The Best Books I Read in 2016

I write nonfiction history, real life tales of extra/ordinary women. This means I do a lot of research, not only in rich and compelling primary sources but also in a wide swath of secondaries. My leisure reading, then, is all about fiction.

https://theresakaminski.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/b00ff-6a00d8341c69f653ef0133f5d726ed970b-pi.jpg (Vanessa Bell)

I read over 50 novels in 2016, most of which were historical fiction. My next few posts will be devoted to the best books I read this year (though they weren’t necessarily published in 2016).

I’m not limiting myself to 10 books. While that’s a neat number, it’s arbitrary. In 2016, for example, I ranked 4 novels as 5-star reads, but I liked an additional 13 very much.

The first of the 5-star novels is:

Image result for georgia by dawn tripp

Tripp did a marvelous job of imagining the life and career of painter Georgia O’Keeffe. I didn’t know much about O’Keeffe, but I do know quite a lot about women’s lives in the 20th century. Tripp deftly handled the historical context while providing a complex, compelling portrait of a talented and driven woman. The novel is every bit as gorgeous as O’Keeffe’s paintings.

Another work of historical fiction about a female artist that I liked a lot is:

Image result for the muralist by b.a. shapiro

Shapiro’s main character is a fictional female artist hired by one of the New Deal programs in the 1930s. Increasingly radicalized by the politics of the times, Alizée makes a fateful decision to try to help the European Jews being crushed by Hitler’s anti-Semitic policies. Some of the real-life historical figures who appeared in the book didn’t always quite ring true for me, but the character of Alizée is fascinating.

Up next: another pairing of a 5-star novel with one that came pretty close.

 

Write-by-the-Lake Writer’s Workshop and Retreat, June 26-30, 2017

Winter weather already getting you down? Looking forward to spring?

Image result for snow storm(WABC)

Registration has just opened for a great writer’s retreat on June 26-30, 2017, in Madison, WI.

I’ll be leading one of the new workshops, Writing Women’s Lives. Plan now to join me!

The 19th annual Write-by-the-Lake Writer’s Workshop & Retreat has expanded to 14 sections. There are several new instructors and topics, including children’s picture books, poetry writing, and a new step-by-step system to plotting fiction with urgency.

This national retreat offers something for all writers. Most of all, it offers the opportunity to work, work, work on your writing.

Plus, by popular request from past attendees who didn’t want the week to stop and who wanted ideas for their next steps, the program added a new special bonus Saturday workshop on July 1 with Tim Storm.

And the famous writing doctor, Kevin Mullen, is back!

Wait, there’s more! Someone who got her start here and is now a big success–hitting the USA Today list with her fiction–will deliver the keynote address and teach one of the new sessions. That’s right. Wisconsin’s own Ann Garvin is on board this year.

UW-Madison’s Memorial Union and its lakeside terrace have been renovated just in time for us to test out the new amenities. We can watch the sailboats go by as we share writing ideas over a glass of something good or a cone packed with the famous Babcock Dairy ice cream.

Image result for uw madison memorial union terrace

Please join me and your fellow writers from across the country.

Enrollment is limited in each section to maximize the attention on your writing.

Click here for full details.

 

 

 

Reflections on a Bookversary

One year ago today, Angels of the Underground launched into the reading world.

Image result for book launchBookBaby.com

It’s been an exciting year, and not because Angels is my first book. It’s my third–the final volume of my historical trilogy of the wartime Philippines.

Rather, it was exciting because this was my first book to be shopped by an agent and sold to a big publisher. (The whole process, including writing the actual book, took years.) I received an advance. I did not quit my day job.

Angels attracted more attention than my previous books. There was a review in Publishers Weekly. The Midwest Independent Booksellers Association selected Angels as a January 2016 Midwest Connections Pick. Vick Mickunas interviewed me for his Book Nook show on WYSO. I appeared on various blogs: Daily History, RA for All, Historiann, and History News Network. There were fun posts for Campaign for the American Reader.

I was invited to be part of a World War II symposium at the MacArthur Memorial, and C-SPAN was there to film it.

I was also invited to write a Five Best Books column for the Wall Street Journal.

Bookmarks! I had bookmarks made to hand out at events and just to hand out.

bookmark-2inx8in-h-front

Looking forward into 2017, I’ll be giving a few more talks about Angels to different audiences. While I continue to promote the book, I’ll be working on a new one that will most likely center on women and war.

Two things I recommend about promotion. Have a book launch party.

Book Launch InvitationZazzle.com

Whether you host it yourself or have someone do it on your behalf, have one. It’s the best, most festive way of introducing your book to its potential reading audience.

Hand out bookmarks. Readers always need bookmarks. (Well, unless they read exclusively on e-readers.) These are relatively inexpensive yet useful “swag” items. Make use of both sides of the bookmark. For mine, one side was based on the book cover (see above) and the other provided contact and purchasing information. A good bookmark should sell you and your book.

bookmark-2inx8in-h-front

 

 

 

“Whatever is asked of us.” Remembering Seventy-five Years Ago Today

This is a big anniversary. Seventy-five years since more than 300 Japanese planes flew over Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and, in less than two hours, dropped the bombs that killed over 2400 Americans, destroyed a large part of the U.S. fleet in the Pacific, and brought the United States into World War II.

Image result for pearl harbor december 7 1941

(Pearl Harbor, NARA)

American radio stations picked up the story almost immediately, bringing the devastating news into millions of homes. Here’s the WNYC broadcast from that day.

First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt gave a brief radio address on December 7. Part of it was directed to “the women of the country.” She acknowledged the tough times ahead and encouraged women to take care of themselves, their families, their communities. “Whatever is asked of us,” the First Lady said, “I am sure we can accomplish it. We are the free and unconquerable people of the United States of America.”

Pearl Harbor and Eleanor Roosevelt's Message to America | TIME

(Eleanor Roosevelt, NBC, Getty Images)

It’s unlikely that Peggy Utinsky heard Eleanor Roosevelt’s words that day. Peggy lived in the Philippine Islands, on the other side of the International Dateline, where the news of Pearl Harbor broke on Monday morning. An American nurse who had traveled to the islands in the 1920s for a vacation, Peggy met and fell in love with Jack Utinsky, an engineer working on the fortified island of Corregidor. They married in the 1930s and settled into a comfortable life there.

Jack tried to send Peggy back to the states earlier in 1941, just to be on the safe side, but she refused to go. His work took him more and more to the Bataan peninsula, so Peggy rented an apartment in Manila to be closer to him. She split her days between working at the Red Cross and a soldiers’ canteen.

On December 8, the Japanese began bombing the Philippines. Unlike their attack on Hawaii, this was a prelude to invasion and occupation. Tough times were indeed ahead for Peggy and everyone else in the Philippines. But Peggy didn’t wait until anyone asked anything of her. She simply kept working. Wounded civilians and military personnel crowded into Manila hospitals and emergency medical facilities. There were no more regular shifts. Peggy worked until she couldn’t stand up anymore. Then, nearly sightless in the blacked-out night, she picked her way back to her apartment along bomb-ravaged sidewalks. After a few hours of rest, Peggy made the return trip to the hospital.

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(Margaret Utinsky, NARA, Signal Corps photo)

December 7/8, 1941, changed Peggy Utinsky’s life. The rest of her story can be found in Angels of the Underground.

A Thanksgiving Post

It’s the day before Thanksgiving, that wondrous holiday in the U.S. that marks the cooperation between a group of indigenous people and newly arrived immigrants. As a historian, I know that what began with cooperation and high hopes devolved into centuries of conflict. So for many people, Thanksgiving is a difficult holiday to observe. And the outcome of the recent presidential election may make some family reunions even more uncomfortable this year.

Since the election, I’ve been at a loss for words. This morning, I read novelist Celeste Ng’s wonderful article about giving thanks, and I decided to share her words here.

I hope we all find things to be thankful for, tomorrow and every day.

And for a non-historical, non-political closing, I’ll leave you with this. Guaranteed to bring a smile.