Speakers

Tickets Available at the Door to the Public

 

Antoine Wilson

Sunday June 9, 7:30 PM, Pacific Ballroom

Antoine Wilson’s most recent novel Mouth to Mouth was featured on Barack Obama's Summer Reading List, and was a finalist for The Scotiabank Giller Prize, the CALIBA Golden Poppy Award, and the Prix Fitzgerald. Antoine is also the author of the novels Panorama City and The Interloper, and he is a contributing editor of the literary magazine A Public Space. A graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop and recipient of a Carol Houck Smith Fiction Fellowship from the University of Wisconsin, he lives in Los Angeles.

Photo credit: Noah Stone

 

Mary Otis

Monday June 10, 7:00 PM, Pacific Ballroom

Poetry opening: 7:00-7:30

7:30: Keynote

Mary Otis is the author of Burst, which is longlisted for the 2024 Joyce Carol Oates Prize and won the 2023 Silver Medal in Literary Fiction from the Independent Book Publisher Awards. The deeply moving debut novel explores the relationship complexities between mothers and daughters, the desire to escape and the longing to connect. She’s also the author of Yes, Yes Cherries, a collection of short stories author Lorrie Moore called “funny, brave and amazing.” Quirky and hilarious, yet deeply human, they contain an affection for human strangeness while exploring the idea that truth tends more often to lie in the extremes and along the outer edges than it does at the center of things. A founding fiction professor in the UC Riverside MFA Program, Otis has also taught creative writing in the UCLA Writers’ Program.

 

W. Bruce Cameron

Tuesday June 11, 7:00 PM, Pacific Ballroom

Poetry opening: 7:00-7:30

7:30: Keynote

W. Bruce Cameron is the creator of the most beloved brand of family dog entertainment in the world. The #1 New York Times, USA Today International bestselling novel A Dog’s Purpose has been translated into over 50 languages and continues to top bestseller lists worldwide. The Amblin/Universal film of the book (he was a screenwriter along with his wife, Cathryn Michon) is the most successful international live-action dog movie of all time. A hilarious guest, Cameron has appeared on some of the most popular shows on television: Oprah, The Today Show, Good Morning America, CBS This Morning and Entertainment Tonight among others. His latest novel, Love, Clancy: Diary of a Good Dog is a deeply moving story with a brand-new cast of characters, including one very good dog. Told in Cameron’s signature style, a tremendous cast of wonderful characters find themselves jointly and separately navigating the challenges of life, love and other pets, including Clancy’s “worst enemy,” one very disdainful cat.

 

Cathleen Schine

Wednesday June 12, 7:00 PM, Pacific Ballroom

Poetry opening: 7:00-7:30

7:30: Keynote

Cathleen Schine is the author of the internationally bestselling novels The Love Letter and Rameau’s Niece, which were made into movies, as well as The Three Weissmanns of Westport, Fin & Lady and The Grammarians. Her latest novel, Künstlers in Paradise, is a tender family story but also a profound meditation on the nature and power of storytelling, inheritance and legacy. When Julian Kunstler’s life falls apart (the Brooklyn bookstore where he works has closed and his girlfriend has dumped him), he agrees to move in with his 93-year-old grandmother, Mamie, in Venice, California, while her fractured wrist heals. Then comes Covid-19 and the lockdown. To fill their days, Mamie begins telling him the story of her life, starting with her cultured existence in Vienna until the family was forced to flee in 1939 and make a new life in sunny California where they joined a colony of Jewish musicians, writers and intellectuals also escaping Hitler.

 

Caitlin Rother

Thursday June 13, 7:00 PM, Pacific Ballroom

Poetry opening: 7:00-7:30

7:30: Keynote

Caitlin Rother has authored 14 books. Her latest, Death on Ocean Boulevard: Inside the Coronado Mansion Case, which is in development for a TV limited series with Rother as executive producer, explores the mysterious death of 32-year-old Rebecca Zahau, who was found hanging from a second-floor balcony of her multimillionaire boyfriend’s San Diego mansion in 2011. The award-winning investigative journalist weaves stunning new details into a personal yet objective examination of the sensational case, exploring its many layers. An investigative newspaper reporter for 19 years, Rother has had her stories published in Cosmopolitan, the Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The San Diego Union‑Tribune and The Daily Beast. Her more than 250 media appearances include 20/20, People Magazine Investigates, Crime Watch Daily and numerous shows on Netflix, Investigation Discovery and Lifetime.

 
 

See also the discussion panel lineup.