Catholic Press book awards

cpaBoston College professors Richard Gaillardetz, Kristin Heyer, and Stephen Pope recently won book awards from the Catholic Press Association. More from BC  News.

 

 

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Hogs Wild

hogsThere’s a wealth of information about everything from meteorites to shrapnel in Ian Frazier’s new book, but you read his work primarily for the encounter between his sensibility and the world, according to a New York Times review of Frazier’s new collection Hogs Wild by Professor of English and fellow essayist Carlo Rotella. Rotella is the author of several books, including Playing in Time:  Essays, Profiles, and Other True Stories, Cut Time: An Education at the Fights and Good With Their Hands: Boxers, Bluesmen, and Other Characters from the Rust Belt.

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Tyvian returns

NoGoodDeedScience fiction/fantasy author Auston Habershaw, a Boston College alumnus, has published No Good Deed (HarperCollins, 2016), the second book in his “The Saga of the Redeemed” series. No Good Deed continues the story of “criminal mastermind, rogue mage, and smuggler of sorcerous goods” Tyvian Reldamar, who was introduced to readers in The Oldest Trick. From the publisher: Tyvian “hears that his old nemesis, Myreon Alafarr, has been framed for a crime she didn’t commit and turned to stone in a penitentiary garden. Somebody is trying to get his attention, and that somebody is playing a very high-stakes game that will draw Tyvian and his friends back to the city of his birth and right under the noses of the Defenders he’s been dodging for so long. The worst part is that the person pulling all the strings is none other than the most powerful sorceress in the West: Lyrelle Reldamar. Tyvian’s own mother.” Learn more about Habershaw’s journey as a writer and his upcoming book readings at his blog.

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Jumbled Joy

joyProfessional organizer Susan Bohenko, a Boston College alumna, has published her first book, Jumbled Joy. The children’s book is based on Bohenko’s daughter, Joy, and her messy room. The mess does not bother Joy until her favorite treasures becomes lost in the clutter and chaos of her bedroom. The book teaches kids to take care of their things and to stay organized. Bohenko was recently interviewed by her hometown paper.

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Nouveau literacy

barberAssociate Professor of History Dana Sajdi was recently interviewed about her book The Barber of Damascus: Nouveau Literacy in the Eighteenth-Century Ottoman Levant (Stanford University Press). Her book looks at the life and work of Shihab al-Din Ahmad Ibn Budayr, a barber in Damascus in the 18th century. The barber wrote a book recording events that took place in the city during his lifetime—part of a new phenomenon, nouveau literacy, or history writing by people outside the learned establishment. Listen to the New Books Network podcast of the interview.

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The Americans by Car

the americansFine Arts Assistant Professor of the Practice Karl Baden has published The Americans by Car, a retrospective of his archival work that pays tribute to two influential photographers, Robert Frank and Lee Friedlander. The photographs in the book were taken by Baden from his car and offer a snapshot of American life. A homage to Robert Frank’s The Americans and Lee Friedlander’s America by Car, Baden’s book “is a personal, more specific answer to the vague question of ‘how are we influenced,'” according to the artist. The cover of The Americans by Car is a photograph of a Boston tourist trolley Baden shot from his car in 2012. Baden discussed his book, the role humor plays in his work, and the impact Frank, Friedlander and other artists had on him in an interview with the photography blogger Elin Spring.

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The Jury in America

jury americaEnshrined in the Constitution and Bill of Rights, a jury trial is an essential right for all Americans. It places citizens at the very heart of the U.S. legal order. And yet at the dawn of the 21st century, juries resolve only a small percentage of legal cases, and concern has arisen that the jury is “vanishing” from both the criminal and civil courts. In The Jury in America: Triumph and Decline  (University Press of Kansas, 2016), BC political scientist Dennis Hale contends that a preference for expert judgment has replaced public judgment, giving rise to arbitration, settlements and trials decided by judges only. In his new book, Hale combines legal history and political analysis to traces what the American jury system was, what it has become, and what the ramifications could be of a withering jury system. BC Libraries presents an interview with Hale.

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Vaudeville days

turner sistersFor her latest novel, BC alumna Juliette Fay travels back to 1919 to tell the story of the four Turner sisters who, faced with a dire financial situation, try their luck as an acrobatic act in vaudeville. The sisters face unexpected possibilities, love and heartbreak, and the dawn of a new American era. According to Fay, The Tumbling Turner Sisters (Gallery Books, Simon & Schuster, 2016) was inspired by the life of her vaudevillian great-grandfather. A book launch event will be held June 9 at 7 p.m. at the Sandy Burr Country Club in Wayland, Mass. A review from Publishers Weekly states:”With humor, affection, ambition, and a talent for weaving in history, Fay brings the world of 1910s vaudeville vividly to life through the travails of the tenacious Turner family.”

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Poetry award for Najarian

najarianAssociate Professor of English James Najarian was chosen as the winner of the sixth annual Frost Farm Prize for poetry. He was honored for his blank verse poem “The Dark Ages.” Najarian’s poem is an extended metaphor comparing a mother’s decline due to Alzheimer’s to the aftermath of the Roman departure from Britain. Poetry contest judge David J. Rothman, director of Western State Colorado University’s Graduate Program in Creative Writing, called “The Dark Ages” a “compelling, masterful work, not only technically adroit but also thematically fierce and focused, and emotionally profound: an intense yet also measured depiction of destruction and grief.” Najarian’s poetry has been published in West BranchChristianity and LiteratureTar River Poetry, Southern Poetry Review, The Literary Imagination, and other journals. Najarian has previously won the Association of Literary Scholars, Critics, and Writers’ Stephen J. Meringoff Writing Award in Poetry. Najarian will read his poetry at the Robert Frost Farm in Derry, NH on June 17 to kick off the Frost Farm Poetry Conference.

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Jesuit Pedagogy, 1540-1616

jesuit pedagogyJesuit Sources has released its first publication since its relocation from Saint Louis to Boston College’s Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies in 2014. Jesuit Pedagogy, 1540-1616: A Reader, edited by Cristiano Casalini and Claude Pavur, S.J.,  offers—for the first time in English—a wide selection of relevant materials that shows the development of Jesuit approaches to pedagogy in theory and practice. The anthology brings about a better understanding of why Jesuit schools became such important educational institutions in early modernity. According to the editors, this volume will be both a helpful tool for those researching Jesuit education and a source of inspiration and insight for those directly involved in its practice today. Fr. Pavur is an associate editor at Jesuit Sources and Casalini is a visiting scholar with the Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies at Boston College. Founded in 1961,  Jesuit Sources is a publishing house specializing in preserving and making available to scholars around the world important texts in Jesuit history, spirituality, and pedagogy.

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