by CWC Marin administrator | Sep 9, 2019 | Classes and Workshops, Events
If you want your book published by one of the big publishing houses, you need an agent. How do you get an agent? You write a letter.
Mary C. Moore, a literary agent with the Tiburon-based Kimberly Cameron & Associates, will be presenting “How to Query an Agent” on September 22 at 2 pm.
She will review the most important elements of query letters and critique a few live queries if participants print theirs out and bring them in.
Mary C. Moore graduated from Mills College, Oakland with a MFA in Creative Writing and English in 2012, dabbled in freelance editing and copy-writing before started an internship at Kimberley Cameron & Associates. She quickly fell in love with agenting, and dedicated two years as Kimberley’s assistant, before beginning her own client list, making deals with Harper Collins, Penguin Random House, Macmillan and more.
by CWC Marin administrator | Sep 9, 2019 | Book Tour, Classes and Workshops, Events
California Writers Club Marin will be co-hosting two events this fall as part of Reimagine End of Life SF, a community wide exploration of big questions about life and death. More than 150 artists, storytellers, healthcare professionals, innovators, designers, faith and community leaders, organizations, and individuals will be banding together to amplify the end-of-life conversation.
Most events are in San Francisco, but also in Oakland, Berkeley, Petaluma, Mill Valley, and beyond.
We’ll be co-hosting “Why I Wrote an Assisted Suicide Family Thriller” on October 26 at Mo’Joe Cafe in Berkeley and November 2 in Mill Valley. Author and CWC Marin board member John Byrne Barry will read from his book — When I Killed My Father: An Assisted Suicide Family Thriller — and lead a conversation about end of life concerns — family decisions, dementia, dying, and more.
The book is fiction, but inspired by his mother’s last ten years, as she fell deeper into dementia.
The story follows psychologist Lamar Rose, whose father is suffering from cancer and dementia, and has asked his son to help him die. Lamar refuses, but his father keeps asking, and he relents. Then, at his father’s memorial, Lamar’s sister accuses him of murder from the pulpit of the church.
The event in Marin is at the Tam Valley Cabin, 60 Tennessee Valley Road. It’s free, but Reimagine urges folks to RSVP. After John reads from his novel and talks about what he learned while researching and writing the book, he will lead a conversation about the challenges and unexpected rewards that come with the end of life. Such as:
- What happens when families can’t agree about health care decisions?
- How do we respond when loved ones say they want to die?
- How do we treat dementia patients with kindness — reality therapy or compassionate fibbing?
- How we initiate end-of-life conversations when people refuse to talk about it?
Read more at johnbyrnebarry.com. You can also sign up through our Facebook event page.