The story of “Pie”

piePloughshares has published “Pie,” a story by Boston College Professor of English Suzanne Matson, as a part of its Ploughshares Solos series. Set in post World War II America, “Pie” depicts the thrill and danger inherent in the American dream of unrestricted liberty. Read an excerpt. Matson, a novelist and poet, is the author of  The Tree-Sitter, A Trick of Nature, The Hunger Moon, Durable Goods and Sea Level. Best known for the award-winning Ploughshares literary journal, Ploughshares has been publishing high quality American literature since 1971. Ploughshares Solos is a series of long stories and essays published first in a digital format, and then collected annually in the Ploughshares Solos Omnibus. “Pie” is available now as a Kindle Single.

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Waiting for Cancer

waitingforcancerIn her new book Waiting for Cancer to Come: Women’s Experiences with Genetic Testing and Medical Decision Making for Breast and Ovarian Cancer (University of Michigan Press, 2014), Boston College Professor of Sociology Sharlene Hesse-Biber explores the complicated emotional, social, economic and psychological turmoil faced by women who test positive for the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene mutations, which indicate high risk of breast and ovarian cancer. Based on interviews and surveys of more than 60 diverse women, Waiting for Cancer to Come uses their voices to describe the under-explored BRCA experience, from family crises, secrets and revelations to difficult surgeries and personal empowerment. “As a woman who has faced breast cancer and BRCA testing in my own life, and having lost a younger sister to an aggressive form of breast cancer, I have been especially motivated to bring women’s stories to life in this project,” said Hesse-Biber. More from BC News.

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A barber in Damascus

barberBoston College Associate Professor of History Dana Sajdi was recently interviewed by Elliot Brandow of BC Libraries about her book, The Barber of Damascus: Nouveau Literacy in the Eighteenth-Century Ottoman Levant (Stanford University Press, 2013). In the interview, Sajdi talks about her book, which focuses on a barber’s chronicle of life in Damascus in the 18th century, and the concept of nouveau literacy–scholarly works produced by commoners.

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Russian revolutionary

vera fignerVera Figner, a Russian noblewoman turned revolutionary terrorist, is the subject of a new biography by Boston College alumna Lynne Ann Hartnett. In The Defiant Life of Vera Figner: Surviving the Russian Revolution (Indiana University Press, 2014), Harnett reveals how Figner survived the Bolshevik revolution and Stalin’s Great Purges and died a lionized revolutionary legend. At first a champion of populist causes and women’s higher education, Figner later became an accomplice in the assassination of Tsar Alexander II. Hartnett is on the faculty of Villanova University.

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Her name is Moxie

moxieBoston College alumna Erin Dionne’s Boston-based book for middle schoolers, Moxie and the Art of Rule Breaking (Puffin, 2014), is a finalist for a Silver Falchion Award from Killer Nashville, an annual conference for mystery, thriller and suspense writers. The award honors the best books of the year in a variety of categories. Moxie is nominated in the Middle Grade category. Dionne’s book tells the story of Moxie Fleece and her attempt, along with best friend Ollie, to find art stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Moxie was also a nominee for a 2014 Edgar Award for Best Juvenile book by the Mystery Writers of America. Dionne’s latest book, Ollie and the Science of Treasure Hunting, continues Ollie’s story.

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Tennis, anyone?

bbblogo_400x400A book co-authored by retired Boston College faculty member Alan Lawson was honored by the Bookbuilders of Boston at their annual New England Book Show. Longwood Covered Courts and the Rise of American Tennis, co-written by Lawson and Mark Williams of Boston University, was named best book in the category of reference books. Their book describes how the modern game of tennis was developed in the Boston area and inspired the building of the Longwood Covered Courts in 1913, the first indoor tennis club in America.

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Minority rights

moral minoritiesIn his new book Moral Minorities and the Making of American Democracy (Oxford University Press, 2014), historian and Boston College alumnus Kyle G. Volk focuses on grassroot moral reforms in the early nineteenth century to show how immigrants, black northerners, abolitionists, liquor dealers, Catholics, Jews and Seventh-day Baptists –moral minorities–articulated a different vision of democracy requiring the protection of minority rights. According to Volk, the moral minorities of the mid-nineteenth century pioneered fundamental methods of political participation and legal advocacy that subsequent generations of civil-rights and civil-liberties activists would adopt and that are widely used today. Volk is an associate professor of history at the University of Montana. Read an excerpt.

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Boston reads

defending jacobBoston.com has published a list of Boston-related recommended reading. Among the listed books are a couple by Boston College grads, The Friends of Eddie Coyle by the late George V. Higgins and Defending Jacob by William Landay.

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Scary good

Boston College alumnus Chuck Hogan is co-creator of FX’s big summer hit “The Strain.” Based on the best-selling thriller The Strain, co-written by Hogan and Guillermo Del Toro, the show is about an epic battle for survival between man and vampire. Hogan also serves as one of the show’s executive producers and writers. According to FX, “The Strain”–which airs Sunday nights–has become the top cable show of the summer and FX’s all-time most popular launch. Watch a trailer. Read what Entertainment Weekly has to say about the show.

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The movement of paper in colonial Latin America

disance and documentsThe creation, movement and storage of paperwork in colonial Latin America, part of the expansive Spanish Empire, is the focus of Distance and Documents at the Spanish Empire’s Periphery (Stanford University Press, 2013) by Assistant Professor of History Sylvia Sellers-García. She was recently interviewed by Senior Reference Librarian Elliot Brandow about the case that served as the genesis of her study– a witchcraft trial in early 18th century Guatemala– and why the study of a place beyond the center of the Spanish Empire matters.

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