Welcome!

We are thrilled to have you join Maryland Humanities for the nineteenth year of One Maryland One Book, Maryland’s largest reading and discussion program. Since 2008, OMOB has brought together thousands of readers across the state to explore a specific work of literature through discussions at book clubs, libraries, colleges, museums, and more.

Literature has the power to delight, inform, and connect us. The OMOB is selected by a committee of distinguished members of Maryland’s literary community. We hope this connects you to parts of your community in a new way.

No Sense in Wishing is a personal and analytical essay collection that aptly captures this year’s theme of Revolution, Reaction, Reform. Taking cue from Burney’s career as a culture writer and critic, No Sense in Wishing uses that lens to look at his home city of Baltimore, music from throughout the global Black diaspora, and the traditions that raised him, offering perspective on the people, places, music, and art that transformed him.

We at Maryland Humanities hope this book continues to affect readers. Through each essay, readers are invited to traverse not only Burney’s own journeys across the world but also consider their own through the music, art, and culture they’ve encountered. Maryland Humanities highlights how No Sense in Wishing shows us, through the words of a local author, how these encounters can help us tap into deeper discussions of cultural background, social histories, adolescence, family, and relationships. Readers are encouraged to see the book as a model for how creative nonfiction and cultural criticism can be a tool for self-exploration and social transformation.

We encourage you to pick up your copy of No Sense in Wishing and join the conversation at one of our many public events across the state. This guide features discussion questions and a guide to further reading and learning.

As a program of the Maryland Center for the Book at Maryland Humanities, One Maryland One Book is made possible each year through the generosity of our sponsors and community partners. We greatly thank them for their support. However, this year we need everyone’s support to survive. We believe that in order to be community-based we must be community-backed, and now more than ever do we need our community’s support, so we’d like to invite you to join this community with a donation. Find out how you can get involved with events and see ways to make your donation.

Please join us!

A headshot of Chanel, a young or middle-aged Black woman with black hair a little longer than shoulder-length. In the background, se see an artistically blurry tree.

Chanel Johnson

Board Chair

Lindsey Baker

CEO