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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260428T180000
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DTSTAMP:20260701T021341
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UID:10000430-1777399200-1777402800@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:"Bramble"
DESCRIPTION:Acclaimed poet Susan Stewart discusses her new poetry collection with Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and poet Eliza Griswold.  Bramble is a meditation on difficulty and the powers of nature. \nIn the Biblical book of Judges\, the bramble is a figure of destructive leadership\, thwarting the lives of trees. In ballads and fairy tales\, roses grow “‘round the briar” in tragic contrast to heroines who are enveloped by the thorns. One of the oldest English words and an even older symbol\, “bramble” reminds us of the entangled and unending struggle that comes with living in time and searching beyond appearances. The rough thicket presents impediments\, yet it also bears fruit and delicate flowers. With Bramble\, Susan Stewart has composed a book of many forms\, including satires\, elegies\, meditations\, and songs. Bramble is also an exploration of the act of making such forms. The book’s three sections— \n“Mirror\,” “Briar\,” and “Channel”—link lyric time to our lives as they are situated in history and nature. Reflecting upon illness\, grief\, and change\, the poems follow the progress of day and night\, the movement of the seasons\, and the path of water from springs to the sea. \nSusan Stewart is a poet\, critic\, and translator. Her previous books of poetry include Columbarium\, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award\, and Cinder: New and Selected Poems. A MacArthur Fellow and a former Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets\, she is also a member of the American Philosophical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Her most recent prose books are Poetry’s Nature and The Ruins Lesson. \nEliza Griswold\, a poet\, a translator\, and a contributing writer covering religion\, politics\, and the environment\, has been writing for The New Yorker since 2003. Her books include Circle of Hope: A Reckoning with Love\, Power\, and Justice in an American Church and Amity and Prosperity: One Family and the Fracturing of America\, which won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize in general nonfiction. She is a Ferris Professor at Princeton University\, where she directs the Program in Journalism. \nThis event is co-sponsored by Chicago University Press\, Princeton University’s Department of English\, the Humanities Council\, the Program in Journalism\, the Lewis Center for the Arts\, and Labyrinth Books.  
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/bramble/
LOCATION:Labyrinth Books\, 122 Nassau Street\, Princeton\, NJ\, 08542\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260421T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260421T193000
DTSTAMP:20260701T021341
CREATED:20260326T124755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260326T124755Z
UID:10000427-1776794400-1776799800@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:On Journalism and Scholarship: Kevin Sack in Conversation with Avram Alpert about “Mother Emanuel”
DESCRIPTION:Sack will present his book Mother Emanuel: Two Centuries of Race\, Resistance\, and Forgiveness in One Charleston Church\, a sweeping history of one of the nation’s most important African American churches and a profound story of courage and grace amid the fight for racial justice. Sack and Alpert will then talk about the importance of scholarship for Sack’s public writing\, and what scholars and journalists can learn from each other in terms of presenting research to general readers. \nPart of the Writing Program’s Public Scholarship Initiative\, in collaboration with Labyrinth Books. Co-sponsored by the Program in Journalism. \n\nFrom Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Kevin Sack\, Mother Emanuel is a sweeping history of one of the nation’s most important African American churches and a profound story of courage and grace amid the fight for racial justice.\n\nFew people beyond South Carolina’s Lowcountry knew of Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston—Mother Emanuel—before the night of June 17\, 2015\, when a twenty-one-year-old white supremacist walked into Bible study and slaughtered the church’s charismatic pastor and eight other worshippers. Although the shooter had targeted Mother Emanuel—the first A.M.E. church in the South—to agitate racial strife\, he did not anticipate the aftermath: an outpouring of forgiveness from the victims’ families and a reckoning with the divisions of caste that have afflicted Charleston and the South since the earliest days of European settlement. \nMother Emanuel explores the fascinating history that brought the church to that moment and the depth of the desecration committed in its fellowship hall. It reveals how African Methodism was cultivated from the harshest American soil\, and how Black suffering shaped forgiveness into both a religious practice and a survival tool. Kevin Sack\, who has written about race in his native South for more than four decades\, uses the church to trace the long arc of Black life in the city where nearly half of enslaved Africans disembarked in North America and where the Civil War began. Through the microcosm of one congregation\, he explores the development of a unique practice of Christianity\, from its daring breakaway from white churches in 1817\, through the traumas of Civil War and Reconstruction\, to its critical role in the Civil Rights Movement and beyond. \nAt its core\, Mother Emanuel is an epic tale of perseverance\, not just of a congregation but of a people who withstood enslavement\, Jim Crow\, and all manner of violence with an unbending faith. \nKevin Sack is a veteran journalist who has written about national affairs for more than four decades and has been part of three Pulitzer Prize–winning teams. A native of Jacksonville\, Florida\, and a graduate of Duke University\, he spent thirty years on the staff of The New York Times\, where he specialized in writing long-form narrative and investigative reports\, often related to race. He has also written for the Los Angeles Times and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution\, and his work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine. He was previously an Emerson Collective Fellow at New America and teaches journalism at Princeton University. \nAvram Alpert is a generalist in the humanities. He works to understand what values we should live by in our connected\, chaotic\, and potentially catastrophic times. His writing has appeared in Aeon\, The New York Times\, The Washington Post\, and elsewhere. His most recent book is The Good-Enough Life.
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/on-journalism-and-scholarship-kevin-sack-in-conversation-with-avram-alpert-about-mother-emanuel/
LOCATION:Labyrinth Books\, 122 Nassau Street\, Princeton\, NJ\, 08542\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260304T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260304T193000
DTSTAMP:20260701T021341
CREATED:20260128T001828Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260128T020921Z
UID:10000421-1772647200-1772652600@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Book Talk: “When All the Men Wore Hats: Susan Cheever on the Stories of John Cheever”
DESCRIPTION:When All the Men Wore Hats is a sympathetic and illuminating account of the stories of John Cheever\, and the intersecting life and work of the legendary writer John Cheever\, as told by his eldest daughter.\n\nThe Stories of John Cheever\, published in 1978\, brought together some of the finest short fiction ever written. The collection was honored with the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award\, and it would go on to sell millions of copies and to define the American short story and shape generations of writers. Cheever’s chronicles of modern life both emerged from a distinctly American culture and also created it—inspiring everything from Mad Men to a Raymond Carver story\, from rock songs to a Seinfeld episode. \nGrowing up\, Susan Cheever\, John Cheever’s eldest child and only daughter\, read what he read\, heard what he heard\, bantered and gossiped with him and her brothers and mother at the dinner table\, and later watched her father type on the cheap yellow paper he favored. A daughter much like Susan appears in many of Cheever’s stories and a family much like theirs is at the center of his writing. \nIn When All the Men Wore Hats\, Susan Cheever looks back on her father’s work and seeks to understand the connections between art and life. How did a bit of local gossip\, a slice of Greek myth\, and a new translation of Madame Bovary somehow become a brilliant gem like “The Country Husband” or “The Swimmer”? In her 1984 book Home Before Dark\, published two years after her father’s death\, Cheever wrote movingly about her father and the secrets he kept\, but here\, years later\, she tells the story of the remarkable stories themselves\, six of which appear in full in the book’s appendix. \nSusan Cheever is the author of many books on American history\, the most recent of which is Drinking in America: Our Secret History\, published in 2015. She is also the author of numerous novels; My Name Is Bill: Bill Wilson—His Life and the Creation of Alcoholics Anonymous\, a biography of the Alcoholics Anonymous cofounder Bill Wilson; and Home Before Dark\, a memoir about her father\, John Cheever. She has taught at Bennington College and currently teaches at the New School in the MFA program. \nEliza Griswold\, a poet\, a translator\, and a contributing writer covering religion\, politics\, and the environment\, has been writing for The New Yorker since 2003. Her books include Circle of Hope: A Reckoning with Love\, Power\, and Justice in an American Church and Amity and Prosperity: One Family and the Fracturing of America\, which won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize in general nonfiction. She is a Ferris Professor at Princeton University\, where she directs the Program in Journalism. \nThis event is co-sponsored by Princeton University’s Program in Journalism and Labyrinth Books.
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/book-talk-when-all-the-men-wore-hats-susan-cheever-on-the-stories-of-john-cheever/
LOCATION:Labyrinth Books\, 122 Nassau Street\, Princeton\, NJ\, 08542\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250304T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250304T193000
DTSTAMP:20260701T021341
CREATED:20250215T222521Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250215T222521Z
UID:10000394-1741111200-1741116600@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Novel Ecologies: Nature Remade and the Illusions of Tech
DESCRIPTION:Tracing the convergence of ecology and engineering over the last three decades\, this book pinpoints a new environmental paradigm that the author calls Nature Remade. \nAllison Carruth’s Novel Ecologies shows how the tech industry has taken up the wilderness mythologies that shaped one strain of American environmentalism over the last century. Calling this twenty-first-century environmental imagination Nature Remade\, Carruth describes a distinctly West Coast framework that is at once nostalgic and futuristic. Through three case studies (synthetic wildlife\, the digital cloud\, and space colonization)\, the book shows Nature Remade to be a quasi-religious belief in venture capitalism and big tech. This paradigm thus imagines a future in which species\, ecosystems\, and entire planets are re-generated and re-created through engineering. \nNovel Ecologies challenges the conviction that climate change and other environmental crises must be met with ever larger-scale forms of technological intervention. Against the new worlds conjured by Google\, Meta\, Open AI\, Amazon\, SpaceX\, and a host of lesser-known start-ups\, Carruth marshals writers and artists who imagine provisionally hopeful environmental futures while refusing to forget the histories that have made the world what it is. On this track of the book\, Carruth discusses the works of Octavia Butler\, Jennifer Egan\, Ruth Ozeki\, Tracy K. Smith\, Jeff VanderMeer\, and and many more. Their novels\, poems\, installation artworks\, and expressive media offer a speculative world built on livable communities rather than engineered lifeforms. \nAllison Carruth is professor in the Effron Center for the Study of America and High Meadows Environmental Institute at Princeton University. She is the cofounder and faculty director of Blue Lab\, an environmental media\, art\, and research group at Princeton. Since 2017\, she has produced original environmental documentaries and multimedia story series in collaboration with filmmakers\, journalists\, artists and others. She is the author of Global Appetites: American Power and the Literature of Food and coauthor with Amy L. Tigner of Literature and Food Studies. Eliza Griswold is the author of six books of poetry and nonfiction\, most recently Circle of Hope: A Reckoning with Love\, Power\, and Justice in an American Church.  Her book Amity and Prosperity: One Family and the Fracturing of America was awarded the 2019 Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction. She writes for The New Yorker\, and is the Ferris Professor and Director of the Program in Journalism at Princeton University.
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/novel-ecologies-nature-remade-and-the-illusions-of-tech/
LOCATION:Labyrinth Books\, 122 Nassau Street\, Princeton\, NJ\, 08542\, United States
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250219T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250219T193000
DTSTAMP:20260701T021341
CREATED:20250114T163104Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250115T235217Z
UID:10000393-1739988000-1739993400@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Great Expectations: A Novel
DESCRIPTION:Vinson Cunningham in Conversation with A.M. Homes \nA historic presidential campaign changes the trajectory of a young Black man’s life in this “coming of age story that captures the soul of America” (The Washington Post)\, the debut novel from The New Yorker staff writer and Pulitzer Prize finalist Vinson Cunningham. \nA BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: The New York Times Book Review\, The Washington Post\, NPR\, Los Angeles Times\, The Boston Globe\, Town & Country\, Publishers Weekly\, Kirkus Reviews\, Electric Lit\, Current\, WBEZ \nWhen David first hears the Senator from Illinois speak\, he feels deep ambivalence. Intrigued by the Senator’s idealistic rhetoric\, David also wonders how he’ll balance the fervent belief and inevitable compromises it will take to become the United States’ first Black president. \nGreat Expectations is about David’s eighteen months working for the Senator’s presidential campaign. Along the way David meets a myriad of people who raise a set of questions—questions of history\, art\, race\, religion\, and fatherhood—that force David to look at his own life anew and come to terms with his identity as a young Black man and father in America. \nMeditating on politics and politicians\, religion and preachers\, fathers and family\, Great Expectations is both an emotionally resonant coming-of-age story and a rich novel of ideas\, marking the arrival of a major new writer. \nVinson Cunningham is a staff writer and critic at The New Yorker and a Pulitzer Prize Finalist. He co-hosts the podcast “Critics at Large” and his writing has appeared in The New York Times Magazine\, The New York Times Book Review\, The Fader\, Vulture\, The Awl\, and McSweeney’s. A former staffer on Barack Obama’s first presidential campaign and in his White House\, Cunningham has taught at Sarah Lawrence College\, the Yale School of Art\, and Columbia University’s School of the Arts.  A.M. Homes’ most recent book is The Unfolding. Her many previous works include This Book Will Save Your Life\, winner of the 2013 Orange/Women’s Prize for Fiction\, the short-story collection Days of Awe\, and the bestselling memoir\, The Mistress’s Daughter.  She is a Professor in the Lewis Center for the Arts’ Program in Creative Writing. \nThis event is cosponsored by the Program in Journalism\, the Humanities Council\, and Labyrinth Books.
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/great-expectations-a-novel/
LOCATION:Labyrinth Books\, 122 Nassau Street\, Princeton\, NJ\, 08542\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://journalism.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2025/01/Great-Expectations-Book-Talk.jpg
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240919T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240919T193000
DTSTAMP:20260701T021341
CREATED:20240919T170659Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240919T170659Z
UID:10000386-1726768800-1726774200@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:LLL Presents – Circle of Hope: A Reckoning with Love\, Power\, and Justice in an American Church
DESCRIPTION:Labyrinth Books and the Princeton Public Library present this conversation with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Eliza Griswold (Journalism) and Judith Weisenfeld (Religion). They will discuss Griswold’s new book\, “Circle of Hope\,” which was recently longlisted for the National Book Award for Nonfiction. \nThis event is co-sponsored by the Humanities Council\, SPIA in NJ\, the Department of English\, the Department of African American Studies\, and the Department of Religion.
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/lll-presents-circle-of-hope-a-reckoning-with-love-power-and-justice-in-an-american-church/
LOCATION:Labyrinth Books\, 122 Nassau Street\, Princeton\, NJ\, 08542\, United States
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191210T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191210T180000
DTSTAMP:20260701T021341
CREATED:20191014T182849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191209T161138Z
UID:10000232-1576000800-1576000800@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Book Talk: The Seine: The River That Made Paris
DESCRIPTION:Elaine Sciolino came to Paris as a young foreign correspondent for Newsweek Magazine and fell in love with both the city — and the Seine. In her revelatory\, brilliantly researched new book she shows us just how indelible the river is not only to Paris and to the French but also to the world at large\, its rich history\, resources\, romance\, and natural beauty. \nAt Labyrinth Books\, Sciolino will be joined by Professor David A. Bell\, a historian of early modern France\, to take the audience on an intimate tour of the Seine. \nThis event is cosponsored by the Program in Journalism.
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/book-talk-the-seine-the-river-that-made-paris/
LOCATION:Labyrinth Books\, 122 Nassau Street\, Princeton\, NJ\, 08542\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://journalism.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2019/11/The-Seine.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191022T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191022T193000
DTSTAMP:20260701T021341
CREATED:20191001T193224Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191008T161124Z
UID:10000230-1571767200-1571772600@journalism.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Greek to Me: Adventures of the Comma Queen
DESCRIPTION:The Comma Queen returns to Labyrinth with a buoyant book about language\, love\, and the wine-dark sea. In her New York Times bestseller Between You & Me\, Mary Norris delighted readers with her irreverent tales of pencils and punctuation in The New Yorker’s celebrated copy department. In Greek to Me\, she delivers another wise and funny paean to the art of self-expression\, this time filtered through her greatest passion: all things Greek.
URL:https://journalism.princeton.edu/event/greek-to-me-adventures-of-the-comma-queen/
LOCATION:Labyrinth Books\, 122 Nassau Street\, Princeton\, NJ\, 08542\, United States
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ORGANIZER;CN="Dorothea von Moltke":MAILTO:dorothea@labyrinthbooks.com
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