Archive - August 2011

1
Tony D'Souza new novel on youtube!
2
Review of Peter Bourque's Tarnished Ivory
3
Fiber Artist Stephanie Gorin (Morocco 1993-95)
4
July 2011 Peace Corps Books
5
Review: COLOMBIA: PICTURES AND STORIES by Sandy Fisher (Colombia)
6
Tony D'Souza's next novel–Mule
7
Emily Arsenault (South Africa 2004-06) new novel is a psychological thriller
8
Words of Writers’ Wisdom
9
RPCV Arrested in Connecticut for sexually abusing children in South Africa

Review of Peter Bourque's Tarnished Ivory

Tarnished Ivory: Reflections on Peace Corps and Beyond by Peter Bourque (Ivory Coast (1973–75) Xlibris 224 pages $19.99 2011 Reviewed by P. David Searles (PC staff/Philippines CD 1971–74; PC Dep Dir 1974–76) TARNISHED IVORY REALLY HAS TWO AUTHORS — one is twenty-something-year-old Peter Bourque, who provides the main text, and the other is sixty-year-old Peter Bourque, who provides editing and commentary. That would be a more accurate description of who wrote what in this fascinating look at Peace Corps service in Ivory Coast in the 1970s.  During his service in Ivory Coast Bourque kept a journal and a diary and also wrote “hundreds of pages” (his count) to friends and family in the U.S., especially to a “significant other” back at the University of Michigan. Thirty-five years later the now older, more mature, and wiser Bourque has edited this material, made interesting and revealing comments on it, and provided some . . .

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Fiber Artist Stephanie Gorin (Morocco 1993-95)

Stephanie Gorin (Morocco 1996–98) worked with me in the New York Recruitment Office, a wonderful woman and Peace Corps Recruiter, and artist! See, there is life after the Peace Corps, (and after working with Coyne) and after graduate school! Congratulates, Steph! — John • From Spin Artiste An Online Publication For the Making and Using of Artisanal Fibers and Yarns Posted on July 8, 2011 by Arlene Ciroula, and reprinted with permission from Spinartiste.com Featured Artist: Steph Gorin of Loop Publisher’s Notes:  Dear Readers, prepare yourself for a magical fiber-filled adventure as we learn more about Steph Gorin and her studio, Loop.  Steph is an incredible talent and her story is quite fascinating. With great pleasure, I present the Spin Artiste interview with Steph Gorin. Spin Artiste (SA): In reading about you, I am struck (let’s make that awestruck) by your impressive educational background and how you have re-focused your career from international . . .

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July 2011 Peace Corps Books

In Search of the Rose Notes by Emily Arsenault (South Africa 2004–06) William Morrow $14.95 369 pages July 2011 • Girls of the Factory: A Year with the Garment Workers of Fes by M. Laetitia Cairoli (Morocco 1985–87) University Press of Florida 256 pages $60.00 March 2011 • Colombia: Pictures & Stories by Sandy Fisher (Colombia 1962–64) Self-published $60.00 (signed) TheMarket@brookviewfarm.com 212 pages January 2011 • The African American Odyssey of John Kizell: A South Carolina Slave Returns to Fight the Slave Trade in His African Homeland by Kevin G. Lowther (Sierra Leone 1963–65) University of Southern Carolina Press $39.95 336 pages May 2011 • Stirring the Pot: A History of African Cuisine by James C. McCann (Ethiopia 1973–75) Ohio University Press 240 pages $26.95 2009 • Bread from the Sky by Maria McCarthy (Togo 1996–98) Amazon Digital Services $4.99 Kindle January 2011 • InGear: Peace Corps & Beyond by . . .

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Review: COLOMBIA: PICTURES AND STORIES by Sandy Fisher (Colombia)

Colombia: Pictures and Stories Sandy Fisher (Colombia 1962–64) Brookview Farm January, 2011 212 pages Hardback $60 (autographed) Order from TheMarket@brookviewfarm.com Reviewed by Lawrence F. Lihosit (Honduras 1975–77) THIS IS A VISUAL KALEIDOSCOPE of historical images and corresponding stories told by someone who went to serve, then stayed. A member of the second group of Peace Corps Volunteers to arrive in Colombia, Sandy Fisher and 59 other PCVs “sang out the Colombian national anthem (and) Alberto Lleras Camargo, the country’s president, cried.” A half century ago, the world was different and so was the Peace Corps. Like so many, Fisher was young — 21 — and inexperienced. His first mission was to “develop the community of Tenjo,” a village located in a valley between Andean mountain ranges in central Colombia. He “built a house, cleared a road, rescued machines,” worked on school water systems and helped organize a vegetable cooperative garden. . . .

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Tony D'Souza's next novel–Mule

Tony D’Souza (Ivory Coast 2000-02; Madagascar 2002-03)  has contributed to The New Yorker, Playboy, Esquire, Outside, Salon, Granta, McSweeny’s and other magazines. He is a recipient of the Sue Kaufman Prize, the O. Henry Award, the Florida Book Awards gold and silver medals for fiction, and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. His novel The Konkans, was a Best Book of the Year in Washington Post Book World, Christian Science Monitor and Publishers Weekly. Tony was nominated for a National Magazine Award for coverage of Nicaragua’s Eric Volz murder trial, all after he spent three years in Africa. He lives now in St. Louis with his wife, a graduate student in creative writing, and their two young children. In September Mule: A Novel of Moving Weight, Tony’s third novel, will be published by Houghton Mifflin. It is a story of a young couple hard hit by . . .

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Emily Arsenault (South Africa 2004-06) new novel is a psychological thriller

Emily Arsenault (South Africa 2004-06) first novel, The Broken Teaglass, was selected by The New York Times as a Notable Crime Book of 2009. She has now just published In Search of the Rose Notes, a psychological mystery about broken friendship and the unease of revisiting adolescent memories. Emily writes, “My initial intention was to write a suspense novel that dealt with some of the darker aspects of adolescence. I wanted to write about a female character in her twenties who, while relatively content as an adult, had a difficult adolescence that she still struggles to understand. I started with that character–Nora–and built the other aspects of the book (the friendship with Charlotte, Rose’s disappearance, the Time-Life books) around her.” Before the Peace Corps and South Africa, Emily  worked as a lexicographer and an English teacher. While she grew up in Connecticut, today she lives with her husband, who served with her in . . .

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Words of Writers’ Wisdom

The current issue of  the Authors Guild Bulletin has a column, “Along Publishers Row” by Campbell Geeslin that has a number of great comments and remarks that I want to share with all of the writers out there! We might find some wisdom here. For example: Jessamyn West believed “Writing is so difficult that I often feel that writers, having had their hell on earth, will escape all punishment hereafter.” F. Scott Fitzgerald said: “An author ought to write for the youth of his own generation, the critics of the next, and the schoolmasters of ever afterwards.” Raymond Carver had this to say: “I made the story just as I made a poem, one line and then the next, and the next. Pretty soon I could see a story–and I knew it was my story, the one I had been wanting to write.” The late Sinclair Lewis said, “It is . . .

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RPCV Arrested in Connecticut for sexually abusing children in South Africa

Peace Corps condemns alleged abuse by volunteer By JOHN CHRISTOFFERSEN | Associated Press The Peace Corps said Friday that a former volunteer’s alleged sexual abuse of young girls in South Africa is “reprehensible” and the agency supports the vigorous prosecution of the case. Thirty-one-year-old Jesse Osmun of Milford was arrested Thursday in Connecticut on federal charges of sexually abusing children at a center in Greytown, which helps AIDS victims. Authorities say Osmun molested five children under the age of 6, some multiple times, and gave them candy during a period between 2010 and this year. Mr. Osmun is charged with a shocking breach of the power entrusted to him as a Peace Corps volunteer,” Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer said upon Osmun’s arrest. The Peace Corps said it was made aware of the allegations after Osmun resigned in May. The humanitarian agency, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary, said it . . .

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