
About this Event
Florida can be a complex and complicated state, and many residents and visitors alike want to know more about the state's history, environment, politics and culture. If the humanities wrestle with the human experience in myriad ways, Florida Studies is about the human experience in the Sunshine State. The Florida Studies Book Festival will provide an opportunity for the public to encounter writers and books that address the Florida experience, and to highlight the .
Agenda
🕑: 09:20 AM - 09:30 AM
Book Festival Welcome
Host: Chris Meindl, USF Florida Studies Program Director
🕑: 09:30 AM - 10:00 AM
Welcome to Florida, the Most Interesting State
Host: Craig Pittman
Info: Craig Pittman is a native Floridian, a best-selling author, a popular pod caster and an award-winning journalist. He spent 20 years covering the environment at the Tampa Bay Times and now writes a weekly column on the environment for the Florida Phoenix. He's the author of seven books on what he calls "the most interesting state," and the co-host of the "Welcome to Florida" podcast.
🕑: 10:05 AM - 10:30 AM
Florida Springs
Host: Chris Meindl
Info: Chris Meindl has been a geography professor at USF St. Petersburg since 2003, and he has directed the university's Florida Studies Program for more than a decade. His book Florida Springs: From Geography to Politics and Restoration recently won a gold medal from the Florida Book Awards and the American Association of Geographers Globe Book Award for Public Understanding of Geography.
🕑: 10:40 AM - 11:10 AM
Florida's Climate and Environment
Host: Cynthia Barnett
Info: Cynthia Barnett is an environmental journalist and author of four books including Rain: A Natural and Cultural History, and The Sound of the Sea: Seashells and the Fate of the Oceans, both named one of the best books of the year by NPR’s Science Friday. She is the director of Climate and Environment Reporting Initiatives at the University of Florida’s College of Journalism and Communications.
🕑: 11:15 AM - 11:55 AM
The Florida Learning Experience
Host: Gary Mormino
Info: Gary Mormino: Gary Mormino is the Frank E. Duckwall professor emeritus at USF St. Petersburg and has taught at USF since 1977. His books include The Immigrant World of Ybor City, Land of Sunshine State of Dreams: A Social History of Modern Florida, and Dreams in a New Century: Florida’s Turning Point. He received the Lifetime Achievement in Writing award from Florida Humanities in 2012.
Debbie Carson: After spending more than 25 years in marketing communications, native Baltimorean Deb Carson completed her undergraduate degree from Eckerd College, and seven years later, her master’s in Florida Studies from USF. Ten years later, Carson transformed her master’s thesis into a book Becoming FLO, A Mostly True Story. She is currently working on a couple of new book projects.
🕑: 12:00 PM - 01:00 PM
Lunch Break
🕑: 01:00 PM - 01:40 PM
Florida Teaching and Writing Reflections
Host: Julie Armstrong and Thomas Hallock
Info: Julie Buckner Armstrong is a Professor of English and the 2024-2026 Duckwall Professor of Florida Studies at the University of South Florida. She has authored and edited multiple publications related to civil rights and racial justice, including, most recently, Learning from Birmingham: A Journey into History and Home (University of Alabama Press, 2023). She is currently co-editing, with Thomas Hallock and Benjamin Brothers, a two-volume anthology of Florida literature.
Thomas Hallock has authored/co-edited a half-dozen books, mostly about Florida, early America, and the environment. His most recent publication is Happy Neighborhood: essays and poems, about staying married and raising a child here in St. Petersburg. A forthcoming edition of translated poems, The Epic of Florida: Selected Poems by Juan de Castellanos, Bartolome de Flores, and Alonso Gregorio de Escobedo, is set for publication in 2026. Tom is professor of English at USF, native plant gardener, city-nature adventurer.
🕑: 01:45 PM - 02:15 PM
The Always Bizarre Florida Crime Fiction Tradition
Host: Taylor Hagood
Info: Taylor Hagood's involvement with the arts is wide. As a writer, he has published in a range of genres. His articles on music, Florida crime writing, and travel have appeared in Bluegrass Unlimited, Palm Beach Post, and the former online lifestyle magazine Throomers. He has published poetry in such journals as A-Minor Magazine, A Thin Slice of Anxiety, Across the Margin, Appalachian Heritage, California Quarterly, Louisiana Literature, and The River. As a writer of short fiction, his stories have appeared in a number of magazines, including Black Petals Horror and Science Fiction Magazine, China Grove, FRiGG, The Horror Zine, and Yellow Mama. Taylor Hagood teaches American literature, with specialization in the writing of William Faulkner, African American literature, disability studies, thing studies, and the literature and culture of the United States South.
🕑: 02:20 PM - 02:50 PM
Florida Is Not For Sissies
Host: Kim Love
Info: Kimball Love is a 7th generation Floridian, Kim’s love of geography, particularly Florida geography, has inspired her life’s work in public service. Evidenced by stints at the National Geographic Society, the State of Florida and several counties, she spent years dedicated to education, disaster recovery, and economic development. All along, natural resource protection and restoration have been a particular focus.
🕑: 02:55 PM - 03:25 PM
Protecting Florida's Wetlands
Host: Roy Gardner
Info: Royal C. Gardner, the Hugh F. Culverhouse Professor of Law and Director of the Institute for Biodiversity Law and Policy at Stetson University College of Law, is an internationally recognized expert in wetland law and policy. He served as lead counsel on amicus briefs on behalf of aquatic scientists and scientific societies in Clean Water Act cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. His recognitions include a National Wetlands Award for Education and Outreach, and his institute is the recipient of the American Bar Association’s Award for Distinguished Achievement in Environmental Law and Policy.
🕑: 03:30 PM - 04:00 PM
Florida's Defining Foods
Host: Andrew C. Huse
Info: Andrew "Andy" Huse is Curator of Florida Studies in Special Collections at the University of South Florida Libraries, where he has worked for more than 25 years. A librarian, archivist, and historian, he enjoys exploring Florida's culture in his research and writing. His books include The Columbia Restaurant, From Saloons to Steakhouses: A History of Tampa, and The Cuban Sandwich: A History in Layers, with Barbara Cruz and Jeff Houck.
🕑: 04:00 PM - 04:30 PM
Final Conversations with Book Festival Authors
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Nelson Poynter Memorial Library, 140 7th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, United States
USD 0.00