Book club members meet twice a month, once to discuss the reading and again to read and listen to music in what Cook called “Reading Jam Sessions,” on a rotating basis. Participants in the gathering, which fluctuates in size each month, grab snacks during their in-person meet-ups and have a celebration lunch with foods from local restaurants at the end of each semester.

“The goal of the book club space is to invite people in and to build a learning community where people can explore not just what abolition is, but the history of abolition, and how abolition applies in our everyday lives,” Cook explained. She said book club members jointly pick what to read, meet to discuss the ideas that struck them most, and listen to lectures, videos, and podcasts about abolition.

Students have read several books and articles since the club started, including an article by Julia Sudbury called “Reform or abolition?” and Angela Davis’ “Abolition Democracy.” This semester, the reading list includes “We Do This ’Til We Free Us” by organizer, educator, and curator Mariame Kaba.

Walker said “Abolition Democracy,” which students read last semester, opened his eyes to the interconnectivity of several issues.

“I didn’t realize that the prison industrial complex had so many connections with slavery and with the military industrial complex,” he said. “She talks so well about the connection between those things, and it helped me get a bigger picture that all of these issues are so complex.”

He and Cook emphasized that book club members are not experts in the subject of abolition, but rather continual learners.

“That’s kind of why we’re here at Harvard. To be exposed to new ideas and experiences that may be different from ours,” Walker said. “And it’s really important as a growing intellectual and as a future citizen of the world.”