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There’s a Book for That: Hispanic & Latine Heritage Month

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Welcome Hispanic & Latine Heritage Month which runs from September 15th through October 15th, during which time we honor the contributions of Hispanic Americans to the United States and celebrate their heritage and culture. Enjoy the following array of new and acclaimed titles – biography, memoir, cooking, fiction, history, and poetry – to mark the occasion.

 

NONFICTION

 

Rivermouth by Alejandra OlivaRIVERMOUTH: A CHRONICLE OF LANGUAGE, FAITH, AND MIGRATION by Alejandra Oliva

In this powerful and deeply felt memoir of translation, storytelling, and borders, Alejandra Oliva, a Mexican-American translator and immigrant justice activist, offers a powerful chronical of her experience interpreting at the US-Mexico border.

 

 

Solito by Javier ZamoraSOLITO: A MEMOIR by Javier Zamora

A young poet tells the unforgettable story of his harrowing migration from El Salvador to the United States at the age of nine in this moving, page-turning memoir hailed as “the mythic journey of our era.” (Sandra Cisneros).

Also Available in Spanish here.

 

Crying in the Bathroom by Erika L. SánchezCRYING IN THE BATHROOM: A MEMOIR by Erika L. Sánchez

From the New York Times bestselling author of I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter, an utterly original memoir-in-essays that is as deeply moving as it is hilarious.

“Equal parts pee-your-pants hilarity and break your heart poignancy—like the perfect brunch date you never want to end!”—America Ferrera, Emmy award-winning actress in Ugly Betty

Also Available in Spanish here

 

Harvest of Empire by Juan GonzalezHARVEST OF EMPIRE: A HISTORY OF LATINOS IN AMERICA: SECOND REVISED AND UPDATED EDITION by Juan Gonzalez

A sweeping history of the Latino experience in the United States. With family portraits of real-life immigrant Latino pioneers, as well as accounts of the events and conditions that compelled them to leave their homelands, Gonzalez highlights the complexity of a segment of the American population that is often discussed but frequently misrepresented.

“A serious, significant contribution to understanding who the Hispanics of the United States are and where they came from.”—The New York Times Book Review

 

My Broken Language by Quiara Alegría HudesMY BROKEN LANGUAGE: A MEMOIR by Quiara Alegría Hudes

The Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright and co-writer of In the Heights tells her lyrical story of coming of age against the backdrop of an ailing Philadelphia barrio, with her sprawling Puerto Rican family as a collective muse.

Also Available in Spanish here

 

I Embrace You With All My Revolutionary Fervor by Ernesto Che GuevaraI EMBRACE YOU WITH ALL MY REVOLUTIONARY FERVOR: LETTERS 1947-1967 by Ernesto Che Guevara; Foreword by Aleida Guevara; Edited by Maria del Carmen Ariet Garcia and Disamis Arcia Munoz

Collected for the first time, here are Guevara’s letters, the vast majority never-before published in English.

As his daughter Aleida Guevara, also a doctor like her father, writes, “When you write a speech, you pay attention to the language, the punctuation and so on. But in a letter to a friend or a member of your family, you don’t worry about those things. It is you speaking, in your authentic voice. That’s what I like about these letters; they show who Che really was and how he thought. This is the true political testimony of my father.”

Also available in a Spanish language edition here

 

Sí, Se Puede by Julio AntaSÍ, SE PUEDE: THE LATINO HEROES WHO CHANGED THE UNITED STATES by Julio Anta, Yasmín Flores Montañez

Meet the unsung Latino rebels, artists, and activists who changed the United States–from Dolores Huerta to Desi Arnaz to Lin Manuel Miranda–in this bold and entertaining graphic history.

 

FICTION

 

Las Madres by Esmeralda SantiagoLAS MADRES: A NOVEL by Esmeralda Santiago

From the award-winning, best-selling author of When I Was Puerto Rican, a powerful novel of family, race, faith, sex, and disaster that moves between Puerto Rico and the Bronx, revealing the lives and loves of five women and the secret that binds them together.

 

 

Vanishing Maps by Cristina GarcíaVANISHING MAPS: A NOVEL by Cristina García

From the acclaimed author of Dreaming in Cuban, a follow-up novel that tracks four generations of the del Pino family against the tumultuous backdrops of Cuba, the U.S., Germany, and Russia in the new millennium.

 

 

The Lost Steps by Alejo CarpentierTHE LOST STEPS: A NOVEL by Alejo Carpentier, Adrian Nathan West, Leonardo Padura

The best-known book by Cuba’s most important twentieth-century novelist, in its first new English translation in more than sixty years.

Dissatisfied with his empty, Sisyphus-like existence in New York City, where he has abandoned his creative dreams for a job in corporate advertising, a highly cultured aspiring composer wants nothing more than to tear his life up from the root. He soon finds his escape hatch: a university-sponsored mission to South America to look for indigenous musical instruments in one of the few areas of the world not yet touched by civilization. Retracing the steps of time, he voyages with his lover into a land that feels outside of history, searching not just for music but ultimately for himself, and turning away from modernity toward the very heart of what makes us human.

 

POETRY

 

Tarta Americana by J. Michael MartinezTARTA AMERICANA by J. Michael Martinez

A suite of poems that channels the legendary singer-songwriter Ritchie Valens to examine and question mid-twentieth-century conceptions of race and art, identity and desire.

 

 

 

The Border Simulator by Gabriel DozalTHE BORDER SIMULATOR: POEMS by Gabriel Dozal, Natasha Tiniacos

Featuring a bilingual format for English and Spanish readers, The Border Simulator is a world-bending, lyrically rich debut poetry collection that reimagines the U.S./Mexico border as both a real place and a living simulation—and tells the story of a pair of siblings trapped between the two.

 

Some of the Light by Tim Z. HernandezSOME OF THE LIGHT: NEW AND SELECTED POEMS by Tim Z. Hernandez

25 years of writing from one of our most gifted Latinx poets, featuring work from early explorations of machismo to new meditations on life as a single father, immigrant detention, and spiritual inquiry. This latest work by Hernandez reveals a writer whom former US poet laureate Juan Felipe Herrera calls “a titan—unafraid to take to the road, get his hands dirty, to fully immerse himself in the world of his subjects.”

 

COOKING

 

Cali Baja CuisineCALI BAJA CUISINE: TIJUANA TACOS, ENSENADA AGUACHILES, SAN DIEGO CALI BURRITOS + MORE by Michael A. Gardiner

The vibrant flavors of Baja California inspire home cooks to recreate the flavor forward and passionate cuisine, inspired by the sea, and the land. The mission of this book is to help it be the next big thing out of your kitchen. Featuring a mix of both traditional and modern takes on signature Baja dishes, such as: Crab with Pickled Asparagus in Guajillo –Pork Broth; Cantaloupe Aguachile al Estilo de Californios, Puerto Nuevo-style Lobster Tortas; Golden Beet Pozole; and Smoked Pulled Lamb Shoulder with Seared Tomatillo.

 

Provecho by Edgar CastrejónPROVECHO: 100 VEGAN MEXICAN RECIPES TO CELEBRATE CULTURE AND COMMUNITY [A COOKBOOK] by Edgar Castrejón

ONE OF THE BEST COOKBOOKS OF THE YEAR: Boston Globe and Glamour

The definitive plant-based Mexican cookbook for a new generation, Provecho features one hundred of Edgar’s ingenious vegan recipes that honor the traditional, often meat-heavy classics of Mexican and Latin American culture while cooking with compassion. Many take thirty minutes or less, rely on readily accessible ingredients, and feature Salvadoran and Colombian influences. And they’re all organized by how meals are approached in Edgar’s family:

For more on these, and related, titles visit Hispanic Heritage Month, 2023

PenguinRandomHouse 

“AS THE SPARROW FLIES: SOJOURNERS’ SAGA,” A NEW DYSTOPIAN FANTASY

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A brand-new world and story from prolific author Chad Corrie

Author Chad Corrie returns to prose with a dystopian fantasy for teens, As the Sparrow Flies: Sojourners’ Saga. Known for his adult fantasy trilogy, The Wizard KingAs the Sparrow Flies: Sojourners’ Saga marks the first time that the author has written for a young adult audience. The book takes place in a brand-new setting, and includes cover art by Dan Burgess and appendices to enrich the reading experience.

Annulis is a dying world. Nothing can stop the doom all say is coming. Some simply accept it, embracing the end. Others hold to a better future—a way of escape from the dark days ahead.

Sarah and her people sojourn the land, searching for a city none have seen but believe exists as an escape from these troubling times. Elliott follows an army with a mandate calling for the purging of all that would hinder a glorious global rebirth. Both are nearing an ancient city set on its own destruction. Both will be tried behind its walls in ways unimaginable. And both will have to live with the consequences.

As the Sparrow Flies: Sojourners’ Saga is perfect for fans of the Grishaverse series, The Bone Witch trilogy, and the Throne of Glass series.

As the Sparrow Flies: Sojourners’ Saga Book One TPB (288 pages) flies into bookstores May 14, 2024. It is now available to pre-order for $19.99 at AmazonBarnes & Noble, and your local comic shop and bookstore.

Be sure to follow Dark Horse Comics on social media for more news, announcements, and updates!

Praise for Chad Corrie:

“Chad Corrie delivers a very promising start to an exciting epic fantasy saga filled with intriguing characters and unexpected twists.”—Richard Knaak, New York Times and USA Today bestselling author

“Here be roaring monsters to be fought, characters who come vividly to life, and fell magic . . . A wild ride. Highly recommended.”—Ed Greenwood, New York Times bestselling author and creator of the Forgotten Realms

“This saga of faith triumphant belongs in larger fantasy collections.”––Library Journal

“. . . spellbinding . . .”—Publishers Weekly

“. . . incredible worldbuilding . . . [complex] characters . . . and various religions and histories that make you want to know more.”—Geek’d Out

“Lovers of swords and sorcery . . . will get quite a thrill out of this series . . .”—Southwest Book Reviews

“Corrie excels by reimagining traditional fantasy stereotypes and making them believable.”—Mania

Dark Horse Comics

 

Sneak Peek: Too Far by Sylvia Day

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Too Far by Sylvia Day

From the #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Crossfire® saga.

You can’t believe all of them, but can you trust any of them? Lily Black was presumed dead for years. Now, she’s back in the unquestioning arms of her loving husband, Kane. Where she’s been remains a mystery, but her past sins haunt her and bring deadly danger into the lives of the family. Meanwhile Aliyah, Kane’s mother, has worked hard for her position of power. She has never believed Lily is who she says she is, and will stop at nothing to expose her. Amy, Kane’s sister-in-law, has always been a pawn in the dangerous games this family plays. But she knows she deserves more, and will do anything to claim the biggest prize. Three women fight to outrun their pasts. But could they have more in common than they think?

With the trademark emotional intensity and scorching sensuality of multimillion bestseller Sylvia Day, the dangerous and sultry Blacklist duology comes to its riveting conclusion.

Welcome Home – New Book is the Perfect Closing Gift for the Young Homeowner

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Good Stories Publishing launched the new book Welcome Home from author Marlene Byrne, kicking off a series of books about significant life moments, Life Point Books. Welcome Home, a hardcover coffee table book, is a heartwarming, housewarming collection of home maintenance tips, recipes, and beautifully told stories to help new homeowners make the journey from house to home.

Welcome Home is an ideal resource for young homeowners who are learning home maintenance and repair for the first time.

“Young couples do not typically have the maintenance knowledge their parents and grandparents did,” said author Marlene Byrne. “I wanted to provide simple tips to remind them of important things like knowing how to shut off their main water valve, or switch a circuit in their electrical box.”

Welcome Home also helps new homeowners with food suggestions. The book has recipes from easy snacks on moving day to delicious ideas for celebrations with friends. The simple recipes help make the first meals in the new house easy and healthy. There are even suggestions for hosting the housewarming party for friends and family.

Alongside tips and recipes are stories from other homeowners who have journeyed over the threshold of a new home for the first time. This beautiful coffee table book even includes space for new homeowners to record their stories and document the first few days in their new home.

Welcome Home is meant to remind those you love to enjoy the journey as they turn their new house into a home. If you are looking for the perfect housewarming gift for the new homeowner in your life, Welcome Home is available for purchase on Amazon. Visit lifepointseries.com/books for more information.

About Marlene Byrne
Marlene Byrne has been writing, in one form or another, her whole life. As CEO of Celtic Chicago, a full-service advertising agency, she used her writing skills for clients. Now she focuses her efforts on writing books and telling inspiring stories. Her work is published through Good Stories Publishing.

More information on Marlene Byrne and her work can be found at www.marlenebyrne.com or at www.goodstoriespublishing.com.

The Good King, A Medieval Thriller,” By George WB Scott

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Pagan priests and Christian traditions compete as rulers face their own spiritual challenges.

George WB Scott’s second novel, “The Good King, A Medieval Thriller,” will be released Sept. 14, 2023, from Black Rose Writing. The Christmas carol “Good King Wenceslas” is beloved throughout the world, but the true story of Saint Wenceslas is tragic—a tale of jealousy, loyalty and betrayal, and mankind’s need for spirituality.

The book launches Sept. 21 with an event hosted by Union Ave. Books, Knoxville’s premiere independent bookstore in the heart of Downtown.

The author’s research and imagination paint a history-based story of the dark ages of central Europe. New religious ideas backed with the force of outside empires flow into superstitious societies and are resisted by people of Bohemia and the priests of old religions.

Learn the facts behind the carol in an epic adventure through forests of holy glades and along roads that lead to the ends of the earth. Learn of the patron saints of millions, and the ancestors—blessed and damned—of Europe’s greatest families.

“I began researching the Christmas carol, ‘Good King Wenceslas,’ and pagan priests, slave workers and other characters of the era walked right off the page and into my story,” says Scott.

Dr. Petr Kubín of the Department of Ecclesiastical History and Literary History at Charles University in Prague is a world expert on Saint Wenceslas and his grandmother, Saint Ludmila. He calls the novel “A well-written story. The American reader will find a thorough and entertaining lesson on the origins of Christianity in medieval Bohemia, and an understanding of the famous Christmas song.” Liliana Shadowlyn of Faerie Review calls the novel “An absolute tour de force.”

Scott is an East Tennessee author and video producer, with a life-long interest in history. He was born in Stuart, Florida, and graduated from Appalachian State University. Previous books include “I Jonathan, A Charleston Tale of the Rebellion,” and “Growing Up In Eden.” He lives in Knoxville with his wife Mary Leidig. They have two sons, Daniel and Gideon, and an English Setter, Emma.

 

“The Good King” is available at BlackRoseWriting.com and wherever you buy books.

MoneyWise Mabel’s Bursting Bank-A guide to finances for Kids By Kalee Boisvert

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MoneyWise Mabel’s Bursting Bank
A guide to finances for Kids – Say It Isn’t SO!?!
Financial Expert Kalee Boisvert shares all with a new fun guide for Kids to learn and begin their money management skills

AN AMAZON #1 HOT NEW RELEASE!

What should Mabel do now that her piggybank is full to the brim? Buy lots of candy? Spend it all on that toy she’s been eyeing? Finally get that unicorn sprinkler that sprays water from its horn?

When Mabel pulls her piggy bank out from under the bed, it’s stuffed. She can’t fit one more coin inside–Piggy is bursting!

What should Mabel do with all that money? Buy candy? Toys? Games!? Mabel’s so excited that her bed becomes a trampoline and she wants to spend it all. But then her mother explains that money doesn’t have to burn a hole in your pocket—a lesson that sends Mabel on a journey to learn what it means to become “moneywise.” independence by opening a bank account!

Follow her as she takes her first steps to Teach your school-aged kids fundamentals about money management with this approachable, fun, and charming debut from Kalee Boisvert, full of colorful illustrations and easy-to-understand concepts.

            MoneyWise Mabel’s Bursting Bank: Boisvert, Kalee: 9781684632282: Books – Amazon.ca

            MoneyWise Mabel’s Bursting Bank – Kindle edition by Boisvert, Kalee. Children Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Kalee Boisvert has been in the financial industry for over 15 years, but her love of money started very young. Growing up in a single parent household, she watched her mom struggle with finances and wished there was something she could do to help. Around this time, she realized she needed to find her own way to save and earn if she wasn’t going to allow her circumstances to define her. And so, her own journey to financial literacy began.

Today, as a single mom and financially independent woman, Kalee is called to support women in their financial lives. She felt the pull toward a career that would allow her to pursue this deeply personal goal to advocate for women and their money, which led her on the path to becoming a financial advisor. Being an advisor allows her to work directly with women to empower and support them and help put an end to any money-related stress and doubts.  

To further her efforts supporting financial literacy, Kalee has two books being released in 2023 – a children’s picture book called MoneyWise Mabel’s Bursting Bank, and a non-fiction book called Make Money Your Thing! Which aims to build confidence and empower people in their financial lives.

            

MasterClass Announces Atomic Habits Author James Clear to Teach His Framework for Building Better Habits

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MasterClass, the streaming platform where anyone can learn from the world’s best, today announced that James Clear will teach a class on how to build habits that actually work. Exclusively with MasterClass, Clear refreshes his Atomic Habits philosophy through today’s lens and shares his approach to designing smarter habits and tackling today’s challenges—from amping up productivity to shutting down distractions in remote or hybrid working environments. He will teach MasterClass members how to build habits that stick, improve bad habits and set themselves up for sustainable success—one small step at a time. The class is available now exclusively on MasterClass, where subscribers have unlimited access to all 185+ instructors with an annual membership.

In this class, members will learn why focusing on goals can trip them up and how to build a smarter system for success. Clear will dive into the science of habit formation and behavior change, showing how habit loops train members to repeat certain behaviors. Clear will also teach members how to use the four laws of behavior to work smarter, not harder. Finally, he will conclude with insight into how to optimize nonwork hours for greater productivity on the job.

“No matter your goals, building better habits will help you get there. And struggling with inconsistency and procrastination will make the path more difficult,” Clear said. “In my class, I’ll walk you through my Atomic Habits approach. I’ll show you how to navigate a world where work and home are increasingly happening in the exact same spaces, and how you can keep making progress despite all the distractions.”

An acclaimed author and speaker, Clear has cut through the self-help clutter with a simplified framework for making progress toward goals every day. His New York Times bestseller, Atomic Habits, has sold more than 15 million copies worldwide and been translated into more than 50 languages. Clear is also known for his popular 3-2-1 newsletter, which is distributed weekly to more than 2 million subscribers.

 

ABOUT MASTERCLASS:
MasterClass is the streaming platform that provides the insights, tools and lived experiences of the world’s best so you can become your best. In as little as 10 minutes, you can gain new skills that can be applied immediately. With an annual membership, you get unlimited access to 185+ instructors and classes through flexible formats for any way you like to learn. Shift the way you see and experience the world through a wide range of subjects, including business and leadership, writing, cooking, acting, sports and more. Cook with Gordon Ramsay. Write with Shonda Rhimes. Get negotiation tactics from Chris Voss. Learn how to navigate relationships with Esther Perel or make bold choices with Samuel L. JacksonOriginal Series provides a new way to learn through quick, 30-minute, highly engaging episodic stories designed to change the way members see the world. With MasterClass at Work, companies can develop durable skills that transform employees into future-ready leaders through cinematic lessons and life-changing stories taught by the world’s best. Each MasterClass offering is available at home or on the go on mobile, tablet, desktop, Apple TV®, Android™TV, Amazon Fire TV and Roku® players and devices.

Follow MasterClass:
TikTok @masterclass
Instagram @masterclass
Facebook @masterclassofficial
YouTube @masterclass
LinkedIn @masterclass
Threads @masterclass
@masterclass

Follow James Clear:
@JamesClear
Instagram @jamesclear

 

Sneak Peek: Now You See It by Carol J. Perry

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Now You See It by Carol J. Perry

Bestselling author Carol J. Perry returns with the latest installment of her Witch City Mysteries!

Marriage isn’t the only thing new in Lee Barrett’s life when she’s tasked with a hauntingly dangerous assignment in her job as program director for Salem, Massachusetts’s local station, WICH-TV . . .

Just married, Lee and her husband, Detective Sergeant Pete Mondello, are settling into their new home when Lee is dubbed WICH-TV’s new “Historical Documentary Chief Executive.” Her first subject is the brand-new Salem International Museum, slated to be a location for traveling blockbuster exhibits, starting with “Seafaring New England.”  From research to collecting artifacts of Salem’s long-ago days as a shipping capital, the project is a challenge—but when the driver of a truckload of antiquities turns up dead under a pile of fall leaves, it’s not quite the kind of challenge Lee expected . . .

Soon, Lee and Pete are dredging up clues along with a hardy crew of helpers, including Lee’s librarian aunt, Ibby, Lee’s best friend and practicing witch, River North—and of course the clairvoyant cat, O’Ryan. But when a ship model in the exhibit’s collection appears to be haunted, Lee will have to dive into her own treasure trove of psychic gifts before a killer comes to the surface to strike again . . .

Talking With Rosa Lowinger, author of DWELL TIME: A Memoir of Art, Exile, and Repair

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Welcome Rosa! We’re excited to talk to you today about your fascinating memoir, DWELL TIME. First, what made you decide to write a memoir and share your story?

In 2009, when I had the Rome Prize at the American Academy in Rome, I came across the memoir The Periodic Table by Primo Levi. As I read the way he structured a family story around the metaphor of chemistry, I realized that I had a similar book in me, about conservation. Initially, I thought of it entirely as a way of showing the world what the conservation field is all about, because there are no books out there AT ALL that display our work in a way that is true and makes sense. Our profession is rife with powerful metaphors about damage and repair, and I felt that telling that story would resonate with so many people. I thought about this book for years and years but put it on the back burner as I built a business, which is now the U.S.’s largest woman-owned materials conservation practice. Then, the pandemic happened. Suddenly I found myself with time to write and reflect. I began a novel, hired a writing coach to help me structure it, and out of the blue I mentioned this idea for a memoir. She said, “stop everything and write that book proposal.” As I began to unpack the conservation material, a story about my family burbled through the narrative. It centered around my troubled, volatile, and extremely abandonment-averse mother. I realized that our family’s loss of Cuba, a country that my grandparents had moved to in the 1920s traumatized my family irrevocably and made my parents difficult to live with. As I wrote, I began to see the healing metaphor within this subject matter as a way to understand my family history of double exile. Art Conservation teaches us that the basis of all repair is understanding the source of damage. My goal with this memoir was to use this knowledge I have to unravel and learn to understand the intergenerational trauma at the foundation of our family life.

What is the definition of Dwell Time and why did you pick it as the title for your memoir?

In conservation, the term dwell time refers to the amount of contact time a chemical material needs to work. It is a measure of action on something you are trying to remove— soap on dirt, solvent on a stain, paint stripper on a varnish. The term dwell time also refers to the total time a person spends in an airport, or looking at a web page, or the time a family lingers at a border, waiting to get into a country, or the time you live in a city before moving on. I chose this title because it perfectly describes how I was trying to clean away the murkiness that made my family difficult to understand. Metaphorically, Dwell Time can also mean the amount of time you need to work on a problem. As I write in the book: We repair and make reparations by taking the risk of going past our own immediate emotions. Acting is its own salvation. You take the harsh decision or material, blend it into a gel, and watch the magic happen. The content of this book is like one of those solvent gels. That’s my hope, anyway.

What exactly is an art conservator and why did you pursue this career? How is it connected to your personal history?

Materials conservators (this term is more esoteric, but it’s used to include both art and architecture) repair, preserve, and perform preventive maintenance and basically enhance the longevity of all built heritage, which includes artworks, natural history collections, books, media, film, sculpture, paintings, murals, textiles, costumes, tapestries, archeological sites, and historic buildings and their materials. Our work blends art, science, and good hand skills. We are trained in the science of chemical deterioration and repair, and we work within specialties, like doctors. In public building restoration projects, for example, we are the ones who determine how stone or metals are treated, how terrazzo floors are repaired and salts leaching through tiles are addressed, yet we are often relegated to the sidelines and the architects get all the credit, even though they do not have the technical knowledge about materials that we have. In art, the curators, gallerists and fabricators get all the attention, yet it is only we (conservators) who know what to do when someone puts their elbow through a painting, or an outdoor sculpture starts to rust. I pursued this career because I fell into it. I was studying art and not very good at it. A professor recommended the field to me. I got into grad school by default and found that the field dovetailed with my sensibilities. It was all a bit subconscious I imagine. As a conservator, you are a servant to a work of art, never the protagonist. It’s got an odd humility to it, work done in the service of someone else’s aesthetic. I was raised to be beholden to others’ visions, my mother especially.

You left Cuba when you were four years old and returned for the first time thirty years later to attend a preservation conference in Old Havana. What was the significance of this trip? How is Cuba so closely aligned with your work?

The significance was monumental. My entire life shifted. I began going to Cuba as often as possible. It was all I wanted to do. Seeing the extraordinary historic fabric of Havana and Cuba- the amazing materials, all needing repair-was a seismic shift in my attention. I was trained to do exactly what Cuba needed. And, I had never known anything about the historic buildings there – the 500 continuous years of architectural history in tile, stone, metal and wood. 99% of Cuba’s buildings are historic and every single one needs work. And yet… the embargo and the U.S. relations with Cuba make it impossible for me to work there.

You write in your memoir, “Being a Cuban exile made me into a hyper-outsider, someone separated from the others by a steel trap door of misunderstanding born of the political situation.” Please explain.

Cuba and the U.S. are sworn enemies and Cuban Americans are the reason for this sixdecades-long embargo. It’s all about Florida politics. Florida is a big swing state, and hardline B.S. about Cuba being a terrorist nation, etc., wins votes from the strong Cuban voting bloc. The U.S. has relations with Vietnam and China, but not Cuba. It makes no sense. When the Soviet Union controlled Cuba, travel by Americans, especially Cuban Americans, was highly restricted. When the Soviet Union fell, and Americans, including Cuban exiles began traveling there in more significant numbers. We were like hyper outsiders because we knew so little about the country compared to other Latin Americans, who had been going back and forth with ease. It is an odd situation that all immigrants from communist regimes understand.

DWELL TIME focuses on your relationship with your mother. Describe the impact immigrating from Eastern Europe to Cuba had on your mother, how her trauma was passed down to you and ultimately shaped your relationship with her.

My mother and father were born in Cuba. Their parents were the Eastern Europeans who came to Cuba. My parents thought of themselves as 100% Cuban, but also Jewish. My mother’s trauma comes from her abandonment and losing her mother at birth. She was partially raised in an orphanage. I believe she has a personality disorder born of trauma, like Borderline Personality Disorder. I don’t name it in the book because I’m not a psychologist. She was very poor growing up. She married my father in part because of his stable financial life. They fell in love later. When the Cuban revolution happened, and they lost everything, she was re-traumatized. She was always anxious, angry, nervous. And in the U.S., she took all of this out on me. She was, quite frankly, abusive. I don’t use that word either in the book because it’s facile and also because she is alive, and I don’t want to hurt her. My father’s father was similar in temperament to her, and he remained stuck in a pattern with her, unable to leave her, and I was actually deeply grateful that he never did, because if he abandoned her, life would have been a true living hell. That said, my mother is extraordinarily loving, brilliant, cunning as hell, hilariously funny, but she has a virulent dark side and can turn on a dime. I walked on eggshells my entire life. I still do. Less so, but still. Writing has helped me heal a lot.

You write in your memoir, “Mistakes are devastating to conservators. We rarely talk about them. Failure is not built into our practice.” Explain what you mean both professionally and personally.

Think of doctors. They’re trained to heal patients, not hurt or kill them; however, everyone makes mistakes eventually. You prescribe the wrong medicine, you fail to see a contraindicator. In our field it is a similar practice. Your hand slips with the scalpel and a marble sculpture gets scratched. Or a piece falls off your worktable and breaks, or a material looks like one thing and it’s actually another. That’s what I write about- a pigment that looked like one thing but was something else, which led to it falling off during treatment. As a person, I hate failure also, but who doesn’t? But conservation teaches me that we are always balancing how far we go with anything. I failed at two partnerships, one close work relationship and one marriage. And I have bounced back from all of them, in part, by recognizing where I was responsible. In the book, I focus on my own complicity in the failures that affected me. It’s always easy to blame someone else, but owning failure is incredibly empowering. Our field is scared of it, I think.

What was your biggest success in your career? Your biggest failure?

My biggest success was building RLA Conservation, the firm I founded and currently work for, into the largest woman-owned firm in the U.S., making it also one of the most diverse firms in the U.S., and then having a new generation of owners who want to keep it going. We’re known nationwide for our excellence and as a great place to work. I love having built that. And of course, we’ve worked on many, many cool projects for historic buildings and artworks, like the mosaic on the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, The Watts Towers, works by Damien Hirst, Donald Judd, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, and art by every major sculptor of the modern era. Failures… I write about one damage to an artwork. I also was unsuccessful at treating other things here and there. And of course, failing at work relationships. In my early years, I was an anxious boss, yelling at people, always stressed. I see that as a failure, but from that failure and others like it, I learned to mend myself.

You write towards the end of DWELL TIME, “Our people, nuestra gente Cuban and Jewish alike, did not abandon our parents.” Please explain.

In some ways it’s a generalization, but I was taught that Cubans, Latinos, Jews… we are all family oriented. We don’t abandon our parents, even when they are difficult. We may put in distance if wellbeing calls for it, but we try to remain present. To do that, one has to be mindful and patient. Some people sublimate their own desires to care for their parent, but understanding their brokenness makes it not only easy but also a source of growth.

What do you hope readers will take away from your memoir?

Courage and optimism. Damage is inevitable, but repair is always possible. Human beings are natural repairers. And things (objects, relationships) that are mended can be dearer than those that were never broken. Love is a phenomenal adhesive. One has to learn how to use it properly, but if we begin to understand the exhilarating possibility of restoration, we can deal with each other with gentleness, with care, and as beautiful, bruised creatures that deserve tenderness. I hope that this memoir opens dialogues about community repair and reparations as well as personal action.

Thank you so much for joining us today, Rosa!

Readers, DWELL TIME: A Memoir of Art, Exile, and Repair, is available for pre-order. Here’s a quick look. 

Dwell Time is a term that measures the amount of time something takes to happen – immigrants waiting at a border, human eyes on a website, the minutes people wait in an airport, and, in art conservation, the time it takes for a chemical to react with a material.

Renowned art conservator Rosa Lowinger spent a difficult childhood in Miami among people whose losses in the Cuban revolution, and earlier by the decimation of family in the Holocaust, clouded all family life.

After moving away to escape the “cloying exile’s nostalgia,” Lowinger discovered the unique field of art conservation, which led her to work in Tel Aviv, Philadelphia, Rome, Los Angeles, Honolulu, Charleston, Marfa, South Dakota, and Port-Au-Prince. Eventually returning to Havana for work, Lowinger suddenly finds herself embarking on a remarkable journey of family repair that begins, as it does in conservation, with an understanding of the origins of damage.

Inspired by and structured similarly to Primo Levi’s The Periodic Table, this first memoir by a working art conservator is organized by chapters based on the materials Lowinger handles in her thriving private practice – Marble, Limestone, Bronze, Ceramics, Concrete, Silver, Wood, Mosaic, Paint, Aluminum, Terrazzo, Steel, Glass and Plastics. Lowinger offers insider accounts of conservation that form the backbone of her immigrant family’s story of healing that beautifully juxtaposes repair of the material with repair of the personal. Through Lowinger’s relentless clear-eyed efforts to be the best practitioner possible while squarely facing her fraught personal and work relationships, she comes to terms with her identity as Cuban and Jewish, American and Latinx.

Dwell Time is an immigrant’s story seen through an entirely new lens, that which connects the material to the personal and helps us see what is possible when one opens one’s heart to another person’s wounds.

From the book: “How, I wondered, was it possible that no one in my family had ever told me that Havana, the place where we were from, was so closely aligned to my work? More importantly, how had I managed to reencounter this ornately decorated, sagging city at the precise moment when I was beginning to see a link between restoration of the material world and personal healing?”

 

A Teenage Girl in Auschwitz: Basha Freilich and the Will to Live

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A True Story That Inspires Strength and Determination In Modern Teens Today

Acclaimed Author Douglas Wellman’s New Book is Titled A Teenage Girl in Auschwitz: Basha Freilich and the Will to Live Now Available at Amazon and in Bookstores Nationwide

Douglas Wellman is a World War II historian who discovered the story of Basha, a teen who’s recorded story of suffering and ultimate survival from the Auschwitz death camp in WWII inspired him to write this book. He wrote A Teenage Girl in Auschwitz: Basha Freilich and the Will to Live with a desire to share this moving story with modern families as a guide that he believes teens and parents today can use as inspiration to discover their own inner mental strength.  As the modern world becomes increasingly fraught with technology that obscures true history, this book serves as a reminder that history can be repeated, and horrible conditions can still exist but in new forms that cause depression and anguish for teens and families today. Wellman wants to inspire everyone that Basha’s story can inspire a stronger mind and the will to live.

Basha, at age fourteen, was dragged with her family from their home in Pruzhany, Poland, by Nazi troops and shipped off to the infamous Auschwitz concentration camp. Within days, five members of her family would be dead, and Basha would be subjected to two and a half years of abuse then months of roaming with other homeless girls when the Third Reich collapsed. Despite it all, she honored a last-minute promise given to her mother: she would survive to tell the story. The author provides each chapter with Basha’s own words and extends the chapter further with historical facts relating to actual events in history.

While few teens today face the horrors of a concentration camp, Wellman knows that life throws seemingly insurmountable conditions at modern teens who face challenges every day. Basha’s story reveals an inner strength and courage that can be found within. Wellman says, “We all hit moments when we feel we are spent, but the story of Basha shows us that we have more strength inside to move us forward through the darkest of times.”

Wellman believes this story is more than a valuable addition to the historical record. It will become a valued addition to high school libraries and the new choice for book clubs, parents, teachers, and teens to read together.

Because today’s teens live in a time when technology can exert more control over truth, this book demonstrates how complete control by The Nazis over an entire population of Germany, created chilling and inhuman results. Once again, we must remain on guard. With the story of Basha told today we can hope her history is never repeated.

A Teenage Girl in Auschwitz: Basha Freilich and the Will to Live by Douglas Wellman is currently available in paperback at Amazon and bookstores nationwide.   https://www.amazon.com/Teenage-Girl-Auschwitz-Basha-Freilich/dp/160808289X

About the Author – https://www.douglaswellmanauthor.com/
Other books by Douglas Wellman include Surviving Hiroshima: A Young Woman’s Story