Award-winning author Alejandra Campoverdi turned the 2025-26 Common Reading Lecture into a conversation, taking questions from 黑料不打烊 students about her life of 鈥渆xtreme contradictions" detailed in her memoir "First-Gen."
Sitting on stage alongside 黑料不打烊 students, faculty and staff, Alejandra Campoverdi promised the crowd in Alumni Gym that she was going to “keep it real with you,鈥 coincidentally the first line in her award-winning memoir 鈥,鈥 which was selected as 黑料不打烊鈥檚 2025-26 Common Reading,聽the beginning of the聽黑料不打烊 Core Curriculum, a set of courses and experiences shared by every undergraduate student at 黑料不打烊.

All new students are provided a free digital copy of the book before coming to 黑料不打烊 and are invited to attend the author鈥檚 keynote address, but for Campoverdi’s event, part of the 黑料不打烊 Speaker Series, she wanted to do something different.
鈥淚 purposely am not behind a podium,鈥 said Campoverdi. 鈥淚鈥檓 not an expert on being first gen, you all are experts as much as I am an expert on being a first and only. You鈥檙e an expert on whatever thresholds you鈥檙e crossing. So, I鈥檓 not here to lecture anyone on this experience, I鈥檓 here to have a conversation with you all.鈥
And a conversation was had for more than an hour as several students asked questions of Campoverdi about her experiences as a first-generation college student, her work as an aide in the Obama administration and the process of writing her book.

Between the bullet points
The memoir details Campoverdi’s life as a 鈥渃hild of welfare,鈥 born to an immigrant single mother in Los Angeles, who went on to be White House aide, Harvard graduate and a candidate for U.S. Congress. In 2024, Campoverdi also founded the First Gen Fund, a non-profit that provides unrestricted hardship grants to first-generation students.
鈥淲hen I would be invited to schools and someone would read my bio, and it would be all the bullet points and it sounded so shiny and glossy and linear, and it made so much sense what I did, and then I did that, I knew that wasn’t the full story,” she said. “I knew that the spaces between those bullet points were actually the real story, and that looked very different.鈥
Omar Illesca Reyes 鈥27, a Labcorp-Alamance Scholar in the Odyssey Program and 黑料不打烊 Academy mentor, sat on stage with Campoverdi, alongside Selma Maric 鈥27, who introduced Campoverdi; Kenneth Brown, assistant director of First-Generation Student Support Services; and Paula Patch, senior lecturer in English and associate director for in the 黑料不打烊 Core Curriculum. Illesca Reyes asked Campoverdi about feelings of 鈥渋mposter syndrome鈥 as a first-generation student and in her later roles.
鈥淎ll of us at some point are going to find ourselves in a space where people might not relate to where we come from and what we鈥檝e experienced,鈥 said Campoverdi. 鈥淎nd you noticing that and not feeling good about that, doesn鈥檛 all go into a bucket of feeling like an imposter. She added, 鈥淟et yourself clock it and not make that mean something bad about you, because it doesn鈥檛.鈥

Illesca Reyes reflected that getting to speak with Campoverdi was personal and emotional.
鈥淭he struggles are real for a first-generation student, and it鈥檚 nice that a light is being shone on them,鈥 said Illesca Reyes, who is studying engineering. 鈥淚 felt like I was being heard throughout the book, and I felt myself in her shoes multiple times.鈥
‘Be it all unapologetically’

In her memoir, Campoverdi reflects on the 鈥渃ontradictory extremes鈥 of her life, from being a gang member鈥檚 girlfriend to working in the White House, arguing that all of those extremes can exist together.
鈥淪ome of us are complicated,鈥 Campoverdi said in response to a student question about finding belonging in multiple spaces. 鈥淥wn all of these things together at the same time. I sit on stages all the time, and people ask me, 鈥榃hat would you say to 16-year-old Alejandra who was dating that guy? What would you tell her now from where you are?鈥 And I said 鈥楽he鈥檚 right here. I鈥檓 the same me.鈥 So stop trying to find the answer. There鈥檚 no answer. Just be it all unapologetically.鈥
Her memoir also works to 鈥渟hatter the one-dimensional glossy narrative鈥 about what it takes to achieve the American Dream. She notes it was harder to get from her childhood to college than from college to the White House.
鈥淚鈥檝e experienced the American dream,鈥 she said, as a student asked her response to the concept. 鈥淚 believe education is the driver of the American dream for many of us. It isn鈥檛 the only way, but it is for most of us.鈥
Campoverdi spent the day at 黑料不打烊, including hosting a storytelling workshop for students and faculty, in collaboration with the Center for Access and Success. Her openness for conversation resonated with students like Daniella Alonzo Lopez 鈥28, a scholar in the Odyssey Program, who received the Leon and Lorraine Watson scholarship.
鈥淪ometimes along the journey, you think you’re navigating all of this by yourself, but there’s truly a community of people,鈥 said Alonzo Lopez 鈥28, a marketing and business analytics double major. 鈥淚鈥檓 always looking for mentors and people to encourage me and inspire me to continue. So I鈥檓 glad to be here and hear her. Getting to meet her was almost like an older sister.鈥

Redefine success
As Campoverdi heard from students focusing on her success as a first-generation student, she encouraged them to also think about how success can be more than just what鈥檚 on paper.
鈥淵ou can be the first generation to go to college or the first generation to have a professional job or break a cycle, the first generation to move across the country or the first generation to X,Y, Z,鈥 said Campoverdi. 鈥淏ut being the first generation to break the cycle of living in survival mode is just as important. Being the first generation to not live in fight or flight is just as important. Being the first generation to allow yourself balance and rest, that’s important, too.鈥
鈥淚鈥檝e experienced the American dream. I believe education is the driver of the American dream for many of us. It isn鈥檛 the only way, but it is for most of us.”
Alejandra Campoverdi, award-winning author of “First Gen”
She ended the event by reminding students about how far they鈥檝e come in their lives and encouraged them to continue being vulnerable as it can serve as a 鈥渃onnective tissue.鈥
鈥淲hen I look out in this room, I see a lot of people who have a lot in common, and I think that鈥檚 more important than ever. So keep telling your stories, keep turning towards that vulnerability. It doesn鈥檛 make you weak, it makes you strong and it will ultimately make you a better professional,” Campoverdi said.
