All Titles

(In order of publication)

Living Toward Justice: A Time Capsule

Edited by Sonya E. Pritzker

An illustrated exploration of how practitioners and scholars in the field of embodied social justice (ESJ) seek to incorporate justice in everyday life.


"ArtMill: A Story of Sustainable Creativity in Bohemia" by Barbara Benish
ArtMill: A Story of Sustainable Creativity in Bohemia

By Barbara Benish

Barbara Benish tells her story as a female artist who found a way to build a life in a rural, post-totalitarian, foreign country, it is a testament to the resilience of the people of that small nation that was sacrificed in the tumultuous chess game of colonial superpowers dividing up Europe after the devastation of WWII.


More Letters from the Edge: Outrider Conversations

By Margaret Randall

A collection of letters exchanged between the author and four “outriders”—artists, writers, and activists who risk everything to confront censorship, injustice, and the constraints of convention.


DisElderly Conduct: The Flawed Business of Assisted Living and Hospice by Judy Karofsky
DisElderly Conduct: The Flawed Business of Assisted Living and Hospice

By Judy Karofsky

A personal account of unmet needs in assisted living and hospice, Judy Karofsky aims to spark discussions about new approaches for America’s aging population and family decision makers.


Letters from the Edge: Outrider Conversations by Margaret Randall
Letters from the Edge: Outrider Conversations

By: Margaret Randall

By excerpting from letters she exchanged with five irreverent writers and artists, Margaret Randall constructs conversations that open windows on four pivotal moments in her life and on world events.


Inspired and Outraged: The Making of a Feminist Physician 

By: Alice Rothchild

A remarkable autobiography—written entirely in free verse—of Alice Rothchild’s journey from 1950’s good girl to irreverent, feisty, feminist obstetrician-gynecologist forging her own direction in the contradictory, sexist world of medicine.


Creative Instigation Cover
Creative Instigation: The Art & Strategy of Authentic Community Engagement

By: Fern Tiger

Creative Instigation is a collection of in-depth case stories focused on effective and innovative community engagement and policymaking in diverse cities across the western U.S.


Portraits of Peacemakers
Portraits of Peacemakers: Americans Who Tell the Truth 

By: Robert Shetterly

This third volume in the Americans Who Tell the Truth series features Robert Shetterly’s striking color portraits and profiles of fifty peace activists as well as essays by Chris Hedges, Kali Rubaii, Paul K. Chappell, Medea Benjamin, Alice Rothchild, and David Swanson. 


See Me Cover
See Me: Prison Theater Workshops and Love

By Jan Cohen-Cruz

Encounters, transformations, and reflections from in-prison and post-release theater workshops, each essay is a collaboration between two or three people who connected profoundly in the temporary community that a workshop can create.


The Women’s Revolution: How We Changed Your Life

By Muriel Fox

A comprehensive, indexed memoir about the Second Wave women’s movement by the cofounder of the National Organization for Women (NOW), Muriel Fox offers rare, firsthand stories of 29 women and one man built mainly from her own hundreds of letters, clippings, notes, and photographs that she archived in her “Feminism Files.”


Making a Way Out of No Way: Lives of Labor, Love, and Resistance

By Merideth M. Taylor, Foreword by Dr. Rex M. Ellis

A richly imagined, photo illustrated narrative of 150 years of life in slavery on tobacco plantations in Southern Maryland. The work is a poetic interwoven collage of scenes and community of characters that reflect the diversity of experience, “silences,” and incompleteness of the historical record.


Random Kindness 30th Anniversary Addition
Random Kindness and Senseless Acts of Beauty— 30th Anniversary Edition

By Anne HerbertPaloma PavelMayumi Oda

Foreword by Desmond Mpilo Tutu

A parable of hope and peace for all ages with beautifully crafted words and exuberant watercolor illustrations, Random Kindness offers a poetic and empowering message for world peace. Recognizing “we are right on the edge of destroying ourselves,” this modern allegory inspires taking joyful steps to end violence. 


I Opened the Gate Laughing Cover
I Opened the Gate Laughing: An Inner Journey — 20th Anniversary Edition

By Mayumi Oda

A tribute to the power of spiritual practice, creative expression, and true self-acceptance I Opened the Gate Laughing is the story of one woman’s journey to creative freedom through gardening and the teachings of Zen. I Opened the Gate Laughing is a resource for anyone seeking a slower pace, a sacred space, and a garden path.


Judith Letting Go: Six Months in the World’s Smallest Death Cafe

By Mark Dowie

The story of an old man learns how to die from a younger woman facing death, this book is ultimately about the lost human art of releasing everything that matters to the living in preparation for the inevitable. It is a rare lesson offered by a poet who somehow taught herself, and then the author, how to let go.


Luck

By Margaret Randall

Illustrations by Barbara Byers

Luck is a collection of essays that combines scholarly research with personal experience, producing texts both intimate and illuminating. Always attentive to the world around her and the one within, Randall has brought us her most relevant and powerful essays to date.


That’s a Pretty Thing to Call It: Prose and Poetry by Artists Teaching in Carceral Institutions

Edited by Leigh Sugar

Poetry and prose by artists, writers, and activists who’ve taught workshops in U.S. criminal legal institutions, this is a book for anyone seeking to understand the prison industrial complex from a human perspective. 

All author royalties from this book will be donated to Dances for Solidarity, a project that brings arts opportunities to people incarcerated in solitary confinement.


Skyscraper Settlement: The Many Lives of Christodora House

By Joyce Milambiling

The roles that Christodora House has played from 19th-century settlement house up to its newest form. Settlement house workers have helped transform the lives of thousands of people despite lack of funding, the influenza epidemic of 1918, economic depressions, and two World Wars.


Stuff: Instead of a Memoir

By Lucy R. Lippard

Stuff: Instead of a Memoir is a short, abundantly illustrated autobiography of the American art writer, activist, and curator Lucy R. Lippard. Describing tchotchkes, photographs, and art in her unpretentious New Mexico home, the author informally narrates key events and relationships in her 86-year-long, highly creative life.


Zoned Out! Race Displacement, and City Planning in New York City, (Revised Edition)

Edited by Tom Angotti and Sylvia Morse

Zoned Out! shows how gentrification and displacement of low-income communities of color have occurred in Williamsburg, Harlem and Chinatown, neighborhoods facing massive displacement of people of color, and looks at ways the city can address inequalities, promote authentic community-based planning and develop housing in the public domain.


Art in a Democracy: Selected Plays of Roadside Theater,
Vol 1 & Vol 2 (set)

Edited by Ben Fink

This two-volume anthology tells the story of Roadside Theater’s first 45 years and includes nine award-winning original play scripts; ten essays by authors from different disciplines and generations, which explore the plays’ social, economic, and political circumstances; and a critical recounting of the theater’s history from 1975 through 2020.

Art in a Democracy: Selected Plays of Roadside Theater, Volume 2: The Intercultural Plays, 1990–2020

Edited by Ben Fink

The plays in Volume 2 come from Roadside’s intercultural and issue-specific theater work, including long-term collaborations with the African American Junebug Productions in New Orleans and the Puerto Rican Pregones Theater in the South Bronx, as well as with residents on both sides of the walls of recently-built prisons.

Art in a Democracy: Selected Plays of Roadside Theater, Volume 1: The Appalachian History Plays, 1975–1989

Edited by Ben Fink

The plays in Volume 1 offer a people’s history of the Appalachian coalfields, from the European incursion through the American War in Vietnam. Roadside has spent 45 years searching for what art in a democracy might look like.


A Peaceful Superpower: Lessons from the World’s Largest Antiwar Movement

By David Cortright

A definitive analysis of the impacts of the Iraq antiwar movement told by distinguished peace scholar and activist David Cortright.


In the Camp of Angels of Freedom: What Does It Mean to Be Educated?

By Arlene Goldbard

Through her evocative paintings and narrative, author Arlene Goldbard has portrayed eleven people whose work most influenced her—what she calls a camp of angels. She sees each as a brave messenger of love and freedom for a society that badly needs “uncolonized minds.”


Portraits of Earth Justice: Americans Who Tell the Truth

By Robert Shetterly

This second volume in the Americans Who Tell the Truth series, is a collection of environmental and climate activists whose stunning color portraits Robert Shetterly painted with the intention of honoring their work and bringing them to a wider audience.


The Book of Judith: Opening Hearts Through Poetry

Edited by Spoon JacksonMark Foss, and Sara Press

The Book of Judith honors Judith Tannenbaum and echoes her own determination to perceive contradiction without judgment. For the next generation of teaching artists in Corrections and elsewhere, the book serves as an inspiration on the qualities needed to survive and thrive in a multi-faceted, ever-changing environment.

More on The Book of Judith here.


Inherited Silence: Listening to the Land, Healing the Colonizer Mind 

By Louise Dunlap

They lived the dream of Manifest Destiny; their consciousness changing only gradually over the generations. Dunlap looks back into California’s and America’s history for the key to their silences and a way to heal the wounds of the land, its original people, and the harmful mind of the colonizer.


We Built a Village: Cohousing and the Commons

By Diane Rothbard Margolis, Foreword by David Bollier

We Built a Village is both a memoir and a sociological analysis that describes the process of planning and building an early cohousing community in Cambridge, Massachusetts in the mid 1990s, setting in motion a counterpoint between the physical spaces and the social configurations that would guide their lives together.


Divining Chaos: The Autobiography of an Idea

By Aviva Rahmani, Foreword by Lucy Lippard

Divining Chaos provides a personal memoir of eco-artist Aviva Rahmani, offering her Trigger-Point theory thesis and unparalleled exclusivity to the moments in her life that shaped her as an artist and activist. Rahmani shares intimate decisions that shaped her life’s work.


Meeting the Moment: Socially Engaged Performance, 1965–2020, by Those Who Lived It

By Jan Cohen-Cruz and Rad Pereira, Forewords by Carlton Turner and Jill Dolan

Meeting the Moment explores experiences of a diverse range of progressive theater and performance makers in the U.S. The work offers insight into the challenges and adaptations of the industry, recognizing limitations due to discrimination and unequal opportunity that performance artists have faced over the past 55 years.


Risking a Somersault in the Air: Conversations with Nicaraguan Writers (Revised edition)

By Margaret Randall

First published in 1984, Risking a Somersault in the Air is a collection of interviews with fourteen of Nicaragua’s most important writers-revolutionaries. Filling in the gaps with new photographs and updates on the writers in the time since the original edition, the book looks at the sacrifices, conflicts, and solutions of the creative artists of Nicaragua’s revolution. Randall shows how Nicaragua, like its poetry, is an expression of great love, imagination, and liberation.


Artists in My Life

By Margaret Randall, Forewords by Mary Gabriel and Ed McCaughan

Artists in My Life is a collection of intimate and conversational accounts of the visual artists that have impacted the renowned poet-activist Margaret Randall on her own journey as an artist. Each story offers insight into the artist’s life and work, and analyses the impact it had on Randall’s own work and its impact on the larger art community. The work strives to answer bigger questions about visual art as a whole and its lasting political influence on the world stage.


Talking to the Girls: Intimate and Political Essays on the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

Edited by Edvige Giuntaand Mary Anne Trasciatti

Talking to the Girls is a written memorial to the victims of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, bringing together stories from writers, artists, activists, scholars, and family members of the Triangle workers to speak on this singular, tragic event that had a remarkable impact.


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Ecoart in Action: Activities, Case Studies, and Provocations for Classrooms and Communities

Edited by Amara Geffen, Ann Rosenthal, Chris Fermantle, and Aviva Rahmani

Compiled of 67 members of the Ecoart Network, a group of more than 200 internationally established practitioners, EcoArt in Action stands as a field guide for practical solutions to critical environmental challenges. Each contribution provides models for ecoart practice that are adaptable for use within a variety of classrooms, communities, and contexts.

Click here to see our Ecoart in Action contributors!


Cultivating Creativity

By Iain Robertson

The product of over three decades of teaching design studios and creativity seminars primarily at the University of Washington, Cultivating Creativity offers firsthand, on-the-ground accounts of encouraging creative expression in the classroom. In this lively book, course instructors will find a wealth of creativity-awakening exercises and strategies that can be adapted to suit a variety of disciplines.


Healing from Genocide in Rwanda book cover
Healing from Genocide in Rwanda: Rugerero Survivors Village, an Artist Book

By Susan Viguers and Lily Yeh

Healing from Genocide in Rwanda demonstrates the power of art in the service of healing and is a testimony to responsive community process in a highly sensitive environment. The work immerses readers in the stories of two Rwandans who as small children experienced the 1994 Genocide. It tells of the horrific tragedy each survived, the courage necessary for surviving, and the humanity they embody.


How Spaces Become Places: Place Makers Tell Their Stories

By John F. Forester

How Spaces Become Places feature stories of community members acting together to transform edgy, empty, contested, or unsafe spaces into functional, safe, convivial places. Pragmatic, real life accounts offer edifying and instructive examples of the kinds of work a variety of readers can do within their own communities.


Portraits of Racial Justice: Americans Who Tell the Truth

By Robert Shetterly

The first volume of Robert Shetterly’s Americans Who Tell the Truth portrait series, Portraits of Racial Justice takes a multimedia, interdisciplinary approach, blending art and history with today’s issues concerning social, environmental, and economic fairness. Shetterly’s paintings, as well as profiles of those portrayed, illuminate a community of people not only willing to recognize the shortcomings of America’s history, but most importantly, individuals who offer their visions of a better world moving forward.


Cover of In the Struggle
In the Struggle: Scholars and the Fight Against Industrial Agribusiness in California

By Daniel J. O’Connell and Scott J. Peters

In the Struggle tells the stories of eight notable public scholars of California’s San Joaquin Valley, and describes their persistent engagement spanning generations of sustained endeavor, a dogged war in which workers and scholars together repeatedly took on the powerful agricultural industry, the political machines, and even the universities.


Cover of Jane Jacobs's First City
Jane Jacobs’s First City: Learning from Scranton, Pennsylvania

By Glenna Lang

A brilliant work of scholarship that convincingly shows how Jane Jacobs’s canonical work on urbanism and the life of great cities, her work on city and national economies, and her underlying social and ethical foundations developed in the historic, mid-sized city of Scranton, Pennsylvania.


Cover of My Life in 100 Objects
My Life in 100 Objects

By Margaret Randall

My Life in 100 Objects is a personal reflection on the events and moments that shaped the life and work of one extraordinary woman. With a masterful, poetic voice, Margaret Randall uses talismanic objects and photographs as launching points for her nonlinear narrative. Interwoven throughout are her most precious relationships, her growth as an artist, and her brave, revolutionary spirit.


Cover of Main Street
Main Street: How a City’s Heart Connects Us All

By Mindy Thompson Fullilove, MD

How do Main Streets contribute to our mental health? This intriguing question took social psychiatrist Mindy Thompson Fullilove on an 11-year search through 178 cities in 14 countries. From these visits Fullilove has discerned the larger architecture of Main Streets: the ways that Main Streets are shaped for a vast array of social gatherings and processes, how they are a marker for the integrity of civilization—and the marks aren’t always good. 


Cover of Visitors. Ann Snitow with short hair and circular, red glasses clapping her hands, smiling
Visitors: An American Feminist in East Central Europe

By Ann Snitow,
Foreword by Susan Faludi

Visitors tells the story of the well-known professor and feminist activist Ann Snitow’s adventures as an organizer in East Central Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. With wit and empathy, Snitow captures change as it unfolds and presents extraordinary insight into the origins and development of an internationalist feminism that is still evolving today.


Cover of A Man of the Theater
A Man of the Theater: Survival as an Artist in Iran

By Nasser Rahmaninejad

A Man of the Theater tells the personal story of a theater artist caught between the two great upheavals of Iranian history in the 20th century.


Cover of Waging Peace in Vietnam
Waging Peace in Vietnam: U.S. Soldiers and Veterans Who Opposed the War

By Ron Carver, David Cortright, and Barbara Doherty, editors

Waging Peace in Vietnam shows how the GI movement unfolded, presenting first-hand accounts, oral histories, and underground newspapers, posters, flyers, and photographs documenting the actions of GIs and veterans who took part in the resistance.


Cover of Such a Pretty Girl. A black and white picture of Nadina LaSpina as a little girl with a bow in her hair
Such a Pretty Girl: A Story of Struggle, Empowerment, and Disability Pride

By Nadina LaSpina

A disability rights activist tells the story of her liberation from oppressive standards of normalcy, showing that freedom comes not through cure, but through organizing to end exclusion from public and social life. 


Cover of In the Company of Rebels. A black and white photograph of a young, female protestor standing against police at the shutdown of the communal People's Park in Berkeley
In the Company of Rebels: A Generational Memoir of Bohemians, Deep Heads, and History Makers

By Chellis Gledinning

A personal portrait of 46 activists, artists, radicals, and thinkers who raised issues of justice, the environment, feminism, and colonialism


Cover of Placemaking with Children and Youth
Placemaking with Children and Youth: Participatory Practices for Planning Sustainable Communities

By Victoria Derr, Louise Chawla, and Mara Mintzer

An illustrated, essential guide to engaging children and teens in the process of urban design.


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Works of Heart: Building Village Through the Arts

Revised Edition
By Lynne Elizabeth and Suzanne Young

Citizen artists revitalize places, celebrate culture, and inspire social change in this beautiful introduction to community-engaged arts.


Cover of Conversations with Diego Rivera. A black and white photograph of Rivera sitting and looking to the side
Conversations with Diego Rivera: The Monster in His Labyrinth

By Alfredo Cardona Peña
Translated by Alvaro Cardona-Hine

A year of weekly interviews (1949–1950) with artist Diego Rivera by poet Alfredo Cardona-Peña disclose Rivera’s iconoclastic views of life and the art world of that time.


Cover of Homeboy Came to Orange
Homeboy Came to Orange: A Story of People’s Power

By Ernest Thompson and Mindy Thompson Fullilove
Introduction by Coleman A. Young
Foreword by Dominic T. Moulden
Afterword by Molly Rose Kaufman

The story of a union organizer who found a second career in community organizing and helped a Jim Crow city become a better place.


Cover of The Earth, the City, and the Hidden Narrative of Race. A man throwing a young boy up in the air like he is flying
The Earth, the City, and the Hidden Narrative of Race

By Carl C. Anthony

Carl Anthony interweaves urban history, racial justice, and cosmology with personal experiences as an architect/planner, environmentalist, and Black American.  By connecting the struggles for social and racial justice to the universe, it creates a new story for our time.


Cover of Beginner's Guide to Community-Based Arts
Beginner’s Guide to Community-Based Arts, 2nd Edition

By Mat Schwarzman
Illustrated by Keith Knight

Ten transformative local arts projects come alive in this illustrated training manual for youth leaders and teachers. This energetic guidebook demonstrates the enormous power of art in grassroots social change.


Root Shock: How Tearing Up City Neighborhoods Hurts America, and What We Can Do About It

By Mindy Thompson Fullilove, MD
Foreword by Carlos F. Peterson and Mary Travis Bassett

Root Shock examines three different US cities to unmask the crippling results of decades-old disinvestment in communities of color and the urban renewal practices that ultimately destroyed these neighborhoods for the advantage of developers and the elite.


Cover of Openings: A Memoir from the Women's Art Movement, New York City 1970-1992 by Sabra Moore, with a black and white picture of Sabra Moore walking down a New York sidewalk next to windows filled with images and grafitti
Openings: A Memoir from the Women’s Art Movement, New York City 1970–1992

By Sabra Moore
Forewords by Lucy R. Lippard and Margaret Randall

An account of the women’s art movement in New York City from 1970 to 1992 and how these women created politically and personally effective art works, exhibitions, actions, and institutions.


Growing A Life: Teen Gardeners Harvest Food, Health, and Joy

By Illéne Pevec, PhD

A testament to the influential nature of educational and community gardening programs for teens.


Building Together: Case Studies in Participatory Planning and Community Building

By Roger Katan with Ronald Shiffman

Case studies of neighborhood developments from North and South America, Europe, and Africa that span more than forty years. This book offers a seminal treatise on the community based design practices of participatory planning an advocacy architecture.


From Foreclosure to Fair Lending: Advocacy, Organizing, Occupy, and the Pursuit of Equitable Credit

Edited by Chester Hartman and Gregory D. Squires

This book informs a renewed movement for fair lending and fair housing. Leading advocates and specialists examine strategic initiatives to realize objectives of the federal Fair Housing Act as well as state and local laws.


Urban Alchemy: Restoring Joy in America’s Sorted-Out Cities

By Mindy Thompson Fullilove, MD

An identification of the problems of socially, economically, and racially divided neighborhoods and nine tools that can mend them.


Beyond Zuccotti Park: Freedom of Assembly and the Occupation of Public Space

Edited by Rick Bell, Lance Jay Brown, Lynne Elizabeth and Ronald Shiffman

In the wake of the Occupy Wall Street movement, leading planners and social scientists examine public space today and freedom of assembly.


Service-Learning in Design and Planning: Educating at the Boundaries

Edited by Tom Angotti, Cheryl S. Doble, and Paula Horrigan

Urban planning and architecture educators challenge traditional community-university relationships by modeling meaningful and reciprocal partnerships for community-engaged learning.


Acting Together, Vol II: Performance and the Creative Transformation of Conflict: Building Just and Inclusive Communities

Edited by Cynthia Cohen, Roberto Gutiérrez Varea, and Polly O. Walker

Acting Together, Volume ll, continues from where the first volume ends documenting exemplary peace-building performances in regions marked by social exclusion, structural violence and dislocation.


Acting Together, Vol I: Performance and the Creative Transformation of Conflict: Resistance and Reconciliation in Regions of Violence

Edited by Cynthia Cohen, Roberto Gutiérrez Varea, and Polly O. Walker

Courageous artists working in conflict regions describe exemplary peace-building performances and groundbreaking theory on performance for transformation of violence.


Awakening Creativity: Dandelion School Blossoms

By Lily Yeh

International artist Lily Yeh guides a participatory process of artistic expression that uplifts a distressed community. Her open, joyful approach to art-making is a model for building healthy cultural esteem.


American Tensions: Literature of Identity and the Search for Social Justice

Edited by William Reichard
Foreword by Ted Kooser
with contributions by Elizabeth Alexander, Linda Hogan, and Sherman Alexie

This new anthology of contemporary American poetry, short fiction and nonfiction, explores issues of identity, oppression, injustice, and social change.


Asphalt to Ecosystems: Design Ideas for Schoolyard Transformation

By Sharon Gamson Danks

Case Studies from North America, Scandinavia, Japan, and Great Britain demonstrate natural outdoor teaching environments that support hand-on learning in science, math, language, and art in ways that nurture healthy imagination and socialization.


What We See: Advancing the Observations of Jane Jacobs

Edited by Stephen Goldsmith and Lynne Elizabeth

A timely revisitation of renowned urbanist-activist Jane Jacobs’ lifework, What We See invites thirty pundits and practitioners across fields to refresh Jacobs’ economic, social and urban planning theories for the present day. Combining personal and professional observations with meditations on Jacobs’ insights, essayists bring their diverse experience to bear to sketch the blueprints for the living city.


By Heart: Poetry, Prison, and Two Lives

By Judith Tannenbaum and Spoon Jackson

A two-person memoir that explores education, prison, possibility, and which children our world nurtures and which it shuns. At the book’s core are two stories that speak up for human imagination, spirit, and the power of art.


Arts for Change: Teaching Outside the Frame

By Beverly Naidus

Beverly Naidus shares her passion and strategies for teaching socially engaged art, offering, as well, a short history of the field and the candid views of more than thirty colleagues.


Art and Upheaval: Artists on the World’s Frontlines

By William Cleveland
Foreword by Clarissa Pinkola Estés

Author William Cleveland tells remarkable stories from Northern Ireland, Cambodia, South Africa, United States (Watts, Lost Angeles), aboriginal Australia, and Serbia, about artists who resolve conflict and heal unspeakable trauma.


Undoing the Silence: Six Tools for Social Change Writing

By Louise Dunlap

Practical guidance to help both citizens and professionals influence democratic process through written letters, articles, reports and public testimony.


Building Commons and Community

By Karl Linn

Building Commons and Community documents 45 years of the late Karl Linn’s legacy creating neighborhood spaces for communities and by communities. In this richly-illustrated landscape-format hardcover book, Linn presents his philosophies and practical wisdom.


New Creative Community: The Art of Cultural Development

By Arlene Goldbard

An inspiring, foundational book that defines the burgeoning field of community cultural development.


Doing Time in the Garden: Life Lessons through Prison Horticulture

By James Jiler

Inspiring firsthand account of how in-prison vocational training programs at Riker’s Island Jail lead to meaningful post-release employment and reduce recidivism—the Green House and GreenTeam run by James Jiler for the Horticultural Society of New York.


Performing Communities: Grassroots Ensemble Theaters Deeply Rooted In Eight U.S. Communities

By Robert H. Leonard and Ann Kilkelly
Introduction by Jan Cohen Cruz
Edited by Linda Frye Burnham

Ensemble theater is one of the vibrant, meaningful American performance forms today. It’s more than art—it’s a social movement.


For the distributor’s full catalog of our books click here.