Author Event: Fiddler in the Golden Land

Sandi AltnerDoes your family have roots on the Lower East Side in New York?  The immigration stories of the turn of the century have long been a passion of mine and I am very pleased to be doing a special talk on this subject next week in Boca Raton, Florida.

Today, I am busy editing the finishing touches on one of the videos I will be including in the presentation which will be on April 3rd at the Sandler Center of the Adolph and Rose Levis Jewish Community Center.

JCC University Series

This is part of the Levis JCC Sandler Center Adult University Lecture series and I am very honored to have been invited to speak about Jewish immigration, with a particular emphasis on New York City.

My interest in Jewish migration grew out of the research I began many years ago for my historical fiction novel Ravenscraig. Since then I have become fascinated with the Lower East Side of New York and I look forward to sharing the stories that I have learned and the marvelous old photographs I have found in the archives of the Library of Congress on line.

Photos and Music

Fiddler Sandi Altner 8x10M

I am particularly drawn to the photos of families at work and will be including a discussion about the sweatshops and what that meant for the littliest workers. The presentation features a video montage of archival photos.

I find these kinds of talks are particularly appealing to people who have a passion for learning their family histories.  For me, learning about the past, and the hardships that had to be overcome is very inspiring.

A Celebration of Family Roots

Whether your family landed in New York, or Chicago or on a farm in Manitoba, as mine did, there is a common experience and a great value in learning the stories of our families.

I am grateful that my ancestors had the determination and grit to make a go of it in the “New World” and indeed, that they were courageous enough to take the plunge.  It was this interest in my family history that inspired me to write Ravenscraig.

Levis JCC Sandler Center:  April 3 at 1:00 p.m.

Please do join me at the Sandler Center on April 3, 2013, if you happen to be in South Florida next week.   For reservations and information, call 561-558-2520.

Book signing to follow the presentation.  See you there. 🙂

Ravenscraig Freebie Days November 14 and 15, 2012

Click here for FREE download on Nov. 14-15, 2012

Freebie Days are back!  Amazon.com is offering Ravenscraig for a free download today and tomorrow. Available in the US and in the UK.

Why free?  This is part of the Kindle Select Program and the idea is to help authors become known to a wider audience.  I am very pleased that we had over 10,000 free downloads in the last free days over a month ago.

I am even more delighted with the readers who took the time to write a review for Amazon.  11 of the 15 reviews currently posted are Five Star.

Thank you!

Amazon Reviews:

Excellent, well-researched and very moving. ”Liz Stein  |  5 reviewers made a similar statement

The city was a hotbed of immigration and this book accurately depicts the history and immigration of a Jewish family from the “old country” to Winnipeg. ” Shell Beckwith  |  5 reviewers made a similar statement

Kept my interest from beginning to end. ” Ginny Harper  |  3 reviewers made a similar statement

See the Book Trailer here:

Storytellers: Deborah Feldman, author of Unorthodox

Deborah Feldman, author of Unorthodox

Deborah Feldman was one of the most impressive authors I was privileged to hear speak at the Jewish Book Council Network Author’s event earlier this month.

I was in New York to talk about Ravenscraig, my novel about an immigrant family fighting to maintain their Jewish identity  against pressure to assimilate a hundred years ago.  Deborah was there to talk about Unorthodox,  her memoire of breaking away from a Hasidic Jewish life rooted in restrictions she could no longer tolerate. The contrast in our subject matter could not have been more pronounced.

Married at 17, a mother at nineteen, Deborah found her courage and purpose in sneaking to the library to read books that she was not allowed to read; books like Matilda by children’s writer, Roald Dahl.

Unorthodox, the Scandalous Rejection of my Hasidic Roots, is a book that many communities and Jewish Book Festivals may shy away from, for being “too hot” a topic for their reader groups. I am very pleased that I first learned of the book when the sisterhood at my own synagogue chose it for our summer reading event.

My heart goes out to Deborah Feldman, a talented writer and gifted storyteller who has given us an inside view of a very difficult emotional journey.  There is much to learn and much to discuss in this  work.  It’s one of the most interesting books I’ve read this year. The strength of the book is in the frank telling of details of her life.

Learn more at Deborah’s website and from the interview in the video below.

Readers Review Ravenscraig

Perhaps the greatest enjoyment in writing a book is getting notes from readers who are touched by the book.  This weekend I received two special notes that I would like to share.

The first is from Heidi, a friend from my early days in radio in Winnipeg.

“I lent my book to my 82-year old father who just returned it today. He’s a German immigrant who was a Wpg transit bus driver his entire working life in Canada and spent many a year driving in the north end. He LOVED your book, and that’s high praise from someone who doesn’t have English as his first language.”

The second note is from someone I only know by reputation for her fantastic Deli on Corydon in Winnipeg, Marla Bernstein of Bernstein’s Deli. (I’ve edited the note to be sure there are no spoilers.)

Hello Sandi,

I finished your wonderful book this evening on the way home from the lake . As  a Jewish Winnipegger I knew that I would love RAVENSCRAIG from the first time I heard about it…(I actually do not remember if it was a review in the Jewish Post, or Free Press, or CBC Radio).

Having Grandparents who immigrated here from Eastern Europe about  20 years after your Ravenscraig  characters came to the Golden Land I can appreciate the Jews who were the first and how horrible it was for them at the beginning. By the time my Family arrived here I would think  that a lot of groundwork must have been done and although poverty stricken they must have had more of a support system in place than your immigrants did.

I love the story of the allotment of acreage for those willing to farm. I love the story of the Zigman Family.

Ravenscraig is a wonderful saga. It even prompted me to take a slow joy ride through Armstrong’s Point, which I have never paid much attention to in the past.

Thank you Sandi for providing me with such a good story.

Thanks for hearing me out ! Enjoy life ! When you are back in Winnipeg and you get hungry during the day I would love to invite you to my Deli for a sandwich and a bowl of soup,(another reason I love the Zigman family)>

Sincerely,

Marla Bernstein

Two Minutes to Make an Impression at the Jewish Book Council

“Two minutes?”
“Yes. Two minutes.”
“But it took four years to write my book.”
“Yes.  Two minutes. Don’t worry. You’ll be fine.”

The smiling coordinators of the Jewish Book Council Network Author Event spent months communicating the dreadful news to the author participants of the annual June conference.  Dreadful news? Yes indeed. The People of the Book are also the People of the Need to Talk.  Holding a Jewish comedian to a two minute audition is enough to cause an anxiety attack.  What if the punchline doesn’t get delivered in time?

Sandi Krawchenko Altner
Author of Ravenscraig
. Click to hear interview on Researching Ravenscraig

I feel very fortunate to be counted as a Jewish Book Council Network Author. It was very exciting to have been among close to two hundred authors who were in New York this month to present, or truthfully, audition, before the organizers and coordinators of the major Jewish Book Festivals and events throughout North America.   It is a brilliant idea, nerve-wracking though it might be. Highly organized, efficient, welcoming and inspiring.

I worried for weeks about what to wear and even longer about what to say, then what to leave out for lack of time.  The prize?  Authors are supported with an expenses paid book tour to visit with communities that invite them to speak.  There could be 30 invitations.  There could be none.  We were told not to worry and have fun, that the Jewish Book Council exists to help support authors who write books of interest to a Jewish audience.

“What if there is a lot of laughter?” one worried presenter asked in the round of questions prior to the audience being allowed into the room.  “Do I get extra time, if I have to wait for the crowd to settle?”

It took a little more than two hours for our group of authors to give their presentations on the first of three nights of author rounds. Almost all were within the time limit.  One woman was ten seconds under, which prompted the promise of an auction for extra seconds for willing spenders. Several were brilliant performers, others thoughtful and interesting, revealing painful stories of difficult life moments and situations.  Still others were very funny leaving the less comic in the audience thinking how wonderful it would be to be able to make people laugh like that. It was fascinating.

After the presentations we moved to a “mingling” opportunity and I was delighted that there was interest in Ravenscraig and in historical fiction in general.  It was, by all accounts, a warm and engaging session.

Over the next few days a heavy workload is facing the leaders and committee members of book festivals across the US and Canada as they finalize their lists of books in order to place their author requests with the Jewish Book Council. Many of the review books are traditional ink on paper, some, like Ravenscraig, which is available in print and digital, were sent electronically for easy access to committees of 20 or more.

(Reviewers will find instructions here for getting emailed files onto your e-reader.)

So what do you say in two minutes?

It’s easiest for me to show you with the book trailer.

A warm thank you for all of the staff at the Jewish Book Council for supporting authors and creating such an exciting opportunity.

Click on the logo to learn more about the Jewish Book Council.