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Why my novel matters

December 3, 2020 By JUDY B Leave a Comment

Jacket flap book blurb / Wheels to Liberty plot: When Carol secretly learns to drive against her husband’s wishes to help her disabled daughter, she sets in motion dire circumstances that tests both her and her daughter’s courage and perseverance. Handsome Sam, a news reporter covering WWII and the polio epidemic wants to help but involving him will put all of them at risk of Joe’s wrath, knowing he will hunt them down. 

Readers will love this storytelling while their curiosity will be satisfied knowing more about the history of the polio virus as it draws parallels to today’s issues, with intimate partner violence still an issue globally. Fears and cheers are in order when readers watch Ellie learn to walk again and gain employment without discrimination. Tears of frustration then joy come about when readers cheer for Carol to beat the odds and get out of the way of her controlling husband. Romance lovers will fall for Sam for his gentleman qualities people will recognize in a healthy relationship. These two young women are their own heroes as they discover their unique strengths and learn to set each other free. 

Wheels to Liberty is an inspiring story with a cause for advocacy on several fronts: women’s global rights to drive, the necessity to protect women from domestic violence, and the continued need to remove barriers preventing persons living with a disability to fully take part in society. Consider my novel a mash up between Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio, (Albert Whitman & Co., 2006) meets the romantic longings in Collen Hoover’s It Ends With Us, (Atria Books, 2016). I finished writing the novel during Fall 2020, and plan to release it in 2022 if not sooner.

[Read more…] about Why my novel matters

Filed Under: Editor Column, Writing Community

On Jazz: The Greatest Music Form Achievement in America – Wynton Marsalis

November 16, 2020 By JUDY B Leave a Comment

Wynton Marsalis Jazz Musician on the David Rubenstein Show Oct. 2020

I’ve recently discovered one can view online concerts at the Jazz at Lincoln Center, led by Wynton Marsalis. I’ve been listening to Jazz for years, thanks primarily to my spouse’s appreciation of the music and his immersion as a fan in the jazz world, exposing me to great talents, past and present. We’ve traveled to live stage performances over the years, including attending the Monterey Jazz Fest, a Chicago Jazz Fest, and traveled at least three times to the Newport Jazz Festival. There are many new artists he has exposed me to, from Gregory Porter to the young pianist, Joey Alexander. The musicians have their own favorites, and interchange who they play with on various stages or recordings. You can follow an individual and be exposed to more talent each year. Loud and live or soft in the background, jazz is exciting yet calming. It was not always my go to music. Growing up in Chicago, I love the blues, and frequented the blues clubs. When I met Neil in Chicago, he took me on dates to Andy’s Jazz Club, and in Minneapolis, the Dakota. My appreciation has grown over the years. This week, I listened to an interview with Wynton Marsalis which nearly brought me to tears. He noted that the Afro-American creation of jazz is the cultures’ greatest American achievement. Sadly, all voices, even in music, are not heard. We have a long way to go to ensure freedoms and rights for all Americans. Read on about Wynton Marsalis’ experience, legendary success and intelligent leadership.

Wynton Marsalis intrigued me when he spoke about how journalists don’t understand enough about the jazz and its form to be qualified to write about it. What also struck me was how his comments parallel complaints from BIPOC about the publishing industry, which is working now to be more inclusive of non-white voices, ever so slowly. Marsalis is an advocate on many levels. He notes that the level of action each person takes depends on their stamina; on their tolerance for pain as they fight discrimination. “The degree of fighting has to do with the degree of pain one is willing to endure in the fight.” Some give up, accept and conform to / comply within systematic discrimination, while others take higher risks, repeatedly raise their voices, put themselves at risk, until they can’t endure the pain any longer. I listened to the interview twice, to catch all he had to say. Here, I include a transcription, in case the interview is hard to find in the future.

African-Americans invented Jazz. Wynton Marsalis is the Managing Director and Artistic Director, Jazz at Lincoln Center. He’s a musician, a composer, a teacher, a person who lives jazz 24 hours a day. He is a Jazz legend. What follows is an unofficial transcript of David Rubenstein’s interview with Wynton Marsalis, recorded in Oct. 2020.  Questions appear in bold. [Read more…] about On Jazz: The Greatest Music Form Achievement in America – Wynton Marsalis

Filed Under: Essay Tagged With: jazz in America, JazzatLincolnCenter, Rubensteinshow, WintonMarsalis

Heaven-sent

March 31, 2020 By JUDY B Leave a Comment

The Coronavirus passes through hands.
We switch to elbow hellos, or germs might
infect our lungs, then subsequently band
us to separate. Not an end in sight.

The longer we stay home, we long to look
forward to school, to work, to the wide sky.
While now we have more time to read a book,
we sing, meet zoom chat. From danger we hide.

Spring sun sends strong rays, soon perfectly bent
toward earth to burn up the curse. Now we need
prayers for a cure, healing. Why heaven-sent?
Spare our friends, family! We’ll change! Godspeed.

Generous humans, selfless acts, we wait.
Doing the right thing outside heaven’s gate.

— Judith Brenner, March 2020

Filed Under: Poetry Tagged With: covid19 sonnet, poetry

Giving Up a Career for Motherhood

December 4, 2018 By JUDY B Leave a Comment

Published in WINK  Issue 4, 2018/

Back in 2004, despite the judging eyes of others, I chose full time parenting, and left the workforce despite being degree-laden. It is not a cop out to decline the role of “super mom.” Peers accused me of sacrificing my career by leaving the corporate ladder opportunities behind. Yet I am content with the decision. I was paid in priceless memories of first steps and first periods. I’ve been paid in thankyous from my smiling baby turned teenager slurping up history from the pureed baby food to today’s smoothies.

For many parents, scaling back at the office has become a necessity when the cost of childcare strains even a middle-class salary A recent poll (July 2015) shows 65 % of parents have passed up a job opportunity/stopped working or switched to a less challenging job to allow more time to care for your children.  See Washington Post Poll results. The numbers didn’t add up for me. Worse, I dreaded what I was missing at home when the babies were with a nanny. The money could not replace the fear factor of lifetime memories I was going to pass up. [Read more…] about Giving Up a Career for Motherhood

Filed Under: Essay, Magazine Articles

How to Run an Estate Sale in 3 Hours

October 12, 2016 By JUDY B Leave a Comment

My sister and I left Chicago decades ago to start our own families in less crowded metropolitan spots, Minneapolis and Milwaukee, leaving behind our widowed mother. She lived alone, in a home where the porch and her bedroom could accommodate her wheel-chair bound lifestyle, until it became unsafe for her. She suffered from alcohol-related dementia (ARD), and was increasingly allowed to mix pain pills with alcohol by a selfish caregiver who was quickly fired. Mom agreed she didn’t feel safe at home. When she turned 71, she agreed to move into a local nursing home, and sell the house.

We had been traveling to Chicago monthly for the previous 90 days, alternating weeks so mom had a visitor as she made the adjustment to nursing home life.

The house went up for sale.  It had sold in three days after the listing. My sister persuaded our mom to lower the price to seal the deal on the very first offer. She also had mom agree to pay the buyer’s closing costs, a deal they couldn’t resist. She then handed authority over to me at the point of contract negotiations over inspection issues. The house was built in 1952, never once remodeled and had no handyman on site since 1994 when our Dad died. I had a lot on my list. This particular weekend we were both in town on a mission: clean out mom’s house in preparation for the closing. We had to get the job done in one day, and do it in 3 hours in order to get back to caring for our own children in neighboring states. [Read more…] about How to Run an Estate Sale in 3 Hours

Filed Under: Essay

Teaching Your Teen to Drive: Baby Steps in the Fast Lane

August 4, 2016 By admin Leave a Comment

Teaching teen driving is more nerve wracking than breastfeeding. For breastfeeding, there was a back up plan: store-bought formula. For driving, the experience I have earned (sometimes the hard way) can’t be transferred in a bottle. When she was knee high, I aimed her body toward open spaces. I padded sharp corners, removed glass vases, covered electrical outlets and locked cabinets. She crawled and explored her motor skills safely. Now, her motor skills again are directed to open spaces, knowing the car bumper, a seat belt, and air bag are all we have for protection. I can’t remove the fire hydrants or electrical poles or lock the steering wheel away from sharp corners with hidden objects.Baby steps. Yes, that’s the ticket!

Lesson 1: Pre-permit, she started the car for me all winter so I enjoyed entering a heated vehicle. I also had her look up from the cell phone while I drove to schools, stores or music lessons. I figured she had to learn the city and whether we were heading north or south, east or west, and had her suggest which direction I should go if I wanted to go home. By early spring, I had her back the car out of garage so she knew how to shift gears. [Read more…] about Teaching Your Teen to Drive: Baby Steps in the Fast Lane

Filed Under: Essay

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