Greenwich Pen Women, a branch of the National League of American Pen Women, is a non-profit organization of women artists, writers, and musicians. We offer mutual support and exchange of ideas to encourage and inspire excellence in original creative work.
HINT OF THE MONTH: May 2021
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May 2021: “Trust your reader. Not everything needs to be explained. If you really know something, and breathe life into it, they’ll know it too.”~~ Esther Freud
September 11, 2001 dawned with a glorious royal blue sky without a single cloud to soften the brilliance. Typical of early fall in southern New England, the temperature was comfortably warm while the humidity level was low. A picture-perfect day. The addition of a slight breeze was enough to convince one that summer was hanging on and all was right with the world. "Twin Towers, New York" by Guillaume Cattiaux is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 School was back in session; it was the first full week of the new year ripe with the promise of new learning and new friends. As the School Psychologist assigned to two elementary schools in Greenwich, Cos Cob and New Lebanon, my job was to support the psychological well-being of close to 700 children between the ages of four and a half and twelve. I was working at ‘New Leb’ that morning, arranging my schedule, meeting new students, and comforting the few reticent 4 & 5-year old kindergarten children who missed...
Our book discussion series in conjunction with the Perrot Memorial Library kicks off on Monday, January 28th at 7pm in the Rand Room. Diane Morello will facilitate an examination of BEHOLD THE DREAMERS by Imbolo Mbue. Jende and Neni Jonga arrive in America from Cameroon to make a home with their son Liomi. After a series of low-skilled jobs, Jende gets a job in late 2007 as a chauffeur for a Lehman Brothers executive. Jende and Neni use the improved income to make a home in Harlem, enroll Neni in pharmacy school, and hire an immigration lawyer to help Jende qualify for political asylum and thus remain in the United States. The American dream is sweet for them—until a cascade of events weakens their foundation. Jende and Neni get pummeled by immigration bureaucracy, financial losses, unemployment, and growing resentment from the executive and his wealthy family. Jende, ever more disillusioned and angry, views America as a land of no opportunity. Neni sees America as her ...
“Open your mind to new experiences, particularly to the study of other people. Nothing that happens to a writer --- how happy, however tragic—is ever wasted.” ~~ P.D. James
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