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Episode 3

Sowing Change

Acclaimed author and poet Camille Dungy joins us this week to explore the intersection of nature, identity, and systemic change. With insight from her latest book, SOIL: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden, Dungy shares her view of gardening as another form of storytelling. Listen in as we talk about environmental advocacy and stewardship—and the ways nature and narrative are more intertwined than you might think.


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Listen to episode 3, then listen and subscribe to Plant People, with new episodes dropping every other week starting March 10. Be sure to rate and review!

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About the Guest

Camille T. Dungy is an author and poet born and raised in the western United States, though she has lived briefly in most other regions of the U.S. and has spent time on all but one continent and several countries. Dungy attributes some of the energy in her writing to both her delight in going new places and meeting new people and the good fortune of having a beautiful place to root down and call home. In much of her writing, Dungy considers history, landscape, culture, family, and desire. Her latest book is Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden.

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