Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Book Discussion Meeting, Saturday May 2, 2015, 2:00 PM, San Leandro Main Library

Oleander Girl by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

Dakshineswar Kali Temple near Kolkata

From the unimpeachable source of all wisdom, Wikipedia:

 Chitralekha Banerjee Divakaruni was born in Kolkata (Calcutta), India. She has two brothers. She received her B.A. from the University of Calcutta in 1976. That same year, she went to the United States to attend Wright State University where she received a master's degree. She received a PhD in English from the University of California, Berkeley in 1985 (Christopher Marlowe was the subject of her doctoral dissertation).

Divakaruni put herself through graduate school by taking on odd jobs, working as a babysitter, a store clerk, a bread slicer in a bakery, a laboratory assistant at Wright State University, and a dining hall attendant at International House, Berkeley. She was a graduate teaching assistant at U.C.Berkeley She taught at Foothill College in Los Altos, California and Diablo Valley College. She now lives and teaches in Texas, where she is the at the nationally ranked University of Houston Creative Writing Program.

Divakaruni is a co-founder and former president of Maitri, a helpline founded in 1991 for South Asian women dealing with domestic abuse. Divakaruni serves on its advisory board and on the advisory board of a similar organisation in Houston, Daya. She also serves on the emeritus board pf Pratham Houston, a non-profit organisation working to bring literacy to disadvantaged Indian children. She volunteers for Indo American Charity Organization, a non-profit which raises money to assist various charities in the Houston area.

Meet the author at the book launch of Oleander Girl at the Asia Society Texas Center




Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Book Discussion on Saturday, April 11, 2015, 2:00 PM, San Leandro Main Library

2015 "Big Read" Event, Into the Beautiful North by Luis Alberto Urrea

Meet the Author

Luis Urrea was born in 1955 in Tijuana, Mexico, to a Mexican father and American mother. His family eventually moved across the border to San Diego, and he spent most of his childhood there. He graduated from UC, San Diego and did graduate work at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He was a relief worker at the dumps in Tijuana, the memory of which colors much of his writing. He moved to Boston to teach expository writing and fiction at Harvard, and it was at about this point that his career as a writer began to take off. He now lives in Napierville, IL, and is a professor of creative writing at the University of Illinois, Chicago. Many of us were fortunate to be able to hear Mr. Urrea speak at the San Leandro Library last month. In addition to this year's "Big Read" selection, Into the Beautiful North, Mr. Urrea has written three other novels, several books of memoirs and short stories, and several non-fiction works including The Devil's Highway from 2004, which was shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize. Last month, I posted an interview of Mr. Urrea by Bill Moyers, in which they talked about The Devil's Highway. This interview can be found by scrolling down on the home page or by clicking on this link.

In the YouTube clip below, Luis Urrea talks with a reporter from San Diego's public television station about Into the Beautiful North



The Magnificent Seven

It is the movie, "The Magnificent Seven," that inspires Nayeli and her friends to take the perilous journey into the north.



Bonus trivia question: Who is the only one of the seven still alive?

ROAD TRIP!

El Rosario, Sinaloa, AKA "Tres Camarones"

Entry to the temple of Nuestra Senora del Rosario, built in the mid 1700s

The lagoon in El Rosario
Tijuana, Baja California



Tijuana dump

Mexico-US border fence at beach in Tijuana

Los Yunaites

La Jolla Beach, San Diego
Viva Las Vegas!


Lake Estes, Colorado
Prairie Dog Town, Oakley, KS

"Seemore" and "Readmore" guarding the door at the library in Kankakee, IL