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Andrew Holter discusses GOING AROUND with Chris Lehmann at Politics and Prose Union Market (Washington, DC)

May08 at Politics and Prose at Union Market in Washington, DC

DATE: 05/08/2025

TIME: 7:00pm

PLACE: 

Politics and Prose at Union Market (1324 4th Street NE) 
1324 4th Street NE 
Washington, DC 20002 
A courtly man of Southern roots, Murray Kempton worked as a labor reporter for the New York Post, won a Pulitzer Prize while at Newsday, and was arrested at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago along the way. He wore three piece suits and polished oxfords and was known for riding his bicycle around New York City while listening to his CD Walkman and smoking a pipe with wild red hair that later turned white. He developed a taste for baroque prose and became, in the words of Robert Silvers, his editor at The New York Review of Books, ''unmatched in his moral insight into the hypocrisies of politics and their consequences for the poor and powerless.''

He went to court proceedings and traffic accidents and funerals and to speeches by people who either were or wanted to be rich and famous. He wrote about everything and anybody--Tonya Harding and Warren Harding, Fidel Castro and Mussolini, Harry Truman and Sal Maglie, St. Francis of Assisi and James Joyce and J. Edgar Hoover.

From dispatches from a hardscrabble coal town in Western Maryland, a bus carrying Freedom Riders through Mississippi, an Iowa cornfield with Nikita Krushchev, an encampment of guerrillas in El Salvador, and Moscow at the end of the Soviet Union (these last two assignments filed by a reporter in his 70s), Kempton's concerns and interests were extraordinarily broad. He wrote about subjects from H.L. Mencken to Tupac Shakur; organized labor and McCarthyism; the Civil Rights and Black Power movements; presidential hopefuls and Mafiosi; frauds and failures of all stripes; the "splendors and miseries" of life in New York City.

Andrew Holter is a historian and writer based in Chicago, formerly of Frederick, Maryland, and Baltimore. His work has appeared in The Times Literary Supplement, Rolling Stone, Los Angeles Review of Books, The Brooklyn Rail, Lapham's Quarterly, and other publications. As an independent historical researcher, he has contributed to books, radio programs, and museum exhibitions, and served as the primary archival consultant for Theo Anthony's 2016 documentary Rat Film, which the New Yorker called one of "62 Films That Shaped the Art of Documentary Filmmaking."

Holter will be in conversation withChris Lehmann. Lehmann is the DC bureau chief for The Nation and a contributing editor to The Baffler. His most recent book is The Money Cult: Capitalism, Christianity, and the Unmaking of the American Dream (Melville House, 2016).

DATE: 05/08/2025
TIME: 7:00pm
PLACE: 
Politics and Prose at Union Market (1324 4th Street NE) 
1324 4th Street NE 
Washington, DC 20002
May08, 7.00pm

1321 4th Street NE
Washington, DC 20002 United States

(202) 364-1919