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Apr
23
6:30 PM18:30

THE GUILT PILL BY SAUMYA DAVE

On April 23rd our third and final book/author event for the Spring series will feature Dr. Saumya Dave, writer, psychiatrist, and mental health advocate in a captivating conversation with FOSEL’s Sara DiVello about her latest novel which explores “What if women could get rid of their guilt?”


About The Guilt Pill

Maya Patel has it all—her own start-up, a sexy, doting husband, influencer status, and now, a new baby. Or does she? Because behind closed doors, Maya’s drowning. Her newborn’s taking a toll on her marriage, her best friend won’t return her calls, and her company’s hanging on by a thread. The worst part? It’s all her fault. If she could just be a better boss, mother, wife, daughter, friend… Maybe she wouldn’t feel so guilty all the time.

Enter: #Girlboss Liz Anderson, who introduces her to the “guilt pill,” an experimental supplement that erases female guilt. At first, it’s the perfect antidote to Maya’s self-blame and imposter syndrome, and she finally becomes the unapologetic woman she’s always wanted to be. But there’s a catch: for Maya to truly “have it all,” she needs to be ready to risk it all. And as Maya falls deeper and deeper down the pill’s guilt-free rabbit hole, her growing ruthlessness could threaten everything she’s built for herself—and the family she’s worked so hard to protect. 

Electric, taut, and sharply observed, The Guilt Pill is a feminist exploration of motherhood, race, ambition, and how the world treats women who dare to go after everything they want. 

Select Reviews

The Guilt Pill is a sharp, insightful, funny and deeply human meditation on motherhood and being your own person and where they intersect. Saumya Dave is one of my favorite writers and she has written her best novel yet. —Laura Dave, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Last Thing He Told Me

The Guilt Pill is the answer to the age-old question of whether a woman can do it all—and whether she should. A powerful rallying cry, a juicy glimpse into startup and influencer culture, and a surprising, intimate portrait of a family strained to breaking by the weight on a new mother's shoulders. Saumya Dave has written a book that's as addictive as its untested supplement. You'll want to share it with everyone you know. —Katie Gutierrez, bestselling author of More Than You'll Ever Know 

The Guilt Pill is book club fiction at its finest, a story full of complicated characters you can’t help rooting for. An incisive, ominous, and ultimately hopeful take on the all-too-pervasive guilt that accompanies motherhood, this one is not to be missed. I can’t wait to read whatever Dave writes next. —Stephanie Wrobel, internationally bestselling author of The Hitchcock Hotel

A gripping and deeply empathetic portrayal of modern-day motherhood… The Guilt Pill will have readers thinking about Maya’s story long after they’ve turned the final page.  —Kirthana Ramisetti, author of GMA book club pick Dava Shastri's Last Day

The Guilt Pill is a brilliant meditation on modern-day motherhood and what happens when women are pushed beyond their limits. Saumya Dave masterfully explores the complexities and absurdities of early motherhood, confidently walking the line between satirical and all-too-real. The Guilt Pill is bold, sly, suspenseful, and bitingly funny. Everyone is going to be talking about this book. —Julia Bartz, New York Times bestselling author of The Writing Retreat

About Saumya Dave

Saumya Dave enjoys exploring the unique dynamics that exist in families. Her second novel, What a Happy Family, was published in June 2021 and a book club pick for Good Housekeeping Magazine, Emily Giffin, Spines and Vines, and Brown Girl Therapy.  Her debut novel, Well-Behaved Indian Women, was featured in The New York Times Book Review, ELLE, Bustle, Buzzfeed, and more. Saumya’s essays, articles, and poetry have been in outlets including The New York Times, ABC News, Refinery29, and HuffPost, among others.

Saumya has a passion for women’s mental health and wellness. She and her husband, Samir Sheth, founded thisisforHER, a nonprofit which uses art therapy to improve mental health awareness and education for women and girls in low- and middle-income countries. She is a practicing therapist, as well as an Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry at Mount Sinai, where she teaches Narrative Medicine.

Saumya was born in India and grew up in Atlanta. In her seventh-grade journal, she wrote: “I will be a psychiatrist and writer someday”. She is a graduate of Georgia Tech and the Medical College of Georgia, where she was an inductee into the Gold Humanism Honor Society. She completed her Psychiatry Residency at Mount Sinai Beth Israel, where she was a Chief Resident and an inductee into the AΩA Medical Honors Society. She completed a Psychoanalytic Fellowship with the New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute.

Author Talk Specifics

When: 4/23/25 at 6:30pm, refreshments + book signings at 7:30pm

Where: Union Church Connection Room

485 Columbus Ave

Books for sale by Parkside Books

Free to All.  Come in person or attend virtually via Zoom

TO CONNECT VIA ZOOM:

Email info@friendsofsouthendlibrary.org to receive the ZOOM info.

FOSEL subscribers will receive the ZOOM link in our Mailchimp newsletter just before the event.


 
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Mar
26
6:30 PM18:30

EDEN UNDONE BY ABBOTT KAHLER

Join us on March 26th for an exciting interview of Abbott Kahler (formerly known as Karen Abbott*) who writes both fiction and nonfiction.  Her earlier nonfiction works include Ghosts of Eden Park, Liar Temptress Soldier Spy, American Rose, and Sin in the Second City

 

About Eden Undone
A True Story of Sex, Murder, and Utopia at the Dawn of World War II
At the height of the Great Depression, Los Angeles oil mogul George Allan Hancock and his crew of Smithsonian scientists came upon a gruesome scene: two bodies, mummified by the searing heat, on the shore of a remote Galápagos island. For the past four years Hancock and other American elites had traveled the South Seas to collect specimens for scientific research. On one trip to the Galápagos, Hancock was surprised to discover an equally exotic group of humans: European exiles who had fled political and economic unrest, hoping to create a utopian paradise. One was so devoted to a life of isolation that he’d had his teeth extracted and replaced with a set of steel dentures.

As Hancock and his fellow American explorers would witness, paradise had turned into chaos. The three sets of exiles—a Berlin doctor and his lover, a traumatized World War I veteran and his young family, and an Austrian Baroness with two adoring paramours—were riven by conflict. Petty slights led to angry confrontations. The Baroness, wielding a riding crop and pearl-handled revolver, staged physical fights between her two lovers and unabashedly seduced American tourists.
The conclusion was deadly: with two exiles missing and two others dead, the survivors hurled accusations of murder. 

Using never-before-published archives, Abbott Kahler weaves a chilling, stranger-than-fiction tale worthy of Agatha Christie. Set against the backdrop of the Great Depression and the march to World War II, with a mystery as alluring and curious as the Galápagos itself, Eden Undone explores the universal and timeless desire to seek utopia—and lays bare the human fallibility that, inevitably, renders such a quest doomed.

About Abbott Kahler

Abbott Kahler (formerly Karen Abbott) is the author of four New York Times bestselling works of narrative nonfiction. A search for an ancestor who went missing in 1905 led her to write Sin in the Second City, which tells the true story of two sisters who ran the world’s most famous brothel and the nationwide battle to shut them down. Her interest in Gypsy Rose Lee, the subject of American Rose, stems from stories her grandmother shared about Rose from the1930s and 40s. Liar Temptress Soldier Spy was inspired by a six-year stint in Atlanta, where the ghosts of the Civil War still seem omnipresent. The HBO show Boardwalk Empire introduced her to bootlegger George Remus, the subject of The Ghosts of Eden Park and a character much more fascinating than Al Capone. 

She was nearing the end of a draft for Eden Undone when she learned that the legendary Ron Howard was directing a movie on the very same subject. Titled EDEN, Howard’s movie—starring Sydney Sweeney as Margret Wittmer, Jude Law as Friedrich Ritter, and Ana de Armas as the Baroness—will premiere at the Venice Film Festival in early September.

Abbott’s books have featured as Indie Next picks, Amazon’s best books of the year, Library Journal’s best books of the year, and Smithsonian Magazine’s best history books of the year. She has also been a finalist for the Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime, the Goodreads book award for history, and the Ohioana Book Awards, the second oldest state literary prize in the country.

She has written for newyorker.com, New York Magazine, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Smithsonian Magazine, and other publications, and has appeared on the History Channel, CBS Sunday Morning, AMC’s "Making of the Mob,” the Discovery Channel, and other media outlets. Her books have been optioned for television and film, and her podcast about George Remus, REMUS: THE MAD BOOTLEG KING, is forthcoming from iHeartRadio.

Abbott is a native of Philadelphia, where she spent six years as a journalist, covering crime, advocating for abused women, and hanging out with mafia bosses and baseball wives. She lives in New York City and in Greenport, New York, where she’s convinced her little bungalow is haunted. She appreciates a good poker hand, an old bottle of wine, and the never-ending hunt for new stories to tell.​

*Read the strange story behind her name change here.  You can follow her on FacebookInstagram, and Twitter, or sign up for her (monthly or so) Wicked History newsletterclick here for her website

 

Author Talk Specifics

When: 3/26/25 at 6:30pm, refreshments + book signings at 7:30pm

Where: Union Church Connection Room

485 Columbus Ave

Books for sale by Parkside Books

Free to All.  Come in person or attend virtually via Zoom

TO CONNECT VIA ZOOM:

Email info@friendsofsouthendlibrary.org to receive the ZOOM info.

FOSEL subscribers will receive the ZOOM link in our Mailchimp newsletter just before the event.

 

 
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Feb
26
6:30 PM18:30

Wonderland by Nicole Treska

Start your spring season early on February 26th by coming out to hear Nicole Treska, author of her debut memoir  Wonderland set in Boston and reminding us of so many places we know and love. 

Nicole Treska was born to a family of gangsters. In the 1970s, during Boston’s mob wars, her grandfather’s diner was an unofficial headquarters for Whitey Bulger and other members of the Winter Hill Gang. Nicole’s father was also an associate of the gang: there was talk that, before Nicole could walk, her stroller was used as a decoy to sell drugs. In 1985, her father was arrested and tried—sentenced to two years in prison for federal drug trafficking.

Wanting to offer a better life to her children, Nicole’s mother moved her and her sister out of Boston. As an adult, Nicole strove to separate herself from her past, establishing a career as a writer and professor in New York City. But when she learns her father’s sister has passed away, she returns to her hometown and reunites with her dad—now stooped and struggling to walk on a bad knee. As she gets reacquainted with him and the old neighborhood, Nicole is forced to reconcile with her harrowing childhood and its lingering impact.

Reviews

“Treska ponders the lifelong imprints of class and community in this touching memoir.” –The New York Times Book Review

“This winning debut memoir… amounts to an arresting and compassionate self-portrait.” —Publisher's Weekly
“A poignantly affecting memoir about surviving and thriving.” Kirkus


“A powerful, poetic memoir that brilliantly blends a history of Boston and its surrounding areas with the history of a fascinating—and at times functional—family. A swaggering storyteller of the highest degree, Nicole Treska will have your heart breaking on one page, and your eyes filling with tears of laughter on the next. Filled with hardscrabble characters and hard-earned lessons, here is a magnificent tale that is as New England as it gets.” —Isaac Fitzgerald,  New York Times bestselling author of Dirtbag, Massachusetts

A “compelling portrait” (Safiya Sinclair, National Book Critics Circle Award–winning author of How to Say Babylon) “written with urgency, vulnerability, and compassion” (Ashley C. Ford, New York Times bestselling author of Somebody’s Daughter), “Wonderland masterfully explores and elucidates the line between helping family and hurting ourselves.” 

Nicole Treska’s short fiction has appeared in New YorkTyrant magazine,Epiphany literary journal, and Egress: New Openings in Literary Art. Her interviews and reviews are up at Electric LiteratureGuernica, The Millions, BOMB, The Rumpus, and then some. She lives in Harlem with her husband, James, and their three-legged dog, Nadine.

Author Talk Specifics

When: 2/26/25 at 6:30pm, refreshments + book signings at 7:30pm

Where: Union Church Connection Room

485 Columbus Ave

Books for sale by Parkside Books

Free to All.  Come in person or attend virtually via Zoom

 TO CONNECT VIA ZOOM:

Email info@friendsofsouthendlibrary.org to receive the ZOOM info.

FOSEL subscribers will receive the ZOOM link in our Mailchimp newsletter just before the event.


 
View Event →