16 Jun HEPL Hosts a Human Library
Experience the opportunity to unjudge someone by sitting down together in a safe space to challenge stereotypes and stigmas.
You might choose from titles such as Child of an Alcoholic, Suicide Survivor, Transgender, Asian-American, Child of Deaf Adults (CODA), Depression, Jewish, Neurodiverse, or Abortion, among others. Attendees will have the opportunity to read one or more Books at the event. You are welcome to stay at the event as long as you wish. Registration is requested but not required—sign up here.
The Human Library® is an international not-for-profit learning platform that has hosted personal conversations designed to challenge stigma and stereotypes since 2000. “The original event was open eight hours a day for four days straight and featured over fifty different titles. The broad selection of books provided readers with ample choice to challenge their stereotypes, and so they did. More than a thousand readers took advantage, leaving books, librarians, organizers, and readers stunned at the impact of the Human Library.” To learn more about the Human Library, check out their website.
Human Library Booklist
If you can’t wait for our Human Library event, consider checking out one of these human-interest stories!
By Moshe Kasher
Kasher’s story is like no other. His biography walks the reader through the wild ride of his family, youth, and addiction. Now, after 20+ years sober and numerous comedy specials, Kasher co-hosts a relationship advice podcast (The Endless Honeymoon) providing answers to callers using his own hard-earned wisdom.
By Patricia Williams
Pat survived extreme poverty and abuse, became one of the few female crack dealers in Atlanta, and was shot twice. That barely scratches the surface of her story. But, as Ms. Pat says, “If you can laugh at your trauma, it loses its power over you.” Her weekly podcast, “The Pat Down,” covers everything from current events to old stories.
By Kevin Allison
Risk! focuses on real stories that involve personal danger, poor decisions, emotional courage, and unexpected consequences. The stories come from a mix of celebrities and everyday people and are shared with the fundamental belief that all experiences are worthwhile once examined.
The Moth Presents – All These Wonders: True Stories About Facing the Unknown
By Catherine Burns
The Moth began in 1997 as a storytelling event focused on unscripted live performances. Recordings of shows were turned into a podcast in 2009. These books bring together the best stories from the group’s history while attempting to retain that spirit of intimate, in-person storytelling.
By Kiese Laymon
From the publisher – “Laymon writes eloquently and honestly about the physical manifestations of violence, grief, trauma, and abuse on his own body. He writes of his own eating disorder and gambling addiction as well as similar issues that run throughout his family. Through self-exploration, storytelling, and honest conversation with family and friends, Heavy seeks to bring what has been hidden into the light and to reckon with all of its myriad sources, from the most intimate–a mother-child relationship–to the most universal–a society that has undervalued and abused black bodies for centuries.”
By Abby Stein
Stein’s journey to becoming herself is more dramatic than most. She started life as a Hasidic Jewish first son, with the hope and promise of being the next generation’s leader. Her personal exodus from Orthodox manhood to mainstream femininity cost her the family and community she was raised in. Today, she has found home with a Jewish Renewal congregation and within the LGBTQ community. Abby shares this coming-of-age and coming-of-self tale with love towards her family, both old and new.
By Jory Fleming
How to Be Human explores what it’s like to be neurodivergent in a world designed for the neurotypical. Fleming, the first autistic man to attend Oxford on a Rhodes scholarship, celebrates his unique brain and finds joy in being human. The book examines the world from Fleming’s point of view and how different minds express the best of our humanity.
By Teresa Hsiao
From the Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment (CAPE), thirty Asian-American creators share their experiences in essays, poems, and comics. The label Asian-American includes 23 million people representing more than twenty countries – and vastly more unique languages, histories, and cultures. These stories represent the immense diversity and complexity of the identity but also explores the commonalities that many of the creators share. Ultimately, this book is about their defining moments living under the banner of the Asian-American identifier.
By Yiyun Li
From the publisher – “Yiyun Li’s searing personal story of hospitalizations for depression and thoughts of suicide is interlaced with reflections on the solace and affirmations of life and personhood that Li found in reading the journals, diaries, and fiction of other writers: William Trevor, Katherine Mansfield, and more.”