Sonia Sotomayor BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor has been on a whirlwind book tour for her childrens title Just Shine and its Spanish counterpart Solo Brilla, packing venues from California to Texas with fans hungry for her wisdom and hugs. Kicking off early this month, she headlined at Occidental College in Los Angeles on February 6, chatting with California Chief Justice Patricia Guerrero and Ninth Circuit Chief Judge Mary Murguia, then spoke to students at Pasadena High School that same day, per Fix the Court updates. The next day, February 9, she snagged a lifetime achievement award at the Japanese American Bar Association dinner in LA, a nod to her trailblazing path as the first Latina on the high court.
Her Texas swing turned electric. On February 10, she teamed up with childrens author Carmen Tafolla at San Antonios Carver Community Cultural Center, filling the theater with kids who grilled her on handling big feelings. I try to show it but not at other people, she told one young fan named Oliver, drawing laughs and applause, as detailed by the San Antonio Report. That crowd, organized by local bookstore Nowhere and the San Antonio Book Festival, ate up her tales of Bronx roots and pushing publishers for simultaneous English-Spanish releases to reach Spanish-first kids like she was. Her books, including memoirs, have netted her nearly four million dollars, the New York Times notes, fueling whispers of justices lucrative side gigs.
February 11 brought Austin, where BookPeople hosted her at First Baptist Church to tout Just Shine, tickets flying via Eventbrite. She capped the week with a February 13 appearance at the Teatro de la Universidad de Puerto Rico in San Juan, her island roots calling her home, according to announcements tracked by Fix the Court. Back in LA on the sixth, she lit up UCLA Law, urging students to ditch bystander status for voting drives and public interest fights. One thing you cant do is give up, she insisted to a rapt crowd moderated by California Unity Bar president Kevin Johnson, with Dean Michael Waterstone calling it an amazing opportunity per UCLA Newsroom. No fresh social buzz or business scoops beyond the tour, though an NPR segment this week replayed her fiery Trump immunity dissent, keeping her dissents in the spotlight. Sotomayors hugging kids for fuel amid tough rulings, darling, thats the bio gold with lasting shine.
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