Annie Stein
We are delighted to start working with author Annie O’Neill Stein who has written for Distinction, More, Los Angeles Times, and C Magazine, as well as for The New York Times, and was a regular contributor to Huffington Post for several years. She is currently working on her first novel. She is on the board of HerShe Girls, a mentoring program for foster youth, and runs writing workshops for at risk teens. Annie has written for several magazines, More, Los Angeles Times Magazine, Distinction, Folks and was a regular contributor to Huffington Post for several years. Native New Yorker, Annie O’Neill Stein moved to Los Angeles in the early ’80s as an actress. After many small parts in TV series, from Miami Vice to Charlie’s Angels, she decided to follow her true passion, writing. She found her mentors at UCLA, Eve LaSalle Caram, and Kerry Madden, studying with them both for several years. Being accepted to Sewanee Writer’s Conference to study with Alice McDermott planted the seed for Exit Wounds, her first novel.
One of the things she’s proudest of is leading creative writing workshops with foster teens for five years, editing and publishing Beauty From Ashes, short stories and poetry written by foster youth. She still lives in LA with her husband and has two grown daughters. Like most writers, she regards Exit Wounds as her other child (along with her dog, Tilly).
Exit Wounds
Born to shanty Irish on one side and Park Avenue privilege on the other, Laura navigates a turbulent childhood filled with the alcohol-fueled abuse of her volatile father and her mother’s excessive drinking. As the middle child of three girls, she assigns herself the role of her mother’s protector, who dies when Laura is thirteen, leaving her heartbroken and adrift.
Insecure, anxious, and fearful, she tries drugs, random sex, and a sequence of lovers. Along the way she becomes a successful painter and has a bad first marriage. Nothing however seems to assuage her emptiness and her sense of loss. Eventually, she marries a caring man and has a loving daughter. It is only at the end of her life and by way of an unusual and unexpected turn of events that she is finally able to make peace with herself, to let go of the feeling that she never really grieved, and said goodbye to her beloved mother, and to appreciate that though we work at love and acceptance, sometimes the most wonderful experiences in our lives come in unanticipated and unsought ways.
Annie O’Neill Stein has an engaging voice— quirky, funny, full of original observations and expressions, as she adroitly explores the mysteries of the human heart.
Stay tuned for updates!