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Event Series Event Series: Oculus Series

Jesmyn Ward with Ijeoma Oluo

Let Us Descend

This event has already occurred
Date:
Friday, September 6
Time:
7:30 pm PDT
Series:
Cost:
$25 - $50 Sliding Scale + optional book add-on
Learn more about Sliding Scale tickets.

Venue

The Great Hall
1119 Eighth Avenue (enter on Eighth Avenue)
Seattle, 98101 United States
+ Google Map

Note: A livesteam of this event is also available

Town Hall events are approximately 75 minutes long.

Book cover of 'Let Us Descend' by Jesmyn Ward featuring a colorful bee with a landscape illustration on its body. The cover includes endorsements from The Washington Post and Oprah's Book Club 2023.
Buy the Book

Let Us Descend: A Novel

The Elliott Bay Book Company

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This event is part of the Oculus Series, connecting audiences to the most impactful writing and ideas of our time.

View this season’s Oculus Series events below.

Headshots of Jesmyn Ward (with long curly hair and light/medium skin) and Ijeoma Oluo (with short curly hair, brown skin, and black earrings)
Arts & Culture

Jesmyn Ward, the two-time National Book Award winner, has returned with a new novel about an enslaved girl in the years before the Civil War. Let Us Descend, an Oprah’s Book Club pick, describes a journey from the rice fields of the Carolinas to the slave markets of New Orleans and into the heart of a Louisiana sugar plantation.

Read More

In Let Us Descend (the title inspired by a line in Dante’s Inferno) the protagonist Annis is sold by her father, a white slaveowner. In the face of unspeakable circumstances on her way south, Annis seeks comfort from memories of her mother and stories of her African warrior grandmother. She soon opens herself to a world beyond this world, one teeming with spirits: of earth and water, of myth and history; spirits who nurture and give, and those who manipulate and take. The tale explores themes of family separation, belief, and the harsh history of chattel slavery in antebellum America. While Annis leads readers through the descent, Ward’s work aims to be a story of rebirth and reclamation.

Jesmyn Ward received her MFA from the University of Michigan and is currently a professor of creative writing at Tulane University. She is the author of the novels Where the Line Bleeds and Salvage the Bones, which won the 2011 National Book Award, and Sing, Unburied, Sing, which won the 2017 National Book Award. She is also the editor of the anthology The Fire This Time and the author of the memoir Men We Reaped, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.

Ijeoma Oluo is a writer, speaker, and internet yeller. She is the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller So You Want to Talk About Race and, most recently, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America. Her work has been featured in the Guardian, the New York Times, and the Washington Post, among many other publications. She was named to the 2021 Time 100 Next list and has twice been named to the Root 100. She received the 2018 Feminist Humanist Award and the 2020 Harvard Humanist of the Year Award from the American Humanist Association. She lives in Seattle, Washington.


Presented by Town Hall Seattle.