-
We’ll go On the Record with a constitutional scholar who argues the only way to fix our dysfunctional democracy is to bulk up the House of Representatives with multiple parties--beyond Democrat and Republican.
-
We’ll go On the Record with writer Mako Yoshikawa. Her estranged father’s death - the day before her wedding - set Yoshikawa on a journey to untangle his mental illness, his stalled career as a physicist, and his cruelty. What did she find?
-
We’ll go On the Record with MIchele Norris, whose “Race Card Project” asks for super-short messages about race. They’re the heart of her new book: "Our Hidden Conversations: What Americans Really Think About Race And Identity."
-
We'll go On the Record with the head of the Maryland Writers' Association to discuss what networking and critique mean for those who write alone.
-
We’ll go On the Record with the novelist who spins into one day--Ana’s 60th birthday--all the joys and stresses of Ana’s complex life.
-
We’ll go On the Record with the co-editor of a new anthology of short stories by Indigenous authors, and one of the contributors. What is dark fiction? And what power do scary and unsettling stories have to transfix readers?
-
We go On The Record with author R. Eric Thomas about his latest book, "Congratulations, the Best is Over!"
-
We’ll go On the Record with Devorah Heitner, author of “Growing Up in Public.” Social media is a place for friendship and self-expression. It’s also full of potential pitfalls. What does it mean to become an adult with the Internet always at your fingertips?
-
We’ll go On the Record with Frederick author Michelle Jabès Corpora. An aging home in a small New England town harbors a dark secret in “Holly Horror,” a supernatural thriller for young adults.
-
We’ll go On the Record with a woman who transformed the story of what really happened to her cousin with disabilities .. into a novel -- how a devious sheriff stole her cousin’s inheritance. Plus, tools to safeguard the finances of people with disabilities.