Immigrant Yarn Project Honors Our Heritage

The Immigrant Yarn Project is the nation’s largest crowd-sourced public art installation in honor of our nation’s rich immigrant history. Hundreds of people are contributing knit and crocheted pieces, which will be assembled into 100 sculptural columns and exhibited in San Francisco in May 2019 before traveling to other locations around the country. I crocheted and sent a granny square (photo below) along with this story: Over a hundred years ago, my four grandparents and my father emigrated from Eastern Europe to the United States. My grandmothers were seamstresses, my mother and aunts were knitters. I knit, crochet, and weave with yarn that I hand-dye. In the enclosed granny square, each strand is made with four shades of cotton thread, each thread is brushed with many colors. The yarn itself thus represents the diversity of our nation. The light blue yarns are left over from when I made my daughter’s “chuppah,” or Jewish wedding canopy, a tradition passed down to yet another generation. The dark blue threads, remnants from decades of weaving projects, represent the Atlantic Ocean which my family had the courage to cross on their voyage to this country. I am also a writer and my NOVELS and SHORT STORIES are often about immigrants, past and present. I am pleased to be part of the Immigrant Yarn Project, which joins with other art and literary expressions in celebrating America’s rich heritage. Read more about the project with instructions on adding your own piece at https://enactivist.org.

Learn History Through Fiction: 11-14 Hour Work Day at Triangle Waist Company

Triangle Waist Company, site of the 1911 fire that killed 146 people, employed 500 workers, mostly young Jewish and Italian immigrant women, who worked 11-14 hours a day on weekdays and 7-10 hours on Saturday. Women earned $6 to $7 per week and men up to $10. During the slow season, although employees worked the same number of hours, the owners deducted $2 a week from their pay. The busy season meant a seven-day week, and workers were told, “If you don’t come in Sunday, don’t come in Monday.” Read more about inhumane labor conditions 100 years ago in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: Look Like a Munchkin

The appearance of the Munchkins in the 1939 Hollywood classic The Wizard of Oz has little to do with L. Frank Baum’s 1900 novel on which the movie is based. In the book, Munchkins are described only as shorter than usual in stature and clad from top to toe in blue. The hairdos (for example, the bald heads and spit curls) and elaborate costumes (for example, the flowing blue robe and high hat of the Coroner, the Mayor’s green frock coat and plaid vest, the Lullaby League’s pink tutus, and the Lollipop Guild’s Tartan shirts and striped tights) are the invention of costume designer Adrian Greenberg and makeup artist Jack Dawn. Read more about the Munchkins and the movie in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).

TAZIA AND GEMMA Book Reading on December 04, 2018

I’m doing a Tazia and Gemma book reading and signing at the Ann Arbor Jewish Community Center on Tuesday, December 04, at 7 PM, 2935 Birch Hollow Drive, Ann Arbor. The event is free and open to all. See details on the NEWS page. Learn more about the book at NOVELS.

What I’m Reading: My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh

My Amazon and Goodreads review of My Year of Rest and Relaxation (Rating 2) – Zzzzz. Critical accolades woke me to read Ottessa Moshfegh’s novel My Year of Rest and Relaxation. As a writer, I relish making unlikable characters interesting, if not sympathetic, and eagerly anticipated this challenge as a reader. Alas, Moshfegh’s privileged narrator has none of the above mentioned virtues. Nor does she offer unique or redeeming insights into the everyday beauty that ameliorates life’s pain. She’s as trite and tedious as the mindless state of unconsciousness rendered by her Rite Aid warehouse of medications. The reader’s boredom is not even relieved by complex secondary characters; their nastiness wallows in stereotype. While Moshfegh has a good eye for detail and is in command of her craft, the elaborate shell she creates here is hollow. Emerging from the slumber induced by this novel won’t leave readers feeling refreshed, but with a sour taste best relieved by vigorous tooth brushing and starting the new day with a more worthy book.

Learn History Through Fiction: Female Circus Performers Were Early Suffragettes

Women joining the labor force at the turn of the 19th century played a major role in turning the public tide in favor of women’s suffrage. Among them were women who worked for the circus where, unlike other fields, their pay was commensurate with that of male performers. In 1912, at the same time women staged a massive march in New York City to promote the 19th Amendment, the Barnum & Bailey’s Circus Women’s Equal Rights Society was founded. The circus was then the most popular form of entertainment in America which magnified the volume and reach of their voices. Read more about the fight for women’s suffrage in On the Shore (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: Clean Enough for You?

The job description of a Navy janitor or cleaning woman circa WWII listed over 100 chores with sub-tasks. For example: Clean windows, glass partitions, and mirrors with soapy water or other cleaners, sponges, and squeegees. Mix water and detergents or acids according to specifications to prepare cleaning solutions. Clean chimneys, flues, and connecting pipes. Requisition supplies. Set up, arrange, and remove decorations, furniture, ladders, and scaffolding to prepare for events such as banquets and meetings. Spray insecticides and fumigants to prevent insect and rodent infestation. Read more about the work performed by a Navy cleaning woman before, during, and after WWII in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: Hollywood Hawks

Hollywood played a prominent role during World War Two, producing movies to promote propaganda and boost morale. Among those released by the War Activities Committee of the Motion Picture Industry were Women in Defense (1941) with Katherine Hepburn and written by Eleanor Roosevelt and The Battle of Midway (1942), directed by John Ford and academy award winner for best documentary. There were also cartoons featuring the seven dwarfs and Popeye, as well as films warning soldiers of the dangers of venereal disease films. Read more about Hollywood and WWII in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: The Threaded Needle Test

An Italian tradition (superstition) used a threaded needle test to determine the sex of an unborn child. (1) Thread an ordinary sewing needle with a foot-long thread. (2) Hold the end of the thread. (3) Dangle the needle six inches above the expecting mother’s stomach. (4) Observe the needle’s motion. If it moves in a circle, the baby is a girl. If it moves back and forth, it’s a boy. Sometimes a ring was substituted for the needle. Read more about pregnancy and childbirth 100 years ago in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

TAZIA AND GEMMA Book Reading and Signing

I’m doing a Tazia and Gemma book reading and signing at Nicola’s Books on Wednesday, October 17, at 7 PM, Westgate Shopping Center, 2513 Jackson Avenue, Ann Arbor. See the Facebook event page https://www.facebook.com/events/349495879111737/ and Nicola’s calendar https://www.nicolasbooks.com/event/ann-s-epstein-presents-her-historical-fiction-novel-tazia-and-gemma. Learn more about the book at http://www.vineleavespress.com/tazia-and-gemma-by-ann-s-epstein.html and see the trailer on Youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lijLhwR2Yb0. Hope to see you and your friends on October 17th.

For a complete list of my publication events see NEWS; to read more about my books see NOVELS.