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A Preview of African-American Programming at BEA
April 28, 2008
This year's BookExpo America program for African-American book industry professionals,
sponsored by the African-American Booksellers Committee, will be held on Thursday,
May 29, at the Los Angeles Convention Center. Registration for the program,
which is open to all BEA registered attendees, is not required.
"I've been doing this for 10 years," said Clara Villarosa of Hue-Man
Resources, "and we're always looking to provide good information ... what
can we provide for attendees in these challenging times? We also want to inspire
them with the keynote." This year's programming seeks to meet these goals
with an opening luncheon and author presentations; a keynote address by Terry
McMillian, bestselling author of Waiting to Exhale; and workshops on
bringing African-American books to life in films and on television, and how
to maximize sales to book clubs.
Thursday, May 29, Los Angeles Convention Center
Opening Session and Luncheon
11:30 a.m. in Room 515B
Welcome: Clara Villarosa, Hue-Man Resources, Harlem, New York
Luncheon Sponsor: One World/Ballantine
"One World, Many Voices" features presentations by Nikki Turner,
author of Black Widow: A Novel, on urban lit and the launch of the
Nikki Turner Presents book line; Donald Welch (The Bachelorette Party:
A Novel), who is writing commercial women's fiction based on a national
hit play; Bertie Bowman, whose Step by Step: A Memoir of Hope, Friendship,
Perseverance, and Living the American Dream spans 60 years of Bowman's
career at the U.S. Capitol and an important slice of American history; and
a video interview with Halima Bashir (Tears of the Desert: A Memoir of
Survival in Darfur) will put a human face on the tragic story of genocide
in Darfur. Moderated by Melody Guy, senior editor. RSVP for the luncheon by
calling (212) 940-7771 or send an e-mail to rsvpluncheon@randomhouse.com.
Keynote Address
1:00 p.m. in Room 518
Terry McMillan, bestselling author of Waiting to Exhale and How
Stella Got Her Groove Back, among many other titles
Workshop: From Page to Screen -- The process of taking African-American
books to film and TV
2:15 p.m. in Room 515AB
Panelists: Virginia DeBerry and Donna Grant, authors of the new novel
Gotta Keep on Tryin', who have formed 4 Colored Girls Productions to
produce independently Tryin' to Sleep in the Bed You Made, starring
Regina King and based on the 1997 bestselling book. Clyde W. Ford, novelist
and screenwriter for the adaptation of his latest novel, Precious Cargo,
for a film starring Morgan Freeman; Donna Hill, contemporary novelist of books
Intimate Betrayal, Private Affair, and Masquerade adapted
for television and presented on BET; and Elvis Mitchell, author and entertainment
critic for NPR's Weekend Edition and author of The Black List,
which will be released as an HBO documentary in August 2008.
Workshop: Working the Clubs -- How to maximize the selling of books through
book club contacts
3:45 p.m. in Room 518
Panelists: Curtis Bunn, author of Baggage Check and founder
of the National Book Club Conference; Kimberla Lawson Roby, author of Sin
No More and One in a Million; Lisa R. Johnson, president/co-founder
of Sistahs on the Reading Edge Book Club in Northern California; Bernard
Henderson, event coordinator of Alexander Book Co. in San Francisco. Moderated
by Linda Duggins, director of multicultural publicity at Hachette Book Group
USA.
Reception
5:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. in Room 515B
Sponsors: Kimani Press; Hachette; Dafina Books; St. Martin's; Moody Publisher;
S&S; Ingram Book Group; and Random House. (Other sponsors to be announced.)
For more information, contact Villarosa at huemanrdr@aol.com.
Topics: Specialty Bookselling, BookExpo, African American,
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