Strum and Fret

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What’s something you don’t ordinarily do with a guitar unless you are a true devotee?

Stand in front of one and stare without touching it.

That will change Friday when the R. Blitzer Gallery is features “Attack of the Killer Guitars,” an art exhibit of electric guitars, painted and decorated by internationally renowned, impressionist painter Eric Hoffman, and set up by master luthier Rick McKee, a.k.a. Ukulele Dick, who calls the show, “Fine art you can shred on.”

McKee (who has worked on guitars for Santana, Doobie Brothers, Neil Young, Joan Baez, Ramones, and Pat Simmons) has rebuilt vintage rock guitars and set them up to “feel like they play themselves”. Hoffman has painted them to the heights of abstract art. This collaboration of two lifetime friends will knock out guitar players and art aficionados alike.

Craig Mitchell’s band The String Bean Serenaders will open the exhibit followed by a “pick-a-thon” of local guitarists. Sunshine Jackson of The Carolyn Sills Combo says “Everyone is going to be there!”       

Born in Santa Cruz in 1952, the young artist experimented with colors from crayons. Art teachers and local artists encouraged him to follow his dream, and he decided to go to art school instead of living the stoner life in Santa Cruz.

 His buddies called him Crazy Eric for going to college. The name stuck, and Hoffman says he wears it as a badge of honor. After graduating with an MA and MFA in art from San Jose State University, he exhibited paintings in New York, Paris, Grenoble, Nice, London, Athens, Rome, Los Angeles, Dallas and San Francisco.

From a visit to Crazy Eric’s studio in Live Oak, he is anything but crazy. He is carefully measured about his work.

“You can’t put the emotions from colors into words,” he says.

 But when he shows you a dazzling guitar with brilliant colors organically running down the body and speaks of how he dipped the body into a tub with his colors floating on top of water, just by the way he holds it and describes the technique, you get it: it would be like asking a mother how she feels about her newborn child.

“This is a paint that I get from Germany. It’s completely different, I built up hand painted layers and then I worked back through it with sandpaper. It’s kind of like an archaeological dig. I go back through the paint that I paint on wood surfaces and carve back into it with a variety of tools. It has texture, it’s three-dimensional power relief. I’ll finish this one with hand brushed lacquer.”

Ukulele Dick is naked. To be fair, he did call me while in the hot tub with his partner and the show’s associate-producer, Laura DeFreyne. As McKee describes one of his guitars in his upcoming show, he starts slowly and then talks faster and faster.

“Richard, these guitars are hand painted, abstract expressionist with a variety of techniques developed by Eric Hoffman. One of a kind. I just put together a ‘NuTone” electric guitar that embodies the spirit of 1950s and 1960s sci-fi space adventure films. Based on a Les Paul Jr. 24 3/4” scale length, it includes a badass bridge, die-cast tuning machines, three 1960s Tedisco pickups, space knobs and strap buttons, three on/off pick up selectors with the middle pickup out of phase for Intergalactic Tones, air pressure gauge, and a Howard Dumble pre-amp!”

People will be able to buy the guitar at the show for $5,400 or a trade.

He started building guitars when he was 12 in Pasadena.

“ I found a couple of guitars that were absolute trash and went into the garage and started fixing them up. Then I saw the Beatles on Ed Sullivan and John Lennon was playing a Rickenbacker and it looked like it was shaped like a pear.

“I found a guitar made from a Formica tabletop, bought it for five bucks and cut it down with a handsaw until it looked like a pear.”

Ukulele Dick is a Gail Rich Award recipient, the original creator of the White Album Ensemble and the original bandleader of The Planet Cruz Comedy Hour.

Attack of the Killer Guitars, the high art and hot guitars of Eric Hoffman and Rick McKee, starts First Friday 5-8 pm. The guitars will be displayed on custom stands made by metal sculptor Craig Mitchell. The exhibit will include canvases of Eric Hoffman paintings as well. The show runs through April at R. Blitzer Gallery, 2801 Mission Street, Santa Cruz.

Everything Under The Gun

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“So I thought, ‘Oh, it would be fun to try to bum people out instead of making them jump around for once,’” recalls Ian Shelton, lead singer for post-hardcore act, Militarie Gun.

Ok, that might not be the usual goal for the scene’s average band. But it’s one of the several reasons that separates Militarie Gun from the cliches.

This Saturday they return to the Catalyst for the Life Under The Gun Tour, their first U.S. tour as headliners with Spiritual Cramp, Pool Kids and Roman Candle. What makes MG interesting is their willingness to push the musical boundaries. While some of their songs lie within the realm of hardcore, many draw influences from Fugazi, The Beatles, Nirvana and others giving the band an almost 90’s alt-rock feel.

But first, back to bumming people out.

Shelton’s discussing the decision around the group’s latest release, Life Under The Sun. The five song EP  is currently streaming online and will see a physical release on limited edition colored vinyl for this year’s Record Store Day on April 20th. It features toned down versions of previously released songs off their 2023 Life Under The Gun full-length with a bonus cover of NoFX’s “Whoops I OD’d.”

“I’ve always been obsessed with that song,” he admits. “The song starts with the craziest line possible–”Whoops, I OD’d on drugs.” I learned that from NoFX, start in the craziest place you can.”

The catalyst for recording Life Under The Sun came from the most likely of sources, Shelton’s girlfriend.

“She always roasts me for how sad the songs are,” he says. “I tell her I don’t think they’re sad and she’s like, ‘Yeah, cause you jump around at them. If you payed attention to the lyrics you’d be bummed out.’”

Tom Waits once said, “I like beautiful melodies telling me terrible things” and it seems so does Shelton.

 Songs like “Never Fucked Up Once” (with lyrics “And now all your friends have left/they left you in shame”) and “Very High” (“It’s a punch to the face/The way I’m left in my disdain/I’ve been feeling pretty down/so I get very high”) have catchy, upbeat melodies delivering the dire lyrics.

When set to intentionally sullen and often haunting music, it’s almost unbelievable that those same songs surge entire rooms into moshing.

Yet it’s Militarie Gun’s intentions  to never make the music that’s expected of them, that has driven the band–and Shelton in particular–since the beginning. It’s also earned them a quickly growing, dedicated fan base, including international superstar, Post Malone, who was filmed last year singing their song, “Do It Faster” backstage at one of his shows.

“It was very surreal. In fact if you watch the video you can see how uncomfortable I am,” laughs Shelton. “I’m lip-singing into the camera and I’m thinking, ‘I don’t know what this is, this is crazy!’”

He adds that Malone has been “a very generous guy” to the band ever since.

Then there’s Taco Bell, who used two different MG songs–”Do It Faster” and “Pressure Cooker”–in separate ads. Like Santa Cruz’s Scowl–whose singer, Kat Moss,  also had to issue a statement about sexism in the scene when she was accused online of being an “industry plant” after their music was used by Taco Bell–Militarie Gun faced some criticism for the big punk no-no of “selling out.”. [1] 

Band members argue Do-It-Yourself underground bands, traveling in a van from gig to gig, often survive on cheap fast food.

“The idea that we give [Taco Bell] money but them giving us money is bad is a hilarious notion,” says Shelton. “At the end of the day I don’t concern myself with the opinions of losers. So for anyone upset, it doesn’t matter.”

Shelton started the band as a solo project in 2020 during the height of the pandemic. He wrote MG’s first song, “Kept Talkin’”in only half a hour. That track, along with three others, became the band’s first release, My Life Is Over EP written and performed by Shelton.

For the band’s next EPs, 2021’s All Roads Lead To the Gun I & II, he recruited William Acuña and Nick Cogan on guitars, Max Epstein on bass and Vince Nguyen on drums. Cogan also recorded many of the guitar parts for the band’s 2023 full-length, Life Under The Gun, before moving to bass with the addition of Waylon Trim on guitars.

“We have tons of new songs but it will be a long time before their release,” Shelton admits. “Before Life Under the Sun came out there was more than an album’s worth of songs already in the aether.”


I know this reads a little chunky. I feel like since Scowl is from here and they also were in a taco bell ad i should mention them and the statement. However, since i’m also over word count, maybe we should take it out? Your call.

Celebrating the Muse

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Imagine two hours of 18 women poets and writers reading their work in a wide variety of voices and styles, in a community of shared enthusiasm and encouragement. No, it’s not poetry heaven, it’s the Celebration of the Muse!

The In Celebration of the Muse annual reading, a showcase for women’s literary voices, began in 1981 and is the longest-running event of its kind—bringing together an impressive list of poets and writers to read their work.

The venue has changed over the years─ taking place at London Nelson Center, the Santa Cruz Civic, the now-defunct Palookaville, Kuumbwa Jazz Center, Cabrillo College, and Center Stage Theater. Yet, despite differing locations, the format has been consistent—this is a festival that brings women poets and artists together, a sacred space where creativity is encouraged and enhanced.

Early writers to the series were both well and lesser-known Santa Cruz writers:  Adrienne Rich, Lorna Dee Cervantes, Wilma Marcus Chandler, Maude Meehan, Carmen Morones, Harryette Mullen, Roz Spafford, Ellen Bass and Claire Braz-Valentine, to name a few.

In Celebration of the Muse emerged as part of the National Festival of Women’s Theater. After the festival’s short run, the Muse (initially conceived as a fundraiser for the festival) continued on spearheaded by women who were interested in fostering women’s voices and elevating them to the same level as the men who were dominating the poetry scene.

Patrice Vecchione and Gael Roziere coordinated and hosted the inaugural reading and subsequent readings for many years to come. Vecchione hosted solo for one year and then invited Amber Cloverdale Sumrall to organize and co-host. This duo was the heart of the Muse for almost two decades, bringing intelligence and wit to the evening, and part of the enchantment at these Muse events was the warm rapport between them.

After 18 years, Dena Taylor took up the baton to co-host with Sumrall. But in 2015 Taylor and Sumrall decided the Muse had reached its end point and Chandler, who “just didn’t want it to die” stepped in. At the time, Sumrall explained: “When the event first started women’s voices were really under-represented in our community and the idea was to give women a voice they didn’t have. Now women have so many venues to be heard. There are so many reading series…we felt like it was time…”

With the re-emergence of the Muse under the direction of Chandler, fiction writers, playwrights and memoirists were added to the line-up. Entering into a partnership with the locally-based online literary magazine, Phren-Z, proved prescient as the Muse moved online in 2020-2023 as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic.

Over the years proceeds from ticket sales have been donated to women-oriented area non-profits including Women’s Crisis Support, the Santa Cruz Aids Project, and WomanCare. Two In Celebration of the Muse anthologies were published, and Muse readings have honored local luminaries who have passed on including Maude Meehan, Tilly Washburn Shaw and Joan Safachek, poets who inspired so many.

For Vecchione, what is most vivid “is remembering the joy of bringing women writers together, watching the audiences grow and grow, and the intoxicating energy of the gala events. The theater would be filled to standing room and the writers, each unique and vibrant in her own way, would take the stage and put a spell on everyone in attendance.”

This year, the Hive Collective will assume production of the Muse. During her tenure as Santa Cruz County Poet Laureate (2018-2020) Danusha Laméris (along with Farnaz Fatemi─ current Santa Cruz County Poet Laureate, Dion O’ Reilly, and Lisa Allen Ortiz) founded the Collective as a way to bring a diverse range of women’s voices to the Santa Cruz poetry community. Reinforcing an already thriving art scene, and the idea that poetry that is all inclusive, changes hearts and minds. Current Hive members include Fatemi and O’Reilly, along with Julia Chiapella, Julie Murphy, Roxi Power and Geneffa Jahan. Along with its bi-monthly poetry readings, The Hive Poetry Collective hosts weekly radio shows Sunday nights at 8 p.m. on KSQD FM 90.7.

For Muse 2024, eighteen poets will be selected to read their work for an in-person reading on Friday, April 26 at the Cabrillo College Horticulture Building (Room 5005), in a free two-hour program. All women, women identified, and non-binary poets are encouraged to apply. And this year the Muse will incorporate audio and visual elements into the reading.

There is no fee to apply but applicants will be asked to submit three poems as well as a statement about their work as a poet and why they would like to participate. Contact Julia Chiapella at ju***@eb***.com or 831-227-7690 for more information.

You can find more information about the Hive Poetry Collection at hivepoetry.org.

Magdalena Montagne is a local poet and teacher who leads poetry writing workshops through the Santa Cruz County Library system and hosts Poets’ Circle Poetry Reading Series at the Watsonville Library. Her website is poetrycirclewithmagdalena.com.

Hitting the Spotlight

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Donald Williams, who founded UCSC’s African American Theater Arts Troupe, got his start in theater in 7th grade when he played Michael Jackson in a school talent show.

 “My world came crashing through and I was like Wow! This is what I want to do. And I didn’t look back.”

Williams, 67, founded the UCSC African American Theater Arts Troupe (AATAT) in 1991, a student-run organization meant to give a voice to the small African American population at the school. However, his story begins earlier when he founded his first theater group while attending Michigan State, called the Last Minute Hookup Theater Company

“It never felt like I was the right type, or color to be in any of the school’s productions, so rather than put myself through school and not practice my trade I started a theater troupe.”

Upon making his way to California, he lived in Los Angeles for some time, working in various theaters until moving to Santa Cruz to work for the UCSC theater department.

“It was like deja vu, I had kids coming up to me saying “Can you help us, Mr. Williams? I want to act, but they’re not doing our kind of shows. I understood where they were coming from because I was there too. When it started I wasn’t getting paid and they weren’t getting credit. But these kids wanted to act.”

In 1991 AATAT was born, when it produced its first play Ceremonies of Dark Old Men it had 15 students, yet they sold out every show.

“The African American community came out en masse, they were happy to see plays that showcased their stories,” said Williams.  “Most of these students were not theater arts majors, chem, psych– you name it I had it.”

Over the years Williams built a community around AATAT, and having a place on campus where they could go to have their stories heard helped them to find a reason to stay and complete their majors.

“Soon enough I had more kids coming up to me saying they liked what we were doing, and before I knew it, Rainbow Theater was born.”

The Rainbow Theater serves as a platform for students to create multicultural productions and enhance cultural diversity on the college campus and the Santa Cruz community. Encompassing Poc, Latinx, and Asian American students who write, direct, produce, and act in their productions, Williams serves as the creative director.

“It has since grown to where I’m now getting paid for my services and students are getting credit. Rainbow Theater is now 31 years old, and AATAT is 34 years old. We continue to do amazing things in terms of outreach. We go to Seaside and LA bringing our shows to high schools to show them that they too can go to college.”

Rainbow Theater has since expanded from 25 students to 150 each year auditioning for roles. It does four student-written and directed shows in the quarter and has raised over $150,000 in scholarships. Over the years students with Rainbow Theater and AATAT have traveled to  showcase their work to high schools in Monterey, Seaside and LA as well as four states for Kennedy Center festivals.

“Some years our theater troupes travel to showcase our work, usually hundreds of high schoolers or entire communities come out to see us. It’s always been moving for me to see folks ask the actors for autographs. To have these students be blessed and looked upon, to see that they are somebody. These are true reflections that I can look at and say this is why I do what I do.”

“Quite naturally there are several students who have gone on to do big things, from folks working for FX TV or as professors to touring the country in one-man shows. All of them came out of this family with Rainbow Theater and AATAT. It’s empowering to see.”

Williams believes in the importance of Black History Month and celebrating black heritage because Black history is American history.

“When we think about American history, Black people have been in this country since the beginning. The White House was built by slaves, and the stoplight was invented by a Black man, (Garret Morrison). The blood transfusion was invented by a Black doctor (Charles Drew) who has saved countless lives, our history runs deep. Yet we don’t talk about it enough, so to have Black History Month and at least acknowledge some of it is extremely important.”

Promoted to senior professor at UCSC in 2023 Williams continues to create opportunities for students on and off campus, his goal is to empower as many students as possible to create positivity and tell their stories.

“The more we exchange how we express ourselves the more we learn to embrace each other. We soon find that we have more in common than we do separately. It’s about closing that gap. Let the arts rise and continue to be the teachers of this land.”

The African American Theater Arts troupe will be presenting Clydes by Lynn Nottage, a Tony-nominated story of formerly incarcerated people getting a second shot at life as kitchen staff will be running from Feb. 23 – March 3 on the UCSC Theater Arts main stage.

Rainbow Theater will be presenting four multicultural productions from May 26 to June 4 at the Stevenson Event Center at UCSC.

Street Talk

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Who is your favorite musician?

Topac Quinteros, 46, Super Steam commercial cleaning

I have to say Igor and Oleg from the Red Elvises. Igor plays the big triangle bass balalaika. I grew up on the Beach Boys, so I love the idea of a Siberian surf rock band. You’ve got that genre, but with a twist. —Topac

Dean Silvers, 71, author and retired teacher

Jordi Savall. He revived the viol, the viola da gamba’s ancestor. He played the music in the movie All the Mornings of the World. He’s from the Basque Country and he speaks at least six languages. His mission is world peace and understanding and he brings together cultures and groups for concerts. —Dean

Maggie Bracken, 56, office manager

Jimi Hendrix. The greatest guitarist ever, in my not-so-humble opinion, for his willingness to experiment. Nobody had ever really sounded like that before.
Maggie

Andrew Ramos, 23, state parks employee

Omar Apollo—he’s a Mexican-American R&B artist from the Midwest. He plays guitar and I like his music style and his taste. He’s very smooth, very similar to Frank Ocean. —Andrew

Dave Gillis, 49, architect

Let’s just say Jobim—Antônio Carlos Jobim. I’m half Brazilian on my mom’s side. Jobim played Latin jazz and he made the bossa nova popular. —Dave

Aria Vladimirov, 23, library assistant

I listen to so much music, but the first that comes to mind is jazz—so I’d say John Coltrane. I like his style and how he developed as a musician. He started off addicted to drugs and then he gets more spiritual and then he does a lot of unique things after that. —Aria

Santa Cruz District 3 City Council Candidate: Joy Schendledecker

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Santa Cruz’s District 3 city council seat is being contested for the March 5 election in a race between incumbent Shebreh Kalantari-Johnson and her challenger, Joy Schendledecker.

Schendledecker previously ran for Mayor of Santa Cruz in 2022, but lost to Fred Keeley. She has since been elected as a California State Assembly 28th District delegate and is involved with organized labor in the area. She is a member of United Auto Workers Local 2865 and is a community organizer focused on issues of economic and reproductive justice, environmental sustainability, peace and democracy.

GT sent questions to the candidates to get their takes on some of the city’s most pressing issues. Read Schendledecker’s responses below.

(Responses have been edited for brevity.)

Why are you running for city council?

I decided to run for city council because I want to be a part of making our city work better for the majority of Santa Cruzans. Many of us don’t feel heard or reflected by our current corporate-oriented council majority. I’d like to bring balance back to our representation, helping shape public conversations, budgets, and policies from a community-led position. 

 What do you think will be the most pressing needs for Santa Cruz over the next four years, and how would you address these needs as a council member?

Our most pressing needs relate to an inequitable and unaffordable housing market coupled with the hyper-commodification of elements necessary to sustain life. Workers are not paid enough and need better workplace conditions. The impacts of climate change are being felt before we have adequately prepared. City council governance is top-down, leading to a crisis of constituent confidence in our city leaders. My proposals for making our city more egalitarian and democratic include precinct assemblies, ranked-choice voting, publicly-financed campaigns, a people’s budget process and more effective collaboration with Santa Cruz County.

What are your thoughts on how the city should address the increasing demand for affordable housing? Any ideas on how to keep public services adequate to accommodate potential new growth? 

Our General Plan has identified sites for thousands of potential homes. We should be working with neighborhoods and property owners in the planning process to minimize appeals. I like the Strong Towns approach of bottom-up governance, incremental growth, fiscal responsibility and safe streets. We should use wealth taxes to beef up our Affordable Housing Trust Fund, use public property for public housing and increase tenant protection programs. We need to use the funds more responsibly on common-good infrastructure and higher wages for our SEIU city employees.

 Do you think raising the city’ s sales tax to help fund assistance programs for the unhoused is a good idea?  What else do you think could be done to address the issue?

I would rather see progressive wealth taxes than regressive sales taxes. Even if those of us living above the median income can handle another parcel tax or $1,000 more per year spent on local sales taxes, the other half of our community is squeezed so hard they have to choose between rent, paying bills and buying essentials. We need to insist on fiscal responsibility and raising funds from people and corporations who have more than enough, not from the people who are most burdened by the cost-of-living crisis.

Santa Cruz District 3 City Council Candidate: Shebreh Kalantari-Johnson

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Santa Cruz’s District 3 city council seat is being contested for the March 5 election in a race between incumbent Shebreh Kalantari-Johnson and her challenger, Joy Schendledecker.

Kalantari-Johnson was first elected to the Santa Cruz City Council in 2020 and, while still serving on the council, launched an unsuccessful bid for District 3 Santa Cruz County Supervisor in 2022.

A small business owner and private consultant in the social services realm, Kalantari-Johnson serves on multiple boards, including as chair of the Santa Cruz METRO’s board of directors. She has been involved in efforts to restore West Cliff Drive, supported the overnight parking ban and supports the growth of the local economy.

GT sent questions to the candidates to get their takes on some of the city’s most pressing issues. Read Kalantari-Johnson’s responses below.

Why are you running again?

I care deeply about our community’s well-being. Over the last two decades, as a public health professional and council member, I have produced results on critical issues that I have heard from our community are important. Progress is accomplished through caring, listening, building consensus and being in action. I have been effective, I have the experience and I am energized to continue to serve our city. 

What do you think will be the most pressing needs for Santa Cruz over the next four years, and how would you address these needs as a council member?

Housing, city infrastructure, homelessness, climate response/coastal erosion, youth investments, and fiscal sustainability are some of the top needs for the City of Santa Cruz. We have already made progress.  I will continue to forge multi-stakeholder partnerships that generate innovative strategies. These approaches have helped us become a pro-housing designated city, decrease homelessness by 29% in a year and increase youth investment -all over the last three years since I have served on council.

What are your thoughts on how the city should address the increasing demand for affordable housing? Any ideas on how to keep public services adequate to accommodate potential new growth? 

There is a need to ensure effective and adequate infrastructure-water, transportation- while we build affordable and workforce housing. We have turned the curve on building housing-being among the 6% of jurisdictions that have met their State housing goals. But we must continue on this path-generating more units will decrease costs. We need to be thoughtful about how and where we build so that we maintain the integrity of our city.

Do you think raising the city’ s sales tax to help fund assistance programs for the unhoused is a good idea?  What else do you think could be done to address the issue?

Raising the sales tax will help generate over $8M to support programs and address critical issues such as wildfire mitigation and protection of open space. We have made great strides on homelessness with the implementation of our Homeless Action Plan-which I helped shape-including a 29% decrease in unsheltered. But we must continue to invest in programs such as safe parking, shelter and case management. The city does not have the capacity or resources to accomplish all of this. It’s important to leverage resources and partner with the county and other jurisdictions so that we may continue this progress.

Native American Author’s Haunting History

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It’s a Monday morning in early February and Tommy Orange is feeling nervous. He’s about to embark on a months-long, cross-country publicity tour for his upcoming sophomore book, “Wandering Stars,” which hits stores on Feb. 27.

It’s been six years since his hugely successful debut novel, the 2019 American Book Award winner “There, There,” lit up the literary world and gave voice to a wide spectrum of Native American experiences. Now, the Oakland author has become one of the most widely-acclaimed writers of his generation, and is booking large event halls throughout the 17-date spring tour.

“I’ve done a lot of public speaking since the first tour. And so, that’s not the part that makes me anxious,” Orange, 42, says in a phone interview. “It’s just the attention that can be a lot, and I think writers are pretty private people.”

“Wandering Stars” is sure to elevate Orange’s profile. The ambitious sequel to “There, There” takes on the painful history of Native American boarding schools in the U.S., which served as brutal reeducation sites for Native children for the better part of a century. Orange immerses himself in a work that is both haunting historical fiction and contemporary literary prowess.

In the novel, the family lineage of Orvil Red Feather—a central character in “There, There”— collides and entwines with the shameful legacy of the Carlisle Indian School. 160 years of history are told through the lives of Red Feather’s ancestors, from the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 to present-day Oakland.

GT spoke with Orange about his upcoming book, the effects of writing during the pandemic and his efforts to bring Native Americans beyond historical relegation in the American popular imagination.

Good Times: In a 2018 interview, you said that you wrote “There, There” out of a place of loneliness, out of a lack of representation for the range of Native voices. What place were you in when you began work on Wandering Stars?

Tommy Orange: I actually started in March of 2018. I just got excited about just doing a sequel and kind of staying in the world of “There,There.” The metaphor of the aftermath of the shooting seemed like a really layered and textured, deep metaphor for the way history plays on the present. And so, Orvil kind of, like, recovering from a shooting at a powwow, it just felt like there were a lot of layers to it. So I got excited about starting to write into that and was also very wary of doing a sequel because you’re almost dooming yourself to writing a less-good book. And for your sophomore effort, that’s the thing you really don’t want to do. 

So, it was kind of a weird decision on my part, but I still was in a similar place when I started writing. And then after two years of writing it, the pandemic happened. I’ve been in a lot of different head spaces during the writing of “Wandering Stars.” And part of that was not being lonely. [Now] we’ve got two TV shows put out representation-wise, and a lot of Native books have been published since then. And I probably feel a lot less lonely representation-wise and got to see a lot of Native people react, including a ton of non-Native people. But a lot of Native people across the country reacted to the book in really positive ways. So that was good.

GT: Did the pandemic’s isolation help you in your process?

TO: No. It was a very distracting time. I sort of lost a lot of structure and routine, which I like to have. You know, not being sure how long this thing’s gonna last. If this was the beginning of some kind of end of the world. That was not conducive for me being in a good writing space. I think a lot of people put out really big books right after that time period. So, some people were really able to take advantage of it.

GT: You’ve said before that contemporary depictions of Native Americans relegate them to the historical. How does “Wandering Stars” explore the generational trauma of Native American boarding schools to inform the book’s characters in the present?

TO: Yeah, so I think a lot of the time, we have only been depicted historically and a lot of times it’s a 400-year-old history, it’s like related to the pilgrims or it’s “Cowboys and Indians.” I think a lot of times we get authenticated from the outside and people kind of look at us as not being Native enough, or not the Native that they had in mind. And it [brings out] a lot of the burden of [questions like] ‘Where’s our language?’ and ‘Where’s our connection to culture?’ especially for urban folks who have a complicated history.

The burden kind of gets put on us like there’s some kind of weakness. And a lot of people don’t know that in these boarding schools we were being punished for practicing our lifeways and our languages. And these boarding schools went on for decades, probably 100 years with the same mentality of ‘Kill the Indian, save the man,’ and so a lot of people’s connection to their culture, their tribal ways, was cut off intentionally. 

And so, portraying the historical piece and then having the contemporary characters kind of struggling with ‘What does it mean to be native?’ it just kind of shows that the fact that we still are connected at all is a lot. It’s trying to show our strength rather than something that we lack.

GT: Part of this book takes place in Oklahoma, a place you have a personal connection with. What was the significance of that while writing this book?

TO: I grew up going back to Oklahoma, that’s where my tribe is and my family that lived there, but it was more the historical piece because that’s where people went after Fort Marion and that’s where my tribe was. That’s where our reservation, our tribal jurisdiction land is. It had more to do with this historical piece. And I did a lot of research.

It’s a complicated thing. Some people have tribal homelands… they’ve been on a piece of land for hundreds—some maybe even longer than that—years, being relegated to this piece of land by the government, and not really being allowed off of it for a while. 

It’s not the same feeling, like, ‘that is home.’ We were in different parts of the country before that, getting moved around and the Sand Creek Massacre and all that stuff. So I have mixed feelings about the place.

GT: For this upcoming event you will be in conversation with acclaimed author and Oakland native Leila Mottley. Are you a fan of hers, and how does it feel to be a part of a contemporary Oakland literary community?

TO: I love her book and she’s got a book of poetry coming out this year, I think. We’ve just been in contact through email, so I haven’t even met her in person, but I love her work. I wish there were more prominent Oakland authors and I hope that there will be more in the future, but it’s great to have somebody’s book from Oakland get the kind of attention that she got. So I was really happy to see that.

I don’t see any evidence of [a literary movement]. Even Leila’s book came out a little while ago and we haven’t seen [more literature]. For the amount of books that come out of New York, it’s really nothing, a drop in the bucket. So, I think the West Coast gets a lot less love in general. So I don’t see it, but I hope to for sure.

GT: Your work gives life to an array of Native experiences and you have garnered wide acclaim for the depth of your depictions. On the flipside, do you ever feel tokenized in an industry that tends to fetishize “other” narratives?

TO: Yeah, and I think sometimes people… I’m like, the only Native author that they know and I’ll get questions that I’m supposed to be able to answer for the entire community and it’s really not something that I can do. We’re almost 574 federally recognized tribes, and there’s like 400 not federally recognized tribes, and everyone has their own worldview and histories and so there’s a lot of diversity that makes it impossible for me to speak for. But, I do feel put on the spot sometimes to answer from that point of view, but I don’t know that I necessarily feel tokenized.

Tommy Orange will be in conversation with fellow Oakland author Leila Mottley Thursday, Feb. 29 at 7 p.m. at the Veterans Memorial Building in Santa Cruz. The event is sponsored by the UC Santa Cruz Humanities Institute and Bookshop Santa Cruz. Visit bookshopsantacruz.com to get tickets.

Santa Cruz Man Charged In Seabright Homicide

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A Santa Cruz man was arrested Feb. 23 on suspicion of killing a woman on Seabright State Beach.

The Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office identified the woman as Zainab Mansoor, 21, of San Ramon who was a student UC Santa Cruz.

The Santa Cruz Police Department said they got a call about a possible homicide near the water line at Seabright Beach, 1300 E. Cliff Drive, at 1:16am. As police made their way out to the shore they found the suspect, Samuel Stone, 20, and arrested him without incident. 

On the beach beside Stone, who is a former UC Santa Cruz student, police discovered Mansoor, who was unconscious. SCPD officers administered lifesaving measures until relieved by Santa Cruz Fire and American Medical Response paramedics. 

Mansoor was rushed to Dominican Hospital, where she later died, police said.

SCPD Investigators, who were called in to begin an investigation, learned that Stone and the victim were in a dating relationship.

Stone was later booked into the Santa Cruz County Jail on first-degree murder charges, where he is being held without bail on Saturday, jail records showed.

The incident is still under investigation.

Drastic Layoffs at Live Oak School District Loom

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This story has been updated

In the aftermath of a fiery Live Oak School District board meeting about layoffs on Feb. 21, a district official has resigned and some parents are calling for the resignation of district Superintendent Daisy Morales. 

Human Resources Chief Heidi Odom, a 30-year employee, sent an all-staff email on Feb. 22 to the employees of the Live Oak School District (LOSD) announcing her resignation after her proposed layoffs to the board were voted down at the meeting. 

In her email she wrote that she had already planned to resign from the district.

“Yet, it became apparent to me last night after repeated attacks that it was necessary to inform everyone that cabinet members are, in fact, voluntarily taking measures to support the district,” the email read. 

The preliminary layoff notices that Odom proposed were to distribute her job’s responsibilities across four other positions. 

Parents and teachers were blindsided by the drastic cuts proposed by the school board after the LOSD approved a 5% pay increase for Morales at the last meeting on Feb. 7. The raise, which also applied to the “cabinet,” was rescinded by the board. Morales’s salary is $228,800, according to the 2022-23 Superintendent Salary Schedule.

Some parents and teachers want Morales to resign.

Members of the Green Acres Elementary Parent and Teacher Organization and the Site Council, a parental board that reviews the school’s funding and goals, say they feel Morales kept them out of the loop about the deficit.

Tammy Summers, a member of the Site Council for Green Acres said, “It seems that what they really want is a rubber stamp of parent approval.”

Another member of the Green Acres council, Brooke Bond, said she is an involved parent who volunteers weekly, and she doesn’t understand how someone like her could not have been made aware of the budget crisis until a couple weeks ago.

The parents say that the cuts were directed at teachers, not the administration, which is typical of Morales’ administration.

Board Member Jeremy Ray said he supports Morales: “I do believe her motivations are in the right place. I take responsibility for the situation we are in. I can’t allow parents to single her out.”

The parents will also be setting up a change.org petition— in English and Spanish— to remove Morales, and proposing an alternative financial plan to try and save as many teacher jobs as possible. 

The Meeting

At the meeting, an emotional Heidi Odom defended the cumulative 38 job cuts outlined in the preliminary layoff notice. The District has 220 employees.

She said the cuts weren’t final and school district employees who were laid off would have first dibs on future work with the District. 

But for the assembled audience of teachers and their supporters that was not good enough.

Douglas Fossum, a local business owner and parent, yelled out, “Sell the property, trim the fat, save the teachers!”

The motion by Board President Kristin Pfotenhauer to approve preliminary layoff notices in preparation for the March 15 state deadline failed to be seconded by anyone on the board.

After the vote, Odom said to this reporter that “insolvency is inevitable” for the school district. 

Then it was Morales’ turn to talk.  

“I don’t want to do any of these cuts,” said Morales. “But we are held to where we are now because we wanted to keep these positions as closely to the timeline of money expiring as possible.”

Ray, who has served on the Board since 2012, took responsibility for the fiasco, saying the lack of leadership falls on him. Ray missed the last two board meetings. 

According to Ray, it all goes back to after the 2008 recession when the district operated on a barebones crew. There were no physical education, music, or art teachers, and the district had built up an emergency 17% cash reserve. Teachers had not gotten a raise in seven years.

This began to change, Ray said, as they started to build some of those positions back by spending down the reserves. Raises followed in the next several years. This wasn’t a problem because attendance was generally flat, and they had fat reserves. 

But the pandemic led the board into a false sense of financial security. The state’s financial contributions were based on old attendance numbers as real attendance fell off a cliff, according to Ray. 

Thrown together with declining enrollment and the loss of one-time pandemic funds, it was the perfect storm, he said. 

Special education costs soared from $2.4 million to $4.5 million this year because LOSD must pay for individual education plans that can sometimes cost as much as $100,000 a student per year. LOSD serves 100 more special education kids than comparable districts in the area.

The board gave the union an approximate 6% raise in each of the last two years as this budget shortfall loomed. 

“The problem is our workforce deserved those raises,” wrote Ray in an email. To attract teachers it was necessary to offer the pay raises to stay competitive, he believes.

The next steps according to Ray are unclear. But there is, however, an option on the table that would give the school district a cash infusion—at least in the short term: sell one of its assets. 

Another Option

The local nonprofit Community Bridges earlier this month proposed a plan to buy the Elena Baskin Live Oak Senior Center property from the District for $2.4 million. The estimated budget deficit of the LOSD was $2.4 million before it was revised upwards at the Feb. 21 meeting.

The LOSD acquired the senior center through the passage of 2004’s Measure E, a bond measure which allowed the district to purchase it from the county for $2.2 million and has continued to operate it since.

The center is home to the county’s Meal on Wheels program, and also serves as a hub for other senior services. The District had plans to make the center into workforce housing for teachers, which would mean the shuttering of the center.

District officials have claimed that the revenue from a potential sale could not be used to address the budget deficit.

Tony Nuñez-Palomino, communications manager for Community Bridges, disagrees with the District’s notion and said in an interview that Covid-era legislation has made it possible to use the revenue for general purposes.

He emphasized that a potential $800,000 down payment for the senior center could float the school district for the short term and prevent layoffs. 

Passed in September 2020, California Senate Bill 820 states that “proceeds from a sale or lease of surplus property can be used for a one-time General Fund purpose.”

Nuñez-Palomino said that his organization is putting the finishing touches on a letter of intent that would formalize its offer.

“No one wants to see teachers and staff members get laid off because that hurts students; it hurts families;  it hurts the community, especially in the area,” Nuñez-Palomino said.

Jeremy Ray said it’s complicated.

“It doesn’t put us in a position of strength when we have public calls to just accept the offer,” he said.

The LOSD board will have to press ahead with layoffs in some form by this week or a state takeover will occur. 

“There will probably be reductions and reorganization in the District office,” he said. “And although it kills me to say it, we will probably have to ask for concessions from the labor groups. They are under no obligation to reopen their contracts just because the board now realizes we made a mistake, but I think we have to ask.”

The LOSD will hold a parent forum at Live Oak Elementary School this Thursday Feb. 29 at 6:00 p.m. The forum will be followed by a special meeting of the District Board at 7:00 p.m. to discuss a fiscal plan for the budget crisis.

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