Skip to main content

DMV-Area & TWWBF Authors at PGCMLS South Bowie Branch

 

[TWWBF2023 authors Shameka Erby, Eden Appiah-Kubi & author Courtney Duke Foster, who also supported TWWBF2023 by attending; TWWBF2023 author Briana L. Smith; book baskets as raffle prizes created by Nikki Payne's mom; the edge of PGCMLS Community Outreach Facilitator's left arm, Shameka Erby, Eden Appiah-Kubi, Nikki Payne; Briana & Eden looking toward the 1st raffle winner; Eden, Nikki & Courtney]  
  

Saturday's "Celebrating Black Women's Voices in Fiction" with authors Eden Appiah-Kubi, Courtney Duke Foster, Shameka Erby, and Nikki Payne offered an abundance of thoughtful insights, personal revelations, and laughs from these brilliant, generous, successful human beings. 

As moderator, Eden Appiah-Kubi's questions about inspirational authors, pivotal reads, book recommendations, the writing craft, self-publishing versus traditional publishing pros and cons, and more invited panelists to answer beyond the superficial, which offered the audience encouragement to read others' works and to write their own. 

Some memorable tidbits that stood out for me... 
from Eden Appiah-Kubi: Use the Libby app, especially for plays and audiobooks. The audio version of Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston is narrated by Ruby Dee! (Oh, yes please and thank you.) 

from Shameka Erby: Create for yourself first before worrying about the business of publishing, marketing, etc. For her, self-publishing means she doesn't have to wait for her stories to go out into the world to her readers. Plus, when she's not writing, there's no pressure of external deadlines to stress her. [The passage she read from her own "Blood Ties" immediately added it to my TBR list.] 

from Courtney Duke Foster: Don't wait until you think you're "ready" to write; just start writing even if you don't know what you're doing because you can learn as you go.

from Nikki Payne: Do your best to let go of the sadness that multiple rejections can cause and focus on your joy in writing. Zora Neale Hurston's work as an ethnoanthropologist inspired Nikki's professional career path. 

A few authors & books they recommended: 
Zora Neale Hurston as an accessible introduction to literary fiction (note: short story collection Hitting a Straight Lick With a Crooked Stick includes African American Vernacular English -AAVE- and is worth taking the extra time to acclimate to it) 
Christina C. Jones 
Kennedy Ryan 
Tia Williams 
Britt (whose last name has completely left my brain)
The Personal Librarian 
In Every Mirror She's Black by Lola Akinmade Akerstrom
Sisters in Arms by Kaia Alderson (Tyler Perry movie about the Six Triple Eight streaming sometime this month) 
My Sister is a Serial Killer 
(title & author totally gone from my memory of) a retelling of Carrie (novel by Stephen King) but featuring a young Black teen 

There were many more, but I wasn't taking notes because I didn't want to miss anything any of them said while being distracted by writing. 

All the authors suggested that borrowing books from the library or submitting purchase requests to the library are great ways for readers to access materials that interest them and to support authors without spending any money. 

my weekly binge reads & library requests wait list  


Happy reading & creating! 

   

Comments

  1. Had such a great time. Thank you so much for blogging about this amazing event and for shouting out my lovely mom!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Our Poet Laureate's Memoir + More TWWBF2025 Prep

Educator, poet, short story author, mindfulness guide and now the moniker of memoirist has been added to the long list of creative accomplishments earned by Poet Laureate of The Write Women Book Fest Aressa V. Williams.  She was born and raised in the vibrant community of Washington, D.C.'s Northeast neighborhood of Deanwood. Her Memoir evokes the nostalgia, challenges, victories, heartaches and joys of her life that connect with readers across generations and locations.    [photo credit: H.L. Brooks; image: two paperback ARCs of In Deanwood, A Memoir by Aressa Verdell Williams arranged on a tabletop; cover art of a sepia toned two-story colonial house with four columns - two on each side of the front door]  The ebook is currently available with print copies coming soon! https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/in-deanwood-aressa-verdell-williams/1147594007   Just under 3 weeks before day one of The Write Women Book Fest and we've finished decorating t-shirts for our aw...

DIY Marketing TWWBF2025 + the Usual BAC Issues

Six(!) days until day one of the 6th and grand finale year of The Write Women Book Fest!!!  Last week was another hard one for federal workers in the DMV area along with other ongoing challenges, making it tough for a lot of people to prioritize joy. This coming weekend TWWBF2025 intends to celebrate and support talented authors, poets, creatives, and publishing industry professionals and their work, readers and literacy advocates while we also celebrate everything positive that this event has contributed to our community since 2019. [a two-image collage: right side - two posters atop the closed lid of a baby grand piano; both with "The Write Women Book Fest, 100+ authors Golden Angel, Eden Appiah-Kubi, Courtney Duke Foster, Jeaniene Frost, Maria Vale, Erin Wright, EC Poetry & Prose, July 19th QR Code thewritewomenbookfest.org, Use code FESTNEWS25 for 30% off!"; left side - an incomplete poster with "The Write Women Book Fest" and a blank sheet of paper with a g...

Tapping into Your Power

The following two books celebrate powerful characters who overcome their fears to manifest their greatness for the benefit of themselves, their loved ones and communities. So satisfying.  [2 books from left to right: A Witch's Guide to Magical Innkeeping by Sangu Mandanna, Direct Descendant by Tanya Huff]  A Witch's Guide to Magical Innkeeping by Sangu Mandanna  contemporary speculative romance  Berkeley, July 2025   Sera's story of navigating otherness was worth the wait. The advantages, responsibilities, and consequences of being powerful are explored with nuanced observations, humor, and compassion. Themes on distinctions between family by blood, choice, and intention weave throughout this poignant tale about paying attention and recognizing personal details as fundamental to the evolution of one's perspective on who and what are valuable.  One of my favorite passages from the end of chapter nineteen:  Like this was a thing that had, somehow, become...