Barbara Ridley

writer

Fiction, Creative Non-Fiction, Short Memoir

Author: barbara

  • My Path to Publishing 2.0

    It’s beginning to feel real: my second novel, Unswerving, will be published next March by the University of Wisconsin Press (UWP). The publicity manager at the press is firming up bookstore readings, and the book is already listed as available for pre-order on Bookshop.org, Barnes and Noble, and Amazon. I’m both excited and nervous now…

  • What’s in a Name?

    My second novel will come into the world in early 2024, published by the University of Wisconsin Press. And it now has a name—a new name: “Unswerving.”   This is not the title I used while working on the book. I called my novel “Spinning.” It follows a young woman, severely injured in a car…

  • Stuck in Jail

    No, I’m not truly “in jail” and I’m not emailing from a distant country asking you to wire me money ASAP to procure my release. But I am in Facebook / Instagram / Messenger/ all things Meta jail, banished from the Zuckerberg Empire—and I cannot get out. My sin? Apparently, someone hacked into my account…

  • Notes from a Fiction Writer

    My novel was published four years ago now, and I am often asked when the next one will be out. Good question! I have completed a second novel; not a sequel to When It’s Over, but something completely different. This story, based on my years of clinical experience, is set in contemporary California, and features a…

  • Dark Days

    On this winter solstice day 2020, we seem to be truly entering dark times. The coronavirus is surging worldwide, even in nations or states that took the pandemic seriously from the start and where the authorities have demonstrated effective leadership. Here in California, where we thought we had flattened the curve back in the summer,…

  • When Will It Be Over?

    Ordered to shelter in place…All schools, gyms, bars, restaurants, theaters, concert halls closed…Grocery stores with bare shelves. These are indeed astonishing times. Like everyone else in California, I am hunkering down for the duration. And I’ve been surprised by a sudden yearning to talk to my mother. She died eighteen years ago, and in the…

  • The Enduring Appeal of WWII Fiction

    I was raised in England in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War. The war was so recent it didn’t feel like history. Bombed out buildings still littered the streets and we had rationing for some items through the mid-fifties. People of my parents’ generation talked about the war constantly: the sound of the…

  • Interview on “Debutante Ball”

    Read Devi Laskar’s interview of Barbara on “Debutante Ball” Devi: Talk about one book that made an impact on you.  Barbara: Only one? Wow—that’s hard. I guess a prime candidate would be The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing. I read it in my twenties, and at the time I thought it had changed my life. It…

  • Report from a NaNoWriMo Rebel

    November has been and gone—so how did I do in NaNoWriMo, you may wonder? If you recall, NaNoWriMo is this crazy thing, with thousands of people all over the world participating, making the commitment to write a novel in a month. Or, at least 50,000 words—that’s supposed to be your goal. When I decided to…

  • “Relevant History”: Refugees Then and Now

    My novel When It’s Over is based on my mother’s story; she was a refugee from the Holocaust during WWII.  After her death, I got the idea of writing something to preserve the memory of her experience, but quickly realized there were too many gaps in my knowledge to write it as memoir. So I…

  • NaNoWriMo

    I have decided to go for it. I’m going to participate in NaNoWriMo this year. That’s National Novel Writing Month, in case you don’t know. Writers from all over the world log on and commit to writing a novel in a month.  What? I know, crazy, right? I’ve been aware of it, known people who…

  • “One to Watch” Interview in Carve Magazine

    Thanks to Carve Magazine and Sejal Patel for this wonderful interview in the Summer 2018 “One to Watch” feature. We discuss my research for “When It’s Over”, some of the themes in the novel, and the lives of refugees then and now. Excerpts: Q: Did writing the book make you feel like you had arrived…

  • Family Separations

    My daughter was on a backpacking trip a few weeks ago, hiking the Lost Coast of California. I have never backpacked there myself, but I am familiar with the area: the beautiful, rugged coastline in the far north of the state, terrain so steep no highway could ever cut through. But there’s a challenging 25-mile…

  • Connections

    Now that my novel, When It’s Over, is out in the world, it’s been thrilling to get positive feedback. What better reward for the years of slogging away than to hear that the novel resonates with readers—friends and total strangers alike? But the greatest thrill has been the new connections I’ve made with the descendants…

  • My Mother was a Refugee

    When It’s Over is historical fiction, but it’s based on my mother’s story. My mother was a refugee. A refugee from the Holocaust. She was part of a group of young, mostly Jewish, anti-fascist activists in Prague who managed to escape the Nazis. Most of their family members left behind were eventually deported to concentration…

  • Writing Fiction Based on Family History

    My novel, When It’s Over, set in Europe during WWII, is based on a true story: the story of my mother’s experience as a refugee from the Holocaust. She was a young woman, an anti-fascist activist from a secular Jewish family, when she fled Czechoslovakia and then Paris, and spent the war years in the…

  • “A Novel Idea” Interview

    Feb 4 A Novel Idea Interview My interview on Suzanne Lang’s wonderful program on KRCB – the NPR affiliate for the North Bay – was originally scheduled for early in the morning of Oct 9. That was the day the Santa Rosa area burst into flames in one of the worst wildfires in California history,…

  • “When It’s Over” featured in Jewish News

    New Books – Jewish News of Northern California Barbara Ridley knew that her mother’s life story was compelling: She’d fled Czechoslovakia before the Nazi invasion, leaving her family and her Judaism behind, and ultimately ended up in England. While Ridley had recorded her mother’s oral history, she realized after her death in 2002 that “there…

  • A New Year

    So, it’s Happy New Year and all that jazz. New resolutions to eat better, exercise more, live with more gratitude, hug those I love. The usual stuff. But for me, 2018 is also the first New Year I can call myself a published author. I still have to pinch myself to really believe that it’s…

  • “Read Her Like an Open Book” Interview

    Anne Raeff interviews Barbara Ridley Read the interview about Barbara’s novel on the “Read Her Like an Open Book” blog.

  • Author “Meet and Greet”

    Initially, I was disappointed that the Barnes and Noble in my sister-in-law’s hometown didn’t offer me a traditional author “book reading” gig. They “didn’t have the space” they claimed, which seemed ridiculous. I’ve attended many author readings—and had my own author events—in much smaller bookstores, where the staff cheerfully maneuver bookshelves on wheels to clear…

  • The Research Journey

    Read Barbara’s Guest Blog Post on “Reading the Past” Reading the Past

  • Interview on “The Nervous Breakdown”

    Read Barbara’s interview about writing the novel on “The Nervous Breakdown.”

  • A Refugee Coffee Shop

    At first glance, it looks like any other Berkeley coffee shop: bags of gourmet beans displayed on racks, croissants and scones in a glass case, rows of young people engrossed in their laptops, the soft hum of conversation, and behind the counter the baristas at work at the espresso machines.           But this is no…