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The festival brings energy to downtown Berkeley and unites a broad array of writers, attracting tens of thousands of area residents.
Next weekend’s event has become a literary tradition that celebrates the Bay Area’s role in culture and ideas. Further it amplifies the voices of writers of all cultures, genders and backgrounds.
For more than 150 years, the Chronicle’s writers have played a key role in our heritage, and our staff of nearly 200 journalists carries that forward today. When you attend the festival, you’ll have an opportunity to hear from, and meet, some of our writers, editors and contributors, along with an enormous number of today’s biggest names in book publishing.
On Sunday, the San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park — an out
MESSAGE FROM BAY AREA BOOK FESTIVAL FOUNDER
Dear literary community, As described on page 39 of this guide, I’m stepping down from my role as Executive Director, my position since founding the Festival nearly 10 years ago.
It has been my great pleasure and honor to serve our amazing community of readers and to have engaged with more than 1,600 authors and their books. (No, I haven’t read all the books. But I’ve tried.)
How would I describe a Festival book? It has heart — deep and emotional relevance. It asks what really matters to us as human beings in this world we share.
door, free venue that seats nearly 600 people — is the perfect place to hear discussions on history, culture and Bay Area stories.
I hope you are able to take a day and visit Berkeley and join the festival. You won’t be disappointed.
Bill Nagel,The City of Berkeley warmly welcomes you to the ninth annual Bay Area Book Festival, one of the world’s premier literary festivals for nearly a decade. The city has been thrilled to have hosted this event since its inception, offering our vibrant Downtown streets and Martin Luther King Civic Center Park for this community celebration of books and reading.
As always, the speaker lineup is highly diverse and involves authors from Berkeley, the broader Bay Area, California, the United States and the world. The authors address urgent topics (such as environment, racial injustice, disability rights and more) while also reveling in the sheer play and power of storytelling, imagination, and ideas — which we believe must be allowed to flow unchecked. We’re proud that the City of Berkeley’s libraries and our school systems refuse to participate in the bookbanning that is sweeping parts of the country.
Out of Berkeley’s many commit
ments, which include tolerance and social justice, “free speech” is perhaps our most famous value. Thus we’re especially happy to support the book festival this year. We hope to see you there!
Jesse Arreguín Mayor, City of BerkeleySo many books in this year’s festival matter in this deep way. Dacher Keltner, the Faculty Director of the Greater Good Science Center, shows us in “Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life” how the experience of wonder can bring happiness. (Freight & Salvage, 12:30 p.m. Saturday, May 6)
Han Chenxing writes about her journey throughout the world to understand what it means to care. Her extraordinary, multilayered memoir, “one long listening,” describes her work to become a hospital chaplain. (Marsh Cabaret, 11:30 a.m. Saturday, May 6)
What are you committed to? Ilyon Woo’s “Master Slave Husband Wife: An Epic Journey from Slavery to Freedom” tells the story of Ellen and William Craft, an enslaved Black man and lightskinned Black woman, who were so committed to freedom — including that of their future children — that they risked their lives to escape north, Ellen posing as a wealthy man and William as his servant. (Residence Inn’s Ballroom 1, 2 p.m. Sunday, May 7)
All these books, as well as music, film and good television, come to us thanks to their respective creative industries. But according to renowned author Cory Doctorow and scholar Rebecca Gitlin in the deep
ly researched “Chokepoint Capitalism,” behemoth corporations are squeezing artists, preventing them from making a living through their creative work, all for the sake of shareholder profits. How can you protect the writers you love? (Freight & Salvage, 11 a.m. Sunday, May 7)
To return to my departure as director of the Bay Area Book Festival, I want to mention one more program: Tricia Hersey with “Rest Is Resistance: A Manifesto.” She argues for resisting the “grind culture” that treats human beings merely as means of production, and calls attention to the most horrific instance of such inhumanity in our history, the centuries of enslavement of Black people, who were driven to “produce” for their overlords. We need to rest, Hersey says, to take back our lives. (Freight & Salvage, 2 p.m. Sunday, May 7)
Creating the Bay Area Book Festival has been a joy for me; at the same time, such a large endeavor has taken a great deal of effort over a decade. Our current Director of Literary Programs, Norah Piehl, will become Interim Executive Director in June. And it’s time for me to rest.
Become
Friends enjoy priority access for the best seats at all indoor daytime festival events. Learn more at baybookfest.org/friends, or during festival weekend visit our Friend of the Festival tent in BART Plaza.
Leadership team
Cherilyn Parsons, Founder and Executive Director
Samee Roberts, Managing Director
Norah Piehl, Director of Literary Programs
Scott Gelfand, Chief Operations Officer
Dahled Jeffries, Program Manager
Dora La Flora Czifra, Program Systems and Web Manager
Julia & Jared Drake, Wildbound PR, Publicist and Video Coordinator
Steven Tiffin, Heart of the Town Events; Outdoor Fair Producer
Festival team
Aspire Visual, Graphic Designer
Julie Coryell, Wildbound PR, Publicity Associate
Matthew Félix, Author Green Room Coordinator
Ogechi Ibeanusi, Volunteer Coordinator
Kate Jessup, Hospitality Liaison International Authors
Haley Kleine, Ticketing & Salesforce Associate
Lou Anna Koehler, Author Travel Coordinator WebCherry, Web Designer
San Francisco Chronicle
Bill Nagel, Publisher
Emilio GarciaRuiz, Editor in Chief
Sarah Feldberg, Maggie Creamer, Gabriel Chavez, Shalyce Benfell, Erin Jacobs, Tyana Samuel, Amir Rezaee, Cheri Quan, Sean Jacobsen,
The Bay Area Book Festival will be on May 6 and 7 in Berkeley.
Rose Fulton, Steve Weimer and Ikaika Nakoa
UC Berkeley interns
Kelly DoloresContreras, Esther Huang, Emily Mendez, Mo Enriquez Mottley, Anjali Pajjuri, and Iris Xu
Program advisers
Jane Ciabattari, Board member and former President, National Book Critics Circle
Michael Holtmann, Executive Director, Center for the Art of Translation
Laurie R. King, Author; Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Janis Cooke Newman, Author; Founder and Director of Lit Camp, Highbeam Editorial and
Page Street writers coworking space
Karen Phillips, Executive Director, Words Without Borders Lise Quintana, Publisher, Zoetic Press
Renée Richard, Founder & Executive Director, Cinnamon girl, Inc. Rachel Richardson, Author; Codirector, Left Margin LIT Brooke Warner, Author; Publisher, She Writes Press
Youth program advisors Ryan Bada, Hally BellahGuther, Michael James, Maeve Knoth, Jessica Lee, Sharon McKellar, Regan McMahon, Mary Ann Placzek Scheuer, Elaine Tai and Mina Witteman
Board of Directors, Foundation for the Future of Literature and Literacy
Brooke Warner, Chair
George Rehm
Cherilyn Parsons
Provisioning bookstores
Bookshop West Portal Books Inc.
Folio Books
Green Apple Books
Marcus Books
Pegasus Books
Sausalito Books by the Bay
Venue partners
Berkeley Public Library
Cornerstone Berkeley
David Brower Center
Freight & Salvage
Language Studies International Magnes Museum
Residence Inn Berkeley by
Marriott
The Marsh
Additional thanks
Mayor Jesse Arreguín, the Berkeley City Council, Interim Police Chief Julie Louis, Shallon
Allen in Special Events, Jennifer Lovvorn (Chief Cultural Affairs Officer), Stefan Elgstrand, and other staff of the City of Berkeley
Lisa Bullwinkel, Chair, City of Berkeley Civic Arts Commission
John Caner and Matthew
Jervis, Downtown Berkeley Association
Barbara Hillman and Dan Marengo, Visit Berkeley
Tess Mayer, Bill Kolb and Elaine Tai, Berkeley Public Library
Kathy Huff and Tienne Lee, Berkeley Public Library Foundation
Evelyn Thorne, UC Berkeley
Internship Program
Janet Lim Young, KQED Frances Dinkelspiel, Lance Knobel, Tracey Taylor, Colleen Leary and Andrew Weiler, Cityside Publishing
Greg Sarris, Chairman of the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria and Tribal Council David M. Guhin, Executive Director, Government Operations, Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria
Angela Hardin, Executive Assistant to Chairman Sarris
Scott Boyle, Dr. Vanessa Esquivido, Smoke Johnson, Vanessa Reveles and Juliana Kang, Graton Writing Project Michaela Florio, Writopia Lab Mark Wasserman, Production Team leader
Janet Heller, Chapter 510 Kevin Bartram, Partnership Representative Suzanne K. Rivecca
Iris Vanderheyden
All of our moderators, interviewers and volunteers who give significant time to help bring the festival to you!
Follow us
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• Sign up for our newsletter: baybookfest.org/contact
Page 5: Author events
Page 6: New program formats
Page 11: Nature books and sessions
Page 12: Keynote session: Joan Baez
Page 16: Keynote session: W. Kamau Bell and Kate Schatz
Page 17: Children, teen and family sessions
Page 18: Graton Writing Project and Half Price Books
Page 19: History books and sessions
Page 20: Get the most out of the festival
Page 21: Outdoor Fair Map/Getting to the festival
Page 22: Schedule of events
Page 26: Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria partnership
Page 28: Literary exhibitors
Page 29: Writing and publishing sessions
Page 32: Outdoor Fair activities
Page 34: Genre fiction books and sessions
Page 35: International author sessions
Page 36: Women Lit program
Page 37: List of authors
Page 39: Executive director profile
Schedule subject to change. See baybookfest.org for any updates.
11 a.m.
The Eyes and the Impossible: Dave Eggers and Shawn Harris Is there anything Dave Eggers can’t do? The multitalented juggernaut’s latest project — a collaboration with artist Shawn Harris — is an illustrated novel about trust, community responsibility — and one very fast dog. You’ll want to make it your next readaloud — no matter your age. Sponsored by Reading Group Choices. (Freight & Salvage)
A Life in Books: Joan Frank, Dorothy Lazard and Jane Smiley, moderated by John Freeman
Each of these authors — Dorothy Lazard (“What You Don’t Know Will Make a Whole New World”), Joan Frank (“Late Work”) and Jane Smiley (“The Questions That Matter Most”) — has had a decadeslong love affair with books; in this session, they’ll tell you not only what they were reading, but how it affected them and their work. (The Marsh Theater)
The Beauty and Urgency of Nature Writing: Erica Berry, Tom Comitta and Talia Lakshmi Kolluri, moderated by Carlos CabreraLomelí
Set aside your human concerns for an hour and immerse yourself in the beautiful urgency of nature writing with Erica Berry (“Wolfish”), Tom Comitta (“The Nature Book”) and Talia Lakshmi Kolluri (“What We Fed to the Manticore”). With the support of SACHI. (The Magnes)
You’re a Fraud: Kirstin Chen, Brendan Slocumb and Kyla Zhao, moderated by Cheryl Popp
This one’s an ode to the grift
ers, the con artists, the scammers: the characters who would gleefully pull one over on you — and probably get away with it, too. Even if the characters they depict are complicated (to put it mildly), there’s one thing we know for sure — Kirstin Chen (“Counterfeit”), Brendan Slocumb (“Symphony of Secrets”) and Kyla Zhao (“The Fraud Squad”) are the real deal. (Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
We Were Once a Family: Journalists Investigating Child Welfare: Roxanna Asgarian and Garrett Therolf, moderated by David Barstow
In 2018, an SUV carrying two women and their six adopted children was found at the bottom of a 100foot cliff in Mendocino County. As time passed, a sickening narrative emerged, one that indicted the foster care and adoption systems that so tragically failed these children. Roxanna Asgarian (“We Were Once a Family”) is joined by Garrett Therolf to discuss the broken systems that placed these children in profound peril. (Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Seen and Unseen: New Glimpses of Japanese Incarceration: Elizabeth Partridge in conversation with Maggie TokudaHall
Through stories, artwork and illustration, Elizabeth Partridge (“Seen and Unseen”) raises important questions about who’s allowed to tell what stories, and how; about the ways in which history is shaped and remembered; and about how those in power shape narratives to suit their own ends. Partridge will be in conversation with Maggie TokudaHall, who tells yet another story of Japanese incarceration — this one about her grandparents’ courtship. All ages. (Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
The Art of Brevity: A Flash Fiction Writing Workshop: Kim Culbertson and Grant Faulkner
If you’ve dreamed of writing fiction but don’t know where to start, may we make a suggestion? Start with a (very) short story! NaNoWriMo executive director Grant Faulkner (“The Art of Brevity”) and author and educator Kim Culbertson (“Small, Bright Things”) will combine their expertise with your inspiration in a fastpaced flash fiction workshop perfect for teens and adults. Pack your pencils and your creativity — we can’t wait to see what you dream up! (Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
11:30 a.m.
The Art of Life: Writing Autobiography Across the Genres: Ingrid Rojas Contreras, K.M. Soehnlein and Preeti Vangani, moderated by Dave Madden How can writers from any genre make art from the everyday mess of reality? Where do you draw the boundaries between authentic and artificial, true and untrue? In this session, University of San Francisco faculty members who’ve written novels, memoirs and poetry books taking from their lived experiences — will discuss how to get beyond “Write what you know” to explore the richer terrain of writing from who you’ve been. Sponsored by University of San Francisco MFA in
Phnom Penh. The book’s short chapters alternate among narrative, reflections, letters to a dying friend, memories of a migratory childhood and wry twists and hilarious footnotes everywhere. (The Marsh Cabaret)
12:15 p.m.
One Story, Unlimited Possibilities: A Choose Your Own Adventure Workshop: Lily Simonson
Writing program. (Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Fiction and Technology: What Hath AI Wrought?: Akil Kumarasamy, Josh Riedel, Allie Rowbottom, Nina Schuyler and Colin Winnette, moderated by Noah Stern
These authors aren’t afraid to use their fiction to contend with the looming future of tech. Akil Kumarasamy (“Meet Us by the Roaring Sea”), Josh Riedel (“Please Report Your Bug Here”), Nina Schuyler (“Afterword”), Allie Rowbottom (“Aesthetica”) and Colin Winnette (“Users”) explore virtual reality, aesthetic procedures, dating apps, and, yes, AI — but their new novels, like so much timeless fiction, are really about the pricelessness of human connection. With the support of SACHI. (Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
One Long Listening: A Habit of Love, a Memoir of Offering Care: Chenxing Han, interviewed by Faith Adiele We instantly fell in love with Chenxing Han’s “one long listening.” A hospital chaplain and caregiver in the making, Han journeys from a mountaintop monastery in Taiwan to oncology wards in San Francisco, from oceanside Ireland to riverfront
If crafting the perfect ending is the hardest part of writing a story, how do you come up with more than two dozen? How can you keep readers moving forward through your story — or excited to start over again if they fall into a crevasse or get eaten by aliens? Find out how to choose your topic, map your story and more! As for the endings … well, that will be up to you! All ages. (Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
12:30 p.m.
Awe: The Science of Everyday Wonder: Dacher Keltner, interviewed by Shawn Taylor
How do we quantify the goose bumps we feel when we see the Grand Canyon, or the utter amazement when we watch a child walk for the first time? How do we give words to the wonder we feel while gazing at works of art? Dacher Keltner, one of the world’s foremost scientists of emotion, presents his groundbreaking new book, “Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life.” Sponsored by Reed Schmidt. (Freight & Salvage)
Dazzling Debuts: Jonathan Escoffery, Tsering Yangzom Lama and Jens Liljestrand, moderated by Leslie Carol Roberts
Here’s your chance to meet three talented young authors at the beginning of their careers: Jonathan Escoffery (“If I Survive You”), Tsering Yangzom Lama (“We Measure the Earth with Our
The Bay Area Book Festival has always celebrated literary diversity — this year, festival organizers are exploring new ways to introduce unique and innovative program formats that go beyond readings and panel discussions.
In two programs dubbed “Craft Chats,” devotees of literary fiction have the opportunity to really dig in to the specific choices authors make as they construct their narratives. In one session on the use of humor (with Erik Tarloff, Kathryn Ma and Cecilia Rabess at 11:30 a.m. Sunday) and another on writing from a child’s point of view (with Keenan Norris, Pilar Quintana and Margaret Verble at 1 p.m. Saturday), the authors will start by discussing, in detail, short excerpts from their work, explaining how they made decisions about word
choice, pacing and voice, among other elements of the writer’s craft.
“This format is really enlightening for both readers and authors alike,” says Norah Piehl, the festival’s director of literary programs. “Craft chats give readers an intimate glimpse into the writer’s mind and process, and they offer authors a chance to discuss these sentencelevel choices with one another in a public forum, not just in the context of a writers’ group.”
Elsewhere at the festival, attendees who enjoy podcasts or storytelling events would be wise to attend a session on “True Stories: Northern California,” featuring two authors of recent nonfiction narratives — Clare Frank
(“Burnt: A Memoir of Fighting Fire”) and Andrew Alden (“Deep Oakland”) — each of whom will
have 12 minutes to share a story from their book. The Chronicle’s John King will moderate.
“These authors’ works might not have much in common on the surface,” says Piehl, “but collectively, their stories create a wonderfully multihued portrait of the richness of our region’s history and of both the natural and built environments.”
Festivalgoers with slightly shorter attention spans should mark their schedules for two fun and fastpaced events. The Mystery Writers of America’s everpopular Noir at the Bar event takes over Cornerstone Berkeley at 5:30 p.m Saturday, featuring lively snippets from recent suspense novels — and a cash bar.
“Noir (at a bar or otherwise) gives writers a chance to read the fun parts of their books,” says
From page S5
Bodies”) and Jens Liljestrand (“Even if Everything Ends”). We’ll hear about these debut authors’ paths to publication and heed their advice to aspiring authors. Sponsored by the Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation and the Consulate General of Sweden in San Francisco, with the support of the Consulate General of Canada San Francisco/Silicon Valley. (The Marsh Theater)
25 Years of the Berkeley Slam: Jason Bayani, Reggie Edmonds, Betsy Gomez, Doug Mungin and Sam Sax, hosted by Ekabhumi
Charles Ellick
The Berkeley Poetry Slam is 25 years old! Join us in celebrating this revered Bay Area staple and see some of the very best and brightest poets to have represented Berkeley on stages across California and the U.S. over the past two and a half decades. Poets from different eras of the show, including Jason Bayani
(“Locus”), Sam Sax (“Bury It”) and Reggie Edmonds (“Sad Boi”) will share poems and be in conversation about what the show has meant to them, and so many others over the years. (The Magnes)
“American Midnight” and Democracy’s Crises: Adam Hochschild
In “American Midnight,” awardwinning historian and journalist Adam Hochschild brings alive the horrifying yet inspiring four years following the U.S. entry into the First World War, spotlighting forgotten repression while celebrating an unforgettable set of Americans who strove to fix their fractured country — and showing how their struggles still guide us today. (Brower Center Goldman Theater)
1 p.m.
What Makes a Critic? Yohanca Delgado, Jonathan Leal, Antonio López, Ricardo Jaramillo and
Maisie WiltshireGordon, moderated by Heather Partington
When Goodreads reviews and social media takedowns outnumber dwindling book review publications, what role does professional criticism still play and how can aspiring critics best prepare to engage in the literary discourse? In this session, recent National Book Critics Circle Emerging Critics will discuss what the next generation of book critics will bring to the table. In
Laurie R. King, mystery writer and Noir at the Bar veteran. “Short pieces, definitely, and sometimes dark — but they can also be edgy or richly imagined or clever or sexy or absurdly funny. Ideally, a Noir at the Bar evening has a gathering of authors whose readings cover the full gamut of entertainment.”
Then, at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, a selection of 15 talented readers from the Lit Camp writers’ confer
ence will close out the San Francisco Chronicle Stage lineup with a series of nomorethan3minute pieces on the theme, “Unreliable Narrator.”
Lit Camp founder Janis Cooke Newman suggests what the audience can expect: “Stories about con artists, liars and people we just don’t trust? You get a reading that’s fast, funny, sometimes heartfelt and never, never boring.”
partnership with the National Book Critics Circle. (Residence Inn Ballroom 2)
Craft Chats: A Child’s Perspective: Keenan Norris, Pilar Quintana, and Margaret Verble, moderated by Ethel Rohan
It’s undeniable that we were all once children, but that doesn’t mean it’s child’s play for writers to center the voice and perspective of a child or teen without veering into oversimplification or preciousness. In this craftfocused session, we’ll engage with the works of three writers who excel at the task: Keenan Norris (“Lustre”), Margaret Verble (“Stealing”) and Pilar Quintana (“Abyss”).
With support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria.
(Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Poetry and the Archives of History: Anthony Cody and Paisley Rekdal, moderated by Tess Taylor Many of us, when faced by stacks of dusty documents or
faded photographs, might leave the work to the archivists. We’ll hear from those who instead look at archives and envision poetry.
Poet Paisley Rekdal (“West: A Translation”) and Anthony Cody (“Borderland Apocrypha”) collage photographs, maps, newspaper clippings and other ephemera with their own thoroughly contemporary voices. (The Marsh Cabaret)
1:45 p.m.
Picturing Lives: Picture Book Biographies: Angela Dalton, Marni Fogelson, Susan B. Katz and Emma Bland Smith, moderated by Amy MidanikBlum
Critic Leonard Marcus has called the recent wave of new picture book biographies “a vibrant publishing phenomenon,” doing important work to address historical imbalances in representation — all while telling vital, surprising stories! In this session that’s appropriate for parents, teachers and young readers alike,
we’ll delve into this exciting world of picture book biographies, where early readers can learn about the lives of trailblazing artists and revolutionaries through a marriage of colors, shapes and prose. All ages. (Berkeley Public Library - Community Meeting Room)
2 p.m.
Science Fiction: Space Exploration: Mary Robinette Kowal, Annalee Newitz and Megan O’Keefe, moderated by Evette Davis
Take off for the far reaches of the galaxy via three very different, but equally fascinating, stories of space exploration written by superb storytellers: festival favorite Annalee Newitz’s “The Terraformers,” Hugo and Nebula Award winner Mary Robinette Kowal’s scifi mystery “The Spare Man” and Megan E. O’Keefe’s space opera “The Blighted Stars.” Set your course for this voyage into the depths of space and the heights of
imagination. (Freight & Salvage)
Fiction: Across Cultures: Jamil Jan Kochai, Marie Myung-Ok Lee and Susanne Pari, moderated by Lance Knobel Stories transcend borders, build bridges across cultural divides and foster empathy. Join Marie MyungOk Lee (“The Evening Hero”), Jamil Jan Kochai (“The Haunting of Hajji Hotak and Other Stories”) and Susanne Pari
(“In the Time of Our History”) to explore themes of identity, displacement and the impact of historical events on individual lives. With the support of SACHI. (The Marsh - Theater)
Historical Fiction: The American West: Rina Ayuyang, Kali Fajardo-Anstine and Jane Smiley, moderated by Blaise Zerega
The sweeping landscapes of
the American West offer writers a broad canvas on which to set epic stories. Three masterful storytellers will transport us through the rich and complex history of California and Colorado as only the best fiction can: Rina Ayuyang (“The Man in the McIntosh Suit”), Kali FajardoAnstine (“Woman of Light”) and Jane Smiley (“A Dangerous Business”). With support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria. (The Magnes)
Romantic Roadblocks: Lily Chu, Claire Kann, Amy Spalding and Taleen Voskuni, moderated by Jasmine Guillory
In contemporary romantic comedies, creative roadblocks make the journey to Happily Ever After endlessly entertaining and the destination that much sweeter. Jasmine Guillory (“Drunk on Love”) will guide us safely down that bumpy road to true love with Continues on S8
From page S7
Amy Spalding (“For Her Consideration”), Taleen Voskuni (“Sorry, Bro”), Claire Kann (“The Romantic Agenda”) and Lily Chu (“The Comeback”). (Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Words and Pictures: Gabriela Hasbun, George McCalman and Joshua Teal, hosted by Mark Murrmann
Immerse yourself in striking visual artworks and the stories behind them in this hour devoted to the art of the illustrated book, from arresting images of Black heroes and cowboys to contemporary artwork inspired by dance. Sponsored by HarperOne. (Brower Center Goldman Theater)
2:30 p.m.
Flash Fiction America: Patricia Quintana Bidar, KMing Chang, Arlene Eisenberg, Molly Giles, Nicole Simonsen and Kara Vernor, hosted by Kirstin Chen, Jane Ciabattari and Grant Faulkner
There’s an art to writing a (very) short story, one that includes a captivating opening, a dynamic middle and a surprising ending — often using fewer words than we’re including in this session description. We’ve brought several authors of flash fiction together for a big celebration of small stories. (Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Pursuing the Impossible: Poetry and the Art of Translation: Forrest Gander and Olivia E. Sears, moderated by CJ Evans Voltaire once claimed, “It is impossible to translate poetry. Can you translate music?” If that’s true, these talented translators have certainly achieved the impossible — in this session, they’ll share insights into how they did so. Olivia Sears (“Simultaneities and Lyric Chemisms”) and Forrest Gander (“Names and Rivers”) will read from their translations and also engage in conversation about the challenges and rewards poetry grants the translator. Spon
sored by Reed Schmidt, with the support of Center for the Art of Translation. (The Marsh Cabaret)
3:30 p.m.
Tasting History: A Delicious Journey Through the Past: Max Miller, interviewed by Brian Watt
If you’ve ever read Dickens and asked yourself, “What is gruel, anyway?” or wondered what would have been served at Macbeth’s infamous feast, this session is for you. Perhaps, if you’re among Max Miller’s 1.65 million YouTube followers on his channel Tasting History, you already know the answers to these questions — now Miller has compiled his ceaseless culinary curiosity into a beautifully illustrated new volume for the rest of us. Satiate your appetite for historical oddities in this lively session! (Freight & Salvage)
Red Team Blues: Cory Doctorow, interviewed by Glynn Washington
In cybersecurity, the red team plays attack; the blue team plays defense. Martin Hench, the protagonist of Cory Doctorow’s latest too close to home for comfort thriller, “Red Team Blues,” was born to play attack. Doctorow’s novels are always feasts for the imagination, and this one is no different. It’s jampacked with cuttingedge ideas, twists and turns and characters you won’t be able to not care about. (The Marsh Theater)
Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction: Jessica Johns, Nick Medina, Marcie R. Rendon and Margaret Verble, moderated by Melissa Stoner
How do these Native American and First Nations writers incorporate historical and current crises — such as the disappearances of Native women or the atrocities of child separation — into their work? And how does their fiction shape perceptions of contemporary Indigenous communities among Native and nonNative audiences alike? With support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria and the Consulate General of Canada San
Francisco/Silicon Valley. (The Magnes)
True Stories: Northern California: Andrew Alden and Clare Frank, hosted by John King Northern California is home to countless compelling stories — in this session, authors of nonfiction books — Andrew Alden (“Deep Oakland”) and Clare Frank (“Burnt”) — each get 12 minutes to share one with you. (Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Crossing the Finish Line: New Books from SJSU MFA Faculty, Steinbeck Fellows, and Students: Rita Cameron, Carmen Kennedy, Amanda Mei Kim, J. Michael Martinez and Keenan Norris, moderated by Alan Soldofsky
How do you make it across the finish line to publication? Five San José State University faculty members, students and Steinbeck Fellows with new or forthcoming books will retrace their own publication journeys and inspire you to chase your second (or third) wind in a session that offers equal parts practical advice and writerly motivation. Sponsored by the Department of English and Comparative Literature at San José State University. (Residence Inn Ballroom 2)
4 p.m.
Hidden Histories: Dorothee Elmiger and Jori Lewis, moderated by Ariana Proehl
After attending this session, you’ll never again view your lunchtime PB&J or that spoonful of sugar in your morning coffee in quite the same way. Jori Lewis (“Slaves for Peanuts”) reveals the long and tortured story of the peanut’s entanglement with human bondage. Swiss author Dorothee Elmiger’s (“Out of the Sugar Factory”) protagonist is an archivist, an obsessive collector of objects related to the violent history of the global sugar trade. With the support of Center for the Art of Translation. (Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
5:30 p.m.
Noir at the Bar: Rina Ayuyang, Margot Douaihy, Mary Robinette Kowal, T. Jefferson Parker, Kwei Quartey and Marcie R. Rendon, emceed by Randal Brandt
The sun might not set until 8 p.m. this time of year, but a stellar lineup of mystery and thriller writers will cast some shadowy thrills on your evening — and maybe a dirty martini will help set the mood, too. Sponsored by Mystery Writers of AmericaNorCal with support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria. (Cornerstone Berkeley)
7:30 p.m.
An Evening with Joan Baez: Trailblazing Musician, Artist, and Activist: Joan Baez, interviewed by Greg Sarris
Renowned for her impressive
natural instrument, her accomplished interpretive skills and her focus on social justice issues and communitybuilding, Joan Baez is a household name and a hero to millions. You may not know that she is also an accomplished painter and has exhibited her artwork in galleries and museums around the world. Her new collection shows another side of her artistry: lovingly loose and charming sketches on themes she has always found important, such as politics, relationships, women and family. Come celebrate Baez’s celebrated career while also glimpsing a whimsical new side of this living legend. Presented by Visit Berkeley. (Freight & Salvage) TICKETS: $15 while supplies last
Sunday, May 7
11 a.m.
Bet on Black: Eboni K. Williams, interviewed by Rae Ingram Eboni K. Williams was the first Black cast member on “The Real Housewives of New York City.” You may not take the show seriously, but Williams proves that is exactly how she should be taken. In “Bet on Black, “she invites readers to join her on a quest to show the world what Black excellence really means. (San Francisco Chronicle Stage)
Chokepoint Capitalism: Cory Doctorow, interviewed by Wendy Liu
Renowned scifi author and activist Cory Doctorow has come to the festival to tell a story that we sure wish was fiction. Do you know what the royalties are for the authors with books at this festival, or how much musicians get paid every time you play their songs on Spotify? How exactly are those few dollars and pennies calculated? Prepare to be fascinated, informed, shocked and activated by this discussion. (Freight & Salvage)
The Art of Suspense: Katy Hays, Marcie R. Rendon and Brendan Slocumb, moderated by Laurie R. King
Not even the rarified realms of art are safe in the imaginations of these writers, where intrigue lurks even in the concert hall or the museum: Brendan Slocumb (“Symphony of Secrets”), Marcie R. Rendon (“Sinister Graves”) and Katy Hays (“The Cloisters”), with moderator Laurie R. King (“Back to the Garden”). With support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria. (The Marsh Theater)
Finding Nature, Saving Time: Maddalena Bearzi and Jenny Odell, moderated by Alexis Madrigal
Join Jenny Odell (“Saving Time: Discovering a Life Beyond the Clock”) and Maddalena Bearzi (“Stranded: Finding Nature in Uncertain Times”) in conversation on the nature of time and how we measure it. This session will elicit both deep noticing and profound reflection. (The Magnes)
Places Worth Fighting For: Preserving Public Lands: Jerry Emory, Dean King and McKenzie Long, moderated by Toby McLeod
Place is political, especially when defining and defending public lands. Three fascinating stories of places worth fighting for — and the people committed to preserving them: Dean King (“Guardians of the Valley”), Jerry Emory (“George Meléndez Wright”) and McKenzie Long (“This Contested Land”) will introduce some of the most stunning — and storied — American public lands. (Brower Center Goldman Theater)
11:30 a.m.
Craft Chats: Writing Literary Humor: Kathryn Ma, Cecilia Rabess and Erik Tarloff, moderated by Michael Shapiro
They say it’s easier to make people cry than to make them laugh — in this craftfocused session, we’ll put that theory to the test with three authors who effectively deploy humor in their recent and forthcoming novels: Erik Tarloff (“Tell Me the Truth About Love”), Kathryn Ma (“The Chinese Groove”) and Cecilia Rabess (“Everything’s Fine”). (Residence Inn Ballroom 2)
Memoir: The Meaning of Home: Vanessa A. Bee, Camille Dungy and Kathryn Savage, moderated by Kristin Keane
Thoughtful considerations of home blend the authors’ intimate perspectives with broader questions of racial and economic injustice, ecological harm, housing insecurity and other systemic crises: Camille Dungy (“Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden”), Vanessa A. Bee (“Home Bound: An Uprooted Daughter’s Reflections on Belonging”) and Kathryn Savage (“Groundglass”). (Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies: In Exile from Tibet: Tsering Yangzom Lama, interviewed by
Cherilyn ParsonsWe’re fortunate that awardwinning TibetanCanadian writer Tsering Yangzom Lama is joining us to discuss her gorgeous, fascinating debut novel,
“We Measure the Earth with our Bodies.” With the support of the Consulate General of Canada San Francisco/Silicon Valley. (The Marsh Cabaret) 12:30 p.m.
A(lexandra) P(etri’s) US History: Alexandra Petri, interviewed by Joe Garofoli Alexandra Petri is no stranger to making history she became the youngestever columnist for the Washington Post. Now she casts her withering glance backward, compiling “historical fan fiction” that includes essential chronicles such as John and Abigail Adams’s experiments in sexting. This uproarious conversation will give you a brandnew way to look (and laugh) at our nation’s complicated past. (San Francisco Chronicle Stage)
Forgiveness, Reconciliation, and Reckoning: V (formerly Eve Ensler), interviewed by Deirdre English Perhaps you’re most familiar with V as the Tony Awardwinning playwright of groundbreaking works. Or maybe you’ve been inspired by V’s global activist movement. These intersections of art and activism are the places V explores most movingly in her new memoir “Reckoning.” Come for a conversation as wideranging and multifaceted as the
book itself. (Freight & Salvage)
Fiction: Mothers & Daughters: Ramona Ausubel, Mary Otis and Margaret Wilkerson Sexton, moderated by Jasmin Darznik Relationships between mothers and daughters can be fraught or fruitful — especially for fiction writers. In Margaret Wilkerson Sexton’s “On the Rooftop,” a mother gradually realizes
that her talented daughters might not share her ambitions. In Mary Otis’s “Burst,” a single mother mourns her own squandered artistic promise. And in Ramona Ausubel’s “The Last Animal,” two squabbling teen sisters and their recently widowed mother rediscover one another. With the support of California College of the Arts MFA Writing program. (The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Fiction: Encounters with Myths and Spirits: KMing Chang, Kali FajardoAnstine and Brandon Hobson, moderated by Rita ChangEppig
In these accomplished writers’ fiction, the boundaries between the spirit world and the “real world” grow porous or indiscernible, in ways that expand realities and excite readers’ imaginations. Join KMingChang (“The Gods of Want”), Kali FajardoAnstine (“Woman of Light”) and Brandon Hobson (“The Removed”). With support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria. (The Magnes)
Memoir: In Search of Our Fathers: Leslie Absher, Eric Newton and Leta Seletzky, moderated by Sylvia Brownrigg
We often find ourselves looking back on our
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parents’ lives to understand our own place in the world. Join authors Leslie Absher (“Spy Daughter, Queer Girl”), Leta Seletzky (“The Kneeling Man”) and Eric Newton (“Circle Way” by Mary Ann Hogan) through this excavation into how the lives of our fathers may offer insight into our own. (Residence Inn Ballroom 1)
How to Create Real Change: David Fenton, interviewed by Monika Bauerlein
How can activists create social change today? For starters, they need to be really good storytellers. David Fenton, one of the most effective progressive communicators of the past 50 years, has penned a remarkable book — part rollercoaster memoir, part guidebook — that distills lessons from his experience shaping some of history’s most impactful social movements. (Brower Center Goldman Theater)
1 p.m.
Fiction: At Play on the Page: Mark Ciabattari, Katie Hafner and Peter Hoey, moderated by Heather Scott Partington
Mark Ciabattari’s most recent collection recounting the absurdist adventures of an everyman is entitled “When the Mask Slips.”
Peter Hoey’s graphic novel “The Bend of Luck” depicts an historic version of California in which prospectors pan for luck, not gold. And debut novelist Katie Hafner, in “The Boys,” cleverly manages a gamechanging plot twist, prompting readers to view her characters and their world in a heartbreakingly different light.
(Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Even If Everything Ends: Jens Liljestrand, interviewed by John Freeman
Be one of the first U.S. readers to meet the author of a novel that’s sweeping the globe: Jens Liljestrand with his debut “Even If Everything Ends,” one of the fiercest and most profoundly human of the climate novels we’ve ever read. Sponsored by
the Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation and the Consulate General of Sweden in San Francisco. (The Marsh Cabaret)
2 p.m.
Bay Curious: Olivia AllenPrice, interviewed by Peter Hartlaub and Heather Knight
In this suretobelively session, Olivia AllenPrice, host of the “Bay Curious” podcast and its new book spinoff, will chat with two fellow journalists whose curiosity about and love for the Bay Area rivals AllenPrice’s own: Peter Hartlaub and Heather Knight of the San Francisco Chronicle’s Total SF podcast. Bring your burning questions, or the Bay Area secrets you’ve been dying to share! (San Francisco Chronicle Stage)
Rest Is Resistance: Tricia Hersey, interviewed by Ashara Ekundayo
In the instant New York Times bestseller “Rest is Resistance: A Manifesto,” Tricia Hersey, aka The Nap Bishop, shows us how to connect to the liberating power of rest, daydreaming and naps as a foundation for healing and justice. (Freight & Salvage)
Bridging the Distance: Nicole Chung, interviewed by Brooke Warner
Nicole Chung follows up her exquisite debut “All You Can Ever Know” with a wrenching memoir, “A Living Remedy,” written in the wake of her mother’s death from cancer in the midst of the COVID19 pandemic. Readers will find both sorrow and solace in her openhearted new book. Sponsored by She Writes Press. (The Marsh Theater)
Echoes of Exclusion: Ava Chin, Fae Myenne Ng and Paisley Rekdal, moderated by Kathryn Ma
The Chinese exclusion era started in 1882 and ended some 60 years later, but its echoes still reverberate. Fae Myenne Ng’s memoir “Orphan Bachelors” recounts her years growing up in San Francisco’s Chinatown. In “West: A Translation,” poet Paisley Rekdal vividly documents how
the transcontinental railroad is intertwined with Chinese exclusion. And in “Mott Street,” Ava Chin vividly narrates the painstaking process of tracing generations of her family and legacy of resilience. (The Magnes)
An Epic Journey from Slavery to Freedom: Ilyon Woo, interviewed by Dorothy Lazard Scholars of American history have uncovered and recounted countless remarkable stories of the courage and resourcefulness of enslaved and formerly enslaved people. But it’s no exaggeration to say that the one Ilyon Woo relates in “Master Slave Husband Wife” is, as Imani Perry writes, “one of the most important stories of American slavery and freedom.” Join accomplished researcher and brilliant storyteller Ilyon Woo for an unforgettable journey.” (Residence Inn Ballroom 1)
Poetry and Fiction: The Artist’s Influence: Selby Wynn Schwartz and Brenda Shaughnessy, moderated by Susan Griffin
Selby Wynn Schwartz’s “After Sappho,” a paean to early 20thcentury feminist creatives and their muse, has received global accolades from the Booker judges and beyond. This network of support and inspiration finds echoes in Brenda Shaughnessy’s latest collection “Tanya.” Here, the awardwinning poet draws
and modern, lurking around her reservation’s casino. And in “They Hide,” Francesca Maria sets her tales of vampires, ghouls and the devil in settings that include colonial New England and prerevolutionary France. With support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria and the Consulate General of Canada San Francisco/Silicon Valley. (The Marsh Cabaret)
3:30 p.m.
out her own sources of inspiration, both personal and intellectual. Join these phenomenally gifted writers for a conversation across time and genre. (Brower Center Goldman Theater)
2:30 p.m.
Parable of the Sower Turns 30: Ashia Ajani, Aya de Leon and Camille Dungy, moderated by Devin T. Murphy 2023 marks the 30th anniversary of Octavia Butler’s novel, which has only grown more relevant over the past three decades. Two poets (Ashia Ajani and Camille Dungy) and a novelist (Aya de Leon) will discuss the power of Octavia Butler’s prophetic parables, placing their own writing in her lineage connecting climate justice and racial justice. (Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Horror: History That Goes Bump in the Night: Jessica Johns, Francesca Maria and Nick Medina, moderated by Ben Monroe
History — both personal and otherwise — comes back to haunt the living in these chilling tales of psychological and mythological horror. In Jessica Johns’s “Bad Cree,” a young woman can manifest dreams and nightmares in the waking world. In “Sisters of the Lost Nation,” debut author Nick Medina’s character confronts the horrors, both ancient
Lit Camp Presents: Unreliable Narrator: Hosted by Keli Dailey and Janis Cooke Newman Fifteen writers read nomorethan3minute pieces written especially for the festival on our theme … Unreliable Narrator: Stories about con artists, liars, and people we just don’t trust. Hosted by Lit Camp founder Janis Cooke Newman and storyteller and performer Keli Dailey. In partnership with Lit Camp. (San Francisco Chronicle Stage)
Poetry at the End of the World: Anthony Cody, CJ Evans, John Freeman, Saeed Jones and Tess Taylor, moderated by Sam Sax Join this powerpacked panel of poets — Anthony Cody (“The Rendering”), CJ Evans (“Lives”), John Freeman (“Wind, Trees”), Saeed Jones (“Alive at the End of the World”) and Tess Taylor (“Rift Zone”) — to explore themes of apocalypse, survival and hope — because celebrating in the face of the end is a testament to the human spirit, an act of defiance against despair, a tribute to life and the poetic thing to do. (Freight & Salvage)
Unraveling: Peggy Orenstein Spins a Yarn about Yarn … and Life: Peggy Orenstein, interviewed by Sylvia Brownrigg Sourdough? Puppies? What were your survival strategies as the pandemic unraveled your life? Journalist Peggy Orenstein, revered for her provocative writing about the cultural pressures on young people, embarked on a wild and woolley (literally) project. A lifelong knitter, she set out to
Celebrating and protecting the Earth has long been an important theme for authors, and the topic has been a cornerstone for the Bay Area Book Festival since its founding. In the festival’s ongoing commitment to showcase the brilliant voices of writers engaging with nature and the environment, the lineup for 2023 welcomes prominent contributors to genres spanning fiction, creative nonfiction, poetry, history, memoirs, children’s books and more.
Schedule your festival experience around some of these standout sessions: “The Beauty and Urgency of Nature Writing” (11 a.m. May 6)
Three talents come together in united themes of this magical world we live in. In their inventive volume, Tom Comitta (“The Nature Book”)invites readers to really pay attention to lyrical nature writing, lacing together stunning examples from 300 Englishlanguage novels into a narrative honoring flora, fauna, weather and geology. By combining excerpts from great writers of the ages through their own artistic vision, Comitta creates what one critic has
called, “A magnum opus about the planet.”
“I’m interested in what this session might reveal about how we relate to the natural world, for both our virtues and imaginative limits,” they said. “My own nature writing is a hybrid study and story of how authors have beheld, distorted and spoken through nature — animals, plants, landforms, weather patterns since people started writing novels.”
Fellow author Erica Berry (“Wolfish: Wolf, Self, and the Stories We Tell About Fear”) penned a fascinating combination of memoir, criticism, science and history to understand our myths about wolves. In a yearslong journey, she tracks one legendary wolf, OR7, from the Wallowa Mountains of Oregon. In the layered tale, Berry nimbly details her own comingofage as she moves away from home and wrestles with inherited beliefs about fear, danger, femininity and the body.
Animals are also the focus for Talia Lakshmi Kolluri (“What We Fed to the Manticore”)with a collection of nine stories each told from the point of view of a different animal. We engage in perspectives of man
eating tigers or a hound tasked with guarding one of the world’s last remaining white rhinos, all exploring themes of environmentalism, conservation, identity, belonging, loss and family.
A manticore, by the way, is a legendary animal with the head of a man, the body of a lion and the tail of a dragon or scorpion.
“Finding Nature, Saving Time” (11 a.m. May 7 )
Time is precious, and also frightening for many people — there is too little, too much, and it can be too confusing. New York Times bestselling author Jenny Odell (“Saving Time: Discovering a Life Beyond the Clock”), explores the idea that the clock we live by was built for profit, not people, telling us time is money and often leading us to existential dread. She argues that embracing a new concept of time can open us up to bold, hopeful possibilities by imagining a real life, identity and source of meaning.
The pandemic, meanwhile, struck author Maddalena Bearzihard, confronting her with struggles of hopelessness and a forced, new way of life away from her beloved work studying marine animals. In “Stranded: Finding Nature in Un
Aspiring authors are never too young to pursue their craft. Entertaining and educational youth sessions are popular at the Bay Area Book Festival, and the celebration of nature and the environment shines for writers of all ages. All are invited to attend, from preteen to older adult scribes.
“The Eyes and the Impossible” (11 a.m. May 6)
Dave Eggers has been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award and is the recipient of the Dayton Literary Peace Prize and the American Book Award. His latest creation — a collaboration with Caldecott Honor winner artist Shawn Harris — is an illustrated novel for absolutely everyone.
Harris’s fullcolor paintings accompany Eggers’s wildly imaginative, emotionally resonant story that offers both gentle humor and profound musings about freedom, mortality and the responsibilities of a community toward one another.
certain Times,”she shares how she rechanneled her energies into observing the squirrels, possums, wasps and coyotes in her neighborhood. This helped her slow down, calm down, find new daily joy and courage. “Memoir: The Meaning of Home” (11:30 a.m. May 7)
“I’m a writer interested in the ways that people become entangled with places,” author Kathryn Savage said. “Home is a vast and dynamic concept to me, one that relates to family and also to ecologies.”
In her “Groundglass: An Essay,” home is set atop a polluted aquifer in Minnesota, beside trains that haul fracked crude oil, as Savage confronts the transgressions of U.S. Superfund sites. The horror is personal to her: she grew up near such a site,
and her father died from cancer.
Joining the stage is National Book Critics Circle Criticism finalist Camille Dungy (“Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden”). Here, she relates the puzzlingmaddening restrictions she found on planting a garden in the predominantly white community of Fort Collins, Colo., and how it became a sevenyear odyssey to finally be able to raise the plants, herbs, vegetables and flowers she loves.
Lawyer and essayist Vanessa A. Bee also presents “Home Bound: An Uprooted Daughter’s Reflections on Belonging,” chronicling her extraordinary upbringing and yearning for a secure home. From her birth in Cameroon, Africa, to her adoption by
her aunt and her aunt’s white French husband, to experiencing housing insecurity in Europe and her eventual immigration to the U.S., she finally settled in Reno, Nev., as a teenager, right around the financial crisis and the collapse of the housing market.
“Parable of the Sower Turns 30” (2:30 p.m. May 7) 2023 marks the 30th anniversary of Octavia Butler’s novel “Parable of the Sower,”a compelling postapocalyptic fiction novel on climate change and social inequality. In this session, poets Camille Dungy and Ashia Ajani, as well as novelist Aya de Leon, discuss the power of Butler’s prophetic vision and how her insight brings greater meaning to their own works on climate and racial justice.
An iconic singersongwriter and social justice advocate will share stories of her manifold creative life in “An Evening with Joan Baez: Trailblazing Musician, Artist, and Activist,”the keynote session of the Bay Area Book Festival at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 6.
Following the April publication of Baez’s art book, “Am I Pretty When I Fly: An Album of Upside Down Drawings,”the highly anticipated event at Freight & Salvage in Berkeley is one of only two festival sessions that requires tickets, with free admission to the nearly 100 others.
Although Baez retired from performing in 2019, she continues to explore politics and relationships, among other recurring themes, in her line drawings. Her book organizes them in sections, each with an introductory essay by Baez.
“The pages come alive, taking readers on a pictorial trip through Baez’s life,” according to a starred Kirkus review. “By gracefully walking a fine line between bluntforce honesty and flights of fancy, the book is satisfying, enjoyable, and rewarding … fans and newcomers alike will appreciate this intimate look into Baez’s unique artistry.”
You can count novelist Greg Sarris, tribal chairman of the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria and professor of creative writing at Sonoma State University,as one of those fans. The author of a 2022 memoir, “Becoming Story: A Journey Among Seasons, Places, Trees, and Ancestors,” Sarris is also a longtime friend of Baez and will join her onstage in conversation about
finally met his mentor.
ADULT AND ALLAGES SCHEDULE SUNDAY, MAY 7 CHILDREN AND TEEN SCHEDULE SATURDAY, MAY 6
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her art and activism.
“Joan gave me the inspiration to make my dreams come true,” Sarris said.
Adopted at birth after the death of his mother, Sarris notes he grew up in Santa Rosa as “kind of a lost kid on the streets” before discovering Baez’s music in high school in the late ’60s.
“It touched me like nothing else at that time, and she became a role model,” Sarris recalled. “I wanted to do good, as a teacher or whatever I would become, just as this remarkable woman had used her voice to do good and put herself on the line. She influenced me and was an icon in American culture and history. I tell my students, many of whom had no idea who she was or is, that she was bigger than Beyoncé, she was on the cover of Time, she was enormous.”
Seeing Baez in concert at Stanford University while he was in high school and working a construction job in Menlo Park inspired Sarris to pursue higher education. He eventually earned a doctorate in modern thought and literature from Stanford and three years later, in 1992, he became chair of Graton Rancheria for the first of 15 consecutive terms. Some two decades after that, he
“It was a chance meeting at a concert, and we had a mutual friend who’s an American Indian, and we sat down for a dinner at Buck’s over Impossible Burgers,” Sarris says. “I heard her story and listened to her and talked to her and understood where her music came from, its pain and complexity. I understood more why I was attracted to her music and her legacy at that time and all my life.”
He and Baez are now “very, very close,” said Sarris, who helped convince his tribe to produce “Joan Baez: I Am a Noise,” a biographical documentary that premiered in Berlin in February and recently screened at the San Francisco Film Festival. Sarris also looks forward to introducing festival goers to Baez’s visual artistry, which includes starting line drawings upside down and often with her nondominant hand.
“Her talents are amazing. She’s been drawing since she was a child,” Sarris noted. “She was drawing before she was singing. Many of these upsidedown drawings she had stuck all over or hid them away.”
Noting that songwriting is “a form of literature,” Cherilyn Parsons, the Bay Area Book Festival founder and executive director, finds a special harmony in Baez’s appearance at the festival.
“She has been such a figure in the social justice movement, which lines up with what Berkeley cares about and is the book festival’s own identity,” Parsons said. “We are known for our attention to social justice, and she has been a standard bearer for that. Her literature her songs — very much express that.”
make her own sweater from scratch — starting with shearing the sheep. (The Magnes)
Mysteries and Thrillers: Dangerous Destinations: Margot Douaihy, Catriona McPherson, T. Jefferson Parker and Kwei Quartey, moderated by Jim L’Etoile
Get ready to pack your bags — but keep an eye on your passport, your valuables and your own neck because the global destinations depicted in these mysteries and thrillers are positively perilous! We’ll hear from Margot Douaihy (“Scorched Grace”), Catriona McPherson (“The Mirror Dance”), T. Jefferson Parker (“The Rescue”) and Kwei Quartey (“Last Seen in Lapaz”). Sponsored by Mystery Writers of AmericaNorCal. (Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids: Angeline Boulley, Alexis Bunten, Laurel Goodluck, Brandon Hobson, Andrea L. Rogers and Brian Young, moderated by Melissa Stoner
The publishing industry is finally starting to catch up to the dazzling talents of Native American creators of books for children. In this session, we’ll hear from six awardwinning authors for youth. They’ll discuss their own journeys toward publication, the state of publishing for Native American creators and the audiences they hope to reach with their work. All ages. With support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria. (Word Power Stage)
4 p.m.
Alice Wong: An Activist’s
Life: Alice Wong, interviewed by Yomi Sachiko Wrong
Alice Wong has been at the forefront of the disability justice movement for years. Her multimedia memoir “Year of the Tiger” traces her identity as the child of immigrants from Hong Kong and as a person living with progressive muscular dystrophy — through essays, fiction and artwork she creates an entirely original volume that lies at the intersections of memoir and manifesto. (Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Love on the Run: Marie Lu, in conversation with Alisha Rai
Falling in love is always a rush — even more so if you and your sexy sidekick are being chased by mobsters … or chasing them down yourselves. Talented authors Marie Lu (“Stars and Smoke”) and Alisha Rai (“Partners in Crime”) really ramp up the adrenaline and the attraction — one way or another, this session will have your heart racing! With the support of SACHI.
(Goldman Theater)
5:30 p.m.
Do the Work! How You
Can Take Action Against Racism: W. Kamau Bell and Kate Schatz
In their new book, comedian W. Kamau Bell and activist Kate Schatz deliver a packedtothegills guide to “dismantling white supremacy in America’’ that humorously implores you to get involved. Truly thoughtprovoking, this colorfully illustrated, eyeopening, deeply informative, interactive workbook gives you, the reader, a handson understanding of systemic racism. It reads as a casual back and forth between the authors; in this session Bell and Schatz invite you into the conversation. Are you ready to get started? Sponsored by Visit Berkeley. (Freight & Salvage) TICKETS: $15 while supplies last
11 a.m.
The Eyes and the Impossible: Dave Eggers and Shawn Harris Is there anything Dave Eggers can’t do? The multitalented juggernaut’s latest project — a collaboration with artist Shawn Harris — is an illustrated novel about trust, community responsibility — and one very fast dog. You’ll want to make it
your next readaloud — no matter your age. Sponsored by Reading Group Choices. (Freight & Salvage)
You Will Do Great Things: Amerie
This multitalented dynamo made a name for herself in the realms of music performance, songwriting and book publishing. Inspired by her own family history and family stories, Amerie’s debut picture book takes readers on a journey through the imagination. This mesmerizing, uplifting reading is the perfect way to kick off your family’s book festival weekend! Ages 48. (Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Seen and Unseen: New Glimpses of Japanese Incarceration: Elizabeth Partridge in conversation with Maggie TokudaHall
Through stories, artwork and illustration, Elizabeth Partridge (“Seen and Unseen”) raises important questions about who’s allowed to tell what stories, and how; about the ways in which history is shaped and remembered; and about how those in power shape narratives to suit their own ends. Partridge will be in conversation with Maggie TokudaHall, who tells yet another story of Japanese incarceration — this one about her grandparents’ courtship. All ages. (Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
The Art of Brevity: A Flash Fiction Writing Workshop: Kim Culbertson and Grant Faulkner
If you’ve dreamed of writing fiction but don’t know where to start, may we make a suggestion?
Start with a (very) short story! NaNoWriMo exec
utive director Grant Faulkner (“The Art of Brevity”) and author and
educator Kim Culbertson (“Small, Bright Things”) will combine their expertise with your inspiration in a fastpaced flash fiction workshop perfect for teens and adults. Pack your pencils and your creativity—we can’t wait to see what you dream up! (Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
Special All-Day Event: Where’s Waldo?
Scavenger Hunt
That tricky Waldo has been hiding in plain sight for more than 35 years — now he’s in Berkeley and sneaking around our book festival! Can you find him? Search upstairs, downstairs and behind bookshelves to see if you can spot Waldo in the Berkeley Public Library! Fill out a card with your finds, and you might win a prize! (Berkeley Public Library)
11:45 a.m.
Story Time: Imagine That!: Tiffany Golden, Mary Robinette Kowal, Nina LaCour and Monica
Wesolowska
Have you ever wished you could fly or live in outer space? In this story time session all about the power of the imagination, you can! Join Oaklandbased writer Tiffany Golden (“I Want to Be Big!”), NYT bestselling author Monica Wesolowska (“El
bert in the Air”), Printz Awardwinning author Nina LaCour (“My Friend, Loonie”) and acclaimed scifi author Mary Robinette Kowal (“Molly on the Moon”). Ages 37. (Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
12:15 p.m.
One Story, Unlimited Possibilities: A Choose Your Own Adventure Workshop: Lily Simonson If crafting the perfect ending is the hardest part of writing a story, how do you come up with more than two dozen? How can you keep readers moving
forward through your story or excited to start over again if they fall into a crevasse or get eaten by aliens? Find out how to choose your topic, map your story and more! As for the endings … well, that will be up to you! All ages. (Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
Middle Grade: Cast a Spell: Marti Dumas, Claire Kann, Claribel A. Ortega and Alexandra Overy This one’s for the potion makers, spellcasters and broom riders! NYT best
selling author Claribel A. Ortega dives into action with “The Golden Frog Games.” In Alexandra Overy’s “The Gingerbread Witch,” her protagonist embarks on a journey through the menacing Shadelands. Matchmaking magic abounds in Claire Kann’s “Harmony and Heartbreak” and author Marti Dumas merges real life with fantasy in “Charmed Life.” Ages 813. (Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
12:30 p.m.
Maurene Goo: Throwback: Maurene Goo
What would you do if you traveled back in time to the 1990s … and met your mother when she was a teenager? Joined by a motherdaughter duo of interviewers from Cinnamongirl, Inc., awardwinning author Maurene Goo’s “Throwback,” a heartfelt exploration of family, identity and love across the decades, is the perfect choice for your next motherdaughter book club! Ages 14+. (Residence Inn Ballroom 1)
1 p.m.
Cooking the Books: A Celebration of Picture Books and Food: Charlotte Cheng, Ying Chang Compestine, Shuli de la FuenteLau, Katherine Pryor and Aliza Sokolow Come hungry for this appetizing array of story time readings by authors whose new books are all about everyone’s favorite topic: food! This mouthwatering, supersized session will also feature cooking demos — stop by any time for a taste (and maybe a tasty tidbit or two), or settle in and enjoy a veritable smorgasbord of great stories! Ages 410. (Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
1:30 p.m.
The Magic of Story: Brandon Hobson, Misa Sugiura and Brian Young From breathtaking magic to adrenalinepumping action, this session celebrates the epic power of storytelling! Awardwinning author Brian Young (“Heroes of the Continues on S14
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Water Monster”), National Book Award finalist Brandon Hobson (“The Storyteller”) and acclaimed novelist Misa Sugiura (“Momo Arashima Steals the Sword of the Wind”) will make for an adventurous session. Ages 812. (Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
1:45 p.m.
Picturing Lives: Picture Book Biographies: Angela Dalton, Marni Fogelson, Susan B. Katz and Emma Bland Smith, moderated by Amy MidanikBlum
Critic Leonard Marcus has called the recent wave of new picture book biographies “a vibrant publishing phenomenon,” doing important work to address historical imbalances in representation — all while telling vital stories! In this session that’s appropriate for parents, teachers and young readers alike, we’ll delve into this exciting world of picture book biographies, where early readers can learn about the lives of trailblazing artists and revolutionaries through a marriage of colors, shapes and prose. All ages. (Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
2:45 p.m.
Story Time: Family and Heritage: Liza Ferneyhough, Laurel Goodluck, Minnie Phan, Sandhya Prabhat and Meera
Sriram
Come one, come all for a cozy story time centered on family relationships and selfdiscovery! Bring your whole family to meet the creators of these touching tales: Minnie Phan (“The Yellow Áo Dài”), Meera Sriram and Sandhya Prabhat (“A Garden in My Hands”), Liza Ferneyhough (“Nana, Nenek, and Nina”) and Laurel Goodluck (“Forever Cousins”). With support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria and SACHI. Ages 38. (Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
3:30 p.m.
YA: Haunts and Horrors: Sara Farizan and Andrea L. Rogers
If screams of fear and lurking monsters are right up your (dark and spooky) alley, you’re in luck! In her awardwinning debut collection “Man Made Monsters,” Andrea L. Rogers spins tales of terror, exploring how a Cherokee family navigates the frightening and the familiar across time. Meanwhile, awardwinning author Sara Farizan returns with “Dead Flip,” which tracks a trio of best friends throughout a hairraising mystery as they grapple with their own untold secrets. You won’t want to miss this haunted hour!
Ages 12+. (Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Musical Story Time: Story Time Band
Local celebrities (and librarians!), Berkeley Public Library’s Story Time Band will entertain the youngest festivalgoers and their grownups with a lively mix of live music, movement and stories.
Ages 26. (Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
4:15 p.m.
Bay Area Children’s Theatre
Playtime: Bay Area Children’s Theatre
Join Bay Area Children’s Theatre and internationally beloved “edutainer” Bri Reads for an afternoon of reading, music, and games! Ages 38. (Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
5 p.m.
YA: Falling for Love: Elise Bryant, Lio Min, Alisha Rai and Amy Spalding, moderated by Tiffany Golden
Wrap up your book festival day with this celebration of young love. Featuring Lio Min (“Beating Heart Baby”), Alisha Rai (“While You Were Dreaming”), Elise Bryant (“Reggie and Delilah’s Year of Falling”) and Amy Spalding (“No Boy Summer”). Get ready to swoon! With the support of SACHI. Ages 12+. (Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
11 a.m.
Special All-Day Event: Where’s Waldo? Scavenger Hunt That tricky Waldo has been hiding in plain sight for more than 35 years—now he’s in Berkeley and sneaking around our book festival! Can you find him? We got a tip that he’s made his way to the Outdoor Fair! Search in and around the Family Fun Zone to see if you can spot Waldo—fill out a card with your finds, and you might win a prize!
Spies, Sleuths, and Secrets: Middle-Grade Mysteries: Katryn Bury, Aya de León and Hayley LeBlanc
Undercover missions, jewel thieves and cryptic ransom notes excite your inner sleuth? Join us for a whodunit session of all things detective with authors Aya de León (“Undercover Latina”), Hayley LeBlanc (The Hayley Mysteries series) and Katryn Bury (“Drew Leclair Gets a Clue”) as they clue us into the exciting world of middlegrade mysteries. Ages 712. (Word Power Stage)
Science Comics: The Periodic Table: Jon Chad In the popular Science Comics series, some of the world’s most talented cartoonists bring to life the most amazing scientific and engineering topics, from bats to bridges! In the latest (and perhaps most ambitious) volume, Jon Chad’s hero must use her knowledge of the periodic table to stop a madman’s evil schemes! Then, don your lab coats as the education team from the Lawrence Hall of Science offers a chance to try your hand at the chemistry of color! In partnership with the Lawrence Hall of Science. Ages 812. (Creativity (on) Center)
11:15 a.m.
A Is for Ambitious: Meena Harris In her picture book “Ambitious Girl,” Meena Harris celebrated the ambitions and aspirations of girls and women.
A Cinnamongirl, Inc., author signs books. Book sales and signings will take place after almost every session at this year’s festival.
Book Sales and Signings for Festival Authors Book sales and signings follow nearly every session at the Bay Area Book Festival, with authors signing books and greeting fans outside the venues where their events take place. The festival’s provisioning booksellers will have books available for sale at the following venues throughout the weekend — attendees can stop by anytime during festival hours to browse and purchase books by festival favorites. Many bookstores will have booths in the Sunday Outdoor Fair as well, carrying a variety of festival authors’ books and other popular titles.
Freight & Salvage
• Green Apple Books
Brower Center (Goldman Theater and Tamalpais Room)
• Bookshop West Portal
The Magnes
• Books Inc.
Residence Inn Berkeley (Ballrooms 1 and 2)
• Sausalito Books by the Bay
The Marsh Berkeley (Theater and Cabaret)
• Marcus Books
Now, Harris is back with a bold, assertive new adventure for Ambitious Girl. In “A Is for Ambitious,” characters reclaim words (like “Bossy” and “Wild”) that are used to tear people down — instead, celebrating what those qualities enable us
Berkeley Public Library (Children’s Room, Community Meeting Room, and Teen Room)
• Folio Books
Cornerstone Berkeley
• Pegasus Books
San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park
• Pegasus Books
Youth Outdoor Stages
• Folio Books
to achieve! Bring your loud, emotional, intense selves to this celebration of the alphabet — and ambition! Ages 48. (Young Readers Stage)
11:30 a.m.
A New Thanksgiving Story
(Story Time): Alexis Bunten
This is the inclusive Thanksgiving story today’s parents, teachers and children have been waiting for. Join Alexis Bunten for a Story Time Circle reading followed by a handson project for kids and families in Creativity (on) Center that will reinforce the story’s powerful themes of history and connection. Ages 37. (Story Time Circle)
Noon
Cinnamongirl: Write Your Story
A cohort of girls spent the year honing their voices and their visions, with encouragement and instruction from a faculty of women authors of color. Now they are ready to present their work and read at the Bay Area Book Festival. Cinnamongirl mentors and teaching artists will share the stage with these new rising literary stars as they share stories, insights, and nuggets of inspiration. Ages 10+. (Word Power Stage)
Stories That Let You Choose!: Amy Seto Forrester, Andy Musser, Lily Simonson and Rana Tahir, moderated by Jessica Lee
If you like science, turn to page 27; if you like adventure, turn to page 19; if you like spy novels, turn to page 32. And if you like all of the above? You’re in the right spot! Lily Simonson (“Choose Your Own Adventure: Antarctica”), Rana Tahir (“Choose Your Own Adventure: Stranger Things Heroes and Monsters”) and Andy Musser and Amy Seto Forrester (“Search for a Giant Squid: Pick Your Path”) will reveal how they draw readers in and keep them turning pages … and how they come up with as many as 25 possible endings! Ages 712.
(Young Readers Stage)
A New Thanksgiving Story
(Activity): Alexis Bunten
This is the inclusive Thanksgiving story today’s parents, teachers and children have been waiting for. Join Alexis Bunten for a Story Time Circle reading followed by a handson project
for kids and families in Creativity (on) Center that will reinforce the story’s powerful themes of history and connection. Ages 37. (Creativity (on) Center)
12:15 p.m.
Copycat: NatureInspired Design (Story Time): Christy Hale
How is a housing development like a honeycomb? How is a bullet train like a bird? Christy Hale’s new picture book “Copycat,” filled with fascinating examples of biomimicry, will have you looking at the world — both natural and humanmade — in a whole new way. Join Hale for a Story Time Circle reading of her new book. Ages 59. (Story Time Circle)
12:45 p.m.
Copycat: NatureInspired Design (Activity): Christy Hale
How is a housing development like a honeycomb? How is a bullet train like a bird? Christy Hale’s new picture book “Copycat”, filled with fascinating examples of biomimicry, will have you looking at the world—both natural and humanmade—in a whole new way. Join Hale for an activity for kids and families interested in dreaming up their own natureinspired designs!
Ages 59. (Creativity (on) Center)
1 p.m.
YA: Thriller Superstars: Angeline Boulley, Nick Brooks, Marie Lu, Melissa de la Cruz
This gathering of YA authors is
nothing less than an event. Debut novelist Nick Brooks (“Promise Boys”) joins bestselling authors Melissa de la Cruz (“Going Dark”), Marie Lu (“Stars and Smoke”) and Angeline Boulley (“Warrior Girl Unearthed”). If you’re already looking ahead to summer (reading), don’t miss this chance to hear from some of YA’s hottest superstars and stock up on their scorching new thrillers.
Ages 14+. (Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
A First Time for Everything: Dan Santat, interviewed by Sharon McKellar
Adolescence happens to the best of us, and, as Dan Santat bravely recounts in his new graphic memoir, even he was not immune. Santat’s chronicle of his transformative middleschool study abroad has already racked up multiple starred reviews, but more importantly, his hilariously honest account offers a relatable guidebook for young people on the cusp of discovering their own whole new world. Ages 1014. (Young Readers Stage)
In the Neighborhood (Story Time): Rocio Bonilla Author, artist and educator Rocio Bonilla joins us all the way from Catalonia in Spain. She’ll first read to us from her new picture book “In the Neighborhood” in the Story Time Circle and then lead kids and families in Creativity (on) Center through a fun art activity related to her book! With the support of Institut Ramon Llull. Ages 37. (Story Time Circle)
1:15 p.m.
Native Voices: Essayists from the 2023 Graton Student Writing Program: Emceed by Greg Sarris
The Graton Writing Project is a series of writing workshops open to middle and highschool Native students from Sonoma, California, that culminates in a published youth anthology. This year, students were asked to write on the theme of imagining a hopeful vision of the future, led by today’s tribal youth. Come hear the students read powerful, sometimes surprising excerpts from their pieces and share their insights. With support from the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria. Ages 12+. (Word Power Stage)
1:45 p.m.
In the Neighborhood (Activity): Rocio Bonilla Author, artist and educator Rocio Bonilla joins us all the way from Catalonia in Spain. She’ll first read to us from her new picture book “In the Neighborhood” in the Story Time Circle and then lead kids and families in Creativity (on) Center through a fun art activity related to her book! With the support of Institut Ramon Llull. Ages 37. (Creativity (on) Center)
2 p.m.
Grounded: Exploring Muslim Identities: S.K. Ali, Huda AlMarashi, JamilahTompkins Bigelow and Aisha Saeed
In the collaboratively written novel “Grounded,” the individual and collective stories of four seemingly different Muslim kids unfold through alternating viewpoints as they learn about themselves and their Muslim identities, finding their voices in the process. Join collaborators Aisha Saeed, Huda AlMarashi, Jamilah Tompkins Bigelow and S.K. Ali. With the support of SACHI. Ages 813. (Young Readers Stage)
2:30 p.m.
YA: What’s Your Inspiration?: Jennieke Cohen, Francesca Flores and Marie MyungOk Lee
What do a fairy tale, a Broadway musical, and a classic 20thcentury social realist novel have in common? They all served as inspiration for the latest works by the talented authors featured in this session — Jennieke Cohen (“My Fine Fellow”), Francesca Flores (“The Witch and the Vampire”) and Marie MyungOk Lee (“Hurt You”) — who took those classic works and ran with them, creating new, exciting and entirely original novels. Ages 12+. (Residence Inn Ballroom 2)
Big Inspiration for Little Activists: Taimani Emerald, Aida Salazar, John Stith and Shaunna Stith
What are you passionate about? Whether you hope to protect endangered species, protest book banning or make your city’s streets safer for pedestrians and cyclists, this session’s storytellers — Taimani Emerald (“We Are Allies!”), Aida Salazar (“Jovita Wore Pants”) and John and Shaunna Stith (“Black Beach”) are here to show you that even the littlest activists can make a big difference! Ages 610. (Word Power Stage)
2:45 p.m.
Search for a Giant Squid (Activity): Amy Seto Forrester and Andy Musser
It’s time to set off on a voyage to the great unknown — in search of the elusive giant squid! Pick your pilot, your submersible and your dive site, and see what happens … no matter what choices you make, you’re bound to find something amazing and surprising. In this interactive session based on their book “Search for a Giant Squid,” Amy Seto Forrester and Andy Musser will invite young readers and their families to create their own deep sea adventures! Ages 69. (Creativity (on) Center)
3 p.m.
You Are Here: Stories of Asian American Identity: Traci Chee, Mike Chen, Ellen Oh and Randy Ribay, moderated by Shanthi Sekaran
After he moved back to the Bay Area from New York, standup comic and social commentator W. Kamau Bellsaid he would spot queer feminist author and activist Kate Schatzat what he jokingly dubs the “East Bay Activist Parents Stroll.”
He explained, “You see each other at the Pride parade, at the Black Joy parade, when you try to write letters to Congress, at the Alphabet Rockers concert ...”
Both married with three children each, Bell eventually met Schatz through the illustrator of her “Rad Women” series of children’s books, Miriam Klein Stahl, who not only lived around the corner from him in Berkeley, but also turned out to be the sisterinlaw of the director of photography on Bell’s CNN series “United Shades of America.”
The shocking murder of George Floyd in 2020and the subsequent national conversation
around structural racism led Bell to develop an even closer connection with Schatz: as coauthors of the bestselling “Do the Work!: An Antiracist Activity Book,”published last July.
Bell and Schatz will share insights from their collaboration at the Bay Area Book Festival’s Sunday evening keynote session, 5:30 p.m. May 7 at Freight & Salvage in Berkeley. Called “Do the Work! How You Can Take Action Against Racism,” their conversation is just one of only two events requiring tickets — Joan Baez’s Saturday evening keynote session being the other — with no charge for the rest of the nearly 100 sessions.
Although the topic is a serious one, the audience can expect some of the humor that infuses their workbook too. It’s a sensibility Bell calls “funny but not f—ing around,” one which Schatz said shares some similarities in style and substance with her “Rad Women”series.
“The ‘Rad’ books and ‘Do the
Work’ both use a very playful and welcoming and engaging approach to get audiences interested in and grappling with some bigger and heavier and more complex problems,” Schatz explained. “In the “Rad” books, we’re using fun illustrations and bright colors and pictures of women with empowering and happy expressions, but we’re also talking explicitly about misogyny, racism, homophobia and social justice.”
Bell said he reached out to Schatz during the summer of 2020’s “socalled racial reckoning” after frequently being asked by white TV talk show hosts, “What do I doooo?,” imitating their drawnout plea.
“At some point I felt like I was giving the same interview and I didn’t want to say it anymore — if it hasn’t ended racism, I don’t want to say it again … I saw Kate on Instagram talking to people, doing the work, sending out resources. She understands as a white ally that her job is to take
CHILDREN, TEEN AND ALLAGES SCHEDULE SUNDAY, MAY 7
From page S15
In “You Are Here: Connecting Flights” individual narratives set in a teeming Chicago airport and written by twelve powerhouse Asian American authors intertwine in unexpected ways. In this session, we’ll hear from contributors Mike Chen, Randy Ribay, Traci Chee and editor Ellen Oh as they discuss this exciting new collaborative exploration of contemporary Asian American identity. Ages 812. (Young Readers Stage)
Some of These Are Snails
(Story Time): Carter Higgins
If you’ve seen one picture book about letters, numbers, colors or shapes, you’ve seen them all … right? Think again (and again … and again). Join Higgins for a Story Time Circle reading of “Some of These Are Snails,” followed by a Creativity (on) Cen
ter activity for kids and families inspired by her book! Ages 35. (Story Time Circle)
3:30 p.m.
What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids: Angeline Boulley, Alexis Bunten, Laurel Goodluck, Brandon Hobson, Andrea L. Rogers and Brian Young, moderated by Melissa
The publishing industry is finally starting to catch up to the dazzling talents of Native American creators of books for children. In this session, we’ll hear from six awardwinning authors for youth. They’ll discuss their own journeys toward publication, the state of publishing for Native American creators and the audiences they hope to reach with their work. All ages. With support from the Federated Indians of
Graton Rancheria. (Word Power Stage)
3:45 p.m.
Some of These Are Snails (Activity): Carter Higgins
If you’ve seen one picture book about letters, numbers, colors or shapes, you’ve seen them all … right? Think again (and again … and again). Join Higgins for a Story Time Circle reading of “Some of These Are Snails,” followed by a Creativity (on) Center activity for kids and families inspired by her book! Ages 35. (Creativity (on) Center)
4 p.m.
Coming of Age in Words and Pictures: Jarrett Krosoczka, Patrick Ness and Victoria Ying, moderated by Elaine Tai How many of us still have
the work off Black folks,” Bell said.
For Schatz, it was a natural fit.
“My work has always been as intersectional as possible,” she noted. “I’m writing not just through a feminist lens but an antiracist lens, which includes centering the stories of marginalized women and women of color. In the first book, Angela Davis talks about growing up in Alabama and her family being targeted by the KKK. So the ‘Rad’ books may not be branded as antiracist books, but they certainly are—it’s baked into them.”
Bell was well aware of “the many antiracist books out there,” he noted, but wondered, “Are
white people reading these books, and what are they going to do after reading these books? Those books aren’t meant to tell you what to do; instead, it’s ‘here’s the history of how we got here.’ ”
Both he and Schatz take pride in the positive reception their book has received from academics and authors such as Marc Lamont Hill and Ibram X. Kendi.
“People invested in the bootsontheground activist work every day respect this book,” Bell said. “If they thought it wasn’t helpful, it wouldn’t be worth a damn. … This can be another tool in the toolbox of where to start.”
(“Different for Boys”) and Victoria Ying (“Hungry Ghost”) — take their comingofage tales one step further. They provide readers with images to make their stories of transition, maturation and selfdiscovery that much more vivid. Ages 14+. (Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
cringeworthy moments from our teenaged years seared as indelible images in our brains? Here, three creators — Jarrett Krosoczka (“Sunshine”), Patrick Ness
Love on the Run: Marie Lu, in conversation with Alisha Rai Falling in love is always a rush even more so if you and your sexy sidekick are being chased by mobsters . . . or chasing them down yourselves. Talented authors Marie Lu (“Stars and Smoke”) and Alisha Rai (“Partners in Crime”) really ramp up the adrenaline and the attraction — one way or another, this session will have your heart racing! With the support of SACHI. (Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Explorations of the past, including the history of people and places as well as family heritage and personal history, are popping up again and again in the free youth programming at this year’s Bay Area Book Festival.
For example, Maurene Goo, the author of several acclaimed books for young adults, will discuss her latest novel, “Throwback,”about time travel. She can only guess why other creators are also looking to the past for inspiration but she suspects it could reflect a longing for simpler times.
“But, of course, when you actually dig into the past, you find that it wasn’t that simple at all,” she said.
Educational activities for kids, families
Talking about history’s dark
er moments can provide valuable insights for people of all ages. In their awardwinning book “Seen and Unseen: What Dorothea Lange, Toyo Miyatake, and Ansel Adams’s Photographs Reveal About the Japanese American Incarceration,” author Elizabeth Partridge and illustrator Lauren Tamaki raise questions about narrative manipulation and who controls historical stories.
By telling the stories of Japanese American incarceration, Partridge hopes she inspires the next generation of “fighters for social justice.”
“I’ve never felt the fragility of our democracy as acutely as I do now,” she said. “It’s important that all of us understand our country’s true history — both the good and the bad — so we know what we want in our future and what we must never allow to be repeated. We need young people to un
» “It’s important that all, of us understand our country’s true history — both the good and the bad — so we know what we want in our future and what we must never allow to be repeated.”
derstand the stakes, so they can stand up for what is right, and defend our democracy.”
On Saturday, May 6, all are invited for a special conversation at 11 a.m. in the Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Roombetween Partridge, who recently won the Sibert Medal(the highest honor for youth nonfiction) and Maggie TokudaHall, whose book “Love in the Library” also tells a story of Japanese incarceration. It’s a unique opportunity for all readers, including children, to consider how to create a more nuanced
and accurate understanding of history.
That session is part of a full day of programs for children, youth and families at the Berkeley Public Library. Other activities include a flash fiction workshop, author panels, a discussion of picture book biographies and picture book story times, including a reading by singer and author Amerie. There will also be a foodthemed session featuring demos and sampling.
In addition, at 11 a.m. May 6, Dave Eggers and Shawn Harris will introduce readers to their
beautifully illustrated new allages animal novel, “The Eyes and the Impossible” at Freight & Salvage.
More sessions for kids and families await during the Outdoor Fair on Sunday, May 7. The day promises a reading by Meena Harrisand a series of picture book readings in the intimate Story Time Circle, accompanied by handson art, history, culture and STEM activities in the new Creativity (on) Center activity tent.
Author sessions for middlegrade readers
Dan Santat, author of bestselling picture books and graphic novels, will also present at the Outdoor Fair. In his memoir, “A First Time for Everything,” he draws inspiration from his personal history, sharing his vulnerable side and the experiences that shaped him,
From page S17
including his awkward adolescence and middle school study abroad trip. Young readers (ages 1014) are invited to gain insight into the creative process of this multitalented writer and illustrator during an interview and Q&A on the Young Readers Stage at 1 p.m. Sunday, May 7.
That same day promises even more activities suited to kids in this age range, including a session about middlegrade mysteries, a discussion about Choose Your Own Adventurestyle novels, a handson science activity complete with lab coats and more.
Youth are engaging with festival
Also, during the Outdoor Fair, there will be readings of short stories and poetry by participants in Cinnamongirl, Inc.’s “Write Your Story”pro
gram. This cohort of girls spent the year honing their voices and their visions with encouragement and instruction from an impressive faculty of women authors of color, many of whom will accompany these new rising literary stars on stage as they share stories, insights and nuggets of inspiration. They’ll present their work at noon May 7 on the Word Power Stage.
Some of these young teen writers from Cinnamongirl will also serve as interviewers and moderators for many of the festival’s youth sessions on
Presented by Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria and the Bay Area Book Festival
For the past six years during spring break, Native high schoolers from local California Indian Nations have participated in the Graton Writing Project: a fourday creative writing workshop guided by professional writing coaches.
In small, supportive groups, the students delve into the craft of writing through games and exercises. For a capstone, each student writes an essay, short story or sequence of poems, followed by a public reading of this work.
This year more than 30 students met with the writing coaches to compose their essays in response to the following prompt:
“Visions of the future have tended toward the wildly optimistic (flying cars, anyone?) or the nightmarishly bleak. The more we learn about climate change and accompanying human crises, the more our imaginations might tend toward hopelessness, but it doesn’t have to be that way. Write your own vision for the future — it could be next year or a fardistant time — that includes at least a glimmer of hope. Could Indigenous knowledge and leadership play a role in the future you imagine? What role could today’s Native youths play in building and shaping that future?”
The writing practice provided an avenue for the students to explore these issues in striking ways. Their responses were bold,
topics like actionpacked mystery and spy novels for young readers, featuring authors Aya de Leon, Katryn Bury and Hayley LeBlanc (who’s also a teen) happening at 11 a.m. May 7 on the Word Power Stage. Another Cinnamongirlled session will take place at 2 p.m. with an exploration of Muslim identities in “Grounded,” a novel by bestselling Muslim authors about four seemingly different
Muslim kids stuck in an airport.
Captivating author sessions for teens
Young moderators from Cinnamongirl will also lead a star studded panel discussion titled “YA: Thriller Superstars” with authors Nick Brooks, Marie Lu, Melissa de la Cruz and Angeline Boulley at 1 p.m. May 7 at the Residence Inn Berkeley in Ballroom 2. Later, festival
goers will have another opportunity to hear about Boulley’s latest work, “Warrior Girl Unearthed,” when she joins a panel of Native American creators on the Word Power Stage at 3:30 p.m.
A motherdaughter duo from Cinnamongirl will also lead a discussion for readers aged 14+ about themes of family and identity in Goo’s new novel “Throwback” at 12:30 p.m. May 6 in Ballroom 1 of the Residence Inn Berkeley. The story follows Samantha Kang, who confronts the complexities of her relationship with her mother after unexpectedly traveling back to the 1990s and meeting her as a teenager.
According to Goo, the past might be a popular topic because creators could be feeling especially contemplative at this moment in time. But she also has a simpler explanation: “A less heavy, more personal reason for me? I love time travel stories,” she said.
Greg Sarris, tribal chairman of the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria, introduces students in the Graton Writing Project. Students will read their work on Sunday at the Word Power Stage.
revealing, insightful, and ultimately hopeful. As in past years which encompassed the pandemic, there was a palpable sense of generational urgency and resilience to their essays, fiction, poetry and newly created fables and myths.
The students will read their
work in front of a live audience during the festival’s “Native Voices” program on the Word Power Stage at 1:15 pm. Sunday. Later this spring, the essays will be published in a printed, bound anthology and then shared with family, friends, teachers and the broader community.
The Bay Area is brimming with young readers who can be simply ravenous when it comes to their favorite books. Thanks to Half Price Books, the nation’s largest familyowned network of new and used book stores, children can choose from thousands of titles at its free book giveaway in the festival’s Outdoor Fair on Sunday.
HearfromtheVoicesofthe
From food to fiction, authors focus on history
Many authors at this year’s Bay Area Book Festival are going down in history — quite literally. The 2023 event attracted a particularly strong lineup of authors writing about history from a variety of different perspectives, including historical fiction, food history and works of narrative history.
Check out these free riveting highlights:
“Historical Fiction: The American West” (2 p.m. May 6)
With its sweeping landscapes, challenges of settling the frontiers and rich and complex stories about the early wildlands of California and Colorado, epic stories about the West have always been popular.
In this panel discussion with authors Jane Smiley, graphic novelist Rina Ayuyang and Kali FajardoAnstine, three novels take the spotlight, including Pulitzer Prize winner and masterful storyteller Smiley’s “A Dangerous Business.”
Learn how she wove together all the gripping elements of a serialkiller mystery, a classic Western and a feminist empowerment narrative, all set in the roughandtumble environs of Gold Rushera Monterey.
“Tasting History: A Delicious Journey
Through the Past” (3:30 p.m. May 6)
Can a YouTube sensation be called an author? Yes indeed, as Max Miller has meticulously researched and shares such fascinating fare as the last dinners served aboard the Titanic (watch his videos as he recreates them in all their glory for his 1.65 million viewers). And especially when he has just pub
lished a beautifully illustrated printed volume cataloging his finds titled “Tasting History: Explore the Past through 4,000 Years of Recipes.”
At this entertaining session, he will share insights into some of his favorite discoveries. One of the best is pumpion pie from 1670.
“First off, it’s spelled PUMPION instead of PUMPKIN; that’s interesting!” he said. “But for me, it’s the fact that everyone thinks they know what pumpkin pie is. They know its taste, its look, its texture. But this recipe breaks all of those rules because it was written before those rules existed. Instead of pumpkin puree, it used fried slices of pumpkin. Instead of the recognizable pumpkin spices like nutmeg, ginger and cinnamon, it’s flavored with raisins, apples, fresh herbs like rosemary and thyme, and even has sherry added for good measure. For a dish we think is so familiar, it’s exciting to see that it hasn’t always been so.”
“Adam Hochschid on ‘American Midnight’ and Democracy’s Crises”
(12:30 p.m. May 6)
Is history repeating itself?
Seemingly, again and again, as author Hochschild digs into the horrifying yet ulti
mately inspiring four years following the U.S. entry into the First World War and what those threats to democracy can teach us today.
In “American Midnight: The Great War, A Violent Peace, and Democracy’s Forgotten Crisis,” the awardwinning historian and journalist reminds us that at the time a deadly virus claimed hundreds of thousands of lives, militant nationalist groups were on the rise, selfappointed vigilantes took the law into their own hands and mobs burned Black churches, with newspapers and magazines being banned from the mail to share those truths.
“An Epic Journey from Slavery to Freedom: ‘Master Slave Husband Wife’ ” (2 p.m. May 7)
History and biography come together in this incredible recounting by author Ilyon Woo of the true story of an 1800s couple trying to escape slavery. Traveling from Macon, Ga., to Philadelphia and later to Boston, Ellen Craft (who could pass as white) disguised herself as a disabled white man, and her husband, William, posed as “his” slave. The tribulations are nailbiting and wrought with peril as the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act put them in danger of enslavement all over again.
JoinusMay6th&7thatthe9thannual BayAreaBookFestivalindowntown Berkeleyforoneofthepremierliterary eventsinthenation.
SATURDAY,MAY6TH
3:30PM-4:30PM
GOLDMAN THEATERATDAVIDBROWERCENTER
2150AllstonWay,Berkeley,CA94704
TrueStories:NorthernCalifornia
SANFRANCISCOCHRONICLEURBANDESIGNCRITICJOHN KING hostsa conversationwithAndrewAldenandClareFrank.NorthernCaliforniaishometocountless compellingstories.Inthissession,authorsofthesenonfictionbookssharetheirchosenstory withtheaudience.
SUNDAY,MAY7TH
11:00AM-12:00PM
RESIDENCEINNBALLROOM1
2121CenterSt,Berkeley,CA94704
ReformingCopCulture:
InOaklandandNationwide
SAN FRANCISCOCHRONICLESFNEXT:FIXINGOURCITYPODCASTHOST LAURAWENUS interviewsDarwinBondGrahamandAliWinston,NeilGross,andSan FranciscopoetlaureateTongoEisen-Martin.Thissessionwillpresentbothlocalandnational perspectives,andthepanelwilldiscussideasabouthowtoenactreform.
12:30PM-1:30PM
SAN FRANCISCOCHRONICLESTAGE
MartinLutherKingJr.CivicCenterPark
A(lexandraP(etri’s)USHistory
2:00PM-3:00PM
SANFRANCISCOCHRONICLESTAGE
MartinLutherKingJr.CivicCenterPark
Culture:BayCuriousandTotalSF
Indoor venues
Author programs take place Saturday and Sunday across multiple venues marked in orange on the above map. This year’s festival offers over 100 great events — and all daytime shows are free!
The best way to secure a seat for these free programs is to arrive 30 minutes prior to the scheduled start time. Walkup attendees will be admitted 20 minutes before each program begins and seating is firstcome, firstserved.
You can access Priority Admission (get in before general admission) by purchasing a Friend of the Festival wristband from the Festival Welcome Center in BART Plaza — or by using the QR code.
Please note that the only ticketed events at this year’s festival are the Saturday and Sunday evening keynotes.
COVID19 protocol: For the health and wellbeing of our authors, attendees and volunteers, masks are encouraged (but not required) at all indoor venues.
Tickets $15 general admission tickets for our two evening keynotes can be purchased at baybookfest.org or the Friend of the
Festival Welcome Center in BART Plaza, while supplies last. 2023 Keynote Events:
• 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 6 Joan Baez
• 5:30 p.m. Sunday, May 7 W. Kamau Bell and Kate Schatz
Free outdoor fair - Sunday only!
Make a day of it! Centered in and around M.L.K., Jr. Civic Center Park, this year’s outdoor fair offers more than 150 literary exhibitors — bookstores, publishers, authors, libraries, book artists and others — along with the San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park, three stages geared toward younger readers, Family Fun Zone/ Creativity (on) Center Activity Tent, reading lounge, free book giveaway, Avenue of the Authors
and much more. Grab a book, hang out and enjoy the park setting.
On Center Street between MLK and Milvia Street is our popular festival Food Court, anchored again this year by the women of La Cocina bringing inspired global food fare! Downtown Berkeley is also filled with fabulous restaurants, cafes and pubs to explore.
On Saturday only, the Ecology Center Farmer’s Market (not affiliated with the festival) will be open 10 a.m.3 p.m. on Center Street.
Colorful festival merchandise, including festivalbranded tote bags and our famous coffee mugs will be on sale at the Friend of the
Festival Welcome Center in BART Plaza. Your purchase helps support the nonprofit festival.
Emergency Medical Technicians are available at the Information Booth on Allston Way in the Park. Security is available at the park during festival hours and into the early evening. Downtown Berkeley Association Ambassadors will also be on hand to support anyone in need.
We will have three interpreters available based on first come, first served requests. Please email ticketing@baybookfest.org in advance of festival weekend to request ASL services for a specific author session.
Public transportation
Always the best choice, especially given limited parking in downtown Berkeley
BART will whisk you directly to the Downtown BART station and sparkling new outdoor plaza which opens into the
heart of the event and serves as the official Festival Welcome Center, sponsored by Visit Berkeley and the Downtown Berkeley Association.
AC Transit also goes right to Downtown Berkeley and has a huge network. Go to 511.org.
Bike
Ride your bike to the Festival. Please bring your own lock.
Rideshare
Central Dropoff/Pickup areas for rideshare services are: Center Street between Milvia Street and Shattuck Avenue, and MLK Way between Allston Way and Center Street.
Taxi
A taxi stand is located at BART Plaza on Shattuck Avenue between Center Street and Allston Way.
Your own car
The City of Berkeley has two downtown parking garages, with entrances on Allston Way, Center Street and Addison Street,
west of Shattuck Avenue. The city’s transportation site has information about additional lots within walking distance from downtown.
Note that on Saturday, most of the residential streets surrounding the festival have restricted twohour parking; on Sunday, there are no restrictions.
Booksigningsimmediatelyfollow each sessionon-site,thankstoour participatingbooksellers
Alldaytimeprogramsare freeofcharge,general admission,spacepermitting. Walkupsadmitted20min priortoprogramstarttime.
PurchaseaFriendofthe Festivalmembershipand helpuskeepthe festivalfree!
Amongotherperks,it enablespriorityadmission toalldaytimeprograms. Availablefestivalweekend atourBARTPlazaWelcome Centeror:
11 am 12 pm 1 pm
SFChronicle Stage
PegasusBooks
11am–12 pm
BetonBlack
Eboni K.Williams, interviewedby RaeIngram 12:30–1:30 pm
A(lexandra)
P(etri’s)US History AlexandraPetri, interviewedby Joe Garofoli
Freight& Salvage
GreenAppleBooks
11am –12pm
Chokepoint Capitalism CoryDoctorow, interviewedby WendyLiu
Brower Center Goldman Theater
Brower Center Tamalpais Room
BookshopWestPortal
11 am –12pm
HistoryofPlaces Worth Fighting For:Preserving PublicLands
Jerr y Emory,DeanKing, andMcKenzieLong, moderatedby TobyMcLeod
12:30 –1:30pm
Forgiveness, Reconciliation, andReckoning V(formerlyEveEnsler)
12:30 –1:30pm How toCreate RealChange DavidFenton, interviewedbyMonika Bauerlein
11:30am–12:30pm
Memoir:The Meaningof Home Vanessa A.Bee, CamilleDungy,and KathrynSavage, moderatedby KristinKeane
1–2 pm
Fiction:AtPlay onthePage MarkCiabattari,Katie Hafner,andPeterHoey, moderatedbyHeather Scott Partington
2–3 pm
BayCurious OliviaAllen-Price, interviewedby PeterHartlauband HeatherKnight
Onlyourtwoeveningevents willbeticketed:
SATMay6 – JoanBaez
SUNMay7 – W.KamauBell andKateSchatz
$15generaladmission, whileticketslast. baybookfest.org/get-tickets
pm
3:30 – 4:30pm
LitCamp Presents: Unreliable Narrator
Hosted byKeliDailey andJanisCooke Newman
pm
2–3 pm
RestIsResistance
TriciaHersey, interviewedby AsharaEkundayo
3:30 – 4:30pm
PoetryattheEnd oftheWorld AnthonyCody,CJEvans, John Freeman,Saeed Jones,andTessTaylor, moderatedbySamSax
pm
Magnes Museum
BooksInc.
11 am –12pm
FindingNature, SavingTime
Maddalena Bearzi andJennyOdell, moderatedby Alexis Madrigal
12:30 –1:30pm
Fiction: Encounterswith MythsandSpirits
K-Ming Chang,Kali Fajardo-Anstine,and BrandonHobson, moderatedby RitaChang-Eppig
2–3 pm
Poetry and Fiction:The Artist’sInfluence SelbyWynnSchwartz and Brenda Shaughnessy, moderatedby SusanGriffin
4 –5 pm
AnActivist’sLife AliceWong, interviewedbyYomi SachikoWrong
2:30 –3:30pm
Parableofthe SowerTurns30
Ashia Ajani,Ayade Leon,andCamille Dungy,moderatedby DevinT.Murphy
4 –5 pm
LoveontheRun MarieLu,in conversationwith AlishaRai
2–3 pm
Echoesof Exclusion
Ava Chin,FaeMyenne
Ng,andPaisley
Rekdal,moderatedby KathrynMa
3:30 – 4:30pm
Unraveling:Peggy
OrensteinSpinsa
YarnaboutYarn... andLife
PeggyOrenstein, interviewedby SylviaBrownrigg
ResidenceInn Ballroom1
SausalitoBooks bytheBay
11am –12pm
Reforming
CopCulture:In Oaklandand Nationwide
Darwin BondGraham, NeilGross,andAli Winston,moderated byLauraWenus
12:30 –1:30pm
Memoir:In SearchofOur Fathers Leslie Absher,Eric Newton,andLeta Seletzky,moderated bySylviaBrownrigg
2–3 pm
AnEpicJourney fromSlaveryto Freedom:Master SlaveHusband Wife Ilyon Woo
3:30 – 4:30pm
Mysteries &Thrillers: Dangerous Destinations
MargotDouaihy, CatrionaMcPherson, T.JeffersonParker, andKweiQuartey, moderatedby JimL’Etoile
11 am 12 pm 1 pm 2 pm 3 pm 4 pm 5 pm
ResidenceInn Ballroom2
SausalitoBooks
bytheBay
11:30am–12:30pm
CraftChats: WritingLiterary
Humor
Kathryn Ma,Cecilia
Rabess,andErik Tarloff,moderatedby MichaelShapiro
1-2pm
YA:Thriller Superstars
AngelineBoulley,Nick
Brooks,Melissadela Cruz, andMarieLu, moderatedbymembers ofCinnamongirl
2:30 –3:30pm
YA:What’sYour Inspiration?
JenniekeCohen, FrancescaFlores, MarieMyung-Ok Lee,moderated bymembersof Cinnamongirl
4 –5 pm
ComingofAge inWordsand Pictures
JarrettKrosoczka, PatrickNess,and VictoriaYing, moderatedby
ElaineTai
11 am –12pm
TheArtof
Suspense
Katy Hays,MarcieR. Rendon,andBrendan Slocumb,moderated byLaurieR.King
12:30 –1:30pm
Fiction:Mothers/ Daughters
RamonaAusubel, Mar yOtis,and MargaretWilkerson
Sexton, moderatedby JasminDarznik
2–3 pm
Bridgingthe Distance
NicoleChung, interviewedbyBrooke Warner
11:30am–12:30pm
WeMeasurethe EarthwithOur Bodies:InExile fromTibet TseringYangzom Lama,interviewedby CherilynParsons
WordPower Stage
YoungReaders Stage
FolioBooks
11–11:45am
Middle-Grade Mysteries
Katryn Bury,AyadeLeón, andHayleyLeBlanc, moderatedbymembers ofCinnamongirl
12–1 pm
Cinnamongirl: WriteYourStory
StoryTime Circle
Creativity(on) Center
11–11:45am
1–2 pm
EvenIfEverything Ends JensLiljestrand, interviewedbyJohn Freeman
2:30 –3:30pm
Horror:History
ThatGoesBump intheNight
JessicaJohns, NickMedina,and FrancescaMaria, moderatedbyBen Monroe
1:15 –2:15pm
NativeVoices
Essayists fromthe 2023GratonStudent WritingProgram, emceedbyGregSarris
2:30 –3:15pm
BigInspiration for Little Activists
TaimaniEmerald,Aida Salazar,JohnStith, andShaunnaStith
3:30 – 4:15pm
What’sNewin NativeAmerican Literaturefor Kids
AngelineBoulley, AlexisBunten,Laurel Goodluck,Brandon Hobson,AndreaL. Rogers,andBrian Young, moderatedby MelissaStoner
11:15 –11:45am
AIsfor Ambitious Meena Harris
12–12:45pm
StoriesthatLet YouChoose!
Amy SetoForrester, AndyMusser,Lily Simonson,andRana Tahir,moderatedby JessicaLee
1–1:45pm
AFirstTimefor Everything
Dan Santat, interviewedby SharonMcKellar
2–2:45pm
Grounded: S.K Ali,HudaAl-Marashi, JamilahTompkins Bigelow,andAisha Saeed,moderated bymembersof Cinnamongirl
3 –3:45pm
YouAreHere TraciChee,MikeChen, EllenOh,andRandy Ribay
11:30 am –12pm
ANew Thanksgiving Story(Story Time)
AlexisBunten
12:15 –12:45pm
Copycat:NatureInspiredDesign (StoryTime)
ChristyHale
1–1:30pm
Inthe Neighborhood (StoryTime)
RocioBonilla
ScienceComics: ThePeriodic Table JonChad
12–12:30pm
ANew Thanksgiving Story(Activity)
AlexisBunten
12:45 –1:30pm
Copycat:NatureInspiredDesign (Activity)
ChristyHale
1:45 –2:30pm
Inthe Neighborhood (Activity) RocioBonilla
2:45 –3:30pm
3 –3:30pm
SomeofThese AreSnails(Story Time)
CarterHiggins
Searchfora GiantSquid Workshop
Amy SetoForrester, AndyMusser
3:45 – 4:30pm
SomeofThese AreSnails (Activity)
CarterHiggins
JointheHunt!WHERE’S WALDO?
BARTPlazaStage•Shattuck&Allston•11:00am-4:00pm• InassociationwithTheBerkeleyPoetrySlam
Openmic+slamcompetitions+DragStoryHour@2pm
SPECIAL ALL-DAYEVENT: FindWaldointhe FamilyFunZone!
Indigenous authors are increasingly garnering not only awards and accolades but also bestseller status, writing across genres in a multitude of styles. The Bay Area Book Festival will feature an expansive and varied group of Indigenous writers in numerous sessions. Leading two of the highly anticipated panels is Melissa Stoner, Native American Studies Librarian at UC Berkeley.
Stoner is impressed and excited by the breadth of Indigenous authors at the festival and she’s particularly intrigued by their growing interest in genre fiction.
“From what I’ve seen, grad students and even undergrads are really pushing toward these concepts of Indigenous Futurism having to do with science fiction,” Stoner said. “I noticed that there is also a lean toward the horror genre too.”
Stoner, who is Diné Navajo, will moderate separate panels on Indigenous writing for young readers and Indigenous writing for adults. She is curious to understand the different writers’ entry to genre and how it might differ by tribes.
“I just want to see their ideas on the concept of horror and how it came about. ‘Did it happen be
For the sixth year, the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria and the Bay Area Book Festival teamed up to achieve a singular mission:
How? By creating a comprehensive slate of sessions on the indelible impact of Native stories, and by organizing a writing program for young and budding Native authors.
Throughout Festival weekend, you will have the opportunity to engage with our heritage by joining us at the sessions to the right:
cause your parents didn’t let you watch it when you were a kid? How did you grow up?’ ” she said. “Because it is really different being native and growing up on the reservation, and you have this huge desert. I feel like also it gives way for a really great canvas of scary stories.”
Stoner is in charge of curating and managing the Native American Studies archives at the Ethnic Studies Library. The book festival is introducing her to many new writers.
“I really want to try to find voices that are authentic to what’s happening in the community now,” Stoner said.
Saturday, May 6 • 1:00 PM
Craft Chats: A Child's Perspective
Brower Center – Tamalpais Room
Saturday, May 6 • 1:30 PM
Middle Grade: The Magic of Story
Berkeley Public Library – Teen Room
Saturday, May 6 • 2:00 PM
Historical Fiction: The American West
The Magnes
Saturday, May 6 • 2:45 PM
Story Time: Family and Heritage
Berkeley Public Library –Children’s Room
Saturday, May 6 • 3:30 PM
Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction
The Magnes
Saturday, May 6 • 3:30 PM
YA: Haunts and Horrors Residence Inn Berkeley - Ballroom 1
Sessions including Indigenous authors encompass every topic.
On Saturday, May 6, “Craft Chats: A Child’s Perspective” with Keenan Norris, Pilar Quintana and Margaret Verble will be moderated by Ethel Rohan at 1 p.m. in the Brower Center Tamalpais Room. At 2 p.m. in the Magnes Auditorium, “Historical Fiction: The American West” will feature Kali FajardoAnstine, Jane Smiley and Rina Ayuyang and will be moderated by Blaise Zerega.
At 3:30 p.m. at the Magnes Auditorium, Stoner moderates “Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction,”a conversation with
Saturday, May 6 • 5:30 PM
Noir at the Bar Cornerstone Berkeley
Sunday, May 7 • 11:00 AM
The Art of Suspense
The Marsh Berkeley – Theater
Sunday, May 7 • 12:30 PM
Fiction: Encounters with Myths and Spirits
The Magnes
Sunday, May 7 • 1:15 PM
Native Voices: Essayists from the 2023 Graton Student Writing Program
Word Power Stage
Sunday, May 7 • 2:30 PM
Horror: History That Goes Bump in the Night
The Marsh – Cabaret
Sunday, May 7 • 3:30 PM
What's New in Native American Literature for Kids
Word Power Stage
Native American and First Nations authors of exciting new works in the genres of mysteries, psychological horror and historical suspense with Nick Medina (“Sisters of the Lost Nation”), Jessica Johns (“Bad Cree”), Marcie R. Rendon (“Sinister Graves”) and Margaret Verble (“Stealing”).
On Sunday, May 7, at 11 a.m. at the Marsh Berkeley Theater is “The Art of Suspense” with Brendan Slo
As part of our program to celebrate Native heritage and writing, we again organized and hosted the Graton Writing Project: a writing program open to middle- and high-school Native students. As in past years, the students worked to create an essay during a week-long writing workshop and will publish their work in the annual Graton Anthology. Plus, they received professional writing and public speaking instruction. Come hear the young authors read excerpts from their pieces on Sunday, May 7 at 1:15 pm on the festival’s Word Power Stage.
For more information on these Festival programs, please refer to the Author Events listings on previous pages.
gratonrancheria.com
cumb, Marcie R. Rendon, Katy Hays and novelist Laurie R. King moderating. At 12:30 p.m. at the Magnes Auditorium is “Fiction: Encounters with Myths and Spirits,” moderated by Rita ChangEppig featuring KMing Chang, Brandon Hobson and Kali FajardoAnstine.
At 2:30 p.m. at the Marsh Berkeley Cabaret, “Horror: History That Goes Bump in the Night,” features Jessica Johns,
Francesca Maria and Nick Medina with novelist and moderator Ben Monroe, author of “The Seething,” about a lake that hides an ancient evil.
There are also several sessions for young adult and child readers.
On Saturday, May 6 at 1:30 p.m. in the Berkeley Public Library Teen Room, “The Magic of Story” for ages 8 to 12 showcases awardwinning author Brian Young’s return with “Heroes of the Water Monster,” in which water monster guardians Nathan and Edward are threatened by an enemy of epic proportions — as well as their own histories. In National Book Award finalist Brandon Hobson’s “The Storyteller,” Ziggy is determined to find out the truth behind his mother’s disappearance. Finally, acclaimed novelist Misa Suguira presents “Momo Arashima Steals the Sword of the Wind,” where halfgoddess Momo must seal the gateway to Yomi, the underworldly domain of evil spirits.
At 2:45 p.m. at Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room, Bay Areabased illustrator Minnie Phan reads “The Yellow Áo Dài,” a Vietnamese generational story celebrating culture and identity. From author and illustrator Meera Sriram and Sandhya Prabhat, “A Garden in My Hands” honors the tradition of applying henna through a mother and daughter’s shared family history. In writerillustrator Liza Ferneyhough’s transcontinental tale “Nana, Nenek, and Nina,” San Francisco resident Nina trots the globe to visit her grandmothers, one living in England and the other in Malaysia. In the picture book “Forever Cousins,” author Laurel Goodluck tells the story of two Native American cousins reconnecting at a family reunion.
At 3:30 p.m. at Berkeley Residence Inn Ballroom 1, the Young Adult panel “Haunts and Horrors” is geared toward ages 12 and up. In her debut collection “Man Made Monsters,” Andrea L. Rogers, winner of the prestigious Walter Award, explores how a Cherokee family navigates the frightening and the familiar across time. Awardwinning author Sara Farizan returns with “Dead Flip,” tracking a trio of best friends as they grapple with untold secrets.
On Sunday, May 7 at 11:30 a.m. in the Story Time Circle and then at noon in the Creativity (on) Center Tent, “Keepunumuk: A New Thanksgiving Story” will feature Alexis Bunten’s children’s book “Keepunumuk: Weeâchumun’s Thanksgiving Story,” (cowritten with Danielle Greendeer and Anthony Perry). Narrated by a Wampanoag grandmother, she explains to her grandchildren about their people’s long history with the land, their special relationship with the Three Sisters (corn, beans, and squash) and why Keepunumuk (Thanksgiving) has become known among their people as a day of mourning.
Join Bunten for a reading followed by a handson project that will reinforce the story’s powerful themes of history and connection. This session is for kids 3 to 7.
At 1 p.m. at Berkeley Residence Inn Ballroom 1, “YA: Thriller Superstars” will be hosted by young moder
ators from Cinnamongirl, Inc., and is for ages 14 and up. Debut novelist Nick Brooks’ “Promise Boys” explores system racism — and murder — at a DC prep school. Brooks joins bestselling authors Melissa de la Cruz, whose “Going Dark” uses inventive storytelling techniques in a mystery about a social media influencer who’s gone missing and Marie Lu, whose “Stars and Smoke” launches a new series combining espionage and pop music. Finally, Angeline Boulley, whose “Firekeeper’s Daughter” won the Printz and Morris Awards and was a Reese’s Book Club pick, returns with the hotly anticipated companion novel “Warrior Girl Unearthed.”
At 3:30 p.m. at the Word Power Stage, “What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids” will feature six awardwinning authors writing picture books, middlegrade novels and YA fiction, in a discussion led by Melissa Stoner. Laurel Goodluck (“Forever Cousins”), Alexis Bunten (“Keepunumuk: Weeâchumun’s Thanksgiving Story”), Brandon Hobson (“The Storyteller”), Brian Young (“Heroes of the Water Monster”), Angeline Boulley (“Warrior Girl Unearthed”), and Andrea L. Rogers (“Man Made Monsters”) will discuss their own journeys toward publication, the state of publishing for Native American creators and the audiences they hope to reach.
Stoner said she plans to ask the authors on her panels how they find their “authentic voice” without just feeding into a colonial perspective of what a Native American person is.
“Now that more authors of color are coming out it feels like they’re more free to be authentic,” she said. “Native American peoples are not just a part of the past, we are now,” Stoner added.
• 826 Valencia: A nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting underresourced students with their writing skills.
• Ahmadiyya Muslim Community: Learn about Islam’s history and its teachings through the literary work of the Community.
• Alta Journal: Quarterly print magazine and related website that focus on the literature, art and culture of California and the West.
• Arabia Bookshop: Will display books the company promotes for educational and cultural exchange purposes in Egypt.
• Bay Area Horror Writers Association: Worldwide nonprofit organization of writers and publishing professionals dedicated to promoting dark literature.
• BayArea Travel Writers: An organization of professional journalists committed to increasing opportunities for, and promoting excellence among, its members in the practice of responsible travel journalism.
• Bookshop West Portal: Local independent bookstore, established in 2006, known for fiction & nonfiction books, plus games, cards & toys.
• Brick Cave Media: Publishes science fiction, fantasy and poetry books.
• California College of the Arts’ MFA Writing Program: A unique and intimate program nestled within one of the nation’s best design schools that encourages experimentation, interdisciplinary work and oneonone mentorship.
Festival Sponsor
• Center for the Art of Translation|Two Lines Press: Dedicated to finding dazzling new, overlooked and underrepresented voices, brought into English by the best translators, and to celebrating the art of translation. Festival Sponsor
• Collective Book Studio: Visit our booth to enjoy drag story time and activities for kids, meet our localtotheBayArea authors and buy discounted warehouse sale books. Festival Sponsor
• Folio Books: Queer and womanowned independent bookshop founded in 2013 in San Francisco’s
Noe Valley that sells new books, stationery, puzzles, games and more.
• Friends of the Berkeley Public Library: Offering a curated selection from their bookstore’s diverse collection of adult fiction and nonfiction, poetry and children’s books. Proceeds benefit the Berkeley Public Library.
• Guerrilla Cartography: Oaklandbased nonprofit whose mission is to create opportunities for everyone to participate in cartographic arts and science.
• Heyday: An independent, nonprofit publisher founded in 1974 in Berkeley, celebrating their recent and backlist publications with a special festival discount.
• Ignatian Literary Magazine: Studentrun print and online magazine which has provided University of San Francisco and outside communities creative works of poetry, fiction, nonfiction and visual art.
• Invisible City, MFA in Writing Program, University of San Francisco: An online publication of fiction, poetry and nonfiction published in the fall and spring. Invisible City seeks work that makes the unseen seen, examining the world through previously unconsidered perspectives and angles. Festival Sponsor
• Jennifer Clifford’s Adventures in Collage: A fine art and paper and gift company based in San Francisco with travelinspired artwork and accessories made for people who love to explore and collect memories.
• Lit Camp: A nonprofit dedicated to supporting writers through conferences, classes, retreats and community that also runs a coworking space for writers in San Francisco.
• Lost Paddle Books: A small independent bookseller specializing in literature, fantasy & science fiction, children’s, young adult and vintage paperbacks.
• Mandorla Books: A boutique book publisher with a unique authorcentric model where authors retain 100% of their rights and receive 100% of their royalties.
• Mangalam Press: Buddhist books for sale from the Tibetan Nyingma organizations founded by Tarthang Tulku.
• Medicine for Nightmares/ Medicine para Pesadillas: San Francisco Mission District bookstore and community space offering books that represent people living in the neighborhood.
• Mystery Writers of America: Northern California regional chapter of the country’s oldest organization of professional mystery writers. Festival Sponsor
• Object:Found: Creates handsoldered glass pendants featuring original images and illustrations upcycled from salvaged books and other printed materials diverted from the waste stream.
• Pathfinder Books: Offers books on the workingclass course needed to confront capitalism’s economic, social and moral crisis. Books on Cuba’s socialist revolution, labor struggles, Black and women’s liberation, antisemitism and writings and speeches by revolutionary leaders, including Jack Barnes, Mary Alice Waters, Malcolm X, Thomas Sankara, Fidel Castro and others.
• Pegasus Books: Selling new and used books in Berkeley and Oakland for more than 50 years.
• PM Press: Oaklandbased publisher of books and resources to educate, entertain and inspire.
and for a radically different world. Will have revolutionary communist books, banned books, graphic novels, children’s books, tshirts and more at their booth.
• San Francisco Chronicle: Subscription sign ups, meet & greets, book signings and swag giveaways. Festival Sponsor
• San Mateo County Libraries: Celebrate the Bay Area literary community. Stop by to learn more about our virtual Author Talk series and resources for local, independent writers.
• She Writes Press: Berkeleybased independent publisher of women’s books and women authors. Festival Sponsor
• Poetry Flash/NCBA: Publishes book reviews, interviews, poems and literary events online for all of California.
• Prisoners Literature Project: Nonprofit that encourages the pursuit of knowledge among incarcerated people by sending free reading materials to those behind bars.
• Radiant Light Holistic Wellness: A local independent publisher of notebooks and prompted journals to enhance wellness and metaphysical practices.
• Rae Trujillo: Handcrafted book themed upcycled items such as bags, high quality blank journals, wallets, passport covers and luxury bookmarks. Aims to put the phrase “Think Globally, Act Locally” into action.
• Reading Group Choices: Provides resources to enhance the shared book group experience for adults and young adults worldwide. Stop by our booth for information about our free services and resources. Festival Sponsor
• Recover Your Thoughts: Creator of journals from books discarded by libraries.
• Red Hen Press: Dedicated to publishing works of literary excellence, fostering diversity and promoting literacy in our local schools.
• Revolution Books: Local book seller that is both about the world
• Small Press Distribution: Better known as SPD, has for five decades connected readers with writers by providing dynamic access to independently published literature and supporting underrepresented literary communities.
• Spanish Press: Publishes and distributes U.S. Hispanic and Spanish American literature by authors from the United States, Mexico, Spain and Spanish America.
• The Weekend Store: Makers of personal and home accessories featuring vintage maps, feminist and pop culture icons.
• TooFar Media: Multimedia storytelling experiences combine books, music, art, animation and videos. Download the TooFar Media app at TooFarMedia.com and visit our booth.
• Visit Berkeley: More than an iconic college town, Berkeley offers an array of engaging neighborhood districts, each with great places to explore. Hip arts hub, capital of California cuisine, craft beer center, urban wine country, outdoor oasis — stop by the Visit Berkeley booth (look for the tiedye) for our new visitors guide!
Festival Sponsor
• Whiskey Tit: Attempts to restore degradation and degeneracy to the literary arts. We are unwilling to sacrifice intellectual rigour, unrelenting playfulness and visual beauty, often leading to
Writing a book is difficult enough. And then comes another great challenge, getting your hard work published. All authors — accomplished or aspiring — are encouraged to join these highly informative, inspiring and free sessions devoted to both tasks. You can learn lots of priceless tips from accomplished critics, novelists and teachers of writing while getting those creative juices flowing. “What Makes a Critic?”(1 p.m. May 6)
In this time of Yelp, social media and shrinking legacy book review publications, magazines and newspapers, it’s increasingly difficult for critics to do their jobs, and even harder for authors to engage with them. In a partnership with the National Book Critics Circle’s Emerging Critics Fellowship, you can learn valuable in
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texts that would otherwise be abandoned in a homogenised literary landscape.
• Write Your Story: Writing program developed for and by Cinnamongirl aiming to contribute to the national narrative by focusing on emerging Black and Brown women writers and supporting the development of all writers of color. Inspiring and honing the storytelling skills of young writers is an investment in the essential platforming of the lives and stories of women of color in every aspect of society.
Festival Community Partner
• WriterCoach Connection: Provides personal coaching to public school students working on their teachers’ writing assignments during class time. Every student in the class meets with a volunteer coach for individualized attention on critical thinking and writing.
formation on the development of the next generation of book critics.
In this session, recent Emerging Critics, including Yohanca Delgado, Ricardo Jaramillo, Jonathan Leal, Antonio López and Maisie WiltshireGordon, will share how they came to be critics and what the modern demands are with moderator Heather Scott Partington.
“Book criticism is an art, a craft and a business,” said Jane Ciabattari, former president of the National Book Critics Circle and acclaimed columnist. “The National Book Critics Circle, a literary community of reviewers founded nearly 50 years ago, created the Emerging Critics program to mentor reviewers at the early stages of their careers in all these aspects and the board is currently selecting candidates for our sixth cohort. Past Emerging Critics are now regular contributors to or editors at the New York Times, Vulture,
• Ateret Haselkorn: Obie lives with an artificially printed heart and no one can know. The scifi book “Call Me Obie” takes young readers along on Obie’s journey, discovering the power of empathy in a world of discrimination.
• America Eclipsed: Laurent Colvin wrote “Progressive Outrage Explored with Tarot” born out of concern for our country when Trump ascended to the presidency the same year a total solar eclipse crossed the nation.
• Andy Hsieh: An epic undying rises underground, threatening to transform all life on the world as we know it. The burden of stopping it falls upon the young dark mage Nila Straese.
• Anna Wong: Presented in ABC format, “Doubly Happy” captures everyday Chinese culture in prose.
• Anthony Florence: “Hell’s Heaven, a Metamorphosis in Costa Rica” navigates the author’s culture shock as he arose from life in the ghetto to one of
of San Francisco faculty members who have successfully and beautifully navigated these tricky waters National Book Award finalist Ingrid Rojas Contreras (“The Man Who Could Move Clouds: A Memoir”), Lambda Literary Awardwinner K.M. Soehnlein (“Army of Lovers”) and RL India Poetry Award winner Preeti Vangani (“Mother Tongue Apologize”) with Dave Maddenas the moderator.
“The Art of Brevity: A Flash Fiction Writing Workshop” (11 a.m. May 6)
who speak languages other than English how to understand, speak, read and write in English, by starting with very short stories — her advice is beneficial to all wouldbe writers, regardless of background. “Dazzling Debuts” (12:30 p.m. May 6)
Alta, the Rumpus, the Los Angeles Times and others.”
“The Art of Life: Writing Autobiography Across the Genres” (11:30 a.m. May 6)
We’ve all heard, “write what you know.” But there can be a blurry line between fact and fiction, and many of us don’t want to upset friends and family.
Capture insight from University
privilege and paradise.
• Ashley Taylor: “The Other Night” is a fastpaced, witty and gripping novel about breaking abusive cycles.
• Authorpreneur Talva: Talva is an author, ghostwriter and screenwriter with books available for children and adults.
• Beak Star Books: Author Linda Oxley Milligan once wrote a fieldworkbased dissertation on the UFO debate in America. In her second career, she is bringing it to her fiction writing.
• Books of Amelie: Nineteenyearold Amelie Butkus’ debut YA novel “A Lamplighter in Larkeney” combines disco, robots and an unnecessary amount of peppers into a hilarious buddy detective mystery.
• Brian Weisfeld: “The Startup Squad” inspires girls (and boys) ages 714 to open their first lemonade stand, or any business, empowering them to learn how to think like entrepreneurs.
• Bridgette Dutta Portman: Come meet the author of young
Writing an entire book, for most people, is extremely intimidating. So why not take baby steps and build your comfort zone? As experts Grant Faulkner (the slim, 184page book “The Art of Brevity”)and author and educator Kim Culbertson (“Small, Bright Things: 100Word Stories in the ELA Classroom”), share, short is indeed sweet. Culbertson’s guide is dedicated to teaching students
These are the first books for panelists Tsering Yangzom Lama, Jonathan Escoffery and Jens Liljestrad, so here’s an opportunity for you to engage in an inthetrenches telling of their paths to publication. You’ll get an international perspective with Escoffery’s “If I Survive You,” a collection of interwoven short stories about Jamaican immigrants; Lama’s “We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies,” a crosscultural, crossgenerational epic tracing 60 years of a Tibetan refugee family; and Swedish author Liljestrad’s “Even if Everything Ends,”which crafts a personal family saga set amid climate crisis.
adult fantasy trilogy “The Coseema Saga.”
• Cat Fan, Mika’s Quest: Mika and her pet unicorn solve clues to find a missing artifact. Young readers are engaged to join the quest while learning about San Francisco.
• Connie Pincus: Multigenre selfpublished author of fiction, memoir, poetry and screenplays, with a particular liking for scifi.
• Dan Hanel: “In the Shadow of Diablo” is the historical mystery series by the local awardwinning author.
• Dana Killion: Author of mystery and memoir, exploring what lies beyond the shadows. Her series follows her protagonist’s unrelenting ability to confront deceit and corruption.
• Daniel Micko: Award nominated and critically acclaimed Bay Area author writes about gray areas and dark places. No limits, stretched to the margins.
• Denver J. Hamilton: “Addiction: What I Wish I Could Tell My Father” is the story of an artist
and musician who is colorblind and tonedeaf.
• Destiny Deems: A collection of vignettes and images rendering one woman’s path through individuation and determining what really matters.
• Donna DiGiuseppe: “Lady in Ermine” dramatizes the life of genius Renaissance painter Sofonisba Anguissola.
• Donna Roberts: Meet the SoCal indie author who will be selling her novels “Letting Go and Holding On” and her newest release “Running with Hounds … and an English Degree.”
• Emil DeAndreis: Written by San Francisco native DeAndreis, “Tell Us When To Go” is a comingofage novel which explores friendships and lives impacted for better or for worse by the 2010 tech boom.
• Erik Schmitt: While attending the notable reunion of Black Mountain College, author Erik Schmitt gathered extensive quotes which serve
From page S29
as the foundation of his beautifully written and designed book: “American Bauhaus.”
• Evil Goddess Press: Epic fantasy, reimagined fairy tales and powerful women of all kinds written by Dalila Holness. Visit our booth and escape reality.
• Gini Grossenbacher: Come discover “HerStorical Novels,” which tell the timeless tales of women who rose above the boundaries and restrictions of their era.
• Golden: The Power of Silence in a World of Noise: Justin Zorn and Leigh Marz take us on an unlikely journey exploring why silence is essential for health, fulfilment, relationships, sustainability and a vibrant community.
• Great Diamond Press, LLC: Hagop Kaneboughazian is a local animator and author selfpublishing heartwarming and inspirational books for kids.
• Gregory Miller: “Black Prep School: Reflections of a Nurse on How Black Children are Indoctrinated by the Penal System” is a work of nonfiction that delves into the problems and origins of a system that results in a staggering number of Black children incarcerated after reaching adulthood.
• Hannah Williamson Books: Independent YA fantasy author will be featuring her novel “Heart of the Empire.” Stop by for signings, to purchase the novel or to pick up some art prints.
• Harper Black: Theresa Thurman is a new, independent author who writes in the romance genre, verging towards subcategories such as second chance romances, mature romance and multicultural and interracial love.
• Impact of Empathy: Dolphins, whales and … empathy? Marine biologist and brain tumor survivor Shari Bookstaff shares her story of survival and determination following a devastating stroke in her book, “When Life Throws You Lemons … Make Cranberry Juice!”
• Jeffrey Vernon Matucha: Literary fiction about crazy punks doing crazy punk things!
• Jennifer Berlingo: A revelatory memoir and inviting guidebook, “Midlife Emergence” belongs on the bedside table of every woman who finds herself burning to reclaim powerful parts of herself that social conditioning has locked away.
• Jimmy Rumsey: The gripping memoir “Slim Chances” is an extraordinary life story arising from the author’s struggles as a teenager through his road to redemption.
• Jordan Fellas: “Eerily Wrinkling and the Prodigal Return” is the debut novel of AJ Jordan and follows Alan Ritson’s reluctant return to his childhood home of Wrinkling City.
• JP Carol: “The Sixth Event” poses this question: What if the Vatican had a manuscript that predicted six events which were to occur in our time and when the sixth one came to pass, everything you know and believed in would change?
• Julien Dourlen Books and Art: Julien illustrates and make stories for children. He loves sharing his selfpublished “All the things a Bot could do” with kids and families at schools and libraries in the Bay Area.
• Katy Hoover: “Changing Tides: Poetry of Love, Loss and New Life” is a book filled with freestyle poetry and ocean photography.
• Kenneth Davids Coffee: Longtime coffee writer and editor of CoffeeReview.com brings “21st Century Coffee: A Guide,” his fourth and most comprehensive book on coffee.
• Lara Gabrielle: “Captain of Her Soul: The Life of Marion Davies” is the first biography of silent film actress Marion Davies in 50 years.
• Leigh Fenty: Come meet the author of sweet and humorous contemporary romance to brighten your day and make you smile.
• Leo M. Jackson, Jr.: Vietnam combat veteran and author will present fiction books based on realities of the turbulent late 1960’s and early 1970’s.
• Lily E. Espinoza: Read the story of a single mother who was unemployed for years before deciding to turn her life around. A true life account and beautiful
lesson on finding acceptance.
• Lisa Olivera: A creative, a therapist and the author of “Already Enough: A Path to SelfAcceptance.” If you’re interested in the human experience and returning to your truest self, come by the booth.
• Lori Berggren: Be curious, be your own hero/heroine. With “Every Day I Wonder What I will Wonder Next,” this author will show you the Wonder way.
• Maggie St. Thomas: “Still Life: The Photographs of Maggie St. Thomas” is about the factual and fantasy world of life and death. The book is filled with over four decades of photography work.
• Marc Johnson: Local fantasy and science fiction author with a deep knowledge of Star Trek and a love of boardgaming.
• Maria Castellucci Moore: “Vivienne in Paris” follows a young Parisian girl who journeys through Paris using her five senses to discover what makes her tick. A story about mindfulness, curiosity and wonderment.
• Matt Gaser: Matt Gaser is an awardwinning illustrator and concept artist. Check out his booth and come explore a whole new world.
• Meera Klein: Awardwinning author combines her love of cooking and writing in her two novels, both of which feature plantbased, easytouse recipes and an uplifting story.
• Michael Melancon: The Bay Area author’s tell all memoir
new YA/Coming of Age title deals with timely mental health issues for teens and young adults.
• Plastic Love Monkey Press: Román Leão’s follow up “Burn Your Starry Crown” explores what would happen if the burden of a Second Coming was foisted on an unknowing young girl in the 1880s.
• Prem Menon: Much like Thomas More’s 1516 sociopolitical satire “Utopia,” the stories they tell each other describe a world transformed by technology yet guided by humanity.
• Rie Neal: Author of “Astrid the Astronaut” series about a girl who wants to be the first hard of hearing astronaut!
“Why Do They Hate Us So Much” recounts shocking experiences with racism.
• Molly Baskette: A progressive Christian pastor writing in the space of posttraumatic joy, parenting & spirituality, and human transformation in a turbulent age.
• Mumblers Press LLC: Mumblers Press is a micro press with a multigenre list. While they currently focus on an LGBTQ angle, their plan is to broaden things up in the next year.
• Myesha Shuaibe: “Melanin Gang” is a brand formed to inspire, celebrate and empower Black people.
• Myoozik Entertainment Group: Founder Derrick Whitsett is an African American man raised in Brooklyn who has published a children’s book and novel that contains elements of love, redemption, coming of age and revenge.
• No More Hiding: Maurice Tobin will showcase his second selfpublished book “Beautifully Imperfect” about selfdiscovery, growth and understanding.
• Ocyrus Ink Publishing: An awardnominated author who writes poetry and children’s books.
• Patricia Bossano: Come meet the author of awardwinning philosophical fictions and supernatural escape artist.
• Pinkus Books: Sandra L. Rostirolla is an awardwinning author of YA/fantasy trilogy, “The Cecilia Series.” Released in April, her
• Robert DiLillo: Presenting a mystery set in Portland, Ore., restaurants in 1980 featuring the Portland Police Department’s first female detective, Hailey Matheson.
• S. Yerucham:If you’re into Melville or Kerouac, you’ll enjoy “True Stories of the Philosophical Theater!”
• S.G. Blaise: Lilac Grove Entertainment seeks to make the world a better place, one fantasy at a time, through “The Last Lumenian” book series..
• Sal da Terra: A poet who shares their work in zines, selfpublished poetry volumes, art prints and spoken word candles.
• Sara Fashandi: “Message in a Matchbox” is about a young impoverished boy growing up in the slums of Iran who uses street smarts to survive and ultimately fulfill his dreams.
• Shanti Hershenson: Teen author will be selling several of her most popular novels, such as “Neverdying” and “The Bane of Angelfall Academy.”
• Stefan Salinas: Author and illustrator focused on matters of spirituality, religion, healing and LGBTQ+.
• T.E. MacArthur: Come discover work by Bay Area author, artist, historian, amateur cat whisperer and parapsychologist wannabe.
• The Improving Democracy Project: Jan Raymond, author of “Curious Correlations, Politics and Economics” documents the ways in which high income tax rates produce a stronger country.
• Aditi Oza: Selftaught mixed media artist whose love for folk art inspires paintings, embroidery and stories based on love for her Indian heritage and culture. “Kesar and the Lullaby Birds” is her debut picture book.
• Alexis Fajardo, Kid Beowulf Comics: History, mythology and adventure converge in the graphic novel series “Kid Beowulf.” Follow the story of 12yearold twin brothers Beowulf and Grendel as they travel across distant lands and meet fellow epic heroes therein.
• AMLBOOKS: Educator, entrepreneur and mentor/teacher Antoinette Lawrence has written and self published four children’s books. She will be providing free book marks, coloring pages, readings and more at her booth.
• Carol Talmon de l’Armée: “Ballerina Belle” is an illustrated 13book series about a little girl who dreams of becoming a ballerina. These beautiful books are all inspired by the most famous classical ballets.
• Chasing A Spider Publishing: We craft stories aimed at educating, entertaining and intriguing children and families across the world.
• Cheery Things LLC: Katherine Crocker’s illustrated book of children’s poetry introduces young children to poetry in relatable terms, reinforcing the importance of art to storytelling. Each poem merges with its illustration to present a small vignette.
• Emily Shan: “Jojo Adventure Books” is a bilingual board book series that exists to provide more resources to Cantonesespeaking and Americanborn Chinese families through books and interactive activities in order to preserve
• The Paper Lantern Writers: Rebecca D’Harlingue’s books focus on historical fiction of all eras from Medieval Europe to the Gilded Age.
• Three Activist Writers: Three seasoned authors of multiple books on politics offer their publications. They can’t tell your fortune, but they know which way
Cantonese language for future generations.
• EmpowerMint Press: David Keyes and Christa Fletcher are independent authors publishing empowering children’s books that inspire kids to be and do their best.
• Grace Schmidt: Whether you’re into horror or scifi, you can’t help but get wholly immersed in the author’s fantasy world, where the impossible is possible.
• Haskells Hustles: Oakland educator and athletics coach Corrin Haskell will be on hand to tak about his two books “The Water Hole” and “Passin’ Gas in Class.”
• Hope Silver: Presenting her novel “Born Against All Odds,” a flash fiction collection, “Curious Thinkers” and children’s books “A Diary of a Traveling Hedgehog,” “Cuckoo Who Was Different” and “Little Dreamers.”
• Jobooks: Author and illustrator Joleen Michellie will sign her children’s books, including the newly released “The Case of The Missing Tooth Fairy.” Come explore and spin the wheel to win a prize.
• Linda Drattell: Author and illustrator of the children’s picture book “Who Wants to be Friends With a Dragon?”
• Marissa McGee: “Free the Curls” features a young girl who visits a store on wash day and notices all the products for her hair type are locked in a case. She must decide … buy the products or take action?
• Mary Jenner: “The Butterfly Pig” is a book and a boutique, founded on the celebration of everyone’s unique differences. We hope to inspire selflove and in
the wind blows.
• Tim Cromartie: Set in 1983, “The Madrinega Missiles” tells the story of Leighton, an AfricanAmerican agent, who is sent undercover to Madrinega, Central America, to recover cruise missiles stolen by guerillas in order to topple a rightwing dictator.
• Valerie Braylovskiy: Bay Areabased poet presents her newly
clusion through our whimsical story.
• Melissa Come Back, Patrice Keet: Melissa, the featured speaker at a fundraising event, and her previous foster mother are reunited after a 20year separation.
• Oak Tree Comics: New independent publisher of environmentallyconscious comics for the young and young at heart founded in 2020 by Josh Oaktree.
• Pamela Green: Bay Area children’s book author and educator is promoting her new book “In Your Dreams” aimed at 05 year olds. A portion of the proceeds from the sale of each book are donated to the Boys & Girls Clubs of America.
• Tenisha Bernal: “Little Chef’s First 100 Words” has a culinary twist that introduces babies and toddlers to items that can be found in the heart of the home: the kitchen. The detailed illustrations and brightly colored backgrounds are sure to engage even the youngest cooking enthusiasts!
• The Three Boys, Anessa Tjarks: Stayathome mom and bilingual children’s picture book author brings us “The Three Boys” which, in both Thai and English, tells the story of her three sons, who are all first generation in her family.
• Tuxedo Baby: A heartwarming children’s story from author Victoria Smith about family love and respect.
• Wilda Silva, Secret Keeper, A. A. Jeffery: Fairies are real, they’re scary, they’re everywhere and they’ve got their eyes on an 11yearold human musician named Wilda. Find out why in the exciting novel, “Wilda Silva, Secret Keeper.”
published debut poetry chapbook “HalfLife” with Alien Buddha Press.
• Viewless Wings: Poet Laureate of Dublin, Calif., and founder of Viewless Wing, James Moorehead has published two collections: “canvas” and “portraits of red and gray” His poems have appeared in multiple publications, media outlets and podcasts.
• African Library Project: Facilitates U.S. volunteers collecting gently used children’s books to send via shipping container to schools in our partner countries in Anglophone Africa. Will be accepting GENTLY USED children’s books to send to South Africa, Kenya and Lesotho, with kids helping pack the boxes.
• Ballerina Belle: Inspired by the most famous classical ballets and written by professional ballerina, teacher and author Carol Talmon de l’Armée, the illustrated ballet book series centers on a girl who dreams of becoming a ballerina.
• Berkeley Baby Book Project (The BBBP): Making books a birthright in our hometown and beyond with Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library. Will be giving out books on the spot and hosting art & crafts activities.
• Bookworm Reads: Social app and book tracker for readers. Think Goodreads but with more community, more color and zero Amazon. Come decorate your bookworm bookmark!
• Francisco the Bunny, Jenny Baran: What’s a rabbit’s favorite dance style? HIPHOP! Join the author of the new, heartwarming children’s book “Francisco the Bunny” for bunny hiphop dance classes, hourly interactive story times and to color your own pages with the illustrator.
• Half Price Books: America’s largest familyowned bookstore will be giving away free kids and YA books — as they have every year since the festival began —
from their very popular booth!
Festival Sponsor
• Krystaelynne Sanders Diggs: Publisher of books covering a range of important themes such as confidence, manners, facing fears, overcoming obstacles, problemsolving, consent and body safety.
• Lawrence Hall of Science: “Lights, Optics, Action!” We use mirrors everyday but how exactly do they work? What can you discover about the way our eyes and brains “see” different types of mirrored reflections? Experiment and notice the surprising results. Festival Community Partner • Little Feminist: Children’s book club subscription and publishing house that curates inclusive, feminist books and accompanying discussion questions & activities delivered to families around the world. Start your Reading Scavenger Hunt and find all the inclusive titles at their booth or around the Outdoor Fair to win sweet prizes.
• Little Wonders of Nature: Tracey Stanley Iives and works under the Redwood Trees a mile from the historic village of Occidental in Sonoma County where she writes, illustrates and handstamps some of the words into her children’s books.
• Oak Tree Comics: New independent publisher of environmentallyconscious comics for the young and young at heart founded in 2020 by Josh Oaktree.
• Words in the Wild: Stop by our booth to craft a bookmark with natural materials and read some children’s books.
The festival’s free oneday Outdoor Fair/Literary Marketplace taking place on Sunday May 7 is a lively, immersive experience jampacked with fun and exploration for festivalgoers of all ages and interests.
The heart of Northern California’s largest weekend literary event beckons book lovers to meet favorite authors spanning myriad genres, discover new reads, catch live performances on four outdoor stages, frolic in the Family Fun Zone, relax and unwind in an outdoor reading lounge and enjoy delectably fresh food to satisfy the foodie in all of us.
The Outdoor Fair’s nearly 150 exhibitors include acclaimed and emerging authors, independent booksellers, local publishers, writing groups and programs, literary clubs and organizations, book artists, libraries, reading resources and more.
“Shop, create and immerse are the prevailing themes of this year’s Outdoor Fair — our largest and most diverse to date,” said Bay Area Book Festival Managing Director Samee Roberts. “Readers of all ages and interests will have the unique opportunity of meeting with writers representing a wide range of genres in our lively, openair marketplace of books, thoughts and ideas.”
The Outdoor Fair is anchored by a 600seat outdoor stage featuring prominent literary talent hosted by festival partner the San Francisco Chronicle. This year’s lineup promises fascinating conversations with both national and local figures.
The San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park will begin at 11 a.m. Sunday with “Eboni K. Williams: Bet on Black,” a discussion between lawyer and television host Williams and podcaster Rae Ingram about Black excellence and Williams’ new book “Bet on Black: The Good News about Being Black in America Today.”
The Outdoor Fair on Sunday in MLK, Jr. Civic Park will feature nearly 150 exhibitors include acclaimed and emerging authors.
Next at 12:30 p.m., Washington Post columnist Alexandra Petri will take the stage to talk with Joe Garofoli, senior political writer for the San Francisco Chronicle, about her humorous take on American history in “A(lexandra) P(etri’s) US History: Important American Documents (I Made Up).”
Then at 2 p.m., the host of KQED’s popular Bay Curious podcast, Olivia AllenPrice, will chat about the new book “Bay Curious: Exploring the Hidden True Stories of the San Francisco Bay Area” with fellow journalists Peter Hartlaub and Heather Knight.
At 3:30 p.m., “Lit Camp Presents: Unreliable Narrator” will feature a series of short pieces by 15 different writers on the theme of con artists, liars and untrustworthy people. Lit Camp founder Janis Cooke Newman and storyteller and performer Keli Dailey will host the session.
Children and families can design their own books, create bookmarks with natural materials, make original art with found objects, join in a scavenger hunt, participate in story readings, pick up free children’s books, and many more handson activities in our robust Family Fun Zone — a great place for families to learn
» “Readers of all ages and interests have the unique opportunity of meeting with writers representing a wide range of genres in our lively, openair marketplace of books, thoughts and ideas.”
Samee Roberts, Bay Area Book Festival managing director
Story Time Circle will be followed by handson activities with the author in the festival’s new Creativity (on) Center tent. Kids and their caregivers can visit this unique area to exercise their own creativity.
and have fun together.
Also in the Family Fun Zone, authors like Meena Harris and Dan Santat will discuss their latest works on the Young Readers Stage for middle grades and teens. In addition, the Word Power Stage will have programming for teens and young adults, such as panels of prominent authors discussing topics ranging from activism to Native American literature and the latest mystery books.
The Collective Book Studio booth will have books available to browse and purchase, meet and greets with Bay Area authors, book signings, activities for kids and a very special story time with Drag Story Hour.
The African Library Project booth will be accepting gently used children’s books to send to South Africa, Kenya and Lesotho. Kids who visit the booth can help pack the boxes. They can also make bookmarks to include in these packages.
Kids can search for Waldo of “Where’s Waldo?” fame in and around the Family Fun Zone and compete for a prize. Another highlight will be the Story Time Circle for youngsters with authors like Alexis Bunten, Christy Hale, Rocio Bonilla and Carter Higgins sharing their latest works.
Creativity takes center stage This year, each reading in the
“It’s always fun for young readers to really get a glimpse into the creativity, research and hard work that fuels great books — and to jumpstart their own creativity and curiosity as well,” explained Director of Literary Programs Norah Piehl. “That’s the idea behind the new Creativity (on) Center tent, where kids and their caregivers can work on projects — from science experiments to visual art activities — alongside authors from all over the country and even around the world.”
For example, after reading her inclusive Thanksgiving story “Kee
punumuk: Weeâchumun’s Thanksgiving Story,” in the Story Time Circle, Alexis Bunten will lead a project that reinforces the work’s powerful themes of history and connection. Then, Christy Hale will help kids dream up their own natureinspired designs, and Rocio Bonilla and Carter Higgins will assist with artbased activities in the afternoon.
The Creativity (on) Center tent will also be the site of the Lawrence Hall of Science “color chemistry” activity with cartoonist Jon Chad. Kids will have the opportunity to don lab coats as he gives a preview of his latest work based on the periodic table of elements.
With so much to explore, our somethingforeveryone Outdoor Fair is family central on Sunday in MLK, Jr. Civic Park in the heart of downtown Berkeley!
Your festival experience won’t be complete without a visit to The Collective Book Studio activity booth in our Outdoor Fair on Sunday, May 7! Enjoy drag story time and activities for kids, meet Bay Area authors and buy discounted warehouse sale books. Based in Oakland, the womanowned, awardwinning publisher produces and distributes highquality lifestyle, food, gift and children’s books.
11 a.m. Faith Kramer, “52 Shabbats: Friday Night Dinners Inspired by a Global Jewish Kitchen.” Join Faith for baked brunch goodies.
11:45 a.m. Charlotte Rygh, “Shrimp ’n Lobster: A San Francisco Adventure.”
12:30 p.m. Drag Story Hour with Gianna Davy, “No One Owns the
Colors.” Storytellers use the art of drag to read Collective Book Studio kids’ books. Capturing the imagination, play and gender fluidity of childhood and giving kids glamorous, positive and unabashedly queer role models. 2 p.m. Jenna Hermans, “Chaos to Calm — 5 Ways Busy Parents Can Break Free from Overwhelm”
3 p.m. Mira Z. Amiras, “Malkah’s Notebook: A Journey Into the Mystical AlephBet.”
4 p.m. Lea Redmond, “Our Friend Moon” and “Wonder Hunt.” Wear your PJs, get glowinthedark stars and play Wonder Hunt Bingo.
Schedule subject to change. See baybookfest.org for any updates.
San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park
11 a.m.
Bet on Black: Eboni K. Williams, interviewed by Rae Ingram
12:30 p.m.
A(lexandra) P(etri’s) US
History: Alexandra Petri, interviewed by Joe Garofoli
2 p.m.
Bay Curious: Olivia AllenPrice, interviewed by Peter Hartlaub and Heather Knight
3:30 p.m.
Lit Camp Presents: Unreliable
Narrator: Hosted by Keli Dailey and Janis Cooke Newman
Book Signings
Chronicle Stage authors (except Lit Camp) will be signing books immediately following their respective programs at the Pegasus Books booth in the park.
Word Power Stage
Sponsored by the Saul Zaentz Company
11 a.m.
Spies, Sleuths, and Secrets: MiddleGrade Mysteries: Katryn Bury, Aya de León and Hayley
LeBlanc
Noon
Cinnamongirl: Write Your Story
1:15 p.m.
Native Voices: Essayists from the 2023 Graton Student
Writing Program, emceed by Greg Sarris
2:30 p.m.
Big Inspiration for Little
Activists: Taimani Emerald, Aida Salazar, John Stith and Shaunna Stith
3:30 p.m.
What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids: Angeline Boulley, Alexis Bunten, Laurel
Goodluck, Brandon Hobson, Andrea L. Rogers and Brian Young, moderated by Melissa Stoner
Book Signings
Word Power Stage authors (except Cinnamongirl and Native Voices/Graton Writing Program) will be signing books immediately following their respective programs at the Folio Books booth in the park. Cinnamongirl authors will sign books at the Cinnamongirl booth, also located in the park.
Creativity (on) Center
Sponsored by the Saul Zaentz Company
11 a.m.
Science Comics: The Periodic Table: Jon Chad
Noon
A New Thanksgiving Story (Activity): Alexis Bunten
12:45 p.m.
Copycat: NatureInspired Design (Activity): Christy Hale
1:45 p.m.
In the Neighborhood (Activity): Rocio Bonilla
2:45 p.m.
Search for a Giant Squid (Activity): Amy Seto Forrester and Andy Musser
3:45 p.m.
Some of These Are Snails (Activity): Carter Higgins
Book signings
Creativity (on) Center authors will be signing books immediately following their respective programs at the Folio Books booth in the park.
Young Readers Stage
Sponsored by the Saul Zaentz Company
11:15 a.m.
A Is for Ambitious: Meena Harris
Noon
Stories That Let You Choose!: Amy Seto Forrester, Andy Musser, Lily Simonson and Rana Tahir, moderated by Jessica Lee
1 p.m.
A First Time for Everything: Dan Santat, interviewed by Sharon McKellar
2 p.m.
Grounded: Exploring Muslim Identities: S.K. Ali, Huda AlMarashi, Jamilah Tompkins Bigelow and Aisha Saeed
3 p.m.
You Are Here: Stories of Asian American Identity: Traci Chee, Mike Chen, Ellen Oh and Randy Ribay
Book signings
Young Readers Stage authors will be signing books immediately following their respective programs at the Folio Books booth in the park.
Story Time Circle
Sponsored by the Saul Zaentz Company
11:30 a.m.
A New Thanksgiving Story (Story Time): Alexis Bunten
12:15 p.m.
Copycat: NatureInspired
Design (Story Time): Christy
Hale
1 p.m. In the Neighborhood (Story Time): Rocio Bonilla
3 p.m.
Some of These Are Snails (Story Time): Carter Higgins
Poetry Slam and Music Performances
Presented by Bay Area Book Festival and Downtown Berkeley Association, in association with The Berkeley Poetry Slam
Saturday, May 6
Noon
All Ages Openish Mic and MC Cypher
Open invitation all ages! Poets will have 34 minutes each.
2 p.m.
Alphabet Rockers Musical performance by Oakland’s Grammywinning hip hop collective
3 p.m.
Felonious:Onelovehiphop Musical performance Sunday, May 7
11:15 a.m.
All Ages Openish Mic Hosted by Reggie Edmonds Open invitation all ages! Poets will have 34 minutes each.
1 p.m.
All Ages Individual Poetry Slam
Hosted by Reggie Edmonds and Nazelah Jamison
Tworound Slam with judges selected from the audience.
2 p.m.
Drag Story Hour: No One Owns the Colors
2:45 p.m.
The Bay Area Poetry Slam: Battle of the Ages Hosted by Nazelah Jamison Featuring Slam teams representing The Berkeley Poetry Slam, Youth Speaks, With Our Words, and Stanford University.
Genre fiction, once the literary novel’s lowerclass cousin, has entered the big time and earned a lot of respect along the way. Genrebased works are the most popular form of literary storytelling, with the romance and horror genres satisfying devotees.
In the increasingly popular audiobook format, mysteries, thrillers and suspense novels are the most popular genres. And according to a recent article in Book Riot, romance novels represent 25 percent of all books sold in the United States
it’s a 1.3 billion dollar industry that’s been steadily growing every year since 2020.
One of the main reasons romance continually connects, according to young adult romance novelist Amy Spalding, is that the storytelling fulfills readers’ expectations in both familiar and surprising ways. Spalding, who is branching out into adult romance this year, will be featured on both the adult and teen romance panels at the 9th annual Bay Area Book Festival.
While the festival continues presenting topoftheline literary fiction, including finalists for the Booker Prize and National Book Award, its genre programs have become increasingly popular and reflective of overall publishing trends.
At this year’s festival, there are eight adult genre fiction sessions and two genre sessions specifically for young adults on horror and romance. All daytime programming will be free to attend.
The adult genre panels include: “Fiction: You’re a Fraud” with Kirstin Chen, Brendan Slocumb and Kyla Zhao; moderated by Cheryl Popp; “Horror: History That Goes Bump in the Night” with writers Jessica Johns, Nick Medina and Francesca Maria, moderated by Ben Monroe; “Mystery: The Art of Suspense” with writers Brendan Slocumb, Katy Hays and Marcie
Rendon, moderated by Laurie R. King; “Mysteries and Thrillers: Dangerous Destinations” with Margot Douaihy, Kwei Quartey and T. Jefferson Parker; “Romantic Roadblocks” moderated by Jasmine Guillory featuring Amy Spalding, Taleen Voskuni, Lily Chu and Claire Kann; and “Science Fiction: Space Exploration” featuring Annalee Newitz, Mary Robinette Kowal and Megan O’Keefe.A conversation with YA author Marie Lu and adult romance novelist Alisha Rai, called “Love on the Run,” combines the romance and thriller genres.
One of the festival’s most popular panel sessions is “Noir at the Bar” at 5:30 p.m. at Cornerstone Berkeley. Randal Brandt, curator of the California Detective Fiction Collection at the Bancroft Library, moderates the session with authors Marcie Rendon, T. Jefferson Parker, Margot Douaihy and Kwei Quartey, among others.
Quartey, a Ghanaian Americanwriter, sets his novels in Ghana, his birth place. He said the plotting and planning of his mysteries is “pretty straightforward” and he grounds the stories in what is really happening around him.
“I keep an eye out for injustices or social ills in the country. Then I create a relevant murder victim about the same time I select a murder site,”
» “It’s a chance to get to meet existing readers in person. You do a panel, and someone is really inspired by something and that always feels amazing to get a new reader in the process of talking about your book.”
Quartey said.
Quartey’s latest novel, “Last Seen In Lapaz,” featuring the young private detective Emma Djan, deals with human trafficking and the exploitation of sex workers.
“I have an essential need to know who, why, when and where,” Quartey said. “It dates back to childhood when I felt drawn to medical science and mystery stories. A voracious reader by 8 or 9 years old, I devoured (Arthur Conan) Doyle, (Dorothy L.) Sayers, (Agatha) Christie and YA mysteries. I loved the unfurling of the story of a crime, the sprinkled clues, the path that leads the detective to the solution or sometimes away.”
The new book is the third with Djan as the lead character.
“Readers like new characters and adventures, but they also like familiarity because it anchors them and makes them feel secure in some way,” Quartey said. “As in life, it’s absorbing to see the protagonist mature and change over time.
Their position or rank, as in the case of police procedurals, might change, as may where they live or travel to. Readers enjoy moving with the new developments.”
There are also two sessions with young adult authors delving deeper into genre, including a horror session, “YA: Haunts and Horrors,” with Andrea L. Rogers, Sara Farizan and Yamile Saied Méndezand a romance session, “YA: Falling for Love,” with Lio Min, Elise Bryant, Alisha Rai and Amy Spalding.
Spalding first started writing YA romances because she loved the immediacy of the genre.
“There’s a heightened sensation to everything,” Spalding said. “When I was a teen, the smallest things could feel very big and important and they were. They were the first time they happened, you hadn’t gone through so many things before. YA captures that feeling of everything being big and urgent for the first time.”
Spalding especially appreciates the Bay Area Book Festi
val’s engaging community.
“I love that so many authors travel from across the country,” Spalding said. “I’ve met so many friends because we’re in the green room at the exact same time or getting ready to be on a panel together, and you end up really bonding.”
Spalding also values making personal connections with readers.
“It’s a chance to get to meet existing readers in person,” Spalding said. “You do a panel, and someone is really inspired by something and that always feels amazing to get a new reader in the process of talking about your book.”
Spalding’s genre niche is quite specific as both the books she has out this year — the adult romance “For Her Consideration” and the young adult novel “No Boy Summer” — have queer characters at the center.
“We’re going through this time in this country where the queer community is really coming under fire by different politicians really trying to squash a lot of visibility,” Spalding said. “It’s a heartbreaking time to be a queer person in America. Getting to write books about girls, women, who are experiencing queer joy and love and friendship, feels extra vital to me. I feel so honored that I get to do this.”
One of the most international and multicultural literary festivals in the United States, the Bay Area Book Festival spotlights authors who hail from around the globe, including Asia, North and South America, Africa and Europe, representing a variety of genres. They’ll share their unique perspectives with festival audiences during nine free sessions May 67 in Berkeley.
“The Bay Area is a highly international place, and people have been eager to hear from afar,” noted Cherilyn Parsons, founder and executive director of the festival.“While travel was not possible for a long time, we were shown how deeply interconnected the world is, where health crises and political events can have global impacts. Literature offers us another way to connect and to learn about places and people that we may or may not have been able to experience firsthand.”
One compelling example is TibetanCanadian writer Tsering Yangzom Lama’s bestselling novel “We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies,”illuminating the lives of Tibetan exiles who flee to Nepal after Chinese forces invade the country, and later move to Canada.
It’s a journey that reflects her own family’s history: Lama was born to Tibetan refugees in Nepal and grew up there before she earned a bachelor’s degree in creative writing and international relations from the University of British Columbia. Parsons will interview Lama, a lifelong activist and now storytelling advisor for Greenpeace International, at 11:30 a.m. Sunday, May 7, at the Marsh Berkeley Cabaret, in a session called “We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies: In Exile from Tibet.”
Now splitting her time between Vancouver and Sweden, Lama said her background also influenced the structure of her debut novel.
“At a basic level, I think that having multiple languages, cultures and even worldviews is probably just helpful for writing
fiction — particularly for engaging with the perspectives of different characters. I knew from the very beginning of drafting this novel that I wanted to have many protagonists,” she notes. “I wanted a novel in which no character was more important than any other. Growing up in Kathmandu, which is an ancient but also very cosmopolitan city teeming with people from around the world, I think I was raised with this mindset.” Lama will also appear on the “Dazzling Debuts” panel along with Jonathan Escoffery, whose critically acclaimed “If I Survive You” interweaves short stories about Jamaican immigrants in Florida, and Swedish journalist Jens Liljestrand, whose celebrated first novel “Even if Everything Ends” combines family drama with the climate crisis, including a wildfire that may have particular resonance for Californians. The panel will be at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, May 6 in the Marsh Berkeley Theater, Liljestrand will have his own festival showcase, too. Jonathan Freeman, the literary critic, poet and author whose works include “Tales of Two Planets: Stories of Climate Change and Inequality in a Divided World,” will interview Liljestrand at 1 p.m. May 7 at the Marsh Berkeley Cabaret, in a session called “Even If Everything Ends: A Searing, Beautiful Novel on Life, Loss, and Today’s Climate Moment.”Festival attendees can be among the first to read the English translation of Liljestrand’s
» “Literature offers us another way to connect and to learn about places and people that we may or may not have been able to experience firsthand.”
novel, officially released May 9 but available for book signings at the Marsh venues.
Swissborn Dorothee Elmiger, who writes in German, is another author whose welllauded work will make its debut in English translation at the festival. Her novel “Out of the Sugar Factory,” a finalist for the German Book Prize, features a protagonist also named Dorothee Elmiger who obsessively collects artifacts tied to the violent history of the global sugar trade.
San Francisco’s Center for the Art of Translation, which commissioned the translation by Megan Ewing, praises Elmiger’s historically grounded novel as a “prismatic account of a writer’s overwhelming need to tell a story that is true, to follow the sugar wherever it may lead.” Elmiger will join journalist Jori Lewis, author of the awardwinning “Slaves for Peanuts” who splits her time between the Illinois and Senegal, in “Hidden Histories” at 4 p.m. May 6 in the Brower Center’s Tamalpais Room. KQED culture reporter Ariana Proehlwill moderate the session.
Pilar Quintana, the Colombian author whose debut novel “The Bitch”won numerous accolades in
2017 for its original Spanish version and again in 2020 for its English translation, will take part in “Craft Chats: A Child’s Perspective,” at 1 p.m. May 6 in the Brower Center’s Tamalpais Room. Her new novel “Abyss,” which received the prestigious Alfaguara de Novela Prize, tells the story of a dysfunctional family in Calí, Colombia through the eyes of 8yearold Claudia.
Muralist, author and illustrator Rocio Bonilla, who lives in Spain’s Catalonia region and writes in Catalan, will share her newly translated children’s book “In the Neighborhood” in two different sessions. She’ll read her story about a fantastical enclave at 1 p.m. May 7 at the Story Time Circle, then will lead children (ages 3 to 7) and their families in an art activity related to the book at 1:45 p.m. in the Creativity (on) Center venue.
Of course, not all international authors require translation. Like Lama, Jessica Johns lives in Canadaand writes in English. A member of Sucker Creek First Nation in northern Alberta, the selfdescribed Nehiyaw (Cree) “aunty” says her debut novel “Bad Cree” has elements of horror and mystery “while diving into the com
plexities of grief, loss and kinship dynamics. I really shaped the story to my taste; I wrote the kind of book I like to read, including all the elements that I love in writing.”
Her work also features Cree characters, who Johns notes did not appear in the books she read in her youth.
“Indigenous folks were largely kept out of the publishing industry when I was growing up, so the only representation was usually nonIndigenous people’s interpretation of our experience, which wasn’t accurate or genuine,” she said. “It’s so beautiful to see a range of identities and experiences now getting exposure, and though we have a long way to go, I’m excited for more of our stories by us to be out in the world.”
Johns will participate in “Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction” at 3:30 p.m. May 6 at the Magnes Auditorium, a session that includes Nick Medina (“Sisters of the Lost Nation”), Marcie R. Rendon (“Sinister Graves”) and Margaret Verble (“Stealing”), moderated by Melissa Stoner, Native American Studies Librarian at UC Berkeley. Johns will also take part in “Horror: History That Goes Bump in the Night” at 2:30 p.m. May 7 at the Marsh Berkeley Cabaret with Medina and Francesca Maria (“They Hide: Short Stories to Tell in the Dark”), in a conversation moderated by Ben Monroe, author of “The Seething.”
From its beginnings in 2018 at the height of the #MeToo movement, the Bay Area Book Festival’s yearround Women Lit series has been about two things: building community around a love of great literature and books, and connecting readers with the most powerfully necessary, brilliant and beloved female authors writing today. (By women, Women Lit means anyone who identifies as such).
The series made a name for itself with inperson events — which frequently sold out — featuring such literary and activist stars as Gloria Steinem, V (formerly known as Eve Ensler), Rachel Cusk, Jenny Offill, Tayari Jones, Terry Tempest Williams, Amber Tamblyn and many more.
At these events, Women Lit members would mingle with authors at private preevent receptions and postevent celebrations at venues across the Bay Area: what one member described as “a dream experience.” Another popular members’ perk: small, intimate gatherings — affectionately dubbed “salons” — with local authors at private homes, which turned into opportunities to discuss life, love, literature and everything in between, over brunch, tea or dinner.
“Then, shelter in place hap
» “With COVID, we had to rethink how we were going to keep giving our members that sense of connection and community that they’d come to value so much.”
Cherilyn Parsons, festival directorpened,” recalls festival director Cherilyn Parsons. “With COVID, we had to rethink how we were going to keep giving our members that sense of connection and community that they’d come to value so much. Especially because everyone was suddenly so isolated and needed it more than ever.”
Enter Women Lit #UNBOUND: the virtual incarnation of the series. Over the two years of lockdown, authors including Ann Patchett, Jane Smiley, Helen Macdonald, Lisa See, Eimear McBride, LaRayia Gaston and many more have connected with Women Lit audiences over Zoom, using a live chat function to recreate the warm giveandtake such events have become known for.
“One of the most powerful programs we’ve done, virtual or inperson, was a Women Lit Zoom event with Patti Smith in 2020,” Parsons says. “It was right before the election. People just really wanted some hope and faith and joy. They got it from this amazing woman just being herself, in front
of a laptop in her New York studio.”
The iconic rocker and National Book Award—winning memoirist regaled a rapt audience with personal storytelling, banter and passages from her latest book in between songs.
“Everyone practically forgot it was virtual,” says Parsons. “In the live chat, people were sharing these memories of seeing Patti live — at the Fillmore in the 2000s, at the Bowery in the ’70s. It was like a 30year oral history being unspooled in the chat. It turned into this evening of support and celebration: of art and literature, but also of resilience and survival and one another.”
After the event, one of Parsons’ favorite audience testimonials showed up in the festival’s inbox, courtesy of a grateful attendee who wrote, “Thank you for bringing me out of myself and reminding me there are others out there. You provided me a measure of collective joy.”
As restrictions eased and the
public health situation improved in summer 2021, the festival began to offer ways of spreading that joy in person again, albeit as safely as possible.
Since the return to inperson programs, Women Lit members have enjoyed conversations with memoirist Ada Calhoun, fashion journalist Alyssa Hardy, writer and writing teacher Susan Griffin, and nature writer Mary Roach, among other memorable events. A screening and discussion of the awardwinning short film “The Day Before Creation” was another 2022 programming highlight. Many of these events have been presented in partnership with other organizations such as The Ruby SF and Sausalito Books by the Bay.
For now, Parsons and the
Women Lit team are excitedly preparing for another beloved Women Lit staple: a 90minute private salon for members. “It’ll be relaxed and informal with drinks and snacks,” says Parsons. “It’s a great chance to unwind and connect during this whirlwind festival weekend, and ask these extraordinary authors about their journeys as writers and women.”
The threshold for joining Women Lit is $50 for a yearlong membership (at the “Voice” level).
“These days, every dollar counts, and we hear that from people. $50 for a year’s worth of programs is one way to make as many benefits available to as many women as possible,” says Parsons.
For information and membership, go to womenlit.org.
KATHLEEN HANNA
Ada Calhoun has participated in Women Lit events.
Women Lit has become one of the most prominent womencentric arts organizations in the Bay Area. The program aims to bring more women to the stage both at the annual festival and as a yearround event series,which has so far featured powerhouses like Patti Smith and Gloria Steinem.
The membershipbased community offers a slew of benefits, including advanced access to yearround event tickets, preevent private receptions, a special salon at the festival, salons in private homes and advanced access to ticketed events at the Bay Area Book Festival.
Become a member at womenlit.org, or email womenlit@ baybookfest.org with questions about membership levels and benefits.
The benefits below reflect perks for currentyear Women Lit members, but are subject to change for 2023 and beyond. Current members will receive the perks described below for the duration of their current yearlong membership, as will NEW members who sign up by May 5! So join now!
Monthly “Literary Lighthouse” letter, only for Women Lit members; Access to Women Lit portal to connect with other members; Access to yearround Women Lit literary events with book discounts; Access to the exclusive Women Lit author salon at the Bay Area Book Festival in Berkeley; One headliner ticket at the festival.
All Voicelevel benefits, with two headliner tickets for the festival; Priority Access for one to the Bay Area Book Festival in Berkeley.
All Esteem level benefits, with Two headliner tickets for the festival; Priority Access for two to the Bay Area Book Festival in Berkeley; Invitation for two to the exclusive Author Kickoff Party at the festival.
All Integrity level benefits, with invitation for four to the exclusive Author Kickoff Party at the festival.
For more information on Women Lit, visit womenlit.org or email womenlit@baybook fest.org.
Leslie Absher
• Memoir: In Search of Our Fathers (12:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Faith Adiele
• One Long Listening: A Habit of Love, a Memoir of Offering Care (11:30 a.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Ashia Ajani
• Parable of the Sower Turns 30 (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Huda AlMarashi
• Grounded: Exploring Muslim Identities (2 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Andrew Alden
• True Stories: Northern California (3:30 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
S.K. Ali
• Grounded: Exploring Muslim Identities (2 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Olivia AllenPrice
• Bay Curious (2 p.m. Sunday, San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park)
Amerie
• Amerie: You Will Do Great Things (11 a.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Roxanna Asgarian
• We Were Once a Family: Journalists Investigating Child Welfare (11 a.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Ramona Ausubel
• Fiction: Mothers and Daughters (12:30 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Rina Ayuyang
• Historical Fiction: The American West (2 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
• Noir at the Bar (5:30 p.m. Satur
day, Cornerstone Berkeley)
Joan Baez
• An Evening with Joan Baez: Trailblazing Musician, Artist, and Activist (7:30 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
David Barstow
• We Were Once a Family: Journalists Investigating Child Welfare (11 a.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Monika Bauerlein
• The Activist’s Media Handbook (12:30 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Jason Bayani
• 25 Years of the Berkeley Slam (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Bay Area Children’s Theatre
• Bay Area Children’s Theatre Continues on S38
From page S37
Playtime (4:15 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Maddalena Bearzi
• Finding Nature, Saving Time (11 a.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Vanessa A. Bee
• Memoir: The Meaning of Home (11:30 a.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
W. Kamau Bell
• Do the Work: How You Can Take Action Against Racism (5:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
The Berkeley Poetry Slam (team)
• The Bay Area Poetry Slam: Battle of the Ages (2:45 p.m. Sunday, BART Plaza Stage)
Erica Berry
• The Beauty and Urgency of Nature Writing (11 a.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Patricia Quintana Bidar
• Flash Fiction America (2:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Darwin BondGraham
• Reforming Cop Culture: In Oakland and Nationwide (11 a.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Rocio Bonilla
• In the Neighborhood (reading) (1 p.m. Sunday, Story Time Circle)
• In the Neighborhood (Activity) (1:45 p.m. Sunday, Creativity (on) Center)
Angeline Boulley
• YA: Thriller Superstars (1 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
• What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Randal Brandt
• Noir at the Bar (5:30 p.m. Saturday, Cornerstone Berkeley)
Nick Brooks
• YA: Thriller Superstars (1 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Sylvia Brownrigg
• Memoir: In Search of Our Fathers (12:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
• Unraveling (3:30 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Elise Bryant
• YA: Falling for Love (5 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Alexis Bunten
• Keepunumuk (Reading) (11:30 a.m. Sunday, Story Time Circle)
• Keepunumuk (Activity) (Noon Sunday, Creativity (on) Center)
• What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Katryn Bury
• Spies, Sleuths, and Secrets: MiddleGrade Mysteries (11 a.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Carlos CabreraLomelí
• The Beauty and Urgency of Nature Writing (11 a.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Rita Cameron
• Crossing the Finish Line: New Books from SJSU MFA Faculty, Steinbeck Fellows, and Students (4 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Jon Chad
• Science Comics Reading/Activity with Lawrence Hall of Science (11 a.m. Sunday, Creativity (on) Center)
KMing Chang
• Flash Fiction America (2:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
• Fiction: Encounters with Myths and Spirits (12:30 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Rita ChangEppig
• Fiction: Encounters with Myths and Spirits (12:30 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Traci Chee
• You Are Here: Stories of Asian American Identity (3 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Kirstin Chen
• Fiction: You’re a Fraud (11 a.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
• Flash Fiction America (2:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Mike Chen
• You Are Here: Stories of Asian American Identity (3 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Charlotte Cheng
• Cooking the Books: A Celebration of Picture Books and Food (1 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Ava Chin
• Echoes of Exclusion (2 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Lily Chu
• Fiction: Romantic Roadblocks (2 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Fiction Writing Workshop (11 a.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
Keli Dailey
• Lit Camp presents: Unreliable Narrator (3:30 p.m. Sunday, San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park)
Angela Dalton
• Picturing Lives: Picture Book Biographies (1:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
Nicole Chung
• Bridging the Distance: Nicole Chung and A Living Remedy (2 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Jane Ciabattari
• Flash Fiction America (2:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Mark Ciabattari
• Fiction: At Play on the Page (1 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Anthony Cody
• Poetry and The Archives of History (1 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
• Poetry at the End of the World (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Jennieke Cohen
• YA: What’s Your Inspiration? (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Tom Comitta
• The Beauty and Urgency of Nature Writing (11 a.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Ying Chang Compestine
• Cooking the Books: A Celebration of Picture Books and Food (1 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Ingrid Rojas Contreras
• The Art of Life: Writing Autobiography Across the Genres (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Kim Culbertson
• The Art of Brevity: A Flash
Jasmin Darznik
• Fiction: Mothers and Daughters (12:30 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Evette Davis
• Science Fiction: Space Exploration (2 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
Melissa de la Cruz
• YA: Thriller Superstars (1 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Shuli de la FuenteLau
• Cooking the Books: A Celebration of Picture Books and Food (1 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Aya de León
• Spies, Sleuths, and Secrets: MiddleGrade Mysteries (11 a.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
• Parable of the Sower Turns 30 (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Yohanca Delgado
• What Makes a Critic? (1 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Cory Doctorow
• Red Team Blues (3:30 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
• Chokepoint Capitalism (11 a.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Margot Douaihy
• Noir at the Bar (5:30 p.m. Saturday, Cornerstone Berkeley)
• Mysteries and Thrillers: Dangerous Destinations (3:30 p.m.
Bay Area Book Festival founder Cherilyn Parsons may be stepping down from her role as executive director in June, but she’s already looking forward to the festival’s 10th anniversary edition in 2024.
“I want to return to applaud the team in bringing forward the vision that I started but they’re taking in their own directions,” Parsons said. “The current team is fantastic and can carry it forward.”
Parsons said she’s “especially excited” about her successor, Norah Piehl, who will become interim executive director after having served as the festival’s program director for the past two years. Piehl previously ran the Boston Book Festival.
“I have such confidence in her with her experience and personal maturity, she’s perfect to take things from here.”
She explained that Piehl “has the ability to make the festival her own. I don’t think it’s easy for anyone to take the reins after a founder steps away. In our case, the festival became identified with me personally, I think because I had to network so radical
Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Marti Dumas
• Middle Grade: Cast a Spell (12:15 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
Camille Dungy
• Memoir: The Meaning of Home (11:30 a.m. Sunday, Brower Center
Tamalpais Room)
• Parable of the Sower Turns 30 (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center
Tamalpais Room)
Reggie Edmonds
• 25 Years of the Berkeley Slam (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes
Auditorium)
ly, selling the vision everywhere, just to get it off the ground. So people began to see the festival and think of me. But long ago it became much more than just me.”
An L.A. native, Parsons had been inspired to start the Bay Area Book Festival by her years of attending the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, “my favorite weekend each year.”
When she moved to the Bay Area in 2009 to take a job at the Center for Investigative Reporting, she saw that “there was no big free weekend festival here.”
At the close of 2012, she left CIR to try to launch one. “In retrospect, it was completely crazy. I knew books well, but I had no knowledge of the publishing industry, which is essential. I had never planned an event bigger than a luncheon. I had no money except my own savings, I had no donors at the beginning, I had nothing.”
Contacts from the journalism world helped her gain sponsors, including the San Francisco Chronicle and KQED, which along with a small grant from UC Berkeley “gave me a sort of calling card to use with some potential funders, potential vol
• The Bay Area Poetry Slam: Battle of the Ages (2:45 p.m. Sunday, BART Plaza Stage)
Dave Eggers
• The Eyes and the Impossible (11 a.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
Tongo Eisen-Martin
• Reforming Cop Culture: In Oakland and Nationwide (11 a.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Ashara Ekundayo
• Tricia Hersey: Rest Is Resistance (2 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
unteers … It was leveraging one tiny thing after another.”
The Bay Area Book Festival debuted in 2015 at nearly the same scale it boasts today.
“It was hard to believe, but we actually pulled off a huge festival with 300 authors and this vibrant giant outdoor fair, and it was packed with people,” Parsons said. “I was walking around all weekend, stunned. It was kind of funny.”
Parsons emphasized that the first festival’s success happened “in large measure” because of longtime Berkeley events producer Lisa Bullwinkel and the festival’s program director Melissa Mytinger, cofounder of Berkeley Arts & Letters and former marketing director of Cody’s Books, the iconic Berkeley bookstore that closed in 2008.
“They were as responsible for it as I was,” Parsons said.
The 2016 presidential election heightened her intention to engage with contemporary issues through the festival.
“We’d always included books that addressed questions of justice, such as human rights, and democratic values. But after 2016 we became much more consciously oriented toward social
Ekabhumi Charles Ellik
• 25 Years of the Berkeley Slam (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Dorothee Elmiger
• Hidden Histories (4 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Taimani Emerald
• Big Inspiration for Little Activists (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Jerry Emory
• Places Worth Fighting For: Preserving Public Lands (11 a.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Bay Area Book Festival founder Cherilyn Parsons, middle, with Heydey’s Steve Wasserman and Paul Yamazaki from City Lights, both of whom helped nurture the festival.
justice across program topics, the authors we choose, and our overall curation. I think we’re known for that. If a festival is an orchestra, that’s our harmony. What I’ve loved most is creating that harmony.”
She was quick to add that while traditional nonfiction “can drive toward a point, didacticism can kill a creative work like fiction, poetry, memoir and literary essays. They ask questions and give us an experience. Also, of course none of this has to be so serious! What a boring book festival that would be!”
After June, Parsons plans to move to France until the following spring, when she’ll return to
Deirdre English
• Forgiveness, Reconciliation, and Reckoning (12:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Jonathan Escoffery
• Dazzling Debuts (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
CJ Evans
• Poetry and the Art of Translation (2:30 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
• Poetry at the End of the World (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Kali Fajardo-Anstine
• Historical Fiction: The American
the festival, “hopefully as a moderator or interviewer, something I always enjoy.”
She expects to stay involved before then. “I’m not saying goodbye — I love this festival.” From remote she will serve as a program advisor and “stay in touch with our many donors and partners. They’ve become friends.”
Yet Parsons is also delighted to pass the baton after nine years of conducting — and fundraising on behalf of — the nonprofit festival.
“While I’ll share ideas, Norah will make the decisions,” Parsons said. “She will be the director, and I will happily not.”
West (2 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
• Fiction: Encounters with Myths and Spirits (12:30 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Sara Farizan
• YA: Haunts and Horrors (3:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Grant Faulkner
• The Art of Brevity: A Flash Fiction Writing Workshop (11 a.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
• Flash Fiction America (2:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Continues on S40
From page S39
David Fenton
• The Activist’s Media Handbook (12:30 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center
Goldman Theater)
Liza Ferneyhough
• Story Time: Family and Heritage (2:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Francesca Flores
• YA: What’s Your Inspiration? (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Marni Fogelson
• Picturing Lives: Picture Book Biographies (1:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
Amy Seto Forrester
• Stories that Let You Choose! (12 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
• Search for a Giant Squid Workshop (2:45 p.m. Sunday, Creativity (on) Center)
Clare Frank
• True Stories: Northern California (3:30 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Joan Frank
• A Life in Books (11 a.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
John Freeman
• A Life in Books (11 a.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
• Even if Everything Ends (1 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
• Poetry at the End of the World (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Forrest Gander
• Poetry and the Art of Translation (2:30 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Joe Garofoli
• A(lexandra) P(etri’s) US History (12:30 p.m. Sunday, San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park)
Molly Giles
• Flash Fiction America (2:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Tiffany Golden
• Story Time: Imagine That! (11:45 a.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
• YA: Falling for Love (5 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Betsy Gomez
• 25 Years of the Berkeley Slam (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Maurene Goo
• Maurene Goo: Throwback (12:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Laurel Goodluck
• Story Time: Family and Heritage (2:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
• What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Susan Griffin
• Poetry and Fiction: The Artist’s Influence (2 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Neil Gross
• Reforming Cop Culture: In Oakland and Nationwide (11 a.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Jasmine Guillory
• Fiction: Romantic Roadblocks (2 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Katie Hafner
• Fiction: At Play on the Page (1 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Christy Hale
• Copycat (Reading) (12:15 p.m. Sunday, Story Time Circle)
• Copycat (Activity) (12:45 p.m. Sunday, Creativity (on) Center)
Chenxing Han
• One Long Listening: A Habit of Love, a Memoir of Offering Care (11:30 a.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Meena Harris
• Meena Harris: A Is for Ambitious (11:15 a.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Shawn Harris
• The Eyes and the Impossible (11 a.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
Peter Hartlaub
• Bay Curious (2 p.m. Sunday, San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park)
Gabriela Hasbun
• Words and Pictures (2 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Katy Hays
• The Art of Suspense (11 a.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Tricia Hersey
• Tricia Hersey: Rest Is Resistance (2 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Jessica Johns
• Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction (3:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
• Horror: History that Goes Bump in the Night (2:30 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Saeed Jones
• Poetry at the End of the World (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Claire Kann
Carter Higgins
• Some of These Are Snails (reading) (3 p.m. Sunday, Story Time Circle)
• Some of These Are Snails (activity) (3:45 p.m. Sunday, Creativity (on) Center)
Brandon Hobson
• Middle Grade: The Magic of Story (1:30 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
• Fiction: Encounters with Myths and Spirits (12:30 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
• What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Adam Hochschild
• Adam Hochschild on American Midnight and Democracy’s Crises (12:30 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Peter Hoey
• Fiction: At Play on the Page (1 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Rae Ingram
• Eboni K. Williams: Bet on Black (11 a.m. Sunday, San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park)
Nazelah Jamison
• 25 Years of the Berkeley Slam (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
• The Bay Area Poetry Slam: Battle of the Ages (2:45 p.m. Sunday, BART Plaza Stage)
Ricardo Frasso Jaramillo
• What Makes a Critic? (1 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
• Middle Grade: Cast a Spell (12:15 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
• Fiction: Romantic Roadblocks (2 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Susan B. Katz
• Picturing Lives: Picture Book Biographies (1:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
Kristin Keane
• Memoir: The Meaning of Home (11:30 a.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Dacher Keltner
• Awe: The Science of Everyday Wonder (12:30 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
Carmen Kennedy
• Crossing the Finish Line: New Books from SJSU MFA Faculty, Steinbeck Fellows, and Students (4 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Amanda Mei Kim
• Crossing the Finish Line: New Books from SJSU MFA Faculty, Steinbeck Fellows, and Students (4 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Dean King
• Places Worth Fighting For: Preserving Public Lands (11 a.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
John King
• True Stories: Northern California (3:30 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Laurie R. King
• The Art of Suspense (11 a.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Heather Knight
• Bay Curious (2 p.m. Sunday, San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park)
Lance Knobel
• Fiction: Across Cultures (2 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Jamil Jan Kochai
• Fiction: Across Cultures (2 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Talia Lakshmi Kolluri
• The Beauty and Urgency of Nature Writing (11 a.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Mary Robinette Kowal
• Story Time: Imagine That! (11:45 a.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
• Science Fiction: Space Exploration (2 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
• Noir at the Bar (5:30 p.m. Saturday, Cornerstone Berkeley)
Jarrett J. Krosoczka
• YA: Coming of Age in Words and Pictures (4 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Akil Kumarasamy
• Fiction and Technology: What Hath AI Wrought? (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Jim L’Etoile
• Mysteries and Thrillers: Dangerous Destinations (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Nina LaCour
• Story Time: Imagine That! (11:45 a.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Tsering Yangzom Lama
• Dazzling Debuts (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
• We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies (11:30 a.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Dorothy Lazard
• A Life in Books (11 a.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
• Master Slave Husband Wife (2 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Jonathan Leal
• What Makes a Critic? (1 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Hayley LeBlanc
• Spies, Sleuths, and Secrets: MiddleGrade Mysteries (11 a.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Jessica Lee
• Stories that Let You Choose! (Noon Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Marie MyungOk Lee
• Fiction: Across Cultures (2 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
• YA: What’s Your Inspiration? (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Jori Lewis
• Hidden Histories (4 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Jens Liljestrand
• Dazzling Debuts (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
• Even if Everything Ends (1 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Wendy Liu
• Chokepoint Capitalism (11 a.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
McKenzie Long
• Places Worth Fighting For: Preserving Public Lands (11 a.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Antonio López
• What Makes a Critic? (1 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Marie Lu
• YA: Thriller Superstars (1 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
• Love on the Run (4 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Kathryn Ma
• Craft Chats: Humor (11:30 a.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
• Echoes of Exclusion (2 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Dave Madden
• The Art of Life: Writing Autobiography Across the Genres (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Alexis Madrigal
• Finding Nature, Saving Time (11 a.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Francesca Maria
• Horror: History that Goes Bump in the Night (2:30 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
J. Michael Martinez
• Crossing the Finish Line: New Books from SJSU MFA Faculty, Steinbeck Fellows, and Students
Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Ben Monroe
• Horror: History that Goes Bump in the Night (2:30 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Doug Mungin
• 25 Years of the Berkeley Slam (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Devin T. Murphy
(4 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
George McCalman
• Words and Pictures (2 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Sharon McKellar
• A First Time for Everything (1 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Toby McLeod
• Places Worth Fighting For: Preserving Public Lands (11 a.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Catriona McPherson
• Mysteries and Thrillers: Dangerous Destinations (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Nick Medina
• Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction (3:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
• Horror: History that Goes
Bump in the Night (2:30 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Amy MidanikBlum
• Picturing Lives: Picture Book Biographies (1:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
Max Miller
• Tasting History with Max Miller (3:30 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
Lio Min
• YA: Falling for Love (5 p.m.
• Parable of the Sower Turns 30 (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Mark Murrmann
• Words and Pictures (2 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Andy Musser
• Stories that Let You Choose! (12 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
• Search for a Giant Squid Workshop (2:45 p.m. Sunday, Creativity (on) Center)
Patrick Ness
• YA: Coming of Age in Words and Pictures (4 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Annalee Newitz
• Science Fiction: Space Exploration (2 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
Janis Cooke Newman
• Lit Camp presents: Unreliable Narrator (3:30 p.m. Sunday, San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park)
Eric Newton
• Memoir: In Search of Our Fathers (12:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Fae Myenne Ng
• Echoes of Exclusion (2 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Keenan Norris
• Craft Chats: A Child’s Perspective (1 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
• Crossing the Finish Line: New Books from SJSU MFA Faculty,
Continues on S42
From page S41
Steinbeck Fellows, and Students (4 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Megan O’Keefe
• Science Fiction: Space Exploration (2 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
Jenny Odell
• Finding Nature, Saving Time (11 a.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Ellen Oh
• You Are Here: Stories of Asian American Identity (3 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Peggy Orenstein
• Unraveling (3:30 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Claribel Ortega
• Middle Grade: Cast a Spell (12:15 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
Mary Otis
• Fiction: Mothers and Daughters (12:30 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Alexandra Overy
• Middle Grade: Cast a Spell (12:15 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
Susanne Pari
• Fiction: Across Cultures (2 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
T. Jefferson Parker
• Noir at the Bar (5:30 p.m. Saturday, Cornerstone Berkeley)
• Mysteries and Thrillers: Dangerous Destinations (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Cherilyn Parsons
• We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies (11:30 a.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Heather Scott Partington
• What Makes a Critic? (1 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
• Fiction: At Play on the Page (1
p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Elizabeth Partridge
• Seen and Unseen: Japanese Incarceration (11 a.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
Alexandra Petri
• A(lexandra) P(etri’s) US History (12:30 p.m. Sunday, San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park)
Minnie Phan
• Story Time: Family and Heritage (2:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Cheryl Popp
• Fiction: You’re a Fraud (11 a.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Sandhya Prabhat
• Story Time: Family and Heritage (2:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Ariana Proehl
• Hidden Histories (4 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Katherine Pryor
• Cooking the Books: A Celebration of Picture Books and Food (1 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Kwei Quartey
• Noir at the Bar (5:30 p.m. Saturday, Cornerstone Berkeley)
• Mysteries and Thrillers: Dangerous Destinations (3:30 p.m. Sun
day, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Pilar Quintana
• Craft Chats: A Child’s Perspective (1 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Cecilia Rabess
• Craft Chats: Humor (11:30 a.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Alisha Rai
• YA: Falling for Love (5 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
• Love on the Run (4 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Paisley Rekdal
• Poetry and The Archives of History (1 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
• Echoes of Exclusion (2 p.m. Sunday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Marcie Rendon
• Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction (3:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
• Noir at the Bar (5:30 p.m. Saturday, Cornerstone Berkeley)
• The Art of Suspense (11 a.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Randy Ribay
• You Are Here: Stories of Asian American Identity (3 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Josh Riedel
• Fiction and Technology: What
Activist (7:30 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
• Native Voices: Essayists from the 2023 Graton Student Writing Program (1:15 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Kathryn Savage
• Memoir: The Meaning of Home (11:30 a.m. Sunday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Sam Sax
• 25 Years of the Berkeley Slam (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Hath AI Wrought? (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Leslie Carol Roberts
• Dazzling Debuts (12:30 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Andrea L. Rogers
• YA: Haunts and Horrors (3:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
• What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Ethel Rohan
• Craft Chats: A Child’s Perspective (1 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Allie Rowbottom
• Fiction and Technology: What Hath AI Wrought? (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Aisha Saeed
• Grounded: Exploring Muslim Identities (2 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Aida Salazar
• Big Inspiration for Little Activists (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Dan Santat
• A First Time for Everything (1 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Greg Sarris
• An Evening with Joan Baez: Trailblazing Musician, Artist, and
• Poetry at the End of the World (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Kate Schatz
• Do the Work: How You Can Take Action Against Racism (5:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Nina Schuyler
• Fiction and Technology: What Hath AI Wrought? (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Selby Wynn Schwartz
• Poetry and Fiction: The Artist’s Influence (2 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Olivia Sears
• Poetry and the Art of Translation (2:30 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
Shanthi Sekaran
• You Are Here: Stories of Asian American Identity (3 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Leta McCullough Seletzky
• Memoir: In Search of Our Fathers (12:30 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Margaret Wilkerson Sexton
• Fiction: Mothers and Daughters (12:30 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Michael Shapiro
• Craft Chats: Humor (11:30 a.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Brenda Shaughnessy
• Poetry and Fiction: The Artist’s
Influence (2 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Nicole Simonsen
• Flash Fiction America (2:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Lily Simonson
• One Story, Unlimited Possibilities: A Choose Your Own Adventure Workshop (12:15 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
• Stories that Let You Choose! (Noon Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Brendan Slocumb
• Fiction: You’re a Fraud (11 a.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
• The Art of Suspense (11 a.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Jane Smiley
• A Life in Books (11 a.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
• Historical Fiction: The American West (2 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Emma Bland Smith
• Picturing Lives: Picture Book Biographies (1:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
KM Soehnlein
• The Art of Life: Writing Autobiography Across the Genres (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Aliza Sokolow
• Cooking the Books: A Celebration of Picture Books and Food (1 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Alan Soldofsky
• Crossing the Finish Line: New Books from SJSU MFA Faculty, Steinbeck Fellows, and Students (4 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Amy Spalding
• Fiction: Romantic Roadblocks (2 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
• YA: Falling for Love (5 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Meera Sriram
• Story Time: Family and Heritage (2:45 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Noah Stern
• Fiction and Technology: What Hath AI Wrought? (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
John Stith
• Big Inspiration for Little Activists (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Shaunna Stith
• Big Inspiration for Little Activists (2:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Melissa Stoner
• Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction (3:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
• What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Story Time Band
• Musical Story Time with the Story Time Band (3:30 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
Misa Sugiura
• Middle Grade: The Magic of Story (1:30 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
Rana Tahir
• Stories that Let You Choose! (Noon Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Elaine Tai
• YA: Coming of Age in Words and Pictures (4 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Erik Tarloff
• Craft Chats: Humor (11:30 a.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Shawn Taylor
• Awe: The Science of Everyday Wonder (12:30 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
Tess Taylor
• Poetry and The Archives of History (1 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Cabaret)
• Poetry at the End of the World (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Joshua Teal
• Words and Pictures (2 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Garrett Therolf
• We Were Once a Family: Journalists Investigating Child Welfare (11 a.m. Saturday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Jamilah ThompkinsBigelow
• Grounded: Exploring Muslim Identities (2 p.m. Sunday, Young Readers Stage)
Maggie TokudaHall
• Seen and Unseen: Japanese Incarceration (11 a.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Community Meeting Room)
V (Eve Ensler)
• V: Forgiveness, Reconciliation, and Reckoning (12:30 p.m. Sunday, Freight & Salvage)
Preeti Vangani
• The Art of Life: Writing Autobiography Across the Genres (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Margaret Verble
• Craft Chats: A Child’s Perspective (1 p.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
• Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction (3:30 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Kara Vernor
• Flash Fiction America (2:30 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Taleen Voskuni
• Fiction: Romantic Roadblocks (2 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Brooke Warner
• Bridging the Distance: Nicole Chung and A Living Remedy (2 p.m. Sunday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Glynn Washington
• Red Team Blues (3:30 p.m. Saturday, The Marsh Berkeley Theater)
Brian Watt
• Tasting History with Max Miller (3:30 p.m. Saturday, Freight & Salvage)
Laura Wenus
• Reforming Cop Culture: In Oakland and Nationwide (11 a.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Monica Wesolowksa
• Story Time: Imagine That! (11:45 a.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Children’s Room)
Eboni K. Williams
• Eboni K. Williams: Bet on Black (11 a.m. Sunday, San Francisco Chronicle Stage in the Park)
Maisie WiltshireGordon
• What Makes a Critic? (1 p.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Colin Winnette
• Fiction and Technology: What Hath AI Wrought? (11:30 a.m. Saturday, Brower Center Tamalpais Room)
Ali Winston
• Reforming Cop Culture: In Oakland and Nationwide (11 a.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
Alice Wong
• Alice Wong: An Activist’s Life (4 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Ilyon Woo
• Master Slave Husband Wife (2 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)
With Our Words
• The Bay Area Poetry Slam: Battle of the Ages (2:45 p.m. Sunday, BART Plaza Stage)
Yomi Sachiko Wrong
• Alice Wong: An Activist’s Life (4 p.m. Sunday, Brower Center Goldman Theater)
Victoria Ying
• YA: Coming of Age in Words and Pictures (4 p.m. Sunday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 2)
Brian Young
• Middle Grade: The Magic of Story (1:30 p.m. Saturday, Berkeley Public Library Teen Room)
• What’s New in Native American Literature for Kids (3:30 p.m. Sunday, Word Power Stage)
Youth Speaks
• The Bay Area Poetry Slam: Battle of the Ages (2:45 p.m. Sunday, BART Plaza Stage)
Blaise Zerega
• Historical Fiction: The American West (2 p.m. Saturday, The Magnes Auditorium)
Kyla Zhao
• Fiction: You’re a Fraud (11 a.m. Saturday, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom 1)