Writer’s Voice: compelling conversations with authors who challenge, inspire, and inform.
In this episode of Writer’s Voice, we hear from two authors illuminating the human cost of broken systems — one through fiction, the other through investigative memoir.
In the first half of the show, we speak with
Evanthia Bromiley about her haunting and lyrical debut novel Crown. It follows three days in the life of a single mother and her nine-year-old twins as they face eviction in the scorching landscape of the American Southwest — a meditation on poverty, love, and resilience in a society that too often looks away.
“Everything here finds a way to grow through what is broken.” — Evanthia Bromiley
Then, in the second half, we turn from fiction to fact with
Judy Karofsky , whose book
DisElderly Conduct: The Flawed Business of Assisted Living and Hospice exposes how an unregulated eldercare industry is failing our most vulnerable — the elderly and their families. She shares her own story of trying to find adequate care for her own mother as the latter entered her final years.
“Civilizations are judged by how we take care of the elderly. And right now, we are not doing a good job.” — Judy Karofsky
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Key Words: Evanthia Bromiley Crown, Judy Karovsky Diselderly Conduct, Writer’s Voice podcast, Francesca Rheannon interviews, fiction about poverty, homelessness in literature, assisted living crisis, hospice industry corruption, eldercare reform, private equity in healthcare
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READ THE TRANSCRIPT
Segment One: Evanthia Bromiley
Evanthia Bromiley’s novel Crown traces three days leading up to a young mother’s eviction in the desert Southwest. As Jude and her nine-year-old twins face homelessness, they cling to each other — and to the imagination that allows them to find beauty amid despair. Bromiley talks about poverty, motherhood, and how “the poetry of poverty” shapes the texture of her prose.
Key Topics
* Eviction and economic precarity
* The intersection of poverty and motherhood
* Writing authentically without sentimentality
* The use of structure and white space in fiction
* Finding beauty and hope amid hardship
Segment Two: Judy Karofsky
Author Judy Karofsky exposes the dark underbelly of the assisted living and hospice industry,