Washington Independent Review of Books

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James Workman & Amanda Leland: Sea Change

Location Kramers, 1517 Connecticut Ave., NW, Washington, DC
Date Wednesday, October 15, 2025 at 7:00pm - 8:00pm
Duration   1 hours
Link https://kramers.com/events/3571920251015
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Sea Change is the captivating, deeply human tale of how fishermen — along with some unlikely allies — helped carry out the biggest conservation success story you’ve never heard of.

Exploring a victory for the world’s most vital ecosystem, Sea Change tells the story of unlikely partnerships and surprising soluti ons that are quietly revoluti onizing the fi shing industry. Like in other ocean areas, the Gulf Coast fi sheries were being fi shed out to the detriment of wildlife and the people whose livelihoods and communiti es hinge on sea catch. Fisherman Keith “Buddy” Guindon had followed every suggested policy and practi ce to no avail, unti l he — along with scienti sts, government agencies, and environmental groups — helped lead real change that is preventi ng overfi shing and securing resource longevity. Sea Change demonstrates that success is possible, that the ti me is now, and the methods are here to conserve our natural world and the people who depend on it.

JAMES WORKMAN is a storyteller, entrepreneur, and author of resilience strategies, including the award-winning book Heart of Dryness. Drawing on fieldwork with Indigenous Kalahari people, he founded AquaShares, a firm pioneering water credit trading. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the New Republic, Orion, Trout, and Washington Monthly. Jamie studied at Yale, Oxford, and Stanford, and taught at Wesleyan and Whitman. But his real education came from restoring wildfires, reintroducing wolves, blowing up dams, smuggling to dissidents, getting married and raising two daughters.

AMANDA LELAND fell in love with the sea at five years old, when her grandfather taught her to fish. She has since gone on to get her Master’s Degree in Marine Biology, work as a marine mammal zookeeper, take more than 1,000 scuba dives, and kayak every chance she gets. As Executive Director of Environmental Defense Fund, Amanda brings unlikely allies together to find the ways that work to support healthy communities and economies while reducing climate impacts. She previously led EDF’s Oceans program, a global team in 14 countries focused on reversing overfishing while supporting thriving fishing communities, triggering the dramatic economic and ecological recovery of U.S. fisheries and beyond.

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