So grateful to Luddington Library for allowing me the opportunity to text run my new book lecture in front of a live audience.








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The dedication at the end of the first episode of season 2 made me cry: “For Nichelle, who was first through the door and showed us the stars. Hailing frequencies forever open…”
I had a lot of fun writing and reading these five key insights from my Everyday Utopia for the Next Big Idea Book Club. You can read and listen to them here.
So, low-key, kinda like a dream come true to have this conversation about Everyday Utopia with the amazing Ezra Klein. You can read the full transcript here.
Watch my book event at Politics and Prose with the wonderful Isa Salazar and Juliet Alekseyeva.
So grateful to a colleague for forwarding me these images.
God, I love that orange cover!
Kristen Ghodsee speaks with Arwa Mahdawi about Everyday Utopia at the Philadelphia Free Library on May 18, 2023
So, wow, I just love it that the Pope weighed in on climate change, and I can understand now why so many American bishops hate his guts. The latter chapters in this Encyclical Letter are a scathing critique of capitalism and consumerism. Some of this stuff was so on point. I will never agree with the Catholic Church on everything, but I think this little letter is a masterpiece. Getting conservative Catholics to recognized that the climate crisis is real and human caused is no small feat. I only regret that I had not read it sooner.
I was absolutely delighted to be a repeat guest on Neil Denny’s excellent podcast, Little Atoms, to discuss Everyday Utopia. Neil always asks the smartest questions!
This was such a great conversation with the brilliant Arwa Mahdawi! I was very nervous at first, but then her thoughtful questions really put me at ease.
Okay so this is technically cheating because this is a short essay rather than an actual book. But Patchett and her publisher cheated by publishing this as a book in the first place. It’s a graduation day speech, and it’s not a bad one, but it should not really be a book. I guess it is something to buy for your college grad when you can’t think of anything else.
A thoughtful look on how feminine characteristics (or those characteristics that girls are socialized into cultivating more than boys) makes for effective leadership.