
About this Event
We are excited to host Meg Stone for an event celebrating the release of The Cost of Fear: Why Most Safety Advice is Sexist and How We Can Stop Gender-Based Violence. For this event, Meg will be joined in conversation by Nancy Lanoue.
Please note: This event is free to attend, but registration is required. Masks are required for our in-person events.
A violence prevention expert helps targets of gender-based violence discern fact from fiction around what keeps us safe and support social change
Personal safety shouldn’t mean living in fear, nor should it come at the expense of political progress.
Questionable advice to avoid violence, like “don’t go shopping alone,” comes mostly from the police or other men in authority. But gender-based violence is often enacted in the most intimate spheres of our lives, not when we’re out grocery shopping. To stop this violence, we need strategies that are just as intimate.
In The Cost of Fear, nationally recognized violence prevention expert Meg Stone helps readers separate fact from fiction. It’s full of practical, research-based strategies that readers can use to keep themselves and their communities safer. Increased safety comes from developing the skills to resist coercive control, especially from people we know or people in authority, not from complying with rigid rules or avoiding homeless people on the street.
This deeply researched book draws timely connections between personal safety and political change—from Latina organizers in California working to stop sexual violence against night shift janitorial workers to teenage girls who call out double standards.
Work to change laws and change people’s minds is essential, but without practical strategies, the change is incomplete. The Cost of Fear will show us how we can make safety choices that expand our worlds and contribute to the fight for social justice.
Meg Stone is the Executive Director of IMPACT Boston, an abuse prevention and empowerment self-defense organization. Her writing has been published in Huffington Post, Newsweek, Washington Post, Boston Globe, Dame, and Ms. She has received numerous awards for her work over the past 30 years. Meg lives in Cambridge, MA, with her partner Mal and a shockingly large collection of musical theatre cast albums.
Nancy Lanoue discovered martial arts and self-defense at the Women’s Martial Arts Center in New York City in 1977. She holds a 7th dan in Seido karate, her primary art, and a 2nd dan in Kajukenbo, which she learned from her partner in life and work, Sarah Ludden. Together, they co-directed the non-profit Thousand Waves Martial Arts & Self-Defense Center in Chicago for more than three decades. Now semi-retired, Lanoue continues to teach martial arts part-time as a volunteer at Thousand Waves. She also oversees the Center’s Empowerment Self-Defense team, with a focus on mentoring the next generation of teachers. She is also enjoying a new collaborative connection with Arlene Limas’ PAVE Prevention and is in the process of being trained as a facilitator for PAVE’s innovative workplace violence prevention programs.
Accessibility: This event is hosted at the bookstore, which is a wheelchair accessible space. Masks are required. Seating is on a first-come, first-serve basis. We have dimmable, non-fluorescent lights. To request ASL interpretation for this event, please email [email protected] by no later than 14 days before the event. For other questions or access needs, please email [email protected].
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Women & Children First, 5233 North Clark Street, Chicago, United States
USD 0.00