I’m thrilled to report that one of my favorite characters, a labrador named Marvin, has found a home in the pages of The Barcelona Review, an international journal of contemporary fiction. Check back in November for the link…and a proper send-off.

Journalist and Author
Watch this space for my short story, “Behind the Wheel,” upcoming in The Concrete Desert Review, the literary magazine of California State University. I’m honored to publish with this journal.
I’m delighted and a bit stunned to have several of my little paintings published today on Detour Ahead, an online project for artists and writers. The exhibition features work done during the pandemic. Having had hundreds of stories published in some spiffy places, I must say that this is uniquely humbling.
https://www.detour-ahead.org/exhibition/gone-to-the-city-yall
After rereading my first published essay, a piece about race and elections in The Chicago Tribune in 1989, I was disheartened by the relevance it still has and was inspired to put together a selection of 51 published stories with similarly pertinent messages. They have been stored in my portfolios, as hard copies, a number of them never having flown through the ethers on the World Wide Web. So, herewith, a heartfelt and (I hope) lively, funny and meaningful collection of cultural observation and personal revelation, from 1989 to present day. I’d be honored if you’d purchase a copy.
A selection of 51 of my published essays, spanning three decades of cultural commentary and personal revelation, is coming this week. Happy to have them in one place.

I’m honored to have this piece published today in The Woven Tale Press.
Some thoughts on instinct and hope and bears. Really big bears. https://medium.com/@pamelakripke/big-things-come-in-big-packages-39c9e2f0fd5d
Read my latest essay, on Medium…
https://medium.com/@pamelakripke/the-strength-for-love-2c2c28d3c4b4
Each afternoon, I call Mom in Florida and ask her questions. Are you staying inside? Were the bananas delivered? Did you wipe down the mailbox?
She says yes to everything I ask, though no is sometimes the accurate reply, I discover the next day.
“Are you staying away from that neighbor…Richard?”
“Yes,” she said on Tuesday. “I spoke to him through the closed door.”
“Are you getting any fresh air?” I asked on Wednesday.
“I took a short walk.”
“Good. Were there people out?”
“Empty. Just me. And Richard.”
Richard goes places, and we determined last week that he could transmit germs and that Mom should stay away from him. When he goes to the places, he offers to bring back items for my mother. Richard is a nice neighbor. My mother likes to have bananas. We determined that when Richard brings back the bananas, my mother would thank him through the louvers in the door and retrieve the sack once he had disappeared down the path. I asked her why she would thank him through the louvers yet go on a walk with him. She said that he was far away.
“Six feet away? Ten feet away?”
“Sure.”
My mother is 83 and lives alone. She cannot see her friends, and her family is up north. She is happy that I call her every day. The next afternoon, she answers, giggling.
“You are like Rotocall.”
“Robocall.”
“That’s it.”
We laugh, and she tells me that she drove to a store for the bananas and a lovely girl put them in her back seat.