After moving to an all-virtual format last year, the Virginia Festival of the Book, a signature program of Virginia Humanities and the Virginia Center for the Book, returns this year to celebrate books, reading, literacy and literary culture with a five-day program of both in-person and virtual events beginning Wednesday.
As in previous years, University of Virginia faculty, staff and alumni are featured prominently in the festival’s program as both authors and moderators. A chronological list of most of the participants, especially from the College of Arts & Sciences, is included below.
All events are open to the public and free of charge. To learn more about festival programming, visit vabook.org. Registration for virtual events is on the specific web pages. For in-person events, some venues have limited capacities. Early arrival is encouraged, and some venues have specific requirements due to the pandemic.
Wednesday
- The Inner Work of Racial Justice: A Conversation With Rhonda V. Magee (2-3 p.m., virtual)
Rhonda V. Magee, author of “The Inner Work of Racial Justice: Healing Ourselves and Transforming Our Communities Through Mindfulness,” discusses her work exploring the intersections of anti-racist education, social justice and contemplative practices. Now on the law faculty at the University of San Francisco, Magee earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in sociology from the University, as well as her law degree.
- Voices of the Civil War Era (2-3 p.m., UVA Bookstore)
Historians Caroline Janney, UVA’s John L. Nau III Professor in the History of American Civil War and author of “Ends of War”; Andrew Lang, author of “A Contest of Civilizations”; and Jonathan White, author of “To Address You as My Friend,” discuss their work with moderator Brian C. Neumann, managing director and digital historian of UVA’s John L. Nau III Center for Civil War History who earned his history Ph.D. in 2020 at UVA. Janney directs the Nau Center. The panelists share their research and writing about the experiences, foundational ideas and letters of the Civil War era.
- Lives of the Unfree: Activism and Survival (4-5 p.m., UVA Bookstore)
Justene Hill Edwards, assistant professor of history and author of “Unfree Markets: The Slaves Economy and the Rise of Capitalism in South Carolina,” and Vanessa M. Holden, author of “Surviving Southampton: African American Women and Resistance in Nat Turner’s Community,” share their new histories offering a fuller picture of the interactions and social relationships of enslaved people as they sought opportunities to survive. Laurent Dubois, director for academic affairs at the Democracy Initiative at UVA, joins them in conversation.
- Rooted in the Personal: Poetry by Forrest Gander and Lisa Russ Spaar (7-8 p.m., Central Jefferson Madison Regional Library)
Poets Forrest Gander, author of “Twice Alive,” and Lisa Russ Spaar, professor of English in UVA’s Creative Writing Program, whose latest book is “Madrigalia: New & Selected Poems,” read from their most recent collections, explorations of both personal and environmental connections. Gander, who grew up in Virginia, won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for his book “Be With.” Spaar is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and Rona Jaffe Award, among numerous other honors.
Thursday
- The Critical Role of Local Journalism (10-11 a.m., virtual)
Authors and media specialists Christopher Ali, associate professor of media studies and author of “Farm Fresh Broadband,” and Jennifer Lawless, author of “News Hole” and the Leone Reeves and George Spicer Professor of Politics at UVA, where she serves as department chair, discuss the many challenges to open access to local news, including struggling newspapers, limited coverage of local government and a widening divide between rural and urban broadband access.
- ‘The Wrong End of the Telescope’ with Rabih Alameddine (Noon-1 p.m., UVA Bookstore)
In conversation with Allison Wright, executive editor and publisher of the Virginia Quarterly Review, who also teaches journalism at UVA, Rabih Alameddine, Kapnick Distinguished Writer-in-Residence in the Creative Writing Program and author of “The Wrong End of the Telescope,” discusses his latest novel about an Arab American trans woman’s journey among Syrian refugees on Lesbos island.
- The Emotional Pull of Home (2-3 p.m., Central Jefferson Madison Regional Library)
Authors Joanna Eleftheriou, author of “This Way Back”; Henry Hoke, author of “Sticker”; and Jennifer Niesslein, who graduated from UVA in 1994 and most recently published “Dreadful Sorry: Essays on an American Nostalgia,” share their place-centered essays and memoirs, addressing questions of class, history, family, gender and home.
Niesslein, founder and editor of Full Grown People (The Other Awkward Age), a web magazine of essays, also co-founded the magazine, Brain, Child, that catered to the intellectual life of mothers. She and alumna Stephanie Wilkinson co-edited the journal for 13 years.
- Eyewitness to the Past (2-3 p.m., Jefferson School African American Heritage Center)
Leah Esslinger, who has a master’s degree in anthropological linguistics from UVA, moderates this panel of writers. Anneliese Bruner, great-granddaughter to the author of “The Nation Must Awake”; Gayle Jessup White, whose book “Reclamation” explores her family ties to Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings; and Steve Majors, who wrote “High Yella,” share their histories and life stories, offering a close look at Black families and their legacies as seen through multiple lenses over time.

