Words on a Wire

Episode 27: Lauren D. Woods

29 min · 12. Apr. 2026
Episode Episode 27: Lauren D. Woods Cover

Beschreibung

In this episode of Words on a Wire, host Will Rose sits down with author Lauren D. Woods to discuss her debut short story collection, The Great Grown-Up Game of Make-Believe—a book that moves fluidly between realism and the surreal, blending sharp emotional insight with inventive, often unexpected forms. Woods talks about the long and winding path to publishing her first collection, including stories that span decades of her life as a writer—from early work written in college to more recent pieces shaped through years of revision. She reflects on learning to trust her instincts, the discipline of writing in small windows of time, and how balancing a demanding career outside of writing has influenced both her process and her voice. The conversation also explores the unique possibilities of short fiction—why it can be such a powerful form for capturing intense, fleeting moments—and how Woods approaches everything from flash pieces to longer, more layered stories. Along the way, she discusses the role of imagination in her work, her blend of the familiar and the strange, and the writers who have shaped her along the way.

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Episode Episode 31: Gabriela Baeza Ventura Cover

Episode 31: Gabriela Baeza Ventura

Host Daniel Chacón sits down with Dr. Gabriela Baeza Ventura, director and publisher of Arte Público Press—widely recognized as the nation’s leading publisher of U.S. Latinx literature. Their conversation begins on the U.S.–Mexico border, tracing Dr. Ventura’s upbringing between Ciudad Juárez and El Paso, and quickly expands into a deeper exploration of how literary worlds are built, sustained, and preserved. She shares the unexpected path that led her into publishing—from a graduate research fellowship to discovering a passion for editing through a stack of “damaged” books—and how that moment evolved into a lifelong commitment to amplifying Latino voices. Dr. Ventura reflects on the mentorship and vision of Arte Público founder Nicolás Kanellos, offering insight into the challenges and responsibilities of running a nonprofit press dedicated to cultural preservation. The discussion highlights the press’s mission to recover and elevate U.S. Hispanic literary heritage, bridging gaps between diasporic communities and their countries of origin while ensuring these works are recognized as part of the broader American canon.

Gestern1 h 17 min
Episode Episode 30: Jazmine Ulloa Cover

Episode 30: Jazmine Ulloa

In this episode of Words on a Wire, host Will Rose sits down with Jazmine Ulloa, national political and immigration reporter for The New York Times, to discuss her powerful new book, El Paso: Five Families and One Hundred Years of Blood, Migration, Race, and Memory. Ulloa traces the lives of five families across more than a century to tell a sweeping, deeply human story of migration, identity, and belonging. Through these interwoven narratives, she repositions El Paso—not as a peripheral border city, but as a central force in shaping American history and immigration policy. The conversation explores Ulloa’s own journey from a high school newsroom in El Paso to the national stage, as well as the formative reporting experiences that shaped her approach to storytelling. She reflects on covering the 2019 El Paso Walmart shooting in her hometown, a moment that became the emotional and intellectual catalyst for her book. Drawing from years of reporting and archival research, Ulloa reveals how today’s immigration debates are rooted in a long and often overlooked history—one marked by cycles of enforcement, resistance, and resilience. Throughout the episode, she brings a journalist’s rigor and a storyteller’s sensitivity to the question of how borders shape not only policy, but people’s lives. This is a conversation about history, memory, and the enduring role of migration in defining what it means to be American.

25. Apr. 202629 min