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Progressively Sexist – Today’s Discriminatory Advertising

Joan and Peggy in a world of Mad Med

Recently it seems like everyone’s stuck trying to define his or her own human rights in today’s society. Religious freedom is strongly misconstrued by fanatics and radicals; human rights are being exploited in all parts of the world, and human rights for any sexual orientation are being ignored, not just in other countries, but also in America, “the land of the free”.

Leaving local politics aside, after years of oppression and progress, women’s rights have once again taken a back seat to entertainment and profit. In the time where retro and pop art have become so popular that 1950s paraphernalia is considered “hip”, we have come to the point where a sense of style is more important than the underlying struggle that comes with it.

Joan and Peggy in Mad Men

Emerson’s Essays: Literary Echoes

 

“Be true to your own act, and congratulate yourself if you have done some thing strange and extravagant, and broken the monotony of a decorous age. It was a high counsel that I once heard given to a young person, ‘Always do what you are afraid to do.’ A simple manly character need never make an apology…”  –Ralph Waldo Emerson

It was perhaps these words by renowned thinker Ralph Waldo Emerson that gave Charley Parkhurst that push towards the West, disguising herself as a man and leaving her past behind. Letting go of all fear, the townspeople’s gossip in Rhode Island, the pain of losing her family; it only fueled her desire to do something – anything – with her life, for herself, without having to apologize for it.

Emerson’s independent thinking was thought revolutionary and risqué during that time, as was no doubt Charley’s preferred lifestyle. Published from 1841 through 1844 in two volumes, Emerson’s Essays brings together a collection of the philosopher’s most popular and sensational idealistic concepts, including the Over-Soul, where he details the individual Self as part of a universal All. Accused of atheism for these notions, Emerson wasn’t taking away power from the “One True God” Catholicism believed, but was rather giving humankind a transcendental power in return; perhaps giving society more credit than it was due in his time.

Come Join Karen Kondazian for a Book Signing at Barnes & Noble

COME JOIN

KAREN KONDAZIAN

SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 2-4PM

For a Book Signing, Video and Q&A

of her New Historical Novel

THE WHIP

inspired by a true story

 

Red Cliffs Mall, 1720 East red Cliffs Drive

St. George, Utah, 84790

Directions

(Also Enjoy Some Refreshments)

 

The Whip Featured on the Cover of Publishers Weekly

March 26, 2012

The Whip has been selected to appear on the cover of Publishers Weekly. The March 26, 2012 issue of Publishers Weekly is devoted to new titles by independent publishers. Karen Kondazian’s The Whip is one of fourteen books featured on the cover.  Jeff DeCola, our book cover artist, was very happy to hear this news.

 

On a Magazine Stand outside Book Soup in Los Angeles

 

Inside Blurb about The Whip

 

The buzz about Karen making the cover:

Good Reads

Women Writing the West

Our Press Release

Hansen Publishing

 

 

 

Still #1 on Book Soup Best-Seller List “The Whip” 2nd Week in a row

BOOK SOUP BESTSELLERS:

FEBRUARY 13 – FEBRUARY 19

PAPERBACK FICTION

1. The Whip  (Karen Kondazian)

2. Shortcut Man: A Novel  (p.g. sturges)

3. The Lazarus Project  (Aleksandar Hemon)

4. Swamplandia  (Karen Russell)

5. Oryx and Crake  (Margaret Atwood)

6. Los Angeles: Stories  (Ry Cooder)

7. Empty The Sun  (Joseph Mattson)

8. The Elementary Particles  (Michel Houellebecq)

9. The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle: A Novel  (Karuki Murakami)

10. A Hole In The Ground Owned By A Liar  (Daniel Pyne)

‘The Whip’ Hits #1 Spot on Book Soup Best-Seller List

BOOK SOUP, Los Angeles

February 11, 2012

 

Karen Kondazian joined readers, friends and colleagues at Book Soup in West Hollywood for a fantastic reading and signing of her new book.

The Whip quickly rose to the #1 spot on the paperback fiction best-sellers list at Book Soup as Karen and the story of her main character, Charley Parkhurst charmed the crowd.

 

BOOK SOUP BESTSELLERS:

FEBRUARY 6 – FEBRUARY 12

PAPERBACK FICTION

1. The Whip  (Karen Kondazian)

2. Shortcut Man: A Novel  (p.g. sturges)

3. Empty The Sun  (Joseph Mattson)

4. What It Was  (George Pelecanos)

5. Los Angeles: Stories  (Ry Cooder)

6. The Lazarus Project  (Aleksandar Hemon)

7. A Visit From The Goon Squad  (Jennifer Egan)

8. Smut: Stories  (Alan Bennett)

9. While Mortals Sleep  (Kurt Vonnegut)

10. Before I Go To Sleep: A Novel  (SJ Watson)

 

Karen with Book Cover artist Jeff DeCola

Karen signs a book for author Dee Levy

Karen and friend, Director Michael Peretzian

Karen helps play the Banjo with Marquis W. Howell, II

 

San Francisco Book Club News Interview

 

The cafe interview: novelist and actor Karen Kondazian

by Art Kusnetz

 

The Petaluma River was rising and the rain and wind made the old railroad trestle beneath our window tremble. I was glad we were inside and warm as I sat with actor and author Karen Kondazian. We were talking about her novel The Whip, which chronicles the life of Charley Parkhurst, one of the best “Whips”—stagecoach drivers—that Wells Fargo ever had. Upon his death, a great secret was revealed, he was a she!

As we ordered our café fare, I asked what first drew her to the story of Charley Parkhurst.

“I first discovered Charley in the 1980s. I immediately felt connected to her and her story on a very personal level. I can’t explain it except to say that I felt like a channel, a voice for Charley. Certainly the dialog flew out of me like I was channeling her, but then I really feel that artists are channels. That’s what actors do, that’s what writers, painters and sculptors do. I was the modern voice for Charley. And what I got from Charley’s life is that everything is on loan in our lives— even the people we love. So always remember to say goodbye. The key to the ending came to me during meditation when I realized she didn’t want to die alone.”

Book Club News in San Francisco – Winter 2011-2012

 

Book Club News | Winter 2011-2012

San Francisco Book & Travel

The Readers Guide to Literary Bay Area Events

 

 

 

 

“Our recommended choice for provoking lively discussions is Karen Kondazian’s The Whip.”

-Judith Chambers, Ph.D., editor of San Francisco Book & Travel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Karen Kondazian Interview with Peter Robinson KALW-FM 91.7 San Francisco

 

Local Public Radio

part of  digital network.

Interview with Peter Robinson’s “Paperback Writer” program on 91.7 FM San Francisco

Karen talks about her book and reads passages from it.  Truly, a must listen-to for anyone who loves audio books.

Download

      here
.

Fountain Theatre Interview of Karen Kondazian

 

Fountain Actress Karen Kondazian Cracks “The Whip” and Writes A Novel

Posted on July 22, 2011 at The Fountain Theatre Blog

 

Karen Kondazian has starred in the Fountain productions of Master Class (2004) and the Tennessee Williams classics The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore (2007), The Night of the Iguana (2001) and Orpheus Descending (1996). She’s now written her first novel, The Whip.

What is your novel about?

The Whip is inspired by the true story of Charlotte “Charley” Parkhurst (1812 – 1879). Charlotte lived 30 years of her extraordinary life as a man. She became a renowned stagecoach driver for Wells Fargo during the California gold rush. One of her many exploits was the killing of the famous outlaw Sugarfoot, when he tried to rob her stagecoach one too many times.

As a young woman, she fell in love and eventually lived with a black man and had his child. He was hung, her baby killed and she was raped by one of the killers. The destruction of her family drove her out west to California during the gold rush, dressed as a man, to track the murderer. She had many adventures and a secret love affair. She also lived with a housekeeper, who fell in love with her, not realizing she was a woman. Charlotte Parkhurst was the first woman to vote in America (as a man!). Her grave lies in Watsonville, California.