A Night with Author Veronica Kirin

19 Feb

A few weeks ago, a friend of mine surprised me with a message to our group of friends.

My sister wrote a book! If anyone wants to grab dinner in Ann Arbor then see her

This was accompanied by a link to an event that I was unable to attend. Thanks to the extreme cold, the event was rescheduled, and my husband and I were able to go!

Veronica is an anthropologist by training and explained that her involvement in her tech company made her think about how people of different generations connected with technology. And what people of older generations thought about that technology. She began interviewing people of the Greatest Generation (we can talk later about who names the generations) about technology and how they feel about it. She’d interviewed thirty people in our metro area and wanted to meet more, up to 100. She turned to Kickstarter with her idea and the proposal for this book and raised the money to travel America and meet and interview these people. She’d networked to get the names of the people she’d meet and she took off, ready to learn. The result was her book, Stories of Elders.

Veronica, me, and Gerrie

Veronica taped her interviews and began the evening (hosted at the amazing Nicola’s Books) by showing a documentary with highlights from those interviews. The elders shared their stories and opinions on technology today in a quick 15-minute summary. From there, we had a group discussion on what she’d found. Veronica shared stories that hadn’t made the documentary and gave us some background on the people we had met. We were fortunate that one of the women interviewed for the book, Gerrie, was in attendance. She shared some stories outside of what was in the book and her daughter was able to chime in as well.

It was a very different author event than I’ve attended in the past. Primarily because of the nature of the book. Fiction and non-fiction authors have a very different path to their books and very different goals with publication. Veronica is sharing the stories of these elders and the analysis she’s able to put together by having spoken to all of them. She’s trying to entertain, but in a different way than I would if I published my book. Having someone involved in the book appearing as well changes the nature of the event. It was much more of a communal experience than I’ve had at most other readings. We all felt encouraged to speak, ask questions, and share our own experiences.

Veronica has several more events in the area pending. She told me she’ll soon be recording a TEDtalk about her findings (so expect that post soon) and may be releasing the documentary we watched. There is another book in the works as well and I’m excited to see where she takes this idea and how she can create another book with it.

She ended the night by signing her books and Gerrie signed as well. Apparently, there is a Pokèmon-esque element to this book where you can try to get all the elders interviewed to sign by their name in the back. I’ve got 99 to go!

Until next time, write on.

You can follow me on Goodreads, Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram. I’m available via email at SamAStevensWriter@gmail.com. And as always, feel free to leave a comment!

7 Responses to “A Night with Author Veronica Kirin”

  1. churdan February 19, 2019 at 11:14 AM #

    How interesting! Wow!

    I can remember talking with my great uncle Albert (1889 – 1987). In the mid 1980’s, he said he was in disbelief how much the world had changed fm when he was a kid. When he was a kid – walking, by horse or train, no electricity on the farm, no tv, no radio. 1980 – electricity, airplane, phone, tv, radio, people had gone to the moon. By the time he died, personal computers were just beginning and that technology shift had not occurred.

    To think, some people actually did homework without the tv, radio, music in the background.

    Thanks! Interesting topic. Too, anytime I can think about Uncle Albert is a good time. Wonderful guy.

    Diane

    Taking

    Like

    • Sam February 19, 2019 at 12:56 PM #

      Thanks for sharing that! What a long and wonderful life he must have lived. It’s mind blowing to think what might change during my life time. I hope it’s equally as amazing. Happy reading!

      Like

  2. Claire 'Word by Word' February 19, 2019 at 11:33 AM #

    Such a worthy project, we need more like this, so many stories simply get lost, the more we share the more fun future generations will have tracking them down.

    Like

    • Sam February 19, 2019 at 12:57 PM #

      So true! Veronica gives her questions in the book. I’m thinking of asking my grandmother when I see her for her 100th birthday. Happy reading!

      Liked by 1 person

      • Claire 'Word by Word' February 19, 2019 at 2:15 PM #

        You might want to think up a few others as well, the questions we all regret not asking many years later, 100 that’s great!

        Liked by 1 person

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Challenge Update, January 2019 | Taking on a World of Words - March 4, 2019

    […] Stories of Elders by Veronica Kirin. I went to an event where Kirin spoke (she’s a friend’s sister) and, of course, bought the book. You can read more about it here. […]

    Like

  2. Book Review: Stories of Elders by Veronica Kirin (4/5) | Taking On a World of Words - June 16, 2020

    […] a writer and I was excited to dive in. We drove out to Ann Arbor to visit Nicola’s Books and hear Veronica speak about her book. I’m only embarrassed that it took me so long to finally read the […]

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.