Comment from the book signing.

July 19th, 2009

Many thanks again for the support at my book-signing.  Here’s one comment I received.

Dear Pamela,

I was at the booksigning in Salisbury, NC and was so impressed when I met you. I am equally impressed by your book. I just finished it and loved it. While dealing with grief is not a pretty subject it needs to be addressed. I lost my mother to cancer in 1998 and I could definitely empathize with Ruby. Loss is loss no matter the person you lose and it is difficult. This book is a must read for anyone struggling with love, faith and loss. Thank you, Pamela, for a wonderful read!

Diane Coates Peoples

Book Signing at Literary Bookpost in NC this weekend!

June 25th, 2009

Thank you to Literary Bookpost for hosting a signing for me this coming Thursday June 27th  from 4:30-5:00pm.  All proceeds will go to Rowan County’s Relay for Life.

Literary Bookpost will hold a special late Saturday afternoon reception and book signing for Pamela Jouan Goldman from 4-5:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 27.

She was born in London, spent much of her professional career in the music industry in Los Angeles, and lives in New York, where she writes for a series of culinary-centric magazines. She is the daughter-in-law of Salisbury residents Norma and Charles Goldman.

While at the Bookpost, she will sign copies of her novel, “White Feathers: If I Had One More Day with You.” In “White Feathers,” Ruby DuPont loses her husband Charles to cancer after 40 years of marriage. After his death, Ruby is given one amazing day with Charles to reconnect and reflect on their lives together, as well as the inexplicable signs that pointed to his impending death.

Inspirational, even miraculous, we come to learn that faith is the binary code in this tale of lost love. The result is clarity on dealing with loss in a positive, self-affirming way.

“White Feathers” is dedicated to Pamela’s mother in her father’s memory. She donates all proceeds from the sale of the novel to the American Cancer Society.

See Salisbury Post link at: http://www.salisburypost.com/Opinion/062109-book-col

Article in Canticle Magazine

January 7th, 2009

Many thanks to Johnette Benkovic for publishing my article entitled “Lady in White” in the Nov/Dec 2008 issue of Canticle Magazine.  To learn more about Canticle, visit their website at: http://lhla.org/canticle/

Article in the Salisbury Post

December 5th, 2008

Many thanks to Susan Shinn for her review in the paper today, Friday December 5th.

http://www.salisburypost.com/Lifestyle/120508-susancol

My book is now also available locally in Salisbury, NC at The Literary Book Post

Lifestyle

Shinn column: White Feathers

Pamela Jouan-Goldman is a delightful woman who lives in New York City with her husband and their young son.

She’s the daughter-in-law of Charles and Norma Goldman of Salisbury.

Pamela has written a slim novella, “White Feathers,” that details the relationship between her mother and father.

In this fictionalized account, Ruby gets to spend just one more day with “her Charles,” who died of cancer.

In real life, Pamela lost her dad to cancer, too.

The book is a testament to the power of love, and would be a wonderful gift to anyone who’s lost someone special.

Originally, Pamela wrote the manuscript for her mother.

“I always loved to write,” says Pamela, 40, an English lit major who’s spent a good deal of her career in the music business.

“My father’s death was very hard on my mother,” she says. “She kept saying, ‘If I only had a little more time.’ She was always with him. As a caregiver, you blame yourself and she did. I wrote this story for her.”

Pamela has had an agent for years, but decided to self-publish to streamline the process. All proceeds from the book will go toward cancer research.

The cover of the book shows a photograph of her parents, Cynthia and Marcel, dancing on their honeymoon.

The book, Pamela says, is pretty true to the details of her parents’ lives.

Pamela’s mother was born and raised in India and later moved to England, while her father grew up in France.

“Both struggled in childhood,” she says, “but they were very rooted in religion. It really helped them through their lives.”

A year before her father’s diagnosis, he had a dream that a woman in white visited him, and told him he had cancer.

“Be prepared,” she told him. “This is your cross to bear.”

Shortly after that, her father began to find white feathers everywhere and joked that the angels must be coming for him.

“It was really uncanny and a little unsettling,” Pamela says.

Writing the book, she says, was an interesting way to relive her parents’ journey.

“All of it was a testament to his faith,” she says, “and his relationship with my mother.”

Marketing and promoting the book is taking up a lot of Pamela’s time and energy.

“It has a very special appeal to people who have gone through that process,” Pamela says. “In a way, it’s a niche book, but it addresses the universal themes of loss, faith and hope.”

“The amazing thing,” Norma says, “is that her mom never told her the thoughts she had. She portrayed them so well.”

“I tried to keep it general and yet specific,” Pamela says. “It was a really good experience for me to write.”

“White Feathers” is available on amazon.com and her own Web site, www.pamelajouan.com.

Locally, it’s available at Literary Book Post.

Amazon review

October 16th, 2008

Many thanks to Elaine Williams for posting her review of White Feathers on Amazon and her blog as well!

5.0 out of 5 stars Eloquent, moving tribute, September 21, 2008
By OnWings Press “www.ajourneywelltaken.com” (New York)

I wish you well with “White Feathers,” which I found to be an eloquent, moving tribute to your parents. As a widow, I know from personal experience there is no measure for grief when a spouse dies. I identify fully with the emotional turmoil you describe following this devastating loss, and also the chance to find joy in life again.

Elaine Williams, widow, author A Journey Well Taken: Life After Loss.

Google review of White Feathers

September 16th, 2008
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Heart Felt Story, September 6, 2008
By AngelLesa (Texas) - See all my reviews

Pamela Jouan writes a heart felt love story that takes us on a journey in this small novelette. Ruby and Charles DuPont are in love for 40 years. Grew up together, raised a family and were best of friends. Cancer arrived taking Charles out of the picture and leaving Ruby to figure life out. The novelette is heart felt and loving. You will enjoy this journey through their life and dealing with the unknown. A must read. When you are done reading this book you will look at those you love differently. Taking the time to enjoy each moment with them. Beautifully written.

AngelLesa of Blog Talk Radio

Join me for a chat on September 18th…

September 2nd, 2008

On September 18th, I will be live on www.blogtalkradio.com/angellesa chatting with  host of ‘The Odd Mind’ Angel Lesa.  I’ll answer all the questions you’ve been dying to ask!

Mention in The Tablet August 30th, 2008

September 2nd, 2008

Got a mention in The Tablet, the Weekly Newspaper of the Diocese of Brooklyn.  Many thanks for the ink!

Pamela Jouan, a parishioner of St. Francis Xavier parish, Park Slope, has recently published a book, White Feathers, a tribute to her parents and what would happen “if we were given one more day with someone we had lost.” The book is available through www.amazon.com. All proceeds go to cancer research.

For more information visit www.pamelajouan.com.

My book takes flight–literally!

August 19th, 2008

One day soon, when I am on Oprah, I’ll tell this story!  My mother-in-law was flying home last week with a copy of my book signed for a friend of hers in her checked luggage–which went missing somewhere between take-off and landing…  She gave it up for lost.  A few days later I got the nicest e-mail from a flight attendant on Jet Blue seeking the owner of the book.  She must have seen my website listed on the back of the book cover and contacted me.  Here’s what she wrote:

Dear Pamela,
This may sound a bit crazy but I am reaching out to you for some assistance in finding someone. I am a Flight Attendant for JetBlue Airways. A passenger left your book on the plane by accident. You not only signed her book but there is personal correspondence from you addressed to her. I would really like to get this book back to her. Do you by any chance have her address?

Additionally, I wanted to share with you a note that I found in this book. The book must have fallen out of a bag and onto the luggage belt because it was found by a Ground Operations worker. He must have read it because he wrote the owner a note about the book as well. His note is as follows:

Dear ‘whom this book belongs to’,
I found this book on the belt in Jetblue Airways in Ground Operations. It really makes me hurt for someone to lose a belonging like this book. I hope this gets back to the person it belongs to. Who ever wrote this book well (Pamela Jouan) good luck. In the life of writing books, it sounds really deep in passion and love for someone who you lost.
From Ground Crew

His note touched me. I’m sure he’s a rather manly guy (they usually are working on the ground!) and your book really got to him. I’m looking forward to reading it in the interim because it seems like a wonderful read!

Yes, I contacted the flight attendant and after she finishes reading it, she’ll sent it on it’s way home!

Answering a few questions about background…

August 10th, 2008

I have recently had some wonderful responses from readers, who themselves have lost a spouse or loved one, saying that White Feathers really spoke to them.  Thank you all so much–this is the reason I wrote the book, a chance to be one little cog in the wheel of healing, or at least facilitate looking back on times remembered with a little less pain.

Just to clarify, the dream in which a Lady in White appears is a true story (based on my father’s own dream) but my mother never had a dream in which my father appeared to her as Charles does to Ruby in the book.  It was a literary device only, based on my original intention to give my mother a gift in which ’she could have one more day with my father.’

As far as Charles’s wise words about heaven and the afterlife, not so much as my own father’s beliefs as ones pulled from my own personal theories learned in school and church and in life over the years–but I imagine, similar to what he would have supposed too.

I welcome all questions you might have about my book!  Many thanks!