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.”

Posted in Alumni Authors | Tagged , | Leave a comment

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.

Posted in Awards/Honors, Boston College Authors | Tagged , | Leave a comment

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.

Posted in Boston College Authors | Tagged , | Leave a comment

An escape from a POW camp in Michigan

smolensAn article BC alumnus John Smolens read about World War II prisoner-of-war camps in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula planted the seed for his latest novel, Wolf’s Mouth (Michigan State University Press, 2016) . “Like most Americans, I didn’t have a clue that there were POW camps in the states at all,” he told the Lansing State Journal. Wolf’s Mouth tells the story of Italian officer Captain Francesco Verdi, who is captured in 1944 by Allied forces in North Africa and shipped to a POW camp in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. His life threatened, Verdi escapes from the camp and meets up with an American woman who helps him elude capture. By 1956 they have become Frank and Claire Green, a young married couple building a new life in postwar Detroit. But when he is tracked down, Frank is faced with hard choices as he strives to escape the ghosts of history. Smolens’ other novels include The Anarchist, The Schoolmaster’s Daughter and The Invisible World. He is a retired professor from Northern Michigan University. Read more.

Posted in Alumni Authors | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Book review: Prophecy Without Contempt

prophesyIn a book review for Commonweal magazine, Libby Professor of Law and Theology Cathleen Kaveny’s Prophecy without Contempt: Religious Discourse in the Public Square (Harvard University Press, 2016) is called “important and path-breaking.” The reviewer  goes on to write: “The place of religious discourse in the American public square has received much attention for many years, but the role of prophetic indictment has been largely overlooked. Kaveny’s book not only opens a ‘new front’ in these debates, but starts the conversation with a rich analysis of the history and function of prophetic discourse and a carefully developed normative framework to guide its use. The interdisciplinary work that informs Kaveny’s book is especially impressive. As an ethicist and legal academic, Kaveny draws on resources from these disciplines, and she also integrates sophisticated analyses of American history, biblical scholarship, and literary criticism.”

Posted in Boston College Authors | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Mergers and Acquisitions

mergersLaw School Associate Professor Brian JM Quinn’s latest textbook Mergers and Acquisitions: Law, Theory, and Practice (West Academic Publishing)  is poised to change the way that transactional law is taught in U.S. law schools by immersing students in a deal environment. The textbook, co-authored with Claire Hill and Steven Davidoff Solomon, focuses on a number of recent high profile deals to teach students about the basics of mergers and acquisitions, as well as the tools to negotiate and document the best deal for their clients. “The idea behind this book is that law students and young lawyers not only have to know the law of mergers and acquisitions, but that they also have to understand the practice of law and doing the deal,” Quinn told BC Law magazine. “Being an M&A lawyer requires not only a knowledge of the law—the statutes, cases, and regulations—but it also requires that the lawyer understand the document, how it’s negotiated and, ultimately, how it actually gets litigated.” More from BC Law magazine.

Posted in Boston College Authors | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Genovese awarded O’Hare Fellowship

nick genoveseNick Genovese, a member of the Class of 2016, has been awarded a Joseph A. O’Hare, S.J., Postgraduate Writing Fellowship. Presented by America Media, the O’Hare Fellows will spend a year at America’s offices in Manhattan editing and developing editorial content for its multi-media platform ministry, fostering their own journalistic skills and abilities, and engaging with high-profile members of the journalistic and communications community. One of three inaugural O’Hare Fellows, Genovese says he has deep passion for the disciplines of theology and filmmaking. He hopes to bring the Jesuit, Catholic ideals from his BC experience out into the world as a way to pursue God’s greater glory. At America, he plans to use his gifts as an avid storyteller and creator of multi-platform content to help build bridges between the Catholic Church and secular society at large. “At the conclusion of the program, these O’Hare Fellows will be uniquely suited to pursue successful careers in the Catholic media or other forms of professional journalism,” said Matt Malone, S.J., president and editor in chief of America Media.  America Media’s announcement of the O’Hare Fellows.

Posted in Awards/Honors, Students | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Consumers opting out

opt outDigital and mobile technology has created a brand new world of possibilities for consumers—and a more challenging one for marketers, according to a new book by Carroll School of Management Associate Professor Jerry Smith. In The Opt-Out Effect: Marketing Strategies that Empower Consumers and Win Customer-Driven Brand Loyalty, Smith says businesses are no longer in control of their relationship with consumers and instead are confronting the “opt-out effect” of would-be buyers who are empowered by search knowledge, mobile agility and social media. Two-thirds of customers opt out of email and pop-up ads while a third update their preferences to block such communications. Brand marketers ignore these trends at their own peril, according to Smith. Read more from BC News.

Posted in Boston College Authors | Tagged , | Leave a comment

American illustrator

garthGarth Williams’ illustrations are an essential part of such classic children’s literature as Stuart Little, Charlotte’s WebThe Cricket in Time’s Square, and the Little House books. English Department faculty members Elizabeth K. Wallace and James D. Wallace have captured the life and times of the beloved illustrator in Garth Williams, American Illustrator: A Life (Beaufort Books, 2016) —the first full biography of Williams written with the help and cooperation of his family. According to the authors, the man behind the illustrations had an extraordinary existence including winning sculpture awards at the Royal College of Art in London and living abroad in the United Kingdom, Italy and Mexico. Elizabeth Wallace recently wrote a Boston Globe piece about the cultural imprint left by Williams. | The authors wrote about the book project for BookPage.

Posted in Boston College Authors | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Shangri La

waterscapesWaterscapes: Islamic Architecture and Art from Doris Duke’s Shangri La is a fully illustrated publication by Boston College professors Jonathan Bloom and Sheila Blair (with Shangri La conservator Kent Severson) that accompanies an exhibition of the same title on display at Rough Point, Duke’s home in Newport, RI. Presented by the Newport Restoration Foundation, the exhibition and publication explore Duke’s love of the water and her love of Islamic art and architecture, which fused together spectacularly at Shangri La, her exotic ocean front estate in Honolulu. Bloom and Blair, experts in Islamic art who jointly hold the Norma Jean Calderwood University Professorship of Islamic and Asian Art at BC, serve as guest curators for the exhibition.

Posted in Boston College Authors | Tagged , , | Leave a comment