We’re gearing up for our first ever Portland reading this week, supporting the Women’s Justice Project.
If you’re at AWP and are looking for a great opportunity to hear personal stories from five stellar writers and support a worthy cause all at once, we hope you’ll join us!
Readers Chelsea Bieker, Aja Gabel, Genevieve Hudson, T Kira Madden & Kimberly King Parsons sent us the books and stories that are inspiring them right now.
Long Live The Tribe of Fatherless Girls
by T Kira Madden
Recommended by Chelsea Bieker
Why Chelsea loves it:
“This memoir touched me in the deepest of ways. Not only is Madden's prose like poetry--you'll want to underline every other sentence--it's an utter page turner of an experience that spans all the big things--growing up, loss, addiction, sexuality, trauma, and love--and it does it so cinematically. You will be utterly changed. I was.”
Also, how much do we love that our own readers are inspiring each other?! <3
Conversation With Friends
by Sally Rooney
Recommended by Aja Gabel
Why Aja loves it:
“I read and loved Sally Rooney's Conversation With Friends last year, and just had a chance to read an early copy of her second novel, Normal People. Now I can call myself a Sally Rooney fan. When it comes to the subtle and murky inner workings of romantic relationships in flux, no one is doing it better than her right now.”
The Autobiography of Red
by Anne Carson
Recommended by Genevieve Hudson
Why Genevieve loves it:
“…such power in such a slim book. The sentences slay me. Each one is a work of art.”
House Rules
by Heather Lewis
Recommended by T Kira Madden
Why T Kira loves it:
“A book that gets real about queerness and horses and romanticizes nothing. It's an incredibly painful read that breaks the comforting spell of clichéd thought and form. An underrated and brilliant writer; every day I wonder what she'd be making if she were still with us.”
Sleepless Nights
by Elizabeth Hardwick
Recommended by Kimberly King Parsons
Why Kimberly loves it:
“It's one of those short, weird, thrilling novels that defies categorization. I reread it every year as an example of what's possible in prose. Hardwick moves seamlessly between topics like jazz and addiction and unwanted houseguests--perhaps what's most compelling is her examination of memory itself, the things that stay with us and the things we wish we could forget.”
Meet these women and hear their own stories.
join us on Thursday, March 28, 5pm-7pm at Spartan Shop for an inspiring reading event that raises essential funds for the Women’s Justice Project. Chelsea, Aja, Genevieve, T Kira and Kimberly will all read about a time they changed course.