Scientific American recommends Andrew Blum's TUBES: A Journey to the Center of the Internet.

Thursday Morning Q&A with Dorothea Benton Frank

August 18th, 2011 by CMandel

We told you that this time things would be different on our blog and we’re keeping our promise. We want to bring you closer to the authors you love by showing you another side of them — their public speaking side. This is the first of what we hope to become a series on Podium 53…Q&As with your favorite authors.

So a little background: I graduated from the College of Charleston in South Carolina. Graduation day can be really nervewracking. I was lucky enough to have a graduation speaker who knew exactly how to calm our nerves — Dorothea “Dottie” Benton Frank. I was able to talk with Dottie and find out her experience being a graduation speaker. Oh, I almost forgot to mention that her son was a part of our graduating class! Did that make things easier? Let’s find out…

1. What was your first thought when the College of Charleston asked you to speak at graduation?

When the CofC asked me to speak at Will’s graduation I was thrilled and honored as any parent would be. But when I realized how emotional I would be watching my son graduate I became terrified. I didn’t want to burst out into tears and mortify him. Usually when I speak I don’t know many people in the crowd but on this occasion my entire family would be there. So I did what I could to control my anxiety by over-preparing. That ten minute talk was finished a month before the date.

2. Did the fact that your son was a part of the graduating class make giving the speech easier or harder?

The fact that William was in the crowd was great. I remember looking at his face and feeling this was a very special day for us — mother and son. I went over the talk with him because I didn’t want to say anything that would embarrass him. He was very cool about the entire event and even said how proud he was of me. More than once. Of course, I told him the same thing about a thousand times. But to your question, it was harder. It’s one thing to talk about your work but it’s another to deliver a talk that will entertain graduates and their families alike — varied generations.

3. Any advice for those who are afraid to speak publicly?

My advice is to prepare and practice and to remember that the people listening to you want you to do well. There’s nothing worse than an unprepared speaker. Pick out a friendly face on both sides of the room and play to them. And stay in the moment. When your adrenalin starts pumping, tell yourself to calm down and listen to every word that’s being spoken. Modulate your talk to advance with place to pause and take a breath. Relax and be yourself.

4. Did you face any pressures in trying to make your speech different and original from the typical graduation speech?

I listened to about fifty  commencement speeches on the internet and then decided the ones I liked the best were the ones where the speakers spoke from their hearts. Who wants to listen to somebody go on and on about how accomplished they are? What graduates want to know is how you got where you are. So talking about things like taking risks and maintaing personal credibility are very important.

5. You used a lot of humor in your speech. How do you determine when is the best time to use humor?

I use humor all the time. The best time to use it is when you want people to listen. Humor is an underrated but very powerful tool.

We would like to once again thank Dottie for her time and thoughtful answers!

To learn more about Dottie and her latest New York Times bestseller Folly Beach, go here.

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The Other Side of Addiction

August 1st, 2011 by CMandel

The recent passing of bluesy British musician Amy Winehouse has us feeling sad and listening to her classic “Rehab” on repeat.  Everyone seems to have an opinion on Winehouse’s death and we’re choosing to abstain from commenting. Whether Winehouse’s death was related to her addictions or not, it encourages us to re-examine the effects of addiction. W’e're not here to bring the doom and gloom; instead, we want to highlight those who have battled with addiction and made it out on the other side.

Mary Karr is the best-selling author of Lit, The Liars’ Club and Cherry. Karr’s battles with alcoholism is chronicled in Lit. With the use of humor, Karr shares her brazen battle into adulthood with readers. From marriage and a new child to a search for religion, Karr attempts to figure it out. In the end, Karr does find answers and makes it out sober and stronger. Currently, Karr is a college professor and performs many speaking engagements about her history with alcoholism and recovery.

As someone who won an Academy award when she was 10, Tatum O’Neal’s drug and alcohol addiction has never been kept out of the spotlight. After getting married, O’Neal left Hollywood to be a full-time mother. Following the birth of three children, O’Neal experienced depression, drug addiction and a divorce, which is described in her first memoir A Paper Life. In her newest book, Found, O’Neal tells the story of her journey to being sober and clean, and reconciling her relationship with her dad. 

Critically aclaimed author, TV and film writer, Jerry Stahl discussed his troubles with drugs in the bestselling junkie confessional memoir Permanent Midnight, which went on to become a movie starring Ben Stiller and Maria Bello.  Since then, he has published several successful fiction novels such as Perv: A Love Story, Plainclothes Naked and his latest novel Pain Killers. Stahl is currently working on several film projects while doing speaking engagements across the country at universities, film schools, libraries, literary arts and lecture series.

Anna David has been sober over a decade and has published four books: Party Girl, Bought, Reality Matters, and Falling for Me. Party Girl is about a hard-partying celebrity journalist and is based off David’s own experiences with addiction and recovery. David speaks regularly on college campuses to revolutionize how students think about drinking. She doesn’t ask students to  practice abstinency but instead shows them that they can make wiser choics than she did.

Son of Jack Canfield (the creator of the best-selling self-helps series Chicken Soup for the Soul),  Oran Canfield tells his story of heroin addiction in  Long Past Stopping.  Like Karr, Canfield uses humor as he details his experiences with hippies, circus clowns, drugs, radical thinkers, a broken family, madcap teachers, experimental music and rehab.  In early in 2001, after seven separate stints in rehab, Canfield got clean when attending an experimental treatment center in the Caribbean. Canfield speaks about his addiction and how he is surviving in recovery.

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