

Bay Area Book Festival Podcast
Bay Area Book Festival
Between audio books? Curious about the writers themselves? Listen to full-length sessions from the Bay Area Book Festival, where readers and writers meet each year in Berkeley, CA, to engage with their favorite authors, including Pulitzer Prize winners, chefs, and activists, to discuss writing, race, love, mystery, and more.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 19, 2017 • 1h 7min
Activism at a Crossroads
Activism is undergoing a re-evaluation. Is protest still effective? What can work today? Micah White (co-creator of Occupy Wall Street and author of 'The End of Protest: A New Playbook for Revolution'), named by Esquire as one of the most influential young thinkers alive today, and Becky Bond (former senior advisor to Bernie Sanders' presidential campaign and co-author of 'Rules for Revolutionaries: How Big Organizing Can Change Everything') will offer guidance and action for a new era of social change and activism. If you've ever thought of joining a march or demonstration, White and Bond will make you smarter about it. Mother Jones' Monika Bauerlein moderates.

Oct 19, 2017 • 52min
Roxane Gay Takes the Stage
What makes a person "difficult"? Fiction writer, essayist, and activist Roxane Gay has been called "the brilliant girl-next-door: your best friend and your sharpest critic" by People magazine. She has authored the stunning novel 'An Untamed State,' the powerhouse essay collection 'Bad Feminist,' and now a new collection of stories, 'Difficult Women,' where she casts her incisive gaze at issues of race, class and gender. Famed for both fearlessness and vulnerability on the page, she tackles issues that lie at the heart of body, identity, relationship and society. In conversation with Rafia Zakaria of The New Republic.

Oct 19, 2017 • 1h 16min
Reality Bites
Being a teenager isn't easy. Everything is changing both physically and emotionally, and you're thrust into the most intense situations of your lives, facing heartbreak, anxiety, low self-esteem, peer pressure, and so much more. Reading stories about other teens in real-life situations can help you feel validated—and can often illuminate paths forward. Four authors who write for young adults, Kristin Elizabeth Clark ('Jess, Chunk, and the Road Trip to Infinity'), Kim Culbertson ('The Wonder of Us'), Sandhya Menon ('When Dimple Met Rishi') and Alexandra Sirowy ('The Creeping') share how they capture the unique interior worlds—the joys, the pitfalls, the intimate struggles—of young adults.

Oct 19, 2017 • 1h 13min
Race and Resistance
The Nation has been fighting for racial justice since abolitionists founded the magazine in 1865; its writers have included W.E.B. DuBois, Martin Luther King, Jr., James Baldwin, Toni Morrison and Alice Walker. Now join some of The Nation's finest current contributors for a fierce, free-ranging discussion of how to advance racial justice in today's America. Panelists include Alicia Garza, co-founder of Black Lives Matter; Walter Mosley, the essayist and novelist; Steve Phillips, author of 'Brown Is the New White'; Joan Walsh, The Nation's national political correspondent; and moderator Mark Hertsgaard, author and investigative editor for The Nation.


