What I’m Reading: Jazzed

My Amazon and Goodreads review of Jazzed by Jill Dearman (Rating 5) – Note Perfect. Awkward Wilhelmina (Will) is obsessed with social butterfly Dolly. Both girls are talented musicians, Will on clarinet, Dolly on piano. Dolly is turned on by jazz and crime; Will is turned on by jazz and Dolly. In a master-slave lesbian relationship, that occasionally turns the tables, Dolly blows hot and cold while Will boils with desire and freezes with the fear of desertion. To guarantee the erratic Dolly’s love, the compliant Will agrees to do anything, even murder a fourteen-year-old boy. Thus unfolds a gender-bending version of the scandalous 1924 Leopold and Loeb case. Dearman captures the Zeitgeist of the era — prohibition, antisemitism, social snobbery, homophobia, and the perceived threat of “Negro music.” The writing is itself a riff on jazz, at times syncopated and lively, at other times sustained and lugubrious. Like jazz artists, the protagonists trade solos, then meld their sounds. As a fiction writer myself (see my Amazon author page and Goodreads author page), I admire the fluidity with which Dearman shifts between styles as smoothly as a versatile musician. She takes us into the minds of her fully developed, complex characters, while also portraying their families’ social status, the legal system that traps them, and the medical establishment that purports to “treat” their sexual deviance. Jazzed is a note-perfect novel.

A gender-bending twist on an infamous crime story

Why writers read: “Reading is an exercise in empathy; an exercise in walking in someone else’s shoes for a while.” – Malorie Blackman

“Snappily Ever After” Published in Anthology ANNA KARENINA ISN’T DEAD

“Snappily Ever After” was published in the anthology Anna Karenina Isn’t Dead (Improbable Press). The collection imagines better endings for women who have been ignored, vilified, or otherwise mistreated in literary works. My piece, “Snappily Ever After,” is a series of limericks about maligned females in fairy tales and classic children’s books. Each verse lauds the prowess of these undervalued girls and women. Read more about my other POEMS and SHORT STORIES.

Re-imagining the lives of women in literature

Why writers write: “I write to dispel the myths that I am a mad prophet or poor suffering soul.” – Gloria E. Anzaldúa

The Goldilocks Question

The Historical Novel Society (HNS) published my essay “The Goldilocks Question” about finding the “just right” balance between history and fiction in historical fiction. The essay is part of a feature promoting the HNS June 2025 conference. Read more in ESSAYS.

Ann’s historical fiction is “just right”

Why writers write: “Writing a novel is taking life as it exists to make an object that might contain this life inside it, something that never was and will not be again.” – Eudora Welty

What I’m Reading: Day by Michael Cunningham

My Goodreads and Amazon review of Day: A Novel by Michael Cunningham (Rating 5) – Ourselves, Only More So. Day: A Novel by Michael Cunningham tracks the lives of a family and its satellites — five adults and three children in all — on the same April date in three consecutive years: 2019, 2020, and 2021, before, during, and after the height of the pandemic. Compared to many people, they are not very inconvenienced. One is tempted to dismiss them as self-absorbed middle class New Yorkers, yet Cunningham persuades us that these well-intentioned lost souls are worth our compassion. The narrative is very interior; Cunningham probes the minds of each character, child as well as adult, and excavates their often incompatible desires. As a novelist myself who uses multiple points of view (see my Amazon author page and Goodreads author page, I admire Cunningham’s ability to make each voice unique. I was particularly struck by the author’s choice to make the children, rather than the adults, ruminate about death. For children, life itself merits investigation, so death is no different. Adults, aware that their time on earth is ebbing, dare not dwell on its demise. By the book’s end, the world has changed, each person’s situation has changed, yet their relationships to work, home, and one another remain an unchanging loop. Time moves on, day to day and year to year, yet we remain who we are, only more so.

Eight characters, three years, one pandemic

Why writers read: “Many people, myself among them, feel better at the mere sight of a book.” – Jane Smiley

Survivor Story: No One Asked

“In 1951, at age 17, I entered a Miami Herald student essay contest with a two-page account of my family’s war experiences in Hungary. I won and received a standing ovation in the school auditorium. However, no one – not the newspaper, my teachers, or fellow students – asked if my essay was true or sought more information about what happened to us. To this day, I do not understand that lack of reaction.” Read about two Holocaust survivors, German Jewish newlyweds sent to America by their parents to have children to “save our people,” in One Person’s Loss. Learn more about the book in NOVELS.

Despite many Holocaust memorials — 16 in the U.S. and 265 worldwide — most people remain ignorant

Berlin, 1937. Jewish newlyweds flee Germany for Brooklyn on the eve of the Nazi slaughter

More Microfiction: Hand Me Ups

50 Give or Take published another piece of my microfiction, Hand Me Ups, a family tradition that began when I inherited clothes from my daughter, then in middle school, and continues as my grandson, now in middle school, gives me the shoes and clothes he’s outgrown. Sign up to receive and submit your own ultra-short stories, free, at 50 Give or Take.

Hand me downs and hand me ups across generations

Why writers write: “Writers write not because they know things but because they want to find things out.” – Julia Alvarez

Learn History Through Fiction: Enemy Alien

Despite being arrested as an “enemy alien,” Lois Gunden from Illinois established an orphanage and rescue mission for children aged 4 to 16 in Southern France. Many, malnourished and lice-infested, were rescued directly from Camp de Rivesaltes, an internment camp. While the U.S. failed to end WW2 sooner or admit those fleeing Nazi persecution, history shows some courageous Americans spoke out and saved lives. Read about a German Jewish family who tries to escape to the U.S. in the novel One Person’s Loss. Learn more about the book in NOVELS.

“Enemy alien” Lois Gunden rescued children from a French internment camp

Berlin, 1937. Jewish newlyweds flee Germany for Brooklyn before the Nazi slaughter begins