Poetry Reading: Ecopoetry in a Time of Climate Change
Join Santos, a National Book Award Recipient and Huntington R. Stanton Avery Distinguished Fellow, in a live ecopoetry reading from his book Habitat Threshold, touching on themes of nature, environmental justice, climate change, and human-animal relations.
Perez is an Indigenous Chamoru from Guam. He is the author of seven books of poetry, as well as the editor of the anthology, Indigenous Pacific Islander Eco-Literatures, which received the 2023 Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE) Creative Book Award.
Key Details
- A cash bar will be available.
- Please allow 10 minutes to walk to the Rose Garden.
- Please bring registration confirmation with you.
- Check in with Education staff at Admission window #10 at 4:30 p.m.
- Please note The Huntington is closed to the public on Tuesdays, but program participants are allowed access to the event.
For questions about this event, please contact publicprograms@huntington.org.
In-Person Class Ticketing Policies
- Tickets are not sold at the door for this event.
- To join the waitlist for this event, please email publicprograms@huntington.org. A space is not guaranteed, but you will be contacted if a space becomes available.
- To receive a refund, you must cancel at least 5 days prior to the event. Cancellations made within 5 days of the event will not be refunded.
- Members may receive a discount for up to two tickets.
Program fees support our mission to promote education in the arts, humanities, and botanical sciences.
Top image: The Huntington’s Rose Garden at sunset. Photo by Brandi Shawn-Chaparro. | The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens.
