The Whiskey of Our Discontent
Shakespeare, Not Stirred (Perigee Books, 2015), a new book co-authored by Associate Professor of English Caroline Bicks that seeks to relate Shakespeare to everyday life, presents cocktails and hors d’oeuvres inspired by the Bard’s characters and their predicaments. The volume has been featured by the Boston Globe and the Folger Shakespeare Library’s “Shakespeare Unlimited” podcast. Bicks also is the author of Midwiving Subjects in Shakespeare’s England and co-editor of The History of British Women’s Writing, 1500–1610, Volume 2.
Posted in Boston College Authors
Tagged British literature, English Department, Shakespeare
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The New Bostonians
Boston College History Professor Marilynn Johnson examines the historical confluence of recent immigration and urban transformation in the Boston area in her new book, The New Bostonians: How Immigrants Have Transformed the Metro Area since the 1960s (University of Massachusetts Press, 2015). Since the 1980s, the Boston area has experienced an astounding renaissance—a development, Johnson argues, to which immigrants have contributed in numerous ways. Like the older Irish and other European immigrant groups whose labor once powered the region’s industrial economy, these newer migrants have been crucial in re-building the population, labor force and metropolitan landscape of the New Boston–although the fruits of the new prosperity have not been equally shared. Johnson also is the author of Street Justice: A History of Police Violence in New York City and The Second Gold Rush: Oakland and the East Bay in World War II.
Incarnate Grace
Boston College alumna Moira Linehan’s second collection of poetry, Incarnate Grace (Southern Illinois University Press, 2015), explores various meanings of the word margin. “Margin” is chosen by the poet after hearing the word in response to her breast cancer diagnosis. From her travels to Ireland and Pacific Northwest to her home in Massachusetts, Linehan links the mundane to the mythic, intertwining connections between scripture and nature, storms and loss, winter and light, and breast cancer and embroidery. Her earlier collection of poems, If No Moon, was named an Honor Book in Poetry in the 8th annual Massachusetts Book Awards. Her poem, “Last Wishes,” received the Foley Poetry Award from America magazine.
The story of Samuel Battle
Posted in Alumni Authors
Tagged African American history, biography, New York City, police
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