Mimi Nichter: Hostage

Mimi Nichter: Hostage

Changing Hands BookstoreTempe, AZ
Thursday, Mar 19 from 7 pm to 9 pm
Overview

Mimi Nichter presents her novel, Hostage, where she shares survival, silence, and reclaiming her voice with Amy Hirshberg Lederman.

When her plane was hijacked in 1970, Mimi Nichter became part of aviation history. In Hostage, she tells her story of survival, silence, and reclaiming her voice. In conversation with Amy Hirshberg Lederman.


ABOUT THE BOOK

On September 6, 1970, twenty-year-old Mimi Nichter was on a flight home to New York from a summer in Israel when armed members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine crash-landed her plane in a remote desert in Jordan. Passengers were held on board for six days in sweltering heat without flushable toilets or running water. Most were sent home, but Mimi—accused of being an Israeli soldier--and thirty-one others were held hostage in Amman, fearing for their lives as a violent civil war erupted around them.

In Hostage: A Memoir of Terrorism, Trauma, and Resilience, Mimi recounts her survival of the hijacking of Trans World Airlines Flight 741, the first incident of international terrorism and one of the most significant events in aviation history.

After her dramatic release, Mimi returned to college a different person. Plagued with terrifying memories, she silenced her experience. One year later, striving to live in the present, she backpacked across Africa and Asia with her boyfriend and in doing so found a path forward, but her buried trauma resurfaced each time a new global hostage crisis occurred. Mimi finally realizes that to fully heal, she must explore how this trauma, and her silence about it, has shaped her life. Told with courage and empathy, Hostage is the story of how one's strength and humanity can flourish even in the most fearful and untenable circumstances.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mimi Nichter (née Beeber) is a cultural and medical anthropologist, public speaker, and a professor emerita of anthropology at the University of Arizona. She is the author or coauthor of four anthropology-related books and the recipient of the Margaret Mead Award and the George Foster Practicing Medical Anthropology Award.

Mimi Nichter presents her novel, Hostage, where she shares survival, silence, and reclaiming her voice with Amy Hirshberg Lederman.

When her plane was hijacked in 1970, Mimi Nichter became part of aviation history. In Hostage, she tells her story of survival, silence, and reclaiming her voice. In conversation with Amy Hirshberg Lederman.


ABOUT THE BOOK

On September 6, 1970, twenty-year-old Mimi Nichter was on a flight home to New York from a summer in Israel when armed members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine crash-landed her plane in a remote desert in Jordan. Passengers were held on board for six days in sweltering heat without flushable toilets or running water. Most were sent home, but Mimi—accused of being an Israeli soldier--and thirty-one others were held hostage in Amman, fearing for their lives as a violent civil war erupted around them.

In Hostage: A Memoir of Terrorism, Trauma, and Resilience, Mimi recounts her survival of the hijacking of Trans World Airlines Flight 741, the first incident of international terrorism and one of the most significant events in aviation history.

After her dramatic release, Mimi returned to college a different person. Plagued with terrifying memories, she silenced her experience. One year later, striving to live in the present, she backpacked across Africa and Asia with her boyfriend and in doing so found a path forward, but her buried trauma resurfaced each time a new global hostage crisis occurred. Mimi finally realizes that to fully heal, she must explore how this trauma, and her silence about it, has shaped her life. Told with courage and empathy, Hostage is the story of how one's strength and humanity can flourish even in the most fearful and untenable circumstances.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mimi Nichter (née Beeber) is a cultural and medical anthropologist, public speaker, and a professor emerita of anthropology at the University of Arizona. She is the author or coauthor of four anthropology-related books and the recipient of the Margaret Mead Award and the George Foster Practicing Medical Anthropology Award.

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Highlights

  • 2 hours
  • In person

Location

Changing Hands Bookstore

6428 South McClintock Drive

Tempe, AZ 85283

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