arts & life b ooks F From Hardball To Mushball Lesley Stahl talks falling in love with her grandchildren in a new book and Metro Detroit appearance. Suzanne Chessler | Contributing Writer details Lesley Stahl will introduce Becoming Grandma at a luncheon program that starts at 11 a.m. Monday, May 16, at Burton Manor Conference and Banquet Center in Livonia. $40. (586) 685-5750; bookandauthor. info. She will also be featured dur- ing An Evening with Lesley Stahl at 7 p.m. Monday, May 16, at the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor. No charge. (734) 668-8397; michtheater.org. or Lesley Stahl, the very begin- ning of emotions associated with grandparenting were born in Detroit — she was in the Motor City when she saw the first sonogram of her oldest granddaughter. Those emotions became the inspi- ration for her new book, Becoming Grandma: The Joys and Science of the New Grandparenting (Blue Rider Press), which shows a softer side of the 25-year veteran correspondent for 60 Minutes. “My daughter [Taylor Latham] is a Hollywood producer, and she made her first movie, LOL, in Detroit,” explains Stahl in a phone conversation held as she walked along a New York City street. “Taylor is our only child, and she was pregnant at the time. My husband [author/screenwriter Aaron Latham] and I spent our summer vacation in Detroit so we could be with her. [Coincidentally], the movie was about a mother-daughter relationship. Miley Cyrus was in it with Demi Moore and Marlo Thomas.” Stahl, who also has been to Michigan reporting on the auto indus- try and speaking before University of Michigan journalism students at the encouragement of late colleague and university alum Mike Wallace, is returning to speak about the book and sign copies. She will be one of four authors addressing the luncheon program hosted May 16 by the Metro Detroit Book and Author Society. That night, she will speak during An Evening with Lesley Stahl at the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor. “This turned out to be the very book I wanted to write,” says Stahl, 74, whose earlier book was Reporting Live. “I wanted it to be part memoir and part 60 Minutes investigation. “I tell about my own experiences as a grandmother of young children, and I tell about interviews with grandmothers and grandfathers hav- ing grandchildren of various ages. I also tell about interviews with various kinds of grandparents — step and surrogate. “Then I go off and try to figure out why 99 percent of us fall madly in love with our grandchildren, turn into little mushballs with them and become pushovers for them.” Figuring that out involved talking with experts in anthropology, physiol- ogy and psychology — all explained in depth. While she explores relation- ship problems faced by some grand- parents, such as being denied access to children, she does not delve into issues faced by grandparents of dis- abled children. “People want to tell me their own stories, and that’s fun for me,” says Stahl, who often hears anecdotes when signing copies of her book. “I’m a good target because I’m interested. “Just the other day, somebody told me that a little boy was asked what he thought a grandparent was, and he said, ‘It’s someone who has time to pay attention to us.’” That reflected her experiences, both as a working parent juggling commit- ments and a grandparent able to be more focused. “As a grandparent, I am in the moment with my granddaughters,” she says of Jordan, 5, and Chloe, 2½. “There is nothing else. I walk into a room, and I don’t know who else is in the room. If they want to do some- thing, my mind is on whatever it is — coloring or having a tea party.” Stahl’s book also recalls her Jewish paternal grandfather, who grew up in Poland and came to America long before the Nazis took control. She tells of traveling to the area of his youth to see the remnants of the places he knew, such as the synagogue where he had his bar mitzvah. “My grandfather had been the most wonderful person in my life,” she says. “He showed me unconditional love, and I would want him to know how important he was to me and how his line went on.” Stahl, whose book includes Yiddish phrases such as tsuris and tchotchkes, is bothered by not introducing her granddaughters to Judaism. For now, she leaves religious experiences to her daughter, who is half Jewish, and her son-in-law, who is not Jewish. Before submitting the book to her publisher, Stahl sought family approval and made changes — tying segments together at the suggestion of her husband and presenting ideas for a younger generation at the suggestion of her daughter. “It became a book for young moth- ers and fathers as much as for grand- parents,” says Stahl, who maintained a conversational style of writing in keeping with her television presenta- tions. Stahl, who has worked as the CBS News White House correspondent and hosted Face the Nation from 1983-1991, is regularly viewed on television by her granddaughters, who don’t consider her special or different because of that — with one exception. “The other day, my 5-year-old asked if it was true that I know Taylor Swift,” she says. “Because I had done a story on Taylor, I am now a hero. She’s in preschool and told her friends, ‘My Lolly [the family name for grand- mother] knows Taylor Swift!’” * May 12 • 2016 35