This roundtable will convene
published authors from various genres, who will discuss their craft, the path to
publication and how their legal experiences affected their writing and career
paths.
MODERATOR:
Gina Walcott, Esq.,
program chair
Lawyers Concerned for Lawyers,
Boston
Gina
Walcott is the
Executive Director of Lawyers Concerned for Lawyers, a private, nonprofit
corporation that is the only lawyer assistance program servicing the
commonwealth’s judges, lawyers and law students. Prior to this position,
Wolcott spent nearly 15 years as a litigator, more than eight years as an
Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Massachusetts and six years as an
Assistant Attorney General for the commonwealth.
AUTHOR
PANELISTS:
Michael Fredrickson is General Counsel to the Board of Bar Overseers and President of Lawyers
Concerned for Lawyers. He has published three crime novels, "A Cinderella
Affidavit", "Witness for the Dead" and "A Defense for the Dead." He is currently
working on his next novel, "Kill All the Lawyers."
Elaine McArdle is
co-author (with Dr. Carolyn Bernstein) of "The Migraine Brain", which was
featured on NBC’s “Today Show” and NPR’s “Fresh Air.” A former editor of Lawyers
Weekly USA, McArdle writes for The Boston Globe, Boston Globe Magazine, Boston
Magazine, Harvard Law Bulletin and other
publications. She also teaches creative nonfiction writing at Grub Street
writers' workshop in Boston. Prior to becoming a journalist, McArdle practiced
law for a short time in Texas.
Lauren Willig is
the New York Times bestselling author of the The Secret History of the
Pink Carnation and its sequels, which follow the antics of spies during the
Napoleonic Wars. She holds a graduate degree in history from Harvard and a J.D.
from Harvard Law. After a short time as a litigator at Cravath, Lauren is now a
full-time writer of historical fiction.
Rishi Reddi is the
author of Karma and Other Stories, which received the 2007 L.L. Winship/PEN New
England Award. Reddi’s work was chosen for The Best American Short Stories 2005,
featured on NPR’s “Selected Shorts” program and received an honorable mention
for a 2004 Pushcart Prize. She has been an enforcement attorney for the state
and federal environmental protection agencies, as well as a lawyer for the
Massachusetts Secretary of Environment.
Kate Flora is
the author of 10 books, including seven Thea Kozak mysteries, the latest of
which are "Stalking Death and Playing God." Her research for Playing God led to
her nonfiction collaboration, "Finding Amy: A True Story of Murder inMaine",
which was nominated for an Edgar award in 2007 and a finalist for the Maine
Literary Awards. Flora, a former Assistant Attorney General, is a partner at
Level Best Books and teaches writing for Grub Street writers' workshop in
Boston.
Faculty:Gina Walcott, Esq., moderator
Lawyers Concerned for Lawyers, Boston