Web Exclusives: Books Received
2001-02.
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Received 2002-03.
New books by alumni and faculty
Undergraduate alumni books are listed by
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Last updated: October 16, 2002
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Books
by undergraduate alumni
1934
Philosophy
& Literature: Truth, Beauty, Goodness, Commitment - Cameron
Thompson 34 *35 and Peter S. Thompson 70. iUniverse.com
$29.95. An interdisciplinary anthology of philosophical ideas designed
for high school and college students. Cameron Thompson died in 1989.
Peter Thompson teaches at Roger Williams University in Providence.
1939
Day of Infamy: The Classic Account of the Bombing of Pearl Harbor
- Walter Lord '39. Henry Holt $14. Lord's account of the human
drama of the attack was recently issued in a 60th-anniversary edition.
He lives in New York City.
1943
The Way Things Are: The Changing Perspective of Human Existence
- John F. Brain [John F. Brinster 43]. Xlibris
$24.99. Using the term "neurocultural evolution" to describe
the mechanisms of learning and memory as the principal force in
human progress, the author suggests that long-term mind changes
will result in greater reality, fading religion, more peaceful coexistence,
and a globalized society without borders. Brinster lives in Skillman,
New Jersey.
Detoxifying the Culture John A. Howard 43.
AmErica House $19.95. A collection of the authors speeches
on Woodstock, capitalism, divorce laws, federal subsidy of higher
education, and more. Howard lives in Rockford, Illinois.
History
of U.S. Television: A Personal Reminiscence - Lawrence H. Rogers
II 43. 1stbooks.com $16.95 paper/$5.95 e-book. A detailed
account of the television industry from its inception in the late
1940s until the author retired in 1976 as president of Taft Broadcasting
Company. Rogers lives in Cincinnati.
Easy to Remember: The Great American Songwriters and Their Songs
- William Zinsser '44. David R. Godine $35. Profiles of composers
and lyricists dating from the early years of the 20th century to
the present. Illustrated with sheet-music covers and photographs
of the song-writers. Zinsser lives in New York City.
1947
Home Hazard Adams 47. SUNY $20.50. Using a
turn-of-the-century anarchist commune as the backdrop, this novel
tells the story of a present-day history professor who is drawn
into a campus dispute over a case of sexual harassment. Adams is
a professor, emeritus, of comparative literature at the University
of Washington.
The Road to Jericho: A Contemporaneous Tale of Good and Evil
William Prickett 47.1st Books Library $19.95 cloth/$11.95
paper/$4.95 e-book. This novel recounts the life of Archibald Bullock
Montgomery IV from his senior year at Princeton, through his marriage
motivated by selfishness rather than mutual love, and concluding
with his 30th reunion at Princeton. Prickett lives in Chesapeake
City, Maryland.
The
Beauty Contest and Other Stories - Robert Steiner 47.
iUniverse $12.95. This collection of short stories deals with science
fiction, fantasy, social problems, and philosophy. Steiner lives
in Ellicott City, Maryland.
1948
Some
Wine for Remembrance - Edmund Keeley 48. White Pine $15.
This novel is set in Nazi-occupied Greece during WWII. Keeley is Charles
Barnwell Straut Class of 1923 Professor of English Emeritus and professor
emeritus of English and creative writing at Princeton.
Beethovens Piano Sonatas: A Short Companion - Charles Rosen
48 *51. Yale $29.95. A practical guide for listeners and
performers, this book places the composers sonatas in context
and details the role of the piano in his life and work. Includes a
CD of the author performing extracts from several of the sonatas.
Rosen is a pianist and scholar living in New York.
1949
The
History of Colt Firearms and The History of Winchester Firearms
- Dean K. Boorman '49. Lyons $29.95 each. Illustrated with full-color
photographs, the two books chronicle the stories of these legendary
names in the saga of firearms history. Boorman is president of the
Armor and Arms Club of New York.
True Men and Traitors: From the OSS to the CIA, My Life in the
Shadows David W. Doyle 49. John Wiley $24.95. During
his career as a former high-level CIA agent, Doyle served as a spymaster
in the Far East, Burundi, Senegal, and the Soviet Bloc Division;
he was the CIAs base chief in the Congo when Premier Patrice
Lumumba was assassinated. The author lives in Honolulu.
My
Father Was a Bootlegger William A. Kelly '49.
Xlibris $31.49 cloth/$21.24 paper. An autobiography about growing
up in Atlantic City during the depression, fighting in air combat
in WWII, and life at Princeton. Kelly lives in Haworth, New Jersey.
OCimarron! Felix E. Goodson 49.
Red Hen $15.95. This novel is set in a remote valley in northern
New Mexico during the 1930s. Goodson lives in Greencastle, Indiana.
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1950
Grotties Dont Kiss: A Prep School Memoir by Clinton
Trowbridge 50. Vineyard $19.95. The authors account
of life at Groton in the 1940s. Trowbridge lives in Maine.
1951
Poetry Mostly Off the Beaten Track - Roy Herbert '51. Five
and Ten $5. A course in understanding poetry that cites great poems
of the past and includes some unpublished poems by the author, who
died in 1996.
Stoopnagles
Tale Is Twisted: Spoonerisms Run Amok edited by Keen
James 51. \ and Scott $16.95. Originally published
in 1945, this is a collection of childrens nursery stories
rewritten with spoonerisms. James lives in Albion, Rhode Island.
Essays Near and Far: As a New Century Dawns by Robert
V. Keeley 51. Five and Ten $10. A collection of the authors
lectures and articles on international affairs. Keeley lives in
Washington, D.C.
The Port of Missing Men - Alain Prévost '51. Five
and Ten $14.95. This coming-of-age novel was translated by the author's
roommate, Ralph Woodward '51, and published as a tribute to Prévost
on the occasion of the Class of 1951's 50th reunion. Prévost
died in 1971.
1952
"A Truthful Impression of the Country": British and
American Travel Writing in China, 1880-1949 Nicholas
Clifford '52. Michigan $39.50. Argues that while travel accounts
during the time studied claimed a particular kind of veracity that
distinguished them from the work of other writers, the traveler's
own sensibility nevertheless entered into the representation of
the unfamiliar and exotic. Clifford is college professor, emeritus,
at Middlebury.
Health Care in America: Can Our Ailing System Be Healed?
John P. Geyman '52. Butterworth Heinemann $49.99.
A review and analysis of health care in the U.S., this book is designed
to bridge the world of health economists, health analysts, and policy
makers to that of clinicians. Geyman is a professor of family medicine,
emeritus, at the University of Washington.
The Best of Fort Wayne, Volume One - George R. Mather '52.
G. Bradley $40. A photographic essay of the city's early years,
from the 1850s to World War I. Mather lives in Fort Wayne, Indiana.
The Best of Fort Wayne, Volume II - George R. Mather 52.
G. Bradley $40. The over 200 archival photographs in this book document
the citys history from the end of WWI through the 1970s. Mather
lives in Fort Wayne.
1953
Quests David M. Burns 53. IUniverse $12.95.
This autobiography covers the years 1928-49 but also includes chapters
on Long Hunters in 18th century Kentucky, pioneers on the Wilderness
Road, and the legacy of Appalachian coal mining. Burns lives in
Washington, D.C.
The Princeton Anthology of Writing: Favorite Pieces by the Ferris/McGraw
Writers at Princeton University edited by John McPhee 53
and Carol Rigolot. Princeton $39.50 cloth/$17.95 paper. Designed
for students and general readers, this book includes favorite and
influential works by writers who have held the Ferris and McGraw
professorships. McPhee is a lecturer in the Council of the Humanities
at Princeton. Rigolot is the executive director of the Council.
Shockingly
Close to the Truth: Confessions of a Grave-Robbing Ufologist
James W. Moseley 53 and Karl T. Pflock. Prometheus $25.
A social history of the worldwide UFO subculture that reveals the
truth behind the infamous Straith letter hoax, the real origins
of the Men in Black, and the true story of George Adamskis
alleged encounter with "a man from Venus." Moseley lives
in Key West and is editor of the newsletter Saucer Smear.
1954
Njals
Saga translated and edited by Robert Cook 54. Penguin
$14. Written in the late 13th century, this is one of the most powerful
and popular of the great Icelandic family sagas. Cook is a professor
of English literature at the University of Iceland in Reykjavik.
Telltale
Stories from Central America: Cultural Heritage, Political Systems,
and Resistance in Developing Countries Samuel Z. Stone
54. University of New Mexico $29.95. This inquiry
into race relations is based upon 118 folktales, reproduced in English
translation, that document the mutual resentment among Indians,
mestizos, ladinos, and whites in Central America. Stone lives in
Madisonville, Louisiana.
1955
Dante: A Life in Works - Robert Hollander '55. Yale $25.
This intellectual biography discusses the poet's works, their critical
reception through the centuries, and issues raised by each text.
Hollander is a professor of European literature and Romance languages
and literatures.
Too Hot to Touch Charles P. Mountebank (Mihailo
Voukitchevitch 55). IUniverse.com $17.95. In this
roman noir set in Arizona and Mexico, a private eye agrees
to protect two young boys from a kidnap threat. The author lives
in Torremanzanas, Spain.
Creative Competitive Power Markets: The PJM Model
Jeremiah D. Lambert '55. PennWell $64.95. Explains how the regional
transmission organization PJM promotes competition and reliability
through sophisticated electric power market design and adaptive
information technology. Lambert is an attorney in Washington, D.C.
1956
Assessment in Counseling: A Guide to the Use of Psychological
Assessment Instruments Albert B. Hood and Richard
W. Johnson 56. American Counseling Association $49.95.
The third edition of this guide for professionals and students has
just been published. Johnson is associate director, emeritus, of
counseling and consultation services and an adjunct professor, emeritus,
of counseling psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
"Happiness
Is Not My Companion": The Life of General G. K. Warren - David
M. Jordan '56. Indiana $35. One of the workhorses of the Army
of the Potomac during the Civil War, Warren helped save the day
at Gettysburg by his action at Little Round Top. He was summarily
relieved of his command after winning the Battle of Five Forks,
and the court findings that vindicated him were made public only
after his death. Jordan is an attorney in Philadelphia.
Occasional Glory: A History of the Philadelphia Phillies - David
M. Jordan 56. McFarland $29.95. A history of the baseball
club from its inception in 1883 through the 2000 season. Jordan
lives in Jenkintown, Pennsylvania.
1957
Principles of Solid Mechanics - Rowland Richards, Jr. '57 *64.
CRC $89.95. This textbook covers the application of the full-range
theory of deformable solids for analysis and design. Each of the
200 figures was hand-drawn by the author. Richards is a professor
of civil engineering at the State University of New York, Buffalo.
1958
Joseph Henry Lumpkin: Georgias First Chief Justice
Paul DeForest Hicks 58. Georgia $39.95. The first biography
of this antebellum southern judge and evangelical Presbyterian reformer.
Hicks lives in Rye, New York.
The Paradox of American Power: Why the Worlds Only Superpower
Cant Go It Alone - Joseph S. Nye Jr. 58. Oxford
$26. The author argues that in the new century the U.S. will rely
less on traditional measures of power and more on what he calls
"soft power" that derives from the appeal of American
culture, values, and institutions. Nye is dean of the Kennedy School
of Government at Harvard.
1959
The Correspondence of John Cotton edited by Sargent Bush,
Jr. 59. North Carolina $79.95. Cotton was one of the most
important leaders of the English Puritan movement in the first half
of the 17th century, and his letters bring to life the transatlantic
intellectual world in which he played a central role. Bush is John
Bascom Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Railroads and American Law James W. Ely, Jr. '59.
University Press of Kansas $39.95. Chronicles how "America's
first big business" impelled the creation of a vast array of
significant legal innovations governing interstate commerce, eminent
domain, private property, and labor relations. Ely is Milton R.
Underwood Professor of Law and a professor of history at Vanderbilt.
Lessons
from Afghanistan - David Fleishhacker 59. DfLessons@aol.com$13.95.
The authors memoirs of his experiences as a Peace Corps volunteer
and English teacher in Afghanistan in1962. Fleishhacker lives in
San Francisco.
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1960
Against Slavery: An Abolitionist Reader - edited by Mason Lowance
60. Penguin Putnam $13.95. This original anthology of
primary documents from the 18th- and 19th-century antislavery movements
includes speeches, lectures, and essays. Lowance is a professor
of English at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
A Companion to Lucca compiled and introduced by Andreas
Prindl '60. Maria Pacini Fazzi $19. An anthology of the history,
art, and music of the Italian city of Lucca, as seen through the
eyes of its visitors. The book features interesting people who came
to Lucca and important things that happened there over the last
2000 years. Prindl lives in London.
1961
The Other Adonis: A Novel of Reincarnation Frank
Deford 61. Sourcebooks $24.00. Rubenss painting
Venus and Adonis is the inspiration for this psychological
thriller and romance set alternately between the 17th century and
the present day. Deford lives in Westport, Connecticut.
The
Flame Charts - Paul Oppenheimer 61. Spuyten Duyvil $10.
This is Oppenheimers third collection of poems. He teaches
at The City College and The Graduate Center of the City University
of New York.
The Nile Basin: National Determinants of Collective Action
John Waterbury 61. Yale $35. Using theories of collective
action and international relations, the author confronts issues
ranging from food security and famine prevention to political stability.
Waterbury is president of the American University of Beirut.
1962
Divided We Stand: American Workers and the Struggle for Black
Equality Bruce Nelson 62. Princeton $39.50.
Focusing on longshoremen and steelworkers, this book examines how
European immigrants became American and "white" in the
crucible of the industrial workplace and the ethnic and working-class
neighborhood. Nelson is a professor of history at Dartmouth.
1964
Nantucket Impressions Robert Gambee 64. W.W.
Norton $50. A collection of over 450 color photographs together
with information about Nantucket past and present. Gambee is a photographer
living in Rye, New York.
1965
Outside the Lines: Poetry at Play Brad Burg 65.
Penguin Putnam $15.99. A collection of poetry for younger children.
Burg is a writer and editor living in Morris Plains, New Jersey.
For information on Brad's book of poetry for children, and to listen
online to some songs he's composed, based on the poems, you can
visit his site: www.bradburg.com.
Classmates may remember that Brad cowrote the 1965 Triangle show,
and he's written music professionally at various times since then.
Beyond Political Correctness: Social Transformation in the United
States - Michael S. Cummings '65. Lynne Rienner $23.50. Argues
that the political left is condemning itself to intellectual atrophy
and political ineffectiveness by avoiding politically sensitive
topics. Cummings is chair of the political science department at
the University of Colorado, Denver.
High and Dry: The Texas/New Mexico Struggle for the Pecos River
G. Emlen Hall 65. New Mexico $39.95. Examines the
clash of principles and personalities in the 100-year effort to
bring the Pecos River under control. Hall is a professor of law
at the University of New Mexico.
Greenberg's Guide to Lionel Trains, 1901-1942. Vol. II: 0 and
00 Gauges Bruce C. Greenberg '65. Kalmbach $49.95.
Featuring 178 photographs, this book provides the details to help
collectors identify and value their prewar Lionel trains. The author
lives in Sykesville, Maryland.
Defining Markets, Defining Moments Geoff Meredith
65 and Charles Schewe. Hungry Minds $24.99. The
authors incorporate the concept of generational cohorts into a customer
analysis model called Multi-Dimensional Marketing. Meredith is principal
and founder of Lifestage Matrix Marketing.
The Wisdom Within Roger Mills 65 and Elsie
Spittle. Lone Pine $12.95. This book is based upon the authors
approach to mental and community health, using the principles of
mind, consciousness, and thought. The authors provide real-life
examples of people whose lives have been transformed. Mills is chairman
of the Health Realization Institute in Saratoga, California.
In
Deep Jung Bion Smalley 65. Xlibris $18.69. Two
professors search for a murderer who is combining the techniques
of lucid dreaming with the properties of the Jungian model of the
human psyche in order to control minds. Smalley lives in Tucson.
1966
Giving Myself Away Jeffrey M. Green 66. Jeffrey
Green, 3 Avigayil St., 93551 Jerusalem, Israel, $8. The authors
first collection of poetry. Thinking Through Translation (University
of Georgia $24.95). The essays in this volume offer the authors
personal and theoretical ruminations on the profession of translation.
Green is a translator and writer living in Jerusalem.
1967
Austin-Healey 100/100-6/3000: Restoration Guide Gary
Anderson 67 and Robert Moment. MBI $29.95. Illustrates
correct restorations of all three series of cars with over 300 photographs.
Anderson is editor and publisher of British Car Magazine
in Los Altos, California.
1968
Performing the American Frontier, 1870-1906 Roger A.
Hall 68. Cambridge $54.95. Examines how the American frontier
was presented in theatrical productions during the critical period
from the end of the Civil War to the beginning of film. Hall is
a professor of theatre at James Madison University in Virginia.
1969
After 9/11: Solutions for a Saner World edited by Don
Hazen 69 et al. AlterNet.org $15. Includes articles on
the post-9/11 landscape from the online journalism portal AlterNet.org,
with contributions from Bill Moyer, Barbara Kingsolver, Edward Said,
Robert Reich, Arundhati Roy, and others. Hazen is executive editor
of AlterNet, based in San Francisco.
Reshaping National Intelligence for an Age of Information
Gregory F. Treverton '69. Cambridge $34.95. Urges
that those who solve intelligence puzzles tap expertise outside
government in the academy, think tanks, and Wall Street.
Treverton is a senior consultant at RAND Corporation in Santa Monica,
California.
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1970
From the Barrel of a Gun: The United States and the War against
Zimbabwe, 1965-1980 - Gerald Horne '70. North Carolina $59.95
cloth/ $24.95 paper. Documents the U.S.'s role in delaying the colonization
of Zimbabwe and how American involvement helped define interracial
dynamics at home. Horne teaches at the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill.
The
Global Journalist: News and Conscience in a World of Conflict
Philip Seib 70. Rowman & Littlefield $65 cloth/$23.95
paper. This book argues that U.S. news media have an obligation
to cover international events that affect the interests of the public
and the government, but that they also should "shake awake
the worlds conscience" by bringing more attention to
international conflict and suffering. Seib is the Lucius W. Nieman
Professor of Journalism at Marquette.
1971
Re-Examining Pauls Letters: The History of the Pauline
Correspondence, by Bo Reicke edited by David P. Moessner
71 and Ingalisa Reicke. Trinity $20. This volume reconciles
the relationship between Pauls "authentic" letters
and those attributed to him. Moessner is also author of Lord of
the Banquet: The Literary and Theological Significance of the Lukan
Travel Narrative (Trinity $22), which explores the problems concerning
form and content in the central "travel" section of the
Gospel of Luke; and editor of Jesus and the Heritage of Israel (Trinity
$40), which presents a consensus that Luke composed a carefully
crafted narrative in order to claim Jesus as Israels true
heritage and legacy. Moessner is a professor of biblical theology
at the University of Dubuque Theological Seminary.
Vectors: Aphorisms and Ten-Second Essays James Richardson
'71. Ausable $24 cloth/$14 paper. This is Richardson's sixth
book of poetry. He is a professor of English and creative writing.
1972
Leadership
for an Age of Higher Consciousness. Volume 2, Ancient Wisdom for
Modern Times B.T. Swami (John E. Favors 72). Hari-Nama
$23. The author argues that the greatest leaders see themselves
as servants first, place integrity and character before personal
gain, and know how to seek help from both earthly and spiritual
realms. B.T. Swami is director of the International Committee for
Urban Spiritual Development and founder/director of the Institute
for Applied Spiritual Technology in Washington, D.C.
Traveling the Pennsylvania Railroad: Photographs of William H. Rau
edited by John C. Van Horne 72. Pennsylvania $49.95.
In the 1890s Rau produced a series of images that explored the relationship
between the Pennsylvania Railroad and the natural and industrial
landscapes through which it passed. This book reproduces almost
100 of these photographs and includes essays that place Rau and
his work in the context of the history of American advertising and
landscape photography. Van Horne is librarian of the Library Company
of Philadelphia.
1973
Parallax: The Race to Measure the Cosmos Alan W. Hirshfeld
73. Freeman $23.95. Written for the general reader, this
book tells the story of the centuries-long quest to measure the
distance to a star. Hirshfeld is an astronomer at the University
of Massachusetts, Dartmouth.
1974
The Suing Game: Preventing and Surviving Class Action Discrimination
Suits Charles Carron 74. iUniverse.com $13.95.
Using fictional case histories, the author offers advice to businesses
on how to respond to accusations of discrimination, defuse media
interest, and maintain the trust of customers, investors, and employees.
Carron is an attorney in Arlington, Virginia.
When Every Moment Counts: What You Need to Know about Bioterrorism
from the Senates Only Doctor - Bill Frist 74. Rowman
& Littlefield $14.95. Written in a question-and-answer format,
this book discusses biological agents, chemical weapons, and the
vulnerabilities of food and water supplies. Frist is a U.S. senator
from Tennessee.
Tree
Girl T.A. Barron 74. Penguin Putnam $14.99.
In this fantasy for young readers, magic and the supernatural reveal
the ways in which all living things are connected. Barron lives
in Colorado.
With a Gemlike Flame: A Novel of Venice and a Lost Masterpiece
David Adams Cleveland '74. Carroll & Graf $25.
The reappearance of a Renaissance painting takes an American art
dealer and a one-time scholar to Venice and the underside of the
art world. Adams lives in London and New York City.
The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes
Jonathan Rose 74. Yale $39.95. Traces the rise and decline
of the autodidact from the preindustrial era to the 20th century,
and reveals that high culture has had a large and enthusiastic following
among the British working classes. Rose is a professor of history
at Drew.
1975
Before Taliban: Genealogies of the Afghan Jihad - David B. Edwards
75. California $17.95. Traces the lives of three recent
Afghan leaders Nur Muhammad Taraki, Samiulla Safi, and Qazi
Amin Waquad to explain how the promise of the 1960s crumbled
into the present tragedy. Edwards is a professor of anthropology
at Williams.
Six Strokes Under Roberta Isleib 75. Penguin
Putnam $5.99. In this mystery novel the protagonist battles her
way to a position on the LPGA Tour only to encounter scandal and
murder. Isleib lives in Madison, Connecticut.
Shackelford's Surgery of the Alimentary Tract
edited by George D. Zuidema and Charles J. Yeo '75. W.B. Saunders
$495. This five-volume textbook is in its fifth edition. Volume
II was edited by Daniel Dempsey '75. Yeo is a professor of surgery
and oncology at Johns Hopkins.
1976
"A Different Sense of Power": Problems of Community
in Late-Twentieth-Century U.S. Poetry Thomas Fink
'76. Fairleigh Dickinson $39.50. Analyzes the work of poets
who speak to issues of visibility and invisibility, the erasure
and reconstruction of history, coalition, and the expansion of collectivity.
Fink is a professor of English at CUNY, La Guardia.
Gossip Thomas Fink 76. Marsh Hawk $10. This
is Finks second book of poetry. He is a professor of English
at City University of New York, La Guardia.
1977
Nigger: The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word Randall
Kennedy 77. Pantheon $22. The author explores the numerous
ways in which the word has been used and by whom, and analyzes the
social, cultural, and legal controversies to which it has given
rise. Kennedy is a professor of law at Harvard.
Hidden Gifts Rick Hamlin 77. Bethany House
$10.99. In this novel a popular vocalist returns home for
a Christmas concert, only to discover the cost of success. Hamlin
is managing editor of Guideposts magazine and lives in New
York City.
Playing the Beethoven Piano Sonatas Robert Taub 77.
Amadeus $24.95. Taub shares what he has learned from Beethovens
own writing and autograph scores, and considers each of the 32 sonatas
to explore the essence of each work and its place in the evolution
of the composers artistry. Taub is a pianist and lives in
Princeton.
1978
The
Limits of Pleasure Daniel M. Jaffe 78. Haworth
$24.95 cloth/$14.95 paper. In two intertwining chronologies,
this novel follows a 40-year-old gay, Jewish man who was raised
by his Orthodox, Holocaust-survivor grandmother. Jaffe is a writer
and literary translator living in Santa Barbara, California.
The Power of Kings: Monarchy and Religion in Europe, 1589-1715
Paul Kléber Monod 78. Yale $19.
Explores the shift in the way European kings and queens were regarded
by their subjects between the Reformation and the Enlightenment.
Once viewed as godlike beings, monarchs came to represent the human,
visible side of the rational state. The author is a professor of
history at Middlebury.
Unlocking the Clubhouse: Women in Computing Jane Margolis
*79 and Allan Fisher '78. MIT $24.95. Based on interviews with
computer science students, classroom observations, and discussions
with college and high school faculty, this book examines the familial,
educational, and institutional origins of the gender gap in computing.
Margolis is a researcher at the Graduate School of Education and
Information Systems at UCLA. Fisher is President and CEO of Carnegie
Technology Education.
Competing for Capital: Europe and North America in a Global
Era Kenneth P. Thomas '78. Georgetown University
$65. Analyzes competition for investment in order to suggest ways
of controlling the effects of capital mobility. The book concludes
with policy lessons from the European Union and recommendations
for improving subsidy control at the national and international
levels. Thomas is an associate professor of political science at
the University of Missouri, St. Louis.
1979
The Drunken Driver Has the Right of Way Ethan Coen 79.
Crown $18. Coens debut book of poems deals with his childhood,
career in Hollywood, and decade-long battle with amphetamines, among
other topics. He is a filmmaker in New York.
Aristocracy and the Modern Imagination - Charles A. Riley II
79. New England $29.95. Examines the place and meaning
of aristocratic birth, heritage, and society in the works of Modernist
artists, writers, and composers. Riley is an associate professor
of English at Baruch College, City University of New York.
Why We Stay Together: 20 Writers on Marriage and Its Rewards
edited by Jennifer Schwamm Willis 79. Marlowe $15.95.
The fiction and nonfiction entries explore a variety of themes,
including respect, sacrifice, compassion, and transformation. Willis
has also recently edited two other volumes. Wizards: Stories of
Mischief, Magic and Mayhem (Thunders Mouth $16.95) is a collection
of stories for children and their parents by C. S. Lewis, T.H. White,
Roald Dahl, E. Nesbit, and others. Explore: Stories of Survival
from Off the Map (Adrenaline $16.95) includes first-hand accounts
of men and women who have encountered storms, starvation, cannibals,
predators, and disease in their pursuit of mystery and adventure.
Willis lives in Maine.
Big
Game, Small World: A Basketball Adventure Alexander
Wolff 79. Warner $24.95. Visiting 16 countries
and 10 states, the author explores how this American-born sport
seems to obsess everyone from Bhutan to Kansas. Wolff is a senior
writer at Sports Illustrated and lives in New York City.
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1980
Building a Church of Small Groups: A Place Where Nobody Stands
Alone - Bill Donahue 80 and Russ Robinson. Zondervan $19.99.
This book for pastors and church leaders discusses the steps necessary
to begin building a church where small groups are integrated throughout
the entire ministry. Donahue is executive director of small group
ministries for the Willow Creek Association.
Simple Gifts: Photographs and Reflections from the Landscape -Edwin
J. Firmage 80. Firmageditions $695. This limited-edition
book is a reflection on the landscape as a place of renewals. It
includes 40 large images and essays by 15 authors. Firmage lives
in Salt Lake City.
Color Country: Touring the Colorado Plateau Susan M. Neider
80. Gibbs-Smith $19.95. A photographic guide to 18 of
the regions most significant parks and monuments; includes
maps. Neider lives in Princeton.
Unequal Rights: Discrimination Against People with Mental Disabilities
and the Americans with Disabilities Act Susan Stefan 80.
American Psychological Association $49.95. Includes descriptions
of court cases and disability law as well as personal testimony
from people with mental disabilities on the impact of discrimination.
Stefan is a professor of law at the University of Miami School of
Law.
1981
33 Things Every Girl Should Know About Womens History:
From Suffragettes to Skirt Lengths to the E.R.A. edited
by Tonya Bolden 81. Crown $12.95. A book for young
readers about the roles women play in society and how those roles
have evolved. Bolden lives in New York City.
Tell
All the Children Our Story: Memories and Mementos of Being Young
and Black in America Tonya Bolden 81. Abrams
$24.95. Using interviews, diaries, news articles, and historical
documents, this book for children examines the black childs
place in society, from the first recorded birth at Jamestown to
the present day. Bolden is also the author of Rock of Ages: A Tribute
to the Black Church (Knopf $16.95), an illustrated celebration
in verse of the black churchs contributions to American culture.
Bolden lives in New York City.
Laugh Track - David Galef 81. Mississippi $25. This
collection of short stories focuses on people with obsessions, including
a failed comedian who brings a recorded laugh track to his psychoanalytic
sessions. Galef is an associate professor of English at the University
of Mississippi.
Key Topics in Evidence-Based Medicine William Summerskill
81 et al. Bios Scientific Publishers $34.95. Summarizes
the key topics essential for a clear understanding of the new skills
required by all healthcare professionals, including how to search
for, appraise, and implement (or reject) changes in practice suggested
by any new evidence. Summerskill trains hospital doctors in evidence-based
medicine at the University of Bristol, England.
Reconfiguring Modernity: Concepts of Nature in Japanese Political
Ideology Julia Adeney Thomas 81. California $37.50.
Thomas argues that from the 19th to the early 20th century, nature
was redefined in Japan, moving from a universal, spatial concept,
through temporal, social Darwinian ideas of inevitable progress
and competitive struggle, to a celebration of the nation as uniquely
in harmony with nature. Thomas is an associate professor of history
at the University of Notre Dame.
A
Purple-Golden Renascence of Eden-Exalting Rainbows Hugo Walter
81. Fithian $18.95. This is Walters 10th
volume of poetry. He is a professor of English and humanities at
Berkeley College in White Plains, New York.
1982
Lifes Work: Confessions of an Unbalanced Mom - Lisa Belkin
82. Simon & Schuster $23. The author explores the
intersection of life in work and considers such issues as working
from home, business travel, family, and vacations. Belkins
column "Lifes Work" appears biweekly in the New
York Times.
Next: The Future Just Happened Michael Lewis 82.
W. W. Norton $22.95. Examining the social implications of the Internet,
the author discusses the shift from a pyramidal edifice of power
to a populist "pancake." Lewis lives in Berkeley, California.
The Devils Workshop - Demetria Martínez 82.
Arizona $24.95 cloth/$14.95 paper. This collection of poems explores
romantic love, the failure of political systems, spirituality, and
social and personal transformation. Martínez lives in Tucson.
1983
Constitutional Self-Government Christopher L.
Eisgruber 83. Harvard $45. Focusing on the Constitutions
seemingly undemocratic features, the author defends a strong role
for courts in democratic deliberation. Eisgruber is the Laurance
S. Rockefeller Professor of Public Affairs.
The Ghosts of Charleston Edward B. Macy and Julian T.
Buxton III '83. Beaufort $21.95 (available at tourcharleston.com).
A collection of short stories recounting the myriad ghosts of Charleston,
including the plight of the headless confederate soldier and the
luminescent Lady in White. Buxton is a founder of Tour Charleston.
Modernist Fiction, Cosmopolitanism and the Politics of Commodity
Jessica Berman 83. Cambridge $59.95.
The author argues that the fiction of Henry James, Marcel Proust,
Virginia Woolf, and Gertrude Stein engages directly with early 20th-century
transformations of community and cosmopolitanism. Berman is also
the editor of [Marianne: this is another title of book] Virginia
Woolf Out of Bounds: Selected Papers from the Tenth Annual Conference
on Virginia Woolf (Pace $40). Berman is an associate professor of
English and womens studies at the University of Maryland,
Baltimore County.
Senseless Stona Fitch 83. Soho $22. This novel
explores the horrific experiences of a hostage forced to endure
torture that ultimately deprives him of his five senses. Fitch lives
in Concord, Massachusetts.
Digital Rights Management: Business and Technology
Bill Rosenblatt '83 et al. M&T $29.99. Explains DRM antecedents,
paradigms, and legal foundations, and offers a guide to DRM technologies
and standards together with practical advice on products, services,
and vendors. Rosenblatt is president of GiantSteps Media Technology
Strategies in New York City.
Spoiling for a Fight: Third-Party Politics in America - Micah
L. Sifry 83. Routledge $27.50. Chronicles the groundswell
of support enjoyed by third-party candidates over the past years,
and examines the obstacles and opportunities facing todays
leading independent parties. Sifry is senior analyst at Public Campaign,
a nonpartisan campaign finance reform group.
1984
Grafting Helen: The Abduction of the Classical Past Matthew
Gumpert 84. Wisconsin $50 cloth/$21.95 paper. Tracing
the figure of Helen of Troy from its classical origins through the
Middle Ages, the French Renaissance, and the modern era, Gumpert
uncovers Helen as a historical emblem that is stolen, appropriated,
imitated, extorted, and coveted. Gumpert is an assistant professor
of core curriculum at Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey
Maternal Measures: Figuring Caregiving in the Early Modern Period
- edited by Naomi J. Miller 81 and Naomi Yavneh 84.
Ashgate $69.95 cloth/$29.95 paper. The contributors present original
research and criticism on caregiving by mothers, stepmothers, midwives,
wet nurses, educators, and witches during the early modern period
in Europe, Latin America, Mexico and the New World. Miller is an
associate professor of English literature and womens studies
at the University of Arizona. Yavneh is an associate professor of
Renaissance culture at the University of South Florida.
Illusion of Order: The False Promise of Broken Windows Policing
Bernard E. Harcourt 84. Harvard $35. The "broken
windows" theory of crime argues that permitting minor misdemeanors
to go unpunished encourages more serious crime. The author critiques
existing data on the theory and offers alternative reasons for the
apparently successful results of this type of law enforcement. Harcourt
is an associate professor of law at the University of Arizona.
Illumination
Terry McGarry 84. Tor $25.95. In this fantasy novel
set in the world of Eiden Myr, the protagonist loses the inner light
that gives her power. Her only hope lies in seeking the help of
the mysterious ruling caste of nine wizards. McGarry lives in East
Rockaway, New York.
The
Glasswrights Journeyman Mindy L. Klasky 86.
Roc $6.99. The third novel in Klaskys fantasy series. She
is a lawyer and librarian living in Arlington, Virginia.
The
Spanish Redemption: Heritage, Power, and Loss on New Mexicos
Upper Rio Grande - Charles Montgomery 86. California $50.
Traces the history of the regions Spanish heritage, showing
how Anglos and Hispanos sought to redefine the regions social
character by glorifying its Spanish colonial past. Montgomery is
an assistant professor of history at the University of Florida.
Cisco IOS Access Lists Jeff Sedayao 86. OReilly
$39.95. An in-depth look at network policies and how to implement
them with access lists. Sedayao is a network engineer with Intel
Online Services and lives in San Jose, California.
1987
My Less Than Secret Life - Jonathan Ames 87. Thunders
Mouth $14.95. This collection of the authors fiction and essays
includes his public diary, the biweekly columns he wrote for the
New York Press. Ames lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Audens
Games of Knowledge: Poetry and the Meanings of Homosexuality
Richard R. Bozorth 87. Columbia $49.50 cloth/$19.50 paper.
The author includes close textual analysis of homosexual encoding
in specific poems as well as interpretations of Audens place
within the larger social, political, and literary worlds. Bozorth
is an assistant professor of English at Southern Methodist University.
Assessing
and Treating Late-Life Depression: A Casebook and Resource Guide
Michele J. Karel 87 et al. Basic $45. A practice-oriented,
research-based casebook that provides an interdisciplinary framework
for understanding and treating late-life depressive symptoms. Karel
is a practicing geropsychologist in Boston.
BEA WebLogic Server Bible Joe Zuffoletto 87
et al. John Wiley $99.98. A learning aid and reference designed
for all WebLogic developers, from beginning to advanced. Zuffoletto
is CEO of ZeeWare, Inc. in Sausalito, California.
1988
Renewing
Birmingham: Federal Funding and the Promise of Change, 1929-1979
- Christopher MacGregor Scribner 88. Georgia $40. The
author explores how federal funding aided Birminghams transition
from an industrial to a service economy and led to redrawn avenues
of power, influence, and justice in the city. Scribner is an independent
scholar living in Birmingham.
Mommy, My Head Hurts Sarah Cheyette 88. Newmarket
$21.95. Practical advice on recognizing and treating childrens
headaches, including tips on communicating with children about their
pain, and on medications and nontraditional treatments. Cheyette
is a pediatric neurologist in Edmonds, Washington.
A Revolution in Language: The Problem of Signs in Late Eighteenth-Century
France Sophia Rosenfeld 88. Stanford $60.
Argues that many key thinkers of the French Revolution were preoccupied
by questions of language, and that prevailing assumptions about
words and other signs profoundly shaped revolutionaries efforts
to imagine and to institute an ideal polity. Rosenfeld is an assistant
professor of history at the University of Virginia.
1989
A
Republic of Righteousness: The Public Christianity of the Post-Revolutionary
New England Clergy Jonathan D. Sassi '89. Oxford
$49.95. Argues that New England clergymen furthered the vitality
of early republican culture through the application of their corporate
ethic to public issues, fostering American identity, nationalism,
and civil religion. Sassi is an assistant professor of history at
the College of Staten Island, CUNY.
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1990
Foreign in a Domestic Sense: Puerto Rico, American Expansion,
and the Constitution edited by Christina Duffy Burnett 90
and Burke Marshall. Duke $69.95 cloth/$23.95 paper. The contributors
discuss the history of U.S. imperialism and the legal issues surrounding
the status of U.S. territories. Burnett is a research associate
in the Program in Law and Public Affairs at Princeton.
1991
The Wedding Workout: Look & Feel Fabulous on Your Special
Day Tracy Effinger 91 and Suzanne Rowen.
Contemporary $19.95. Includes stress-reducing activities, targeted
workouts, and exercises to improve posture. Effinger is a fitness
trainer.
The
Huntsman Whitney Terrell 91. Viking $25.95. The
murder of a young Kansas City socialite serves as the starting point
for a contemporary tale of incest, hypocrisy, and race relations.
Terrell is a writer-in-residence for the School of Professional
Studies at Rockhurst University in Kansas City.
1993
The Perfect Store: Inside eBay - Adam Cohen 93.
Little, Brown $25.95. The author was granted total inside access
to eBay for this story of the Internet companys success. Cohen
is on the editorial board of the New York Times.
1994
The Way to Somewhere Angie Day 94. Simon
& Schuster $22. The protagonist of this novel journeys from
Houston to Mexico to New York City, but finds herself torn between
her lofty goals and the dysfunctional world she left behind in Texas.
Day is a freelance producer and editor for MTV in New York City.
Drive:
Womens True Stories from the Open Road edited by Jennie
Goode 94. Seal $15.95. A collection of tales about women
on the great American road trip, from a small-time magicians
trek through the mining towns of the Continental divide to a Korean-American
womans tour-bus escapade across Canada. Goode lives in Seattle.
White Lies Michael Salinas '94. Booklocker.com
$13.95 paper/$6.95 e-book. A legal mystery set in a tiny Texas border
town. Salinas is an attorney in Mercedes, Texas.
1995
Things
You Need to Be Told: A handbook for Polite Behavior in a tacky,
rude world! Honore McDonough Ervin and Lesley Carlin '95.
Berkley $9.95. Advice on manners for the new millennium, including
how to choose the right e-mail address, quit your job with finesse,
and keep up appearances on a casual Friday. Carlin
is cocreator of the Web site EtiquetteGrrls.com
and lives near Boston.
The River We Carry With Us edited by Tracy
Stone-Manning and Emily J. Miller 95. Clark City $22.95.
A collection of stories, essays, and historical pieces about the
Clark Fork River basin of Western Montana. Miller teaches creative
writing at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
E-Mail Etiquette: Do's, Don'ts, and Disaster Tales Samantha
Miller '95. Warner $12.95. Includes strategies for composing
personal and business e-mail, practical advice about privacy and
junk e-mail, and tips on how to guard against Net dangers. This
book grew out of the author's "Internet Manners" advice
column that appears on the Web site People.com. Miller lives in
Brooklyn, New York.
1998
The Muse Asylum David Czuchlewski 98. Putnam
$23.95. In this novel three recent college graduates search to uncover
the identity of a great modern American writer but find themselves
caught in a game of reflections and reversals. The author is a student
at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City.
2002
Saguaro: The Desert Giant Ann Humphreys 02 and
Susan Lowell *79. Rio Nuevo $10.95. Illustrated with contemporary
and historic photographs, this book explores the saguaros
biology and place in the Sonoran desert ecosystem and examines the
cultural impact the cactus has made on human inhabitants of the
southwest. Lowell lives in Tucson. Humphreys, her daughter, is a
graduating senior.
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By
Graduate Alumni
Greed and Injustice in Classical Athens Ryan K.
Balot *93. Princeton $39.50. Integrating ancient philosophy,
poetry, and history, and drawing on modern political thought, the
author demonstrates that the Athenian discourse on greed was an
essential component of Greek social development and political history.
Balot is an assistant professor of classics at Washington University
in St. Louis.
The
Cult of the Nation in France: Inventing Nationalism, 1680-1800
David A. Bell *91. Harvard $45. Argues that while
the French revolutionaries hoped that patriotism and national sentiment
would replace religion as the new binding force in public life,
the example of cultural remodeling they followed was that of the
Catholic Church. Bell is a professor of history at Johns Hopkins.
Roman Catholics and Shii Muslims: Prayer, Passion, and
Politics James A. Bill *68 and John Alden Williams *58.
North Carolina $24.95. The authors analyze common doctrinal, structural,
and sociopolitical characteristics shared by both religions. Bill
is Reves Professor of International Studies and Government at the
College of William and Mary. Williams is Professor Emeritus of the
Humanities in Religion at the College of William and Mary.
Us vs. Them: American Political and Cultural Conflict from WWII
to Watergate Robert J. Bresler *64. SR Books $55.00 cloth/
$17.95 paper. This textbook collects documents designed to introduce
students to the historical roots of contemporary cultural politics.
Bresler is a professor of public policy at the School of Public
Affairs, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg.
Silently into the Midst of Things Atholl Sutherland Brown
*54. Trafford $19. This history of the RAF Bristol Beaufighter
squadrons in the air war in Burma has been published in a new edition.
Brown lives in Victoria, British Columbia.
The Perfect Home: Living in Style - Joseph Carroll *63. The
Ashley Group $39.95. This illustrated guide to decorating focuses
on the key elements of style, personality, color and light, hospitality,
and nature. Carroll is publisher of Furniture/Today and lives in
Greensboro, North Carolina.
The Soledades, Góngoras Masque of the Imagination -
Marsha S. Collins *83. Missouri $37.50. The author explores
the controversial pastoral poems of the 17th-century Spanish writer
Góngora as a product of European court culture. Collins is
an associate professor of Spanish at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill.
Inventing the Renaissance Putto Charles Dempsey *63.
North Carolina $59.95. Discussing the manifestations of the putto
(often portrayed as a mischievous baby) in 15th-century Italian
art and literature, Dempsey explores the fusion of classical forms
with local, vernacular, and modern Italian traditions. Dempsey is
a professor of Italian Renaissance and Baroque art at Johns Hopkins.
Weathering the Storm: Sverre Petterssen, the D-Day Forecast,
and the Rise of Modern Meteorology edited by James Rodger
Fleming *88. American Meteorological Society $70. This autobiographical
memoir traces the life of a key figure in the field of weather analysis
and forecasting. Petterssen developed the Bergen-school and upper-air
techniques and discovered what were later called "jet streams."
Fleming teaches at Colby College.
Boat Camping Haida Gwaii: A Small-Vessel Guide to the Queen
Charlotte Islands - Neil Frazer *78. Harbour $29.95. This practical
guide for kayakers and small-boat voyagers provides detailed information
for cruising and camping around one of the most remote areas in
British Columbia. Frazer is a research professor at the University
of Hawaii.
Susan
Glaspell in Context: American Theater, Culture, and Politics, 1915-48
J. Ellen Gainor *88. Michigan $52.50. Explores the
playwrights dramatic work within its context: the worlds of
Greenwich Village and Provincetown bohemia, of the American frontier,
and of American modernism. Gainor is a professor of theatre, womens
studies, and American studies at Cornell.
Time Travel in Einsteins Universe: The Physical Possibilities
of Travel Through Time J. Richard Gott *73. Houghton
Mifflin $25. The author shows that time travel is physically possible
and provides possible answers about the origin of the universe.
Gott is a professor of astrophysical sciences.
What Are the Chances? Voodoo Deaths, Office Gossip, and Other
Adventures in Probability Bart K. Holland *83. Johns
Hopkins $24.95. Weaving together tales from real life including
the spread of the bubonic plague in medieval Europe, the number
of Prussian cavalrymen kicked to death by their horses, and deaths
by voodoo curse Holland, a statistician, reveals how everyday
events that profoundly affect our lives are controlled by just one
number. Holland is an associate professor of biostatistics and epidemiology
at New Jersey Medical School.
Andy Warhol Wayne Koestenbaum *88. Lipper/Viking
$19.95. Drawing on interviews with the artists collaborators,
his writings, ephemera in his time capsules, and his provocative
and powerful films, the author considers issues of eroticism and
homosexuality in Warhols life and work. Koestenbaum is a professor
of English at the CUNY Graduate Center.
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Irreconcilable Differences? Explaining Czechoslovakias
Dissolution edited and translated by Michael Kraus
*86 and Allison Stanger. Rowman & Littlefield $84
cloth/$27.95 paper. A multi-disciplinary group of scholars together
with Czech and Slovak decision makers consider the problems of democratic
transitions in multinational societies and ethnic separatism and
its origins. Kraus is a professor and chair of political science
at Middlebury.
The Essential John Nash edited by Harold W. Kuhn *50
and Sylvia Nasar. Princeton $29.95. Includes nine of Nashs
most influential papers, his Nobel citation, and his autobiography.
Kuhn is a professor emeritus of mathematics.
Secret Missions to Cuba: Fidel Castro, Bernardo Benes, and Cuban
Miami Robert M. Levine *67. Palgrave $29.95.
The Cuban American lawyer Beness first mission to Cuba
in 1978 led to the release of 3,600 political prisoners, but he
remains an outcast in Miamis Cuban community for having dealt
personally with Castro. Levine is director of the Center for Latin
American Studies at the University of Miami.
Saguaro: The Desert Giant Ann Humphreys 02
and Susan Lowell *79. Rio Nuevo $10.95. Illustrated with
contemporary and historic photographs, this book explores the saguaros
biology and place in the Sonoran desert ecosystem and examines the
cultural impact the cactus has made on human inhabitants of the
southwest. Lowell lives in Tucson. Humphreys, her daughter, is a
graduating senior.
Moral and Political Education edited by Stephen Macedo
*87 and Yael Tamir. NYU $55. The contributors offer philosophical,
political, and legal reflections on the practical questions of how
education should be changed to meet the needs of the 21st century.
Macedo is Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Politics at the University
Center for Human Values.
Unlocking
the Clubhouse: Women in Computing Jane Margolis *79
and Allan Fisher '78. MIT $24.95. Based on interviews with computer
science students, classroom observations, and discussions with college
and high school faculty, this book examines the familial, educational,
and institutional origins of the gender gap in computing. Margolis
is a researcher at the Graduate School of Education and Information
Systems at UCLA. Fisher is President and CEO of Carnegie Technology
Education.
The
Jewish Lights Spirituality Handbook: A Guide to Understanding, Exploring
& Living a Spiritual Life edited by Stuart M. Matlins
*62. Jewish Lights $24.95. The contributors explore multiple
aspects of Jewish spirituality, including God, community, prayer,
meditation, mysticism, and traditions. Matlins is editor-in-chief
and publisher of Jewish Lights Publishing in Woodstock, Vermont.
The
Bible in Translation: Ancient and English Versions
Bruce M. Metzger *42. Baker $14.99. Explores the circumstances
under which 50 biblical translations were produced and offers insights
into the underlying objectives, characteristics, and strengths of
each. Metzger is George L. Collord Professor of New Testament Language
and Literature, Emeritus, at Princeton Theological Seminary.
Germs: Biological Weapons and Americas Secret War
Judith Miller *72, Stephen Engelberg 79 and
William Broad. Simon & Schuster $27.00. Argues that secret,
government-funded research has taken the U.S. to the limits if not
beyond what is allowed by the global treaty banning germ arms. Miller
is a senior writer and Engelberg a senior investigative editor at
the New York Times.
An Aesthetic Occupation: The Immediacy of Architecture and the
Palestine Conflict -Daniel Bertrand Monk *95. Duke $54.95 cloth/$18.95
paper. The author combines archival research and theoretical insights
to explore controversies over the authenticity of holy sites, the
restorations of the Dome of the Rock, and the accusations that followed
the Buraq, or Wailing Wall, riots of 1929. Monk is an associate
professor of art and architecture at SUNY, Stony Brook, and teaches
at Harvards Graduate School of Design.
A Guide to Tucson Architecture -Anne M. Nequette *86 and
R. Brooks Jeffery. Arizona $22.95. Includes 14 tours with maps;
annotated descriptions and photographs of distinctive buildings;
profiles of prominent Tucson architects; and a guide to local architectural
styles. Nequette teaches in the University of Arizonas School
of Architecture.
Rhode
Island Stained Glass: An Historical Guide Paul F. Norton
*52. William L. Bauhan $32.50 cloth/$27.50 paper. Documents
320 buildings arranged alphabetically by town and church and includes
a register of studios, artisans, and artists that designed and executed
the stained-glass windows. Norton is chair of the art history department
at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
Literary
Culture in a World Transformed: A Future for the Humanities - William
Paulson *81. Cornell $42.50 cloth/$16.95 paper. Assesses the
role of literary studies in the academic and non-academic worlds,
proposing a closer connection between literature and everyday language
and arguing for a restructuring of undergraduate and graduate education.
Paulson is a professor of French at the University of Michigan.
Post-Cowboy
Economics: Pay and Prosperity in the New American West
Thomas Michael Power *72 and Richard N. Barrett. Island $50
cloth/$25 paper. The authors argue that the American Wests
economic misfortunes are local manifestations of national and international
trends rather than the result of changes in the regional industrial
structure. Power is a professor of economics at the University of
Montana in Missoula.
Tom Wolfe: A Critical Companion Brian Abel Ragen *87.
Greenwood $34.95. The author explores Wolfes thematic concerns,
including his ideas on society, religion, and gender, and situates
his book-length works within the context of his life and literary
forms. Ragen is a professor of English at Southern Illinois University,
Edwardsville.
Taking Parenting Public: The Case for a New Social Movement
edited by Sylvia Ann Hewlett, Nancy Rankin *75,
and Cornel West *80. Rowman & Littlefield $72 cloth/$22.95 paper.
This book calls for a new personal and public investment in the
work of raising children, one that would situate parents as economic,
emotional, and moral providers. Rankin is the former executive director
of the National Parenting Association. West is the Alphonse Fletcher
Jr. University Professor at Harvard University but will return to
Princeton July 1.
An
American Poet in Paris: Pauline Avery Crawford and the Herald
Tribune Charles L. Robertson *59. Missouri $34.95.
A literary biography of the American expatriate who wrote for the
Paris edition of the New York Herald Tribune in the 1930s
and 1940s. Smith is Retired Professor of Government at Smith.
Kaon Physics edited by Jonathan L. Rosner *65 and
Bruce Winstein. Chicago $70. Leading theorists and experimentalists
synthesize the current state of the field and suggest new directions
for the future study of kaons, first detected in 1947. Rosner is
a professor of physics at the University of Chicago.
Ida B. Wells-Barnett and American Reform, 1880-1930
Patricia A. Schechter *93. North Carolina $55 cloth/$19.95
paper. A study of the pioneering African-American journalist
who held a central place in the early reform movements for civil
rights, women's suffrage, and Progressivism in the United States
and abroad. Schechter is an assistant professor of history at Portland
State University in Oregon.
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Doctors Orders: Goethe and Enlightenment Medicine
Robert D. Tobin *90. Associated University Presses
$41.50. The author shows how Goethes novel Wilhelm
Meister documents the rise of medicine as an institution structuring
the self and society. Tobin is an associate professor of German
at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington.
Curso de Análisis Matemático II [A Course in Intermediate
Analysis] and Análisis Matemático II: Problemas
y Soluciones [Problems in Intermediate Analysis] Luis
M. Navas Vicente *93 Librería Cervantes $30,
$20. These two textbooks, written in Spanish, cover the main
topics of differential, integral, and tensorial calculus. The first
volume is devoted to theory and the second to the solution of problems.
The author is a professor of mathematics at the University of Salamanca,
Spain.
The Effective, Efficient Professor: Teaching, Scholarship and
Service Phillip C. Wankat *70. Allyn and Bacon
$31. Reveals how student learning and academic productivity
can be improved by awareness of effective time-management techniques.
Wankat is the Clifton L. Lovell Distinguished Professor of Chemical
Engineering at Purdue.
Mavo:
Japanese Artists and the Avant-Garde, 1905-1931 - Gennifer Weisenfeld
*97. California $55. A history of the radical Japanese art group
Mavo, whose work included performance art, painting, book illustration,
and architectural projects and was linked with futurism, Dada, expressionism,
socialism, and communism. Weisenfeld is an assistant professor of
art history at Duke.
Ahead of the Curve?: UN Ideas and Global Challenges
Louis Emmerij, Richard Jolly, and Thomas Weiss *74. Indiana
$59.95 cloth/ $24.95 paper. The first volume in the United Nations
Intellectual History Project, this book analyzes successes and weaknesses
of key U.N. concepts of international economic and social development.
Weiss is Presidential Professor at the CUNY Graduate Center.
Taking Parenting Public: The Case for a New Social Movement
edited by Sylvia Ann Hewlett, Nancy Rankin *75,
and Cornel West *80. Rowman & Littlefield $72 cloth/$22.95
paper. This book calls for a new personal and public investment
in the work of raising children, one that would situate parents
as economic, emotional, and moral providers. Rankin is the former
executive director of the National Parenting Association. West is
the Alphonse Fletcher Jr. University Professor at Harvard University
but will return to Princeton July 1.
The Soundscape of Modernity: Architectural Acoustics and the
Culture of Listening in America, 1900-1933 Emily Thompson
*92. MIT $44.95. This history of aural culture in early 20th-century
America charts the dramatic transformations produced by modern technology.
Thompson is an assistant professor of history and the sociology
of science at the University of Pennsylvania.
Lincolns
Greatest Speech: The Second Inaugural Ronald C. White, Jr.
*72. Simon & Schuster $24. Analyzes the content and
context of Lincolns "malice toward none" speech
and explains its continuing relevance. White is a dean and professor
of American religious history at San Francisco Theological Seminary.
Roman Catholics and Shii Muslims: Prayer, Passion, and
Politics James A. Bill *68 and John Alden Williams
*58. North Carolina $24.95. The authors analyze common doctrinal,
structural, and sociopolitical characteristics shared by both religions.
Bill is Reves Professor of International Studies and Government
at the College of William and Mary. Williams is Professor Emeritus
of the Humanities in Religion at the College of William and Mary.
Its a Global Jungle: Can It Become a Global Village
Daniel Wit *50. 1stbooks.com $10.95 paper/$3.95 e-book. Explores
humankinds contribution to global violence and conflict and
suggests steps toward managing international conflict more effectively.
Wit lives in Palm Desert, California.
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By
Faculty
Asset Pricing Under Asymmetric Information: Bubbles, Crashes,
Technical Analysis, and Herding - Markus K. Brunnermeier. Oxford
$39.95. Provides a detailed review of recent theoretical literature
and a framework for understanding price processes, emphasizing the
informational aspects of asset price dynamics. Brunnermeier is an
assistant professor of economics.
Blood and Debt Miguel Angel Centeno. Penn State $45.
In this study of Latin America, the author examines how war affected
the fiscal development of the state, the creation of national identity,
and claims to citizenship. Centeno is an associate professor of
sociology.
Chinas Economic Transformation Gregory C. Chow.
Blackwell $64.95 cloth/$29.95 paper. Combining historical-institutional
and theoretical-quantitative approaches, Chow analyzes the factors
that have contributed to Chinas economic success. Chow is
the Class of 1913 Professor of Political Economy, Emeritus.
Failed
Crusade: America and the Tragedy of Post-Communist Russia
Stephen F. Cohen. Norton $14.95. This critique of
U.S. foreign policy has been updated for the paperback edition to
expand the authors analysis through the middle of 2001. Cohen
is a professor of politics, emeritus.
The Harvard College Guide to Careers in Public Service - Ande
Diaz. Harvard OCS Publications $15. Designed for students, recent
graduates, and those contemplating a career change, this book surveys
opportunities in public service, outlines strategies for a successful
job search, and includes career portraits representing a variety
of professional paths. Diaz is an assistant dean of undergraduate
students at Princeton.
Fast-Talking Dames Maria DiBattista. Yale $27.95.
A history of the actresses of the 1930s and 40s who epitomized
a new breed of woman. Includes profiles of blonde bombshells Jean
Harlow and Ginger Rogers, and brunettes (and brunettes at heart)
Myrna Loy and Claudette Colbert. DiBattista is a professor of English
and chair of the Committee for Film Studies.
Constitutional
Self-Government Christopher L. Eisgruber 83.
Harvard $45. Focusing on the Constitutions seemingly
undemocratic features, the author defends a strong role for courts
in democratic deliberation. Eisgruber is the Laurance S. Rockefeller
Professor of Public Affairs.
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The Clash of Orthodoxies: Law, Religion, and Morality in Crisis
Robert P. George. ISI $24.95. The author argues that
on controversial issues like embryonic stem-cell research, abortion,
euthanasia, homosexuality, and same-sex marriage, traditional Judeo-Christian
beliefs are rationally superior to secular liberal alternatives.
George is McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and a professor of
politics.
The Challenge of Global Capitalism: The World Economy in the
21st Century Robert Gilpin. Princeton $19.95. The author
examines the political circumstances that have enabled global markets
to develop and function and suggests ways to strengthen the global
economy. Gilpin is the Eisenhower Professor of International Affairs,
Emeritus.
Time Travel in Einsteins Universe: The Physical Possibilities
of Travel Through Time J. Richard Gott *73. Houghton
Mifflin $25. The author shows that time travel is physically possible
and provides possible answers about the origin of the universe.
Gott is a professor of astrophysical sciences.
Emmet Gowin: Changing the Earth Jock Reynolds. Yale
$45. Gowins aerial photographs of military test sites, coal
mining, pivot irrigation, and other human footprints record the
alteration of the earths surface. Gowin is the director of
the program in visual
Bring
Out Your Dead: The Past as Revelation Anthony Grafton.
Harvard $39.95. This collection of essays presents a series
of Renaissance humanists who labored to recover ancient texts. Grafton
is Henry Putnam University Professor of History.
Special
Interest Politics Gene M. Grossman and Elhanan Helpman.
MIT $40. This book discusses the mechanisms by which special interest
groups affect policy in modern democracies and develops theoretical
tools for studying the interactions among voters, interest groups,
and politicians. Grossman is Jacob Viner Professor of International
Affairs.
Understanding
Figurative Language: From Metaphors to Idioms Sam Glucksberg.
Oxford $27.95. The author proposes a new theory of metaphor comprehension
and argues that figurative language involves the same kinds of linguistic
and pragmatic operations that are used for ordinary, literal language.
Glucksberg is a professor of psychology.
Preparation
for a Revolution: The Young Turks, 1902-1908 M. Sükrü
Hanioglu. Oxford $72. The first book on the Young Turk
Revolution to draw on both the extensive memoirs and papers of the
Young Turks as well as the extensive diplomatic archives around
the world. Hanioglu is a professor of Near Eastern Studies.
Dante: A Life in Works - Robert Hollander '55. Yale $25.
This intellectual biography discusses the poet's works, their critical
reception through the centuries, and issues raised by each text.
Hollander is a professor of European literature and Romance languages
and literatures.
King David in the Index of Christian Art - edited by Colum Hourihane.
Princeton $72.50 cloth/$37.50 paper. The first comprehensive survey
of the vast profusion of David images in both Byzantium and the
West; over 5,000 entries are organized into more than 240 episodes
from his life. Hourihane is director of the Index of Christian Art.
Walking
with Thoreau: A Literary Guide to the Mountains of New England
commentary by William Howarth. Beacon $16. Presents Thoreaus
writings about nine mountain journeys, along with Howarths
commentary retracing the trails and interpreting the stories Thoreau
created. Howarth is a professor of English.
The End of Globalization: Lessons from the Great Depression
- Harold James. Harvard $39.95. Arguing that the Depression
was partly the result of the failure of tariff systems, central
banks, and immigration legislation, the author detects modern-day
parallels. James is a professor of history.
The
Fruited Plain: Fables for a Postmodern Democracy Alvin Kernan.
Yale $24.95. In this satirical work, the author sends various descendants
of Steinbecks Joad family on a journey into the excesses of
American culture at the beginning of the 21st century. Kernan is
the Avalon Foundation Professor of Humanities, emeritus.
The Essential John Nash edited by Harold W. Kuhn *50
and Sylvia Nasar. Princeton $29.95. Includes nine of Nashs
most influential papers, his Nobel citation, and his autobiography.
Kuhn is a professor emeritus of mathematics.
Music
of a Distant Drum: Classical Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and Hebrew
Poems Bernard Lewis. Princeton $19.95. Includes
129 poems, most of which make their English-language debut in this
volume, that span the seventh to the early 18th century. Lewis is
the Cleveland E. Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies, Emeritus.
What Went Wrong? Western Impact and Middle Eastern Response
Bernard Lewis. Oxford $23. Examines the 19th- and 20th-century
reactions of the Islamic world as it tried to understand Western
domination. The author shows how the Middle East turned its attention
to understanding European weaponry and military tactics, commerce
and industry, government and diplomacy, education, and culture.
Lewis is Cleveland E. Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies, Emeritus.
Moral
and Political Education edited by Stephen Macedo *87 and
Yael Tamir. NYU $55. The contributors offer
philosophical, political, and legal reflections on the practical
questions of how education should be changed to meet the needs of
the 21st century. Macedo is Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of
Politics at the University Center for Human Values.
The Princeton Anthology of Writing: Favorite Pieces by the Ferris/McGraw
Writers at Princeton University edited by John McPhee 53
and Carol Rigolot. Princeton $39.50 cloth/$17.95 paper. Designed
for students and general readers, this book includes favorite and
influential works by writers who have held the Ferris and McGraw
professorships. McPhee is a lecturer in the Council of the Humanities
at Princeton. Rigolot is the executive director of the Council.
The Race Card: Campaign Strategy, Implicit Messages, and the
Norm of Equality - Tali Mendelberg. Princeton $52.50 cloth/
$17.95 paper. Traces the evolution of political rhetoric about race
from the Civil War to the present, analyzing the causes, dynamics,
and consequences of racially loaded political communication. Mendelberg
is an associate professor of politics.
Democracy
in Suburbia J. Eric Oliver. Princeton $47.50 cloth/$17.95
paper. Argues that suburbanization has negated the benefits
of "small town" government and deprived metropolitan areas
of valuable civic capacity. Oliver is an assistant professor of
politics and public affairs.
Vectors:
Aphorisms and Ten-Second Essays James Richardson '71.
Ausable $24 cloth/$14 paper. This is Richardson's sixth book of
poetry. He is a professor of English and creative writing.
Forged Genealogies: Saint-John Perses Conversations with
Culture Carol Rigolot. North Carolina $34.95. Analysis
of the Nobel Prize-winning poets multiple strategies of dialogue.
Rigolot is executive director of the Council of the Humanities and
lecturer in French and Italian.
Creative
Spirituality: The Way of the Artist - Robert Wuthnow. California
$27.50. Explores the link between the creative and the sacred and
suggests that artists have become the spiritual vanguard of our
time. Wuthnow is a professor of sociology and the director of the
Center for the Study of Religion.
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