It is 1883, and America is at a crossroads. At a tiny college in Upstate
New York, an idealistic young professor has managed to convince Mark
Twain, Frederick Douglass, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, Harriet
Beecher Stowe, Confederate memoirist Forrest Taylor, and romance
novelist Lucy Comstock to participate in the first (and last) Auburn
Writers' Conference for a public discussion about the future of the
nation. By turns brilliantly comic and startlingly prescient, The
Auburn Conference vibrates with questions as alive and urgent today as
they were in 1883--the chronic American conundrums of race, class, and
gender, and the fate of the democratic ideal.