L.A. Times Festival of Books kicks off with packed panels at USC
Tens of thousands of readers of all ages, from toddlers clutching picture books to longtime fans carrying armfuls of paperbacks, fanned out across the USC campus Saturday for the opening day of the 31st Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, packing panels and lining up to see favorite authors and celebrity guests.
It was too early to know how many people attended the first day of the event, billed as the countryβs largest literary festival, though organizers said they expect between 150,000 and 155,000 attendees over the weekend. By late morning, the campus was already bustling, with strong turnout expected for appearances by author T.C. Boyle and actors Sarah Jessica Parker and David Duchovny, among others.
Founded in 1996 and spread across eight outdoor stages and 12 indoor venues, the festival has become a fixture on Los Angelesβ cultural calendar, bringing together more than 550 storytellers for panels, author interviews, book signings, performances and screenings spanning a wide range of genres, from childrenβs story times to cooking demonstrations.
This yearβs lineup features a broad mix of writers, performers and public figures, including comedian Larry David, musician Lionel Richie, multihyphenate businesswoman (and BeyoncΓ©βs mother) Tina Knowles, author and social critic Roxane Gay and scholar Reza Aslan.
Under sunny skies, actor and reality TV personality Lisa Rinna brought humor and a bit of bite to a 10:30 a.m. conversation on the festivalβs main stage. The βReal Housewives of Beverly Hillsβ alum released her second memoir, βYou Better Believe Iβm Gonna Talk About It,β in February, chronicling her time on the show and her recent turn on Season 4 of Peacockβs reality competition series βThe Traitors.β
Reflecting on her approach to βTraitors,β Rinna said she wanted to strip away the conflict-driven persona she had cultivated on βReal Housewivesβ and present a more unfiltered version of herself. βI was like, βSelf, listen. Youβre gonna go in there and just be you. No housewife sβ, none of that reactionary stuff.β β
In conversation with Times senior television writer Yvonne Villarreal, Rinna also spoke candidly about the loss of her mother, Lois Rinna, in 2021 and how her grief manifested in a feeling of rage while she was filming Season 12 of βReal Housewives.β
βIt really took me by surprise,β she said. βAnd you have to give space for it because you canβt make it go away. … They always say time heals, but time makes everything just a little less intense.β
At a noon panel titled βFire Escape: Wildfires and the Changing Geography of Southern California,β moderated by Times climate and energy reporter Blanca Begert, author and former wildland firefighter Jordan Thomas said the scale and frequency of California wildfires have shifted dramatically in recent decades.
βThe vast majority of the largest wildfires in Californiaβs recorded history have happened just in the past 20 years,β said Thomas, author of last yearβs National Book Award finalist βWhen It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World.β βWhile I was a hotshot, there were three of those fires burning simultaneously, including a million-acre fire β more than used to burn across the entire American West over the course of a decade.β
In the early afternoon, former Georgia Rep. Stacey Abrams spoke with moderator Leigh Haber about artificial intelligence and voter suppression in front of an enthusiastic, packed crowd at USCβs Bovard Auditorium.
Abramsβ latest Avery Keene novel, βCoded Justice,β came out last year and explores the role of artificial intelligence in the healthcare industry. AI has already become enmeshed in everyday life, she said, asking audience members to raise their hands if they had used TSA PreCheck or a streaming service.
βAI is a tool β¦ but it is created by someone, it is programmed by someone, it is controlled by someone,β she said. βRegulation is not about slowing down progress. It is about asking questions and saying that in the absence of answers, weβre going to put on reasonable restraints that we can revisit.β
Abrams also revealed that her next book, the fourth in her Avery Keene thriller series, will focus on prediction markets.
βI write Avery Keene novels to tell stories about social justice, but I put it in a form thatβs accessible to people who donβt think that they are social justice people,β Abrams said. βI want to meet people where they are, not where I want them to be.β
She also encouraged audience members to push back against voter suppression and defend democracy by volunteering at polling places β even in reliably blue districts β warning that she believes masked paramilitary groups will be allowed to patrol voting locations and target people of color in the upcoming midterm elections.
The festival kicked off Friday evening with the 46th Los Angeles Times Book Prizes ceremony at Bovard Auditorium, emceed by Times columnist LZ Granderson, recognizing both emerging voices and established writers.
Winners were announced in 13 categories for works published last year. Find a full list of winners here.
Oakland-born novelist Amy Tan, whose work often explores identity and the Chinese American immigrant experience, received the Robert Kirsch Award for lifetime achievement, and the literary nonprofit We Need Diverse Books received the Innovatorβs Award for its work promoting diversity in publishing.
Accepting her award, Tan, author of the 1989 bestseller βThe Joy Luck Club,β said that as a birthright citizen, she had never questioned her place in the country until recent debates over citizenship and belonging led her to reconsider whether she is, in fact, a βpolitical writer.β
βMy birthright and that of millions of others is now being argued before the Supreme Court, and no matter what the outcome is, itβs been a kick in the gut to know that those in the highest echelons of government and those who support them believe that we donβt belong.β
Tan said that as an author, βI imagine the lives of the people I write about,β and that act of compassion βreflects our politics and our beliefs. And so yes, I am a political writer.β
Addressing the attendees, Times Executive Editor Terry Tang pointed to the breadth of the weekendβs programming as an opportunity for connection and discovery. βIf you take in just a fraction of these events, it will expand your mind,β she said. βThis weekend gives all of us a chance to celebrate a sense of unity, purpose and support.β
The festival runs through Sunday. More information, including a schedule of events, can be found on the festivalβs website.