Books & Recordings
Books
The Needle
By Jennifer Grotz
Houghton Mifflin, 2011
In her second book of poems, Grotz, a prize-winning poet and assistant professor of English at logo presents a collection set in Krakow.
Sweatshops at Sea: Merchant Seamen in the World’s First Globalized Industry
By Leon Fink ’77 (PhD)
University of North Carolina, 2011
Fink, the Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Illinois at Chicago, explores the evolution of labor relations and labor law in the world’s first globalized industry, merchant shipping.
I Take Off My Hat: Respectful Yet Pertinent End-of-the-Age Essays
By Julian Hartzell ’66
Dorrance Publishing, 2010
In letters and essays, San Francisco author Hartzell argues that Americans need “a shared national vision, enabled by and rooted in our history.” He relays inspiring and relevant examples from the Founding Era.
Visions of the Multiverse
By Steven Manly
Career Press, 2011
Drawing from research in quantum mechanics, cosmology, and string theory, Manly, a professor of physics at logo explains for a popular audience why many physicists believe in the existence of multiple universes.
Buglette the Messy Sleeper
By Bethanie Deeney Murguia ’93
Random House, 2011
In her debut picture book, Murguia introduces a ladybug, Buglette, who “tosses, turns and kicks while she dreams of doing big things.”
Smart Time
By Rick Kremer ’78
iUniverse, 2011
Kremer’s first novel is the story of Paulie Weston, a developmentally disabled adult with a limited ability to speak, who’s chosen as the subject of a groundbreaking research project that gives him the ability to communicate for a limited time.
Pathfinder: An Action Plan
By Frank Leana ’74 (PhD)
iUniverse, 2010
Leana, a lecturer and counselor with practices in Manhattan and Cambridge, Mass., offers a guide for parents and educators to help students make the most out of high school.
Nonviolent People
By David Atwood ’63
PeaceCenter Books, 2010
Atwood, the founder of the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, reflects on the lives of Jesus, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., Dorothy Day, Caesar Chavez, and other figures whose nonviolent teachings and actions have inspired him.
Hal Hartley
By Mark L. Berrettini ’00 (PhD)
University of Illinois, 2011
Berrettini, an assistant professor of film studies at Portland State University, offers a critical overview of the realist narrative filmmaker Hartley.
A Physician Under the Nazis: Memoirs of Henry Glenwick
Edited by David Glenwick '76 (PhD)
Hamilton Books, 2011
Glenwick, a professor of psychology at Fordham University, presents the memoirs of his late father’s first 40 years (1909–48), which focus on his experiences as a physician—first in Russian-occupied Ukraine after the outbreak of World War II and subsequently in labor and concentration camps in Poland and Germany.
The Animal Rights Debate: Abolition or Regulation?
By Gary L. Francione ’76 and Robert Garner
Columbia University Press, 2010
Francione and Garner debate the moral status of nonhuman animals: Francione maintains humans should stop exploiting animals, while Garner argues that a more humane approach to animal use is possible. Francione is Distinguished Professor of Law and Nicholas deB. Katzenbach Scholar of Law and Philosophy at Rutgers University School of Law and Garner is a professor a politics at the University of Leicester.
Defamation, Libel Tourism, and the SPEECH Act of 2010: The First Amendment Colliding with the Common Law
By Harry Melkonian ’71
Cambria Press, 2010
Melkonian, a senior lecturer at the University of Sydney’s United States Studies Centre, offers a critical examination of the federal legislation passed in 2010 to prevent “libel tourism,” in which defamation suits against American media companies are initiated in foreign countries without an established tradition of free speech.
Multicultural Perspectives in Music Education (Third Edition)
Edited by William Anderson ’63E, ’65E (MM)
Rowman & Littlefield, 2010
Anderson, a professor emeritus and founding director of the Center for the Study of World Musics at Kent State University, edits an updated and expanded edition of the collection of essays and lesson plans for music educators.
Octogenarians Say the Darndest Things!
By David L. Anders and Rebekah Yates Anders ’53M (MD)
David Anders, 2011
Rebekah Yates Anders, a retired physician, and her son, David, a geriatrician, recall the humor, wisdom, pathos and surprises they’ve experienced while caring for older patients.
The Wellspring Weight Loss Plan
By Daniel Kirschenbaum ’71
BenBella Books, 2011
Kirschenbaum, the vice president of clinical services at Wellspring, a nonprofit provider of weight loss support, presents a weight loss program based on “science, simplicity, and sustainability” to help overweight adults and youths make behavioral changes to lose weight.
Camelot, Inc.: Leadership and Management Insights from King Arthur and the Round Table
By Paul Oestreicher ’79
ABC-CLIO/Praeger, 2011
Entrepreneur and communications expert Oestreicher explores leadership challenges by relating contemporary examples to the lessons of Arthurian legends.
Image Ethics in Shakespeare and Spenser
By James A. Knapp ’98 (PhD)
Palgrave Macmillan, 2011
Knapp, the Edward Surtz, S.J., Professor of Shakespeare and Textual Studies at Loyola University Chicago, examines the relationship between visual perception and ethical action in early modern English literature.
Terror in a Troubled Land
By Mario Sparagana '51, '55M (MD)
Peppertree Press, 2010
In the murder mystery by Sparagana, a retired professor of medicine at Loyola Stritch School of Medicine, an investigation follows a 1980 bomb explosion in a Bologna, Italy, train station.
Human Autonomy in Cross-Cultural Context: Perspectives on the Psychology of Agency, Freedom, and Well-Being
Edited by Valery I. Chirkov ’01 (PhD), Richard M. Ryan ’81 (PhD), and Kennon M. Sheldon
Springer, 2011
Chirkov, Ryan, and Sheldon coedit a collection of essays exploring the nature of personal autonomy, self-determination, and agency, building on self-determination theory developed by Ryan and Edward Deci, professors in the Department of Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology at Rochester. Chirkov is an associate professor of psychology at the University of Saskatchewan.
You Are Not Your Brain: The 4-Step Solution for Changing Bad Habits, Ending Unhealthy Thinking, and Taking Control of Your Life
By Rebecca Gladding and Jeffrey Schwartz ’73
Avery, 2011
Schwartz, a research psychiatrist at the University of California at Los Angeles, demonstrates how we can “rewire” our brains through the techniques of mindfulness.
Ben Graham Was a Quant: Raising the IQ of the Intelligent Investor
By Steven Greiner ’87 (PhD), ’89 (Flw)
John Wiley & Sons, 2011
Greiner, the head of risk research for FactSet logo Systems, shows investors how to create models based on the ideas of value investing pioneer Ben Graham.
Final Mercy
By Frank Edwards ’79M (MD)
Zumaya Publications, 2010
Edwards, the founder and medical director of Delphi Emergency Physicians and a clinical assistant professor of emergency medicine at the School of Medicine and Dentistry, presents his first thriller.
The Depression Code: Deciphering the Purposes of Neurotic Depression
By Roger Di Pietro ’04M (Pdc)
Lulu, 2010
Clinical psychologist Di Pietro explores the low-level depression known as dysthymic disorder, arguing that it’s a personality-based condition in which depressive symptoms may be used by sufferers to achieve goals within a social context.
Recordings
Piano Praise 2
By Todd Beaney ’85E (MM)
Self-published, 2010
In a follow-up to Piano Praise (Self-published, 2005), the pianist and composer performs original arrangements of classic hymns in a variety of musical styles. Beaney is also the author of “We Have Met to Worship”: Captivating Expressions of Praise for Piano (Lorenz, 2010), a collection of arrangements and compositions for solo piano.
String Quartets and Trio
By Katherine Hoover ’59E
Parnassus Records, 2010
The composer Hoover presents performances of her compositions String Quartet 1 and String Quartet 2, by the Colorado Quartet, and Trio, by the Rogeri Trio.
Books & Recordings is a compilation of recent work by University alumni, faculty, and staff. For inclusion in an upcoming issue, send the work’s title, publisher information, author, and author’s class year, along with a brief description, to Books & Recordings, Rochester Review, 22 Wallis Hall, P. O. Box 270044, University of logo logo NY 14627-0044; or by e-mail to rochrev@rochester.edu.