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  • Black History in North Texas

    What are local communities doing to connect African Americans to their cultural heritage? In honor of Black History Month, we’ll talk to Safisha Hill, Director of Education for The Act of Change, and Sarah Walker, President of the Tarrant County Black Historical and Genealogical Society. How do race, culture and personal experience impact architecture? In […]

  • Economics & Marriage

    Is there a simpler (or at least more formulaic) way to negotiate the pitfalls of marriage? According to our guest this hour, economics could be the key. We’ll talk with Jenny Anderson, New York Times reporter and co-author of the new book “Spousonomics: Using Economics to Master Love, Marriage, and Dirty Dishes” (Random House, 2011).

  • Becoming a Playwright

    What makes a writer a writer, and how can a great teacher influence the arc of a writer’s career? We’ll spend this hour with playwright, author, screenwriter, actor, director Doug Wright and Linda Raya, the Highland Park High School Fine Arts director and theatre teacher who instructed Doug when he was a student at the […]

  • American Women at the Dawn of the 1960s

    How and where did the American women’s movement begin? We’ll look back at the mid-20th Century this hour and explore the lives of our mothers and grandmothers with Stephanie Coontz, Director of Research and Public Education at the Council on Contemporary Families. Her new book is “A Strange Stirring: The Feminine Mystique and American Women […]

  • Women for Women

    What do women in developing and war-torn countries face as they try to build independent and better lives for their families and themselves? We’ll talk this hour with Zainab Salbi, former member of Saddam Hussein’s inner circle and founder of and president of Women for Women International. She’ll address the Global Outreach Forum and accept […]

  • The Illumination

    What would happen if our injuries, suffering and sicknesses began to glow? The phenomenon is a key element in novelist Kevin Brockmeier’s latest book “The Illumination: A Novel” (Pantheon, 2011). Brockmeier, who speaks to the Dallas Museum of Art’s Arts & Letters Live series this Friday, will be our guest this hour.

  • Geopolitics in The Next Decade

    How will the United States deal with Iran, China and other countries with growing geopolitical influence and how fast will those relationships change? We’ll talk this hour with George Friedman, president and CEO of STRATFOR – a private intelligence company. His new book is “The Next Decade: Where We’ve Been…and Where We’re Going” (Doubleday, 2011).

  • How We Age

    What does “old” really mean? We’ll explore the concept of aging this hour with someone who sees it every day – Marc E. Agronin, MD, adult and geriatric psychiatrist and Medical Director for Mental Health and Clinical Research at Miami Jewish Health Systems. His new book is “How We Age: A Doctor’s Journey into the […]

  • A Family's Tour of Duty

    What’s it really like to wait for your loved one to return from military service overseas? What’s it like when they do return? We’ll talk this hour with writer Siobhan Fallon, whose husband did two tours of duty in Iraq himself. Her new collection of stories is called “You Know When the Men Are Gone” […]

  • The Front Lines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture

    It’s hard to resist your young daughter’s request for the latest and greatest trendy must-haves, but what will be the ultimate effects of the ubiquitous commercialization of American girlhood? We’ll talk this hour with journalist Peggy Orenstein whose new book is “Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture” […]