July 7 — Santa Barbara Museum of Art to present free virtual Parallel Stories experience featuring Santa Barbara resident and Museum literary partner Sameer Pandya and his debut novel Members Only

Sameer Pandya. Courtesy photo.

SANTA BARBARA — The Santa Barbara Museum of Art is pleased to present a free virtual Parallel Stories experience featuring Santa Barbara resident and Museum literary partner Sameer Pandya and his debut novel Members Only at 6 p.m. Tuesday, July 7Connect via Zoom for a reading and conversation between Pandya and the novelist Ivy Pochoda as they discuss this irreverent, tense, and sly novel that The New York Times Book Review recently said is as “witty as it is woeful.”

In the novel, meet Raj Bhatt, a middle-aged man at a moment of crisis, one that is at least partially of his own making. Raj emigrated from Bombay to California as a kid and has always felt like he is on the outside, looking in. In the unraveling of his life over the span of a week, Pandya explores ideas of race, belonging, and the grace and indignities of middle age.

Tickets available at tickets.sbma.net
This is a virtual experience using Zoom. An email will be sent with the event information for Zoom after reserving a ticket.


Related link:

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/15/books/review/members-only-sameer-pandya-the-beauty-of-your-face-sahar-mustafah-days-of-distraction-alexandra-chang.html?searchResultPosition=1

 

Sameer Pandya is the author of the story collection The Blind Writer, which was long listed for the PEN/Open Book Award. He is also the recipient of the PEN/Civitella Fellowship. His fiction, commentary, and cultural criticism has appeared in a range of publications, including The AtlanticSalonSports Illustrated, ESPN, and Narrative Magazine. He teaches creative writing and literature at UC Santa Barbara, where he is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Asian American Studies. Members Only is his first novel.

Ivy Pochoda is the author of the critically acclaimed novels Wonder ValleyVisitation Street, and These WomenWonder Valley won the 2018 Strand Critics Award for Best Novel and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and Le Grand Prix de Litterature Americaine, as well as being chosen as an NPR and Los Angeles Times Book of the Year. Her books have been translated into five languages, and her writing has appeared in The New York TimesWall Street JournalLos Angeles Times, and Los Angeles Review of Books. Her first novel, The Art of Disappearing, was published by St. Martin’s Press in 2009. She teaches creative writing at the Studio 526 Skid Row.