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| Shelf Life |
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Home Work: Handbuilt Shelter
Lloyd Kahn, '57
Shelter Publications, 2004
$26.95
kahn was “shelter”
editor of the Whole Earth Catalog, the 1960s countercultural
bible; his book Shelter (1973) documented do-it-yourself
dwellings around the world. This sequel is the result
of Kahn’s 30-year odyssey collecting data, anecdotes,
1,100 photographs and more than 300 drawings of structures
that include a four-story tree house in China and an
elegant three-ring yurt in the Maine woods. There’s
a colorful house made of bottles in the Nevada desert,
a greenhouse crafted from car windshields, and assorted
mud, straw and bamboo creations. Kahn, who has built
four houses himself, lives with his wife in Bolinas,
Calif.
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The Vienna Paradox: A
Memoir
Marjorie Perloff
New Directions, 2004
$15.95
Perloff, professor emerita
of English and comparative literature, began life as
Gabriele Mintz; her privileged childhood in Vienna was
cut short when the family fled to New York in 1938 to
escape the Nazis. Part biography, part intellectual
history, the memoir reflects on changing identity, assimilation
and the conflict between high culture and American life
as it affected three generations of her family.
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Recall: California's Political
Earthquake
Larry N. Gerston and Terry
Christensen, '66
M.E. Sharpe, 2004
$18.95
The idea that California
voters would bounce out Gov. Gray Davis nine months
into his second term—in favor of a bodybuilding
movie star new to politics—may have seemed like
a Hollywood fantasy. The authors, both political science
professors at San Jose State, take a thorough look at
how it happened—and tell why California’s
idiosyncrasies made it possible.
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The Art of the Russian
Matryoshka
Rett Ertl, '71, and Rick
Hubbard
Vernissage Press, 2003
$40.00
from their first appearance
in 1899, Russian nesting dolls were an instant hit.
Ertl, an importer of Russian handicrafts for more than
a decade, explores the evolution of the matryoshki in
the context of Russia’s transformations over the
20th century. While production techniques have changed
very little, creativity and entrepreneurship have blossomed
in the post-Soviet era, as the book’s 330 color
plates demonstrate.
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Fred Terman at Stanford:
Building a Discipline, a University, and Silicon Valley.
C. Stewart Gillmor, '60
Stanford U. Press, 2004
$70.00
any one of Terman’s
three major areas of accomplishment—dean of engineering,
provost, father of Silicon Valley—could fill a
book. Gillmor, professor of history and science at Wesleyan,
has spent seven years exploring Terman’s whole
career and personal life (1900-1982). Exhaustive research
makes this 612-page volume the definitive biography
of a towering figure.
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Black Eye: Escaping a
Marriage, Writing a Life
Judith Strasser, MA '70
U. of Wisconsin Press/Terrace Books, 2004
$26.95
this memoir opens as the
author ponders how to relate being struck by her husband.
“He gave me a black eye” was the customary
locution, one that reflected her financial and emotional
dependence. “My husband punched me in the eye”
was wording more conducive to leaving the 17-year marriage.
Black Eye combines Strasser’s journal and her
reflections at a decade’s remove.
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Lie Still: A Novel of
Suspense
David Farris, '76
William Morrow, 2003
$24.95
malcolm ishmael's career
seems doomed even before the young doctor completes
his residency, when he tries to blow the whistle on
an incompetent superior. That she was his lover is only
one of many complications in this medical thriller,
made credible by the author’s 20 years as a pediatric
anesthesiologist.
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Whitewashed Adobe: The
Rise of Los Angeles and the Remaking of Its Mexican
Past
William Deverell, '83
UC Press, 2004
$29.95
"Whitewashed"
is a synonym for forgetting and appropriation. Deverell
examines six developments— including a 1924 outbreak
of bubonic plague and the creation of America’s
largest brickyard—to show how Los Angeles changed
from a Mexican city to a striving Anglo-centric “city
of the future” that distanced itself from that
heritage.
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The Success of Open Source
Steven Weber, '86
Harvard U. Press, 2004
$29.95
as a political scientist,
Weber's interest in nonproprietary software such as
Linux centers on the programming community: its motivations
and values, and how it is structured and governed. In
layman's terms, Weber explains the movement's history,
development and inner workings. The UC-Berkeley professor
also assesses the movement's new definitions of property
rights and their effect on conventional economic principles
and organization.
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