Friday, September 30, 2011

I am an Expert, and humble, too. "The Swan" is the next "Stand By Me."


Subject of the 10-10-11 Sunset Heights Culture Club, at 7pm, 1736 9th Ave.


Child's Play with Jim Cohee 

With The Swan, the 67-year-old debut novelist writes from the perspective of a child.



Like many novelists, Jim Cohee had literary ambitions from a young age. But unlike many novelists, he gave up the ghost fairly quickly; although the San Francisco resident dreamed of writing fiction for a living in high school, soon enough, "life intervened." He married young, had two sons, went to graduate school, and fell into trade publishing as an editor at Sierra Club Books. But in his fifties, now working part-time and with the kids out of the house, Cohee rediscovered the passion to pursue the career he'd wanted as a kid. Well, sort of: Cohee's first novel was rejected fifty times, even by people he knew in the publishing industry. After that, he wrote his next book, The Swan -- about a young boy in 1950s Indianapolis who stops speaking in the aftermath of his sister's death -- mostly as a labor of love, never expecting it to see the light of day. It was only until his wife pulled the novel off the shelf and urged him to try his luck once again that he gave it a second thought. Two months later, he got an e-mail from an editor at Indiana University Press that opened with the line, "I love this novel." Last month, Cohee, who reads on Saturday, Sept. 17, at Mrs. Dalloway's (2904 College Ave., Berkeley), saw his first novel published. He's 67 years old.
The Swan proves that age is no limitation: that a sexagenarian can get a debut novel published -- or, indeed, that a ten-year-old can be a compelling narrator for a novel. Nowadays in adult contemporary fiction it's not hard to find stories told from the perspective of a child, but it's a conceit that can easily collapse in on itself and become plot-obscuringly precious. Staggeringly few of these stories work, but The Swan succeeds because Cohee uses the constraint to draw out the tensions inherent in his approach: There's something ironic, compelling, and deeply sad about hearing a story of mortality and unspeakable loss unfold in the chirpy, attention-deficit, occasionally hilarious voice of a fourth-grader. As Aaron Cooper stays silent and continues to cocoon himself in his imagination, it becomes clear just how much his life has been shaped by the fear and sadness of growing up in a family wracked by tragedy, and, more abstractly, in a nation entrenched in the Cold War. In Cooper's world, brought to life through Cohee's evocative prose, refrigerators turn into sharks and writhe around the kitchen; pythons masquerading as dinner guests eat housecats under the cover of night; and grown men are killed after being caught in bamboo finger traps. And somewhere in there, you begin to realize that this is not a novel about plot or linear motion. It's about exploring what Cohee called "a wilderness of dreams" -- less a line than an exceptionally detailed dot. "The point of The Swan is to examine the fantasy life of a child, and the joy of The Swan is following the crazy path of this boy's dream life," Cohee said. "It's a story that can only be seen through this child's eyes." The voice isn't a gimmick -- it's the point of the book, and it works brilliantly. Not bad for someone who thought he'd never have a novel published.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

October 10 Culture Club Meeting

Place: 1736 9th Ave, Upper Sunset, aka:  Sunset Heights.  Free... to the public.


At Seven pm on Monday, October 10,  we will have our next "Author Nite"

Inner Richmond Resident, Jim Cohee, age 67, has  published his first book.

"The Swan" is a novel written in the voice of a  ten year old boy, about his life.

Local Professor, Lowell Pratt, will interview the author about his career, book and life Mr. Cohee will read some selections from his book, and take audience questions....     (See Google to learn more details of the story, and how it is getting  excellent reviews.

Bring your friends and children who like books told in their voice.....

________

This Culture club is sponsored by SHARP, in whose Meeting Hall the event occurs.  (between Moraga and Noriega, at 1736 Ninth Ave.)

Jack Barry, of the SHARP board, brings you this, for this reason:

"Ars Gratia Artis"...

 write to him with encomiums, brickbats, and so on.:
jackbarry99@gmail.com

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

SHARP CULTURE CLUB. September 12 Meeting



SHARP'S  CULTURE CLUB MEETS NEXT MONDAY, 7PM,  9-12-2011
1736 Ninth Avenue.SHARP Meeting Room 
WE WILL  HAVE A LECTURE AND  Q & A ON  HOW TO PROTECT AND GROW YOUR $$ ASSETS.

" SHARP MONEY NIGHT"  ...... Ray Meadows of Berkeley Investment Advisors will present his views on “Investing and Risk Management – achieving superior results by understanding and managing risk”.  Ray will dissect the key sources of risk, and explain how to manage them so you can earn better returns with less risk.  His talk will include a discussion of the impact of emotions on trading: how to avoid mistakes and profit from the market’s mood swings.

ALSO:  HERB MEIBERGER, A LONG TIME ELECTED MEMBER OF THE SF RETIREMENT SYSTEM, WILL  EXPLAIN HOW HE HAD THE FABULOUS "INVESTMENT TRACK RECORD", THAT HE HAD,...FOR SO MANY YEARS.  HERB IS NOW AN  INSTRUCTOR AT SAN FRANCISCO STATE UNIVERSITY..

This meeting will be a truly enriching experience.....   Admission is open to the public... Seating is limited to 30 .

jack barry, host.  415 235 7897cell.



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Herb's bio.... < full disclosure:  I have followed this man's work for 20 years.>

 Herb Meiberger, CFA
Commissioner
City & County of San Francisco Employees’ Retirement System

Herb Meiberger was first elected to a five-year term on the Retirement Board in 1992, and has served for 18 years in that capacity.    The Retirement Board oversees the $14.0 billion (6/30/2010) Defined Benefit pension fund and the voluntary $1.8 billion Defined Contribution fund.  Mr. Meiberger was hired by the Retirement System in 1986 as a security analyst and has worked in several capacities, including directly managing and overseeing the fixed income portfolios, monitoring compliance of the asset managers and working on the alternative investment portfolio.  He retired in 2006 after twenty years of service.  He earned a B.A. in mathematics and chemistry from the University of South Dakota and an M.B.A. in Finance from the University of California at Berkeley.  He was awarded the Chartered Financial Analyst designation in 1987, and currently teaches CFA review courses for the Stalla/Becker Educational program. In addition, he teaches corporate finance and investments at San Francisco State University and at Hult International University