Author Event: Cathy Rath

Fri Jun 10 2022 at 05:00 pm to 07:00 pm

Booked | Philadelphia

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Publisher/Hostbooked.
Author Event: Cathy Rath
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Join us on June 10 for a reading, book signing, and conversation with debut novelist, Cathy Rath, author of Ripple Effect.
About this Event

Join us on June 10 for a reading, book signing, and conversation with debut novelist, Cathy Rath, author of Ripple Effect.

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About Ripple Effect

Jeannie Glazer was three years old in 1952 when her father dies in a car accident on a trip to Atlanta. Sixteen years later, as a college freshman, she is arrested during the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago. She is released hours later when a sergeant announces that her bail was paid by “her pop” and tosses her an envelope of cash. Stunned and suspicious, Jeannie tells no one, convinced someone is watching her. Determined to find answers, her search closes in on a darker secret about her father’s tragic death two decades earlier.

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Cathy Rath has written a family saga that is both engaging and riveting. I like the way she devoted chapters to different family members, allowing the reader to learn about the life of each individual and gain a complete picture of the family as a whole and the dynamics that made them unique. I thought there was quite a lot of depth to each character, and I liked the fact that Jeannie was a determined young woman with not just a secret to uncover but someone trying to navigate life on her own terms.

I found the story to be wonderfully descriptive and very good at bringing in significant social issues of the time. I enjoyed this book and had a hard time putting it down. By the time I finished it, I felt that I had come to know the Glazer family inside and out. I wouldn’t mind reading more about what happened to Jeannie and how things turned out with Phil. I hope there will be more from Rath in the future. — San Francisco Book Review

Ripple Effect offers an appealing premise with a number of original strokes, and is accessible, tidy and clips along at an even pace. Rath's prose is forthright, clear, and supports the conventional storyline with characters that are satisfyingly relevant and multi-layered. Jeannie Glazer is equal parts self-absorbed and unsettled, while Hank Carlton's angst is sure to tug on readers' heartstrings. – Booklife Prize (Publisher’s Weekly)

"The pleasure of reading Cathy Rath's Ripple Effect is like the turning of a kaleidoscope: each chapter brings a burst of new revelations, each jump back and forth in time deepens the moral complexity of a story that is part political thriller and part family drama. At its heart is a dauntless and empathetic heroine, Jeannie Glazer, whose coming of age as an activist and truth-teller is both inspiring and emotionally affecting." – Christopher Castellani, author of Leading Men

"I was hooked from the start by this compulsively readable narrative of family secrets. – Jo Piazza, author Charlotte Walsh likes to Win

"A complex novel that dives into a daughter’s discovery of her father’s life and death during the 1960s student rebellions, it builds into an undeniably powerful story of regret and redemption." – Joy Gould Boyum, author of Double Exposure: Fiction to Film

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About Cathy Rath

Cathy Rath completed her education at UC Santa Barbara and San Francisco State University. In 2010, she joined the SFSU faculty as an adjunct professor in the public health department. For the past 10 years, she has taught Women’s Health, extending its reach in 2013-2015 to graduate students participating in SFSU’s Post Baccalaureate health promotions program. Cathy added Community Organizing in Community Health to her course repertoire in 2015. A writing coach and tutor from middle school to the graduate school level, Cathy also provides copyediting and grant-writing services to SFSU faculty.

A SFSU alumnus, Cathy’s thesis in health and social justice curriculum evaluation was published by the American Public Health Association. As a social justice advocate and organizer, she led public health campaigns at Planned Parenthood and Transforming Communities, where her innovative approach to violence prevention was published by the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence. Her efforts to reduce violence against women earned her the 2000 Millennium Leadership Award by the Marin Independent Journal.

Ripple Effect is her first novel. Ms. Rath resides in the San Francisco Bay Area.

"Writing has been both a career and personal passion. As a professor and advocate in my non-profit work, I have witnessed profound shifts in attitudes, beliefs and behaviors through the power of storytelling." – Cathy Rath

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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

Booked, 8511 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, United States

Tickets

USD 0.00

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