• Book Talk: Kate Brown — Tiny Gardens Everywhere: The Past, Present, and Future of the Self-Provisioning City

    Politics and Prose 324 4th St NE, Washington, DC, United States

    From the eighteenth century to the twenty–first, the surprising history and inspiring contemporary panorama of urban gardening: nurturing health, hope, and community. This manifesto for the next food revolution by acclaimed environmental historian Kate Brown speaks to nature lovers, food activists, social–justice warriors, urban planners, WOOFers, and the climate–concerned. Ever since wage labor in cities […]

  • Book Talk: Rachel Taff — Paper Cut – with Brittany Kerfoot

    Politics and Prose 324 4th St NE, Washington, DC, United States

    A page-turning suspense debut about a woman infamous for escaping a cult as a teenager, whose future is threatened when dangerous secrets come back to haunt her—perfect for fans of Jessica Knoll and The Girls. Lucy Golden is a true-crime icon, infamous for the murder she committed while escaping a California cult twenty years ago. But […]

  • Book Talk: Laura Mauldin — In Sickness and in Health

    Politics and Prose 324 4th St NE, Washington, DC, United States

    An urgent and deeply affecting account of America's failure to provide meaningful support to its chronically ill and disabled citizens and our resulting reliance on the unpaid caregiving labor of spouses and intimate partners. When twenty-seven-year-old Laura Mauldin moved to New York for graduate school, she fell headlong into love. But just months into the […]

  • Book Talk: Bsrat Mezghebe — I Hope You Find What You’re Looking For

    Politics and Prose 324 4th St NE, Washington, DC, United States

    From Well–Read Black Girl Books, a "wise and witty, unflinchingly honest and insightful" (Maaza Mengiste) novel that delves into the secret lives of three women on the eve of Eritrean independence. The year is 1991. Eritrea is on the verge of liberation from Ethiopian rule and in Washington, D.C.’s tight-knit Eritrean community, change is in […]

  • Book Talk: Ana Patricia Rodríguez – Avocado Dreams

    Politics and Prose 324 4th St NE, Washington, DC, United States

    For more than four generations, Salvadorans have made themselves at home in the greater Washington, D.C. metropolitan area and have transformed the region, contributing their labor, ingenuity, and culture to the making of a thriving but highly neglected and overlooked community. In Avocado Dreams, Ana Patricia Rodríguez draws from her own positionality as a Salvadoran transplant to […]

  • Book Talk: Roddy Bottum — The Royal We

    Politics and Prose 324 4th St NE, Washington, DC, United States

    The Royal We is a poetic survey of a time set in a magical city that once was and is no more. It is a memoir written by Roddy Bottum, a musician and artist, that documents his coming of age and out of the closet in 1980s San Francisco, a charged era of bicycle messengers, punk […]

  • Book Talk: Let the People Hear It: One Hundred Years of Concerts at the Library of Congress

    Politics and Prose 324 4th St NE, Washington, DC, United States

    Since 1925, the Library of Congress has presented one of the most prestigious and innovative concert series in the United States. Philanthropist Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge founded the series with the purpose of sharing music of the highest caliber with the American people. Her vision was clear: concerts would be free and open to all, the […]

  • Book Talk: Daniyal Mueenuddin — This Is Where the Serpent Lives

    Politics and Prose 324 4th St NE, Washington, DC, United States

    A stunning new work from universally acclaimed Daniyal Mueenuddin, whose debut short story collection won the Story Prize and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Book Prize, the National Book Award, and the Pulitzer Prize. Moving from Pakistan’s dazzling chaotic cities to its lawless feudal countryside, This Is Where the Serpent Lives powerfully evokes contemporary feudal […]