Monday, September 27, 2010

'Blue Nude' by Elizabeth Rosner

INHERITING AN IDENTITY
A Conversation with Elizabeth Rosner
Wednesday, September 29
7:30 PM



Elizabeth Rosner
author of Blue Nude

in conversation with Linda Gray Sexton,

with opening remarks by Philippa Kelly


Acclaimed novelist Elizabeth Rosner asks: “Can we remember the past and move beyond it, creating art in the process?”

Her luminous second novel, Blue Nude, takes modern history’s greatest atrocity and expresses its consequences—and a hope for redemption—in the lives of two people thrown together by accident.

Born in the shadow of postwar Germany, Danzig is a once-prominent painter, now teaching at an art institute in San Francisco. Increasingly haunted by his dark inheritance, he finds himself unable to create. When Merav, the Israeli-born granddaughter of a Holocaust survivor, becomes Danzig’s muse, both realize they must face the wounds of history that each of them carries. Bringing together the past and present lives of Merav and Danzig, the story moves forward and backward in time and place: from a California art studio to the ruins of Berlin and back again.

In subtle yet profound awakenings, both artist and model begin to transform themselves as well as one another. Blue Nude becomes the literary equivalent of a masterpiece of visual art: elegantly composed, vivid, a perfect object as well as a great and stirring drama.

A daughter of Holocaust survivors, Rosner spent several years involved in a project called Acts of Reconciliation. This exploration of the legacy shared by Second Generation Jews and Germans, descendants of victims and perpetrators, led to the writing of Blue Nude. Its powerful themes of inheritance and transformation are inspiring answers to a question haunting many of us: How do our ancestors' lives dictate and inform our own?

Joining Elizabeth Rosner in conversation will be Linda Gray Sexton, whose writing has been intricately shaped by the life and work of her mother, poet Anne Sexton.


"We watch, spellbound, as the story seems to levitate midair, as the characters seamlessly unfold a plot that is no less than fascinating. Using the rhythms of poetry, Elizabeth Rosner has created a lyrical tour de force." -- Linda Gray Sexton, author of Half in Love: Surviving the Legacy of Suicide


“Rosner has a painter's eye and a poet's ear. BLUE NUDE is a luminous book about painful histories -- both private and global -- and how they stay with us even as they travel through to become something else - quite possibly art. A book both heady and tangible, both unflinching and generous, but always beautiful to read.” -- Karen Joy Fowler, author of The Jane Austen Book Club


“Through German artist, Danzig, and Israeli muse, Merav, Elizabeth Rosner builds a bridge from loss to reconciliation, from anger to understanding. Blue Nude is a lyrical exploration of how we -- as individuals and as a society -- move past our separate histories and toward a shared redemption. This is truly a lovely book.” -- Meg Waite Clayton, author of The Wednesday Sisters


“Blue Nude is a novel which spans time and continents, from post war Germany to California to Israeli kibbutzim, a novel which explores the big questions of history, fate, art, how we choose to live the lives we’re given–and yet it’s also wonderfully intimate as well in its exploration of the hearts of its individual characters. Elizabeth Rosner has written a thought provoking, moving and original book.” -- Dan Chaon, author of You Remind Me of Me


“Rosner takes on complexity with a brilliant poet’s insistence that the body can never surrender cultural legacy. Blue Nude is easy to pick up and, in its suspense, hard to put down. Its sensitivity to detail acts as a love letter to the world.” -- Edie Meidav, author of Crawl Space

Linda Gray Sexton, our interviewer this evening, has written four novels, and her first memoir, Searching for Mercy Street, was published to widespread acclaim. Linda Sexton’s new book, Half in Love: Surviving the Legacy of Suicide, arrives in January.


Philippa Kelly is Resident Dramaturg at the California Shakespeare Theater.



$12 advance ($6 students with ID and Hillside Club members), $15 (for all) at the door, online at Brown Paper Tickets on 800-838-3006.


Hillside Club (2286 Cedar Street, Berkeley)

Friday, September 24, 2010

Harmonious communication

I didn’t invent any of this. I’ve pieced it together over the years from other experts, as well as my own
personal and professional experience. Try it. It works. You’ll have more harmonious relationships with
men… All men.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Don't make him wrong: my marriage vows

I got married recently. We wrote our vows separately and surprised each other with them. I had been
jotting things down over a period of months, and one thing kept coming up for me: my beloved has zero
tolerance for being made wrong. It just doesn’t work for us. The first thing that I committed to in my
vows was to try to not make him wrong, and that if I wanted to make him wrong, I committed to figuring
out what was going on with me that caused me to do so. Because when you make somebody wrong it’s
information about you, not about them. I know, you probably don’t like hearing that either. But I’m right
on this. These unconventional vows really resonated with my beloved, as well as with the audience, the
men especially. They’re still talking about it. I think I struck a chord. As far as our marriage goes, so far so good.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Don't make him wrong!

Here’s a biggie: making a man wrong is a lose. Cumulatively, it whittles away at his sense of manhood
and empowerment. It’ll make him angry and cause him to withdraw. You may have noticed. Don’t make
him wrong. Period. Give it up.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Positive sandwich

When giving a man feedback, give him the ‘positive sandwich’: you start with a positive (“I love how
you…”), give him the constructive criticism (“And it would make me even happier if…”), and end with a
positive (“You’re such a wonderful…(lover, cook, father, planner)”).

Monday, September 20, 2010

Men have a single focus brain

When you want to talk to a man, pick an opportune time, a time that will set you both up for success.
Men’s brains are single‐focused ‐ in other words, they’re best‐suited to only focusing on one thing at a
time. Women tend to have multi‐tasking brains. Again, neither is better; it’s just different, and serves
different purposes. So if you want to approach him to discuss something, don’t do it when he’s focused
on something else. When he’s watching a football game on TV, fixing the car, doing e‐mail, helping little
Johnny assemble his new toy…he’s not available. And he won’t be able to give you his undivided
attention, which is what you want, right? He may grunt in response, and you assume that he has heard
and understood you. Later you wonder why he doesn’t remember. He genuinely doesn’t. Pick a time
when he can focus on you. Catch him in between tasks. You might even want to ask if it’s a good time to
discuss what color to paint the den, plan his mother’s birthday party, RSVP to a dinner invitation…

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Thank him: it's a win

When you thank him, that’s a win for him, and he will want to do what pleases you again, so
that you are pleased again. Never underestimate the impact of praising and thanking a man, with a
smile and direct eye contact, whether it’s your mate, a busboy in a restaurant, the guy helping you at
the hardware store. A smile reads as a win to a man, and facilitates you both getting what you want.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Thank him...up one side and down the other

Here’s another important piece: when a man does something that pleases you…thank him! Several
times. Thank him in the moment, and be specific about what pleased you (it made you feel cared for, it
helped you somehow…). And thank him again later, in an unrelated moment: “Remember when you
complimented me on my outfit? That made me feel pretty.” “I’ve noticed you haven’t been leaving your
shoes in the middle of the hallway. I really appreciate that. I feel safer and not afraid to trip over them
anymore.”

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Set your man up to win: be specific

Setting your man up to win might also sound like: “Sweetie, it would really make me happy if we had a
date night at that French restaurant this Friday; I could wear my new dress and you’d look so handsome
in that suit we got you last year. Would you be willing to make a reservation for an early dinner for us?”
Be specific. He wants to make you happy. I guarantee it; that’s how men are. If you communicate
clearly, then he knows what to do to get the win: make the reservation, wear the suit, and take you out
to dinner at the French restaurant.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Set your man up to win: he wants to please you

Setting a man up to win is telling him what would make you happy, and inviting him to please you. Not
demanding: inviting. When a woman demands, a man only has two choices: he can submit and comply
(not a win), or he can rebel (not a win either). Inviting would be something like: “Honey, it would really
help me out if you would take out the trash”. He wants to help, he takes out the trash, you’re pleased,
he wins, everybody wins.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Men need wins

Men generally thrive on
wins; they need a lot of them. It’s not at all that they’re frail creatures who need to be pumped up; it’s
how they’re put together. And there’s great value in it. When a man is happy at work, feels effective, get
successes, that’s a win. Each new client, each sale, each happy customer, each time his supervisor
praises him, he’s a winner. It’s similar in relationships.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Men have binary brains

When
you set a man up to win, it doesn’t mean that you lose. On the contrary. When you can increase a man’s
sense of his manhood (and I’m not just talking about sex here) (but that too), his self‐esteem blossoms,
he feels empowered, and better able to get the ‘win’. Men have binary brains: every situation is either a
win or a lose. It’s not wrong. It’s just one of the ways that men are not women.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Build you man up

Build your man up, set him up to win. There are women who take men
down, and those who build them up. You know who you are. It’s ok. We’re all doing the best we know
how. Man bashing is an insidious message we get from the culture. It’s not overt necessarily; it’s subtle,
but damaging. And the worst part is that women don’t get what they want from men that way.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

'Getting our needs met'

Unproductive habits include waiting for him to read our mind, making him wrong for not doing so, and punishing him for it. Some couples really have stamina and can do this for years on end. Their communication consists of bickering, unresolved fights, lobbing emotional grenades at each other because they’re not ‘getting their needs met’. Let me tell you: nobody was put on this earth to meet our needs. I know; nobody likes to hear that.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

HOW TO TALK TO MEN

Most communications can have one of two impacts: they can bring people closer together, or create distance. Too often we don’t think about that before we speak, nor do we develop habits that are conducive to more effective communication. In heterosexual communication, there are specific ways for women to communicate more effectively with men. (Stay tuned...)

Friday, September 3, 2010

Love them into Presence

Don't make someone wrong if they are upsetting you, or behaving in a way that is difficult for you. LOVE THEM INTO PRESENCE. Find the best in them, see their fears, figure out why they are behaving the way they are, how it makes perfect sense. And then love them through it. Help them to show up from the best in them, and to be present. You'll all have a much easier time. :)

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Mars & Venus

John Gray has just published his 17th book. He and I agree about men wanting to make women happy, especially when women appreciate and thank them. We also agree that women benefit from giving men opportunities to be successful. 'Set him up to win', is how I describe it.
He is not available for counseling sessions, but if you like his material, I know a few things too. And I am available. :)