In January, the owners of Broadway Books in Northeast Portland were contacted by the Crown Publishing Group. One of its authors was touring to promote her memoir; could she discuss it with a local book club at the store?

Kim Bissell and Sally McPherson couldn’t say no to Michelle Obama.

“The hardest part was keeping it a secret,” Bissell said Tuesday afternoon as she awaited Obama’s arrival, just hours before the former first lady was to speak at the Moda Center as part of her “Becoming” tour. Her sold-out appearance was rescheduled from Feb. 9 because of a winter storm warning.

McPherson said Broadway Books was asked to find an established book club to meet Obama. McPherson reached out to a woman she knew who was in a book club that she felt “would represent us well”: Its members were young women with diverse backgrounds. For their January title, they’d chosen “Becoming,” published in 2018.

Today @MichelleObama is meeting with 14 members of a Portland book club at @bookbroads before her Moda Center appearance as part of her BECOMING book tour. The club, launched in 2015, read the book in January. pic.twitter.com/pAQ0tn30AO — Amy Wang (@ORAmyW) March 19, 2019

Tuesday, 14 of them – white, black, Asian and Latina – sat in a circle inside Broadway Books, which had closed for the day. Some were native Oregonians; others, immigrants. They shared which parts of Obama’s memoir had resonated most with them: Her path through several careers, from law to municipal government to the nonprofit sector. Her fleshing out of her identity. Her relationship with the parents who sacrificed much for her and her older brother, Craig Robinson, onetime head men’s basketball coach at Oregon State University. Her work to invest in her community. Her stories of motherhood.

One woman spoke through tears as she talked about what she saw as the book’s foundational theme: family. Obama replied as if she were speaking to a friend: “You’re getting me, girl.” She said a few moments later that she has often used the story of her family, recounted in the initial chapters of her book, to explain her career changes and to connect with people on the campaign trail.

Obama added that she felt it was important to tell her story as a woman, particularly a woman of color.

“How rare it is that the woman’s story is told, let alone by her,” she said. “I wanted to tell it all. … I knew it was going to resonate.”

Obama will appear onstage Tuesday night at the Moda Center in conversation with Sam Kass, who served as executive director for her Let’s Move! Campaign as first lady. He was also President Barack Obama’s senior policy adviser for nutrition policy and as White House chef was instrumental in creating the White House kitchen garden.

Released in November, Obama’s memoir “Becoming” was one of the top books of 2018. Her candor about everything from her upbringing in Chicago, her marriage, to her time in the White House and even her struggles with infertility kept the title at the top Amazon’s best sellers through mid-February.

Meanwhile in Portland, Michelle Obama fans could hardly contain their excitement.

This is gonna be me all day waiting to see @MichelleObama tonight. Its gonna be a rough day for my coworkers! #becoming #PortlandOR pic.twitter.com/ZTZ5JXr2J7 — Emily Lang (@emslang382) March 19, 2019

Check OregonLive.com tonight for full coverage of Obama’s appearances in Portland.

Previous coverage:

-- Amy Wang