Skylight Confessions
Alice Hoffman,
MA ’75
Little, Brown
$24.99
In this multigenerational ghost story, a family that lives in a famous architect’s glass house experiences some familiar stages of grief and some that occur only in Hoffman’s distinctive brand of American magical realism. Amid broken china, sifting soot and strangely compelled birds, two children who have lost their mother to breast cancer grapple with fates that are not kind, yet have an odd beauty.
Living
Into Leadership: A Journey in Ethics
Bowen H. “Buzz” McCoy, ’58
Stanford U. Press
$24.95
President of a real estate and business counseling firm in Los Angeles and a former partner in Morgan Stanley, McCoy discusses how individuals and organizations need to think about ethical decision making. One of McCoy’s personal experiences while trekking in Nepal—when several groups encountered an ill man coming down a mountain—led to a much-debated business-school case called “The Parable of the Sadhu.”
Ninety
Miles: Cuban Journeys in the Age of Castro
Ian Michael James, MA ’95
Rowman & Littlefield
$24.95
An Associated Press bureau chief, James writes about three Cubans whose lives were altered by the ideological divisions in the Castro era. Eloy Gutiérrez Menoyo fought on Castro’s side in the revolution, but then opposed the government and was jailed for 22 years. Paquito D’Rivera is a saxophonist who defected to New York City. Nancy Lledes grew up supporting socialism, but fell in love with a man who didn’t.
The
Best Seat in the House: How I Woke Up One Tuesday and
Was Paralyzed for Life
Allen Rucker, MA ’77
HarperCollins
$24.95
Hollywood writer Rucker experienced a one-in-a-million illness that left him paralyzed below the waist. His adjustments to immobility—he thought of calling his memoir A Farewell to Legs—are offered up to fellow Baby Boomers as a guidepost in the “life-altering illness/change-your-ways sweepstakes” that lies ahead as they age.
Inescapable
Ecologies: A History of Environment, Disease, and Knowledge
Linda Nash, ’84
U. of California Press
$24.95
An assistant professor of history at the University of Washington, Nash examines the cultural history of health and ecology issues in California’s Central Valley—from the fevers and miasmas that early settlers feared to the pollution and pesticide controversies of recent years. Humankind often has tried to improve nature in the vast valley, only to reap new problems.
Beyond
the Seas
Liam Coughlin, ’44, MA ’50
PublishAmerica
$24.95
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist William Coughlin draws upon a wealth of Irish and American history in this family saga. The novel spans four centuries, along with multiple continents, as the O’Sullivan family experiences struggles and battles, climaxing in a senator’s campaign against the death penalty. Embedded in the story are perspectives Coughlin gained as a fighter pilot and foreign correspondent.
Rickshaw
Girl
Mitali (Bose) Perkins, ’84, illustrated by Jamie Hogan
Charlesbridge Publishing
$13.95
Naima yearns to earn money for her family, but driving a rickshaw or selling things in the marketplace are jobs considered suitable only for boys. In this novel for ages 7 to 10, Perkins dramatizes cultural changes afoot in Bangladeshi villages while rewarding her heroine’s economic and artistic ambitions.
Mr.
Ding’s Chicken Feet: On a Slow Boat from Shanghai
to Texas
Gillian Kendall, MA ’85
U. of Wisconsin Press
$22.95
A freelance writer living in Melbourne, Australia, Kendall noticed an advertisement for an English as a Second Language teacher to assist a crew of Chinese seamen. In a six-week journey rife with sea creatures, chainsmoking and linguistic confusion, Kendall examines the divide between her cosmopolitanism and the focused male-dominated world of the ship. |