For Immediate Release

Contact:
City Art Director Joel Long: joeltlong@yahoo.com

Gerda Saunders and Jennifer Tonge
to read at City Art

Salt Lake Public Library Main Branch
210 East 400 South
Salt Lake City UT 84111

Wednesday April 5th, 7:00—8:00 P.M.
 
Writer Gerda Saunders and Poet Jennifer Tonge will read from their works on Wednesday, April 5th at 7:00 p.m. at the Salt Lake City Public Library as part of the City Art Reading Series. This event is free and open to the public.
 
GERDA SAUNDERS: In 2010, just before her sixty-first birthday, former literature professor Gerda Saunders was diagnosed with microvascular disease, the second leading cause of dementia after Alzheimer’s. At Saunders’ early retirement party, her colleagues presented her with a beautiful leather-bound journal. Facing “the premature death of the mind,” she took to jotting down notes in the journal about her daily misadventures– pots boiling dry on the stove, washing her hair twice in an hour, forgetting to bake a casserole. She would come to call these scribblings her “Dementia Field Notes.” Saunders became an  anthropologist assigned to observe one member of a strange tribe, the Dementers. “Like a true scientist,” she writes, “I would be objective. No whining, wailing, or gnashing of the teeth. Just the facts.” The result of Saunders’ extraordinary project – a sort of true-life “Sill Alice” – is MEMORY’S LAST BREATH: Field Notes on My Dementia (Hachette Books, June 13, 2017), an unsparing, beautifully written memoir about Gerda’s experience as an intellectual person aware that her brain is betraying her. MEMORY’S LAST BREATH is uncharted territory in the writing about dementia, a diagnosis one in nine Americans will ultimately receive.
 
Gerda Saunders grew up in South Africa, where she obtained a B.S. from the University of Pretoria. In 1984, she settled in Utah with her husband Peter and two children. After receiving an English PhD from the University of Utah in 1996, she suffered the corporate world before becoming the Associate Director of Gender Studies at her alma mater, also teaching gender studies and English. SMU Press published her stories Blessings on the Sheep Dog (2002), about which Nobel laureate J.M. Coetzee said, “With cool intelligence, laconic wit, and deep feeling, Saunders explores the moral chaos of South Africa and the pain of a new generation of…exiles.” Now retired, she enjoys time with her husband Peter, children, grandchildren, and made-in-America family. She is writing a memoir, Telling Who I Am before I Forget: My Dementia. An excerpt from the memo was published in the Winter 2013 edition of The Georgia Review and in March 2014 republished online in Slate Magazine and the UK Independent.

Jennifer Tonge’s poems have appeared in Poetry, Ploughshares, The New England Review, Denver Quarterly, and elsewhere, and on Poetry Daily.  She has received the Jay C. and Ruth Halls Fellowship in Poetry from the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing, a Work-study Scholarship and the Margaret Bridgman Scholarship in Poetry from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, and fellowships from The MacDowell Colony, The Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, The Ucross Foundation, and The Djerassi Resident Artists Program.  She has served as poetry editor of Quarterly West, as president of Writers at Work, and on the board of City Art.
 
Most featured readings are followed by an open reading.
 
The event is free and open to the public.  City Art is sponsored by the Utah Arts Council, the Salt Lake City Arts Council, Zoo, Arts, and Parks, X-mission, and audience donations. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Joel Long