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The Signal
The oral history project, “For All the World to Hear,” brings together the stories of living witnesses to the civil rights struggle. Participants Janice Grant and Barbara Redfearn join the program to share their recollections of social tumult and hard-won racial progress.
Aerial theater artist Mara Neimanis finds a strangely poignant way to portray the story of her aging mother’s upside-down world.
The Stoop Storytelling Series recently hosted a program at Center Stage called: “Parenthood: Stories about birthing, finding, raising, (and surviving) children.” Seven storytellers took their turns on stage, under the spotlight, in front of a live audience, to share their true, personal tales.
Debbie Page works for the Baltimore Country Public Schools in the Office of Special Education, she’s the co-president of the Autism Society of Baltimore-Chesapeake, and she’s also the mom of an autistic son. She shared her tale at the recent Stoop Storytelling event, “Parenthood: Stories about birthing, finding, raising, (and surviving) children.”
One of the most bittersweet things, perhaps, about parenthood is that your kids don’t stay kids forever. Poet Kwame Alexander speaks for many a misty-eyed dad.
Baltimore independent tour guide Zippy Larson has built her reputation on taking visitors off the beaten path. We’ll talk with her about her shoe-leather research methods and what she’s learned about the real character of Charm City.
We look at the intersection of political action and parenthood with China Martens, editor of Don’t Leave your Friends Behind: Concrete Ways to Support Families in Social Justice Movements and Communities.
On the eve of her 30th birthday, Marianne Amoss takes stock of her life and ponders the meaning of the impending milestone.
The co-founders of Ink Press Productions aren’t likely to be hired by Hallmark this Valentine’s Day – they join us with their new book of darkly humorous verse, titled “Sorry I Wrote So Many Sad Poems Today”

From a cave in Kentucky, to a school in Mississippi, to a prison in Arkansas, Stephen Wade has traveled the country in search of the living roots of iconic Library of Congress records. He joins us with stories and songs from his book, The Beautiful Music all around Us: Field Recordings and the American Experience, and his Grammy-nominated CD, Banjo Diary: Lessons from Tradition.
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