Ann S. Epstein writes novels, short stories, memoir, essays, and poems. Please use the links or site menu to go to the HOME PAGE; learn about her NOVELS, SHORT STORIES, MEMOIR, ESSAYS, and POEMS; find interesting facts in BEHIND THE STORY; read REFLECTIONS on writing; check NEWS for updates on publications and related events; see REVIEWS; learn about her END-OF-LIFE DOULA credentials and services; and CONTACT US to send webmail.
Author: annsepstein@att.net
Ann S. Epstein is an award-winning writer of novels, short stories, memoirs, and essays.
My short story “The Women of Tahiti” was accepted for publication in Jewish Fiction (Fall 2020 or Spring 2021 issue). Here’s the log line: In “The Women of Tahiti,” an elderly man, convalescing after heart surgery, fantasizes the healing caresses of tropical beauties while recalling his troubled life as a cripple working for the Kosher Mob. In the early 1900s, the Jewish Mafia transformed organized crime from a thuggish activity carried out by hoodlums into a big business. Some elements in the story are drawn from my father’s life. Read more in SHORT STORIES.
Prominent members of the Jewish Mafia, a.k.a. the Kosher MobAn English language journal of contemporary writing on Jewish themes
My Amazon and Goodreads review of The Dutch House: A Novel (Rating 5) – As Many Twists and Turns as a Spiral Staircase. Many years ago, I was forced to flee a one-of-a-kind home that I loved. While the circumstances were nothing like the eviction of the brother and sister in Ann Patchett’s The Dutch House, my ouster was also precipitated by an unimaginable act of cruelty. Unlike the protagonists, I wasn’t able to go back to the house, but I’ve often wondered what it would be like to once again step inside. I can only hope the visit would be as gratifying as the tale in this novel. The plot has as many twists and turns as a spiral staircase, each a surprise, yet also as inevitable as a well-drawn blueprint. Vivid characters spill intense emotions: love, hate, longing, guilt. As a writer myself (see my Amazon author page and my Goodreads author page), I am filled with admiration for Patchett’s memorable storytelling. The Dutch House is ultimately about letting go, but readers won’t want to let go of this book.
A story of two siblings and the three-story house that haunts them “A good book is an education of the heart.” – Susan Sontag
I’m happy to announce that my short story “Sophie’s Confession” will be published in the next issue of Ramblr (2020, Issue 3). Here’s the log line: In “Sophie’s Confession,” Sophie Tucker, The Last of the Red Hot Mamas, makes a surprising admission on her death bed and leaves the public to ponder its response to discovering the truth behind an illusion. Read more in SHORT STORIES.
Sophie Tucker: Grande Dame and The Last of the Red Hot Mamas
Fourteen states hold primaries today and my essay “It’s Not Your Story: Citizenship Rules for Writers Groups” goes online at Black Fox Literary Magazine. The article argues that while some literary tenets beg to be broken, writers group etiquette rules are worth following to derive the benefits and avoid the pitfalls of membership. Please leave a comment about the blog. Read more of my thoughts about writing in REFLECTIONS.
Check out the online archives of Black Fox Literary Magazine, founded 2011 Why writers write: “To get your own back on the grown-ups who snubbed you in childhood.” – George Orwell
I’m happy to announce that my article “It’s Not Your Story: Citizenship Rules for Writers Groups” has been accepted for publication by Black Fox Literary Magazine. Here’s the log line: The craft essay “It’s Not Your Story: Citizenship Rules for Writers Groups” acknowledges that while some literary tenets beg to be broken, writers group etiquette rules are worth following to derive the benefits and avoid the pitfalls of membership. I’ll post the link when the essay is up and open for comments on the Black Fox blog. Read more of my thoughts about writing in REFLECTIONS.
Black Fox seeks fiction from under-represented genres and styles Why writers write: “A professional writer is an amateur who didn’t quit.” – Richard Bach
My Amazon and Goodreads review of Fly Girls: How Five Daring Women Defied All Odds and Made Aviation History (Rating 4) – More Deaths Per Page Than a War Book. In the battle for the skies, the history of aviation is littered with shattered bodies. All were intrepid souls, none more so than the women in Keith O’Brien’s Fly Girls: How Five Daring Women Defied All Odds and Made Aviation History. Male aviators had to fight physics, mechanics, and weather. Women overcame all those and also the men who, both on and off the field, demeaned and tried to defeat them. Fortunately, the support among the women handily counteracted the discouragement of the men. “Fly Girls,” as the press dubbed them, were competitors but also friends. While some were bent on promoting themselves, all were primarily out to promote women’s full participation in aviation. Despite harrowing accounts of sacrifices and tragedies, this book is ultimately about victory and the amazing women whose dreams and persistence made their success possible. As a writer of historical fiction who often features women overcoming tough odds (see my Amazon author page and Goodreads author page), I cheered them to the heavens.
Sisterhood in the air “If you are going to get anywhere in life you have to read a lot of books.” – Roald Dahl
My creative nonfiction piece “My Name Could Be Toby Gardner” is now online as the featured essay at bioStories. The essay begins: “I lost my name. Perhaps the name was never mine to begin with. In which case, will I ever own one? Or, if the name was once in my possession, can I get it back?” While you’re visiting the site, check out, like, and follow the other features at bioStories, which “offers word portraits of the people surrounding us in our daily lives, of the strangers we pass on the street unnoticed and of those who have been the most influential and most familiar to us but who remain strangers to others.” Read more about my creative nonfiction in MEMOIR.
Me (bottom right) with my family at age five, when “Toby” became “Ann”
Tens of thousands of teachers, parents, and researchers have read my books about early development and education, most notably The Intentional Teacher. I also write literary fiction for grownups: On the Shore, Tazia and Gemma, and A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. Read more about my NOVELS and SHORT STORIES. We’re never too old to learn.
Strategies to support early learning An immigrant Jewish family in turmoil during World War I An Italian immigrant survives the Triangle Fire and flees with her unborn childA fictional biography of the Munchkin Coroner in The Wizard of Oz
I’m happy to announce that my short story, “A Mule of One’s Own,” will be published in Orca (2020, Issue #3). Here’s the log line: “A Mule of One’s Own” is about a pack horse librarian who delivers books and hope to Kentucky’s rural families in the Depression while her own family falls apart because her job threatens her unemployed husband. Here’s the history behind the story: In the 1930s, the Works Progress Administration (WPA) funded local women to serve as “equestrienne librarians,” visiting isolated families in Kentucky’s remote hills. The women traveled miles through rutted, icy, and muddy trails to teach children and adults to read, and deliver books, magazines, and other materials, in hopes they’d have a better chance of finding employment when the economy recovered. Read more in SHORT STORIES.
The WPA paid local pack horse librarians to visit Kentucky’s remote hills during the Depression An equestrienne librarian was a lifeline to poor isolated hill people in Kentucky in the 1930s
My Amazon and Goodreads review of Olive, Again (Rating 5) – Godfrey. Thank God Olive Kittridge is Back. In Olive, Again, Elizabeth Strout returns us to the coastal town of Crosby, Maine. All I can say is, “Godfrey. Thank God Olive Kittridge is back.” In stories that feature Olive, or bring her on for a cameo, Strout introduces us to residents whose lives are filled with sadness, even tragedy, but who evince a New England determination not to complain and to carry on. Olive delights us with her own small epiphanies, often reached reluctantly but embraced when she accepts that they are inescapable. One of Strout’s most satisfying creations is Jack Kennison, Olive’s late-in-life second husband, who is her match in irascibility and likability. Best about Jack is how much he likes Olive. Olive herself is one hot, leaky mess of contradictions: tactless and kind; humorless and funny; oblivious and self-aware; judgmental and open-minded; exasperating and endearing. I was reluctant to read the last story because I didn’t want the book to end. As a writer (see my Amazon author page and Goodreads author page), I know that my characters never leave me. I hope that is true for writer Elizabeth Strout, because as a reader, all I can say is “Godfrey. Please don’t ever die Olive. I can’t bear the thought of a world without your bulk.”
The prickly but endearing Olive Kittridge is one hot, leaky mess of contradictionsWhy writers read: “It is what you read when you don’t have to that determines what you will be when you can’t help it.” – Oscar Wilde