Literary Festival – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Mon, 10 Jun 2019 21:34:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Literary Festival – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Book Festival Features 2 Sonias From the Bronx https://now.fordham.edu/arts-and-culture/bronx-book-festival-features-2-sonias-from-the-bronx/ Mon, 10 Jun 2019 21:34:15 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=121482 At the Bronx Book Festival on June 8, two Sonias from the Bronx⁠— U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor and actress Sonia Manzano⁠—bantered and shared stories about their love of books.  

“I often like to refer to the justice as the other Sonia from the Bronx,“ began Manzano, getting a laugh from the crowd sitting in the sunshine on the Walsh Family Library lawn. Manzano, an actress and writer, is most noted for playing Maria on Sesame Street. She is the author of Becoming Maria and A Miracle on 133rd St, among other books.

Sotomayor has penned a few books of her own since being appointed to the nation’s highest court in 2009. She is the author of My Beloved World (2013) and a children’s book called Turning Pages (2018). She is also expected to release Just Ask! Be Different, Be Brave, Be You in September.

Sotomayor said she wrote My Beloved World to remind herself, and everyone, that none of us succeed alone.

“Nobody can do it by themselves. No matter what you do in life, people help you do it. My book was for me to remember that always. All of those people and experiences that started here in the Bronx, that made methat’s what I wanted to write about.”

The Bronx Book Festival, just in its second year, included a full line-up of author-led panels. The Bronx Book Festival is organized by The Bronx is Reading, founded by Bronx native and book publicist Saracia Fennell. This year the event was co-sponsored by Fordham University. Panels were held on both the Fordham’s Rose Hill campus and Fordham Plaza. Bronxites and folks from all over NYC lined up at 8:30 a.m. in front of the University to attend the Bronx Book Festival and listen to Sonia Sotomayor speak.

Sonia Sotomayer and Sonia Manzano standing together
Sonia Sotomayor and Sonia Manzano posing in front of the Walsh Library.

At their in-conversation style event, Sotomayor told Manzano how much she admired her work on Sesame Street.

“You reached out to a community of Latinos that were ignored in mainstream television at the time,” she said.

Manzano and Sotomayor met on the set of Sesame Street for the episode The Justice Hears a Case. Over a cafecito, Sotomayor explained the role of supreme court judge to the show’s characters.

Just as they did on Sesame Street, at the Bronx Book Festival they both spoke in a way that was accessible to the many young children in the audience.

Sotomayor asked the organizers to place a row of child lawn chairs at the very front. “I put all the kids in the front because I remember being a kid and having to sit in the back, and I couldn’t see anything, and I hated it,” said Sotomayor.

At times, the justice spoke directly to the kids. She told them about her library and why it was important to her.  

“One of my favorite places was and still is the library. It was one of the places I escaped to after my dad died. My house was very, very sad when my dad passed away. So, I would go to the library and get lost in books. I traveled around the world when I read books,” she said as she pointed to a picture of her library card in her book Turning Pages.

“Does every child in the audience have a library card?” she asked, encouraging those that didn’t to “ask your mommy or daddy to get you one.”

Sotomayor told the crowd that Lord of the Flies was the book that inspired her to become a lawyer. “I learned something very important,” she said of reading the 1954 William Golding novel, in which a group of boys are marooned on an island and attempt to govern themselveswith tragic results.

”Laws help us figure out how to treat each other better,” she said, “and how to share things in this world together.”

She also cited the importance of her mother purchasing the Encyclopedia Britannica for her while they lived in the projects in the Soundview section of the Bronx, now named the Justice Sonia Sotomayor Houses. The volumes helped her learn about the world beyond her home borough.

Sonia Sotomayor gives an audience member a hug
Sonia Sotomayor gives an audience member a hug.

“You cannot dream about becoming something you don’t know about,” she said.

In the middle of the conversation with Manzano, Sotomayor got up and said she was “going to go for a walk so that the people in the back can see me.”

“I give out hugs freely,”  she added as she walked down to the audience members in the lawn.

 

Panelists Share their Stories

Like many of the authors on the festival lineup, Lilliam Rivera, a keynote speaker and young adult author of Dealing in Dreams and The Education of Margot Sanchez, was in the audience for Sotomayor’s and Manzano’s session. In her own talk, Rivera discussed the significance of the festival itself.

“I write about my home, and those connections,”  said Rivera, who set all of her books in the Bronx. She held her book launch for Dealing in Dreams last spring at the Bronx’s only independent bookstore, The Lit. Bar, founded by Noelle Santos.

Growing up near Fordham Plaza, she said, “If you wanted to buy a book you had to go to the city.”

Lilliam Rivera at Fordham Plaza
Author Lilliam Rivera at Fordham Plaza

Like Sotomayor, Rivera and her family got their books from the New York Public Library.

Rivera was inspired by her father to become a writer. “Growing up, my father used to recite poetry at events. He still does. My parents are very proud of my career. They are always making me sign books for their doctors or neighbors.”

Readers young and old said that the festival inspired them.

Jasmine Cordero of Soundview said that coming to the festival last year sparked her interest in reading.

“I bought two books last year, and I read them in a month. I didn’t know that I could read that fast. Now, I’m always looking for Latinx or African-American writers. I look for writers that look like me and writers that write about the community that I live in.”

The Bronx is both home and a source of inspiration for many of the panelists. For Josue Caceres, poet and brand manager of Bronx Native, the Bronx is more than a place.

“The Bronx is its own character in my writing. It’s important to be here and share the space with both kids and adults and show them that people in the Bronx read and write, and that it’s part of our culture.“

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Sonia Sotomayor to Appear at 2nd Annual Bronx Book Festival June 8 https://now.fordham.edu/arts-and-culture/sonia-sotomayor-to-appear-at-second-annual-bronx-book-festival-june-8/ Wed, 05 Jun 2019 15:02:41 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=121220 The Bronx Book Festival will return on Saturday, June 8, with a full lineup of events and author-hosted workshops.

The day will start with the Bronx’s own Sonia Sotomayor, U.S. Supreme Court justice and author of My Beloved World (2013). Sotomayor will be in conversation with award-winning actress and author Sonia Manzano, most noted for her work on Sesame Street, at 10 a.m. on the Walsh Family Library lawn.

The all-day literary event is co-sponsored by Fordham and organized by The Bronx Is Reading, which was founded by book publicist and South Bronx native Saraciea Fennell.

“The Bronx Book Festival is more than just a festival, it’s a community event and all are invited. Even if you don’t read, come to Fordham Plaza and Fordham University to enjoy the entertainment!” said Fennell.

Last year, when the festival was in its first year, Fordham stepped in as a last-minute co-sponsor, thanks to alumnus Miles Doyle, FCRH ’01, a senior editor at HarperOne, and Rafael Zapata, special adviser to the president for diversity, chief diversity officer, and associate vice president for Academic Affairs.

This year, the event will be held on both Fordham Plaza and Fordham’s Rose Hill campus. Leading up to the Bronx Book Festival on June 7, The Bronx is Reading will also host author visits at Title I schools across the Bronx to foster a love of reading in children and teens.

“Hosting Bronx children, youth, and their families for a community event promoting literacy, engagement, and stories that are deeply resonant of the everyday experiences of Bronxites—especially those of immigrants and communities of color—is absolutely consistent with our mission as the Jesuit University of New York City,” said Zapata, “as is supporting the talented artists whose creativity and hard work beautifully and authentically convey those experiences in all their complexity.”

The festival boasts many notable writers, including Lilliam Rivera, author of Dealing with Dreams and The Education of Margot Sanchez, who will be a keynote speaker; Darnell Moore, Sulma Arzu-Brown, and many others. There will also be panels going on throughout the day, such as Reclaiming Sci-Fi/Fantasy: Imagining New Worlds and Seeds & Roots: Community (re)Building in Fiction.

This is a free event that requires all attendees to register in advance. Register here.

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