AUDIOBOOK

About
Through this collection of essays, author and activist Reagan Jackson, chronicles her journey into the world of journalism. Art, cinema, social justice, feminism, Black reparations, health & reproductive rights, dance, educationwhile Jacksons subjects range far and wide, her writing brings an intimacy & immediacy to all.
Equal parts personal testament, structural interrogation, and social criticism, Reagan JacksonsStill Trueinspires in its singularity. Jackson writes with a powerful sense of history and a wide-ranging vision, capturing a Seattle in flux, where processes of inequality, gentrification, and police violence occur alongside community struggle, vivid resistance, and countless episodes of joy. We should all hope that voices like hers blossom throughout our communities. This book is a gift to all readers and writersaspiring, established, or otherwise.~Sonora Jha, author ofThe Laughter
Reagan Jackson writes from the crossroads of journalism, memoir, activism, and everyday life in these raw and wild times. Jackson is a pioneer for what writing the first draft of history looks like in an intersectional world and a model of how media can help build the communities and worlds of the future.
~Sarah Stuteville, Co-Founder of theSeattle Globalist
Equal parts personal testament, structural interrogation, and social criticism, Reagan JacksonsStill Trueinspires in its singularity. Jackson writes with a powerful sense of history and a wide-ranging vision, capturing a Seattle in flux, where processes of inequality, gentrification, and police violence occur alongside community struggle, vivid resistance, and countless episodes of joy. We should all hope that voices like hers blossom throughout our communities. This book is a gift to all readers and writersaspiring, established, or otherwise.~Sonora Jha, author ofThe Laughter
Reagan Jackson writes from the crossroads of journalism, memoir, activism, and everyday life in these raw and wild times. Jackson is a pioneer for what writing the first draft of history looks like in an intersectional world and a model of how media can help build the communities and worlds of the future.
~Sarah Stuteville, Co-Founder of theSeattle Globalist