Category Archives: Scribbler’s Corner at River of Grass

Sohrab Homi Fracis: An Immigrant’s Perspective on Place

Sometimes it’s hard to know who your friends are, even when there aren’t any cultural barriers to overcome. In his work, Sohrab Homi Fracis documents his experience as an Indian immigrant adapting to American culture—the good, the bad, and the ugly—in the 1980s. Fracis, who now calls Jacksonville home, has gone on to gain recognition for his excellent work, but he walks through life with a perspective inextricably tied to his Asian roots, and the hostility of some Americans to anyone who looks, or speaks differently than them.

Listen to Fracis’s conversation with Darlyn Finch Kuhn on Scribbler’s Corner at River of Grass.

Fracis was the first Asian author to win the Iowa Short Fiction Award, which was for his 2001 collection, Ticket to Minto: Stories of India and America. The book was also a finalist for the Flannery O’Connor Award for short fiction. A novella Adaptation of Ticket to Minto was a finalist in Screencraft’s Cinematic Story Contest.

Fracis’s 2017 novel, Go Home, was a finalist in the International Book Awards: Multicultural Fiction category, and it brought him the South Asian Litterary Associations’ Distinguished Achievement Award. The novel was shortlisted by Stanford University for the 2018 William Saroyan International Prize for Writing. His novel excerpt, “Distant Vision,” was nominated for a pushcart prize.

Transformative Narratives with Yvette Angelique Hyater-Adams

Hyater-Adams reads at Yellow House

Yvette Angelique Hyater-Adams is a poet and essayist, teaching artist, and narrative practitioner in applied behavioral science. A passionate mixed-media artist, she uses collage and fiber arts to express stories. Her work spans a wide range of corporate and private projects, but her passion is working with young African American women to help them find their voices and develop their own transformative narrative. She stopped by Scribbler’s Corner at River of Grass to talk about how writing and storytelling can change lives, communities, and even the world.

Click here to listen to the podcast, which you can also download at iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, and Google Play. To hear other episodes of Scribbler’s Corner, go to:
https://www.buzzsprout.com/266583

Fred Zara on Filmmaking at Scribbler’s Corner at River of Grass

Filmmaker, director, writer, actor—Fred Zara lives in Orlando, but stopped by Scribbler’s Corner at River of Grass while he was in Jacksonville for the Southeast Regional Film Festival, where his latest film, The Suicide of James Rider, was being screened. Listen to the Podcast:

https://www.buzzsprout.com/266583/1229918-fred-zara-life-as-art-making-movies-from-memoir

Fred grew up in New Jersey, where, at 15, he got kicked out of the 9th grade for fighting with a teacher. He played drums in a Trenton-based punk band under the name of Fred Fatal – a wild ride he documented twenty years later in his award-winning documentary, Average Community.  

So how does a 15-year-old high school dropout with anger issues go from riding around with friends to meet their crack dealer in New Jersey to an award-winning filmmaker in Florida?

Learn more about Fred and his work at https://fredzara.wordpress.com/

Jenn Chase visits Scribbler’s Corner at River of Grass

Jennifer Chase

So happy to visit with Jennifer Chase for our Scribbler’s Corner at River of Grass podcast. Here is the link to listen as Chase and Darlyn Finch Kuhn discuss Bad Choices and the Gift of Failure:

https://www.buzzsprout.com/266583/1180346-jenn-chase-bad-choices-and-the-gift-of-failure


Playwright, musician, professor, Jenn Chase’s creative journey has taken her from her childhood home in Cape Cod to Dakar, Senegal, before bringing her here to us in Jacksonville where she works out of her studio in the CoRK Arts District, and as a professor teaching writing and humanities at FSCJ. A free spirit, who has failed as spectacularly as she has succeeded, and persevered to produce a significant body of work, including five albums, six theatrical productions and a variety of film and television projects on three continents. She joins us on Scribbler’s Corner to talk about how bad choices have taught her the best lessons in life. .