I know it’s short notice, but tonight (Friday, June 3rd), I’ll be reading at Art for Change’s Poetry Unleashed, a spoken word event focused on literature about the displaced or economically disadvantaged, accompanying the gallery’s current Voices of the Economy exhibit. Although it’s mainly poets who will be reading, I’ll be reading a short excerpt from Swallow. The gallery’s in East Harlem – Lexington at 103rd. Visit the AFC website for more info about the ongoing exhibit and tonight’s event.
Maira Kalman at the Jewish Museum
Last week my friend, Alyssa, who’s an independent art curator, invited me to an art / law celebration at the Jewish Museum. The Jewish Museum really knows how to put on a party! They had the most splendid array of hors d’oeuvres, two big carving and sushi stations, and a full bar (not just wine and champagne). I hadn’t been to the Jewish Museum since I saw a Marc Chagall exhibit there I don’t know how many years ago. So, in between nibbling on mini Tuscan pizzettes and sipping Glenmorangie, I wandered into the main exhibit, which is currently featuring the work of Maira Kalman.
Kalman’s mainly a painter and illustrator but is also an essayist and performance artist; kind of an artist at large. She illustrates a lot for the New Yorker. The top picture is from an illustration from that mag.
I really love this one, though. It’s called Grand Central Station. I love it because it evokes the kind of sentiment I was going for in the closing line of Swallow (which I’m not giving away đ )
Then I came across a couple of illustrations of dancers, which of course excited me.
I don’t know who the dancer in the first illustration is, but the bottom is of Pina Bausch. The little explanatory caption below the illustration said that Kalman had a deep admiration for Bausch, got along well with her, and, before Bausch’s death, had wanted to collaborate with her on a dance.
As I walked through the exhibit, I happened upon a couple of sets of videos. In one Kalman, who seems to be quite a character, was collaborating on a performance piece with Nico Muhly and an opera star (whose name I forgot). Muhly was his usual slightly whacked self. Fun! Kalman’s also been involved in a lot of social projects, such as helping to design and create art work for a new library in Harlem. And, much of her work features her dog (below).
Hehe, I was so excited when I saw this. I actually have this picture, clipped from a old New Yorker copy, hanging above one of my bookcases at home. That’ll teach me to look at the name of the illustrator more often!
Anyway, it’s a very good exhibit, and I recommend it. It’s at the Jewish Museum through the end of July.
Sexy Kindle Party Reading
Broadcasting Live with Ustream.TV
So, my reading Thursday evening is now archived on the Reading is Sexy Kindle Party ustream; I embedded it here. I’m the sixth reader on the list – out of eight. The readings were so diverse. The only similarity between us is that we all happened to be women (though the event definitely wasn’t excluded to men)! Each of the books seemed to be of very high quality – really the quality of self-published books is not at all what those in traditional publishing seem to want to make it out to be – and the authors were quite adept at reading from their own work, which surprised me – usually authors don’t make such good readers đ Many of the authors have won awards for their writing (either for their books or short stories), some have been published in anthologies, some have MFA degrees, and some are Amazon bestsellers.
The authors I read with were:
Karen Cantwell, reading from her comical mystery, Take the Monkeys and Run (A Barbara Marr Murder Mystery)”
L.B. Gschwandtner, reading from her literary novel, The Naked Gardener
Lisa Leibow, reading from her women’s novel, Double Out and Back
Laverne Thompson, who writes romantic suspense and erotic romance novels
Cathy Wiley, reading from her cozy mystery, Dead to Writes
Misha Crews, reading from her literary novel, Still Waters
D. A. Spruzen, reading from her literary suspense novel, Not One of Us (The Flower Ladies Trilogy, Book 1)
I think the event was really a success. The live audience was packed – I’d say there were about 50 seats set up in the reading room, which was completely full. And we had an internet audience as well, actively asking questions of the readers. So a big huge THANK YOU if you were one of the online participants!!!
Someone asked me if my next novel (the legal / urban drama about the group of men who witnessed a shooting) was based on a true story. I’ve been kind of working on two novels simultaneously – that one, which is taking a while because I needed to take a little writing break and do some research, and a sequel to Swallow, that will include dance. I thought the second might have more sales potential, which is why I was working on it as well, trying to get it out as soon as possible. But several people (mostly outside of the dance world đ ) keep telling me they’re eagerly awaiting the legal drama. So the person who asked that question prompted me to work hard on that one, because there is interest, and in my heart that’s what I want to write about. So, thank you person who asked me that question!! The answer to the question is yes, but I’m taking a lot of liberties with the actual event it’s based on, completely creating new characters, etc.
Also, three of the authors happened to be lawyers or former lawyers, and someone asked the third what was up with that! What’s drawing lawyers to a profession that’s so much less lucrative than their original career? Leibow, the last lawyer to read, laughed and said it just so much more creatively rewarding. I’d strongly second that, adding, in my case, that it’s also far more rewarding to write for intelligent, open-minded readers, than for judges, most of whom are conservative, jaded and cynical.
I had such a good time doing this and am so glad I went down to Virginia for the day. I realized though, in doing so, that I’m not as young as I once was. Funny though, because I got carded ordering a rum-based Hurricane with my lunch at the Pizzeria Uno in Union Station. I always seem to get carded when I order alcoholic beverages down South. So, apparently to some I don’t look as old as I feel đ Anyway, such a long one-day trip there and back really kind of took the wind out of me and it took me most of yesterday to recover. I should have stayed overnight in DC and gone to the AWP (Association of Writing Programs) conference yesterday, but for some odd reason I decided to catch the 1:40 a.m. bus back to NY.
I always travel like this and, I know, I’m weird. My third year in law school I had an interview for a federal clerkship, down in Albany. Not Albany, NY, but Albany, GA, about two hours out of Atlanta. I was living in Hoboken, New Jersey at the time. I left my apartment at 6 in the morning, bussed to Newark airport, flew to Atlanta, caught a connecting flight to Albany (one one of those 10-seater planes, which I don’t think I’ll do again…), took a long cab ride to the courthouse, had my interview, then went back all the same way, arriving at my Hoboken apartment nearly 24 hours after I left it.
And, during my first dance competition, which was in Miami, I decided last minute I just had to see Key West. I only had one day until my first day of competition, and then my flight back to NY was the evening of my last comp. So, I took a day trip from Miami to Key West the day before the comp. It’s about 3 1/2 hours each way. I spent about six hours out on the island, and I still managed to get a full night’s sleep (part of it on the bus) and was up early and ready for morning practice the following day. I don’t know how I did that…
Anyway, I had a wonderful time in Vienna, met so many wonderful writers and readers. The Soundry, a multi-room venue kind of like the KGB Bar in NY, was an excellent place to have a reading. Thank you so much to the Soundry’s Jennifer Crawford for including me in the roster at the last minute. Thank you so much to Karen Cantwell for telling me about the event in the first place (on the Kindleboards), and for carting me between the Soundry and the Vienna metro station! So nice to meet several Kindleboards authors I’ve been chatting online with for months now. Can’t wait for the next event!
Reading is Sexy Kindle Party!
This Thursday night I’ll be participating in the first ever (that I know of anyway) Kindle party. There will be a total of eight e-book authors, including acclaimed women’s lit writers Karen Cantwell and L.B. Gschwandtner. Audience members are encouraged to come with their e-readers, though it’s not necessary to have one. (I think most of us have print versions of our books published as well.)
It’ll be held at the Soundry, in Vienna Virginia, but will also be live-streamed online! So you can watch from the comfort of your home, and participate in a live chat (format is similar to the Guggenheim’s Giselle live stream & chat). It’s from 7-10 p.m. EST on Thursday night, February 3rd. Go here for the ustream channel. There will also be a discussion of e-readers and e-publishing in general. So, tune in (or come if you’re in the DC area) if you’re interested in any of those things.
This is the first time I will have read from my book post-publication, so I’m really excited about it. I’m also really excited about all of these live-streamed events!
Sample Sunday: Wedding Belle

For this week’s #SampleSunday, here’s an excerpt from Swallow‘s chapter eight, titled “Father Christian.” For a synopsis of the whole book, go here.
I made it to the boutique only ten minutes late. Speed walking toward the glass-doored entrance, I saw Francie inside looking out, peering up and down the street, pacing back and forth, perfectly steady on her six-inch, stiletto-heeled, candy red pumps, her flawlessly coiffed strawberry mane bouncing girlishly with each pirouette. Oh, I pray Iâm Francie at fifty, I thought. New York women never get old, I swear. When our eyes met, she tapped her French-manicured fingernail on the face of her watch, then shook her finger at me in mock reprobation.
âSorry sorry,â I mouthed, pushing open the door.
âItâs all right, itâs not like thereâs anyone else here.â She stood in fifth ballet position and extended her left arm gracefully toward the middle of the store, her frown at odds with her delicate pose. âWhat is it about getting married here? No one in this city seems to do it.â
âThatâs because New York women are all so independent and sophisticated, like a certain fashion maven I know,â I gushed.
âYeah yeah yeah. Perpetual singlehood has been a real frigginâ joy.â She fluttered her hand about dismissively. âCome on, letâs find you the Audrey dress of your dreams, skinny girl,â she said, pinching my arm. âGeez Soph, you really are losing weight. Look at these little twigs.â
âIâve lost twenty pounds,â I said. I knew it was getting to be a lot; another ten pounds and Iâd weigh 100. But truth be told, I felt like I was really beginning to fit in in New York. It looked rather elegant, if not downright trendy, to be thin here. Still, I knew I couldnât lose a whole lot more. It had to stop at some point.
âShit, Soph. Whatâs your secret? How come youâre keepinâ it from the old lady?â
âHey, I did tell you; you just werenât listening.â
âHuh?â
âThe throat ball. The âballâ — remember?â
She had the loopiest smile I think Iâd ever seen.
âOkay, after weâre done here, weâll go out to eat,â I said. âThen you just imagine a big ole ball in your throat and you choking to death whenever you try to swallow. Beats the hell out of a diet any day.â I couldnât believe what I just heard myself say.
âShit, Soph, youâre starting to sound, you know, a little fucked up,â she said, echoing my thought.
âHello, ladies.â Marlena, with whom I had my appointment, appeared as if out of thin air. She was sixtyish, immaculately groomed, with snowy whitish-blonde hair, and a full face of makeup that — unlike on me — made her look polished rather than fake. Already I felt like a street urchin with my shiny nose, flyaway hair, and now oversized, dowdy suit.
âYou must be Ms. Hegel,â she smiled, cupping my hand between her palms. I always felt so uneasy in places like Saks and Bergdorf, like it was so obvious to all the salespeople that I didnât belong anywhere near the place. Funny, I wasnât feeling that so much with Marlena though.
âUm, yes.â I tried to return her smile, not anywhere near as elegantly.
âAnd youâve brought your big sister with you. Excellent idea,â she said, extending a hand and smile to Francie.
âBasically,â Francie said, giving her a cursory New York handshake.
âNow you tell me what kind of dress it is youâre looking for, dear,â Marlena began, eyes now focused solidly on me. âWould you like to look at the catalog, or do you have something in mind?â Something about her was so familiar, like she was an old dear nanny or governess or something. Except of course I never had such a person in my life.
âMmmâŚâ I looked at the four huge tomes on the counter. They looked far too intimidating; weâd have been there all day if I started with them. âI think Iâll start with the actual gowns.â
âThatâs perfectly fine,â she sang, with the sweetest of smiles. âLet me just tell you a little about my job here at Bettinaâs Bridal. Iâm not here to dictate what you should wear. You brides today are more sophisticated, more mature, far more educated than you were in my day,â she chimed in a fantastical voice that sounded like sheâd been around for centuries. âYou have your careers, you know who you are and what you want out of life, not to mention out of a dress,â she laughed. âYouâre not to be bossed around by your mothers, your sistersâŚâ she gave a nod and wink to Francie at this, âcertainly not your future husband. This is obviously your most important day. This is the statement that youâre making to all your friends and family, to the world, of who you are.â She positively glowed.
Francie rolled her eyes. Argh, can you say, âjaded New Yorker,â I thought.
When I looked back at Marlena she radiated a fairy godmother smile, and I felt a tear starting down my face. I was so embarrassed I couldâve just fallen to the floor and rolled myself up into a little fetal ball. What was with my total lack of control over my tear glands?
âOh dear. Would you like a glass of water?â she asked, grabbing a tissue.
âNo, no.â I felt like the consummate ass.
âItâs normal, you know, this is quite an emotional time.â She stood smiling down at me, her hands folded in front of her, her long eyelashes glistening, her cheeks glowing.
âOkay.â I took a deep breath, pulling it together. âI have an idea of what I want. Something basic, not really frilly, just simple, but you know, a fabric with a nice sheen.â I had no idea what the hell I was saying. âNice sheenâ â what was that? Such the couture dyslexic was I.
âSophisticated, elegant, you know, Grace Kelly, Audrey Hepburn. Maybe matte satin or Duchess silk, possibly organza. I think she wants to go with a simple A-line silhouette, natural or dropped waist bodice, attached chapel train, very little if any embellishments.â Thank you, Francie, I thought. Whatever you just said.
âLetâs start here.â Marlena showed me a simple satin dress with beautiful beaded buttons trailing down the back. Only problem with that one was a monster bow right on the butt — made it look like her bottom was a big present to the groom.
âKind of makes her look like a present,â I said to Francie.
âWell, you are a present, my darling,â she said.
âNo, like an object, I mean. Like she has no personhood.â
âUgh.â Francie rolled her eyes again. Francie didnât have the most developed feminist consciousness, I kept forgetting. I mean she did, but she just wasnât schooled in feminist theory, didnât have the jargon down. Not that I wanted her to though; she was far, far more interesting the way she was!
âThen thereâs this nice simple organza ball gown.â Marlena next showed me one with a lacy bodice, cinched at the waist by another bow that led to a poofy floor-length skirt. This one reminded me of the ballet dress I wore for a recital at Phoenix Symphony Hall right before Daddy left. And the cinching bow recalled a bit of the Barium Swallow ordeal. Uh-uh, I shook my head. Far too much baggage contained in one dress.
Then she led me to a plain, but soft and silky, form-fitting gown. But this one had underwire cups stitched on the outside of the fabric.
âOoh la la, sexy,â Francie said.
âYeah, for the slut bride,â I whispered to her.
Francie rolled her eyes again. âYou have body issues,â she said to me under her breath, her voice trailing off at the end, indicating this was a continuing issue that she intended eventually to cure.
âI donât have body issues, and I am not wearing a bra on the outside of my dress to my wedding,â I whispered back, smiling over at Marlena, who was looking a bit weary. I was being too picky. I decided Iâd try on the next one — which happened to be very pretty, with pearl buttons tip-toeing down the back. Itâs just that the buttons didnât start practically till the waist-line; I had no idea how the thing stayed up and I knew Iâd be worrying about it nonstop.
Before I knew it, weâd spent an hour and a half and I hadnât tried on a single thing.
âAre you sure you donât want to take a little peek at the catalog?â Marlena asked with a hint of hopelessness. Francie, ever the New Yorker, didnât bother trying to hide her annoyance.
âCome on, come on, come on, Soph. We donât have all day. Nothing is going to look right on the hanger. You gotta see it on to see how it hangs on your body.â
Okay, okay. I told Marlena Iâd try the first two — the butt-present and the issue-laden ones. She looked ecstatic.
The dresses on display were all in size 10, so Marlena called her assistant, Ruiza, to accompany me into the dressing room. I felt weird undressing in front of her — especially when she motioned for me to remove my bra. She helped me into the butt one, then taped, tucked, tied, zipped and pinned me up. About twenty minutes later, I emerged.
âWow, very very nice,â Marlena said, walking me toward the three-way mirror.
âOooh, look at those gorgeous tiny arms,â Francie squealed, squeezing my shoulder. âHon, really, another ten or fifteen pounds and you could be a petite model.â
Oh geez. I laughed. As I stood in front of the mirror, Francie walked around me gazing at the dress. Marlena patted at the skirt. It actually looked quite lovely. I was transformed. Imagine that, mousy me.
âYou really do look beautiful, hon,â Francie said from behind, to my reflection in the mirror. Then Marlena turned me to my side, and I saw the blasted bow. It was pinker than it initially appeared, and strikingly different than the rest of the dress. I looked like a baboon in heat.
âI donât know. I really donât like the bow.â
âIt can be altered,â Marlena and Francie said simultaneously. Yeah, but that would totally increase the price, I thought. But I didnât dare say it, of course.
âIâll try the other one.â I went back into the fitting room with Ruiza, underwent the process again with the cinch-waisted Giselle gown. Hmmm, could get used to someone dressing and primping me, I thought. Like Scarlet OâHara. It was kind of nice, even if initially embarrassing.
After she finished, I headed to the three-way. Ooh, this one looked quite lovely. A little poofy and princessy, but also chic and sophisticated with a more grown-up elegance than had appeared from the hanger. The bow was sweet, much smaller than the other, the same color as the rest of the dress, and was a little off to the side, so not so obnoxious. It was beautiful; I could definitely do with this one. However, one ever so little necessity… had to figure out a way of finding out the price. Of course, there were no tags on anything. I hated it when stores did that. But I guess I shouldâve expected it with a place like this. I hated having to ask.
âThat oneâs a great deal,â Marlena said right then, as if reading my mind. âQuite a steal at only $5995.â
Yikes. I was hoping to pay a third of that, at most.
âThatâs great,â Francie said, nodding at me. I thought I detected a wink as well. âOkay, Soph, off to a good start. We got one possibility. But before you get hooked, hon, letâs look at a couple more.â She turned back to Marlena. âThe organza and lace might make it just a bit too frilly. What about something with a little less embellishment.â
âSure,â Marlena smiled, a bit pityingly, I thought, as if she knew exactly what Francie was hinting at. She led us over to one of the first racks in the store — exactly where all of the silly, frilly, i.e., cheap, stuff was located.
I tried and tried. But nothing looked as good as the $5995. Just as I was about to leave to think over my too-expensive Giselle-before-Daddy-left dress, I remembered the catalog and, ever so stupidly, decided to take a peek.
And of course therein I saw it: the gown that simply stood so far above the rest it was pitiful. The satin-y fabric wrapped around the wearerâs body regally, like a protective sheath. And it had this really extraordinary lace framing device. There were two wide strands of intricately-patterned lace extending the length of the bodice. They originated at the waist, then rose up and above the top of the dress where they fanned out into two pleats flowering just over the top, highlighting the wearerâs chest, and framing her torso. At the waist, they met with several more lace lines that wound around from the back, and at the hip, all lace strands bunched up and overflowed into more pleats that formed sequins, which cascaded all the way down to the ballgownâs train.
The wearer of the gown was a true queen. And, bizarrely, here that wearer was the supermodel from the Vogue ad in the museum exhibit; the one Stephen had said looked like a âHolocaust victim.â
Only odd thing was the gown was rose-colored. Iâd never thought of a wedding gown in any color other than white.
âBeautiful, isnât it? Thatâs one of our Lacroixs,â Marlena said, over my shoulder.
âItâs gorgeous. But itâs red. It is a wedding dress, right?â
âOh yes. The most popular color right now in Europe is red. Brides here are a little more conservative. But if you want to make a statement…â
âDo you have it?â I asked. I knew it was probably way too expensive but I really wanted to try it just for kicks.
âYes…,â she said, her voice inflecting at the end. She looked hesitant.
âCan I try it?â
Marlena smiled weakly. âSure. Itâs just that, well, this one has a great deal more embellishments than⌠Of course you can, of course, dear.â She started to walk away; I followed. âItâs in the back. Itâll take some time to get,â she called over her shoulder.
âHey ready yet, Soph? Iâm getting hungry,â Francie called out, posing in front of a mirror with a pearl-white veil draped over her face.
âIâm just going to try one more.â
âOne more! Iâm really really getting hungry here, Soph.â I hated it when Francie got pissy.
âItâll just be a sec. Please?â I whined like the child Marlenaâd just spent all afternoon trying to make me feel I wasnât. Francie scowled at me, returning the veil to its mannequin. Just then Marlena returned with Ruiza, the two of them together carrying a veritable body bag.
âWhatâs in there?â Francie asked, annoyance metamorphosing into intrigue.
âHere it is,â Marlena chirped, as she, Ruiza, and yet another assistant all maneuvered it out of the bag. Once I saw it, I understood why this required a group effort. It was simply huge. This time it took a full forty minutes to get into it, but not because there was a lot of taping and pinning on Ruizaâs part: believe it or not, unlike all the other floor models, this one was a size four. It took so long because there were so many pleats, sequins, ties, clasps, and buttons for poor Ruiza to figure out.
âOh my god,â Francie shrieked when I walked out, âYou look âŚâ
âYes, you do,â Marlena echoed, even though Francie hadnât actually come up with an adjective. âItâs tight, but, wow, not all that much.â
âThe color is gorgeous, Soph,â Francie said, brushing the train.
âYou think itâs okay that itâs not white and all?â I asked.
âShut up and look at yourself!â Francie whiplashed me toward the three-way.
When I looked in the mirror, I saw someone else. I was like royalty, someone very special, even beautiful. Thereâs no such thing as natural beauty, I thought. Designers are the makers of reality, and you just have to be skinny enough to squeeze into the alternate universe theyâve created for you. I had no idea what Christian Lacroix looked like, but I imagined him as this posh but avuncular man plucking at the lace, smoothing out the sides, telling me what a perfect fit it was, how beautiful and smart and charming I was; how I was the perfect wearer.
Suddenly I began hearing my motherâs voice. âWho do you think you are? Some movie star, some Arabian princess?â The same words she used when Iâd received my letter from Yale and told her the cost of tuition, and my father went ballistic. A place for high-class people, deserving people, not me.
âOh Sophier, youâre absolutely mesmerizing.â Thank goodness for Francieâs New York voice trumpeting over Momâs. I was getting married now. I was a law school graduate. I was an adult. What was wrong with me? âSo teeny tiny. Oh youâre so beautiful, darling. You look just like the model. Itâs so so SO you!â
âStephen says that model is a glorified Holocaust victim,â I couldnât help but blurt out.
âUGH.â Francie screamed, throwing up her hands. âFff…â she began, then saw my discomfort at her âfree form expressionsâ in Marlenaâs presence and altered her tone, somewhat. âThen, my dear, you are a beautiful fucking glorified Holocaust victim,â Francie whispered to me, lips pursed tightly over teeth.
âI need to know the price of this one,â I found myself again blurting out, too needy now to care how poor I appeared. Marlena smiled, pityingly again. She had an answer that I really didnât need to know.
Photo above of Christian Lacroix and model from Independent UK.
Sample Sunday: Poison Ivy
For this week’s #SampleSunday, here is a passage from chapter four of Swallow, entitled “Poison Ivy.” (For a synopsis of the novel, go here).
Four
Poison Ivy
I met her the following Friday night. Stephen had an alumni cocktail party at the Harvard Club in midtown. Iâd only been a couple of times with him, and I really didnât like the place. The people seemed so arrogant and could talk only about their undergraduate days, even the ones who graduated at the turn of the century — last one, that is. When Stephen would introduce me to someone and theyâd ask where I went to college — and they always did — theyâd look at me like I was mildly retarded when I answered. And then theyâd look at him with these quizzical smiles, like they couldnât understand what one of their ilk was doing with someone so mentally challenged.
Fridayâs mixer was special: a childhood friend of Stephenâs, Alana, had just moved back to town from Oxford, where sheâd been studying for an advanced law degree. I didnât know what to expect. Most of his female friends, family members, and former girlfriends whom Iâd met were smart, sophisticated, glamorous, and wealthy with posh educations. In his twenties and early thirties, Stephen was, as he said, ârather female identified,â in that he just had a knack for getting along well with women, and thus couldnât help remaining good friends with his girlfriends after they ceased to be romantically involved. He didnât so much have classic good looks as he did this combination of commanding-voiced virility, intellectual sophistication, worldly charm, and older-man protectiveness that seemed to attract women. I wasnât sure whether Alana was a former girlfriend or a friend. When I asked him, he laughed and said they were like brother and sister and not to worry.
Thankfully, Iâd managed to rope my best friend from law school, Samia, into the eveningâs shindig. Her fiancĂŠ, Roger, was an alumnus of the school, so it worked out perfectly. I hadnât seen much of Sami lately; sheâd graduated a year before I did and had been doing a womenâs rights fellowship at Georgetown, but, in a shocking 360-degree turn, moved to New York in the fall to work for a big firm. Since she began the firm job, Iâd since seen her all of about twice.
Stephen found us a table smack in the center of the room, smack in the center of attention. One look at the platters and I didnât even want to think of eating. Nearly apple-sized sushi rolls, grapefruit-sized dumplings, a mangled web of snaky noodles labeled âvegetarian.â But nothing for non-solid-eating nutters. I ordered a Merlot. Heavy reds usually filled me up.
âWhat do you want to eat?â Stephen asked.
âIâm not hungry.â
âOh câmon,â he laughed. âTheyâve got soft-shell–â
âNo,â I snapped without meaning to. I did like the rainbow sushi rolls — the ones filled with soft-shell crab, which they had in abundance. Normally I would have rushed the table, ecstatic to be there before the crowd, to load up.
âIâm sorry,â I said. âIâm just ⌠kinda nervous.â
Stephen frowned. He knew I felt uncomfortable here, but couldnât understand why and hated that I did. I worried it was going to cause some friction, but fortunately she arrived just then, or I should say, made her grand entrance.
âOh my gaaawd! Stevie!â she screamed out, gliding toward us.
She had long, silky blonde hair, which she wore parted practically all the way to her left ear and which would have covered the entire right side of her face if she didnât repeatedly fling it back. The fling was quite extravagant too: she dipped her head till her chin touched her chest, then with one swift motion swung it up and over until her forehead nearly grazed her back, golden strands cascading. She was tall, with bronzed skin, and wore a champagne-colored silky dress with high-heeled sandals and a blood-red Pashmina — same basic color as mine but a much richer sheen, as it was, unlike mine, most definitely not a discount. She came with an exotic-looking man who had olive skin and jet-black hair, pulled back into a short ponytail at the nape of his neck.
âOh my gaawwd,â she howled again, throwing the shawl over the back of the chair next to Stephen, thus revealing her quite voluptuous frame — particularly so up top. The sheerness of her dress and its light color revealed two rather pointy nipples. I was dressed in a black suit which now resembled a nunâs habit.
âI canât fucking believe it,â she hooted, emphasis on the âfucking,â as she plastered a cherry outline of her lips on each of Stephenâs cheeks, peering over each of his shoulders at me.
âIt has been a while,â Stephen said, with a cocked smile.
âToo fucking long, baby, too fucking long.â
She had a way of saying âfuckingâ that made it seem like she wasnât just using it as an adjective.
âWhew,â she said, plopping down, her D-cups doing practically a full foot-high jounce. âOh my gawd,â she said once more. âThis is Costa, my good friend from Oxford.â She smacked him, rather hard, on the thigh. âCostie, Stephen, my best best friend from home, from Harvard, from life.â
I was beginning to wonder whether she was on something.
âAnd this must be the Sophie Iâve heard so much about,â she said, frowning slightly at my suit jacket, buttoned practically all the way up to my chin. I self-consciously undid the top button.
âThis would be she,â Stephen smiled, putting his arm around my waist as I moved forward to shake Alanaâs hand.
âHello,â Costa said rather demurely with an accent I couldnât really place.
âNow Sophie,â Alana smacked the table with her hand making her boobs bounce again. âTell me all about yourself.â
âWell, umâŚâ I hated being asked open-ended questions about myself. âUm Stephen and I met in school … I mean while I was in law school âŚâ
âRight, at Yale. Stevie was afraid he wouldnât be able to hack law school, so he had to go somewhere that had a no-ranking policy. Too bad,â she said cocking her head and making a faux pout. âDidnât get the benefit of a real education.â
I began to feel about two feet tall when she burst out laughing, Stephen laughing with her. I then remembered the Harvard and Yale rivalry thing and realized she was joking.
âI stayed at Harvard for my J.D.,â she went on, âI mean after traveling first in Asia then Africa for a year, did a clerkship in the Ninth Circuit, came to New York for a job at Freedes Wyne, who sent me to Oxford for my L.L.M., and now here I am, back in Freedesâ head office to make youngest female partner,â she said in one breath, followed by a full-force hair flip that landed a few strands in the martini glass of the man passing behind her at the moment.
At first he didnât notice and continued walking, her wet ends trailing along with him, in the glass. But a second later, when she clearly felt the pull, she turned around and said, âHey!â now calling the guyâs attention to his sullied drink.
âGod, you look a certain way and every man thinks itâs his prerogative to just reach out and take a part of you,â she shouted more than loudly enough for him to hear, upon which I, being in his line of vision, was the recipient of his angry glare. Costa and Stephen looked bemused but entertained.
âOh wow, um, and, um, do you like your firm?â I asked stupidly, trying to calm her and avoid a scene with martini guy.
But, thankfully, I spied just then a petite, multi-pierced-eared woman with bouncing black curls, pulling behind her a small, red-haired, bespectacled man.
âSamia, Roger!â I cried, flailing my arms about madly.
She cantered over, black mane and fiancĂŠ flying behind her. When she reached me, she left what I can only imagine by her lipstick to be bright red implants on each of my cheeks similar to those left by Alana on my fiancĂŠâs. I wasnât sure whether Iâd ever get used to the East Coast kissy kissy culture. Out West, we just said, âheyâ in greeting.
âHi, hi, hi,â Sami chirped, sweetly trying to direct her smile to everyone simultaneously as I nervously made introductions. âDid you go to Harvard?â she asked Alana, who nodded. âOh, well, Iâm Holyoke Yale,â Sami continued, extending her hand. âAnd heâs Harvard Hopkins Princeton,â she said swinging her arm at Roger, smacking him in the chest with the back of her hand. Sami always kind of babbled when she was nervous; she must have thought it would be fitting here to introduce people by their alma maters.
âHmmm,â Alana laughed, looking at Stephen quizzically as if for interpretation.
âAre you at Lord Pniphken?â Samia asked.
âNo, Iâm not at Stevieâs firm,â Alana said, looking at Stephen with a somewhat wicked grin that I didnât like one bit. Perhaps her definition of a sibling-like relationship was different than his. âIâm at Freedes Wyne.â
Her eyes were still focused on my fiancĂŠ, who was sitting back in his chair now, seemingly mesmerized by her. He must have caught my glance in his periphery, because he reached for my hand and gave my palm a lovable squeeze, but still without taking his eyes from her.
I’m on the Lit Chick Show!
I’m very psyched to be this week’s guest on the Lit Chick Show, a wonderful Australian-based literary website, which stands for literary chicks, not chick lit :), and which has hosted interviews with people like Smashwords founder Mark Coker and bestselling indie author Vicki Tyley. A huge thank you to author and host Sylvia Massara for having me!
Check out the show’s archives for other author interviews – they have several months’ worth. And, if you’re one of this blog’s readers who happens to be an author, you can get involved in Authors Helping Authors.
Writers Cake!
How sweet is this cake! Last night was the annual Writers Room party, where all the books published by Writers Room members throughout the past year are honored. The Writers Room of NYC, by the way, is the oldest and largest writers’ colony in the country. A membership gives you a quiet space in which to write 24/7, seminars and little lectures from time to time, and group readings at local cafes that you can participate in. Those readings have always been really helpful to me.
Anyway, since Swallow was published so late last year, they waited till this year to celebrate it with the 2010 books. I love how they did the cover of the cake – the top layer with images of all of our book covers was actually edible.
Sample Sunday: Sophie’s First Day in Court
Hey everyone,
So for this week’s Sample Sunday, I’m putting up the first part of Swallow‘s Chapter 3. This is where Sophie (a lawyer suffering from Globus Hystericus, the feeling of an imaginary ball lodged in your throat) has her first courtroom argument, and where the ball (whom she personifies as “FB”) first causes problems with something other than eating. A fellow student in one of my first writing classes whose writing I greatly admired and opinion I respected (and who now works for the PEN American Center) said this is where Swallow really began to come to life for him. So, here it is.
By the way, I just want to thank you all, and everyone who’s supported my writing – both the book and this blog – over the past year. The book sold a total of 3,232 copies in its first year out there in the world, and I’ve been told that’s fairly decent for a first novel, especially one that’s self-published, and especially one that’s more literary than commercial. So, including the several hundred I’ve given out to readers who’ve won giveaway contests around the blogosphere and to all the wonderful bloggers and professional reviewers who’ve been so kind by reviewing it, there are nearly 4,000 people out there who’ve read (or have at least downloaded) Swallow. I had absolutely no idea what to expect this time last year – and, to be sure, I’m definitely far behind many self-published authors who’ve sold over a hundred thousand in a year – but I’m really overjoyed with the 4000 readers I’ve had – especially since, going by the reviews, a good many of them are liking and getting something out of the book. So once again, thank you thank you thank you!
Okay, here’s the beginning of chapter three:
Three
Not Exactly Audrey
I knew how horribly oral arguments could go from having watched, in preparation for this day, oodles of them given by my colleagues — mostly by my supervisor Jeannie. Jeannie was in her mid thirties, with radiant red hair shimmering half-way down her back, gorgeous green eyes, and, regardless of what she was saying, always sparkled with never-can-fail attitude, though I was realizing more and more that appellate PDs almost always do â fail to win their cases, that is. Well, we were asking the court to reverse the convictions of people who, at least on the record, could sometimes appear rather unsavory. Anyway, the justice presiding on my panel today — grandfatherly Justice OâGrady — absolutely adored Jeannie. After sheâd finished an argument once, heâd pronounced with the proudest of grins, âAs always from you, Ms. Davis, excellent argument. Well reasoned, persuasively analyzed, and eloquently rendered. And as always, the Court thanks you.â
âYou won!â Iâd squealed as we left the courthouse.
Sheâd laughed. âSophie, youâre so cute. That was actually the kiss of death.â
âDeath?â
âYep. What he really meant was: âyour clientâs an evil crack-head and if you think for one second weâre letting him out to spread more of his poison throughout our fine city, youâd better think again. But donât you take it personally dear; you did as well as you could for the bastard.ââ Sheâd laughed.
Okay, Iâd thought. I guess you can get jaded with this job at some point.
I knew I wouldnât be able to eat well in the morning regardless of FB. But I had to force myself to eat a little lest I run the possibility of keeling over with hunger pangs at a quite inopportune time. So I set my alarm for extra early to have plenty of time for the ever so melodramatic production of breakfast. I fixed a tiny bowl of Cocoa Pebbles, figuring their size would make them relatively easy, and, being a childhood favorite, soothing to boot. But no such luck: saliva disintegration took just as long and I ingested just as little.
Funny thing about food, I was beginning to realize, is that, when it took me so long to finish, I was just as full after eating only about twenty percent of what Iâd usually eat. I remembered my Calcuttan bean-pole of a yoga instructor once telling Francie and me that this was the ideal way to consume in order to achieve healthy digestion, slow metabolism, and that ever-elusive but so highly coveted female goal: low body fat. But when weâd put it to the test afterwards at a Belgian bistro with Croque Madames and Dutch chocolate waffles — and failed ridiculously — we determined that such a feat must require something our American socio-biological make-ups simply lacked. Of course, it could have been our choice of food. Regardless, we resigned ourselves to the fact that gustatory nirvana never would be ours. Hmmm, things seemed to be changing for me every dayâŚ
So, the defendant, the subject of my first argument, was this very polite elderly Jamaican immigrant named Joseph White whoâd been convicted of drug possession with intent to sell. I didnât think he was a drug dealer at all, but simply unlucky enough to be in the proverbial wrong place at the wrong time. Police had stormed his daughterâs apartment to search for drugs, and he was sitting on the living room couch talking to his son-in-law, after his grandson, whom heâd come to see, went to bed. The couch was next to a bookcase whose shelves were loaded with small glassines containing âa white rocky substanceâ and a scale. Yes, someone in that apartment had a lovely little crack business going, but I strongly believed it wasnât Mr. White.
But the law says he can be convicted of possession with intent to sell just because he was in a room where the contraband was in open view, even though no one saw him so much as touch the stuff and he had a totally innocent reason for being there. I argued in my brief that the search warrant said a confidential informant had been in the apartment three times and saw two black guys in their twenties with long dreadlocks weighing and packaging the crack. That description fits the son-in-law to a T, but certainly not bald, 73-year-old Mr. White. At trial, the defense attorney asked the judge to make the informant testify so he could tell the jury what the people looked like whom he saw. But the judge didnât want to jeopardize the informantâs identity by making him testify in open court. And his testimony, the judge said, wasnât necessary since Mr. White could be found guilty of possession just because he was in the same room with the drugs in open view. In my brief, I argued the judgeâs ruling was wrong: the jury should have been able to hear from the informant that he saw other men packaging those drugs for sale. I think that would have been crucial information in determining whether Mr. White himself was guilty. He was on trial, after all, not the son-in-law.
Iâd had it pounded into me ad nauseam by my colleagues that youâre not supposed to get attached to the client or let yourself feel too strongly for his innocence because you can get too emotionally involved in his plight and get really upset when you lose. Which I understood. But I also felt that there wasnât much of a point to doing a job you werenât really compassionate about. And it was hard because Mr. White was the sweetest, most nonviolent man and so not a big-time drug dealer. And I felt like his situation was the result of something a family member did. Like he had any control over whom he associated with by virtue of biology.
Cedric, the doorman of Stephenâs building, was on duty bright and early. He was the strangest-looking man: ghostly pale skin, no eyebrows, and could honestly be anywhere in age from 20 to 55. And he always shot me the nastiest glares — at least I perceived them that way. Nearly made me cry when Iâd met him while visiting Stephen one weekend during school, with his slow, full up and down followed by a decidedly disapproving frown delivered straight to my eyes. Of course I was a dowdy backpack-bedraggled student then. But even after I moved in and started wearing more polished business attire, he kept it up. And he always gave Stephen a polite âMr. Walshâ address, accompanied by a professional nod, but never a greeting for me. Not that Iâd want him calling me âMs. Hegelâ though; Iâd feel so silly Iâd surely laugh. But I could have done without the âdear lord, what troglodyte has moved in and desecrated my buildingâ look.
So, professional and polished though I thought I was, Cedricâs admonishing up and down frown that continued through my entire journey from the elevator, around the lobby corner and out the front glass door, shouldâve come as no surprise. But it still unsettled me, as always.
Next to our building was a frame shop. Through the window you could see a huge mirror framed with brilliant gilding, where I often took a quick peek at myself to ensure I wasnât as hideous as Cedric would have me believe. One of the first things I noticed about New York was that mirrors are everywhere — on the streets, in restaurants, in the lobby of every building. Stephen always said theyâre to create the illusion of space, which Iâm sure is part of it, but I think they really exist to encourage the vanity that IS this city. Well, fully-acclimated participant in the Vanity Fair was I: I stood squarely in front of the mirror, squinting at myself through the metal bars of the gate still latched securely over the front windows since the shop hadnât yet opened for the morning. My long brown hair was held neatly behind my ears by a pink silk scarf whose edges daintily brushed my shoulders, evenly-trimmed bangs grazed my big Audrey eyebrows, cat-eyed knock-off Chanel sunglasses looked deceptively posh, tiny pearls on earrings matched those on necklace, scarlet raincoat was as of yet unwrinkled, facial t-zone as of yet un-shiny, pumps as of yet unscuffed. I looked just fine. Cedric could eat it.
I sauntered into the courthouse an hour early. The courtroom doors werenât open yet, so I darted straight back to the lawyersâ lounge — the supposedly cozy waiting area with couches and the like. Having thought, comfy chairs or not, how much Iâd be freaking out when I was here for my first argument, Iâd dubbed this the âfreak out lounge.â And freaking out I was. I slinked into a couch cushion, unbuckled my briefcase, and began reading my already memorized outline.
Nearly an hour later, the bailiff popped his ruddy face into said âfreak-out loungeâ to say the courtroom doors were now open and calendar call was in fifteen. I decided to sit in the front row, where I had an ideal preview of which justice would sit in which elephantine black chair, as indicated by their nameplates. Iâd seen everyone on this panel before, except newly appointed Justice Adele Parks, who, according to the nameplates, would sit second from left. I began another read-through of my outline, when I saw Jeannie breezing over, all confident smiles.
âHiya,â she said patting my shoulder. âHow ya doinâ?â
âUgh, Okay,â I said rolling my eyes. âNervous.â
âYouâre gonna be great. I know it, you know it,â she laughed, shaking her head at my absurdly over-highlighted outline. âIâm going to sit in back. Pretend Iâm not there. Youâre gonna knock âem dead,â she said, giving my shoulder one final pat, before skating off.
âAll rise, all rise,â the bailiff cried, and I felt like I was going to lose the few Cocoa Pebbles I ate.
The justices glided in in their flowing black capes. There was wizened Justice OâGrady first, followed by short, bald, angry-looking Justice Boyd, then haggard Justice McKinley, who appeared to have just climbed out of bed, and lastly Parks, the only woman on my panel, who I was hoping would be a liberal, underdog-sympathizing ally, even if her sympathy was for the new, nervous female lawyer. She had batty eyelashes, flowing black hair, a flawlessly lipsticked mouth, and was about fifty years younger than the others.
âPeople versus Joseph White,â OâGrady hollered before I could even take a breath and brace myself.
I walked to appellantâs podium, careful not to trip over nothing — like my own feet — not because Iâm usually clumsy, but weird things seem to happen when I sense a plethora of eyes on me. The Manhattan Assistant District Attorney, ADA Claudia Gromes — a fiftyish woman with grayish brown hair tied into a taut bun, and dressed in a matronly navy suit, approached the podium next to mine, looking very unafraid, very serious, very mature. I hoped I wasnât too much of a contrast. All butter-fingers, I fumbled a bit with my outline before getting it into position on the podium, then looked to Justice OâGrady for his âThou Shalt Beginâ cue. He nodded.
âMay it please the Court.â My voice was shaking but not as badly as Iâd expected. âI am Sophie Hegel, from the New York City Public Defenderâs Office, and I represent appellant Joseph White.â So far so good.
I began my argument, trying to space my words and look into the justicesâ faces, unnerving though they may be. Boyd, whose feet couldnât reach the floor nor head the headrest, spun around repeatedly in his mammoth chair. McKinley couldnât curtail continual wide-mouthed, tonsil-revealing yawns. And OâGrady remained face-down, looking into an open notebook, head resting in open palm, a pen in hand, appearing to be completely immersed in a doodle.
I was becoming dejected over how uninterested they seemed in my clientâs case when Parks pounced.
âCounselor, a C.I. only need testify if his testimony is pertinent to the ultimate issue in the case.â
Her voice was so loud and authoritative, so final. She seemed to glare at me. I wondered what Iâd done.
âWell, here the inforâŚâ I began.
Suddenly I felt him, FB, raising his knuckly little head. This was the first time Iâd sensed him when not eating. It confused me.
âExcuse me. Iâm sorry,â I said. âUh, in this case, the informantâs testimony would have been probative of whether other people had dominion and controlâŚâ My voice was weakening.
âNo, no, counselor,â Parks blasted. âThe test is whether the C.I.âs information is probative of the ultimate issue — which is whether your client had constructive possession of the drugs that were found, after all, right in front of him.â
Okay, female judges are not more sympathetic. I succumbed to a stupid stereotype.
âWell, Your HonorâŚâ I said hoarsely, struggling to force words out around FB. âThis goes to the ultimate issue, which is appellantâs possession. If others were seen packaging the drugs on other dates, then he didnât haveâŚâ I realized I was talking loudly, but I had to get the words out.
âWeâre not talking about other dates. Weâre talking about on this date, the date on which your client was arrested, on which date he was found by the police to be within a number of inches from a bookcase containing — containing what? Dostoevsky?â A snicker emanated from the back of Boydâs chair, which in its current rotation, was presently facing the back of the room. âShakespeare?â she continued. Laughs now from the courtroom audience. OâGradyâs face sank deeper into his hand, and he shook his snowy head. I felt my face redden. âNo. Containing what? Containing five entire shelves of crack, another of empty Ziplocs and a scale. The jury can find your client constructively possessed the drugs by testimony regarding the amount of space between him and the contraband.â
I couldnât believe she was so hostile, even using sarcasm, in court. I opened my mouth, trying to ignore FBâs pulsing, hoping heâd let me get through this. âUm, well it wasâŚâ I was still hoarse. âThe testimony wasâŚâ I had to get the words out. âRELEVANT,â I unintentionally shouted, âto whetherâŚâ
âBut counselor, the test isnât simple RELEVANCY.â
Oh no, the way she highlighted the last word indicated she thought I was challenging her by raising my voice.
âItâs whether itâs PROBATIVE of the ULTIMATE ISSUE,â she continued. âWe canât allow our C.I.sâ confidentialities to be compromised for any little reason. The term âconfidentialâ means something, does it not?â
More stifled laughs from behind me. She was so angry, seemed to take this so personally. And I was becoming the same. Someoneâs freedom wasnât just âany little reason.â
âYes, Your Honor, butâŚâ I squeaked, sounding like a childâs squeezable doll, which is exactly how I felt.
âCounselor, we have your argument. Weâll take it under advisement. Please be seated,â OâGrady said, now peeking up and looking exhausted.
I knew you werenât supposed to keep talking after the presiding judge told you to sit. I obeyed, feeling dumb, powerless, and deeply sorry for having botched Mr. Whiteâs case.
âThank you, Your Honors.â I tried to smile. OâGrady gave me a conclusive nod. I could already see the written decision affirming Mr. Whiteâs conviction, Parks authoring.
Page 99 Test for This Week’s Sample Sunday
I hope everyone had a good Christmas. I did. Went to a friend’s to make mulled wine and roasted chestnuts but somehow neither happened. My friend ended up taking me out for a massage, which I seriously needed (especially after spending all morning listening to my next door neighbor’s four unsupervised children run, scream, wail, jump off of his bed loft, and repeatedly ram themselves into the walls of his approximately 200 square foot apartment, nearly sending several of my paintings crashing to the floor). Then when we got back to her apartment, another friend came over with a bottle of vintage Scotch, which was lovely, and which, for the same aforesaid reason, I desperately needed. But somehow we just didn’t get a whole lot of cooking done after that…
Anyway, I almost forgot about Sample Sunday this week. (This is a new promotion for authors on Twitter, to link to a sample passage from one of their books.) I recently uploaded page 99 of Swallow for the newish Page 99 Test site (wherein readers rate how likely they’ll be to buy your book based on a random page somewhere in the middle), but I didn’t realize you couldn’t access the site without signing up for an account. So, I’m pasting my page 99 into the body of this post instead. Here it is:
Okay, I made it worse. I decided to cut my losses and just shut up.
We found Stephen in the next room examining a sketch of Rodinâs sculpture of a woman with her legs splayed in the air.
âThis is the ideal woman,â he nodded.
âSheâs upside down,â I said.
âWell, obviously. I mean the proportions. Fleshy womb, generous hips, well proportioned-breastsâŚâ He sounded lost in a dream. I cocked my head to try to see her right-side up as Stephen became interested in a Gauguin Polynesian princess. From what I could tell, her body seemed very unlike mine.
I followed Thomâs laughter to some advertisements. There was a hilarious turn-of-the-century one of a woman riding witch-like not a broom, but an uncorked, exploding champagne bottle. Another, more contemporary one, depicted a naked woman, her back to the viewer, but head cocked over shoulder, demurely smiling, sitting at an outdoors picnic with two fully clothed men and a stereo. Caption read, âWe could all use a bit of romance in our lives.â Like, buy the stereo, get the woman included. There were naked women selling sports cars, menâs cologne, everything under the sun. This room could have gone on forever and a day.
I saw Stephen shaking his head at something. I walked up. It was an advert featuring a naked female model being sprayed playfully by a hose. Honestly couldnât tell exactly what it was advertising though. Tap water? Didnât think so.
SWALLOW is in Kindle Nation’s Indie Authors Hall of Fame









Was very pleased to see this! Especially when I’m having a kind of crappy day…
And I’m right next to J.A. Konrath đ
I’ve been meaning to read some of these books and just haven’t had the time, especially now that I’m heavy in research / writing mode for my next book (as well as trying to keep up this blog). Anyway, in particular I’ve been wanting to read Karen Fenech’s Gone, Scott Nicholson’s Disintegration, and I have Konrath’s Shaken and Victorine Lieske’s Not What She Seems on my iPhone already. Also, Imogen Rose’s Portal looks good, as does L.J. Sellers’s The Sex Club, and Monique Martin’s Out of Time. I’d heard an online interview with Robert Kroese that made me want to read Mercury Falls. And, hadn’t heard of it, but Kitty Thomas’s Comfort Food looks intriguing too!
I’m Interviewed at Independent Publisher, Along with Evil Wylie!

I’m interviewed today at Independent Publisher magazine, the people who gave me my IPPY gold medal. This is the first interview where I was asked more detailed questions about how autobiographical the psychosomatic disorder aspect of Swallow was, and so I talked a bit about that. It’s funny because when the writer, Nina L. Diamond, was asking me questions about my own experiences with the disorder and how closely they paralleled Sophie’s experiences with it, I really had to think back. I think when you really get into a novel and you start creating your own characters and filling out the details of their lives and creating situations for them that will increase the conflict and the dramatic tension of the novel and will lead to a fuller arc for both the characters and the overall plot, then you really distance yourself from what actually happened. And then, when asked, you have trouble remembering what actually happened! So, I kind of stuttered a bit on that.
Also in the same issue, Diamond interviews the writer known as Evil Wylie (and also Emperor Franzen). Fun to be in the same issue as he!







