Saturday, March 8, 2014

Friday, March 7, 2014

Media Release: Documentary Film Maker Gary Hochman to Speak at Springfield's Sinai Temple on March 23...Hochman Previews "Deadly Deception at Sobibor".



DATELINE: March 7, 2014
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:

Mark G. Auerbach, 
Mark G. Auerbach Public Relations

GARY HOCHMAN, LONGMEADOW NATIVE AND DOCUMENTARY FILM MAKER, PREVIEWS “DEADLY DECEPTION AT SOBIBOR”, HIS NEW PBS FILM  ABOUT UNEARTHING A NAZI DEATH CAMP, ON SUNDAY, MARCH 23 AT SINAI TEMPLE, SPRINGFIELD 

Longmeadow native Gary Hochman, a producer of national history and science documentaries for PBS and NOVA, will discuss his documentary-in-production,, “Deadly Deception at Sobibor”, at Sinai Temple, Springfield, MA, on Sunday, March 23, at 9:30AM. The event, part of the Men of Sinai program, is open to the public with a $5.00 donation for non-menbers, which includes a breakfast of lox, bagels, eggs, and coffee..

“Deadly Deception at Sobibor” brought Hochman to a remote forest in Poland, where archeologistsYoram Haimi (Israel) and Wojtek Mazurek (Poland) are leading a team to uncover evidence of a Nazi cover-up of a 1943 revolt and mass escape from the WWII death camp known as Sobibor. To hide the rebellion and the murder of 250,000 Jews, the Nazis concealed all trace of the camp. Haimi, Mazurek, and local Polish citizens excavated a forest to reveal irrefutable evidence, including traces of the walled corridor through which the Nazis herded Jews to the gas chamber; personal items, a Star of David, and a small name tag of a murdered child from Amsterdam.  Adding eyewitness testimony is Philip Bialowitz, one of the 8 remaining Sobibor survivors. 

This is an unprecedented international collaboration in Holocaust research, in cooperation with the Majdanek Museum, the Sobibor Museum, the Foundation for Polish-German Reconciliation, and the Sobibor Steering Committee representing Poland, Israel, The Netherlands, and Slovakia.

Hochman, a graduate of Longmeadow High School, majored in journalism at the University of Wisconsin, before joining Wisconsin Public Television. He’s currently a senior producer at NET television (PBS) in Nebraska. Hochman produced the NOVA PBS special “Secrets Beneath The Ice” (about Antarctica and climate change) before beginning work on “Deadly Deception at Sobibor”.

Sinai Temple is located at 1100 Dickinson Street in Springfield, MA. For information on Sinai Temple: http://www.sinai-temple.org/index.php

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Note to the Media:

To arrange a phone interview with Gary Hochman, or for photographs, contact: Mark G. Auerbach Public Relations. 413-427-7352 or mgauerbach@gmail.com.

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Media Release / Author Harriet Scott Chessman Reading/Booksigning March 26 at The Odyssey Bookshop



DATELINE: March 6, 2014
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACTS:
M. Allen Cunningham, Atelier26 Books
503-890-0780 or atelier26books@gmail.com
Mark G. Auerbach, Public Relations
413-733-7095 or 413-427-7352
or MGAuerbach@gmail.com

AUTHOR HARRIET SCOTT CHESSMAN VISITS THE ODYSSEY BOOK SHOP IN SOUTH HADLEY, MASSACHUSETTS  ON MARCH 26 ON HER READING/BOOKSIGNING TOUR OF HER NEW NOVEL “THE BEAUTY OF ORDINARY THINGS” 

Portland, OR--Atelier26 Books, publisher of Harriet Scott Chessman’s new novel, The Beauty of Ordinary Things, has announced that Chessman will visit the Odyssey Book Shop in South Hadley, Massachusetts on Wednesday, March 26, at 7:00PM, as part of her New York and New England March reading and booksigning tour. 

A portion of the proceeds of her South Hadley tour stop will benefit her alma mater, Northfield Mount Hermon School. Peter Weis, Northfield Mount Hermon School’s archivist and a member of the class of 1978, will introduce her at the Odyssey Book Shop.

Harriet Scott Chessman was born in Newark, OH and raised in Granville, OH. A graduate of Northfield Mount Hermon School, Wellesley College (B.A.), and Yale University (Ph.D), Chessman  has taught literature and writing at Yale University, Bread Loaf School of English in VT, and Stanford University’s Continuing Studies Program. In addition to her novels, Chessman has authored ”The Public Is Invited to Dance”, a book about Gertrude Stein. She currently lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. For information on Harriet Scott Chessman: http://harrietchessman.com/

With The Beauty of Ordinary Things, Chessman has fashioned a powerful new story about our yearning for wholeness and the enduring weight of our briefest encounters. Back from a tour of duty in Vietnam, Benny Finn, eldest son in a large Irish-American family, strives to find his bearings amid the everyday life of 1973 New England. At a Benedictine abbey in rural New Hampshire, Sister Clare, a young novice, confronts the day-to-day realities of a cloistered existence. Linking these two is Isabel Howell, a college student soon to discover that she must chart the course of her own life in a way she could not have imagined.


Atelier26 Books, a new independent press in Portland, OR, released Chessman’s new novel, The Beauty of Ordinary Things, on November 12. Chessman is author of three previous acclaimed novels, including the #1 Indie Next Pick and book-club favorite “Lydia Cassatt Reading the Morning Paper” as well as the Good Morning America Book Club selection and San Francisco Chronicle Top Pick “Someone Not Really Her Mother” and “Ohio Angels”. Her fiction has been translated into ten languages.

A complete list of Harriet Scott Chessman’s readings and booksigning dates is available at: http://www.atelier26books.com/p/events.html

The Odyssey Book Shop, which has just celebrated its 50th anniversary, is located at the Village Commons, 9 College Street, South Hadley, MA. For information: 413-534-7307 or http://odysseybks.com/

The Beauty of Ordinary Things
by Harriet Scott Chessman
Paperback: 144 pages
Publisher: Atelier26 Books
List Price: $13.95
Release Date: November 12, 2013
ISBN-10: 0989302318
ISBN-13: 978-0989302319

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