Lunchtime turns literary at Round Table West
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Alex Coolman
When Richard Paul Evans was an unknown author carrying around stacks
of a book called “The Christmas Box,” he came to speak at Round Table
West, a lunchtime program of literary presentations held in Newport
Beach. At the time, Evans was so unsure of himself that he thought he
would be expected to give his stories away, said Marilyn Hudson, the
executive director of the program,.
Today, Evans had sold more than 10 million copies of his books --
best-selling works like “The Christmas Box,” “Timepiece” and “The Letter”
-- and been translated into almost 20 languages. On Thursday, Evans will
read again at Round Table West, an event he still enjoys.
“It’s actually a personal thing I do now -- to kind of keep in touch
with my roots,” Evans said. “I actually make time for it.”
Evans will share the spotlight with some writers who are fairly famous
themselves. Also scheduled to speak are Janet Fitch, author of the
best-selling novel “White Oleander,” which was Oprah Winfrey’s Book Club
selection for May, and Diana Douglas Darrid, ex-wife of Kirk Douglas and
author of the memoir “In The Wings.”
Hudson co-founded Round Table West in Los Angeles with Margaret Burk
and the late Adela Rogers St. Johns in 1977. Though it moved to Orange
County after a few years of meeting at L.A. hotels, the format for the
event has remained the same for 22 years: three or four writers speak for
20 minutes or so each, and the lunch audience soaks up the culture.
The events frequently feature very popular writers, people like Dean
Koontz and T. Jefferson Parker, but talented, lesser-known faces, like
the Richard Paul Evans of yore, also make an appearance.
“We’re quite proud to feature beginning authors as well as established
ones,” Hudson said.
Fitch, who comes to Round Table West on the crest of a tidal wave of
popularity, said she was caught off guard by the sudden prominence of
“White Oleander.”
“I’ve been writing for some time, and I was just glad to be published
and to be published by a decent house,” she said. “[Little, Brown,
Fitch’s publisher] were very excited about the book, and that was the sum
total of my dream.
“The rest,” she said, “is completely unexpected.”
Fitch didn’t write her novel with any deliberate plan to make it a
huge best seller. In fact, she said, she wasn’t even sure what she was
writing when she began.
“I don’t plot my novels,” she said. “I just let one thing lead to
another, and what it does is it lets me get to stuff that I didn’t even
know was there. I didn’t know I was concerned with foster children, but
once the mother in the novel goes to jail, I knew that’s what would
happen [to Astrid, the foster-child protagonist of the book].”
Evans professed a similar lack of calculation in his work.
“I write from deep inside,” he said. “I do not know how to write a
best seller, I just know how to write something that connects with
myself.”
Evans says he plans to read his new children’s story “The Dance” at
Round Table West. It takes him only three minutes to recite the tale,
which touches on the cycle of life in a manner reminiscent of Shel
Silverstein’s “Giving Tree,” but Evans says “The Dance” packs a lot of
power into a few pages.
Evans described reading the story to a group of women inmates at a
jail and watching the women bolt out of the room to get rolls of toilet
paper to mop their teary eyes. He has also read the story to gatherings
of banking executives, with more-or-less similar results.
WHAT: Round Table West
WHERE: The Balboa Bay Club, 1221 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach
WHEN: Thursday at noon
HOW MUCH: $40
TELEPHONE: (323) 256-7977
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