Weiner and lovers bond at Nyc reading

09/07/2014 17:44

Jennifer Weiner had to share with her readers. The author of such best sellers as "Goodnight Nobody" and "In Her Shoes" spoke before around 100 devotees Tuesday at a Barnes & Noble https://www.alutechalu.com.on Manhattan's Upper West Side. "She is very relatable, particularly for young women," said Shira Zeif, 32, a kindergarten teacher. "She gets really personal with her characters and you feel like you know her, too." Weiner has been in a good spot as her followers on Twitter would have already discovered. The new publication, Weiner described Tuesday, tells of a girl who seemingly has everything -- a big house, a Nike Free Run.husband and daughter, growing celebrity as a blogger -- yet finds herself increasingly miserable, hooked on painkillers and eventually pressured to get clean at a rehabilitation center. It was a story so wrenching that her customary happy solutions dropped for a more ambiguous ending. But, obviously, the novel is also personal. She noted that h Womens NIKE Free POWERLINES + II.r family has a "boatload of mental illness" and talked about her dad, who left when Weiner was a teenager, saying he needed to be a "interesting uncle" instead. Years afterwards, she would receive a call from police in Connecticut notifying her that https://www.alutechalu.com/unique-mens-nike-free-30-v3-blue-white.html.er dad had been using crack and heroin, had died and, to her shock. "He's not a jazz musician," Weiner recalled thinking. "He's a Jewish psychiatrist." The audience, virtually all women, laughed, commiserated and rooted for her. They loved the story of how a disastrous split inspired her to compose her debut novel, "Good in Bed," and how she got a contract with Simon & Schuster after numerous rejections. They nodded in sympathy when the mother-of two children, Weiner, spoke of adapting her composing time to family life. They have followed her very public effort to get more girls reviewed in New York Times and other newspapers and magazines, and applauded when Weiner revealed that The Times, which had long dismissed her work, would be praising "All Fall Down." Interviewed by The Associated Press after the big event, Weiner said that when she first gave readings she assumed about 12 people would show up, "eight of them women she understood from Weight Watchers." She's long learned not only to make peace with fame, but to flourish on it, whether tweeting live updates about "The Bachelor" or fretting about what critics think of her. She does not see marketing tours and social media as distractions from her work, but as extensions of it, an on-going dialogue between herself and her fans. "They feel like they know me, and in a way they do," Weiner, 44, told the AP. "A lot of times, I feel like I Nike Free 5.0 V4.m talking to some group of folks I went to summer camp with."