Tag: author event

Susan Conley, author of ELSEY COME HOME

photo credit: Michael Lionstar

Thursday, January 31, at 6pm, a reading and discussion with Susan Conley, author of ELSEY COME HOME. ELSEY COME HOME is the January/February 2019 Books & Books @ The Studios Virtual Book Club pick. Bookclub discount available now through January 26th. (Online use code BC20 for 20% off). The event will be followed by a book signing.

“I loved ELSEY COME HOME. The exotic setting, the characters Elsey meets along the way—her husband, her little girls, her dilemma. And the writing, spare and lovely. What more can I say— perfect.” – Judy Blume, Books & Books @ The Studios co-founder.

From the widely praised author of Paris Was the Place — a shattering new novel that bravely delves into the darkest corners of addiction, marriage, and motherhood

When Elsey’s husband, Lukas, hands her a brochure for a weeklong mountain retreat, she knows he is really giving her an ultimatum: Go, or we’re done. Once a successful painter, Elsey set down roots in China after falling passionately for Lukas, the tall, Danish MC at a warehouse rave in downtown Beijing. Now, with two young daughters and unable to find a balance between her identities as painter, mother, and, especially, wife, Elsey fills her days worrying, drinking, and descending into desperate unhappiness. So, brochure in hand, she agrees to go and confront the ghosts of her past. There, she meets a group of men and women who will forever alter the way she understands herself: from Tasmin, another (much richer) expat, to Hunter, a young man whose courage endangers them all, and, most important, Mei — wife of one of China’s most famous artists and a renowned painter herself — with whom Elsey quickly forges a fierce friendship and whose candidness about her pain helps Elsey understand her own. But Elsey must risk tearing herself and Lukas further apart when she decides she must return to her childhood home — the center of her deepest pain — before she can find her way back to him. Written in a voice at once wry, sensual, blunt, and hypnotic, Elsey Come Home is a modern odyssey and a quietly dynamic portrait of contemporary womanhood.

Maximizing space with Key West Designer Debra Butler

Don’t just take our word for it. Leaf through a copy of SOME LIKE IT HOT. More than 220 color images from the work of Florida interior designers will give you tons of ideas to create your own Florida style. We caught up with Key West designer Debra Butler, one of the book’s contributing designers, prior to our meet & greet and book signing on Tuesday, January 29, at 6pm, to talk inspiration and storage.

Q: How did you end up in Key West?

A: Sorry, it’s a long but not interesting story. I’m sure, not different from many others. I moved here in 2000, was supposed to be here for a year or so, while I decided on my next city… I never left.

Q: What tips do you have for pulling together a Keys style that isn’t too stereotypically beachy?

A: I don’t really approach design from a beachy or really any trendy perspective. I spend a lot of time working with my clients & learning how they live or plan to use the space. I like to combine natural textures with colors also found in nature. When I juxtapose these with bold accents either material or color & let as much natural light or views become part of the accessories. If we have a lush garden or ocean view to balance beautiful art or unusual piece of furniture even better.

Q: Do you find that your background in custom cabinetry is particularly useful in dealing with small space living?

A: Yes, absolutely. Understanding function and maximizing space & often storage is so important to all my designs.

Q: What are you reading and recommending currently?

A: Right now I prefer fiction (thrillers & suspense) & books on spirituality… I know I should probably read more design & art… but I haven’t lately… reading is a big part of the time I spend away from work.

Andrew Furman, author of GOLDENS ARE HERE

Wednesday, February 6, at 6pm, a reading, discussion and book signing with Andrew Furman, author of GOLDENS ARE HERE.

Inspired by true events surrounding an historic Florida citrus season and the civil rights struggle, GOLDENS ARE HERE offers a glimpse of the sea changes occurring in Florida and the nation in the 1960s through the prism of one family’s negotiations with the land, their neighbors, and each other.

It’s 1961, and everything is changing in Florida. Jim Crow strains to maintain its hold, the Cold War escalates, the US space program hits its stride, and the Jewish Goldens—determined to begin a new pastoral life along Florida’s central east coast—are just trying to hold on to their small orange grove near the excitement of Cape Canaveral.

In GOLDENS ARE HERE, Andrew Furman imagines with great empathy the individual members of the Golden family, their unique struggles and dreams, during a single tumultuous citrus season. Isaac Golden must reckon between his ambition to create the perfect fruit and the business realities bearing down upon him given the booming postwar demand for cheap frozen concentrate. His beautiful wife, Melody, finds herself testing the boundaries that had so clearly governed her more conventional life in suburban Philadelphia, and their chronically ill son, Eli, wishes only to muster his strength so that he might enjoy the wide-open outdoors and see a bobcat.

Andrew Furman is a professor of English at Florida Atlantic University and teaches in its creative writing MFA program. He is the author of the environmental memoir Bitten: My Unexpected Love Affair with Florida (2014), which was named a Finalist for the ASLE Environmental Book Award, and My Los Angeles in Black and (Almost) White (2010). His fiction and creative nonfiction frequently engages with the Florida outdoors, but he has also written about Jewish identity, basketball, lighthouses, swimming, and cast-iron cookware. He lives in south Florida.

Praise for GOLDENS ARE HERE:

“Andrew Furman’s GOLDENS ARE HERE is a smart, generous, and engrossing look at the Civil Rights struggle in Florida. A fascinating meditation on what it means to be a neighbor in a highly unjust world.” —Gary Shteyngart, author of Super Sad True Love Story and Little Failure

“‘There was something glorious about an examination with a stethoscope,’ muses Isaac Golden, the searching, hopeful patriarch in Andrew Furman’s novel, GOLDENS ARE HERE. ‘This laying on of hands. This reverent silence. . . . Here was the real, Isaac thought.’ Readers looking for the real will find it in Furman’s careful attunement to place (tamarind, lantana, wax myrtle; Parson Brown, Hamlin, Valencia) and time (the Space Age and the Civil Rights struggle.) Furman gives this moment in our collective history its due with nuance, warmth, and a palpable sense of family grief and love.”
—Joni Tevis, author of The World Is On Fire: Scrap, Treasure, and Songs of Apocalypse

Virtual Book Club Pick: Elsey Come Home

Every other month or so, we chose a new book for our virtual book club, giving us the chance to share a book we love with other readers far and near. Read along with us. Share your thoughts and photos with our virtual book club on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram by following and using the hashtag: #bbkwbookclub.

ELSEY COME HOME by Susan Conley is a staff favorite, and we’ve asked bookseller Camila Duke to introduce the book to all of you.

“I was about to head across the country without my family for the very first time since my eldest son Phineas was born. He’s 8 and my youngest is almost 5. So, it’s been a while since I could read uninterrupted on a trip. I needed a book for the plane and ELSEY COME HOME was recommended by our manager Emily and our co-founder Judy Blume. I had no idea what the content was, but based on who suggested it… it was the winner.

As I started to read it on the first of two flights that day, I realized that this was the PERFECT book for my trip. Elsey and I were both heading to wellness retreats away from our families. We were both moms of two, and we shared the loves and frustrations that go along with family life. Sometimes we feel a little lost or alone. At times we have a glass of wine at the end of a very long day, or in Elsey’s case a bottle of wine and a couple of six packs. Maybe our similarities ended there.

Elsey had to go on a week-long mountain retreat in order to save her marriage, herself, and her connection with her young daughters. She was given an ultimatum. If she didn’t go, sober up and take care of herself, she would lose everything. Elsey and her family were comfortably settled in China. She used to be a well-known painter, but when she became a mother her identity shifted, and she lost herself.

This novel takes us on her journey to find herself again. We go along with Elsey and meet fascinating characters that help her along on her path away from home and back again. I finished this book en route and continued to think about this novel while I was away. I hope you enjoy reading this book as much as I did. Susan Conley created a very real character with relatable problems.

You don’t have to be a mother, an artist, or an alcoholic to relate to this character and story. There is a connection for everyone in ELSEY COME HOME.”

 

 

Mixed Doubles: Spencer Wise, author of THE EMPEROR OF SHOES

Spencer Wise photo by Molly Hamill

The New York Times Book Review calls Spencer Wise’s THE EMPEROR OF SHOES “Evocative,” going on to write, “THE EMPEROR OF SHOES underscores the extent to which the promise of economic opportunity still moves people across great distances on our planet…[A novel] of our times.”

Spencer will be giving a joint book talk with author Bethany Ball, Thursday, January 17th at 6:00 p.m. at B’Nai Zion Synagogue, 750 United St. in Key West. This event is free and open to the public. Please join us for what is sure to be an insightful and engaging conversation.

Leading up to this fun double-bill, I had the opportunity to ask both Spencer and Bethany a few questions.

Q. How did you come to be touring together?

A. Bethany and I have the same agent, Duvall Osteen, out of the Aragi literary agency in NYC. We have similar personalities (funny, but totally neurotic) and we also wrote our debut novels about Jewish people in the diaspora (Israel for her, China for me). Also she’s awesome and funny. And we both love tennis and we’re way too competitive despite not being that good in the grand scheme of tennis things. I think it was our agent who introduced us—Bethany was kind and generous enough to blurb my book, which was a big honor. We did a reading in NYC together, then Miami, now Key West, and Montreal is coming up. So we’ve been very lucky in that regard.

This event is interesting because the one-and-only Judy Blume is a huge fan of Bethany’s novel and invited her down to read. So a lot of stars aligned for this event and we’re so excited about it. We’ve been talking about it for months.

Having a touring buddy is the best! There is always someone to kvetch with instead of having to torture your partner/spouse over the phone. I’ve probably done 40 cities at this point on a six-month book tour and every event has been an absolute honor, but it’s a little more fun when I get to share the stage with a great writer like Bethany.

Q. Sell me Bethany’s book, WHAT TO DO ABOUT THE SOLOMONS.

A. Bethany’s book is fantastic. Stylistically it’s innovative. Somehow, she balances all these disparate plot lines and makes them all come together at the end. It’s a real tight-rope act she pulls off. The book is about the decline of the kibbutz system in Israel, a fading patriarch, and a family scattered across the globe in the diaspora. It’s full of sympathetic characters who are real and flawed. And it’s loaded with a dark, wry humor. It’s about what it means to be Jewish in 21st century and how one forms identity. And I’d say both our books are about a similar paradox—a strong desire to be with your family and the horrifying realization that you can’t get away from them.

Q. What was the genesis of your own book?

A. My family are shoemakers going back 5 generations to a shtetl in Russia. I wanted to explore that legacy, but also explore what happened to all these American textile and footwear factories when they closed in the late-60s and were outsourced overseas. My dad has been making shoes for the past 30 years in China. In 2014, I went and lived in a shoe factory in South China to research this novel. I was able to interview migrant workers in the factories and see the complex social and political realities they’re facing. So this is a very personal book. It’s totally fiction (when I go off on a reading my father always says, “Have fun and tell them it’s fiction for God’s sake”). The story itself is about a young man who goes to China to take over his family shoe business from his father, but he falls in love with a Chinese worker who may or may not be using him to start a workers’ revolution.

Q. What are you reading and recommending?

A. Well, I’ve got a mountain of books on my bedside table I’m looking forward to, but I’m also a college professor—I teach creative writing at Augusta University—so right now I’m feverishly reading all the books and stories I’ve assigned for the new semester. Some I’ve read before, others are new. I’ve got The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan and Maus by Art Spiegelman in there, two classics, both profound and warm, and I love teaching all the history behind them.

On my nightstand—a new collection called Hong Kong Noir that I’m enjoying a ton. There’s a great story by Carmen Suen. Very excited for a debut coming out this February called Bangkok Wakes to Rain by Pitchaya Sudbanthad. It’s going to be a biggie. I also have a few secret gems—a terrific upcoming book by Jing-Jing Lee called How We Disappeared and a coming-of-age memoir by John Glynn titled Out East that’s going to be amazing. Folks are in for a treat. Keep your eye out for all three authors in 2019.

Q. What are you working on now, if you don’t mind saying?

The next novel! I don’t talk too much about the project though until it’s done because it might change and suddenly it’s all about a feral cat colony on Mars (which it isn’t…yet) and everyone is disappointed.

~Robin Wood, Associate Manager

Mixed Doubles: From Bethany Ball, author of WHAT TO DO ABOUT THE SOLOMONS

Spencer Wise photo by Molly Hamill

Our own Judy Blume raves about Bethany Ball’s WHAT TO DO ABOUT THE SOLOMONS, as does Booklist, writing, “Ball, with great humor, profound wit, and notable insight, vividly captures a singular family . . . This novel from a most promising writer has been compared to the work of Isaac B. Singer and Grace Paley, as well as Nathan Englander and Jennifer Egan. Try Eudora Welty with sex and Jews.”

Bethany will be giving a joint book talk with author Spencer Wise, Thursday, January 17th at 6:00 p.m. at B’Nai Zion Synagogue, 750 United St. in Key West. This event is free and open to the public. Please join us for what is sure to be an insightful and engaging conversation.

Leading up to this fun double-bill, I had the opportunity to ask both Spencer and Bethany a few questions.

Q. What do you like best about having a tour buddy?

A. Spencer and I have the same agent, the wonderful Duvall Osteen. She had sent me his book in galley form. When he asked me to do his launch reading with him in New York City, I jumped at the chance. We have a good rapport. I can feel a little jittery with public events, but not with Spencer. He’s really funny and generous and kind. Everyone who meets him loves him. And our books go well together. Ex pat Jews, old patriarchs who find themselves a little outre and not with the new times, and the younger generation trying to break out of the mold that they feel was cast for them long ago. Our books also deal in depth with the world outside of the United States which I’m always happy to explore both as a writer and a reader.

Q. What do you like about Spencer’s novel, THE EMPEROR OF SHOES?

A. Spencer is a wonderful storyteller. He gets you hooked right from the very beginning. THE EMPEROR OF SHOES tackles a topic we are all interested in: what does it really mean that everything we own and wear and buy for our kids is made in China? Who are the people working in these factories? It’s political and real but warm rather than dark and at times it’s really funny.

Q: Tell me a little about how you came to write your novel?

A. My book started out as several stories I was playing around with. The first was the chapter, Guy Gever Stands in the Fields. I had lived in a kibbutz for about half a year with my ex kibbutznik husband and young son. I have lived with and around kibbutzniks for almost twenty years. It was something I was dying to write about! I was fascinated by the concept of communal living in the mold of Marxism and what that meant for a generation of people my own age. Later, I wrote stories about Israeli Navy Seals and then an American woman named Carolyn and an Israeli woman who accidentally leaves her young son alone while she travels to the United States. I decided to take those three or four marginally related stories and write in the connective tissue. Out of all that was born WHAT TO DO ABOUT THE SOLOMONS.

Q. What are you reading and recommending?

I just read a wonderful time travel novel called The Heavens by Sandra Newman coming out from Grove next month. It’s literary but wonderfully readable. A writer friend of mine gave me the new edition of Just Kids by Patti Smith with the photograph that I’m rereading. I love her very grounded mysticism.

Q. What are you working on now?

I’m working on a new novel about a group of families in a satellite town of New York City. I was kind of a lonely only child growing up without a lot of family or community so I like to populate my books – as I once did my imaginary games – with a lot of people. Reading them is fine but I would feel lonely and claustrophobic writing a book from the POV of just one person!

~Robin Wood, Associate Manager

Going Viral: Talking to Caitlin Kunkel, co-author of NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS

If you haven’t visited comedy site The Belladonna, “a comedy and satire site by women and other marginalized genders, for everyone,” go check it out.

No really, we’ll wait.

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Okay, come back now. You’re welcome.

We are excited to present comedy writer Caitlin Kunkel, co-founder of The Belladonna and co-author of NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS. Kunkel will appear in-conversation with local comedian and journalist Gwen Filosa Saturday, January 19, at 6pm, followed by a book signing.

Kunkel is visiting Key West for the first time and we had a chance to ask her a few questions about transforming a web-post into a book, staying busy and checking out iconic movie locations.

Q. Tell me a little bit about The Belladonna. How did it come to be? How did you come to be working with your partners? Besides being funny, what’s your goal with the site?

A. The Belladonna is a site that features comedy and satire written by women, for everyone. The four co-founders (myself, Brooke Preston, Fiona Taylor, and Carrie Wittmer) were each part of a private Facebook group for female comedy writers, and there was increasing discussion about how there seemed to be a dearth of reputable satire sites that accepted outside submissions from contributors, and even fewer that celebrated or nurtured specifically women’s talents and voices.

A number of members in that group mentioned they’d stopped writing comedy entirely, because their early efforts had been met with unnecessarily cliquish or exclusionary behavior, or negative feedback, or no feedback at all. Other members had occasionally piped in to suggest that women from that group should start their own publication, but no one had taken the reins.Then in November 2016, Carrie posted “I want to start a website, who wants to start one?” I responded, so did Fiona, and I looped in Brooke who I knew in real life. So it was completely chance how to came to be – we just each had the same purpose and desire! We actually ran the site and got the book deal prior to all four being in the same room together. So a lot of trust and remote working was involved!

Our goal is to provide a space where beginning writers can get feedback (we tell every submission why it’s not right for us), and writers at all stages of their careers can benefit from a growing platform to showcase their unique voices.

Q. How did you come to write the original post that became NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS? Any hint that it would take off the way it did? What’s your sense of what captured people’s imagination and made it go viral?

A. It truly felt like the piece chose us! We were deep in daydream schemes about how to potentially monetize The Belladonna (a frequent topic of conversation for us), cheekily dreaming about having our favorite flavored sparkling water company (LaCroix–wildly popular in the US, a real cult following) somehow just foot the bill for everything and send us truck upon truck of the stuff. And why not have, say, Tom Hardy make those deliveries? Is that not how corporate sponsorship works? Perhaps we don’t understand commerce after all.

One of us said (in jest) ‘you know, that’s our million dollar idea–that sounds like erotica the women of New York would pay good money for’. We decided then and there to write a comedy piece in that vein–what would erotica for feminist women look like–and it flowed out of us so quickly and naturally as we realized all the ways actual romance and porn tropes are in service to traditionally cisgender male desires and urges, and the women are largely there as objects to be had rather than protagonists.

We did NOT expect it to go viral – we wrote the whole thing in about a day, and we thought we would get some views back to The Belladonna from McSweeney’s [where the piece was published], but that was about as big as we dreamed. It started to take off the same day it was published, and then we watched, mouths agape, as it kept spreading. We think that the format of erotica lets people slip into each vignettes themselves, and the central of ideas of fantasies that should be reality can be expanded to SO many different scenarios and areas of life. So people could appreciate the piece, but also appreciate the main satirical point of view pretty easily.

Q. What was the expansion/revision process like? What does the book do that the original post couldn’t?

A. One of the interesting things we saw in the response to the initial McSweeney’s piece was that people tended to prefer completely different vignettes for different reasons. Typically in a humor piece, there are a few lines that people cluster around, but here, different elements were sticking out to people. So looking at the initial group of 12, as well as our early brainstorms of new material to put into the proposals, we started to see groups and methods of classifying them. There were a lot that skewed pop culture, we knew we wanted to touch on parenting, and being able to look at historical sources gave us a lot of inspiration. Building out a table of contents helped us show publishers how this 800-word piece could become a 10,000 word-plus book. We could then also brainstorm and write around each chapter heading and see where we needed more and less entries, rather than write an amorphous bunch of jokes and try to organize them.

The book also let us write some significantly longer vignettes, mostly in the Historical and Literary sections. It’s hard to do a literary parody of Lolita in four lines, so having a little more space to have a clear point of view really helped! It also lets you vary tone a bit more – in a piece with 12 vignettes, they each have to play the game pretty clearly to fit together. But the 47th vignette in the middle of the book could break format a little, or be weirder. So it let us build in more variety.

Q. What are you reading and recommending?

As we wrote our comedic book, I read a lot a serious books on women and/or society this year! The three that stood out to me were Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit, Good and Mad by Rebecca Traister, and So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo. Each of these is excellently written with the author’s particular voice clearly shining through.

For fiction, I’m a huge Stephen King fan (I thank him in the acknowledgments of the book!), and I reread The Stand this year, as I do most years. I loved Carmen Maria Machado’s Her Body and Other Parties, which is like feminist sci-fi/dystopian fiction, and in somewhat of that same vein I truly enjoyed the thought experiment of reading Naomi Alderman’s excellent book The Power.

Q. What are you working on now?

A. We’re working on continuing to grow The Belladonna and create more opportunities for women in comedy! Personally, I’m taking a hiatus from teaching satire, which I’ve done for The Second City in Chicago via online teaching for seven years, and I’m focusing on my own writing full-time. I’m the writer for Live Wire Radio, a variety show that airs on public radio across the country, and that is extremely fun and challenging job. I’m also one of the producers of the very first Satire and Humor Festival, coming to NY in March of 2019! And I’m continuing to tour and talk about the book. So I’m focusing on my own writing as well as community building. I love to keep busy.

Q. Have you been to Key West before? What are you most looking forward to here?

A. I have NEVER been to Key West, and I just want to walk to the end and stare out over the ocean at the southernmost point of the continental US! I grew up in Rhode Island, and being close to the water never ceases to give me a major thrill. I also saw the movie True Lies pretty young, and the iconic scenes on the Overseas Highway gave me an appetite to drive on that road someday.

~ Robin Wood, Associate Manager

At The Studios – Dar Williams, author of WHAT I FOUND IN A THOUSAND TOWNS

At The Studios of Key West, next door to Books & Books @ The Studios, a book discussion and signing with Dar Williams, author of WHAT I FOUND IN A THOUSAND TOWNS, Saturday, January 12 at 3pm.

Dar Williams, a beloved folk singer, presents an impassioned account of the fall and rise of the small American towns she cherishes through her book WHAT I FOUND IN A THOUSAND TOWNS. Here, she muses on why some towns flourish while others fail, examining elements from the significance of history and nature to the uniting power of public spaces and food. Drawing on her own travels and the work of urban theorists, Williams offers real solutions to rebuild declining communities.

Dubbed by the New Yorker as “one of America’s very best singer-songwriters,” Dar Williams has made her career not in stadiums, but touring America’s small towns. She has played their venues, composed in their coffee shops, and drunk in their bars. She has seen these communities struggle, but also seen them thrive in the face of postindustrial identity crises.

For the full list of Studios events, exhibits and classes, visit www.tskw.org.

And don’t miss Dar Williams in concert, Sunday, January 13 at the Key West Theater.

Caitlin Kunkel, co-author of NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS

Saturday, January 19, at 6pm, a discussion and book signing with comedy writer Caitlin Kunkel, co-author of NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS. Kunkel will appear in-conversation with local comedian and journalist Gwen Filosa.

Equal parts explosive, witty and empowering, NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS, is the expansion of a satirical piece on McSweeney’s that became a viral sensation, attracting nearly a million page views. Caitlin Kunkel, along with her co-writers Brooke Preston, Fiona Taylor, and Carrie Wittmer, have rewritten common romance and adult genre tropes into hilarious, hot feminist fantasies.

Kunkel, Preston, Taylor, and Wittmer have assembled a smart, timely, and relatable book that balances our need to laugh through the pain with an earnest invocation for change. In NEW EROTICA FOR FEMINISTS, the authors have written dozens of brand-new satirical, spicy vignettes, chock-full of tongue-in-cheek (yet safer for work than the title implies) smut about women in pop culture, literature, dating, and modern parenting.

Authors Spencer Wise & Bethany Ball @ B’Nai Zion Synagogue

Thursday, January 17th at 6:00 p.m. at B’Nai Zion Synagogue, 750 United St, Key West, Books and Books @ the Studios and B’Nai Zion Synagogue will host a reading and book signing with two bestselling authors: Spencer Wise and Bethany Ball. Wise and Ball will read from and discuss their books, both of which explore the modern-day Jewish-American experience.

From Bethany Ball, comes WHAT TO DO ABOUT THE SOLOMONS, a hilarious multigenerational family saga set in Israel, New York, and Los Angeles that explores the secrets and gossip-filled lives of a kibbutz community near Jerusalem. The book introduces readers to the Solomon family as they are faced with a life-altering scandal. Marc Solomon, an Israeli exNavy commando now living in L.A., is falsely accused of money laundering through his asset management firm. Marc’s American wife, Carolyn—concealing her own dark past—makes hopeless attempts to hold their family of five together. But news of the scandal makes its way from America to the rest of the Solomon clan on the kibbutz in the Jordan River Valley. As the secrets and rumors of the kibbutz are revealed through various memories and tales, we witness the things that keep the Solomons together, and those that tear them apart.

photo by Molly Hamill

Spencer Wise’s THE EMPEROR OF SHOES is a transfixing debut novel inspired by the author’s experiences living and working in an American-owned shoe factory in Guangdong, China. The novel follows Alex, a Jewish American ex-pat, as he reluctantly assumes the helm of his family’s shoe company. When he meets a seamstress named Ivy, she shifts his gaze. But Ivy, who is also an embedded pro-democracy organizer, has broader aims, and Alex must decide where his loyalty resides, a choice which ultimately pushes the entire factory to a crisis point.

This event marks the second partnering of Books & Books and B’Nai Zion. Last year, the two
organizations worked together to hold a reading and book signing with Francine Klagsbrun,
winning author of the 2017 National Jewish Book Award for her biography Lioness; Golda Meir
and the Nation of Israel.

This event is free and open to the public.