If you would like to read the rest of my interview with Esther, here is the link: AROHO Speaks: Writer to Writer.
Photo: Copyright Jamie Clifford/2011 AROHO Retreat www.jamieseye.com
AROHO's
2011 retreat brought 90 women writers from across the United States
together in a supportive community, with time to write, read, teach,
learn and share. The AROHO Speaks: Writer to Writer interview project is
designed to continue building connections among women writers.During
the coming year, our group will interview as many 2011 retreat
participants as possible about their experiences and writing projects.
We hope that you will visit this page regularly, post comments, and
share the link. We look forward to hearing your stories!
--Tania Pryputniewicz, Lisa Rizzo, Marlene Samuels, and Barbara YoderDuring the retreat, I didn't get a real opportunity to get to know Esther very well. Now, having had the privilege to interview her, I wish I had had more time to talk to her in person. I certainly hope our paths cross again. - Lisa Rizzo
Esther, I'd love to know more about why you call yourself The Book Doctor. Could you tell me more about that title?
I've been helping people with their books since I was young. It was my first job too. I was a publishing assistant at Simon and Schuster and I found myself intuitively knowing how a book is made. What to do. How to help. Maybe because I've read thousands of books and it's more or less what I do - read books. So, I've worked on countless books, all my life. I'm working on a few now, including a wonderful advice/memoir book by an AROHO woman, Amy Siskind.
--Tania Pryputniewicz, Lisa Rizzo, Marlene Samuels, and Barbara YoderDuring the retreat, I didn't get a real opportunity to get to know Esther very well. Now, having had the privilege to interview her, I wish I had had more time to talk to her in person. I certainly hope our paths cross again. - Lisa Rizzo
Esther, I'd love to know more about why you call yourself The Book Doctor. Could you tell me more about that title?
I've been helping people with their books since I was young. It was my first job too. I was a publishing assistant at Simon and Schuster and I found myself intuitively knowing how a book is made. What to do. How to help. Maybe because I've read thousands of books and it's more or less what I do - read books. So, I've worked on countless books, all my life. I'm working on a few now, including a wonderful advice/memoir book by an AROHO woman, Amy Siskind.
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