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Bookworm Picture The Bookworm                                                             
  WNBA-SF Chapter Newslette
     September 2008

Check out our New Blog at http://wnba-sfchapter.org/blog
In This Issue

From Our Chapter President

WNBA-SF News

Announcements

Author Spotlight

From Our Literacy Liaison

Poet's Corner 

WNBA National News

Link to Renew Membership (General Member - $45)
Link to Renew Membership (Senior/Student - $25)


WNBA-SF News

Sonoma Book Festival
Don’t let your love of writing stop at the page! For one day put down your pen, pick up your curiosity and perhaps a young niece, nephew or child and spread your influence as a WNBA member to the greater California literary community at the Sonoma Book Festival.

A full day of creative literary Arts awaits you.  Stop by the WNBA booth, and say hello to exhibiting authors Elisa Southard: Break Through the Noise, 9 Tools To Propel Your Marketing Message, Teresa LeYung Ryan: Love Made of Heart, Janey Lee Caravallo: Gilbert C. Hurry Home! I Just Want to Say I Love You, Gail Johnston: The Social Cause Diet: Finding A Service That Feeds Your Soul, Shyne: My Human Heart, and Mathilde A. Schmidt: My Life on Two Continents and poet Lucy Lang Day: Fire in the Garden.

When: Saturday, Sept. 20, 2009, 10-4
Where: Downtown Sonoma
Admission: FREE

 Find to more at  www.socobookfest.org

See you there!  

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Member News

WNBA-SF Board Meeting

All members are welcome to attend board meetings. Some board meetings will be held prior to WNBA-SF events this year in an effort to conserve natural and human resources. Please check the WNBA-SF web site calendar for the date and location of the monthly board meetings. Our next meeting is Oct. 2 from 6-8 at SFMOMA cafe in San Francisco.

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Author Spotlight
Bookworm talks to Patti Breitman author of....


book cover

When did you start writing?
In 1988, when the AIDS epidemic was making headlines, and major magazines were hailing condoms as the solution, I kept yelling at the magazine articles, “Nobody wants to wear a condom!” So I wrote my first book, about why and how to persuade your lover to use a condom.   The persusasive arguments are still valid, but the statistics, sadly, are out of date. And the book is out of print now, too.

Why did you choose your particular genre? 
I have always worked with prescriptive nonfiction, first as a publicist, then as an editor and finally as an agent.  Many of these books had a huge, positive influence in my life and I hoped that mine might influence others for the better as well.

What inspired you to choose your subject matter? 
The condom book was inspired by the headlines of the time. My next project, How to Say No Without Feeling Guilty, was the answer to a question my co-author Connie Hatch and I had been playing with: What did we wish we had known when we were in our twenties and thirties that we finally knew in our forties.  My new book is a response to people who enjoy vegetarian meals when they eat in restaurants or when I prepare them, but who say, “I’d eat this way more often if only it didn’t take so much time.” I set out with my co-author, Carol J. Adams, to show that it does not take so much time to prepare delicious and nutritious food from the plant kingdom.
 
How difficult/easy has your experience been as a published writer? 
Having co-authors has made the writing process a delight for me. I work alone most of the time, and I love the collaborative process of creating a book.  The hardest part for me is to think organizationally. My co-authors have always been good at organizing the books and brainstorming  the best ways to communicate the information. Also, they have been very good writers, and that has made the books accessible and fun to read.

What advice would you give other aspiring authors? 
Don’t let the nuts and bolts of getting the book published in the way of the writing. Write the best book proposal you can, and then focus on finding the best agent for the book.
 
Anything else you would like to share with the WNBA? 
I would like to thank the WNBA for its steadfast focus on books and reading. As the industry changes and even what we call a book is redefined to include electronic formats, the WNBA keeps reading front and center and celebrates books with  robust enthusiasm. It has been a pleasure to be a member.

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Would you like to be featured as our Author Spotlight?  or Do you have an announcement you would like to see in our newsletter?  

Please email our newsletter editor, Sara Cassella, at  newsletter@wnba-sfchapter.org .

Submission are due by the 29th of each month.  

Thank you!


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Book Announcement

Former San Francisco and National WNBA president Patti Breitman has written a new book (with Carol J. Adams) called "How to Eat Like a Vegetarian, Even If You Never Want to Be One" (Lantern Books, September 2008). Filled with more than 250 kitchen shortcuts, strategies and simple solutions, the book is intended for people who want to eat well, but who:

-Think it takes too much time to prepare meals at home;
-Are cutting back on meat and don't know what to serve;
-Do not like following recipes.

Dozens of lists, charts, and hints in How to Eat Like a Vegetarian provide meals, snacks, and surprises that are as easy to make as they are delicious. And whether they become a way of life for the reader of just an occasional experiment, these strategies will help anyone become more at home in the kitchen and more comfortable preparing scrumptious, delightful, health promoting food.

Patti Breitman is also the coauthor with Connie Hatch of How to Say No Without Feeling Guilty (Broadway Books, 2000). She is an expert public speaker and a former food columnist for VegNews magazine. She has been a vegetarian since 1986 and is the founder and director of the Marin Vegetarian Education Group.

"Practical, entertaining, and ingenious! Adams and Breitman prove that we don't need a lot of time-or even recipes-to create delicious, satisfying vegetarian meals."
-Neal Barnard, M.D., President, Physicians' Committee for Responsible Medicine

This book can be purchased by visiting www.amazon.com.


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Back to School Special - Sept Workshop Fee $199


Simple Abundance Close to-Home  Workshops

Are you stressed? Is the closest you get to a luxurious bubble bath that TV commercial while you are making peanut butter sandwiches for the kids? Is the last time you had 15 minutes to yourself when you arrived early at the dentist?  Would you like to change that?

Simple Abundance Close to-Home  Workshops offer an opportunity for women

who find themselves hurdling thru each day as if it were an out of body experience to slow down, take stock of their world and perhaps make changes in their lives.                    

In a community of like-minded women who share your challenges, dreams and hopes we’ll explore each of the six guiding principles  (Gratitude, Simplicity, Order, Harmony, Beauty and Joy) of  Simple Abundance  through creative and playful encounters.

Workshop fee:   $199  Fee includes  a copy of Simple Abundance , a Daybook  of Comfort and Joy, other materials,  refreshments, and  membership at  SimpleAbundance.com (a $75 value). This on-line community offers a monthly on-line magazine, member forum, classes and on-going tips on how to live an authentic life.
 
Workshop dates:  (Coastside locations)

    * Once a week for three weeks (7-9 pm): 
Sept. 10, 17 & 24

    * One-day retreat just steps from the Pacific Ocean (10 am-4:30 pm):

           Sept. 21, or Nov.  8

Classes are limited so sign up today.

Register on-line  at www.openuptoyourcreativity.com using PayPal or send a check to Creativity Mentor, PO Box 244, Half Moon Bay, CA 94019.

A portion of the proceeds from every workshop will be donated to breast cancer research. 

As your Simple Abundance  Close-to-Home  Certified Workshop Leader it will be my privilege to be your guide as you embark on this grand adventure. I have been on this journey with Sarah since first discovering Simple Abundance while on retreat over ten years ago  and continue to delight in finding myself  reflected in Sarah’s words.

Mary E. Knippel, maryeknippel@simpleabundance.com, www.openuptoyourcreativity.com

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Year at a Glance

WNBA-SF Schedule of Events:

Sept. 20  WNBA-SF at Sonoma County Book Festival

Contact Elisa Southard at elisa@marketskills.com if you would like to join the WNBA-SF contingent at this popular summer event. Eight members of WNBA-SF will exhibit at the festival. ($25 to participate).

Oct 16  WNBA National Book Reading Month event!
Featuring Phillipa Gregory, author of  at Book Passage in Marin.
Join us at 7:00 for time with Phillipa Gregory and a reception.
More details coming soon.

Nov. 8th from 4:30-6:30

WNBA Award Ceremony and Cocktail Party honoring Kathi Kamen Goldmark 

Where: The Century Club of California 
Cost TBA soon!

Join fellow WNBA members in congratulating Kathi Kamen Goldmark for her meritorious work in the world of books!  

This year’s WNBA Award winner is San Francisco resident Kathi Kamen Goldmark. Goldmark, a singer and musician who was working part time as a media escort in Los Angeles, driving authors around on their book tours, came up with the idea of putting together a literary band to give a benefit concert at a Los Angeles book fair in 1992. The band, known as The Rock Bottom Remainders, includes some of today’s most popular authors such as Amy Tan, Dave Barry, and Stephen King. 

The WNBA Award is presented by the members of the Women's National Book Association to "a living American woman who derives part or all of her income from books and allied arts, and who has done meritorious work in the world of books beyond the duties or responsibilities of her profession or occupation." 

The award was formerly known as the Constance Lindsay Skinner Award. Its namesake was a playwright, critic, editor, and author active from early in the 20th century until her death in 1939. Eleanor Roosevelt, Pearl Buck, Barbara Bush, Patricia Schroeder, Nancy Pearl, Perri Klass and our own Effie Lee Morris have all received this distinguished award. WNBA-SF will have the honor of planning the reception for this year’s winner here in San Francisco.

Nov. 14-16  WNBA-SF at California Library Assn Conference in San Jose

WNBA-SF will have a booth at the California Library Assn Conference in San Jose to share information about our organization with the library association and to continue the literary legacy of our founding president, Ms. Effie Lee Morris. In March 2008 Ms. Morris received ALA's highest honor of honorary membership in the American Library Association in recognition for her vision, advocacy and legacy to children’s services in public libraries. This distinction is conferred in recognition of outstanding contributions of lasting importance to libraries and librarianship.

Dec. 2 WNBA-SF program featuring Christine Comaford Lynch - "How I Made My Book a Bestseller"

Come join the Renegade Writer herself as she discusses her writing career and gives us tips on how to tackle our writing dilemmas.

Dec. TBA  WNBA-SF Holiday party

Don’t miss your chance to raise a glass of holiday cheer and exchange a generous amount of good will with all your WNBA-SF friends.

Jan. TBA WNBA-SF (East Bay) Mixer

Another opportunity to gather writers and readers together to discuss triumphs and challenges of their writing life. Watch the web site for more information about this event.

Feb. TBA Creativity Workshop

This workshop is an invitation to PLAY! We’ll explore new ways to think outside the box and connect to your physical self and literary soul.

Mar. 28 Meet-the-Agents

Get your pitch ready folks. This is your chance to have that long sought after face time with a real agent. You have a manuscript, but are nervous about what to say? You are in luck! This year as an added bonus WNBA-SF members who need coaching around what to say will have help. More information about this will be on the web site soon.

April 16 Author Showcase

Our popular book preview will be chaired by Elisa Southard. She is a Marketing Queen and will undoubtedly have a wonderful “hook” to help us with promotion. Whether your book is a tangible reality, or a phantom dancing in your imagination, Elisa will offer marketing advice to help you on your writing journey. Watch the web site for more information about this event.

May TBA WNBA-SF (Marin) Mixer

Another opportunity to gather writers and readers together to discuss triumphs and challenges of their writing life. Watch the web site for more information about this event.

June TBA Effie Lee Morris Children’s Lecture

Established in 1977 as a tribute to our founding president, this event is held at the San Francisco Public Library and features authors in the Children’s Historical and Research Collection.

Seeking meeting space…

Do you know a terrific restaurant in San Francisco? Or, maybe an art gallery? A community room? We’re looking for a venue to hold a dinner meeting, or Saturday morning event - do you have any suggestions. We need a room that would hold 75-100 people, on public transportation, and preferably with parking near by. Please contact Mary at president@wnba-sfchapter.org with your suggestions. 

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History

The Woman's National Book Association is a national organization of women and men who work with and value books. WNBA exists to promote reading and to support the role of women in the community of the book. The San Francisco Chapter of WNBA was founded in 1968 by Effie Lee Morris, then coordinator of Children's Services for the San Francisco Main Public Library.

Membership has ranged from sixty to one hundred. Our members are writers, booksellers, agents, editors, publishers, publicists, librarians, graphic designers, career coaches, marketing specialists, conference planners, aspiring authors and avid readers.

The San Francisco branch of WNBA is one chapter in a vibrant organization with over 800 members across the county. Each branch has its own flavor and lively events to honor books, the creation of books, the world of books, and allied arts.

The Women's National Book Association has been a Non-Governmental Organization member of the United Nations since 1959. An NGO is defined as "any non-profit, voluntary citizens' group which is organized on a local, national or international level. Task-oriented and driven by people with a common interest, NGOs perform a variety of services and humanitarian functions, bring citizens' concerns to governments, monitor policies and encourage political participation at the community level."

In effect, WNBA members are to be ambassadors for the UN. Our organization disseminates information about the United Nations through all the means at our disposal, especially through our national and chapter publications and monthly programs.



  From Our Chapter President

Picture
Dear WNBA-SF Friends,

Summer flew by didn't it? First we had the WNBA-40th Anniversary Gala. What a wonderful gathering of old and new friends. Gathering at the classic Sir Francis Drake Hotel all dressed up and in high spirits we laughed and enjoyed author and humorist Beth Lisick and
our founder Effie Lee. Thank you to all who came and supported the celebration of 40 years in the Bay Area.

The WNBA National meeting was the same weekend, where our own Joan Gelfand was officially passed the gavel as the new National President. Mary E. Knippel did a fantastic job hosting the National Meeting. Thank you to Mary and all the board members who worked hard to make this event run smoothly.

In July we had our long range planning meeting. Visit the website to see an overview of the events we have planned. There are some opportunities open right now on our WNBA Board. This gives you the chance to volunteer and add the WNBA to your resume. We need you.

Check out the new WNBA blog! See what your fellow members are talking about and add your comments and thoughts to the discussion. I invite all of you to submit articles you have written that we can post on our blog. Be sure to include a photo of yourself and your website link. The blog is a great way to participate and be a part of the WNBA-SF Chapter. I look forward to reading what you have to say. Please send your posts/articles to blog@wnba-sfchapter.org.

 
Linda Lee

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From our Literacy Liaison

Dear WNBA Members and Friends,

In the interests of promoting literacy, we are asking members to help us compose a list of community organizations that encourage literacy in the Bay Area. These organizations could include church groups you belong to, private libraries, schools or even a college mentoring program.  Any input you have to offer will be of great value.

We want to cast a huge net for your "promoting literacy" efforts.

Our goal is to create a resource list so that WNBA members can support each other while we support your passion to promote literacy.

Let's Grow Your Literacy Partnerships:


REACH OUT AND READ 
Email: Roya Yasharpour

BRING ME A BOOK

BAY AREA LITERACY  

PROJECT READ-SF CHAPTER  

Please email us and we'll showcase you in this Column.  Please put "WNBA and Literacy" in your subject line.

Be well.

Sincerely,

Patricia Costello & Teresa LeYung Ryan

LiteracyLiaison@wnba-sfchapter.org  

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Poet's Corner

Featuring Rebecca Foust
author of  

Dark Card

In 2007 Rebecca Foust’s book, Dark Card, won the Robert Phillips Poetry Chapbook Prize (Texas Review Press), and her full length manuscript was a finalist for Poetry’s Emily Dickinson First Book Award. A second chapbook, Mom’s Canoe, won the 2008 Robert Phillips Prize and will be released in 2009. Foust’s recent poetry was nominated for two Pushcart Awards and appears or is forthcoming in Atlanta Review, Margie, North American Review, Nimrod, Spoon River Poetry Review, and others.

A second semester student in Warren Wilson’s MFA program, Foust lives with her husband and three teenagers in Marin County. Before retiring in May 2007, she was a full time volunteer activist and grassroots political organizer for students with learning disabilities. An early and powerful source of inspiration for her writing was Joan Gelfand’s book Seeking Center which she found while taking a writing course at Book Passage.

Dark Card

When they look at my son like that
at the grocery store check out
or at school assemblies,
I wait for the right moment, till they move
through laughter, raised eyebrows, clamped lips
-but before fear.  Then I switch gears,
go into my tap dance-and-shuffle routine.

Yes, he’s different, all kids are different, him
just a little bit more-oh, he’s knocked down
the applesauce pyramid?  So sorry, here,
my sleeves conceal napkins for messes like this,
and I can make them disappear.  But before I do,
make sure you marvel at how the jars
made an algorithm when he pulled that one free.

Oh, he was standing on his desk again, crowing
like a rooster in your third-period class?
Yes, bad manners, and worse luck
that he noticed how today’s date and the clock
matched the hour of what you taught
last week in a footnote-the exact pivotal
second of the Chinese Year of the Cock. 

Before they get angry, I pull out my deck,
deal out what they want.  Yes, he’s different,
but look at his IQ score, his Math SAT!
I’ve figured out that difference pays freight
when linked with intelligence; genius trumps odd,
alchemizes bizarre into merely eccentric.
So I play the dark card of the idiot savant,  
trotting out parlor tricks in physics and math:

he sees solutions the way you might breathe!
Or perceive! The color green!  It’s my ploy
to exorcise their pitchforks and torches,
to conjure Bill Gates when they see him,
or Einstein, not Kaczynski or Columbine;
perhaps they’ll think him delightfully odd 
or oddly delightful, dark Anime eyes,

brow arc calligraphy on rice paper skin,
his question mark flowerstalk spine.
But it’s a swindle, a flimflam, a lie,
a not-celebration of what he sees
with his inward-turned eye:
the patterns in everything-traffic, dirt piles, 
bare branches of trees, matrices in jar stacks,

Shang Dynasty history in tick of school clock,
music in color and math, the way shoppers
shuffle their feet while waiting on line;
how he tastes minute differences between brands-
even batches-within-brands-of pickles and cheese;
how he sees the moonlit vole
on the freeway’s blurred berm.

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New Book Release Sneak Preview/Reading

Dark Card

by Rebecca Foust

(Winner of the 2007 Robert Phillips Poetry Prize)

Poetry about raising a son with Asperger’s Syndrome

When: Saturday, September 13, 7:00 pm
Where: Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd.
Corte Madera, California

To order this book click here or call (800) 826-8911.
 
Rebecca Foust PO Box 399 Ross, CA 94957 www.rebeccafoust.com

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Would you like to be featured in our Poet's Corner?

Please email our newsletter editor, Sara Cassella, at  newsletter@wnba-sfchapter.org.

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Announcements

Career Building Opportunity

Do you want to make connections with New York Publishers? Would you like to meet well established authors? Do you have a few hours to spare for WNBA?

We have an opening for a Chairperson for our National Reading Group Month to be held in October.  NRGM was launched in Oct. 07 to much media attention and great success.  Read press on www.wnba-books.org. Please email 
LiteracyLiaison@wnba-sfchapter.org for more information. 

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WNBA WINS FIRST EVER READING AT LITCRAWL

October 11th


Litquake is San Francisco’s literary festival

Since its inception in 1999 the mission has been to galvanize the Bay Area’s already thriving literary scene by bringing emerging, mid-career and established local authors together with fans of the written word for nine days of readings, panel discussions, themed events, and general literary mayhem.

Litquake is for folks who get excited by reading, writing or both. It is an opportunity to put down the books and head out of the house to a bar, movie theater, park, or auditorium to hear your favorite writers read, perform or just talk.

This year’s festival-featuring over 300 authors over 8 days-will take place October 3-11 .  

Authors include: Christopher Gortner, Connie Post, Lucille Lang Day, Becky Foust, and Alice Wilson Fried.

Litquake has been featured or mentioned in a number of print articles, radio programs as well as blogs, including the San Francisco Chronicle, 7 x 7 magazine, San Francisco magazine, the Contra Costa Times, USA Today, London’s Guardian, West Coast Live, KALW, KGO,C-SPAN Book TV, Air America Radio and more.

LitCrawl is the final event on Saturday night, October 11th.  Joan Gelfand coordinated this fantastic event with Elise Proulx.  

Come support your fellow members at Parea Wine Bar (
795 Valencia Street, San Francisco) starting at 7:15.

Earlier (starting at 6pm), Joan Gelfand will read at LitCrawl with authors Jean Shinoda-Bolen, Marc Lesser and Sera Beak at the Spirituality reading at Forest Books (3080 16th Street, San Francisco).

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Mills College Literary Salon

9/20 1pm in Carnegie Hall, Mills College

Joan Gelfand will speak to the Literary Salon readers and guests about WNBA/LitQuake and the San Francisco Writers Conference .

Please join us!

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Dues are due!

It’s time to renew your membership. Don’t miss a single issue of the Bookworm, Bookwoman, or an opportunity to enhance your writing life by renewing today. It’s easy and fast to do online with PayPal; just visit our web site at www.wnba-sfchapter.org. Or, send your check for $45 to WNBA-SF Chapter Membership, 4061 East Castro Valley Blvd #193, Castro Valley, CA 94552.
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EDITCETERA, an association of freelance publishing professionals, presents the following workshops to begin in early October. For registration and more info: www.edicetera.com; 510-849-1110; also learn about correspondence courses and freelance editorial services.

 • Freelancing as a Business, Not as a Hobby
Instructor: Robyn Brode Orsini
When: Saturday, October 4; 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Where: First Presbyterian Church, 2407 Dana Street, Berkeley
Cost: $145 through September 26; $165 thereafter
Details: Learn the nuts and bolts of starting and running a freelance business.

• Basic Copyediting
Instructor: Barbara Fuller
When: Six Mondays, October 6 to November 17 (no meeting November 10); 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Where: First Presbyterian Church, 2407 Dana Street, Berkeley
Cost: $320 through September 29; $340 thereafter
Details: Gain the knowledge and skills that will prepare you to copyedit books, articles, and other documents, with emphasis on Chicago style.

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California Writers Club--SF Peninsula Branch


Saturday, September 20, 2008, 10am to noon


Guest Speakers: Laurel Anne Hill and Alice Wilson-Fried


Author of Heroes Arise, Laurel Anne Hill crafts stories with inspirational premises. Worthiness is rewarded. The power of love, honor, faith and duty can surmount daunting obstacles and transform lives.

Heroes Arise, Laurel’s debut parable was published in October 2007. Her shorter fiction and creative nonfiction have been published in the Contra Costa Times, Nth Zine (Online Exclusives), Lynx Eye, the San Jose Mercury
News, Space and Time, and a variety of small-circulation magazines. KQED-FM (NPR, San Francisco) broadcast her perspective in 2004 about the plight of homeless families.

In 2005, Laurel was awarded first prize in the Ninth Annual Captivating Beginnings Short Story Contest for “Reaching for Rainbows.” She received an honorable mention (creative nonfiction category) for “Learning the Bones” in the 2004 Soul-Making Literary Competition, an extended community arts outreach program of the National League of American Pen Women, Nob Hill, San Francisco Bay Area Branch. “Crescendo,” her personal essay, won honorable mention in the Foster City 2003 International Writer’s Contest. Upon invitation, she participated in the Literature Without Borders
readings at the 2005 Oakland Literature & World Music Expo.

Laurel's website: http://www.laurelannehill.com

Alice Wilson-Fried grew up in the Magnolia Housing Project in New Orleans, Louisiana. After attending Grambling College and Tulane University, she worked as an administrator in public relations at the Delta Queen Steamboat Company. Alice now lives in Alameda, California, with her husband, Frank. She is a mother of two, stepmother of three, and grandmother of eight.

After suffering through menopause for five years, Alice took up tennis, and finally found relief. By extending herself physically and mentally on the courts, she was able to regain control of her life from the inside out. She wrote her debut nonfiction book, Menopause, Sisterhood, and
Tennis, to share this experience with other women, and help them recognize and prepare for menopause.

For her first novel, Outside Child, Alice returned to her Louisiana roots to craft a murder mystery set in the corrupt business world of pre-Katrina New Orleans. Alice’s childhood in the Magnolia Housing Project and her
life thereafter in New Orleans enabled her to open up the world of native-born New Orleans blacks, their communities and their abilities to succeed in their city. Alice is currently working on a sequel to Outside Child, focusing that novel on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

Alice's website: http://www.alicewilsonfried.com

Cost: $15 CWC members;  $18 non-members
Location:  Belmont Library
1110 Alameda De Las Pulgas, Belmont, CA
Reservations are advised
Call our hotline at 650-615-8331 to leave a message or email Chris Wachlin  reservations@sfpeninsulawriters.com with your name and the meeting date.

http://sfpeninsulawriters.com/meetings/meetings.html#res

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WNBA-SF Chapter Board Members

Co-Presidents: Mary E. Knippel and Linda Lee
president@wnba -sfchapter.org


Vice President: Linda Lee

vicepresident@wnba-sfchapter.org


Treasurer: Allegra Harris

treasurer@wnba-sfchapter.org

Literacy Liaison: Teresa LeYung Ryan
literacyliaison@wnba-sfchapter.org


Newsletter Editor: Sara Cassella

newsletter@wnba-sfchapter.org

Publicity Chair: Barbara Whittaker


Hospitality Chair : Vicki Weiland


Founding Member: Effie Lee Morris

pic 4


WNBA National Board Members


President: 
Joan Gelfand
joan@joangelfand.com


Past President: Laurie Beckelman
lbeckleman@aol.com





Be sure to check out our new blog!

Womens National Book Association Blog

This e-Letter is a publication of the WNBA-SF Chapter. It is provided free, via e-mail. ©2008 WNBA-SF Chapter