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A Conversation with Author Jayne Allen

Join us for a conversation with author Jayne Allen in the SPXCE Lounge on April 14th at 12 PM. Jayne will speaking about her two books Black Girls Must Die Exhausted and Black Girls Must Be Magic. MIT student Mercy Oladipo will moderate a fireside chat and allow participants to join in.

Jayne Allen, in her life outside of writing, is a serial entrepreneur, Harvard-trained attorney, and engineer. She dabbles in stand up comedy, tries to learn one new thing a week, and relishes laughter and champagne bubbles with her girlfriends and family.

Originally from Detroit, when not writing her latest novel, newsletter or message to her readers, she’s spending time with her friends and family, keeping one ear open for her next saucy tale.

Jayne writes fiction out of life experiences, calling every character “fragments of reality strung together by imagination” and strives to tell stories that stick to your bones. Her series Black Girls Must Die Exhausted she calls “chocolate chick lit with a conscience,” touching upon contemporary women’s issues such as workplace womanhood, race, fertility, modern relationships and mental health awareness. Her writing echoes her desire to bring both multiculturalism and multidimensionality to contemporary women’s fiction with dynamic female protagonists who also happen to be black.

Jayne has authored four non-fiction books, in addition to books one and two in the Black Girls Must Die Exhausted trilogy. She is most active on Instagram at @JayneAllenWrites, where she hosts weekly live writers workshops (usually Sundays).

It is Jayne’s passion to help further the cause of increasing diversity in book publishing and to use her work to help people move past bias in the name of growth, connection, and innovation.

Jayne is also the founder of Book Genius, a full-service online book marketing and author branding course, forthcoming in early 2022.

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March 29

Picture a Scientist | Women Take the Reels Film Festival

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April 15

An Indigenous History of National Parks and Other Homelands