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Zoë Eisenberg on Messy Romances and the Art of Community
For years, Zoë Eisenberg has supported independent filmmaking in her East Hawaiʻi home. Now, a book and feature film debut brings her creative work into the spotlight.
Two Authors, One Subject: Zoë Eisenberg and Rhaina Cohen on Writing Intimate Friendships
The Author of “Significant Others” and “The Other Significant Others” in Conversation. Novelist Zoë Eisenberg and journalist-turned-author Rhaina Cohen have something in common: they both published books about extraordinarily intimate friendships. Their debut books published in February of this year with strikingly similar titles—Significant Others (Eisenberg) and The Other Significant Others (Cohen). They talk about their books as “literary fraternal twins.”
EXCERPT: PIG ISLAND (short story)
The first thing I ever say to her is: I think it is an orgy.
HONOLULU Book Awards Author of the Year
Bytrevor
Not many first novelists have the chutzpah and chops to rewrite the rules, but Zoë Eisenberg does just that in her acclaimed novel, which she says “came to me as a breakup story about friends.” Free spirit waiter Ren and hyperefficient real estate agent Jess, former college roommates, share a house and a platonic bed in backwater Hilo. The shock that divides is Ren’s unplanned pregnancy, laying bare their unequal power relations when Jess embraces her inner Mommyboss.
Meet Hawai‘i’s Newest Literary and Film Star, Zoë Eisenberg
Zoë Eisenberg is winning praise for two works released early this year. In her debut novel, Significant Others, Hawai‘i Island writer Zoë Eisenberg explores the complexities of female friendship and how it shifts over time and circumstances. The book, published in early February by HarperCollins, has generated early buzz, with Kirkus Reviews describing it as an “accomplished first novel [that] artfully limns romantic crosscurrents in a thoroughly contemporary setting.” A month earlier, the 35-year-old made her solo directorial and screenwriting debut with the release of Chaperone, which won the Grand Jury Prize for Breakouts Feature at this year’s Slamdance Film Festival, known for launching breakthrough projects. The film tells the story of an unambitious 29-year-old connected to an 18-year-old who mistakes her for a high school student. Chaperone was shot in Hilo and features a predominantly Asian American and Pacific Islander cast.
Sunrise Interview on Hawaii News Now with Zoë, Mitzi Akaha, and Krista Alvarez of Chaperone.
Zoë Eisenberg, writer and director of ‘Chaperone,’ joins actors Mitzi Akaha and Krista Alvarez on Hawai‘i News Now Sunrise to discuss her directorial debut and its Hawai‘i International Film Festival premiere.
