Something That Disappeared
The seven winners of our winter essay contest ponder how keys, nasturtiums, youth, mothers, bikes, brothers, and redwoods go missing.
Read MorePosted by L.J. Cranmer, Anne Fox, Caroline M. Grant, Kathy Hrastar, Wendy Winter, Russell Yee and Nicole R. Zimmerman | Dec 1, 2014 | Feature |
The seven winners of our winter essay contest ponder how keys, nasturtiums, youth, mothers, bikes, brothers, and redwoods go missing.
Read MorePosted by Caroline M. Grant | Dec 1, 2014 | Feature |
The coffee was just the latest. First she stopped driving, then she stopped stocking the fridge...
Read MorePosted by Caroline M. Grant and Lisa Catherine Harper | Feb 1, 2014 | Books |
Writer Phyllis Grant of Berkeley shares life lessons from the kitchen and a recipe in her essay, “Recipe,” one of 28 pieces collected in a recently published anthology, The Cassoulet Saved Our Marriage: True Tales of Food, Family and How We Learn to Eat. Two San Francisco authors and editors, Caroline M. Grant and Lisa Catherine Harper, put together the collection, which includes submissions from several Bay Area writers.
Read Moreby Caroline M. Grant | Feature |
Hidden in the East Bay hills, the Carmelite nuns of Kensington live at the most secluded monastery in the United States.
by Caroline M. Grant | Feature |
by Lisa Fernandez | Apr 1, 2019 | Faces of the East Bay, Parenting
A Cal psychologist has a simple prescription for race relations.
by Lisa Fernandez | Nov 1, 2017 | Faces of the East Bay, Up Front
Experts say that when caring for an elderly parent who lives far away, the most important thing is to join a support group with people experiencing the same challenges.
by Susan E. Davis | Mar 1, 2014 | Faces of the East Bay, Up Front
Rockridge residents John Bliss and Kim Thompson may live far removed the gritty flats of East and West Oakland. But this philanthropic couple see themselves as one with the citizens of Oakland, particularly those who are struggling financially, and they’re leading a campaign to get their “financially blessed” peers to invest in the community like they have by funding city programs to teach kids how to swim.
by Meredith Maran | Nov 1, 2010 | Faces of the East Bay, First Person
Oakland author Meredith Maran accused her father of the ultimate betrayal. Then she un-accused him. In this first-person essay, adapted from her new book, My Lie, she reveals how it all went down.