The Quest of Miles Arthur

miles arthurBoston College alumnus C.E. Zyburo has published his debut novel, Miles Arthur and the Quest for the King’s Scabbard (Wee Creek Press, 2015). It is a young adult fantasy novel about a high school student who is thrust into a medieval adventure. From the publisher: “Miles Arthur considers himself a lucky kid – he gets three square meals a day, goes to a nice high school, and lives in a mansion. Problem is, no matter what he eats he remains undersized, he has no friends and is picked on at school, and his foster father runs the huge estate where he lives like a boot camp. His foster brother, Kay, is older, stronger, and gets treated like a prince while Miles suffers silently. But soon, the hand of fate seems to start favoring Miles and when one unexpected victory is followed by another, he quickly finds himself on the adventure of a lifetime.” C.E. Zyburo is probably better known as “Mr. Z”–  a middle school teacher in Tampa, Florida. Book review

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Bilder, O’Connor honored for their work

bilderBoston College Law School Professor Mary Bilder (pictured) and Professor Emerita Sharon Hamby O’Connor, along with Harvard Law professor Charles Donahue, Jr., have been selected by the American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) to receive the 2015 Joseph L. Andrews Legal Literature Award for their work, Appeals to the Privy Council from the American Colonies: An Annotated Digital Catalogue. The Appeals to the Privy Council project opens a digital window on colonial-era appellate cases that helped shape constitutional law in America. The Andrews, awarded since 1967, recognizes a significant textual contribution to legal literature, measured by the creative, evaluative elements of the work and the extent to which originality and judgment were factors in its creation. Read more about the project.

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The BBC and “The Troubles”

bbc bookIn his new book, Associate Professor of the Practice of History Robert Savage explores how chronicling 30 years of violence and turmoil in Northern Ireland tested the integrity and independence of the BBC, one of the most trusted and respected media outlets in the world. The BBC’s Irish Troubles: Television, Conflict and Northern Ireland (Manchester University Press, 2015) focuses on the challenges the public service provider faced  in accurately informing citizens of important events taking place within the United Kingdom. As violence continued, the BBC was attacked, threatened and bullied, by a variety of actors but did its best to stand its ground and maintain editorial independence and journalistic credibility.

 

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Literature & science

losing touchIn her book Losing Touch with Nature: Literature and the New Science in Sixteenth-Century England (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014), Rattigan Professor of English Mary Crane looks at the works of English writers such as Edmund Spenser, Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare to determine how 16th-century writers grappled with the scientific revolution. During this time, the dominant Aristotelian picture of nature, which aligned with intuition and ordinary perceptual experience, was falling away due to the discoveries of modern science. Crane breaks new ground by arguing that 16th-century ideas about the universe were actually much more sophisticated, rational and observation-based than many literary critics have assumed. Crane talks about her book with Brendan Rapple of BC Libraries, which she credits for providing her with online access to early English books. Crane is the director of the Institute for the Liberal Arts at Boston College.

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“Yeats & The Irish Revolutionary Era”

yeatsThe Boston College 2015 Flatley Lecturer John Kelly will present “Yeats & The Irish Revolutionary Era, 1912-1923” on Apr. 23 at 4:30 p.m. in the Thompson Room of Burns Library. A leading expert on W.B. Yeats, Kelly is a longtime professor of English at Oxford University and an emeritus research fellow at St. John’s College at Oxford. The author of numerous scholarly articles, Kelly is the general editor of The Collected Letters of W.B. Yeats.  He co-edited, with BC Associate Professor Marjorie Howes, The Cambridge Companion to W.B. Yeats. Sponsor: The Center for Irish Programs.

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Poetry Festival

poetryfestBoston College will once again host the Greater Boston Intercollegiate Undergraduate Poetry Festival, an annual showcase of student verse. The event features original work by students from some 20 area colleges and universities.  Boston College will be represented by Carroll School of Management senior Christine Degenaars, who says her poem, “Borderline,” focuses on “the complicated relationship between people’s internal lives — their emotions and memories — and the external world in which they live.” The festival will feature a keynote address by Jill McDonough, a three-time Pushcart prizewinner whose books  include Habeas Corpus; Oh, James, and Where You Live. SponsorsPoetry Days and Boston College Magazine.

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Scanlan named an author of the month

diverseschoolsLynch School of Education Associate Professor Martin Scanlan, who works out of the Roche Center for Catholic Education, and his co-editor have been named “Authors of the Month” for April by Routledge publishing for their book Leadership for Increasingly Diverse Schools. The book provides both practicing and aspiring leaders with strategies for working with students of all socioeconomic statuses, races, religions, sexual orientations, languages and special needs to reverse long-standing trends of educational inequities, exclusion and disparate school outcomes. Scanlan’s research explores how to strengthen the communities of practice in schools to promote inclusion of students across multiple dimensions of diversity. His scholarship – which has focused primarily on reform in special education service delivery, bilingual education and school-community collaboration – has been published in dozens of articles in peer-reviewed journals. He has spent more than a decade as a teacher and administrator in elementary and middle schools in Washington, D.C., Berkeley, CA, and Madison, WI.

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Coates event postponed

EVENT CHANGE: The Boston College Office of the Provost has announced that the Apr. 13 talk by Ta-Nehisi Coates has been postponed until next fall.

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What makes Gatsby great?

gatsbyArt historian and author Charles Scribner III — the fourth generation of Scribners to oversee F. Scott Fitzgerald’s works at the family publishing house — will present “From Paradise to Party Lights: Fitzgerald and Gatsby” on Apr. 15 at 5:30 p.m. in Devlin Hall, room 101. Scribner will offer both a personal and professional perspective on the legendary Jazz Age writer, the “Last of the Romantics,” and his iconic novel that still defines the magic of American self-invention. An expert in Baroque art, Scribner is the author The Shadow of God: A Journey Through Memory, Art and Faith and The Triumph of the Eucharist: Tapestries Designed by Rubens, among other titles. He was awarded the Yorktown Certificate by the US Department of Treasury for his successful undercover role with US Customs special agents in recovering a Rubens stolen from a museum in Spain, later the subject of the television documentary “The Rubens Robbers.” Sponsor: The Heinz Bluhm Memorial Lecture Series.

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BC Strong

bostonstrongwedgebookAuthor Dave Wedge, a Boston College alumnus, will participate in the panel “BC Strong: Boston College Alumni Share Their Stories of the Marathon Bombings” taking place at Robsham Theater on Apr. 14 at 7 p.m. Wedge, a former reporter for the Boston Herald, is co-author of the new book Boston Strong: A City’s Triumph over Tragedy. Other panelists include Patrick Downes and Brittany Loring, both of whom were injured in the blast. The panel will be moderated by award-winning journalist and BC alumna Paula Ebben of CBS Boston. Based on months of intensive interviews, Boston Strong: A City’s Triumph over Tragedy tells the story of the marathon bombings from the perspectives of the cop first on the scene to the detectives assigned to the manhunt to the victims. Wedge will be available to sign copies of book after the event. Read more about the event in the Boston College Chronicle

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