Archive for July, 2013

STEELE INTERVIEWS: author Andrew Sean Greer [The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells]

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Amy Steele: How did you come up with the idea for this novel?

Andrew Sean Greer: In writing The Confessions of Max Tivoli and Story of a Marriage, the plots rely on the character being unable to make liberated choices, due to the times in which they live. That led me to be interested in how the same story would differ in three different time frames—same characters, same tensions, same situations, with only the year changed. I set out to write the book as a three-part novel, only to decide it would be intensely boring. That is when I decided to put all the stories on top of each other, and create a protagonist who would wake up in a different story every day, and be forced to adjust to how things were different. That person became Greta Wells.

Amy Steele: What interests you about time travel?

Andrew Sean Greer: Well, as the novel is about alternative realities, other worlds, I don’t think of it as time travel. It is more a novel of anachronism. Interviewers often ask me what time I would like to live in, and I have to say to them I’d like to bring my friend along, which means often my female friends would be unable to work, or vote, and my black friends unable to move freely, Chinese friends unable to reunite with their spouses. And as for me, as a gay man…well the past doesn’t look too pleasant. So I have an unromantic view of the past. Which allows me, I think, to enjoy it all the more in my writing.

Amy Steele: Why did you choose to set the story in 1984, 1941 and 1918?

Andrew Sean Greer: Gut feeling. Those time periods simply interested me. 1918 was always a fascinating moment, and I wanted a time period near the middle of the century. And I decided that, while I could put Greta’s world in the present day, if I set it in 1985, I would get an extra time period at no extra cost! Only then did their connections reveal themselves to me—two worlds at war, two worlds with plague, and so on. WIth this book, I followed and trusted my instincts far more than my brain.

Amy Steele: What do you like about Greta?

Andrew Sean Greer: She is stubborn and vulnerable, she is a mute Cassandra, and she is, though very sad, capable of bearing witness to the beauty of places others take for granted, and for recognizing the possibilities thwarted in lives of those she loves.

photo by Kaliel Roberts

photo by Kaliel Roberts

Amy Steele: Greta’s twin Felix is a major part of her life. What interested you in writing about twins?

Andrew Sean Greer: I’m an identical twin 🙂

Amy Steele: How would you describe Felix?

Andrew Sean Greer: Well, there are three Felixes, in three different worlds. 1985 Felix, who we see only in memory (as he is dead when the novel begins), is funny, brash, driven by a thirst for life. 1941 Felix is secretive, desperate and about to have a nervous breakdown. 1918 Felix is a mask of smiles and pat phrases, hiding a tormented inner life. They are all the same man, in the way that our different moods from different moments are all the same us. And, in a way, they are all pieces of me.

Amy Steele: The twins also have this wonderful aunt. She’s so open-minded and independent.

Andrew Sean Greer: I LOVE HER! She was a great creation to be able to put on the page. I know quite a number of women like her, and they are not always celebrated for their independence! Strong women suffer. And Ruth suffers, though you only see it in small moments. She also will not indulge self-pity in Greta. She has seen a lot, and only gotten through it with will and making everything into a funny story at a party.

Amy Steele: The reason why Greta travels is that she’s receiving electroshock therapy for depression. Why don’t you mention her depression at all? There’s no way she would be instantly “cured.” [and I’m speaking as someone who has clinical depression.]

Andrew Sean Greer: I don’t understand the question—the first twenty-five pages of the novel are devoted to describing her depression. Look at page 13. I, too, suffer from depression, as do most of my friends. I can’t imagine claiming anyone is cured. But my god, waking up in a new world, she is certainly distracted!

Amy Steele: You’re the son of two scientists. What effect did that have on your world view and your own education and career plans?

Andrew Sean Greer: They were also two people who came from poor, rural areas of the South, and books were what brought them out of those worlds. So books were always held up in my house as the greatest, most accessible kind of travel away from pain, and also the way to understand it. Is it any wonder I became a writer?

Amy Steele: You received your undergraduate degree from Brown University. Did you become interested in writing in college?

Andrew Sean Greer: I became interested in writing when i was ten. I wrote stories until I was 16, when I wrote my first novel. So no, my interested started long, long ago!

Amy Steele: What did you do at Nintendo? What kind of place was that to work at?

Andrew Sean Greer: I worked for Nintendo Power magazine, which was dedicated to helping American kids get through the very difficult game levels (seen by the company to be too hard for Americans). I had to win the games and document, in kid-prose, how to beat the game! It involved hours of gameplay, and my godsons thought I was the most amazing adult ever! Then I’d write the articles. I was hardly ever at the Nintendo campus except to talk to the game developers, who gave me maps and tips. It was so long ago that I got the job after answering an ad in the local paper!

Amy Steele: Where do you write?

Andrew Sean Greer: I have been traveling for a year and a half, so I’ve learned to write anywhere. I have friends who write in cafe on yellow legal pads. I have friends who write on a treadmill office in their house. I seem to prefer a small quiet internet-free room with a couch to nap on. But relying on “needing” something to write is just another form of procrastination—so whenever I develop a habit, I try to break it!

Amy Steele: This is the first of your novels I’ve read. What would you suggest I read next? Do you have a particular favorite?

Andrew Sean Greer: Well I hope it was a nice introduction! I think the next most similar, if you liked Greta Wells, is The Confessions of Max Tivoli. It, also, has a small magical premise, an obsessive love story, and an historical setting. And, like Greta, it is built to make a certain number of readers cry

Amy Steele: Thank you so much for taking the time to answer these questions, Andrew. I will definitely add your other books to my reading list.

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New Music: Singles from The O’s; Meiko; Gentlemen Hall and We are Temporary

The O’s
from: Texas
sound: folk-pop
album: THUNDERDOG will be released July 23
band members: Taylor Young (acoustic guitar, kick drum) and John Pedigo (banjo)

check out Outlaw: http://www.inmusicwetrust.com/pr/freemp3s/theos_outlaw.mp3

Meiko has a sadder song out called “We All Fall Down”:

Gentlemen Hall
from: Boston
sound: upbeat pop
band members:
Gavin Merlot – Lead vocals, guitar
Rory Given – Bass guitar
Bradford Alderman – Keyboards, synthesizers
Cobi Mike – Lead vocals, lead guitar
Phil Boucher – Drums, percussion, glockenspiel, pooter
Seth Hachen – Flute, piccolo

“Sail into the Sun”– a pretty summer song

We are Temporary
from: Brooklyn
sound: electronic, goth

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STEELE INTERVIEWS: Marjan Kamali [author, Together Tea]

Marjan Kamali, an Iranian-American author, moved to the United States after the Islamic Revolution in 1979 though she’s lived in Kenya, Turkey, Switzerland as her father worked as a diplomat. She’s since lived in Massachusetts, New York, California, Switzerland and Australia. She received an MBA from Columbia and an MFA from NYU. Together Tea, a delightful novel about an Iranian-American mother and daughter striving to find what makes them happy after leaving one home and attempting to fit in to another. Read my review here.

Recently I met Marjan for coffee/tea to speak about the novel and her background.

photo by David E. Lawrence

photo by David E. Lawrence

Amy Steele: Have you always wanted to be a writer?

Marjan Kamali:I always wanted to write. I moved around a lot as a child. My dad was a diplomat so we moved around a lot. I never really had a sense of home. I learned to read in English from a Richard Scarry book. I loved to read. Books were my home. And then I wanted to write.

Amy Steele: When did you decide to write this book?

Marjan Kamali: I came to the U.S. as the child of immigrants. Writing wasn’t considered an option as a career because it wasn’t considered professional or stable or lucrative. The choice was a doctor, a lawyer or an MBA. So I pursued an MBA but the entire time I was there I wistfully looked at the MFA program. They wouldn’t let me do a double-major so that’s how NYU came about.
And because I had a liberal arts background when starting my MBA they put us in “Math Camp” and introduced us to Excel. I saw the spread sheets and thought what if a mother used this to find suitable matches for her daughter. I started writing the story. That was over 10 years ago.

I did put it aside because I was doing the double degrees and found I was having a baby and then went back to school and had another baby and we moved to Australia. So I put it aside for six years. After my youngest child was in kindergarten, I retrieved it and started revising it.

Amy Steele: How did the Islamic Revolution affect your family?

Marjan Kamali: I was living abroad because of my dad’s job. After the revolution in 1979 we went back because at that time it was considered a time of democracy but it soon became clear it wasn’t moving in the way many had hoped. It was becoming a theocracy and not a democracy. I was there between the ages of 9 and 10 ½. A lot of the scenes that occurred in the early 80s, I was there then so that’s how I got those scenes.

Amy Steele:: How autobiographical is the novel?

Marjan Kamali: I would say it’s semi-autobiographical. My mom never made spreadsheets to find me a husband but I was in Iran during the war so the schools changing and things like that.

Amy Steele: What do you think are the greatest misconceptions people have about Iran?

Marjan Kamali: I feel the biggest one is that people have a really short-term memory. 34 years in the history of Iran is very short. There are these Islamic fanatic and negative images on the media of people who hate America. I think the biggest misconception is that Iranians hate America because they don’t. They’re thrilled to see anyone from America. They want more of America and they can’t have it.

Amy Steele: You start out with Darya trying to set up Mina in a marriage. Is that common?

Marjan Kamali: Arranged marriages aren’t common. Even today it’s what you and I would call a blind date. There’s a word for it in Farsi and it means that if you’re a young person of a certain age and I know someone of a certain age who would be suitable, I set you guys up to meet. When it’s done by the parents, it’s more official. The man comes over to tea to meet the young woman. If they like each other, another meeting is set up. If not, nothing becomes of it. It’s matchmaking.

Amy Steele: Did you develop the story first or the characters?

Marjan Kamali: I developed the characters first. I wanted that mother figure and I wanted that daughter figure that was 25 and coming of age and trying to become independent. I came up with the spreadsheets because I thought it was a way to get to know the characters.

Amy Steele: What drew you to writing?

Marjan Kamali: I always read. Once I was in high school my English teachers encouraged me. I wrote a short story as a junior in high school that my mom sent to a contest. I kept getting feedback from really good teachers. It was never really a love of writing but a love of reading and others were encouraging.

together tea

Amy Steele: Why did you want to write this story?

Marjan Kamali: I believe there are two Irans. There is the Iran that we see in the media and then there is the real Iran. Adjusting to American life, trying to find a sense of home, and culture shock are common challenges for most immigrants. But Iranian immigrants have the additional charge of explaining or correcting negative representations of their home country. When I was an undergraduate, books like Maxine Hong Kingston’s “The Woman Warrior” and Toni Morrison’s “The Bluest Eye” made me understand the Chinese-American and African-American experience better through fiction. I wanted to find similar novels about Iranian Americans. So I decided to write a novel that shows the beauty, frustrations and joy in a Persian family. Iranians are often drawn with such a broad brush – I wanted to try and provide more nuanced, colorful strokes.

Amy Steele: this quote from pg. 67– “Mina knew how to study and work very hard. She knew how to swing her legs on that hyphen that defined and denied who she was: Iranian-American. Neither the first word nor the second really belonged to her. Her place was on the hyphen, and on the hyphen she would stay, carrying memories of the one place from which she had come and the other place in which she must succeed. The hyphen was hers—a pace small, potentially precarious. On the hyphen she would sit and on the hyphen she would stand and soon, like a seasoned acrobat, she would balance there perfectly, never falling, never choosing either side over the other, content with walking that thin line.”, as an Iranian-American Mina feels she’s on the hyphen. Can you explain that?

Marjan Kamali: This passage seems to have struck a chord with readers. It gets quoted in reviews the most and was read on NPR WBUR’s Good Reads program. It happens to be one of the autobiographical passages in the novel. I was putting into words how I had felt for so long. “She knew how to swing her legs on that hyphen that defined and denied who she was: Iranian-American. Neither the first word nor the second really belonged to her”. Mina, like many hyphenated Americans who live between worlds, is a foreigner when she goes to her “home” country and isn’t always quite at home in the U.S. either. She tries to find a balance for years. “The hyphen was hers – a space small, potentially precarious. On the hyphen she would sit and on the hyphen she would stand and soon, like a seasoned acrobat, she would balance there perfectly, never falling, never choosing either side over the other, content with walking that thin line.” Ultimately, Mina realizes that her sense of belonging doesn’t need to come from a place or ethnicity. Rather than being a limiting small space, that hyphen is actually a bridge between cultures and Mina finds her home on that bridge and in her art and in her relationships.

Amy Steele: How difficult was it to get out of Iran during the revolution? Some people stayed. Why?

Marjan Kamali: It was difficult especially after the revolution had succeeded because for a while the borders were closed. The new government wanted to make sure that no one who was a political anti-revolutionary left. Others stayed because they didn’t have the means to leave or had no choice. But many stayed because they did not want to leave. It’s difficult to leave the country you have known all your life and in which you have a strong family network in order to become a refugee or to just start anew in an unknown land. Also, people stayed because they just loved Iran too much – Iranians are very nationalistic and they wanted to see how post-revolutionary Iran played out. Others stayed because they wanted to contribute to making post-revolutionary Iran work. And some stayed because they couldn’t believe that anything negative or violent would last, that it would all blow over and things would go “back to normal”.

Amy Steele: Can you explain the title?

Marjan Kamali: The title is actually a phrase that my Farsi-speaking mother-in-law uses when she speaks English. She says “Would you like to have together tea”? I used this phrase as the title because tea is such a huge part of Persian life – it’s usually brewed (with great care) on a samovar and people drink it all day long. Throughout the novel, many characters meet over tea and pivotal conversations between Darya and Mina, Darya and Sam, Mina and Ramin, Darya, Parviz and Sam etc. are had over tea. Also, I wanted to use the word “together” to indicate the bridge between Iran and America. We have so much in common, despite the political rhetoric.

Amy Steele: Both Darya and Mina are strong women. What do you like about them?

Marjan Kamali: I love that Darya speaks her mind. She is judgmental and she knows it but she’s old enough to not care what others think. Her generation is one that was steeped in tradition and she was raised to respect her parents’ choices, to marry someone of whom they approved, and to establish a stable, secure life where one kept one’s head low and did not rock the boat. But she doesn’t suffer fools gladly and she is a very headstrong, determined, and talented woman. Because of Iran’s tumultuous politics, both Darya and Mina have experienced regime change (Darya’s generation were children during the ouster of Mossadegh and installment of the Shah in 1953 and Mina’s generation were kids during the 1979 Islamic revolution). Both know political upheaval first hand and see that stability and security are temporary. But whereas Darya’s response is to keep a low profile and hang on to safe and secure choices, Mina’s, due in large part to her exposure to Western culture, is to ultimately follow her bliss, despite the risks. This is where Darya and Mina differ the most. But I love and respect Darya’s decisions to keep her family safe and I think her choices in life show strength, even if they are choices of compromise. Mina, too, makes many compromises – but in the end she chooses her passion and I respect this greatly about her. I love that she manages to carve her own path without being a clichéd “rebel” who rejects her parents. Mina is trapped in a way, between her parents’ desires for her and her American opportunities. But she manages to balance both, hard as it is, and I love this about her.

Amy Steele: You mentioned potential unfulfilled and that this appealed to you as a writing topic. Why?

Marjan Kamali: I grew up aware that a lot of adults regretted not pursuing their passion. There was plenty of excellent talent that had not been put to use due to circumstance, revolution, war, laziness, what have you. It made me fascinated by the idea of not fulfilling your potential and living a life of regret. No person who has reached middle age is a stranger to unfulfilled dreams, failed ambitions, or missed opportunity. But the idea of having a true talent and not pursuing it, like Darya’s talent in mathematics or Mina’s talent in art– the idea of having to neglect your passion due to life’s circumstances or your own choices has always fascinated me. It’s what happens when lives are cut short and when lives are not lived to the fullest. It is what happens when people can’t muster up the courage to pursue their real desire or don’t have the circumstances that can make that happen. Potential unfulfilled is a great loss and if someone is able to actually live up to their potential, that is the greatest gift of all. That privilege, duty, and gift of living up to your potential is the theme I wanted to explore in Together Tea.

Many thanks to my new friend Marjan Kamali. Definitely add Together Tea to your summer reading list. You won’t be disappointed.

** ECCO/Harper has also agreed to give away one copy of the novel to U.S. residents, if interested please leave your email in the comments. Contest closes August 8.

Together Tea
by Marjan Kamali
Powells.com

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Project Runway S12: Meet the Designers

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Alexander Pope
Age: 38
Hometown: Los Angeles
Resides in: New York, NY
School: FIDM, Los Angeles
Favorite Designers: Viktor & Rolf, Mcqueen, Mugler (original house), Rick Owens, Galliano,
Style Icon: Tilda Swinton
Misc: currently works on costume construction for Broadway
Fun fact: loves amusement parks

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Alexandria von Bromssen
Age: 38
Hometown: Stockholm, Sweden
Resides in: San Mateo, CA
School: Academy of Art University
Favorite Designers: Free people, Alexander McQueen, Comme des Garçon
Style Icon: Karl Lagerfeld, Kate Moss, Daphne Guinness, Nicole Ritchie
Fun fact: made a vest for her Barbie and a skirt with a knit hem as a child

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Angela Bacskocky
Age: 33
Hometown: Richmond, VA
Resides in: Richmond, VA
School: studied fashion in London
Favorite Designers: Alexander McQueen, Viktor & Rolfe, Chloe, Celine, Burberry and Rag &Bone
Style Icon: Audrey Hepburn and Johnny Rotten
Misc: loves finding new vegan recipes [yet inexplicably she loves working with leather]
Fun fact; she was a part of a rock band for 7 years!

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Bradon McDonald
Age: 38
Hometown: Lowville, NY
Resides in Los Angeles, CA
School: Fashion Institute of Art & Merchandising in Los Angeles
Favorite Designers: Charles James, Madame Grès, Valentino Mugler
Style Icon: Lulu Guinness
Fun fact: toured as a modern dancer for 14 years

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Dom Streater
Age: 24
Hometown: Philadelphia, PA
Resides in Philadelphia, PA
School: Moore College of Art and Design in Philadelphia
Favorite Designers: Helmut Lang, Calvin Klein, Alexander Wang, Lanvin
Style Icon: Kate Lanphear
Fun fact: likes to paint and do yoga

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Helen Castillo
Age: 25
Hometown: Weehawken, NJ
Resides in: Union City, NJ
School: Fashion Institute of Technology
Favorite Designers: Valentino, Ricardo Tisci, Vivienne Westwood
Style Icon: Alice Dellal
Misc: bachelor’s degree in Special Occasion Design

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Jeremy Brandrick
Age: 41
Hometown: Birmingham, England
Resides in: New York, NY
School: Central St. Martins in London
Favorite Designers: Raf Simmons, Dries Van Noten, Riccardo Tisci, Alber Elbaz, Karl Lagerfeld, YSL, Dior
Style Icon: Debbie Harry “back in the day”
Misc: has worked for Dolce and Gabbana, Mulberry and Marks and Spencer
Fun fact: he and his partner of 15 years have a son and a daughter

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Justin LeBlanc
Age: 27
Hometown: Tampa, FL
Resides in: Raleigh, NC
School: none listed
Favorite Designers: Iris Van Herpen, Alexander McQueen and Rick Owens
Style Icon: Daphne Guinness
Misc: he’s deaf
Fun fact: his ideal materials to work with are felts and wools and he prefers greys and solids

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Kahindo Mateene
Age: 34
Hometown: Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Resides in Chicago, IL
School: Illinois Institute of Art-Chicago
Favorite Designers: Stella McCartney, Alexander McQueen, Peter Pilotto and Mary Katrantzou
Style Icon: Michelle Obama and Sarah Jessica Parker
Misc: holds a BA in International Business & Economics

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Karen Batts
Age: 29
Hometown: Boca Raton, FL
Resides in Queens, NY
School: Savannah College of Art and Design
Favorite Designers : Kate Spade, Tory Burch, J.Crew, John Patrick Organic, Michael Kors, Proenza Schouler, Dries Van Noten and Miu Miu
Style Icon: Katharine Hepburn
Fun fact: designed her own wedding dress

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Ken Laurence
Age: 24
Hometown: Birmingham, AL
Resides in Birmingham, AL
School: self-taught
Favorite Designers: Alexander McQueen and Marchesa
Style Icon: Daphne Guinness
Misc: favorite materials to work with are neoprene, spandex and wools

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Miranda Kay Levy
Age: 29
Hometown: Wilton, WI
Resides in: Milwaukee, WI
School: UWM
Favorite Designers: William Morris (a wallpaper designer); Franck Sorbier and Christian Dior
Style Icon: Bettie Page, Madonna, Marilyn Monroe, Twiggy, Mick Jagger, Jackie O, Richard Hell, Patti Smith
Misc: gallery curator of Milwaukee’s Tenth Street Gallery
Fun fact: finished contract position as color specialist for Kohl’s Corporate

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Sandro Masmanidi
Age: 28
Hometown: Krasnodar, Russia
Resides in: New York, NY
School: University of Culture and Art in Moscow
Favorite Designers: Gianni Versace, Gianfranco Ferre, John Galliano, Alexander McQueen, Giorgio Armani and Francesco Smalto
Style Icon: Marlene Dietrich
Misc: likes to swim, read and collect architectural drawings
Fun fact: knew he had the designer potential from the age of 8 after designing dresses for a Barbie doll

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Sue Waller
Age: 45
Hometown: Boston, MA
Resides in: Brooklyn, NY
School: self-taught
Favorite Designers: none [no favorites?]
Style Icon: none

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Timothy Westbrook
Age: 24
Hometown: Wanakena, NY
Resides in: Milwaukee, WI
School: Syracuse University
Favorite Designers: Alexander McQueen
Style Icon: Grace Jones
Misc: his grandmother taught him to sew
Fun fact: inspired by Victorian Era, design aesthetic is influenced by classical styles and political activism and sustainability.

Several designers list Daphne Guinness as a style icon. I had to Google her and I’m sharing with you a few pictures:

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no teams this time but more Tim Gunn! He’ll sit with the judges and provide them with information about how a designer works in the workroom. He will also be able to save designers from elimination if he thinks s/he deserves another chance.

heidi klum

Project Runway Premieres Thursday, July 18, at 9pm ET/PT on LIFETIME.

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Choice Quote: Eve Ensler

in the body of the world

“I was raised in America. All value lies in the future, in the dream, in production. There is no present tense. There is not value in what is, only in what might be made or exploited from what already exists. Of course the same was true for me. I had no inherent value. Without work or effort, without making myself into something significant, without proving my worth, I had no right to be here. Life itself was inconsequential unless it led to something.”

–Eve Ensler

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2013 Summer Book Picks [part one]

people

The People of Forever are Not Afraid by Shani Boianjiu [Hogarth Books]

My favorite book of last year is available in paperback. The novel focuses on three young women in the Israeli army. They’re thrown into some truly adult and potentially dangerous situations. While they often think like hormonal, selfish, naïve teenagers at other times these women react with amazing strength, bravery and clarity. Boianjiu includes point of views from Egyptian army members, Palestinians and a Ukranian woman who seeks to emigrate to Israel. A veteran of the IDF, she writes with compassion, humor, modernity and a humanistic approach to the IDF and Israel’s issues with its border nations as well as the United States and the UK.

RATING: *****/5

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The Collective by Done Lee [W.W. Norton paperback, 2013]

“Give up trying. The world doesn’t need another dilettante, and that’s all you’ve ever been.”

This was one of my favorite novels of 2012. While at Macalester college, Eric Cho forms a strong friendship with painter Jessica Tsai and novelist Joshua Yoon. Years later they reunite in Cambridge forming the Asian American Artists Collective [3 AC]. Don Lee masterfully creates characters, story lines and vivid descriptions with the most gorgeous prose. These characters compete with each other, become jealous of one another and support each other’s goals. Lee truly grasps the creative lifestyle–its ups and downs, its starving moments, its triumphant moments.

RATING: *****/5

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The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells by Andrew Sean Greer [ECCO, 2013]

“Why is it so impossible to be a woman? [sic] When has a woman ever been forgiven? Can you even imagine it? For I have seen the plane of being, and nowhere upon it is the woman tracing her life as she always dreamed of it. Always there are the boundaries, the rules, the questions—wouldn’t you prefer to be back home, little lady?—that break the spell of the living.”

This one’s about time-travel however Greta travels in an unusual, ingenious way. It’s engrossing as long as you can get past the issue that causes Greta to time travel—she’s being treated for her depression by electroshock therapy—“Of course this was how our minds had connected in that blue electric flash of madness, across the membrane of three worlds so we switched places, two Gretas and myself, and awoke to different lives.” My issue wasn’t with that but with Greer never mentioning her depression as she traveled from her present day of 1984 to 1918 to 1941. The present Greta just lost her twin brother Felix to AIDS and her longtime paramour left her. In each time period she’s missing a loved one and her life’s slightly different. Even her physical appearance is a bit different. Greer recreates each time period through wonderful description, interesting people and dialogue. It’s a fast-paced novel perfect for summer reading. In the end Greta much decide which time she’s happiest in and in which she wants to remain.

RATING: ***/5

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Crazy Brave by Jo Harjo [W.W. Norton, 2012]

Poet and Native American Jo Harjo writes lyrically about her difficult childhood in the Midwest. Her stepfather was an abusive alcoholic; she faced extreme challenges as a Native American and pretty much raised two children on her own. While she recalls these horrific moments in her past she’s also hauntingly philosophical and forgiving. She writes: “In the end, we must each tend to our own gulf of sadness, though others can assist us with kindness, food, good words, and music. Our human tendency is to fill these holes with distractions like shopping and fast romance, or with drugs and alcohol.” She also intersperses her tribe’s beliefs but never in an overbearing manner. About having a spinal tap in her youth, she writes: “The spinal column carries personal essence back and forth between earth and sky. The spine is powerful and vulnerable. The procedure was excruciating.” She’s a powerful voice for women and minorities; a truly beautiful soul.

RATING: ****/5

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Together Tea: book review & giveaway

together tea

Together Tea by Marjan Kamali. Publisher: ecco (2013). Fiction. 336 pages. ISBN: 978-0-06-223680-7.

Marjan Kamali spent a decade to completing her debut novel, Together Tea, due to various life events. She first developed the concept as an MFA student at NYU [while simultaneously completing her MBA at Columbia]. She wanted to write about an Iranian-American immigrants in an amusing style without falling into stereotypes.

The novel focuses on Mina, a twenty-something MBA student with dreams of being an artist, and her mother Darya, who abandoned her goal to be a math teacher when she fled Iran during the 1979 Islamic Revolution. At the start, Darya’s setting Mina up for another date after using her intricate spreadsheet calculations to determine compatibility. Darya’s always telling Mina about how wonderful life in Iran was and how much she misses it. Mina decides she needs to see Darya’s Iran for herself and decides to go during her winter vacation. Darya volunteers to join her. So the mother and daughter set off back to their homeland.

“What if the country and history her parents loved was still buried there? What if she could find it? Could Mina go back and see what Darya meant when she said she wanted Mina to have “everything she had”? Mina had always wished that she could have known the Iran Darya had grown up in, instead of the Iran she herself had escaped from. Could she find it and piece it together if she went back there as an adult?”

Mina studies hard but isn’t truly happy with pursuing an MBA. She aches to become an artist. Her conservative parents don’t think that’s a career, something lucrative or stable. As Mina contemplates her present, she realizes that her past in Iran shapes her as an individual today. She wants to experience Iran in order to make sense of her present self. Is she an immigrant or an American or a combination of both? Once in Iran, she and her mother re-discover the old beauty and traditions as well as young people secretly embracing Western culture.

“Mina knew how to study and work very hard. She knew how to swing her legs on that hyphen that defined and denied who she was: Iranian-American. Neither the first word nor the second really belonged to her. Her place was on the hyphen, and on the hyphen she would stay, carrying memories of the one place from which she had come and the other place in which she must succeed. The hyphen was hers—a pace small, potentially precarious. On the hyphen she would sit and on the hyphen she would stand and soon, like a seasoned acrobat, she would balance there perfectly, never falling, never choosing either side over the other, content with walking that thin line.”

Together Tea provides a novel insight into the immigrant experience. Humor, love, respect and mother-daughter bonding make this a book you’ll long remember after finishing the last page. It’s a love story to Persia as well as an acceptance for the United States.

RATING: ****/5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from Harper Collins.

***I can giveaway one copy of Together Tea to U.S. residents only. If interested please provide email address in comments. Entries close July 20.

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Entertainment News: books to film

James Franco plans to adapt another William Faulkner novel, The Sound and the Fury

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Franco recently premiered his version of As I Lay Dying at the Cannes Film Festival. The Sound and the Fury is a collaborative effort between Franco and his Yale classmate Matt Rager. Franco will direct and star in the movie. He would like to cast Mad Men‘s Jon Hamm in the role of Mr Compson, the head of a family of southern aristocrats fallen on hard times in early 20th century Mississippi.

As I Lay Dying trailer:

Keira Knightley will produce and star in The Other Typist

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The Other Typist, the debut novel from Suzanne Rindell, focuses on Rose, a typist in a police department typist during the 1920s.

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2013 Summer Music Picks

pretty song by Gentleman Hall
–new album out this fall

get retro with She & Him, Vol. 3

thoughtful, moving folk-pop from Frank Turner on Tape Deck Heart

gorgeous, moody The National, Trouble Will Find Me— gorgeous, moody

swirly, sublime Camera Obscura, Desire Lines

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The Never List: book review & giveaway

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The Never List by Koethi Zan. Publisher: Pamela Dorman Books / Viking (July 16, 2013). Fiction. Thriller. Hardcover. 303 pages. ISBN 978-0-670-02651-7.

In The Never List, a college professor held four women captive in a cellar—chained to the walls, put in cages/ boxes, tortured and sexually abused– for years until one manages to escape. Creepy premise and au currant after rescue of Cleveland women imprisoned and sexually assaulted for years. When the man responsible for this unimaginable behavior becomes eligible for parole 13 years later, two women begin their own investigation into BDSM clubs, cults and more. Jumping back and forth from past to present, first-time novelist Koethi Zan painstakingly describes the captive experience and its aftermath on the women’s current lives told from Sarah’s point of view. She’s the one still in therapy and in constant contact with the case’s lead detective.

“It was a history I revealed in isolate images. Me, blindfolded, my feet in chains hanging from the I-clamp bolted to the ceiling. Me, on the table, spread out like an inset for dissection, a catheter running to my bladder, filling me up milliliter by milliliter. Me, in the corner, strapped to a chair with my wrists cuffed behind me, a surgical needle piercing my tongue.”

Sarah works from home, safely ensconced in her apartment, ordering out for lunch and relying on the building’s 24-7 security. Christine erased any evidence to her years spent underground, now living a seemingly idyllic existence on the Manhattan’s Upper East Side, married with two daughters. Tracy, the Goth kid with her own dark past, delved into academia to make sense of it all.

I understand that in allowing these women to take down those responsible for the atrocities they suffered makes this about empowerment and justice. It’s the ultimate revenge for those trafficked and abused. Unfortunately, the story lost steam toward the end and I didn’t care the reasons for this deranged behavior that ruined young women’s lives forever. Knowing that this just happened in a Cleveland neighborhood made this a difficult read.

RATING: ***/5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from Viking.

Giveaway: I’m giving away a copy of The Never List courtesy of Pamela Dorman/Viking. Contest closes August 1. If interested, please leave a comment. Open to U.S. and Canadian residents only.

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