CALIBA's Fall Fest Concludes
The California Independent Booksellers Alliance Fall Fest came to a close Thursday afternoon in South San Francisco, Calif., following two days of education sessions, author panels, and bookseller connections. More than 200 booksellers attended this year's show, representing 86 bookstores from across the state. Among them were 14 new stores and 70 first-time attendees. Next year's show will be held in San Diego, Calif.
At the Golden Poppy Kickoff Breakfast Panel Wednesday morning (l.-r.) authors Kelly Yang (The Take; Berkley), Claire Oshetsky (Evil Genius, Ecco), Rex Ogle (When We Ride, Norton Young Readers), and Carolina Ixta (Few Blue Skies, Quill Tree Books)--all Golden Poppy winners or finalists--discussed their upcoming novels, moderated by Jhoanna Belfer, owner of Bel Canto Books in Long Beach, Calif.
Mary Williams, general manager of Skylight Books in Los Angeles, Calif., moderated a panel Wednesday morning with nonfiction authors Shannon Michelle (Step into Your Miracle: Transforming Trauma into Triumph, Liberte Press) and Nikki Nash (Collateral Stardust: Chasing Warren Beatty and Other Foolish Things, Sibylline Press).
The horror and thriller author panel featured Catriona Ward (Nowhere Burning, Tor Nightfire), Allison Mick (Humboldt Cut, Erewhon Books), Mary Kubica (It's Not Her, Park Row Books), and Brian Asman (Man, F*ck This House, Blackstone). Zack Dubuc, operations and logistics manager at Book Passage in Corte Madera and San Francisco, moderated the discussion.
Camden Avery, co-owner and manager of the Booksmith in San Francisco, and Eileen McCormick, manager of Green Apple Books on Clement in San Francisco, led a session Thursday morning on management practices for cultural leadership and institutional longevity.
Michelle Pierce, owner of Lido Village Books in Newport Beach and Malibu Village Books in Malibu; Justin Carder, founder of Bathers Library in Oakland; and Shea Robinson, author and manager of A Seat at the Table Books in Elk Grove, convened Thursday morning to discuss their approaches for working with independent and self-published authors.
Jyoti and Auyon Mukharji, mother-and-son team and authors of the cookbook Heartland Masala: An Indian Cookbook from an American Kitchen (Collective Book Studio), at CALIBA's closing reception Thursday.









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NAACP Image Award nominee Khadijah VanBrakle (center) celebrated the launch of her YA novel My Perfect Family (Holiday House) at her local indie,
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Book you're an evangelist for:
The Dinner Party, Viola van de Sandt's propulsive debut, is structured around one fraught dinner party and the far-reaching ramifications it has on Franca's life after a somewhat unwilling stint as its hostess. Franca's account of the doomed evening begins as a collection of facts in an unsent letter she is writing to a long-lost friend at the behest of her therapist. Her report of the meal is carefully organized, starting with prep and mise en place and continuing through each course, right up to the sickly sweet spill of chocolate frosting at dessert. But amid that careful organization is lurking "that business with the knife," the alluded-to denouement of the evening that launches Franca out of the prim and proper life she's constructed and into something for which she has no menu, no plan, no recipe--something that, if she can only get there, might feel begin to feel like freedom.