2023 Festival Events

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Welcome to the seventh annual Succeed2gether's Montclair Literary Festival from Wednesday May 3 to Tuesday May 9, 2023.
Plus a bonus event on Thursday May 11!



The festival would not be possible without the support of our Festival partners – Montclair State University, Montclair Public Library, and Watchung Booksellers – and the support of our sponsors. See all our amazing sponsors here.

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The majority of the festival's over 40 events are free. Any proceeds from the ticketed events benefit Succeed2gether, a Montclair-based non-profit 501(c) organization that addresses unequal access to educational resources for low-income families and children from Montclair and Essex County, NJ.

Any questions or to join our mailing list, please email montclairliteraryfestival@gmail.com.



    WEDNESDAY MAY 3, 7:00 P.M. – 8:30 P.M.


    MONTCLAIR STORY SALON
    Books That Changed My Life

    Kick off the bookish delights with this book-themed Montclair Story Salon! The salon is a bi-monthly storytelling event, hosted and produced by Liz Samuel. The evening's storytellers, singer-songwriters, and artists include Dagmara DominczykEric Roston, Nicole GrayRachel Quinn Egan, Rachel Martens, Carol Crittenden, Stacia Thiel and, painting live, Merrie Koehlert. Come at 7pm, grab a drink and some light refreshments, mingle with the group, and then sit down to listen, laugh, and be moved by the shared stories about the books that changed their lives.

    Venue: Fletcher Hall, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Montclair, 67 Church St, Montclair

    Tickets to hear the storytellers in person cost $25. Drinks and light refreshments will be served. All proceeds from the event will be donated to local non-profit Succeed2gether.

    THURSDAY MAY 4, 4:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M.


    Voices of Tomorrow: Creative Writing Readings from High School students

    Students from the Montclair Kimberley Academy, Glen Ridge High School and Montclair High School read short works of creative writing, as chosen by each school's review committee. Open to all.

    Venue: Montclair State University, University Hall, Room #1070. 



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    THURSDAY MAY 4, 5:30 P.M. – 6:30 P.M.




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    Literature's Rising Stars: Montclair State University's Creative Writing Award Readings

    Student recipients of the English Department's Creative Writing Awards at Montclair State University will read their poems, short stories, or works of creative nonfiction. Open to all.

    Venue: Montclair State University, University Hall, Room #1020.

    THURSDAY MAY 4, 7:00 P.M. – 8:00 P.M.


    MEMOIR
    Chita Rivera: A Memoir

    Join us to spend a captivating evening with Broadway legend and national treasure Chita Rivera, in conversation with friend and Broadway World correspondent Richard Ridge. Chita will be live and in person talking about her long-awaited and entertaining memoir Chita: A Memoir.

    Chita takes us behind the curtain to reveal the highs and lows of her extraordinary showbusiness career, from her trailblazing performance as Anita in West Side Story to her haunting 2015 star turn in The Visit and more.

    Venue: The Sanctuary, First Congregational Church, 40 S Fullerton Ave, Montclair.

    Tickets to hear Chita in person cost $38 for one, $55 for two, and include one pre-signed copy of the book Chita: A Memoir (value $30).

    FRIDAY MAY 5, 5:00 P.M. – 6:00 P.M.


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    FICTION 
    Joyce Maynard The Bird Hotel

    New York Times bestselling author Joyce Maynard reveals the magical world of La Llorona in her new novel The Bird Hotel. Joyce will be in conversation with professor and author Alice Elliott Dark. Joyce will be signing books after the event.

    Venue: Montclair State University, Alumni Green Overlook (2nd floor) in Sprague Library. Free parking at Red Hawk Deck. Campus Map for MLF May 5 2023


    RSVP HERE

    FRIDAY MAY 5, 7:00 P.M. – 8:00 P.M.


    NON-FICTION
    Warren Zanes: Finding Nebraska

    We, along with Outpost in the Burbs, invite you to spend the evening 'Finding Nebraska', a words-and-music show about one man's love affair with Bruce Springsteen's album Nebraska. Combining storytelling and performance, author Warren Zanes will be joined by guests including Laura Cantrell and James Maddock, all backed by a house band featuring David Mansfield, Ray Kubian, and Chris Harford.

    Venue: The Sanctuary, First Congregational Church, 40 S Fullerton Ave, Montclair. 

    Tickets to hear Warren Zanes and guests in person cost $45 for one/$75 for two, and include one copy of the book Deliver Me From Nowhere (value $28). Warren will be signing books after the event.

    SATURDAY MAY 6, 9:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M.


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    POETRY CAFÉ

    We all need more poetry in our lives! Start your day with coffee, bagels and poetry! Hear from some of New Jersey’s finest poets. Hosted by Chris Adams and John J. Trause, and featuring Sharon Dennis-Wyeth, Frank Rubino, George Witte, Tina Kelley, and Theresa Burns.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Guild Room.




    SATURDAY MAY 6, 10:00 A.M. – 10:45 A.M.


    CHILDREN STORYTELLER
    Harvest Tales & Songs from Africa

    When we have a bountiful harvest, we share with friends and neighbors. This season, storyteller Sabina Wasonga-Gitau shares her bountiful harvest of stories and folktales from West Africa to East Africa. Join her for stories, songs and chants in Swahili as we celebrate the harvest. Recommended for all ages.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Tent.


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 10:00 A.M. – 10:45 A.M.


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    CHILDREN
    Perfect Partners with Mary Amato

    Cat, with a passion for painting, stumbles upon an announcement for an Art Club. Excited to join and make friends, she arrives only to discover that everyone else is a dog. Woof! Will her dream of finding painter friends come true? Have your face painted and act out Mary Amato’s latest story. Recommended for ages 4-6.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library, Children's Floor (3rd).




    SATURDAY MAY 6, 10:00 A.M. – 11:00 A.M.


    FREE SHUTTLE BUS TO/FROM MSU!

    On Saturday May 6, a free shuttle bus will run from the First Congregational Church (FCC, 40 South Fullerton Ave) to Montclair State University (MSU) leaving at 9:40 am and 10:55 am, and returning at 11:20 am and 12:30 pm. Free parking will also be provided for festival attendees in the Red Hawk parking deck for this and other events held at MSU.


    NON-FICTION
    Deb Perelman: Smitten Kitchen Keepers

    We are excited to welcome New York Times' best-selling cookbook author and food blogger Deb Perelman to talk about her long-awaited and latest cookbook Smitten Kitchen Keepers: New Classics for Your Forever Files. Deb will be in conversation with Coccia Institute Director Mark Rotella.

    The author of two (now three!) best-selling cookbooks and one of the most successful food bloggers with a homegrown brand of more than a million Instagram followers, Deb is a self-taught cook who rigorously tests her recipes and shares them with warmth and wit.

    Venue: University Hall Conference Center, Montclair State University, 1 Normal Ave, Montclair 07043. Campus Map for MLF May 6 2023

    Tickets to hear Deb Perelman in person cost $40 for one/$65 for two, and include one copy of the book Smitten Kitchen Keepers (value $35). Deb will be signing books after the event.



    SATURDAY MAY 6, 10:00 A.M. – 11:00 A.M.


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    FICTION
    Pushed to the Brink

    What happens when athletes are pushed to the brink? When Won Lee, the first Asian American in the NBA, stuns the world in a seven-game winning streak, the global media audience dubs it “The Wonder”—much to Won’s chagrin. Matthew Salesses’ The Sense of Wonder is "a smart, very meta take" (Kirkus Reviews) on the ways Asian Americans navigate the thorny worlds of sports and entertainment when everything is stacked against them. In Jade Song’s Chlorine, Ren is a competitive swimmer whose obsession with water and chlorine and being pushed too hard to succeed turns her into a monster of her own making. Tracy O'Neill, author of The Hopeful, in which a figure skating prodigy races against nature's clock to get into the Olympics, leads the discussion. This event is co-presented by AAPI Montclair.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Sanctuary. 

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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 10:00 A.M. – 11:00 A.M.


    FICTION
    Family Matters

    In Beyond That, the Sea, Laura Spence-Ash tells the story of two families living through World War II on opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean, and the young woman claimed by both. Eliza Minot’s In the Orchard is an exploration of the interior landscape of maternal life, over the course of a single day when a young mother and her husband take their children to pick apples. The authors talk with their former MFA professor Alice Elliott Dark, author of Fellowship Pointabout how family identity and motherhood influenced what and how they write. This event is co-presented with Montclair Public Library's Open Book, Open Mind program.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Auditorium. 


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 11:00 A.M. – 11:45 A.M.


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    CHILDREN
    Mermaid and Pirate with Tracey Baptiste

    Mermaid and Pirate cannot understand each other. They speak different languages and come from different worlds. But they’re quick to lend a hand, or a tail, when the sky grows stormy and waters get rough, and a friendship is born. Hear author Tracey Baptiste tell her story of a shared adventure where kindness and generosity speak louder than words. Recommended for ages 3-7.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Tent.


    SATURDAY MAY 6, 11:15 A.M. – 12:15 P.M.


    FREE SHUTTLE BUS TO/FROM MSU!

    On Saturday May 6, a free shuttle bus will run from the First Congregational Church (FCC, 40 South Fullerton Ave) to Montclair State University (MSU) leaving at 9:40 am and 10:55 am, and returning at 11:20 am and 12:30 pm. Free parking will also be provided for festival attendees in the Red Hawk parking deck for this and other events held at MSU.


    NON-FICTION
    Hooked on True Crime

    Calling all Serial fans: join Lisa Belkin (Genealogy of a Murder: Four Generations, Three Families, One Fateful Night), Andy Kroll (Death on W Street: The Murder of Seth Rich and the Age of Conspiracy) and Joe Pompeo (Blood and Ink: The Scandalous Jazz Age Double Murder that Hooked America on True Crime) who, along with Katherine Dykstra (What Happened to Paula: On the Death of an American Girl), discuss America’s fascination with true crime and the relationship between journalism, public opinion, and entertainment.

    Venue: Student Center Ballroom, Montclair State University, 1 Normal Ave, Montclair 07043. Campus Map for MLF May 6 2023

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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 11:15 A.M. – 12:15 P.M.


    FREE SHUTTLE BUS TO/FROM MSU!

    On Saturday May 6, a free shuttle bus will run from the First Congregational Church (FCC, 40 South Fullerton Ave) to Montclair State University (MSU) leaving at 9:40 am and 10:55 am, and returning at 11:20 am and 12:30 pm. Free parking will also be provided for festival attendees in the Red Hawk parking deck for this and other events held at MSU.


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    NON-FICTION
    Re-Examining the American Dream

    Join Montclair State University’s Dean Peter Kingstone for a lively discussion with three award-winning journalists about poverty, racism and fascism in the U.S. today. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, Andrea Elliott’s Invisible Child: Poverty, Survival and Hope in an American City is an astonishing story about the power of resilience, the importance of family and the cost of inequality—told through the crucible of one remarkable girl. In The Undertow: Scenes from a Civil War, Jeff Sharlet journeys into corners of our national psyche where others fear to tread, providing an unmatched guide to the religious dimensions of American politics. Alissa Quart’s Bootstrapped is a powerful examination of what ails us at a societal level and a plan for how we can free ourselves from these self-defeating narratives.

    Venue: Dickson Hall, Room 177 (Brantl Lecture Hall), Montclair State University, 1 Normal Ave, Montclair 07043. Campus Map for MLF May 6 2023

    SATURDAY MAY 6, 11:30 A.M. – 12:30 P.M.


    NON-FICTION
    Exceptional Women and the Fight for Equality

    Don't miss this important conversation about how extraordinary women across journalism and science changed the treatment of women. Moderated by journalist and author Gabrielle Glaser, with Brooke Kroeger, journalist, NYU professor, and author of Undaunted: How Women Changed American JournalismKate Zernike, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter who broke the story of MIT's discrimination against its women science professors and their fight for recognition, chronicled in her new book, The Exceptions; and Regan Penaluna, whose How to Think Like A Woman tells the stories of four forgotten women philosophers, while suggesting an alternative paradigm if we are ever to achieve gender equality.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Auditorium.


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 11:45 A.M. – 12:45 P.M.


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    CHILDREN
    Kwame Alexander: How to Write a Poem

    What is a poem? Can you write one? Of course you can! In this hour of fun and laughs and showcasing his new book How to Write a PoemNewbery Medalist Kwame Alexander will share the magic of discovering your very own poetry in the world around you. You will be encouraged to listen, feel, and discover the words that dance in the world around you—poems just waiting to be written down. Recommended for all ages.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Sanctuary.

    SATURDAY MAY 6, 1:00 P.M. – 1:45 P.M.


    CHILDREN
    Alliah L. Agostini shares Big Tune

    Get ready to dance and rhyme with author Alliah L. Agostini as she celebrates Big Tune. Set within a vibrant Caribbean American neighborhood and told to a rhythmic beat, this is a story of a Black boy with big dancing dreams that touches on determination, confidence to express who you are, selflessness, and community gratitude. Recommended for ages 3-6.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Tent.

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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 1:00 P.M. – 2:00 P.M.


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    MEMOIR
    Margo Jefferson's Constructing a Nervous System

    Join Pulitzer Prize-winning author and critic Margo Jefferson in conversation about Constructing a Nervous System, a follow-up to her award-winning memoir, Negroland. Winner of Best Book of the 2022 by The New York Times, TIME, Oprah Daily, The New Yorker, Washington Post, Vulture, Buzzfeed, Publishers Weekly, and more, Jefferson interrogates herself as well as the act of writing a memoir, and probes the fissures at the center of American cultural life. Don’t miss this talk with "one of our most nuanced thinkers on the intersections of race, class, and feminism". With New York Times Magazine's Jazmine Hughes.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Sanctuary.


    SATURDAY MAY 6, 1:00 P.M. – 2:00 P.M.


    FICTION
    Exploring Loss, Love and Stress in Short Stories

    Clare Sestanovich (Objects of Desire) leads a discussion about loss, love and stress in three new compelling and provocative short story collections with their authors. Jai Chakrabarti crosses continents and cultures to explore what it means to cultivate a family today, across borders, religions, and race in A Small Sacrifice for an Enormous Happiness. Alejandro Varela’s collection of humorous, sexy, and highly neurotic tales about parenting, long-term relationships, systemic and interpersonal racism, and class conflict, The People Who Report More Stress, expresses the frustration of knowing our society’s inequities but being unable to do anything about them. Andrew Porter’s The Disappeared centers on lives and loves that are cut short, the vanishing of one's youthful self and captures relationships mid-flight, every individual life punctuated by loss, beauty and need.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Guild Room.


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 1:00 P.M. – 2:00 P.M.


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    CHILDREN
    Soman Chainani: Fall of the School for Good and Evil

    Are you a fan of the EverNever World? If you've read the Of The School For Good And Evil series and maybe even watched the film on Netflix, then you'll want to go back to where it all began. Author Soman Chainani shares the final chapter that began with Rise of The School For Good And Evil — which of the twin School Masters will prevail? And what will become of the school and its students? Recommended for ages 8+.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Auditorium. 




    SATURDAY MAY 6, 2:00 P.M. – 3:00 P.M.


    CHILDREN'S WORKSHOP
    Let The Looney Out! With Mike Allegra

    How did that fleet of ice cream trucks end up on the bottom of the Hudson River? What kind of story has the title “The Bananaman Brouhaha?” And, for the love of Pete, why did you wake up in a strange hotel room with clown shoes on your feet? Long story short, it’s time to let your weirdness out! In this freewheeling, hands-on workshop for kids, children's author Mike Allegra uses story prompts, team writing exercises, and games designed to let students find inspiration, silliness, and (of course) lots of laughs. Recommended for ages 8+.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library, Children's Floor (3rd).


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 2:15 P.M. – 3:15 P.M.


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    MEMOIR
    The Year of No Do-Overs with Mary Louise Kelly

    Ever since she became a parent, acclaimed NPR reporter and co-host of All Things Considered Mary Louise Kelly has said “next year.” Next year will be the year she makes it to her son James’ soccer games and drives carpool for her son Alexander. Now, Mary Louise is coming to grips with the reality every parent faces. Childhood has a definite expiration date. In conversation with People magazine books editor, Kate Tuttle, Mary Louise shares insights from It.Goes.So.Fast.: The Year of No Do-Overs, a chronicle of her eldest child’s final year at home, losing her father, as well as other curve balls thrown at her. Her questions, her issues, will resonate with every parent.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Sanctuary.



    SATURDAY MAY 6, 2:15 P.M. – 3:15 P.M.


    FICTION
    Debut Novelists Find Their Voice

    Fiction-writer Leslie-Ann Murray talks with three authors of very different debut novels in a lively discussion of the importance of place and how they each developed their distinct voice. Asale Angel-Adjani’s A Country You Can Leave follows the turbulent relationship of a Black, biracial teen and her ferocious Russian mother, struggling to survive in the California desert. In Sea Change, Gina Chung introduces us to Ro, a woman facing heartbreak and loss, whose only companion is a giant Pacific octopus, while Tyriek White’s We Are a Haunting is a working-class story of hope and transformation set in East New York.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Guild Room.

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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 2:15 P.M. – 3:15 P.M. ***NEW TIME/VENUE***


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    NON-FICTION
    Legendary Artists

    A trio of biographies delve into the lives of pioneering figures whose work transformed dance, jazz and musical theater in the 20th century and whose impact is still felt today. Neil Baldwin (Martha Graham: When Dance became Modern), DT Max (Finale, Late Conversations with Stephen Sondheim) and Aidan Levy (Saxophone Colossus, the Life and Music of Sonny Rollins) join award-winning biographer Amanda Vaill to bring new insight into artists whose work enchants and inspires us.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Tent

    SATURDAY MAY 6, 2:15 P.M. – 3:15 P.M.


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    FICTION/NON-FICTION
    Land of the Free

    Writertranslator, and author Alexis Romay delves into immigration issues with fiction writers Marina Budhos (We are All We Have) and Anne Burt (The Dig), and historian Carly Goodman (Dreamland: America’s Immigration Lottery). Marina's Rania, a 17-year-old asylum-seeker life shatters with an ICE raid, and Anne's Sarajevo-born Antonia confronts the trauma of displacement and war, while Carly tells the little-known story of the Immigration Lottery and its role in American life and the global story of migration. This event is co-presented with B'nai Keshet synagogue.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Auditorium. 


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 3:30 P.M. – 4:30 P.M.


    MEMOIR/NON-FICTION
    Honoring and Remembering Those Lost

    Join Rabbi Marc Katz in discussion with two authors whose books grapple with the legacy of the Holocaust. Unearthed: A Lost Actress, A Forbidden Book and A Search for Life in the Shadow of the Holocaust recounts Meryl Frank’s journey to seek the truth about a beloved and revolutionary cousin and to answer the question of how the next generation should honor the memory of the Holocaust. Michael Frank spent One Hundred Saturdays meeting with 99 year-old Stella Levi to bring to life the vibrant world of Jewish Rhodes, the deportation to Auschwitz that extinguished 90 percent of her community, and the resilience and wisdom of the woman who lived to tell the tale. This event is co-presented with Temple Ner Tamid.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Sanctuary.


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 3:30 P.M. – 4:30 P.M.


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    FICTION
    Mary Beth Keane's The Half Moon

    Join New York Times’ bestselling author Mary Beth Keane (Ask Again, Yes) as she shares her new novel The Half Moon. Taking place over the course of one tumultuous week, Keane’s skilled storytelling and generous spirit are on full display as she carefully explores a marriage in crisis, what it takes to make a life with another person, and the true meaning of family. In conversation with Matthew Thomas (We are not Ourselves)

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Auditorium. 



    SATURDAY MAY 6, 3:30 P.M. – 4:30 P.M.


    FICTION
    The Meaning of Home

    Cleyvis Natera (Neruda on the Park) introduces us to exciting and powerful new fiction from three Puerto Rican authors. In What Happened to Ruthy Ramirez, Claire Jimenez’s debut, a Puerto Rican family on Staten Island discovers their long‑missing sister is potentially alive and cast on a reality TV show. Melissa Coss Aquino’s Carmen and Grace follows two cousins lured into the underground drug trade at a young age and the inextricable ties that bind them. The stories in When Trying to Return Home, Jennifer Maritza McCauley’s debut collection, span a century of Black American and Afro-Latino life in Puerto Rico, Pittsburgh, Louisiana, Miami, and beyond, offering an evocative meditation on belonging, the meaning of home, and how we secure freedom on our own terms. This event is co-presented with Latinos of Montclair.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Tent. 


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 4:45 P.M. – 5:45 P.M.


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    FICTION/NON-FICTION
    Love is Love is Love

    Explore love in whatever form, wherever it is found, with three very different versions of a queer love story with poet, writer, and scholar Naomi Extra. Alice Winn’s international bestseller In Memoriam is a tragic love story set at an English boarding school and the battlefields of World War I. In Pomegranate, Helen Elaine Lee tells the story of Ranita, a queer Black woman who works to pull her life together after being released from prison. Ranita is regaining her freedom, but she’s leaving behind her lover Maxine. In Lesbian Love Story: A Memoir in Archives, Amelia Possanza stitches together personal memoir, painstaking research, and fictional imaginings to recover the personal histories of lesbians in the twentieth century: who they were, how they loved, why their stories were destroyed, and where their memories echo and live on. This event is co-presented with Out Montclair.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Sanctuary. 


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 4:45 P.M. – 5:45 P.M.


    MEMOIR
    Healing from the Past

    An unexpected family photograph leads award-winning journalist, Dionne Ford, to uncover the stories of her enslaved female ancestors, reclaim their power and begin to heal. Go Back and Get It: A Memoir of Race, Inheritance and Intergenerational Healing is “a cathartic reading experience” (Kirkus Review) and “one of the most anticipated feminist books of 2023” (Ms Magazine). Ford is in conversation with author Benilde Little. This event is co-presented with Montclair Public Library's Open Book, Open Mind program.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Auditorium


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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 4:45 P.M. – 5:45 P.M.


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    FICTION
    Women on the Verge

    If you are in the market for a juicy beach read or a smart and funny book club pick, look no further. Amy Poeppel (The Sweet Spot), Megan Tady (Super Bloom) and Jenny Jackson (Pineapple Street) discuss their latest novels with Laurie Albanese (Hester). From a sharply observed novel of three women in one wealthy Brooklyn clan, to a heartwarming story of second chances in life and love set at an iconic Vermont spa, to a charming tale of three women who form an accidental sorority when a baby lands on their collective doorstep, these books are guaranteed to fit the bill. 

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Tent. 


    SATURDAY MAY 6, 6:00 P.M. – 7:00 P.M.


    Pitchapalooza!

    Pitchapalooza is American Idol for books (only kinder and gentler). Twenty writers will be selected at random to pitch their book. Each writer gets one minute— and only one minute! Dozens of writers have gone from talented amateurs to professionally published authors as a result of participating in Pitchapalooza.

    Whether potential authors pitch themselves, or simply listen to trained professionals critique each presentation, Pitchapalooza is educational and entertaining for one and all. At the end of Pitchapalooza, the judges will pick a winner. The winner receives an introduction to an agent or publisher appropriate for their book. As always, bestselling author David Henry Sterry and agent-to-the-stars Arielle Eckstut will host the party.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Sanctuary.

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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 6:00 P.M. – 7:00 P.M.


    MEMOIR/POETRY
    Identity and Belonging

    Explore the themes of identity and belonging with storytellers and poets Deborah D.E.E.P. Mouton and her memoir Black Chameleon: Memory, Womanhood and MythJosé Olivarez with Promises of Gold and Rio Cortez for Golden Ax. Discussion moderated by poet, writer and visual artist Keisha-Gaye Anderson.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Tent.

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    SATURDAY MAY 6, 7:00 P.M. – 8:30 P.M.


    FESTIVAL PARTY
    Meet the Authors!

    Join festival authors and supporters for dazzling conversation, drinks, and light snacks to celebrate the seventh annual Montclair Literary Festival. Round off the day in style while supporting Succeed2gether’s important work to close the education achievement gap.

    Venue: First Congregational Church, The Guild Room. 

    Tickets to the party are $35 for one person, $50 for two. Beverages and food will be served. Purchase two tickets for $100 and donate $50 to Succeed2gether.

    SUNDAY MAY 7, 2:00 P.M. – 3:00 P.M.


    NON-FICTION
    Climate Migration

    Even as climate change dominates the headlines, many of us still think about it in the future tense. What we often don’t realize is that the consequences of climate change are already visible. From half-drowned Louisiana to fire-scorched California, people are moving. Climate journalist Jake Bittle talks about his new book The Great Displacement: Climate Change and the Next American Migration with Bloomberg News sustainability editor Eric Roston. Bittle's book tells the untold story of climate migration in the United States—the personal stories of those experiencing displacement, the portraits of communities being torn apart by disaster and the implications for the future if we do not act now. 

    Venue: Peierls Room, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Montclair, 67 Church St, Montclair. 

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    SUNDAY MAY 7, 3:30 P.M. – 5:00 P.M.


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    COMMUNITY DISCUSSION
    Banned Books

    Join us for a community discussion about the recent and growing attacks on the freedom to read, the dangers it signals, and what we can do to fight back. Panel includes: William Johnson (PEN America), Amol Sinha (ACLU), Diane Wachtell (New Press), Skip Dye (ALA), Jake Silverstein (1619 Project; New York Times Magazine), Janet Torsney (Montclair Public Library Director) and Dr Michael Gillespie (author). This event is co-presented by Out Montclair and Montclair NAACP.

    Venue: Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Montclair, The Sanctuary, 67 Church St, Montclair.


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    TUESDAY MAY 9, 7:00 P.M. – 8:00 P.M.


    NON-FICTION 
    Secrets of the Sprakkar with Iceland's First Lady, Eliza Reid

    Meet Iceland's First Lady, Eliza Reid, author of  Secrets of the Sprakkar, as she talks with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Kate Zernike (The Exceptions) about why Iceland is the best place on earth to be a woman.   In this remarkable book, Eliza Reid answers this question by analyzing Iceland's culture and telling the stories of dozens of sprakkar ("extraordinary women"), weaving in her own experiences as an immigrant from a small-town in Canada. The result is an illuminating discussion of how important the rules of society are in determining who we view as equal. To quote Hillary Clinton, "Secrets of the Sprakkar is a fascinating window into what a more gender-equal world could look like, and why it's worth striving for."

    Venue: Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Montclair, The Sanctuary, 67 Church St, Montclair. 

    THURSDAY MAY 11, 6:30 P.M. – 8:00 P.M.


    FICTION
    Anne Berest: The Postcard

    We are excited to welcome best-selling author Anne Berest to celebrate the English-language publication of her award-winning novel, The Postcard (Europa, 2023, translated by Tina Kover). Anne will be in conversation with renowned books editor Kate Tuttle.

    Luminous and gripping to the very last page, The Postcard is an enthralling investigation into family secrets, a poignant tale of mothers and daughters, and a vivid portrait of 20th-century Parisian intellectual and artistic life.

    This event is co-presented with FIAF (French Institute Alliance Française), Montclair Public Library, Villa Albertine, and Watchung Booksellers.

    Venue: Montclair Public Library Auditorium.

    Tickets to hear Anne in person cost $30 and include a signed copy of the book The Postcard (value $28). Anne will be signing books after the talk.
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