In Embrace Your Weird, New York Times bestselling author, producer, actress, TV writer, and award-winning web series creator, Felicia Day takes you on a journey to find, rekindle, or expand your creative passions.
Including Felicia’s personal stories and hard-won wisdom, Embrace Your Weird offers:
—Entertaining and revelatory exercises that empower you to be fearless, so you can rediscover the things that bring you joy, and crack your imagination wide open
—Unique techniques to vanquish enemies of creativity like: anxiety, fear, procrastination, perfectionism, criticism, and jealousy
—Tips to cultivate a creative community
—Space to explore and get your neurons firing
Whether you enjoy writing, baking, painting, podcasting, playing music, or have yet to uncover your favorite creative outlet, Embrace Your Weird will help you unlock the power of self-expression. Get motivated. Get creative. Get weird.
FELICIA DAY is the author of Embrace Your Weird: Face Your Fears and Unleash Creativityand a New York Times bestselling memoir, You’re Never Weird on the Internet (Almost). She is a professional actress who has appeared in numerous television shows and films, includingSupernatural, The Magicians, and Mystery Science Theatre 3000. Felicia is best known for her work in the web video world, behind and in front of the camera. She co-starred in Joss Whedon’s Internet musical Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog, which won an Emmy in 2009. She also created and starred in the seminal web series The Guild. In 2012, Felicia created a production company called Geek & Sundry that pioneered content on YouTube, Twitch and other platforms. It was sold to Legendary Entertainment in 2015. Felicia continues to work on her own creative projects as a producer, writer, and actor. Most recently, she is working as a producer with Freeform on Woman World, an animated TV show based on the award-winning graphic novel. Visit @feliciaday on Twitter and Instagram, or FeliciaDay.com.
The details:
Questions may be directed to leila@portersquarebooks.com. We’re excited to bring you this very special signing event!
Certain books were “banned in Boston” at least as far back as 1651, when one William Pynchon wrote a book criticizing Puritanism.