South Carolina and the American Revolution: A Battlefield History
By John W. Gordon A.M. '70, Ph.D. '75.
University of South Carolina Press, 2003.
208 pages. $29.95. Before
it tried to secede from the Union, South Carolina played a pivotal role in
giving it birth. The decisive battleground in the final theater of the Revolutionary
War, it was the site of one-third of all combat and much of the very bloodiest.
According to Gordon, a Vietnam veteran, professor of national security affairs
at the U.S. Marine Corps Command and Staff College, and former history professor
and dean of undergraduate studies at The Citadel, the British found themselves
in a bit of a pickle--having to wage a conventional war against American regular
forces, the Continentals, and a counterinsurgency against partisan bands. Even
if you already know the ending (they lost and went home), the details are fascinating.
Beyond the Shadow of the Senators: The Untold Story of the Homestead Grays and the Integration of Baseball
By Brad Snyder '94.
McGraw-Hill/ Contemporary Books, 2003.
304 pages. $24.95. Snyder
has dusted off a story long forgotten, if known at all, by fans of baseball.
The Homestead Grays, the greatest team ever to play in the Negro Leagues, was
also the greatest team ever to play in Griffith Stadium, home of the white
Washington Senators. As a sideshow to a greatly inferior feature act, the Homestead
Grays embodied the ironies and absurdities of an era, and its leading cast--sluggers
like Buck Leonard and Joe Williams and a sports writer named Sam Lacy--were
the pioneering forces behind eventual change. Snyder has retrieved a time lost
between its bookends, Jackie and the Babe, shedding much-needed light on those
who cracked baseball's color barrier so that others might one day break through.
Does Anybody Else Look Like Me? A Parent's Guide to Raising Multiracial Children
By Donna Jackson Nakazawa '82.
Perseus Publishing, 2003.
256 pages. $25.
The
author grew up "a white woman in white America," married
a Japanese man named Zenji, and discovered, as the mother of two,
the challenges of multiracial identity in a color-conscious world.
Through her children, who have "different" eyes and hair
and parents who "don't match," she experienced the discomforting
in-between, the "emotional knee-scrapes" of having no race
to call one's own. Drawing on psychological research and interviews
with more than sixty multiracial families, Nakazawa navigates a labyrinth
of distinctions and terminological minutiae with clarity while addressing
a multitude of real-life, parent-child configurations in the infinite
range between "black" and "white." From suggesting
scripts to help multiracial children gracefully react to sensitive
comments, to illuminating the mindset of the multiracial adolescent,
she offers readers, concerned or simply curious, a comforting guide
to the unfamiliar.
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The New York Times Dictionary of Money and Investing: The Essential A-To-Z Guide to the Language of the New Market
By Gretchen Morgenson and Campbell R. Harvey. Times Books/Henry Holt and Co., 2002.
400 pages. $17. Everybody
knows what "macaroni" is and everybody knows what "defense" is,
but who in the world knows what a "macaroni defense" is? Harvey,
the J. Paul Sticht Professor of international business at Duke, does. He and
his co-author Morgenson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times reporter,
have defined it along with almost every other obscure and unintelligible term
in the universe of financial speak, from "abusive tax shelter" to "material
adverse effect" to "zero-coupon convertible security." Websites
are included for various organizations, and acronyms are cross-referenced to
their complete names.
O God of Players: The Story of the Immaculata Mighty Macs
By Julie Byrne '90, A.M. '96, Ph.D. '00.
Columbia University Press, 2003.
320 pages. $22.50. The
Mighty Macs of Immaculata, a small Catholic school thirty miles west of Philadelphia,
won the first three women's national college basketball championships ever
played. They sweated and jumped and ran and did things that girls, at that
time, did not do--especially Catholic girls. But they did them anyway and,
when they won games, they won for women everywhere. Byrne, a religion professor
at Texas Christian University, explores the history of religion and sports
in the United States in all of its mid-century upheaval, culling information
from hundreds of interviews with players and coaches to tell the story of a
group of women whose rare combination of a love of God and a love of game made
them truly "mighty."
Small Things Considered: Why There is No Perfect Design
By Henry Petroski.
Alfred A. Knopf, 2003.
304 pages. $25.
In
design, as in life, "nothing is perfect," writes Duke's
Aleksander S. Vesic Professor of civil engineering, a history professor,
and the author of nine previous books, including The Evolution of
Useful Things, The Pencil, and To Engineer is Human. Petroski, an
engineer with the rare ability to write clearly what he thinks--"America's
poet laureate of technology," as one reviewer has called him--ponders
the shortcomings and successes of household objects that are seldom
the object of scientific study. The toothbrush, the chair, the doorknob:
All are marvels of design. But, as with any attempt to satisfy competing
constraints, all fall short of perfect--something that everyone will
just have to live with.
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