Ru Freeman's Blog, page 3
August 5, 2016
Wayne, PA
Thursday, November 17th, 2016
7 p.m.
Main Point Books
116 N. Wayne Avenue
Wayne, PA 19087
In conversation with John Freeman & Garnette Cadogan.
Richmond, VA
Thursday, March 23, 2017
7 p.m.
VCU Visiting Writer Series
VCU Cabell Library
900 Park Avenue
Richmond, VA 23284-2005
Reading and conversation with LeAnne Howe
(Choctalking on Other Realities)
April 26, 2016
Chicago, IL
Wednesday, May 11th 2016
7:00 pm – 8:30 pm
Unabridged Books – 3251 N Broadway Street
Chicago, IL 60657
Dreams and Stones: Magdalena Tulli, Bill Johnston, and Ru Freeman, in Conversation with Words Without Borders’ Susan Harris.
February 1, 2016
A Fist to the Heart – on Sunil Yapa’s Debut
I’m over at the Huffington Post with a review of Sunil Yapa’s new novel, Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist. You can read the review here, the opening below:
In Colum McCann’s latest book, Thirteen Ways of Looking (Random House, 2015), a young soldier looks out over the Kerengal valley in Afghanistan, minding an outpost as the New Year dawns. The story carries echoes of Italo Calvino’s masterpiece, If On A Winter’s Night a Traveler (1979), where half the book is about a reader attempting to read the title story; in McCann’s version, the story is about an author attempting to write a story. It is brilliantly done, with all the questions that could be asked of a writer attempting to make a leap of imagination into unfamiliar–yet politically loaded–territory, being asked and answered by the writer himself. For example, this: “(Are there any female engagement teams in the Kerengal Valley?) (Is there even such a thing as a Browning M-57?)” Acknowledging a lack of familiarity is one way to fictionalize a place (there is a Korangal Valley in North Eastern Afghanistan), and a possible event.
I read the McCann in the wake of finishing his student, Sunil Yapa’s, Your Heart Is A Muscle The Size of a Fist, (Lee Boudreaux Books, 2016), a book inspired by the 1999 demonstrations against the meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in America’s single socialist-leaning city, Seattle. McCann’s gorgeous blurb on the cover (he calls the book “a literary molotov cocktail to light up the dark”), is justified: Yapa makes an important contribution toward documenting this moment in the overall history of activism in the United States, a service that it seems only literature is able to provide for this country. As pointed out in the closing pages of the novel itself, and in the many glowing reviews that have followed the publication of the novel–and in light of the undeniable energy of the prose, surely those are deserved– the WTO protests were not adequately covered in the media. This is no great surprise, of course, to those brave thousands who, inspired by the anti-austerity protests in Spain and initiated by the Canadian anti-consumerist group, Adbusters, occupied Zucotti Park in 2011. That is a tale still waiting to be written, though Molly Crabapple, it’s celebrated cartoon archivist has addressed some of it in her debut, Drawing Blood (Harper Collins, 2015).
Yet to write not of an imagined place and imagined events but rather a real place and an historic event, as McCann did in his masterpiece Transatlantic (2013) for instance, raises the stakes for any writer. Yapa’s novel chronicles the jittery political awakening of no fewer than seven major characters, six of whom represent the face of America’s difficulties and political upheavals: mixed-race marriages (Bishop, Chief of Police), the weather underground (Kingfisher, circa Earth Liberation Front), cultural appropriation (John Henry, circa Jim-Crow), race-riots (the Guatemalan Ju, circa Rodney King), police brutality and domestic terrorism (Officer Park, circa Oklahoma City), serial escapism (Victor, the pot-smoking accidental activist), and one singular representative of the “globe” in globalization, Charles Wickamasinghe, a well-meaning, earnest, mostly clueless, Sri Lankan Deputy Minister of Finance and Planning.
January 26, 2016
New York, NY
NYC, New School for Social Research
Breaking the Silence on Palestine
March 1st 6.30 – 8 p.m.
With Sinan Antoon, Ibtisam Azem, Teju Cole, and Jason Schneiderman, moderated by Zia Jaffrey
New York, NY
Wednesday, April 20th, 2016
7 p.m.
Book Culture
536 West 112th Street
Between Broadway and Amsterdam
Phone 212-865-1588
Reading & Discussion with authors from the anthology, Extraordinary Rendition: (American) Writers on Palestine.
San Francisco
Thursday, May 22nd, 2016
3 p.m.
Diesel Bookstore
5433 College Avenue, Oakland, CA 94618
(510) 653-9965
Reading and Discussion with three authors from Extraordinary Rendition: (American) Writers on Palestine, Chana Bloch, Cristina Garcia, and Jane Hirshfield.
Atlanta, GA
Friday/Sunday September 2-4, 2016
Decatur Book Festival
Details: TBA
Allentown, PA
Thursday, September 6th, 2016
Allentown Art Museum
Luncheon With Authors
Discussion with Bill Clegg (Have You Ever Had A Family) and Natalie Harnett (The Hallow Ground)
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