Pulitzer Prize Finalist
An Evening with
Wed, Jan 29 | 7:30 PM | |
Campbell Hall |
General Public | $20 |
UCSB Student Free | $0 |
Includes facility fee
FREE copies of Orange’s new book, Wandering Stars, will be available while supplies last (pick up at event, one per household)
“Tommy Orange is building a body of literature that reshapes the Native American story in the United States. Book by book, he’s correcting the dearth of Indian stories even while depicting the tragic cost of that silence.” The Washington Post
Tommy Orange is the author of the bestselling There There, a thrilling multi-generational story about a side of America few of us have ever seen: the lives of urban Native Americans. Orange, a citizen of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma, was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for There There and is longlisted for the Booker Prize for his latest novel, Wandering Stars. He shows us violence and recovery, hope and loss, identity and power, dislocation and communion and the beauty and despair woven into the history of a nation and its people.
Wed, Jan 29 | 7:30 PM | |
Campbell Hall |
General Public | $20 |
UCSB Student Free | $0 |
Includes facility fee
Justice for All Lead Sponsors: Marcy Carsey, Connie Frank & Evan Thompson, Eva & Yoel Haller, Dick Wolf, and Zegar Family Foundation
Presented in association with the following UCSB partners: American Indian and Indigenous Collective; Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion; and American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program