place everyone wanted to come to including dinesh d'souza himself. >> host: just a quick preview with marji ross, publisher at regnery, of some of the titles coming out from that company this year. of you're watching booktv on c-span2. >> is there a nonfiction author or book you'd like to see featured on booktv? send us an e-mail at booktv@c-span.org or tweet us at twitter.com/booktv. >> actually, the film comes from the spanish cimarron, and at the beginning -- [inaudible] which has wandered off the farms and by with extension it was used for runaway slaves. so it was cimarron in spanish, marom in french, and it became maroon in english. now, what is interesting also is that even though maron is used and cimarron as any kind of runaway, then it became really used for people who settled in the woods, the swamps, the mountains. but in the united states maron was actually reserved for large -- [inaudible] communities of suriname and jamaica. and in the united states maroons were actually calls runaways simply or outliers. >> but these, normally when we think of runaway slaves, we think