Know how to spot a con? I didn’t, but now I do. Read “From the Playbook of a Con” published in Mia Magazine, A Journal By For and About Women in the Summer 2011 issue. To read more of Mia’s refreshing articles, visit www.miamagazine.net.
Leanne Grossman's Writing
Know how to spot a con? I didn’t, but now I do. Read “From the Playbook of a Con” published in Mia Magazine, A Journal By For and About Women in the Summer 2011 issue. To read more of Mia’s refreshing articles, visit www.miamagazine.net.

Yeah for small victories! Allen Michaan, owner of the Grand Lake Theatre called me after receiving my letter urging him to pull Olympus Has Fallen from the movie line-up. He did pull it. He totally agrees that the movie is horrible crap (as he put it). He had not had a chance to view the movie yet … [Read More...]

More than 50 miles northeast of Beirut lies Baalbek, ruins of Canaanite and later, Roman architecture. Once called Heliopolis, City of the Sun, it houses multi-ton rocks whose cutting and moving predated the Christian era. The Temple of Jupiter, seen here, weighs 455-tons, according to archeologists.

Find articles or photos in the archive by searching for words by locations or topics such as "Azerbaijan", "Pt. Reyes," or "women in WWII." … [See Archives]

I now respond to lifelines, rather than deadlines. Lifelines connect me to my passions. The web of color designed by nature. The soul satisfaction of playing djembe in a circle of drummers. The outrage that almost every nation in the world is a … [Read More...]

Yeah for small victories! Allen Michaan, owner of the Grand Lake Theatre called me after receiving my letter urging him to pull Olympus Has Fallen from the movie line-up. He did pull it. He totally … [Read More...]

Find articles or photos in the archive by searching for words by locations or topics such as "Azerbaijan", "Pt. Reyes," or "women in WWII." … [See Archives]
Congrats on getting this piece published, Leanne! I continue to very much enjoy your writing and the clarity and freshness you bring to it.
Thanks, Chris. I look forward to some day writing about the African Library Project.
I have always loved your writing and now find it even more unique and direct. Your creativity is flowing, girl!