BRADFORD, PA – Lesléa
Newman, the prolific poet and children’s book author who wrote “Heather has two
Mommies” will speak tonight at the University of Pittsburgh
at Bradford.
At 7:30 p.m.,
she will present “He Continues to Make a Difference: The Story of Matthew
Shepard.” The presentation will take place in the Mukaiyama University Room
and is free and open to the public.
Newman is the author
of more than 40 books for children and young adults, including “Heather has two
Mommies,” the first children’s book
to portray lesbian families in a
positive way. Other popular youth titles include “Hachiko Waits,” “Fat Chance”
and “A Sweet Passover.”
The evening program
uses poetry, photographs and creative visualization to explore the impact of
Matthew Shepard’s murder on the world. In 1998, Shepard was kidnapped, robbed,
beaten and murdered in Laramie, WY.
Newman was the
keynote speaker for the Gay Awareness Week at the University of Wyoming that
year and arrived on campus the day that Shepard died. She spoke to a devastated
campus and community and vowed to work to erase hate from that day forward.
Her most recent book,
“October Mourning: A Song for Matthew Shepard” explores the impact of Shepard’s
murder in a cycle of 68 poems written as fictional monologues in a variety of
voices, including the fence he was tied to, the stars that watched over him and
a doe who kept him company.
She is the author of
many books for adults that deal with lesbian identity, Jewish identity and the
intersection between the two. Other topics she explores include AIDS, eating
disorders and sexual abuse. Her award-winning short story “A Letter to Harvey
Milk” has been made into a film and adapted for the stage.
Newman’s visit is
part of Pitt-Bradford’s Spectrum arts series. It is co-sponsored by the Women’s
Studies program and the LGBTS Alliance.
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