Sunday, April 21, 2024
A presentation by Cathy Robbins
In her work in progress, A Torrid Splendor: Seeking Calabria, Cathy Robbins tells a story about a society’s fall from grace. Once upon a time Calabria was a jewel in the diadem of Magna Graecia, which wrapped around the Mediterranean and Aegean Seas from Naples to Anatolia for nearly a millennium. Calabria has since slid inexorably to become today the poorest region of Italy. Cathy invites the reader to view Calabria from three perspectives: the region’s long and complex history; the history of her family in Calabria; and contemporary life in the region. The long history of Calabria established the groundwork—a base on which Calabria totters today, its arms flailing to catch a banister, a rope, other outstretched hands, anything to steady itself.In her talk, Cathy will review the genesis for the book, its sources and development, and its status today. In perhaps an unusual twist for participants in this presentation, Cathy is asking for help. With close to half the book written, she is stuck, mostly in history. So, she has named this talk: A Torrid Splendor, Can this book be saved? Cathy Robbins earned degrees from Columbia and from New York University. She has forty years of experience as a journalist, with articles published in a number of local, regional and national publications including Voice of San Diego; Albuquerque Journal; Santa Fe New Mexican; High Country News; and The New York Times. As a general assignment and interpretive reporter, Cathy covered a wide range of topics, including government, arts and music, and business. From three decades of living in New Mexico, Cathy developed her first book, All Indians Do Not Live in Teepees (or Casinos), published by Bison Books / University of Nebraska Press. The theme in that work resonates in her new book: How stable societies slide into disaster and can disappear.