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AL ST. LOUIS JEWISH ANNU ST 41 BOOK FESTIVAL NovemberSEPTEMBER 1, 20 316 – – 15,JUNE 2019 30, 2017 | | PlusPlus bookend bookend author events thauthorroughout the eventsyear throughout the year FEATURING ISAAC MIZRAHI AND MORE THAN 35 PREMIER AUTHORS TICKETS on sale now! 314.442.3299 | stljewishbookfestival.org A program of the Jewish Community Center All events take place in the Carl & Helene Mirowitz Performing Arts & Banquet Center unless otherwise noted. Jewish Community Center, Staenberg Family Complex, 2 Millstone Campus Drive, St. Louis Missouri 63146 $600 Value! Premier Pass: $110 Premier Passes now have a unique barcode to make entry safer and more secure for everyone. This pass provides entry into all festival events through June 2020. RSVP DATES: (BY NOV. 1) HEARING ASSISTANCE [email protected] or 314.442.3299 A limited number of NEW assistive hearing devices Including Premier Pass Holders are available at the sound desk. The following events require an RSVP: Sports Night November 6 Women’s Night November 7 ADA ACCESSIBLE Wheelchair seating and companion seats Bagel Breakfast November 10 are available for all author presentations. The following sponsor events require an RSVP: Reception after Isaac Mizrahi November 3 Symphony Concert Dress Rehearsal November 5 FREE Student Tickets Sponsor Dinner November 10 Available to junior high, high school and college students who show a current ID at the door for any author program. Three ways to purchase tickets 1 2 3 Charge by phone In person Order online 314-442-3299 Box Office stljewishbookfestival.org 2 Millstone Campus Dr. Please Note: All Festival ticket and book sales are final. No refunds or exchanges. Due to circumstances beyond our control, programs may be subject to change, rescheduling or cancellation. Every effort will be made to reschedule or replace a cancelled author. The J will not be liable for non-appearance of any scheduled author or performer. Check Festival hotline 314.442.3299 or stljewishbookfestival.org for any schedule changes. 2 | St. Louis Jewish Book Festival 2019 FALL BOOKEND VOLUNTEER WITH THE EVENT ST. LOUIS JEWISH INCLUDED WITH PREMIER PASS BOOK FESTIVAL! KIM HORNER There are many opportunities to get involved, including: Thursday, October 3 at 7:00pm | FREE Kim Horner discovers she has inherited a BRCA Bookstore: Assist customers, use the cash register and charge $600 Value! gene mutation that puts her at high risk of equipment; and maintain the appearance of the bookstore developing certain cancers, but struggles with the decision to have surgery to reduce her risk Ticketing: Greet attendees at the door; check to make sure all for a disease she doesn’t have and may never attendees have their ticket scanned upon entry; and distribute get. In Probably Someday Cancer, Kim weaves pre-purchased tickets (“will call”) her personal experience with extensive research and interviews to help anyone confronted with Raffles: Assist with raffle ticket sales; collect raffle items; difficult medical decisions face their risk, take develop raffle bags; and help monitor any special raffle items control of their healthcare and make informed decisions. Following her presentation, Kim will We would love to have your help! moderate a discussion with leaders from our To become a volunteer with the St. Louis Jewish Book Festival, contact medical community. The panel will include: Amy Bornstein at 314.442.3152 or [email protected]. • Heidi A. Beaver, MPH, Certified Genetic Counselor, Missouri Baptist Medical Center • Abigail Hoffman, MD, Breast Surgeon, Mercy • Lynne Kipnis, PhD, Clinical Psychologist GREETINGS! On behalf of the J’s Cultural Arts Department, I am very excited to share our 2019-20 Festival lineup. You will have the opportunity to meet an array of incredible authors with BIG stories. From a mixed-race Jewish girl battling hate to a Palestinian activist promoting peace; from a legendary -- and local! -- New York Mets outfielder to the first woman ordained as a cantor in Jewish history; from Conan Doyle’s work on a murder case to Audrey Hepburn’s childhood in Nazi-occupied Netherlands; with each author, we strive to create a space that is engaging and meaningful for all. Since its inception in 1979, the St. Louis Jewish Book Festival has become one of the largest and most well renowned in the United States. However, this Festival would not be possible without the incredible team of dedicated volunteers that work year-round to produce more than 25 events in 12 days. And that does not even include our Bookend events, which start in October and continue through spring. At the forefront of this powerhouse team are Co-Chairs Bob Germain and Barb Williams, whom I cannot thank enough for their passion, creativity and hard work. We hope you will join us this fall for the 41st Book Festival, and throughout the year at our many Cultural Arts programs, where there is truly something for everyone! Cheers to a great year, Amy Bornstein Director, Literary and Jewish Arts 314.442.3299 • stljewishbookfestival.org | 3 Sunday, November 3 Keynote Speaker ISAAC MIZRAHI In I.M.: A Memoir, Isaac Mizrahi offers a poignant, candid and touching look back on his life. And what a life it’s been. He tells the story of growing up gay in a sheltered Syrian Jewish Orthodox family, portraying a strained relationship with his father and a complicated one with his beloved mother. At the famed LaGuardia High School for Performing Arts, he found his people (and appeared in his first movie, Fame). As a budding fashion designer, Isaac worked with luminaries such as Perry Ellis and Calvin Klein. After branching out on his own, his label’s instant success anointed him the wunderkind of the international fashion world. He looks back on his groundbreaking documentary, Unzipped, and after his first fall from grace, his partnership with Target that brought his high-end collection to the masses and revolutionized fashion retail. Isaac describes his numerous self-reinventions that landed him back to his first true calling of show business. He delves into his lifelong battles with his weight, insomnia and depression. He tells what it was like to be an out gay man in a homophobic age and to witness the ravaging effects of the AIDS epidemic. In his elegant memoir, brimming with intimate details and inimitable wit, Isaac reveals not just the glamour of his years, but the grit beneath the glitz. Rich with memorable stories from in and out of the spotlight, I.M.: A Memoir illuminates deep emotional truths. This is pure Isaac Mizrahi, as only he can tell it. 7:00pm | $45 Takes place in the Edison Gymnasium 4 | St. Louis Jewish Book Festival 2019 Monday, November 4 SUSAN ANGEL MILLER PAM JENOFF 10:30am | $20 1:00pm | $20 In Permission to Thrive, Susan Angel Miller shares an The Lost Girls of Paris is the story of a group of British intensely personal story of faith and hope, addressing female spies sent to France during World War II. One the unnerving and universal topics of death, illness and morning, while passing through Grand Central Terminal trauma while conveying a hopeful message: even though on her way to work, Grace Healy finds an abandoned it’s impossible to predict when adversity will strike, suitcase tucked beneath a bench. Unable to resist her we can choose how to respond to trauma, ultimately own curiosity, Grace opens the suitcase where she achieving posttraumatic growth (PTG). This memorable discovers a dozen photographs – each of a different book traces Susan’s extraordinary journey, which woman. Setting out to learn the truth behind the women begins when her healthy 14-year-old daughter dies in the photographs, Grace finds herself drawn to Marie, suddenly from a brain tumor, and the family’s decision a young mother-turned-agent, whose daring mission on the worst day of their lives — and with their rabbi’s overseas reveals a remarkable story of friendship, valor, counsel – to donate Laura’s organs, saving the life of and betrayal. a woman with whom the Miller family would eventually cultivate an exceptional relationship. Pam Jenoff is the author of several novels, including the New York Times bestseller The Orphan’s Tale. Her Sponsored by Maxine & Steven Mirowitz novels are inspired by her experiences working at the Pentagon and as a diplomat for the State Department handling Holocaust issues in Poland. Sponsored by Booksource, The Rubin Family Foundation, UMSL Center for the Humanities, Marsha & David Soshnik MARRA B. GAD 7:00pm | $20 An unforgettable debut memoir about a mixed-race Jewish woman who, after 15 years of estrangement from her racist great-aunt, helps bring her home when Alzheimer’s strikes. The Color of Love explores the idea of yerusha, which means “inheritance” in Yiddish. At times heart-wrenching and heartwarming, this is a story about what you inherit from your family — identity, disease, melanin, hate, and most powerful of all, love. With honesty, insight, and warmth, Marra B. Gad has written an inspirational and moving chronicle, proving that when all else is stripped away, love is where we return, and love is always our greatest inheritance. Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Learning and The Morris and Ann Lazaroff Endowment of the Saul Brodsky Jewish Community Library 314.442.3299 • stljewishbookfestival.org | 5 Tuesday, November 5 DAWN RAFFEL YOUSEF BASHIR 10:30am | $20 7:00pm | $20 Dr. Martin Arthur Couney (née Michael Cohn) In The Words of My Father, a Palestinian-American was one of the most improbable heroes of the activist recalls his adolescence in Gaza during early 20th century. For more than 40 years, he the Second Intifada. Still suffering the effects saved tiny premature babies by placing them in of a near catastrophic injury at the hands of an incubator sideshows at Coney Island and world’s anonymous IDF soldier, it was Israeli doctors who fairs, right out on the midway, next to the sword saved Yousef and helped him eventually learn to swallowers and strippers.