Category: personal

Reading Recap: Dutton’s Books

Audience: About 30.
Anxiety index: 5 (out of 10).
Surprise guest(s): Gil E., my ex-boss at ASI. And Fred S. who was in one of my writing classes at UCLA back in 2001.
Book given away: Veronica by Mary Gaitskill.
No. of Moroccans who said hello: 1/2.

I hadn’t been back in Los Angeles more than an hour when a Land Rover honked at me for actually stopping at an intersection. Ah, I’m back home, I thought. The smell, the sounds, the smog, the three or four languages I could hear at the coffee shop while I was waiting for my order, the big headlines that read “Storm Watch 2005” because there’s been, like, two inches of rain, the surly actors slash waiters, the lights of the big city all around me–I’d missed it all. And, above all, I got to see all my family and friends and catch up with everyone.

It was a special treat, too, to be able to read at Dutton’s, which was one of my regular hang outs during the many years I lived in L.A. There were quite a few familiar faces at the reading, and I had a great time talking about the book and answering questions.






Reading Recap: Village Books

Audience: 15
Anxiety index: 4 (out of 10).
Surprise guest(s): A regular Moorishgirl reader who lives in Bellingham.
Book given away: A Thousand Years of Good Prayers by Yiyun Li.
No. of Moroccans who said hello:0

Village Books is a large independent bookstore in the historic district of Bellingham. Although it was a smaller crowd, the Q&A lasted even longer than at larger readings. There were a lot of questions about my book, about immigration out of and into Morocco–particularly in light of recent events in the Spanish presidios of Ceuta and Melilla.



Reading Recap: Ballard High School

Audience: About 120.
Anxiety index: 8 (out of 10).
Books given away: The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven, by Sherman Alexie and Persepolis, by Marjane Satrapi.

I was invited to speak to an auditorium full of 9th, 10th and 11th graders at Ballard High School yesterday. This was part of the Writers in the Schools program run by Seattle Arts and Lectures. I’ve spoken in front of large audiences before, but this was the toughest crowd yet!

I talked about being a teenager myself, the kind of books I liked to read, what kind of writing I did back then. I read from “The Storyteller” and talked about how that piece was very personal for me, because it mirrored my own journey to writing. Afterwards, we had a Q&A, which was very enjoyable. Kids at that age have an incredible ability to ask very astute questions, the kind that many adults wouldn’t think of asking. Unfortunately, we started a bit late and ran out of time during that last part, so I didn’t get to spend as much time as I would have liked to interacting with the kids.