Categories: Web and IT News

Former Tech Worker Pens Award Winning Book to Heal from Workplace Bullying To Be Featured At LA Times Book Festival

“The Ookleberry Tree” aims to raise awareness of anti-Asian racism and focus harshly on workplace bullying.

Bullying in the workplace is an all too common experience that can have a lasting impact on an individual’s life. Former tech employee and Harvard alum, Judy Choi, this experience was the catalyst for her award-winning art book, “The Ookleberry Tree,” which she will showcase at the upcoming LA Times Book Festival on 4/22 for the world’s largest book retailer, Kinokuniya.

“The Ookleberry Tree.” Choi’s book is a fairy tale illustrated with photographs and tells the story of a misfit girl named Yoyo who leaves the real world and enters an imaginary universe. Together with her new friend Ookles they ride a cow to find a magical tree that grants wishes.

The book was written after Choi was bullied by her manager at a former tech job. “I’ve been bullied as a kid and an adult” Choi explained. “As a kid I used to hide from bullies by going to the library during recess and lunch so I could read to pass time. But as a woman being bullied by a woman manager, it’s a different dynamic and hard to prove because the acts of aggression fall in a gray area. The game played was to make fun of me from a distance but making sure so I could hear or not letting me order mashed potatoes at a restaurant. Once I asked permission to miss a team lunch to finish a project and a month later she used it against me during my performance review and said I was inefficient.”

To cope with the bullying Choi wrote her third book “The Ookleberry Tree.” The book took five years to make and was created with the help of photographer Francis George. “We built everything for the photographs including the costumes and sets” Choi explained.

The upcoming “Tigre Fou” showcase at the LA Times Book Festival on 4/22 is a significant opportunity for Choi to share her message with a broader audience. This event will feature some of the most innovative and thought-provoking authors and artists worldwide, and Choi’s work will make an impact.

“I am excited to have the opportunity to showcase my work at the LA Times Book Festival,” says Choi. “It is an honor to be featured alongside some of the most talented authors and artists in the world, and I hope that my book will inspire others to stand up against bullying and racism. I want to create a world where everyone fits in no matter how different you are.”

“The Ookleberry Tree” is available at Kinokuniya Bookstores. The Los Angeles Times Book Festival will be featuring writer Judy Choi as the character “Yoyo” from “The Ookleberry Tree” along with photographer Francis George on Saturday 04/22/2023 from 10:30 am to 1 pm at the Kinokuniya Booth #84.

Tigrefou Editions is an AAPI and woman owned small publisher devoted to producing original art books by underrepresented artists.  Since 2018, the four artists have released 3 award winning books and currently working on 8 more.   To learn more about Choi and her work, visit www.tigrefou.com. 

Media Contact
Company Name: Tigrefou Editions
Contact Person: Louise Yorath
Email: Send Email
City: Los Angeles
State: California
Country: United States
Website: tigrefou.com

The post Former Tech Worker Pens Award Winning Book to Heal from Workplace Bullying To Be Featured At LA Times Book Festival first appeared on PressRelease.cc.

Former Tech Worker Pens Award Winning Book to Heal from Workplace Bullying To Be Featured At LA Times Book Festival first appeared on Web and IT News.

awnewsor

Recent Posts

The Quiet Death of the Dumb Terminal: Why Claude’s New Computer Use Is the Real AI Interface War

Anthropic just made its AI agent permanently resident on your desktop. Not as a chatbot…

16 hours ago

The Billionaire Who Says Your Kids Should Learn to Code Like They Learn to Read — And Why Wall Street Should Listen

Jack Clark thinks coding is the new literacy. Not in the vague, aspirational way that…

16 hours ago

Your AI Chatbot Is Flattering You — And It’s Making Its Answers Worse

Ask a chatbot a question and you’ll get an answer. But the answer you get…

16 hours ago

Google Photos Finally Fixes Its Most Annoying Editing Flaw — And It’s About Time

For years, cropping a photo in Google Photos has been an exercise in quiet frustration.…

16 hours ago

The Squeeze Is On: How U.S. Sanctions, OPEC Politics, and a Shadow War Are Reshaping Global Oil Markets

OPEC’s crude oil production dropped sharply in May, and the reasons stretch far beyond the…

16 hours ago

Google’s Gemini Is About to Know You Better Than You Know Yourself — And That’s the Whole Point

Google is making its biggest bet yet on the idea that artificial intelligence should be…

16 hours ago

This website uses cookies.