Climate
Landscape as Dreamscape: Environmental Memoirs
Sunday, May 31 | 1:30pm-2:30pm
Jeremy Collins, Grant Faulkner, and Caroline Tracey, moderated by Rue Mapp
From sequoias to salt lakes, deserts to deep connections, the natural world serves as inspiration for the writers of this panel, who place nature’s breathtaking landscapes not as a backdrop to, but at the center of their stories. In his 2025 Banff Mountain Book Competition Finalist graphic memoir, Eventually a Sequoia: Stories of Art, Adventure & the Wisdom of Giants, Jeremy Collins documents the people living in the endangered corners of the world whose small seeds produce enormous results. Switching the lens to the American West, flash-fiction master Grant Faulkner’s Something Out There in the Distance features edge-of-the-world images by punk photographer Gail Butensky alongside stories about two lovers taking a reckless, searching road trip in the achingly familiar desert landscape. Hidden in remote desert valleys are the uncanny, shimmering ecosystems of salt lakes, whose rapid decline is a harbinger of rising sea levels, life-threatening dust storms, and environmental collapse. Caroline Tracey parallels this environmental journey to her personal story of finding queer love and building a home amidst ecological crises in her book Salt Lakes: An Unnatural History, which blends travel writing, memoir, and reportage in an inspiring call to fight for all that is fragile in our lives. Moderated by Rue Mapp, Founder and CEO of Outdoor Afro, the nation’s foremost non-profit organization inspiring Black leadership and connections in nature, this panel will provide a glimpse into the wondrous and nurturing beauty of our natural world worth protecting.
Post-Disaster Futures: Sci-Fi Visions of Survival and Renewal
Sunday, May 31 | 4:00pm-5:00pm
Susanna Kwan, T. K. Rex, and Chuck Tingle, moderated by Lara Messersmith-Glavin
When the world ends but life persists, what remnants of humanity, hope, and connection remain? In this futuristic sci-fi conversation, authors T. K. Rex, Chuck Tingle, and Susanna Kwan imagine the strange new worlds that follow catastrophe, confronting ecological collapse, improbable survival, and the fragile bonds that hold us together. T. K. Rex’s The Wildcraft Drones charts a near-future shaped by the intertwined evolution of machines, ecosystems, and the people who depend on both. Through stories of AIs, dolphins, and rebel biologists amid environmental decay, Rex explores what intelligence means when nature itself is learning to adapt. Chuck Tingle’s Lucky Day shifts the lens to probability run amok, where a world altered by freak chance teeters between chaos and fate. His signature blend of absurdity and heart becomes a meditation on what it means to rebuild meaning and love in the aftermath of statistical disaster. In Awake in the Floating City, Susanna Kwan renders a tender apocalypse in the drowned remains of a futuristic San Francisco, where an artist and an aging woman forge a powerful connection against the inevitable tide. Moderated by Lara Messersmith-Glavin, author of Ruiner and Spirit Things, this panel dives into the new mythologies born after disaster, where the ruins of the past give rise to glittering, uncanny futures.
Hope is a Time Traveler: Globalist Pasts & Potentials
Saturday, May 30 | 7:30pm-9:00pm
Rebecca Solnit and Saul Williams, moderated by Christie George (illustrator Morgan Sörne joining for signing)
In the midst of white nationalism, global capitalism, and authoritarian regimes that drive individualism and isolation, a look to our past and envisioned futures reveals the prevailing strength of creativity and rebellion across time. By surveying a world that has changed dramatically since 1960 in her book The Beginning Comes After the End: Notes on a World of Change, historian and activist Rebecca Solnit unveils the sheer breadth and scale of social, political, scientific, and cultural changes that have shaped a more interconnected, relational world which embraces antiracism, feminism, a more expansive understanding of gender, environmental thinking, scientific breakthroughs, and Indigenous and non-Western ideas. Because transformation is obscured within a longer arc of history, its scale is seldom recognized, but change is inevitable, brought about by dismantling an old civilization and building a new one, whose newness is often the return of the old ways and wisdoms. Poet, performer, and director Saul Williams charts his own creative visions for change in Martyr Loser King, his graphic novel about a global cyberattack rebellion in a small East African country where the Black population and the land are exploited for the mining of the precious ore coltan. Simultaneously a cautionary tale and hopeful vision for the future, this cyberpunk fable raises incisive questions about capitalism, colonialism, and the future of technology. Moderated by writer, producer, and activist Christie George, who is working at the intersection of media, technology, and social change, this headlining conversation features the creative minds who are mapping and shaping the trajectory of our futures despite the forces seeking to turn back the clock on history.
Illustrator Morgan Sörne will join for book signing after this headliner conversation.
Introductory live music performance by Bushwick Book Club Oakland