Summer Reading by Women of a Certain Age – Panel with Sibylline Authors in Sausalito, CA!
Women of a certain age are writing brilliant books. Come hear from a few of them, all published by Sibylline Press, and pick up a great novel for your last weeks of summer. We have an assortment of fiction, historical fiction, mystery, and memoir for you.
EVENT INFORMATION:
August 1st, 6pm
Sausalito Books by the Bay
100 Bay Street
Sausalito, CA 94965
Moderated by our publisher Vicki DeArmon, Sibylline Press is bringing you four authors to discuss their novels and Sibylline’s mission of uplifting and empowering women writers of a certain age. Listen to it firsthand!
Featured authors include Robin Somers, author of Eleven Stolen Horses, Simi Monheit, author of The Goldie Standard, Susannah Kennedy, author of Reading Jane: A Daughter’s Memoir, and Julia Park Tracey, author of The Bereaved and Silence.
Read more about the featured novels below, and purchase your copies at the event, or at this link!
Silence by Julia Park Tracey
A whiff of sulfur and witchcraft shadows this literary Puritan tale of loss and redemption, based on this best-selling historical fiction author’s own ancestor, her seventh great-grandmother.
Historical Fiction | On Sale: September 24, 2024
Eleven Stolen Horses: A Wild Horses Mystery by Robin Somers
News reporter Eleanor Wooley wants to start her life over in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada but when her new best friend suddenly disappears, she finds herself in pursuit and in grave danger instead.
Mystery | On Sale: September 17, 2024
The Goldie Standard by Simi Monheit
Hilarious and surprising, this unapologetically Jewish story delivers a present-day take on a highly creative grandmother in an old folks’ home trying to find her Ph.D grand-daughter a husband who is a doctor—with a yarmulke, of course.
Fiction | Out Now
Reading Jane: A Daughter’s Memoir by Susannah Kennedy
Jane at 75, healthy and fit, chooses suicide, leaving her daughter with grief and the unwelcome gift of 45 years of hidden diaries. Daring to “read” Jane after her death is like unlatching Pandora’s Box.
Memoir | Out Now