fbpx
October
19

October 19

This event has taken place

Joyce Maynard:

Women on the Move

Few writers have had more personal experience with holding on and letting go than bestselling author Joyce Maynard. Commissioned by The New York Times Magazine to write a cover story when she was still a freshman at Yale, she then dropped out to live with iconoclastic literary hermit J. D. Salinger. Over time, she bought a farmhouse in New Hampshire; reported for The New York Times; wrote a nationally syndicated column on families; married twice; moved to San Francisco; produced three memoirs, 10 novels, four children’s books and a true-crime thriller — and went back to Yale as a sophomore 48 years after she quit.

In her latest novel, Count the Ways, Maynard explores the struggle between the forces that connect and those that repel through the story of a marriage fractured by a horrific accident. In depicting a single family confronting the painful if essential truths of their past, she has produced an achingly poignant novel about home, love and forgiveness . . . of holding on and letting go.

Tuesday, October 19 | 
11:30 am Eastern
Free (with option to buy the book)
Free (with option to buy the book)

Virtual Event

Sponsored by The Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation Authors’ Series, honoring Theodore and Caroline Newhouse and Susan Newhouse

This event has taken place

Tuesday, October 19 | 
11:30 am
Free (with option to buy the book)
Free (with option to buy the book)

Few writers have had more personal experience with holding on and letting go than bestselling author Joyce Maynard. Commissioned by The New York Times Magazine to write a cover story when she was still a freshman at Yale, she then dropped out to live with iconoclastic literary hermit J. D. Salinger. Over time, she bought a farmhouse in New Hampshire; reported for The New York Times; wrote a nationally syndicated column on families; married twice; moved to San Francisco; produced three memoirs, 10 novels, four children’s books and a true-crime thriller — and went back to Yale as a sophomore 48 years after she quit.

In her latest novel, Count the Ways, Maynard explores the struggle between the forces that connect and those that repel through the story of a marriage fractured by a horrific accident. In depicting a single family confronting the painful if essential truths of their past, she has produced an achingly poignant novel about home, love and forgiveness . . . of holding on and letting go.

This event has taken place

Virtual Event

Sponsored by The Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation Authors’ Series, honoring Theodore and Caroline Newhouse and Susan Newhouse

Women on the Move:
A Virtual Series

Temple Emanu-El’s Stettenheim Library is proud to present its fourth edition of Women on the Move, a series that welcomes female authors to discuss their latest work probing the intricacies of our lives. 

The series will be moderated by Zibby Owens, writer and creator of the popular podcast Moms Don’t Have Time to Read Books, one of O: The Oprah Magazine’s favorite book podcasts; journalist Jordana Horn, co-host of the Call Your Mother podcast and contributing editor at Kveller; and Marjorie Shuster, Coordinator of Literary Events at Temple Emanu-El.

Other events in this series

Subscribe to our mailing list to learn about special events and more.

The Temple Emanu-El Streicker Center|One East Sixty‑Fifth Street|New York, NY 10065

Streicker.NYC
Privacy Policy