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"First Gen": A Conversation with Alejandra Campoverdi

"First Gen": A Conversation with Alejandra Campoverdi In-Person

Join us for an on-stage conversation with Alejandra Campoverdi, a nationally recognized advocate for educational opportunity and women’s health and bestselling author of First Gen: A Memoir. Campoverdi will be in conversation with Martha Williams, the library's director of programs and education.

Alejandra has been a child on welfare, a White House aide to President Obama, a Harvard graduate, a gang member’s girlfriend, and a candidate for U.S. Congress. Living a life of contradictory extremes often comes with the territory when you’re a “First and Only.” It also comes at a price. With candor and heart, Alejandra retraces her trajectory as a Mexican American woman raised by an immigrant single mother in Los Angeles. Foregoing the tidy bullet points of her resume and shining a light on the spaces between them instead, what emerges is a powerful testimony that shatters the one-dimensional glossy narrative we are often sold of what it takes to achieve the American Dream. In this timely and revealing reflection, Alejandra draws from her own experiences to name and frame the challenges First and Onlys often face.
 
Part memoir, part manifesto, First Gen is a story of generational inheritance, aspiration, and the true meaning of belonging - a gripping journey to “reclaim the parts of ourselves we sacrificed in order to survive.”

This program will be livestreamed, but a recording will not be available to watch later. 

Campoverdi will also lead a memoir-writing workshop on Thursday, August 14. Learn more here.

Date:
Monday, August 11, 2025
Time:
5:00pm - 6:00pm
Time Zone:
Mountain Time - US & Canada (change)
Location:
John A. and Carole O. Moran Lecture Hall
Campus:
The Community Library
Audience:
  Adults  
Categories:
  Lectures & Conversations  
Registration has closed.

Alejandra Campoverdi's national bestselling book, First Gen, is the winner of the Dolores Huerta Award by the International Latino Book Awards, who also named Alejandra its 2024 Rising Star in Nonfiction. The book also won the Martin Cruz Smith Award and was chosen by the Council for Opportunity in Education as their 2024 Opportunity Matters Book Club selection, a nationwide book club for first-generation and low-income students at colleges and universities across the country.

In 2024, Alejandra founded the First Gen Fund, a 501c3 that provides hardship grants to first gen students. She produced the groundbreaking PBS health documentary Inheritance, and founded the LATINOS & BRCA awareness initiative in partnership with Penn Medicine’s Basser Center for BRCA. Previously, Alejandra served in the Obama White House as White House Deputy Director of Hispanic Media. 

Alejandra holds a Master’s degree in Public Policy from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government and graduated cum laude from the University of Southern California. She currently serves on the board of the California Community Foundation and is a Senior Fellow at the USC Center on Communication Leadership and Policy.

Photo credit – Brie Lakin.