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Have any of you ever heard of the writer Elizabeth Nunez? Or read any of her books? No? Well, maybe you should. In fact, maybe we should. Book club, anyone? Let’s let that marinate.

So on Wednesday night, I went to Hue-Man Bookstore (on Frederick Douglass Blvd. in Harlem) to hear Dr. Nunez (please don’t call her by her first name) read from her latest novel, Anna In Between. This book is Dr. Nunez’ 7th (!) book and tells the story of Anna, a successful book publisher living in New York who goes home to Trinidad to spend some time with her aging parents. When she gets there, she finds out that her mother has cancer. On top that that, Anna, is forced to deal with a lot of issues of identity and understand where she comes from and where she belongs. She was born in Trinidad, but lived most of her life in the U.S., so she feels in-between both places, and both cultures. She is also spending a lot of time with her parents and trying to understand their relationship (which she doesn’t), getting  to know them as people (outside of being her parents), dealing with class issues (they are an upper-middle class family with a maid), and, as Nunez said, “using American eyes to judge her Caribbean family,” and culture.

Can any of you relate?

Well, the author, Elizabeth Nunez sure can. She was born in Trinidad, and is now a successful writer in New York. Her parents were upper-middle class, and her mother also had breast cancer. So she knows of what she writes. “The world viewed in American eyes is very different from the world viewed in Caribbean eyes,” she said.

Elizabeth Nunez at Hue Man; she writes...

Writer Elizabeth Nunez at Hue Man; she talks...

...she listens

...she listens

“If you really want to know a person, you have to look at them through their lenses, which is very hard to do.”

In the novel, Anna has to readjust to her homeland and reconnect to the physical landscape of the place where she was born. Nunez said that a write she admires, Barbadian George Lamming belives that “landscape is a destiny in a way,” meaning that  “landscape shapes us.” Do you believe that? How much have you been shaped by where you live? What is it about New York, about being a New York girl, that makes you who are you?

Nunez has written a bunch of books, many focusing on culture and identity, so check them out if you’re looking for a good read.

Not to follow up a writing post up with yet another post about writing, but…the Brooklyn Book Festival is tomorrow, Sunday, September 13, 2009 at the Brooklyn Borough Hall and Plaza from 10 am to 6 pm. It’s free and there are some specific events for teens that you might want to check out.

Here is the schedule for what they are calling the “Youth Stoop:”

Youth Stoop (Borough Hall Plaza)
The Youth Stoop provides day-long literary activities for youth ages 10-18

10:00 a.m. Brooklyn Next Lit Match Awards. Come hear some of the most talented students writing in the borough who are the finalists in the “Brooklyn Next” borough-wide writing contest. Hosted by  Jamie Hector of The Wire.

11:00 p.m. Fantastical Journeys. Join award-winning middle grade authors and illustratorsKate DiCamillo (The Magician’s Elephant), Christopher Myers (Wings) and Michael Buckley(The Sisters Grimm) and step into a world of whimsical imagination where elephants guide, boys fly and humans and fairy-tale creatures live side by side.

12:00 p.m. Keeping it HonestCoe Booth (Tyrell), Matt de la Peña (Mexican White Boy) andPaul Griffin (Ten Mile River) write books for teenagers that are smart and honest and never talk down to their audience. Join them as they talk about their work and about how they keep it real.

1:00 p.m. Breaking Through. Critically acclaimed authors Laurie Halse Anderson (Winter Girls), Gayle Forman (If I Stay) and G.Neri (Surf Mules) discuss some of this year’s most talked about novels featuring teens forced to make difficult decisions under extraordinary—and less than favorable—circumstances.

2:00 p.m. Love and Longing. How far will you go for love and how far will love go for you? Ned Vizzini (Be More Chill), Aimee Friedman (Sea Change) and Anna Godbersen (The Luxe) reveal very different approaches to succeeding in love as they read and discuss their books.

3:00 p.m. Love, War and Adventures in BabysittingTransforming Stories into Comics. How does a comic artist take a favorite story and make it new? Three new stars in the literary comics cosmos shine the light on their process, adapting award-winning fiction, found historical materials and one of the most popular teen series of all time into graphic novels. Raina Telgemeier (The Babysitters Club graphic novel series), Danica Novgorodoff (Refresh, Refresh) and George O’Connor (Journey into Mohawk Country).

4:00 p.m. Adventures in the Past. Critically acclaimed authors M.T. Anderson (The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing), Marilyn Nelson (The Freedom Business) and Margaret Peterson Haddix (Shadow Children and Missing series) take us into a thrilling tour of the past where King Edward V lives, and the eighteenth century comes alive with adventure—giving us a new understanding of race then and now. Moderated by Stacey Barney.

5:00 p.m. High School and the Paranormal. Authors Claudia Gray (Evernight Series) and Carolyn MacCullough  (Once a Witch) show us that high schoolers have far more to worry about than acne and who to take to the school dance. Enter an exciting world of witches, vampires and magic. Moderated by Stephanie Anderson.

Directions- Just take the 2, 3, 4, 5 to Borough Hall; R to Court Street; or A, C, F to Jay Street/Borough Hall

Hope to see you there! (Ok, well it’s not like I’ll have a booth or anything- this year- but I hope you go, take some friends, and enjoy yourself)