Catherine Sevenau

Opener of doors, teller of tales, family scribe.

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Behind These Doors

Passages from BEHIND THESE DOORS: A Family Memoir

BOOKSTORES:
Readers’ Books Sonoma, CA (paperback $9.95)
*Arrange with Readers’ for a signed copy: 707-939-1779
Note: Any bookstore can order a copy for you

ON-LINE PURCHASE
Amazon (paperback, eBook, audio)
Audible (audio: 1 hr, 15 min)
Barnes & Noble (eBook/Nook)
BookBaby (eBook)
iBooks (eBook and audio)
Kobo (eBook)
Smashwords (eBook)

ISBN: 978-0-6159716-0-5 (paperback, 54 pages)
ISBN: 978-0-9960514-1-5 (eBook)
ISBN: 978-0-9960514-0-8 (audio, 1:15)

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Passages from

Behind These Doors

A Family Memoir

With clarity and perspective, Sevenau embraces the events of her early years—that what occurred happened for her, not to her—and transforms a bewildering and fractured childhood into a life well lived. Behind These Doors, a poignant and captivating taste of Through Any Given Door, is available in audio, paperback, and eBook.

11 second intro: Passages from Behind These Doors: A Family Memoir
written and spoken by Catherine Sevenau

https://sevenau.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Title-Behind-These-Doors-V-O-with-music.mp3

An opener of doors, teller of tales, and family scribe, Catherine (Clemens) Sevenau is the author of Passages from Behind These Doors: A Family Memoir. Her kaleidoscope of frank, funny, and tender tales are about sin and prayer, good intentions and unattended sorrows… and about finding our way back home. Growing up in California in the 1950s and 60s, she was raised primarily by an older sister, survived five years living with an unhinged, erratic mother, and spent summers working at her father’s five-and-dime in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury. The era and sense of place provide a colorful background to a riveting account of her early family life told with humor and grace. With clarity and perspective, Sevenau embraces the events of her early years; what occurred happened for her, not ;to her, transforming a bewildering, fractured childhood into a life well lived. Catherine is an irreverent humorist and an astute storyteller. 

If you grew up in the 1950s and 60s, Behind These Doors is part of your story. If you lived in Sonora, Southern California, or the Haight-Ashbury during that time, you’ll return to those places. And if you simply want to read a good story, to laugh, cry, and then laugh some more, you’ll do that too.

Book launch at Readers’ Books in Sonoma, November 13, 2014:

Behind These Doors Book Launch, video courtesy of Judy Baker

I am more than a tad atingle to share that Passages from Behind These Doors was the BESTSELLING book for 2014 at Readers’ Books in Sonoma. I’m completely over the moon! Thank you, thank you, thank you. In gratitude to my friends, family, and all who bought my book, to Andy Weinberger and the staff at Readers’, and a shout-out to my collaborators below.

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Credits:

Editor:
Deb Carlen
Paperback and eBook design:
Todd Towner
TandHGraphics.com
* Voice Director:
Madeleine Wild (audio)
RadioMagic.com
* Sound Engineer:
Roy Blumenfeld (audio)
* Author Photo:
In Her Image Photography
* Book Cover and Website Design:
Dianna Jacobsen
* Book Cover Illustration:
Mary Patterson
Fishchild.com

Artist Mary Patterson

Artist: Mary Patterson Fishchild
12″x12″ Acrylic paint on primed masonite

* Social Media Marketing:
Heather Piazza
Piazza Marketing Concepts
* Author and Voice:
Catherine (Clemens) Sevenau
Sevenau.com
CSevenau@earthlink.net
Facebook
Tintype Publishing
Sonoma, CA 95476

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At the Wax Museum in Washington D.C. Behind These Doors was in everyone’s hands!

Nixon Obama Bush Clinton Reagan-bomb Carter J-JF-Kennedy Eisenhower-2 Truman Lincoln John-Quincy-Adams-6th Jefferson John-Adams-2nd-Pres Washington Grant-Lee Frederick-Douglas Harriet-Tubman Rosa-Parks Malcolm MLK Hoover Churchill bunker Castro Oprah-crop Babe-Ruth Johhny-Depp Cruise Clooney Dylan Bieber Jackson J-Lo Astronauts
[Show thumbnails]

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READERS’ BOOKS NEWSLETTER (Nov 2104)
Thursday, November 13th 7:00 p.m. Book Launch for Catherine Sevenau to celebrate the publication of Passages from Behind These Doors: A Family Memoir.

Jude, Andy, and Thea of Readers' Books

Jude, Andy, and Thea of Readers’ Books

Full disclosure: Catherine Sevenau is a devoted friend of the bookstore, and she was one of the passionate people who helped us raise money to create the Reading Garden out back. She is also the driving force behind Random Acts, our monthly open mic program that now is celebrating its 5th year. That said, she is also a writer with a deeply personal, at times funny, and often difficult life story to unravel. Fiction is one thing, but a person doing memoir has to be able to find the right balance; for example, they have to contend sometimes, not only with the truth as they remember it, but with the feelings and opinions of still living family members. If you have a perfectly happy upbringing, this is not a problem. But Catherine grew up in a small Northern California town, the child of a working class father and a neglectful—and occasionally institutionalized—mother. Given her circumstances you might imagine that she’d write a rather dark tale. Her book, however, is a testament, not to suffering, but to just how resilient human beings can be. In that sense, then, it’s triumphant. Oh, and did I mention that it’s also funny? I did.
Andy Weinberger

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Dear Catherine,
Yup, ya got a winner here! I realize this isn’t your novel, but I assume that the parts that will become part of it are your profound recountings of those-that-walked-before you—ah, that DNA stuff. Your characters were in turn sympathetic, intriguing and frustrating, in other words, pure family. You told their tales with insight and compassion, weaving them together with a wonderful fabric of colorful words and observations, and your pace of storytelling was both hypnotic and rhythmic. I was totally caught up and you made me care about the characters that I thought I “knew” and had a long prejudice about (in your defense!) and of course, that’s the way it is… when we know someone, it makes all the difference in our abilities to understand (or tolerate) their behavior as we watch all the strange choices they make in order to get their needs met.

Your tale indeed gives a very brave understanding of who you are (your observations quite strict and fair… so you, you philosopher you!), but most clearly it showed how you “created” yourself “outta scratch” which only serves to make me respect and love you more.

I had a lot of fun with your exposé of Bob… for some reason I didn’t really know all the history. I laughed and laughed. In contrast, it was a darn good thing I had tissues when I read about your sister… I really LOVED the cranes. Wasn’t that miraculous?

Yours poems, your research, amazing… your Capricorn Moon at it’s finest… both precise, as Capricorn energy is, but cardinal… vision, romance and artistic. It’s the part of you that gives the illusion of being aloof, but the reality of being a mushy softy.
Super Moon photo courtesy of Segway Napa
You captured my skittery mind, entertained me, intrigued me, affected me, and enchanted me. Thank you for the honor and privilege of the early read. I LOVED it!

Your friend and your fan,
PJ Tyler

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Q & A

Q. What is your writing about?
A. Family, relationships, transformation, choice, grace, and hope.

Q. It’s very personal. Was your first book, Behind These Doors, hard to write?
A. At times. It revived memories forgotten or dismissed, and there were untold family stories that brought me to my knees. Sometimes I’d laugh, sometimes I’d cry. It was hard on me physically. When I get stressed, it shows up in my body. I ended up with two frozen shoulders, my stomach issues kicked in, and I was a mess through parts of it. My computer also crashed twice, and then I lost the motherboard. Apparently it was experiencing techno-cosmic sympathy pains.

Q. Were you abused as a child?
A. No, I’ve never thought of it as abuse (some don’t agree, but abuse is subjective). There was a period of time when I was neglected, among other things, but those stories are in the full memoir.

Q. What does your family think about your book?
A. My siblings loved it; then my sister Liz had a change of heart and asked me to take out a story about her. She was dying of cancer and I didn’t want her to die upset and angry with me, so I put the book away for awhile. Then there are my two sons. We live in the same small town and they are somewhat horrified that personal is now public. Proud of me, happy for me, but for them, it’s too much information.

Q. What was your inspiration?
A. I wrote a story “Queen Bee” in a workshop that connected me more deeply to my siblings. Subsequently, I wanted to know more about my mother, so I had a family reunion. Four generations of family sat in a circle in my living room and introduced themselves with stories about her. These were the beginnings of the memoir.

Q. Are you planning to write another book?
A. This edition of Behind These Doors is a broad sample of the complete book. The full memoir, Through Any Given Door, is offered as a free web serial. This seems to be the most confusing piece for readers. Passages from Behind These Doors, A Family Memoir is composed of twenty stories from the full memoir. I created an audio, eBook, and paperback (54 pages) versions of those twenty stories. The full book is much longer. Now I’m back to working on our family genealogy.

Q. Why did you decide to record some of the stories from Behind These Doors?
A. When my friend Reva Metzger was dying of cancer, I went to say goodbye toward the end of her life. I had a bound book of sixty-something stories and I left it for her. Reva could no longer read, but she could listen, and her sister read her one of my stories every night until the day Reva died. They made her laugh and distracted her to different destinations. Touched to participate in her dying process, and I wanted to honor her in return. I was going to record sixty stories, but it turned out to be an extensive and expensive undertaking, so I completed the project at twenty.

Q. How frequently do you write?
A.Whenever I’m inspired, which is often. My schedule is flexible so I split my free time between writing and working on genealogy.

Q. What/who has helped you most in your writing?
A. Two mentors and friends. Stephanie Moore helped me find my voice. I spent five years in her Monday night writing group, penning and getting feedback one story at a time. The other was Michael Naumer, the teacher with whom I worked for five years in Beyond the Game. Being immersed in the transformational work he taught (along with many other courses and workshops I’ve done) gave me another level of perception, a different way to see the events in my life and the world. Studying the Enneagram, an ancient model of personality and study of the human psyche, was also invaluable in helping me understand myself and others.

Q. What makes your writing appealing?
A. The stories are universal, so people relate to them. Most of us have difficult family relationships or have experienced challenging situations. Our past experiences make us rise to the occasion and become who we are—or—descend to the occasion if one chooses the slippery slope. I try to write transparently, and am able to tell my story without “being” my story. For a woman who was seldom in touch with her feelings, the practice of writing allows me to tap into and translate them onto the page. I’m also pretty funny. You’re either going to feel a kinship and say, “that’s my family, too,” or “my family isn’t as bad as I thought!” For others, Behind These Doors may beckon; personal reflection isn’t everyone’s cup of tea.

Q. What was the biggest gift for you in this process?
A. There were three:
1. Gaining a larger picture and an understanding of my mother.
2. A reconnection with my siblings and a sense of keeping the family together. Writing this book, along with all the genealogy work I’ve compiled, has done that, and then some!
3. In the five years I lived with my mother, I was raised by omission—by neglect—and neglect doesn’t leave a scar, it leaves a hole. Time, understanding, and writing Behind These Doors transformed this hole into a kind of wholeness—and out of this wholeness, a kind of holiness emerged. Therein lies the grace. Also, my mother wanted the same things I want: to be seen and to be heard. Writing this memoir did that, for both of us.

© 2014 Catherine (Clemens) Sevenau
All rights reserved

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