South End Writes

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Oct
8
7:00 PM19:00

Daniel Barbarisi: Chasing the Thrill

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On Thursday October 7th, SEW will welcome Daniel Barbarisi, veteran journalist and author with over 15 years in newspaper journalism at The Boston Globe, Providence Journal, Wall Street Journal, and now The Athletic, where he is currently a senior editor. Barbarisi has covered crime, politics, news, and sports. He joined the staff of the Wall Street Journal in 2010, where he spent five years as the beat writer covering the New York Yankees. He left the WSJ at the end of 2015 to pursue his first book project, Dueling with Kings, and joined The Athletic in 2018. 

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Barbarisi will be sharing from his new book, Chasing the Thrill, which was released in May of 2021.  Chasing the Thrill is a full-throttle, first-person account of the treasure hunt created by eccentric millionaire art dealer –and, some would say, robber baron– Forrest Fenn, that became the stuff of contemporary legend. 
When Forrest Fenn was given a fatal cancer diagnosis, he came up with a bold plan: He would hide a chest full of jewels and gold in the wilderness, and publish a poem that would serve as a map leading to the treasure’s secret location.  But he didn’t die, and after hiding the treasure in 2010, Fenn instead presided over a decade-long gold rush that saw many thousands of treasure hunters scrambling across the Rocky Mountains in pursuit of his fortune. 
 Barbarisi first learned of Fenn’s hunt in 2017, when a friend became consumed with decoding the poem and convinced Barbarisi to document his search. What began as an attempt to capture the inner workings of Fenn’s hunt quickly turned into a personal quest that led Barbarisi down a reckless and potentially dangerous path, one that found him embroiled in searcher conspiracies and matching wits with Fenn himself. Over the course of four chaotic years, several searchers would die, endless controversies would erupt, and one hunter would ultimately find the chest.  But the mystery didn’t end there.  Full of intrigue, danger, and break-neck action, Chasing the Thrill is a riveting tale of desire, obsession, and unbridled adventure. 

Barbarisi is a native of Rye Brook, NY.  He holds a bachelor's degree in history and political science from Tufts University and a Master of Public Affairs from Brown University. He and his wife, Amalie Benjamin, live in Boston. 

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 “Barbarisi tells the story so well that you should resist any form of peeking ahead and leave the matter in his capable hands.”
—Dennis Drabelle, The Washington Post


“Barbarisi’s exploration of the who and how and why of those who hunted for the hidden treasure left by Forrest Fenn confronts fascinating questions about the sometimes indistinct realms of adventure and obsession.”
The Boston GlobeSummer Reading 2021


“An engaging adventure story . . . A well-reported insider’s study on the engrossing and alarming fervor a search can inspire.”
Kirkus

 
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Nov
10
7:00 PM19:00

Sue Miller will read from her widely praised new work of fiction "Monogamy"

Acclaimed author Sue Miller will be hosted by Sara Divello as she returns to South End Writes on Tuesday, November 10 at 7:00 PM to read from her widely praised new work of fiction, Monogamy. In a laudatory reprise of the novel, NPR’s Maureen Corrigan described Miller as “one of our most emotionally profound and nuanced writers.” Miller will be introduced by her colleague, Lilly King, whose recent novel, Writers and Lovers, is on the New York Times bestseller list. In 2011, King was at the South End library to present an earlier novel, Father of the Rain.

Miller has a long and distinguished history with FOSEL’s South End Writes program, both as an author who presented several of her remarkable novels, The Lake Shore Limited in 2010 and The Arsonist just a few years ago, but also as someone who generously invited many of her literary colleagues to talk about their literary works at the South End library. Jack Beattie, Jamaica Kincaid, Alice Hoffman, Edith Pearlman, Doug Bauer, Anita Shreve and many other of Miller’s literary friends and associates made their way to the tiny South End branch where they were warmly welcomed by enthusiastic Southenders, delighted to meet such luminaries right here in their ‘hood.’. The novelist, who lived in the South End for many years, currently resides in Cambridge.

Monogamy, also prominently featured in a recent New York Times Sunday Book Review, is a “rich, complex book,” according to bestselling author Richard Russo, “an old-fashioned slow burn of a novel that allows readers to dream deeply.” It describes a Cambridge couple, photographer Annie and bookseller Graham, whose thirty-some year marriage has long been the envy of their friends and acquaintances. When Graham suddenly dies, Annie discovers that shortly before his death Graham had an impulsive, brief affair he was trying to end. She spirals into darkness wondering if she truly knew the man who loved her. Monogamy delves into the secrets families keep from one another, a mesmerizing work of fiction in which Miller reflects on the transformative power of memory, and the triumph of love over death itself. “A thoughtful and realistic portrait of those golden people who seem to have such enviable lives,” said Kirkus Review.

The author’s has ten previous novels that have been widely translated and published in 22 countries around the world. The Good Mother (1986) was more than six months at the top of the New York Times charts. Subsequent novels include three Book-of- the-Month main selections: Family Pictures (nominated for a National Book Critics Circle Award), While I Was Gone (an Oprah’s Book Club selection), and The Senator’s Wife. Her last one was The Arsonist. Her non-fiction book, The Story of My Father, was described as a “beautiful, spare memoir about her relationship with her father during his illness and death from Alzheimer’s disease.”

Miller was recently awarded a 2020 spot in the Writers-in-Residence program at The Mount, the Berkshire estate of author, Edith Wharton, the first woman to win a Pulitzer Prize. Her previous honors include Guggenheim and Radcliffe Institute fellowships. She was on the board of PEN’s American Center and chair of PEN New England, an active branch that worked with writing programs in local high schools and ran classes in prisons. She has taught fiction at, among other places, Amherst, Tufts, Boston University, Smith, and MIT. She currently lives in Cambridge.


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Oct
6
7:00 PM19:00

Dorothy Keeney - Annie McKay Boston's First School Nurse

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South End resident, Dorothy Keeney, will talk with FOSEL’s Yvette Jarreau at South End Writes via ZOOM on Tuesday, October 6 at 7:00 PM, about the history of Boston public school nurses, The Untold Story of Annie McKay and the Boston Public School Nurses, 1905-1988 (details below). Herself a retired public-school nurse, Keeney spent many years researching the subject, and wrote about it for, among other outlets, the Boston Union Teacher; the South End Historical Society Newsletter; and professional nurses’ publications. Keeney became the unofficial historian for the Boston School Nurses and was the former historian for the Massachusetts School Nurse Organization.

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The subject of Keeney’s book, Annie McKay, was appointed by the Boston School Committee in 1905 as the first public-school nurse in Boston and Massachusetts. She taught basic hygiene in, among other places, several South End schools, including the Quincy, Way Street and Andrews schools. After her first eight weeks on the job, McKay recorded 215 cases, made 576 home visits and helped more than 70 children obtain glasses. The experiment was considered such a success that the Boston School Committee hired 25 more nurses for Boston’s elementary schools and, within a short time, the state mandated school nurses throughout Massachusetts.

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McKay was born in 1867 in Ontario, Canada, and began her career as a school teacher but switched to nursing. She attended, among other places, the Massachusetts Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary. She lived in Boston and worked with the Red Cross in Europe during WW I. For a while she lived at 1525 Washington Street in the South End, where a plaque commemorates her legacy. She died in Ontario in 1944.

Keeney, a longtime Massachusetts resident who received a masters degree in Health Care Administrationj from Framington State University, described the nurses’ struggle for pay equity and a five-day work week, and their transformation to professional status from the stereotypical profile of a doctor’s handmaiden. Today, she says, school nurses are the clinical health experts in the school, the health care providers for students and staff during the school day, and advocates for preventive care and health maintenance. 

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Lauren Francis - Sharma - Book of the Little Axe
Sep
22
7:00 PM19:00

Lauren Francis - Sharma - Book of the Little Axe

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Lauren Francis-Sharma, a child of Trinidadian immigrants, continues to explore the story of her Caribbean ancestors’ history in her new novel, Book of the Little Axe. She will be hosted on South End Writes via ZOOM on Tuesday, September 22, at 7:00 PM (details at the bottom of the page).

Her new work of fiction was preceded by the 2014 ‘Til the Well Runs Dry, a first novel that was short-listed for the William Saroyan International Prize. It won the Honor Fiction Prize by the Black Caucus of the American Library Association and was also chosen as an O, The Oprah Magazine Summer Reading Pick and lauded by the New York TimesUSA TodayEssence Magazine, and People Magazine among other publications. Inspired by her grandmother’s journey from Trinidad to the United States, Francis-Sharma’s debut novel was the subject of feature articles about her Caribbean ancestry in the Washington Post  and the Baltimore Sun in 2014 and 2015, respectively.

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The author’s short story, Demented, is featured in the anthology Us Against Alzheimer’s: Stories of Family Love and Faith, edited by Marita Golden. Before becoming a novelist, Francis-Sharma worked as a mergers-and-acquisitions attorney; currently, she is the owner of DC Writers Room, a co-working space dedicated to both published and aspiring writers. She is also the Assistant Director of Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference at Middlebury College and a MacDowell Fellow.

Lauren lives in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C. with her husband and two children and “is always working on another book.”

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Stephen Kinzer and  Christopher Lydon - How Our Presidential Election Could Reshape the World:
Sep
15
7:00 PM19:00

Stephen Kinzer and Christopher Lydon - How Our Presidential Election Could Reshape the World:

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Award-winning foreign policy journalist, Stephen Kinzer, will return to the virtual version of South End Writes on Tuesday, September 15 at 7:00 PM via ZOOM with a talk titled: How Our Presidential Election Could Reshape the World. Kinzer will be introduced by Christopher Lydon, the erudite host of the WBUR radio show, Open Source.

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A Senior Fellow in International and Public Affairs at Brown University’s Watson Institute, he is the author of a dozen books about foreign affairs. They include All the Shah’s Men (reportedly a go-to book for former Senator and Secretary of State, John Kerry) and The Brothers: John Foster Dulles, Allen Dulles, and their Secret World War.

Kinzer most recently presented, Poisoner in Chief: Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control, at the South End library in October 2019. He told the audience that although he had seen a lot in his life and career, in researching the book he was “shocked by what he found.” Kinzer is an Opinion Columnist at The Boston Globe and has been a South End resident since the 1970s, except for when he was New York Times bureau chief in Nicaragua, Istanbul and Berlin. At the moment, Kinzer told FOSEL, he is doing something different from writing books: He’s reading them.

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Heidi Pitlor - Impersonation
Sep
8
7:00 PM19:00

Heidi Pitlor - Impersonation

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Novelist Heidi Pitlor, for many years the series editor of The Best American Short Stories, will be on South End Writes via ZOOM, Tuesday, September 8, at 7:00 PM to talk about her newest work of fiction, Impersonation. “A smart behind-the-scenes tour of the murky world of publishing, politics, and the good people who get caught in the cross-fire,” says novelist Chris Castellani (Leading Men). “Pitlor’s voice is witty and brisk, bringing warmth and light to questions of identity, independence and, yes, intellectual property. Who owns your stories? How much are they worth?” declares the New York Times Book Review.

The author of two earlier novels, The Birthdays, a Boston Globe bestseller, and The Daylight Marriage, a crime thriller centered on a failed marriage, which was optioned for the movies. Pitlor is also the editorial director of the literary studio, Plympton. Her other writings have been published in Ploughshares, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Huffington Post, and the story collections It Occurs to Me That I Am America: New Stories and Art, Labor Day: True Birth Stories by Today’s Best Women Writers. Heidi Pitlor lives outside Boston. 

TO CONNECT VIA ZOOM:

Email info@friendsofsouthendlibrary.org and you will receive the ZOOM info.

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To subscribe, click here and go to the bottom of the page for the subscriber space.

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 Alli Frank and Asha Youmans - Tiny Imperfections
Aug
25
7:00 PM19:00

Alli Frank and Asha Youmans - Tiny Imperfections

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The bi-racial writing team of Alli Frank and Asha Youmans will join South End Writes on Tuesday, August 25 with their debut novel, Tiny Imperfections. Set in the  minefield of Kindergarten admissions in the San Francisco Bay Area, the writing team, former educators themselves, takes a withering look at it all through the eyes of three generations of Black women, themselves navigating the private-school shoals. Kirkus Review described it as a ‘fun, snappy read.’

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Josie Bordelon, director of admissions at San Francisco's most sought after private school, is determined to keep her seventeen-year-old daughter, Etta, from making the same mistakes she did. Another relative has her daughter’s back. And as admissions season heats up, Josie discovers that when it comes to matters of the heart--and the office--the biggest surprises lie closest to home.

The authors worked in education for more than twenty years. Good Housekeeping Magazine listed Tiny Imperfections as one of the 20 Best New Fiction Books of 2020 and Good Morning America declared it one of the Mother's Day in Quarantine Books to Buy.

TO CONNECT VIA ZOOM:

Email info@friendsofsouthendlibrary.org and you will receive the ZOOM info.

FOSEL subscribers will receive the ZOOM link in our Mailchimp newsletter just before the event.

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 Caroline Leavitt - With or Without You
Aug
18
7:00 PM19:00

Caroline Leavitt - With or Without You

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New York Times bestselling writer, Caroline Leavitt, will talk with Sara DiVello about her new novel With or Without You, on South End Writes via ZOOM, Tuesday, August 18 at 7:00 PM.  With or Without You received a starred Kirkus Review. The Minneapolis StarTribune’ praised Leavitt’s “fearlessness with plot.” The novelist’s earlier novels include Is This Tomorrow, Pictures of You and Cruel Beautiful World.

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The novelist is the recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts Award in Fiction and the Goldenberg Fiction Prize. She was also a National Magazine Award Nominee in Personal Essay; a finalist in the Nickelodeon Screenwriting Awards; and a finalist in the Sundance Screenwriters Lab. She reviews books for The Boston Globe, The San Francisco Chronicle and People, and has published essays and articles in numerous publications, including New York MagazinePsychology TodayMoreRedbook, and Parenting. Her novel, Cruel Beautiful World, an Indie Next Pick, was named one of the Best Books of the Year by BlogCritics and by The Pulpwood Queens. Pictures of You was named one of the Best Books of the year by Ihe San Francisco Chronicle, The Providence Journal, and Bookmarks. Kirkus Reviews listed as one of its top five books.

TO CONNECT VIA ZOOM:

Email info@friendsofsouthendlibrary.org and you will receive the ZOOM info.

FOSEL subscribers will receive the ZOOM link in our Mailchimp newsletter just before the event.

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L. Annette Binder - The Vanishing Sky
Aug
11
7:00 PM19:00

L. Annette Binder - The Vanishing Sky

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L. Annette Binder  will be back for South End Writes via ZOOM on August 11, 2020 to present her first novel of historical fiction, The Vanishing Sky. She will be joined in the conversation by Sandell Morse, the Maine-based award-winning author of The Spiral Shell: A French village Reveals Its Secrets of Jewish Resistance in World War II. Binder first read at the South End library in October 2012 from her short-story collection, Rise, a 2011 winner of the Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction, and a finalist in the Colorado Book Awards. For Zoom information, please go to the bottom of this page.

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The author, a former attorney and a classics major, was born in Germany but raised and educated in Colorado where her parents moved when she was a child. Her novel is inspired by her family's experiences in World War II Germany. She knew that her father had spent time in the Hitler Youth but they never spoke of it. He died when she was sixteen. As a writer, she told South End Writes in 2012, she finds the seeds of her materials from "something I hear on the street," or "a blip in the newspapers," but that what drives her stories is "character."

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In The Vanishing Sky, Binder takes the reader back to a rural setting in Germany near the end of World War II, where Etta Huber and her two young sons have become entrapped by the brutally re-ordered world of the Third Reich. The elder, Max, returns from the Eastern Front, haunted by what he has seen. Georg, Etta’s younger son, is off at a camp run by the Hitler Youth, digging trenches as the Allied armies approach.

"…The Vanishing Sky reveals the German home front as I've never seen it in fiction... Binder tells her story patiently, like an artist placing tiny pieces into a mosaic; this literary novel isn't one to race through. But I find it gripping, powerful, and a brave narrative, unsparing in its honesty…," wrote Larry  Zuckerman for Historical Novels Review. Binder "uses Etta Huber, a hausfrau in a rural village, as a means of feeling her way back into the past, channeling the anguish and uncertainty of the final months of the fighting," said Alida Becker for the New York Times Book Review’s Summer Reading recommendations.

Binder has degrees from Harvard, UC Berkeley and the Programs in Writing at the University of California, Irvine. Her fiction has appeared in the Pushcart Prize Anthology, the PEN/O. Henry Prize Stories, One Story, American Short Fiction, The Southern Review, Third Coast, Fairy Tale Review and others. 

TO JOIN THE MEETING VIA ZOOM:

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Saumya Dave - Well Behaved Indian Women
Jul
28
6:30 PM18:30

Saumya Dave - Well Behaved Indian Women

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Saumya Dave , a psychiatrist and mental health advocate, will present her debut novel, Well-behaved Indian Women, on Tuesday, July 28 at 6:30 PM, via ZOOM (details below).  As a writer, Dave explores the unique dynamics of immigrant families, and Well-Behaved Indian Women was inspired by the strong women who surrounded her.

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In the novel, three generations of women struggle to define themselves as they pursue their dreams. Simran Mehta has always felt harshly judged by her mother, Nandini, especially when it comes to her little "writing hobby." The mother, for her part, strived to create an easy life for her children in America while putting up with her husband's demanding family and the casual racism of her patients. Nandini’s mother, Mimi Kadakia, feels she failed her daughter in ways she'll never be able to fix­—or forget. As life begins to pull Nandini and Simran apart, Mimi is determined to be the bridge that keeps them connected, even as she carries her own secret burden.

Dave’s essays, articles, and poetry have been featured in The New York TimesABC News, and Refinery 29, among other places. A practicing therapist, she’s the co-founder with her husband of thisisforHER, a nonprofit that uses art therapy to improve mental health awareness and education for women and girls in low- and middle-income countries. An Adjunct Professor at Mount Sinai, Dave lives in New York City with her family.

TO JOIN THE ZOOM MEETING;
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 Lis Wiehl - Hunting the Unabomber,
Jul
21
6:30 PM18:30

Lis Wiehl - Hunting the Unabomber,

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Lis Wiehl was a Fox News legal analyst for 15 years and a reporter/legal analyst for NBC News and NPR’s All Things Considered, before that. She has come out with her second historical thriller in The Hunting Series, titled Hunting the Unabomber: The FBI, Ted Kaczynski, and the Capture of America’s Most Notorious Domestic Terrorist.

The first in the series, Hunting Charles Manson, co-written with Caitlin Rother, was based on a re-examination of the 50-year-old case with new interviews, reviews of original source materials and  dozens of parole hearing transcripts. Wiehl, a former Federal prosecutor, relied on those same research methods to take a fresh look at the search for Theodore Kaczynski, an effort rife with inter-agency law enforcement conflicts that was almost shut down by the 150-member FBI team on the case before a stroke of luck led to the arrest of the criminally insane math prodigy. By that time, Kaczynski had killed three people and maimed more than a dozen others with bombs sent in the mail to random individuals. Wiehl, who lives in New York, is a professor of law at the New York Law School, a private law school in Tribeca, NYC.

To join us on Tuesday, July 21, at 6:30 PM, please click on the Facebook link below:  https://www.facebook.com/FriendsoftheSouthEndLibrary

ZOOM info will be emailed to our subscribers.

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 Martin Espada  - Recent Work
Jul
14
6:30 PM18:30

Martin Espada - Recent Work

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Before Martín Espada was a 2007 Pulitzer Prize finalist for The Republic of Poetry or, for that matter, before he won the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize in 2018 for outstanding lifetime achievement and recognition of his contribution to poetry, he was a tenant lawyer in Greater Boston’s Latino community. The experience barges through in a searing poem, Jumping Off the Mystic Tobin Bridge, from his forthcoming collection Floaters, due out in January 2021. And it did so again in his recent Op-Ed piece in The Boston Globe, linking racism to the devastation among the residents of Chelsea by the Covid-19 pandemic. Martin Espada is the featured speaker for South End Writes via Zoom on Tuesday, July 14, at 6:30 PM. He will read from the 2021 Floaters; the 2016 Vivas to Those Who Have Failed, winner of the 2017 Massachusetts Center for the Book Poetry Award; and his 2019 anthology, What Saves Us: Poems of Empathy and Outrage in the Age of Trump, featuring 93 poets, including Danielle Legros George, Richard Blanco and Donald Hall.

The poet will be introduced by South End State Rep., Jon Santiago.

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(Zoom contact information is at the bottom of this page).

Espada grew up in New York City, the son of Frank Espada, a documentary photographer and civil rights activist born in Puerto Rico. Now a professor of English at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst., Martin Espada has published more than twenty books as a poet, editor, essayist and translator, among them The Trouble Ball (2011),  Alabanza (2003), A Mayan Astronomer in Hell’s Kitchen (2000), Imagine the Angels of Bread (1996), City of Coughing and Dead Radiators (1993) and Rebellion is the Circle of a Lover’s Hands (1990). His many honors also include the Shelley Memorial Award, the Robert Creeley Award, the National Hispanic Cultural Center Literary Award, an American Book Award, a 2018 Academy of American Poets Fellowship, the PEN/Revson Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Espada was the first Latino recipient of the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, sponsored by the Poetry Foundation, since it was founded more than three decades ago.

A 1998 book of essays and poems by Espada about social injustice, Zapada’s Disciple, was banned in Arizona and Texas. A new edition by Northwestern University Press won the 1999 Independent Publisher Book Award for Essay / Creative Nonfiction.

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To join the July 14 ZOOM meeting:

Topic: South End Writes hosts poet Martin Espada
Time: Jul 14, 2020 06:30 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
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Barbara Shapiro - The Collector's Apprentice
May
26
6:30 PM18:30

Barbara Shapiro - The Collector's Apprentice

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Barbara Shapiro, a New York Times bestselling author who has written several historical thrillers set in the art world and based on true events, will return to the South End Writes program via ZOOM on Tuesday, May 26, 6:30 PM, with her most recent work of fictionalized sleuthing, The Collector’s Apprentice. (Details of the ZOOM meeting are at the bottom of the page. )

Also known as B.A. Shapiro, the part-time South End resident has written seven novels,  including  The Muralist and The Art Forger. The latter novel of suspense, about the unsolved 1990 art theft of irreplaceable works by Rembrandt, Vermeer, Degas, and Manet from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, won the New England Book Award for Fiction and the Boston Authors Society Award for Fiction.

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The Collector's Apprentice is inspired by the controversial story of Philadelphia's Barnes Foundation art collection, which the author crafted into a thriller that plays out in Paris and Philadelphia in the 1920s. It’s a tale about the lengths to which people will go for their obsession, whether art, money, love, or vengeance:  Nineteen-year-old Paulien Mertens finds herself in Paris—broke, disowned, and alone. In her native Belgium everyone, including her own family, believes she stole millions in a sophisticated con game perpetrated by her then-fiancé, George Everard. She creates a new identity, a Frenchwoman named Vivienne Gregsby, and sets out to recover her father’s art collection, prove her innocence—and exact revenge on George. She becomes the assistant to an eccentric American art collector, Edwin Bradley and helps him build an art museum near Philadelphia. Caught up in the Parisian world of post-Impressionists and expatriates—including Gertrude Stein and Henri Matisse, with whom Vivienne becomes romantically entwined, she is eventually arrested for the alleged murder of Bradley. Tantalizing scenes from the trial are cleverly placed throughout the narrative.

Suspense writer, Barbara Shapiro, featured at the South End Writes program in 2013, signing copies of The Art Forger.

Suspense writer, Barbara Shapiro, featured at the South End Writes program in 2013, signing copies of The Art Forger.

Several years ago, Shapiro talked about The Art Forger before a standing-room-only crowd at the South End library. The author recounted how she became intimately familiar with every aspect of the tragic art theft as she transformed the particulars of the case into crime fiction. When she was asked what she thought had happened to the artworks, she said she had come to believe they had been destroyed.

Her earlier suspense novels include The Safe RoomBlind SpotSee No EvilBlameless and Shattered Echoes. The novelist also wrote four screenplays, Blind SpotThe Lost CovenBorderline and Shattered Echoes.

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 Laura Zigman - Separation Anxiety
Apr
14
6:30 PM18:30

Laura Zigman - Separation Anxiety

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Author and yoga teacher, Sara DiVello, who is hosting South End Writes for FOSEL, has generously arranged to present our booked authors remotely. She will bring you our popular series via Zoom.

After a hiatus of 14 years, novelist Laura Zigman just came out with her latest work of fiction, Separation Anxiety, which The Boston Globe hailed as a “triumphant return.” Its main character, Judy, a children’s book author going through a rough stretch in her life, finds her 13-year-old son’s baby sling while sorting through stuff in the basement. She puts her dog, Charlotte, inside, and finds it oddly comforting. She decides to keep carrying the dog around for a while.

The New York Times, in a review titled Don’t Mind Me While I Wear My Dog, says Zigman’s latest work of semi-autobiographical fiction “has brought her ur-self firmly into middle age.” The Boston Globe reviewer reports the book captures “an astonishing level of empathy.” “By the time you get into your 40s and beyond, you’re dealing with loss,” Zigman is quoted as saying. “You have a lot of empathy for the people who are helping you through it, and for the people you know who are going through it themselves.”

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Laura Zigman grew up in Newton, MA, and, yes, owns a Sheltie. After working for ten years as a publicist for other authors, she wrote the semi-autobiographical Animal Husbandry in 1998. It became a New York Times bestseller and was turned into a movie starring Ashley Judd and Hugh Jackman, Someone Like You. She has penned three other, also semi-autobiographical novels: Dating Big Bird (2000); Her (2002); and Piece of Work (2006).

Zigman has been a contributor to The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Huffington Post. She also produced a popular online series of animated videos, Annoying Conversations, and was the recipient of a Yaddo residency. 

NOTE: The Friends of the South End Library will present the reading as a REMOTE event. To access the meeting, please read the instructions below and download Zoom in advance.

The Zoom  event is a FREE videoconferencing program. If you have never used Zoom before, it may take about three minutes to install. It also may require you to restart your computer after the installation. 

NOTE about purchasing copies of Separation Anxiety: Amazon is NOT shipping books during the pandemic as they are not considered "necessities" (how wrong they are!) but our local Indie Bookstore, Trident Booksellers and Cafe, on Newbury Street, will provide you with copies of Separation Anxiety if you order on-line. They have FREE SHIPPING. If you want to order something from their cafe they can include a book along with your food order. Please support our beloved small businesses. Please contact them via this link.

NOTE from Anne Smart:

The BPL owns 5 copies of the book and there are 33 titles on request.  I will request a few more copies.  Thanks!! Anne

Thank you for your support. 

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Dr. Gerald Hass - The Story of the South End Community Health Center
Mar
17
6:30 PM18:30

Dr. Gerald Hass - The Story of the South End Community Health Center

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Dr. Gerald Hass, a beloved local pediatrician and force for social justice, will be at the South End library on Tuesday March 17 at 6:30 PM to talk about his memoir, The Story of the South End Community Health Center: The Early Days. Hass, who was born in the UK, came to the South End on a medical fellowship in the 1960s when the neighborhood was considered the poorest in Boston, suffering from high rates of maternal and infant mortality. He returned here to practice pediatrics at what was then Boston City Hospital and now Boston Medical Center.

In 1969 he co-founded a children’s health clinic on Shawmut Avenue with a local businessman, Mel Scovell, which since became the non-profit comprehensive South End Community Health Center (SECHC). The now 86-year-old South End icon has written a memoir about his 45-year illustrious medical career, marked by a passion for the South End community and its residents, who returned his kindness with love and admiration. He retired in 2014.

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The Dr. Gerald Hass Center is now a satellite health clinic focused on the students of the Blackstone School, and operated out of the same location as the original pediatric clinic at 400 Shawmut Avenue. The current SECHC became a comprehensive health clinic for people of all ages, and settled at 1601 Washington Street.

At the March 17 event, Hass will be introduced by his longtime friends, co-founder Mel Scovell and WBUR radio host of Con Salsa, Jose Masso.

Books will be available for purchase, signing and borrowing. Seating is limited.

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Oct
22
6:30 PM18:30

Stephen Kinzer - Poisoner in Chief: Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control

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Award-winning foreign correspondent Stephen Kinzer, whose investigations and penetrating analyses have shed harrowing light on innumerable clandestine American adventures here and abroad, will return to the South End library on Tuesday, October 22, with the amazing results of his latest investigation of government wrong-doing, Poisoner in Chief: Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control. A former New York Times bureau chief in Nicaragua, Berlin and Istanbul, and current world affairs columnist at the Boston Globe, Kinzer tells the hair-raising tale of chemist Sidney Gottlieb, who was in charge of the CIA’s MK-ULTRA mind control project in the 1950s and 60s, when Allen Dulles was head of the CIA. At a talk for a Boston publication party in September, Kinzer noted that, while he may have shocked others with his earlier investigations, discovering what Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA had engaged in during the 1950s and 1960s shocked him.

In a recent interview with Terry Gross on NPR’s Fresh Air, Kinzer described how Sidney Gottlieb brought LSD to America, from its pharmaceutical producer in Switzerland, to find a way to control the minds of human beings, ostensibly for national security purposes. Assisted by funds from phoney foundations, Gottlieb asked various institutions around the world, including hospitals and prisons, to experiment with LSD on those under their control. One of them was Whitey Bulger who received LSD every day for a year when in Federal detention, he discovered.

Strangely, Gottlieb, who oversaw experiments at secret prisons in the 1950s and ‘60s, producing pills, powders, and potions that could kill or maim without leaving a trace, considered himself deeply spiritual. He lived in a remote cabin without running water, meditated, and rose before dawn to milk his goats. Since his death in 1999 it has become possible to piece together his astonishing career of 22 years in the CIA, and Kinzer, the author of a dozen books including The True FlagThe BrothersOverthrow, and All the Shah’s Men, was able to draw on newly available documents and additional original interviews to write Gottlieb’s biography (although he prefers to say he was on an LSD trip and saw Sidney Gottlieb there).

“It’s all in the bone-crunching detail, and Kinzer, a master of American perfidy, has done it again,” says Seymour Hersh, investigative journalist and national security contributor to The New Yorker. Kinzer, a South End resident, is a senior fellow at the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University.

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Oct
15
6:30 PM18:30

Alison Barnet - Once Upon A Neighborhood

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An overflow audience of more than 70 aficionados South End history tried to find seating or standing room in the branch library’s upstairs community space on October 8 for Alison Barnet’s talk about her latest book, Once Upon a Neighborhood: A Timeline and Anecdotal History of the South End of Boston. Some could not even make it out of the stairwell leading to the community room. This was despite the night’s event being the holiday of Yom Kippur, which had limited attendance to some extent. But a repeat event has been scheduled.

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Pages from the Once Upon A Neighborhood timeline, which runs from the 1600s to 2015.

Pages from the Once Upon A Neighborhood timeline, which runs from the 1600s to 2015.

As luck would have it, a cancellation by a local organization for the upstairs room came in, making it possible for Barnet to return for an encore on Tuesday, October 15 at 6:30 PM. She hopes additional copies of the book, very hot off the presses, will be available. Those she brought on October 8 were all sold.

Longtime South End resident Ann Hershfang, founder and board member of WalkBoston and a member of the South End History Collective, will introduce the speaker. Urban historian Russ Lopez, also part of the Collective, had done the honors for Barnet’s talk on October 8.

Seating is limited.

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