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| Shelf Life |
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Ordinary Heroes
Scott Turow, MA ’74
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005
$25
Stewart Dubinsky, a crime reporter from Turow’s
first bestselling novel, Presumed Innocent,
discovers some love letters his “tirelessly proper”
father, David, wrote during World War II—and the
letters reveal that David was court-martialed in the
matter of a rogue OSS officer active with the French
Resistance. Vividly written scenes from the Battle of
the Bulge and a portrait of the Balingen labor camp
punctuate this examination of how war corrupts absolutely. |
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Active Liberty: Interpreting Our Democratic Constitution
Stephen Breyer, ’59
Alfred A. Knopf, 2005
$21
The
Framers “wrote a
Constitution that begins with ‘We the People,’”
Supreme Court Justice Breyer writes. “The words
are not ‘we the people of 1787.’” Breyer
calls attention to “active liberty”—how
citizens share in a nation’s sovereign authority.
Judges who make the rationale for their decisions transparent,
he argues, best serve this democratic ideal. |
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Aiding Students, Buying Students: Financial Aid in America
Rupert Wilkinson, PhD ’71
Vanderbilt U. Press, 2005
$39.95
Although more than half of undergraduates in America
today receive some form of student aid, the tradition
began in 1643 with a single (rather scandalous) scholarship
at Harvard College. Wilkinson’s exploration of
financial aid often emphasizes class inequities in higher
education, touching on Stanford’s participation
in the student “market”—from its once-free
tuition to the University’s refusal to join the
Ivies and MIT in conferring about aid offers in the
1980s. |
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Da Gama, Cary Grant, and the Election of 1934
Charles Reis Felix, ’50
U. of Massachusetts Dartmouth, 2005
$20
In a tiny Massachusetts mill town, French, Jewish, Canadian,
Polish, Portuguese and “Yankee” hopefuls
are running for mayor, and the novel’s 10-year-old
narrator notices how the contest touches lives in each
ethnic community. Felix, a retired schoolteacher, examines
the contradictions Depression-era immigrants faced in
becoming American. The title icons—Portuguese
explorer Vasco da Gama and movie star Grant—symbolize
the conflict between old and new worlds. |
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Monkeyluv: and Other Essays on Our Lives as Animals Robert M. Sapolsky
Scribner, 2005
$24
What big antlers signify. Why grieving humans want
bodies reclaimed. Why dreams are dreamlike. Why paraplegics’
hearts don’t race when they’re frightened.
Why you don’t listen to much new music. Such are
the lively topics investigated in this collection by
biological sciences professor Sapolsky. |
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Out of Joint: A Private & Public Story of Arthritis
Mary Felstiner, PhD ’70
U. of Nebraska Press, 2005
$25
Felstiner, a history professor at San Francisco State,
recounts life with rheumatoid arthritis, which first
wracked her joints at 28. A survivor of methotrexate
and Celebrex, hot wax soaks and cold oatmeal baths,
Felstiner no longer blanches at the memory of wearing
rubber sandals at her daughter’s wedding. But
reaching that height of acceptance took one tough climb. |
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A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War Victor Davis Hanson, PhD ’80
Random House, 2005
$29.95
Before America’s War Between the States, before
the Troubles in Ireland and before “quagmire”
was used to describe either Vietnam or Iraq, there was
the great Greek civil war. Hanson, a Hoover Institution
fellow, draws a comprehensive picture of a 27-year debacle
whose plague, sieges, assassinations and terrorism echo
to this day. |
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Troubled Fields: Men, Emotions, and the Crisis in American Farming Eric Ramírez-Ferrero, MA ’89, PhD ’01
Columbia U. Press, 2005
$24.50
In the mid-’80s, the leading cause of farm deaths
in Oklahoma was not accidents, but suicides. An anthropologist
assessing rural mental-health needs, the author found
that the restructuring of agriculture altered the men’s
identities as family providers and community stalwarts. |
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The Underdog: How I Survived the World’s Most Outlandish Competitions Joshua Davis, ’96
Villard Books, 2005
$21.95
The author’s wife
(Tara Kini, ’97, MA ’98) desired home improvements—so
Davis, a contributing editor at Wired magazine,
vowed to supplement the family income by entering contests.
He arm wrestles in Poland, fights bulls in Spain, runs
backward in India, and sweats out a sauna contest in
Finland. “I grew up believing that I could be
the best at something,” he writes. “To be
honest, I haven’t found it yet, but I’m
not giving up.” |
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