Events

Events in June 2024

  • - How to do Justice to Diversity in Fiction — Journey to Merveilleux City
    How to do Justice to Diversity in Fiction — Journey to Merveilleux City

    How to do Justice to Diversity in Fiction — Journey to Merveilleux City


    June 2, 2024

    Sunday, June 2, 2024

    Conversations at the Culver with Stephanie Barbé Hammer and Romaine Washington

    How to do Justice to Diversity in Fiction — Journey to Merveilleux City

    1:30-3:00 PM; doors open at 1:00 PM

    UCR ARTS

    Barbara and Art Culver Center of the Arts

    3824 Main Street, Riverside, CA 92501

    Free and open to the public.

    How do we, as writers, tell the stories of characters whose lived experience is different from our own? How do we create a world in our work that’s true to the multicultural spaces we inhabit – without risking the misappropriation of those cultures?

    Please join Romaine Washington and Stephanie Barbé Hammer in conversation about Stephanie’s new novella, Journey to Merveilleux City, finalist for the Foreword Indie book award, Mystery category.

  • - Loud and Clear -- The Voices of Gay and Trans Literature
    Loud and Clear -- The Voices of Gay and Trans Literature

    Loud and Clear -- The Voices of Gay and Trans Literature


    June 6, 2024

    Thursday, June 6, 2024

    First Thursdays Arts Walk – Loud and Clear: The Voices of Gay and Trans Literature

    Riverside Main Library Community Room

    3900 Mission Inn Avenue

    Riverside, CA 92501

    7:00-8:00 PM; doors open at 6:30 PM

    Free and open to the public.

    Join Inlandia for a celebration of Pride Month as LGBTQIA+ community members share literary passages by LGBTQIA+ authors that have influenced, encouraged, shaped, and inspired them.

  • - Inlandia at the Maloof Artist Series Presents Ellen Estilai and Exit Prohibited
    Inlandia at the Maloof Artist Series Presents Ellen Estilai and Exit Prohibited

    Inlandia at the Maloof Artist Series Presents Ellen Estilai and Exit Prohibited


    June 8, 2024

    Saturday, June 8, 2024

    Inlandia at the Maloof Artist Series Presents Ellen Estilai and Exit Prohibited

    12:00-2:00 PM

    Sam and Alfreda Maloof Foundation for Arts and Crafts

    5131 Carnelian St

    Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91701

    Free and open to all ages.

    Inlandia Institute, in partnership with the Sam and Alfreda Maloof Foundation for Arts and Crafts, invites you to a very special afternoon with Ellen Estilai, author of Exit Prohibited: A Memoir of Iran, published by Inlandia Books. A book talk is scheduled for Saturday, June 8, at 12:00 PM, at the Maloof Home, Gardens, and Gallery in Rancho Cucamonga, and will include a discussion of the author’s extraordinary experiences living in—and leaving—Iran, accompanied by selected readings and book signing by the author.

    Books will be available for sale in the Maloof Store, and may be purchased online at https://inlandia-institute.square.site/ and through Amazon.

    Exit Prohibited explores a side of Iran and Iranians seldom portrayed in popular media. It follows Ellen Estilai and her family after the 1979 Iranian Revolution as they attempt to leave Tehran, their home of nine years. At the airport, Ali, her Iranian husband, is inexplicably prevented from leaving. As he confronts hostile colleagues and the Islamic Republic’s opaque bureaucracy, Estilai examines their lives, trying to understand what might have brought them to this point. It is a story of an Iran that is at once welcoming and hostile, progressive and traditional, enamored of and distrustful of the West—an Iran as complex as Estilai’s relationship to it.

    Ellen Estilai has spent much of her career collaborating with artists, writers, and agencies to strengthen communities through the arts.  She has served as the executive director of the Riverside Arts Council and the Arts Council for San Bernardino County, and has taught English language, literature, and writing in universities in Iran and California. Because Ellen and her husband have been immigrants in each other’s countries, her writing frequently explores the joys and tribulations of the immigrant experience.