Carla Malden credits her father, actor Karl Malden, for sowing the seeds of her writing career first as a screenwriter, then an author. “He used me and my sister to cue him quite often when he was learning a part,” she recalled from her home in Los.
Tinseltown Talks: Carla Malden on her new book and famous father mansfieldnewsjournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mansfieldnewsjournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Richard Alther was born and raised in suburban New Jersey. He graduated as an English major from Cornell University and pursued twin careers as a writer and painter. He is the author of four novels: The Decade of Blind Dates (2008), Siegfried Follies (2010), The Scar Letters (2013), and Roxie and Fred (2017). Richard was a Huffington Post Blogger for Gay Voices and has had a simultaneous career as an exhibiting painter, including gallery representation and one-person shows in Montreal, London, Los Angeles, Boston, Dallas, and Florida. Richard has trained and competed nationally as a Masters Swimmer for several years. At the Gay Games in Chicago he won four gold medals and a silver. After continuous and far-flung adventures as an emerging gay man, seventeen years ago online he met his husband, the musician Ray Repp. He divides his time between homes in Palm Springs, California, and on Lake Champlain in Vermont where his daughter, son-in-
Canyon News
UNITED STATES Author Carla Malden will discuss her new YA novel
Shine Until Tomorrow, set in San Francisco’s 1967 “Summer of Love,” in a virtual event hosted by Diesel Bookstore in Brentwood on March 10 – 6:30 to 7:30pm. Film critic Stephen Farber, former president of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, will moderate the free event and tie dye is optional.
For more information and to register to attend go Diesel Bookstores’ Event Calendar.
Shine Until Tomorrow is a timely novel that provides much needed uplift to all audiences from young readers carrying on the activist torch of the late ‘60s through older readers who know the era and especially the iconic music well. The book is a coming of age story about self discovery in a time of social unrest.