Not What They Voted For
In this deeply personal and unflinching episode, author Vanessa Riley reflects on the tension between the creative life and a world that feels increasingly unstable. After a trip to Baltimore filled with bookstores, libraries, and readers, she receives devastating news that brings the realities of war painfully close to home. What follows is a powerful meditation on grief, compartmentalization, and the emotional cost of living through uncertain times.
Blending personal loss with sharp cultural and political reflection, this episode examines rising gas prices, economic strain, and the human consequences of global conflictโwhile questioning the gap between what people believed they were choosing and the reality unfolding around them.ย
Through it all, Riley explores the role of storytelling as both escape and resistance, and why creating, reading, and preserving truth matters now more than ever.This is a conversation about dignity, resilience, and the necessity of art in times of crisisโand a reminder that even in a world on fire, stories help us endure, understand, and imagine something better.
Keywords:
writing life, author podcast, Vanessa Riley, storytelling, compartmentalization, grief and loss, war impact, military families, current events, gas prices, economy concerns, political reflection, book culture, reading life, creative process, trauma and resilience, social commentary, history and storytelling, womenโs voices, Baltimore bookstores, libraries, Tayari Jones, Kin novel, Kate Quinn, Amy DuBois Barnett, Megan Devine, writing through crisis