larsen-Pomada Literary Agents in 1972. The agency sold books to more than 100 publishers and imprints. 

The agency’s bestsellers include A World Full of Strangers by Cynthia Freeman; The Complete Guide to Disco Dancing by Karen Lustgarten; and Get Anyone to Do Anything and Never Be Lied to Again by David Lieberman. After Cherie Carter-Scott appeared on Oprah, If Life is a Game, These Are the Rules shot to the top of the New York Times list. The book sold 4 million copies and was published in more than forty countries. First published in 1980, Dan Millman’s Way of the Peaceful Warrior: A Book That Changes Lives, an international bestseller, continues to sell.

Elizabeth and Mike joined the San Francisco chapter of the WNBA in the early 70s. Elizabeth served two terms as president; Mike as program director. In 2003, they cofounded the San Francisco Writers Conference and later, the San Francisco Writing for Change Conference.

They coauthored the six books in the Painted Ladies series about Victorian houses, which sparked a national movement and sold more than 400,000 copies. Publishers Weekly chose the second book in the series, Daughters of Painted Ladies: America’s Resplendent Victorians, as one of the best books of 1987.

Mike’s books include: 

  • How to Write a Book Proposal, 5th Edition, a collaboration with Jody Rein (previous editions by Mike sold more than 100,000 copies) 
  • How to Get a Literary Agent 
  • Guerrilla Marketing for Writers: 100 Weapons for Selling Your Work, with Jay Conrad Levinson, Rick Frishman, and David Hancock. 
  • Writing Success Guaranteed: How to Use Your Superpowers to Build a Career Doing What You Love, in progress.

To register, please fill out the form below:

Sorry. This form is no longer available.

 

 

How to Follow Up with a Literary Agent

By Julianna Holshue

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, June 29, 12 P.M. PDT- A FREE Virtual Event

A Lunch and Learn with Peter Rubie on Zoom 

Unable to attend? No worries. Register anyway and receive the replay!

How to Follow Up with a Literary Agent

Are you looking for a literary agent? Have you sent out your query only to receive a polite rejection letter wishing you well on your publishing journey?

Here’s the reason: Literary agents are overwhelmed. Some receive 1500+ queries a month. But there’s an even bigger reason as to why you are not getting the traction you want.

Join literary agent, Peter Rubie, for a Lunch and Learn for the Women’s National Book Association – San Francisco Chapter, on Thursday, June 29th, at 12 p.m. PDT. 

Peter will share his expertise and explain the secrets behind his decade-long successes in championing the work of his clients. He will demystify the reality behind the art of obtaining a literary agent in our current publishing landscape.

If achieving literary representation for your manuscript is your goal, let Peter guide you with his insights and advice to receive a “yes” from the agent of your dreams! Peter will share what agents respond to positively, what topics are currently popular in the market, the quickest way to get agents to stop in their tracks, the one thing to absolutely not do if you are serious about getting a literary agent and much more. 

We hope to see you there! 

Peter Rubie has been in New York publishing as an agent, editor, and published writer for nearly forty years. He is the CEO of FinePrint Literary Management, an NYC-based literary agency with 5 active agents, and began in publishing working as a freelance reader and freelance editor for major “Big Six” publishers (as they were then) before becoming the adult fiction editor at Walker & Co. from 1985 to 1991. He became an agent in 1992 and formed his own agency in 1998.

Besides working in publishing as an agent and editor, he was also an adjunct professor in the New York University publishing faculty for 10 years, where he taught the only university-level course in the country on how to become a literary agent. He is known for working closely, editorially, with his clients to bring projects to their fullest potential before submitting them. Over the years, several of his authors have become NY Times bestsellers and award-winning writers.

Peter represents a broad range of high-quality fiction and non-fiction. He specializes in children’s books, particularly middle grade, and some picture books. For adult books, he specializes in narrative non-fiction such as memoirs; biographies; history and current affairs; books on business; popular science and technology; parenting; music; food; and in adult fiction, crime novels; thrillers; commercial woman’s fiction; fantasy; science fiction; and some literary fiction.

To register, please fill out the form below: 

27th Annual Effie Lee Morris Lecture

By Julianna Holshue

“Words as Witness, Words as Healing,” Dr. Jewell Parker Rhodes speaks on Wednesday, June 7 at 5:00 pm / PT:  

Join award-winning writer Jewell Parker Rhodes on Wednesday, June 7, at 5 p.m. for the 27th annual Effie Lee Morris Lecture.

In partnership with the San Francisco Public Library Main Children’s Center and the SFPL Racial Equity Committee, the Women’s National Book Association, San Francisco Chapter invites you to join us to participate in the 27th Annual Effie Lee Morris Lecture.

This is a hybrid event; attendees may opt to attend in-person or online on Zoom.

  • ONLINE: Registration is required for Zoom attendance. Register now on Zoom.
  • IN-PERSON: Registration is encouraged for in-person attendees to help estimate crowd size. Register now to attend in-person.

We are thrilled to announce that for the first time since 2019, the Effie Lee Morris Lecture returns as an in-person event to the Koret Auditorium. Masking is strongly recommended. This event is for all ages.

Dr. Jewell Parker Rhodes
Photo credit: Jay Watson Photography

Dr. Rhodes’s topic is “Words as Witness, Words as Healing.” Her books for youth include Ghost Boys, where the long shadows of violence against Black kids and teens reach from the past into the present. Louisiana Girls Trilogy: Bayou Magic is about a young girl who learns to carry forward her family’s magical legacy. Paradise on Fire tells the story of a group of Black city kids who learn wilderness skills and how to survive in a perilous world. And Black Brother, Black Brother is about a Black kid who joins the fencing team, faces off against injustice and a bully, and makes a place for himself in a world that prefers his light-skinned brother. 

Dr. Rhodes is the recipient of a Coretta Scott King Award for Louisiana Girls Trilogy: Ninth Ward; a Walter Dean Myers Award for Ghost Boys; an American Book Award for her adult historical novel Douglass’ Women and numerous other honors. She lives in Seattle and serves as the founding artistic director of the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing and Narrative Studies Professor and Virginia G. Piper Endowed Chair at Arizona State University. She is also the recipient of an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Carnegie-Mellon University. 

A leader in advocacy for women, people of color, and the disabled, Ms. Morris was Coordinator of Children and Youth Services for the San Francisco Public Library, having previously opened avenues for success for Black and visually impaired readers in Cleveland and New York Public Libraries.

In 1996, the WNBA-SF Chapter established the annual Effie Lee Morris Lecture Series to honor their founder.

To read more about this event, please visit here: https://sfpl.org/locations/main-library/childrens-center/effie-lee-morris-collection/effie-lee-morris-lecture-series

To learn more about this event’s featured author, Dr. Jewell Parker Rhodes, please visit here: https://jewellparkerrhodes.com/children/meet-jewell/

Joining in Community at AWP 2023, A Conference for Writers, Publishers and Literature Enthusiasts

By Julianna Holshue

 

by Isidra Mencos

Introduction to Panelists

 

The 2023 AWP Conference, located in Seattle, was a first for me. I had never attended this massive annual event, which attracts thousands of writers eager to see panels, hear their favorite authors read, and buy books and literary magazines at the Book Fair.

I was there to speak on a panel entitled Writing With An Accent: Immigrant Women’s Voices in the U.S. with Allison Hong Merrill, Veena Rao, and Rakija Bhandari, as well as our moderator Parisa Saranj. We brought perspectives from India, Taiwan, Spain, and Iran. Some of the points we made during the panel were:

Fellow Panelist at the Podium

  • Immigrants contribute enormously to the U.S. economy. Their voices are key to understanding the diversity of the American experience.
  • Writing in English as a second language can be a boon instead of a hindrance: it can give you a different voice (more direct and shorter than Spanish, for example) and also provide you a bit of distance from the subject matter, which as a memoirist allows you to be more raw and honest.
  • Avoiding negative stereotypes about your culture is key, as is integrating cultural context in a plot-driven way instead of in summary or exposition (show, don’t tell).
  • If you connect organically with networks in your culture and ethnicity much before your book comes out, they will support you in force when you publish. 

Aside from our presentation, I attended several panels and was impressed by the consistently high quality of the content. A couple of favorites were The Sentence is the Story, which celebrated the sheer joy of writing a memorable and beautiful sentence and offered tips to elevate our style; and Ambition of the Short Story, organized by WNBA-SF member Leslie Kirk Campbell, where four short story writers presented a passionate defense of this art form, and highlighted what it can do that cannot be done in longer forms of writing.

Isidra speaking at AWP 2023

Isidra Presenting on the Panel

I was impressed with the organization of the Festival. With 14,000 writers going up and down the Convention Center escalators, it ran like clockwork and had topics and readings for everyone. The Book Fair was enormous, and on Saturday all the vendors offered deep discounts, so you could see writers leaving with bulging bags of books and magazines. 

I had never been to Seattle before, and I enjoyed discovering some neighborhoods and cafes with WNBA-SF president Elise Marie Collins, including the original Starbucks store and a lovely Native American restaurant ?ál?al. 

Fellow WNBA-SF Board Member, Lucille Lang Day, had this to say about her experience at AWP as a publisher for Scarlet Tanager Books: Scarlet Tanager Books had a strong presence at the 2023 AWP Conference in Seattle. We shared a booth at the Bookfair with Poetry Flash and hosted several book signings, including one by the latest Scarlet Tanager author, Chumash and O’odham poet Georgiana Valoyce-Sanchez. Her book, A Light to Do Shellwork By (Scarlet Tanager, November 2022), sold out. We had a full house for a reading I moderated, Elder Songs: Indigenous Wisdom in Poetry, where Georgiana read with Denise Low, Robert Davis Hoffmann, and Ron Welburn, who are also Native American elders. On Friday night, Scarlet Tanager followed up with a public reception entitled Scarlet Tanager Books Celebrates Indigenous Wisdom in Poetry. Georgiana, Denise, and Robert read again at the reception, along with Deborah A. Miranda, a contributor to the Scarlet Tanager anthology Red Indian Road West: Native American Poetry from California. Overall, we had a grand time at AWP!

Another highlight of my stay was meeting in person seven writers from my publishing house, She Writes Press, and seeing again my friend Erika Cebreros, whom I had not seen in over three years. 

AWP was a wonderful experience for me, uniting intellectual stimulation with personal connections. Although I missed many presentations because the program is enormous, and you cannot be in two places at once, attendees can access many of them online after the conference is over. 

Next year AWP will take place in Kansas City. If you’re planning to go, I recommend finding a conference buddy so you can enjoy some sightseeing during conference breaks; downloading the app in advance and studying the program so you can create your own schedule easily accessible from your phone; attending some evening events and readings to meet authors you admire in smaller venues; and keeping some cash in hand for the Book Fair. Happy conferencing!

Panelists Holding Their Books

 

Isidra Mencos is the author of Promenade of Desire—A Barcelona Memoir. Her work has been published in Chicago Quarterly Review, Front Porch Journal, The Penmen Review, Stirring Literary Journal, and Newfound, among others. Her essay, “My Books and I,” was listed as Notable in the The Best American Essays 2019.

 

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