AUTHOR (needs to be edited before goes live)
I am a late-blooming author working hard to make up for lost time. I earned an MFA in creative writing from UC Riverside, Palm Desert when I turned sixty.
My second book, GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK: A Memoir of Self-Acceptance was recently published by Otis Books (Seismicity Editions, June 2019). Evocative of Nora Ephron’s wry, hilarious I Feel Bad About My Neck and the cathartic Hunger by Roxane Gay, GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK, shares an intimate story of ageism, shame and affirmation, one that will resonate not only with women of a certain age, but also with anyone who's experienced a challenging relationship with their mother, food, their body, their hair, their past self or who they are right now. In other words, I dare you not to find a piece of yourself in this personal and universal story!
My first book, THE RELUCTANT ARTIST, an art book/memoir about my father, an immigrant from the Philippines, was published by Shanti Arts in 2015. An essay about my mother’s descent into Alzheimer’s was awarded second place in the 2018 Kalanithi Awards (honoring Paul Kalanithi, author of When Breath Becomes Air), and one of my short stories was nominated for a Pushcart and Best of the Net. I have published essays and stories in a number of literary journals. (Find links to some of my favorites below)
I grew up in San Francisco's Sunset District, blocks from the Zoo and Ocean Beach, during the fifties and psychedelic sixties. As a single mother, I climbed the ranks of state civil service, rising from clerk typist to Executive Director of the State Water Resources Control Board. Along the way, I worked for California's Assembly Committee on Environmental Safety and Toxic Materials and managed toxic and solid waste cleanup programs; as a former clerk-typist with a BA in Spanish Literature, managing complex, technical programs gave me a powerful case of imposter syndrome. Retired from 9 to 5 jobs, I now have my dream job - writer. I also work for a Sacramento-area nonprofit, 916 Ink, which conducts creative writing workshops for area youth and transforms them into published authors. And, I co-manage Stories on Stage Sacramento, the capital city's premier literary performance series.
"GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK is a coming of age memoir for those of us who took a little longer than others to write it all down. Rice discusses being a daughter, sister, mother, grandmother and wife with an unflinchingly honest and unquestionably relatable pen. Rice details her pain with such wry humor that her memoir was impossible to put down." Mom Egg Review
"One of my favorite authors is Nora Ephron. I especially love her book I Feel Bad About My Neck, which is a lovely, humorous look at growing older as a woman. Sadly, Nora is no longer with us so there are no more Ephron books to look forward to. In reading GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK: A Memoir of Self Acceptance (Otis Books, Seismicity Editions, June 2019) by Dorothy Rice however I think I have found my new Nora. Any woman over 50 years old should pick this up, because she will find insight into her own story in this insightful, bittersweet book." Beauty Info Zone
"We are reminded of the old adage, Don’t Judge a Book by Its Cover, upon opening Dorothy Rice’s recent memoir, GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK. The simple cover — black background, minimal white font donning only the book’s title and author’s name — gives no hint of the complexity of emotions that lies between its pages." NY Yoga+Life
"The book is a personal story, but it resonates on a universal level with readers." Inside Sacramento
I am a late-blooming author working hard to make up for lost time. I earned an MFA in creative writing from UC Riverside, Palm Desert when I turned sixty.
My second book, GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK: A Memoir of Self-Acceptance was recently published by Otis Books (Seismicity Editions, June 2019). Evocative of Nora Ephron’s wry, hilarious I Feel Bad About My Neck and the cathartic Hunger by Roxane Gay, GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK, shares an intimate story of ageism, shame and affirmation, one that will resonate not only with women of a certain age, but also with anyone who's experienced a challenging relationship with their mother, food, their body, their hair, their past self or who they are right now. In other words, I dare you not to find a piece of yourself in this personal and universal story!
My first book, THE RELUCTANT ARTIST, an art book/memoir about my father, an immigrant from the Philippines, was published by Shanti Arts in 2015. An essay about my mother’s descent into Alzheimer’s was awarded second place in the 2018 Kalanithi Awards (honoring Paul Kalanithi, author of When Breath Becomes Air), and one of my short stories was nominated for a Pushcart and Best of the Net. I have published essays and stories in a number of literary journals. (Find links to some of my favorites below)
I grew up in San Francisco's Sunset District, blocks from the Zoo and Ocean Beach, during the fifties and psychedelic sixties. As a single mother, I climbed the ranks of state civil service, rising from clerk typist to Executive Director of the State Water Resources Control Board. Along the way, I worked for California's Assembly Committee on Environmental Safety and Toxic Materials and managed toxic and solid waste cleanup programs; as a former clerk-typist with a BA in Spanish Literature, managing complex, technical programs gave me a powerful case of imposter syndrome. Retired from 9 to 5 jobs, I now have my dream job - writer. I also work for a Sacramento-area nonprofit, 916 Ink, which conducts creative writing workshops for area youth and transforms them into published authors. And, I co-manage Stories on Stage Sacramento, the capital city's premier literary performance series.
"GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK is a coming of age memoir for those of us who took a little longer than others to write it all down. Rice discusses being a daughter, sister, mother, grandmother and wife with an unflinchingly honest and unquestionably relatable pen. Rice details her pain with such wry humor that her memoir was impossible to put down." Mom Egg Review
"One of my favorite authors is Nora Ephron. I especially love her book I Feel Bad About My Neck, which is a lovely, humorous look at growing older as a woman. Sadly, Nora is no longer with us so there are no more Ephron books to look forward to. In reading GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK: A Memoir of Self Acceptance (Otis Books, Seismicity Editions, June 2019) by Dorothy Rice however I think I have found my new Nora. Any woman over 50 years old should pick this up, because she will find insight into her own story in this insightful, bittersweet book." Beauty Info Zone
"We are reminded of the old adage, Don’t Judge a Book by Its Cover, upon opening Dorothy Rice’s recent memoir, GRAY IS THE NEW BLACK. The simple cover — black background, minimal white font donning only the book’s title and author’s name — gives no hint of the complexity of emotions that lies between its pages." NY Yoga+Life
"The book is a personal story, but it resonates on a universal level with readers." Inside Sacramento