Tuesday, September 16, 2025 at 7:00 PM
Skylight Books, Los Angeles
 CLICK HERE TO RSVP _**RSVP is recommended but not required. Entry and seating are first-come, first-served. RSVPs do not guarantee entry to a full event.**_ **“Heart-pounding, illuminating, and ominously timeless” (Gina Frangello), this honest and poignant memoir reflects on a woman’s escape from a violent marriage and what it cost to protect her and her family’s safety.** “Once upon a time, I disappeared.” So begins Karen Palmer’s harrowing and redemptive memoir, _She’s Under Here._ In 1989, shortly after her second marriage, Palmer and her new husband quit their jobs without notice. They pulled her two young daughters out of school and buckled them into the rear seat of a used car purchased with cash. The trunk was packed with clothing and toys, pillows and blankets, four place settings, one pot, one pan, and a sack that contained every penny they had. Living with the fear of Palmer’s dangerous ex-husband had become untenable: This was DIY witness protection. In this searingly honest and heartwrenching account, Palmer examines why she ended up trapped, how she escaped, and the ongoing perils of life constructed around a false identity. She ruthlessly explores the lines between desire and fear, victim and perpetrator, captivity and freedom, and exposes myriad aspects of what it means to make difficult choices as a woman, when none of the options are good. _She’s Under Here_ is a haunting meditation on themes of disappearance, betrayal, and private violence, and it is utterly unforgettable. **Karen Palmer** is a Pushcart Prize winner and has received grants from the NEA and Colorado Council on the Arts. _She's Under Here_ grew out of her award-winning essay “The Reader Is the Protagonist,” first published in _Virginia Quarterly Review_ and selected by Leslie Jamison for inclusion in _Best American Essays 2017_. More recently her short story “Birds of Paradise” won the 2022 Emily Clark Balch Prize for Fiction. Her writing has appeared in _The Rumpus,_ _The Kenyon Review_, _Arts & Letters_, and _Kalliope_, among others. She lives in Los Angeles. **Matthew Specktor** is the author of the memoirs The Golden Hour and Always Crashing in the Same Car, and of the novel American Dream Machine. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, GQ, The Paris Review, and numerous other periodicals and anthologies. He is a founding editor of the Los Angeles Review of Books