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Housing Crisis in Nome: Homeless, not hopeless


Housing Crisis in Nome: Homeless, not hopeless
Thu, 07/22/2021 - 8:44pm
admin
By Julia Lerner
As the housing crisis worsens, The Nome Nugget plans to explore different aspects of homeless and low-income life in the community. Regularly, the Nugget will include an article addressing addiction, the housing crisis, profiles of homeless residents, and different approaches and solutions to the crisis. This article, titled “Homeless, not Hopeless”, is designed as an introduction to Nome’s unhoused population. We will dig much deeper into each aspect of homelessness, as well as solutions, over the coming weeks.
Robert “B Boy” Lincoln loves to cook. He’s currently learning how to pickle and has practiced by pickling several pounds of vegetables in the last few weeks. His next project, he says, is sauerkraut.

Alaska , United-states , Afghanistan , Nome-census-area , Anchorage , White-mountain , Savoonga , Norton-sound , Julia-lerner , Shoni-evans , Bryan-ayek , Rhonda-schneider

Los Altos author Wang releases 'Impostor Syndrome' | Community


Local author Kathy Wang seeks to captivate readers once again with her new novel, “Impostor Syndrome,” released May 25 by publisher HarperCollins.
Wang, a longtime Los Altos resident, said she wanted to give readers her sincere view of life here through her book, an espionage thriller set in Silicon Valley.
“I wrote this book earnestly about the things I truly felt made America a place that immigrants wanted to move to,” she said. “So even though it’s being presented as a satire or a thriller, in my heart it’s really about America and why my parents and people from all over the world want to move here and why I hope it remains a place like that.”

China , United-states , Russia , Chinese , Russian , Americans , America , American , Alice-lu , Julia-lerner , Kathy-wang , Harpercollins

Novel Approach: Russian spies and shadowy tech shine in 'Imposter Syndrome'

In Kathy Wang’s latest novel she satirizes the culture at large tech companies while...

Moscow , Moskva , Russia , United-states , Russian , America , American , Alice-lu , Julia-lerner , Kathy-wang , Dave-eggers ,

Los Altos author Kathy Wang fuses technology, espionage in new novel 'Impostor Syndrome'


Jessica Zack May 24, 2021Updated: May 24, 2021, 7:25 am
Kathy Wang of Los Altos has written a follow-up to “Family Trust,” her acclaimed 2018 debut novel. Photo: Stephen Lam, The Chronicle
Kathy Wang was well into writing a follow-up to “Family Trust,” her acclaimed 2018 debut novel about a Chinese family in Silicon Valley, when she was driving near her home in Los Altos and was suddenly gripped by a new idea.
“What if one of the world’s most powerful executives in tech was a spy?” she said about the plot of her new book, “Impostor Syndrome,” out Tuesday, May 25.
That seed of an idea, prompted by news stories about an uptick in corporate espionage among tech startups and venture capital firms, led Wang to ditch her late-stage manuscript two years ago.

United-states , Los-altos , California , Custom-house , China , Wuhan , Hubei , Russia , San-francisco , Russian , Americans , Chinese

'GMA' Buzz Picks: Eva Chen's book recommendations for AAPI Heritage Month


ABC News
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The "A is for Awesome" author shares books for the whole family to enjoy.
• 8 min read
The story of the 'model minority' myth
Dion Lim, a journalist with KGO-TV/ABC News, explains how the 'model minority' myth about the Asian American Pacific Islander community is harmful.ABC News Photo Illustration, Photo credit- Instagram
If you've finished our "GMA" Book Club pick this month and are craving something else to read, look no further than our new digital series, "GMA" Buzz Picks. Each week, we'll feature other books that we're also reading this month to give our audience even more literary adventures. Get started with our latest picks below!

New-york , United-states , Russia , South-korea , Connecticut , Russian , America , American , Helena-ku-rhee , Julia-lerner , Alice-lu , Jenny-lee

Author Kathy Wang Faced 'Pressure' to Write Only Asian Characters 'Engaging' in 'Asian Things'


Author Kathy Wang Faced 'Pressure' to Write Only Asian Characters 'Engaging' in 'Asian Things'
People
2 days ago
© Provided by People
Nina Subin Kathy Wang
Writing in a white space and for a predominantly white publishing industry isn't new for Family Trust
author Kathy Wang. But she was still surprised when a fellow writer encouraged her to feature only Asian characters in her upcoming spy novel so it could sell better. "The friend, a novelist, is also Asian American like me, and I understood exactly what she meant," Wang writes in an essay for PEOPLE
, which will publish on May 25, follows Julia Lerner, who uses her position as COO of one of the most popular technology companies in Silicon Valley to gather information for Russia. A company employee, Alice, who is a first generation Chinese American, catches on to Julia's strange behavior. Here, Wang delves into the pressures she faced to rewrite Julia as an Asian woman — and why she didn't do it.

China , United-states , Russia , Russian , Americans , America , Chinese , American , Sun-tzu , Julia-lerner , Nina-subin-kathy-wang , Kathy-wang

Twisted Sisterhoods: Mysteries & Thrillers 2021

Twisted Sisterhoods: Mysteries & Thrillers 2021
publishersweekly.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from publishersweekly.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New-york , United-states , Mexico , Japan , Texas , Japanese , American , Alice-lu , Mary-dixie-carter , Carol-goodman , Andrea-bartz , Lola-maxwell

In public housing, a small debt can get poor tenants evicted

In public housing, a small debt can get poor tenants evicted
bcdemocrat.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bcdemocrat.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Richmond , Virginia , United-states , Chesapeake-bay , Maryland , Charleston , South-carolina , City-of-charleston , University-of-maryland , Baltimore , Luciana-perez-uribe-guinassi , Diane-yentel

In public housing, a small debt can get poor tenants evicted


In public housing, a small debt can get poor tenants evicted
by Bryan Gallion, Maya Pottiger, Kara Newhouse, Ryan Little, Trisha Ahmed, Jenna Pierson, Anastazja Kolodziej And Allison Mollenkamp / The Howard Center For Investigative Journalism, University Of Maryland, The Associated Press
Posted Dec 18, 2020 9:02 am EDT
Last Updated Dec 18, 2020 at 9:14 am EDT
Kandise Norris, shown here with her three children in a Nov. 7 photo outside their home in Somerset County, Maryland, says she has been rebuilding her life since getting treatment for drug addiction in April 2019. The Housing Authority of Crisfield, Maryland, which owns her house, has filed three eviction cases against the 30-year-old since September. (Nick McMillan/Howard Center for Investigative Journalism via AP)

Richmond , Virginia , United-states , Chesapeake-bay , Maryland , Charleston , South-carolina , City-of-charleston , University-of-maryland , Baltimore , Kara-newhouse , Luciana-perez-uribe-guinassi