by Theresa Garee | Jan 27, 2020
Nita Sweeney at B&N Emeryville, CA
Saturday, February 15th from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. PST
Bay Street-Emeryville
5604 Bay Street
Emeryville, CA 94608
510-547-0905
Before she discovered running, Nita was 49-years-old, chronically depressed, and unable to jog for more than 60 seconds at a time. Using exercise, Nita discovered an inner strength she didn’t know she possessed, and with the help of her canine companion, she found herself on the way to completing her first marathon.
https://stores.barnesandnoble.com/store/2072
https://www.facebook.com/events/489032781759811/
by Theresa Garee | Jan 27, 2020
Meet & Greet with Nita Sweeney, author of “Depression Hates A Moving Target: How Running with my Dog Brought Me Back From the Brink”
Author Event, Author Reading, Author Signing
Friday February 14, 2020 2:00 PM
(Biography, Exercise, Health & Fitness)
Event Description
Before she discovered running, Nita was 49-years-old, chronically depressed, and unable to jog for more than 60 seconds at a time. Using exercise, Nita discovered an inner strength she didn’t know she possessed, and with the help of her canine companion, she found herself on the way to completing her first marathon.
by Theresa Garee | Sep 4, 2006 | Blog
The good news is that I’m feverishly rewriting my memoir, Memorial: Our Last Year on the Links. The even better news (which the faithful readers of this blog already know) is that both an agent and an editor are interested. The bad news is that in order to stick to my deadlines, something must go. The thing that’s going is my participation in the monthly Writers’ Roundtable.
I’ve been thinking about turning the Roundtable reins over to someone new for awhile. Book writing, graduate school, teaching, and family illnesses leave little time for anything resembling a life. When I discussed this with Roxanne Martin (who I dub “Saint Rox” since she put her job on the line for Michael Wilson and I for several years by paying us when she shouldn’t have), she explained honestly that eventually the powers that be at Barnes & Noble would get wind of our arrangement and cut off the funding. It happened sooner than we anticipated. The Easton Barnes & Noble store has become a training facility and, as such, all the staffers, including Roxanne, must now play by the corporate rulebook. While I never facilitated Roundtable for the money, this seemed the time to make the switch.
Fortunately for all of us, two willing souls (also being sainted) have stepped forward to take the completely unpaid helm. Many of you know Valerie Chandler and Sammi Soutar as regular Roundtable attendees. They are working writers, experienced writing group coordinators, and Sammi pinch hitted for me several times.
I’ll end my Roundtable stint with the October group, but don’t worry. I’m not going far. I’ll still teach classes at Lifelong Learning and Leisure, publish this newsletter, and regularly update my blog. And hopefully, before long, I’ll invite you to see me at another venue – a reading and signing with copies of my finished book. Wish me luck!