Elaine Drew read from Courting Trouble (a romantic comedy set in England in 800 AD) at the Lafayette Library Sunday, September 15, at 4 pm, as part of the Art Embraces Words program.
Dr. Jac Fitz-enz is featured in the September 2019 issue of CFO magazine. Jac is quoted by David McCann in “Human Capital’s Big Reveal” in the sidebar titled “Perspectives From A Trailblazer.” You can read that article here.
The Pleasanton Weekly interviewed Barbara Flores this summer about her recently-published memoir, Separated, Acting Badly: A Bi-Cultural Memoir, which describes the year after her husband of 30 years left her for a much younger woman. She says, “Revenge can be funny and hilarious—but it is kind of painful. I was caught in this place as trying to see him as bad yet in my heart I still loved him.”
B. Lynn Goodwin had flash fiction “Suppose” published in Cabinet of Heed and “Moving” in Nebo, and won second place in a Flash Fiction Contest run by Story Circle Network. She also has a couple of articles in Women’s Writers, Women’s Books. She recently signed a contract with Koehler Books to issue a new version of Talent since the old one became unavailable when the former publishing company closed its doors.
Julaina Kleist-Corwin‘s short story, “The Story Changed” was published in Donna Kozik’s Community Book Project called A Gift of Gratitude.
John Q. McDonald‘s flash fiction “Here It Began” was published September 5 in the online e-zine BoomSpeak. You can read it here.
Ann Parker, the author of the award-winning Silver Rush historical mystery series set in the 1880s and featuring saloon owner Inez Stannert, was inducted into the Colorado Authors’ Hall of Fame. A red carpet awards ceremony was held September 14 in Denver, CO.
Julie Royce has two short stories, “The Ghost of Minnie Quay” and “The South Haven Keeper’s Ghost,” in Curious Things, A Compilation of Curiously Disturbing & Sometimes Horrifying Short Stories. The anthology will be published in September.