Altered Stories We Found In Our Closets
, by Lindsay, Tinker; de Varennes, Monique; Hagen, Kathryn; Small, Emilie R.; Sweeney, Barbara; Baz, Bev; Bingham, Lucretia; Hendricks, Kathlyn; Dole Klein, Hilary; Stiles, Patricia- ISBN: 9798350970111 | 8350970111
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 5/1/2025
From the ages of five to eighteen, Monique de Varennes lived in a series of boarding schools; the stories she read and sometimes wrote during those years were her delight and her escape. She continues to find joy in fiction. Her short stories, one of which received a Pushcart Prize, have been published in literary journals and anthologies. She has also written two books for children, which appeared on lists of Best and Honors books. Monique studied at the Iowa Writers' Workshop and received her M.A. from the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University. She is working on a memoir of her odd childhood and unique family that was sparked by the essays she wrote for this collection. Website: moniquedevarennes.com
Born mid-century in the Midwest, a middle child of five, Kathryn Hagen made her way to New York at age seventeen to study fashion design and painting. Art, local and international teaching, exotic travel, trail marathons, and creating design and academic textbooks have all fed her adventurous spirit and creative compulsions. Her published works include Illustration for Fashion Designers, Portfolio for Fashion Designers, and Garb: A Fashion and Culture Reader (Prentice Hall). More recently, she completed the first book in the E-Race Trilogy, a future speculative series focused on artificial intelligence, genetics, and Utopian innovation.
Emilie R. Small is a Los Angeles-based television writer, screenwriter, and author. She has written for numerous television productions, receiving an Emmy nomination for an episode of St. Elsewhere. She is a member of the Writers Guild of America West and the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. She received her B.A. from University of California Los Angeles and her M.A. from New York University in History of the Modern Far East. Currently focusing on fiction, Emilie has recently completed her first novel, which takes us on a journey of self-discovery with a West Coast college girl in the late 1960s: an illegal abortion, student demonstrations against the Vietnam war, and sexual awakening in an evolving love relationship, as she tours the West with her hippie friends' rock 'n roll band.
Barbara Sweeney studied Fine Art at USC, Advertising Design at ArtCenter, and Spanish language at the Instituto Cultural Oaxaca. She survived a Catholic childhood, a career in advertising, and Colorado Outward Bound wilderness training. She can still sing the Latin Mass. Small glories during her ad days include a Clio for Public Service, a New York Film Festival gold medal, and a Lulu for ethnic advertising. Barbara co-authored What Can I Do?, a book about caregiving, with actress Patricia Bethune. Her poetry has appeared in multiple publications and anthologies. The urge to write longer form led to these essays, as well as a middle-grade historical novel based on the feline survivor of the Bounty. Ignatius Skye, Ship's Cat, her magnum opus manuscript, is referred to by her daughter as "my mom's cat book."
She is represented by Anna Olswanger, Olswanger Literary, LLC.
Website: basweeney.com
Bev Baz is a reader, writer, assemblage artist, singer, rodeo clown, and bon vivant. The proud owner of a chest filled with unpublished novels, stories, and essays, she loves to write but not so much the other stuff. Possessing a restless spirit and wanderlust, she's worn many hats in her life but most recently toiled as a Story Analyst for film production companies. She was forced to retire from writing reviews and synopses when her sanity was threatened while reading the eight thousandth chase scene. A longtime resident of her beloved Silver Lake neighborhood in Los Angeles, Bev fled when the area was overtaken by hordes of young men sporting Snidely Whiplash mustaches riding penny-farthing bicycles. She now lives peacefully in the liminal mystery of the vast Mojave Desert.
Adventure and drama are in Lucretia Bingham's blood. She grew up on an isolated island in the Bahamas where she and her brother hunted sharks and treasure as much as they went to school. As a freelance travel writer and photographer, Lucretia Bingham's credits include publication in Vanity Fair, Conde Nast Traveler, Los Angeles Times Travel Magazine, Islands Magazine, Smithsonian, and Saveur. She has also published four novels, all of which are available on Amazon.
Website: lucretiabingham.com
Kathlyn Hendricks, Ph.D. is an evolutionary catalyst, contextual disruptor, poet and freelance mentor who has been a pioneer in the field of body intelligence and relationships for over fifty years. She describes her purpose: "I feel through to the heart with laser love and evoke essence through deep play." She is co-author of twelve books including the best-selling Conscious Loving, At The Speed of Life and the new Conscious Loving Ever After: How to Create Thriving Relationships at Midlife and Beyond, and a book of poetry, A Waterbaby Contemplates Dry Land. Katie has been a successful entrepreneur since the 1970s and has developed a unique experientially based coaching program that has trained hundreds of coaches in the U.S., Asia and Europe.
Website: hendricks.com
Hilary Dole Klein is a memoirist, journalist, photographer, and editor. Raised in Florence, Italy, and Santa Barbara, she left home at fourteen for boarding school, Stanford, and NYU. After collecting two degrees, one husband, and three children, she returned to Santa Barbara and began her writing career. Amid stints as a food editor, restaurant critic, and writing teacher, she's written hundreds of articles on artists, travel, health, romance, pests, films, astrology, heroes, and her family?who eagerly await her switch to fiction. Hilary has also written or edited eight books, including Santa Barbara Cooks and Tiny Game Hunting, and was the founding editor of Destination Wine Country magazine. A series of articles she wrote for the Santa Barbara Independent were made into a Lifetime movie, A Mother's Fight for Justice, nominated for a Humanitas Award.
Website: hilarydoleklein.com
Patricia Stiles worked professionally as an illustrator, a model, and a popular Professor of Fashion Illustration at Otis College of Art and Design, but she reserved her deepest love for writing. Her fiction was published in literary magazines and was recognized in a number of literary competitions, including the NY Stories Short Fiction Contest, the William Faulkner Competition, New Millennium Writing, and The Speakeasy Prize judged by Amy Bloom. The essay that appears in these pages was previously published in the anthology Garb: A Fashion and Culture Reader. Pat was a founder and guiding light of our writing group and a beloved friend. She died in 2023.
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