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A sell-out crowd at Vroman's!

What they're saying about our new book:

"The elderly have quite a bit of wisdom, and often you'll get it whether you want it or not. "Feeding Mrs. Moskowitz & The Caregiver" is a pair of two novellas focusing on the topic of the elderly and their interactions with the people around them. 'Feeding Mrs. Moskowitz' is the story of the titular elderly lady and her encounters with a girl rapidly approaching middle age. 'The Caregiver' tells the tale of a caregiver and her job at an assisted living facility. "Feeding Mrs. Moskowitz & The Caregiver" is an enticing read that shouldn't be missed."
-- Midwest Review of Books

"The novellas are authentic, filled with believable characters and situations that resonate with our own life experiences. The stories are funny and poignant at the same time, teaching those who have not thought much about the aging process in the best way possible by fascinating and amazing us."
-- Anne M. Wyatt-Brown

"As someone who was the caregiver for two aging parents, both of whom lived into their nineties, I found Feeding Mrs. Moskowitz and The Caregiver: Two Stories by Barbara Pokras and Fran Yariv a delightful experience. It is a candid and humorous look at aging. .....It is well work reading whether one is a caregiver or not. This is a slice of life worth visiting."
-- Alan Caruba, Bookviews

"Caring for aging parents is one of the most common experiences sisters share, but few can transform their responsibility into bittersweet words of wisdom the way the Pokras sisters, Fran and Barbara, have done. This book, with its tender, funny, and revealing insights into the world of the elderly, is a must-read for every caretaker." -- Carol Saline, author of The New York Times bestseller, "Sisters"

"The novellas are beautiful little parables that are just not meant for caregivers or for the children of the elderly, bur for everyone -- as most of us will, eventually, take similar journeys to those taken by the residents of Sunset Hills, in one form or another." -- John McDonald, New York Journal of Books, award-winning novelist, screenwriter, playwright and graphic novel adaptor of the works of William Shakespeare.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Playing To An Empty House

We got off to such a fabulous start at Vroman's Bookstore in Pasadena that we were somewhat spoiled.  The audience for our out-of-town signings were predictably smaller, but still drew some interested people.  Albany was an abrupt reminder that we are not celebrities on the New York Times best-seller list....at least not yet!  The signing was at Barnes and Noble in Albany where neither of us knew anyone.

We left Woodstock in plenty of time for an early dinner, figuring if the event was scheduled for 7:00  we would not be done before 8:15 or so and it would be too late for dinner.

The store manager was off, the store itself nearly deserted, but they had set up a desk for us, facing chairs for the audience.  The seats were unoccupied.  We sat down behind the desk, smiling hopefully at the few customers who passed by.  Barbara invited one or two to join us, but they passed.  We decided to wait until 7:20 or so and if no one showed up, we would leave.  7:20 came and went.  We looked at the empty seats and decided to give it another 10 minutes.  At 7:30 we closed up shop.

We asked the girl behind the counter if it ever happened before that no one showed up at a reading.  "Yes," she replied.  "Depends on the date, the weather.  You never know."  We thanked her, bought a couple of books (including one of our own) and hit the road.

We turned our thoughts to our next event --Fairfield, Conn.--where we knew at least some of our old high school friends and our cousins would show up.  Onward!

Fran

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My Blog List

Some of our favorites to share:

  • Barbara's favorite movies: "Precious" "Inglorius Bastards" "The Orange Thief" (never released theatrically), anything by Frederick Wiseman, and "Stop Making Sense" (I worked on this!)
  • Fran likes "ALL ABOUT EVE" with Bette Davis
  • Another of Fran's favorites -- FIELDWORK by Mischa Berlinski