Making Noise in the Library — An Author’s Gala in Walnut Creek

Writers Barbara Falconer Newhall and Lisa Wrenn at the Walnut Creek Library Foundation Authors Gala, 2018. Barbara Newhall photo
Bumped into at the library party: Lisa Wrenn, my old editor at the Oakland Tribune when our kids were little and I was writing a weekly column for our paper. Barbara Newhall photo

By Barbara Falconer Newhall

I like a party. No two ways about it. I love to talk. And I love to eat and drink, especially when the food and company are as delicious as those on offer Saturday night at the annual Walnut Creek Library Foundation’s Authors Gala, held in the beautiful Walnut Creek Library. Yes, in the library.

It was fun bumping into people I know and don’t know. Lisa Wrenn was there — she was my editor at the Oakland Tribune when I was writing the columns about life with little kids, husband, house and commute. Many of those columns are republished, with permission, on this website.

Lisa was a writer’s dream of an editor. I’d come to work on a Monday morning with a sliver of

Authors Barbara Falconer Newhall and Joyce Maynard at the Walnut Creek Library Foundation's Authors Gala, 2018. Photo by Jon Newhall
Memoirists meet: That’s me striking up a conversation with Joyce Maynard in the midst of a noisy library crowd Saturday night. Photo by Jon Newhall

an idea for that week’s column. I’d try my idea out on Lisa, who also had small children. If Lisa laughed, I knew my idea was good to go.

Author and religion writer Don Lattin at the Walnut Creek Library Foundation's Authors Gala, 2018. Photo by Jon Newhall
Don Lattin. Photo by Jon Newhall

Also at the library party Saturday night: Don Lattin, who was the religion reporter at the San Francisco Chronicle for years and years and the author, most recently, of  “Changing Our Minds: Psychedelic Sacraments and the New Psychotherapy.” Don wrote the foreword to my book “Wrestling with God: Stories of Doubt and Faith.” It’s an insightful read even if you don’t get any further than that into my book.

Somebody I didn’t know till Saturday night is Robert Aquinas McNally. We shared an author’s table at the library gala. His latest book is “The Modoc War: A Story of Genocide at the Dawn of America’s Gilded Age.” I’m going to study it and get some ideas on how to write historical narrative. (I’m hoping to write about my three-times great-grandmother who had the enigmatic — Dutch? Indonesian? — name: Bandenah.)

Author and poet Robert Aquinas McNally at the Walnut Creek Library Foundation's Authors Gala, 2018. Photo by Jon Newhall
Robert Aquinas McNally. Photo by Jon Newhall

Bob is also a prizewinning poet. Find out for yourself at this YouTube video recorded at the Mt. Diablo Unitarian Universalist Church a couple of years ago.

I also had a chance to get myself photographed with the famous memoirist Joyce Maynard, who lives in the East Bay, like so many of the writers partying with impunity at the library on Saturday night.

Jon, the thriller-writer at our house, scored a couple of writing tips from Joyce before he snapped the photo.

I always get super nervous before these author  events. But I always wind up having fun. It’s a mystery.

More author events at “How Three World War II POWs Saved Each Other’s Lives.”  Also, “I Landed a Bit Part in a Real Movie. Thank You, Armistead Maupin.”

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  1. Lisa was my editor at the Trib, too. She was absolutely a delight to work with, unbelievably patient, and I wish she could say the same for me! More than once she had to wait to ask questions about my column until after I was playing golf with TV and radio degenerate buddies/sources.. She was great.

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