Susan Hayden aka L.A.’s “Library Girl” is known for nurturing writers via her curated local events. Her new book, Now You Are a Missing Person, captures the random uniqueness of Los Angeles, especially from a perspective of loss. The deaths of her father, her childhood best friend and her husband lead her down a path of self discovery and healing that also highlights the past and present vibes of this city, a place that can be lonely even in crowded places and overwhelming even in solitude. The untraditional memoir, which includes stories, poems and idea fragments, traces Hayden’s search for identity from the 1970s to the present– from growing up in an observant Jewish family in the San Fernando Valley to making a name for herself on the literary circuit with her poetry and music series.
Hayden, who is currently in the midst of her book tour (her recent Beyond Baroque launch sold out swiftly) will be reading and speaking with NYT Bestselling Author Steve Leder (For You When I Am Gone) at the event called “The Marriage of Love and Grief,” at Village Well Books & Coffee, 9900 Culver Blvd. #1B, Culver City; Thursday, June 29, 7 p.m. FREE. RSVP at eventbrite.com/e/susan-hayden-in-conversation-with-steve-leder-tickets.
The author shares an excerpt from the book with LA Weekly, below.

Susan Hayden (Alexis Rhone Fancher)
Excerpt from Now You Are a Missing Person shared with permission from author Susan Hayden and publisher Moon Tide Press:
He Called Himself a Very Late Bloomer

(Cover art by Hazel Angell- shared courtesy of Moon Tide Press)
I was insecure in those days, feeling like I wasn’t important enough for them to say “Hi.” And I wasn’t. And they didn’t. The only person who talked to me in that club was Harry Dean. I got to sit next to him and hear his simple but ancient wisdom, his quotes from Chief Seattle, about “this web of life” and “not leaving footprints,” about how there’s “no death, only a change in worlds.” He rambled on and I was all ears. This conversation ended up inspiring me to create a character like him in a play I would eventually write.
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