Category Archives: featured

California Trees by Kit Courter

Available now!

Los Nietos PCalifornia Trees Front 900hress is proud to announce the release of California Trees, a collection of new poems by Southern California poet and photographer Kit Courter.

Here are lines from the opening poem, “Guidebook.”

”    At their roots

we paused, in their shade we rested, in their presence
we grew to know their natures as we grew to know
ourselves.  My mother bought a guidebook
to California Trees in a bookstore filled with poetry,

and its words have remained as an echo
long after her own voice had gone.”

 California Trees Back 900hAccentuated by Courter’s photography, this book about trees magically becomes about the lessons passed down from mother to son, our relationship to nature, and who we become because of it all.

 

Available now!

 

Sharing Stories: Global Voices Coming Together

 

Los Nietos Press is pleased to announce the release of Sharing Stories: Global Voices Coming Together.

This collection of 39 stories  by members of the The Creative Writing for Seniors class, held at the Norwalk Senior Center, is a celebration of the stories that have poured out of this class over many years. The anthology contains the work of 39 authors, selected from the “Shared Stories” columns that have appeared over the last three years in The Downey Patriot and The Norwalk Patriot.

Purchase “Sharing Stories” From Los Nietos Press

“The weekly column from which these pieces come … is an example of journalism at its most organic, with raw and honest storytelling that shines a light on the American way of life, in all its varied forms.”
— Eric Pierce, Editor, The Downey Patriot

 

For more than a decade, a senior center southeast of downtown Los Angeles has been a gathering place for individuals who come to learn about writing and to share their stories.  Some participants join the group as new writers, while others have dabbled in poetry and various forms of prose.   It is a friendly group, always open to newcomers.

Group Photo

Members come from all walks of life – housewives, office workers, veterans, educators, medical personnel — and their backstories reflect the diversity of southern California.  They are both native born and immigrant.

Some grew up without running water in the Midwest, others grew up without running water in the Philippines.  Some grew up experiencing the conflicts of the segregated South, others had their youth sacrificed to war, here and in the Pacific. In various ways their stories reveal strength, courage, curiosity, compassion, and a desire to remain engaged with life.

Three years ago, The Downey Patriot began featuring the stories from this writing group in a weekly column, “Shared Stories.”  This anthology celebrates the column’s anniversary.

Purchase “Sharing Stories” From Los Nietos Press


Authors

Sabreen Adeeba Claire Hess
Yolanda Adelé Angelo Holt
Nobuyo Avery Daniela Kanz
Charlotte Boquist Virginia “Ginger” Lane
Karen Borrell Shirley Mark
Mina Anne Chudilowsky Frank Novak
Janice Collins Kikumi Kay Okino
“Kacie” Kathy Cooper Noemi Rabina
Gail Earl Yolanda Reyna
Charlene Farnsworth Dulce Ruelos
Belle Fluhart Dora Silvers
Maria Lourdes Garcia Sharon Benson Smith
Barbara Goodhue Barbara Keesee Sparks
Maria Helen Gutierrez Loie Tannehill
Kay Halsey Katie Troy
Helen Hampton Cynthia “Cindy” Vanasse
Gloria Hannigan Evelyn Watson
Elaine Held Vickie E.  Williams
Owen Heninger, M.D. Candy Wong
Maria Zeeman

Rosalie Sciortino: “The Gift”

Downey Native to be Featured Poet

by Carol Kearns

Downey poet and artist Rosalie Desimone Sciortino will be the featured reader for Poetry Matters, Thursday, January 15, at Stay Gallery.  Her work over the years has had an impact on the Downey arts scene in many ways.   Sciortino was a leader in Writers Workshop West (a writing group spearheaded by theater director John Hume), and a board member of the Downey Art League.  She has often been a contributing writer to the Downey Patriot, and before that the Downey Eagle.  Doors will open at 6:30 PM for a reception, and her artwork will be on display for a week.

Reflecting her wit and creativity, Sciortino’s new book, The Gift, includes a whimsical short story and several memoirs of her Downey childhood, in addition to her lyrical poetry.  Her poems convey her love of nature and reflections on the human spirit.   “Her gift is the transformation of the common to the uncommon,” writes poet Zaida Ramos.

Sciortino is a virtual native of Downey, having arrived here with her family when she was just twenty days old.   Her parents, who met and married in Colorado after immigrating separately from Sicily, settled into a farmhouse with acreage at the corner of what is now Paramount and Florence where the Chase Bank sits.

At that time Paramount Blvd, known then as College, dead-ended at Florence, and vehicles were only able to turn east or west.  Sciortnio recalls that loaded hay trucks would shake the timbers of the house as they rolled to a stop at the corner.

Sciortino was the youngest of seven siblings, with her neighborhood defined by orange groves,  sooty air from smudge pots, irrigation ditches, and the “magical sylvan retreat” of the Rio San Gabriel river bed.  Relatives from Los Angeles described their weekly visits to Downey as “a trip to the country.”

In the 1970’s Sciortino was an active member of the Downey Art League when the organization’s membership was at its height.   She explored a variety of media, including oil, collage, and acrylic, winning numerous prizes.    Her subjects range from stylized still-life’s to realistic figures and cityscapes.

While writing and painting were her chosen vehicles for expressing her love of nature and beauty,  Sciortino’s creativity was not limited to these art forms.  Fans of talk radio on KABC in the 1980’s remember Sciortino’s comedic call-in’s to the morning Ken and Bob Company show.   Listeners were invited to win prizes by calling in with explanations and descriptions of common terms.  Sciortino would call in so often that she would change her name, but she could not disguise her voice.   She recalls that her husband’s golfing buddies would tell him, “Your wife’s on the radio again.”

As an avid KABC listener, Sciortino’s prize-winning success was legendary.  She twice won tickets to an opening game of the Dodgers, several dinners at high-end restaurants in Beverly Hills, and tickets for the Cirque de Soleil when it premiered during the Los Angeles Olympics in 1984.

Sciortino’s impact on the Downey art scene extends beyond her own writing and painting.  Sciortino has contributed years of community service as a member of the Downey Symphony Guild, helping with fund-raisers that support the regular season concerts and the Music in the Schools program.   The music education program, started in 1995, serves 11,000 local elementary students in the area’s public and private schools.

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