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Tag Archives: The Berkeley Girl
A Berkeley Girl Looks Back
Fifty years ago this month, the May Revolution began in Paris and spread throughout France. The population of France was just over 50 million, and 10 million workers went out on strike. Imagine if today, out of 327 million Americans, … Continue reading
How The Berkeley Girl series isn’t “chick lit” – stories for men, too?
I’m aware and concerned that very few men will want to read a book entitled “The Berkeley Girl.” And why should they? How can you, who are my female readers from three generations, place it into the hands of the … Continue reading
Posted in 1968, 60s stereotypes, activism today, anti-war protest, literature for men, novels for men, Uncategorized, Vietnam War veterans, Writing fiction
Tagged 1968 history, 1968 May Revolution, 60s stereotypes, activism, Berkeley, historical fiction, literature, novels for men, Paris, political action, protest, sexual revolution, The Berkeley Girl, Vietnam veterans
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Why I wrote The Berkeley Girl: Rendezvous in London – and other Stories of the ‘60s
Note to readers: If your Bay Area book club, service group or other organization is looking for a speaker and discussion, I’d be happy to present about my books, the late 1960s, current events or any other related topics of … Continue reading
My Confessions from the Summer of Love
During the Summer of Love I was in Berkeley—not in San Francisco. Recently, listening to a PBS special on the Beatles’ masterpiece, “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” brought me back, as only music can do.* The Beatles and their … Continue reading
Perspective on yesterday’s Women’s March from 49 years ago
When Jay and I, with our friends Mary and Stu, joined 100,000 Bay Area protestors yesterday at Civic Center, I was struck by how similar the rally and Women’s March were to events I witnessed in Paris nearly 49 years … Continue reading
Posted in activism today, Protests today and in 1968
Tagged 1968 history, 1968 May Revolution, activism, current-events, Paris, politics, protest, The Berkeley Girl
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Art can change minds, inspire action
During a discussion at the World Fellowship Center, the family camp devoted to social justice, environment, and peace which I attended last month, I heard one decades-long camper complain that she felt the program had become “lightweight.” “We used to … Continue reading