The Encyclopedia of Duke Basketball
By John Roth ’80. Duke University Press, 2006. 438 pages. $34.95.
N.C. State’s Reynolds Coliseum, where Duke has played more games
than any other arena apart from its own, was named after a former
Trinity College student. Chris Moreland is the only women’s player
in Duke history to average a double-double—20.1 points and 11.1
rebounds—during her 111-game career. These are just two of the
tidbits of information contained in this comprehensive volume
compiled by Roth, an analyst on the Duke Radio Network, editor
of Blue Devil Weekly, and former Duke sports information director.
Roth’s encyclopedia documents 101 years of Duke basketball with
timelines, game reviews, and all the trivia a Duke fan could
ask for.
God’s Country, Uncle Sam’s Land: Faith and Conflict in the
American West
By Todd M. Kerstetter ’86. University of Illinois Press, 2006.
213 pages. $36.00.
The American West has been characterized, traditionally, as
a land of freedom and rugged individualism. But Kerstetter,
an associate professor of history at Texas Christian University,
explores three cases where society and the federal government,
at odds with religious movements, stepped in to define the
boundaries of tolerance in the West. He analyzes Mormon history,
including the Utah Expedition and Mountain Meadows Massacre
of 1857 and subsequent decades of legislative and judicial
restraint; the Lakota Ghost Dancers and the Wounded Knee Massacre
of 1890 in South Dakota; and the siege of the Branch Davidians
in Waco, Texas, in 1993.
Ninety Miles: Cuban Journeys in the Age of Castro
By Ian Michael James ’94. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Inc., 2006. 203 pages. $24.95.
Eloy Gutiérrez Menoyo was a rebel commander in Fidel Castro’s
forces who turned against the government and spent twenty-two
years in Cuban prisons. After being released and moving to
Miami, he began a controversial campaign to promote change
in Cuba through dialogue with Castro and returned to lead a
new opposition movement.
Paquito D’Rivera was a boy when Castro’s rebels marched into
Havana. His career as a musician prospered under the communist
government, but seeking greater freedom, he defected to New
York. Nancy Lledes Espinosa was born in the early years of
Castro’s rule and was taught to respect the system. But she
fell in love and abandoned her homeland. Journalist James proffers
a wide-ranging history but also an intimately personal narrative
that helps explain how Cubans think and feel about their country
and their leader.
Gay Marriage: For Better or For Worse? What We’ve Learned
from the Evidence
By William N. Eskridge Jr. and Darren R. Spedale ’93. Oxford
University Press, 2006. 336 pages. $29.95.
Opponents of same-sex marriage often claim that allowing same-sex
couples to marry will lead to the downfall of the institution
of marriage and will do irreparable harm to children. But is
this really the case? According to Eskridge, a Yale law professor,
and Spedale, a corporate attorney, the answer is a resounding
“no.” The authors look to Scandinavia, where gay couples have
enjoyed the rights and benefits of marriage since 1989. Using
empirical evidence, they examine the effects of gay marriage
on couples, families, children, and communities, finding that
if anything, the institution of marriage in the Scandinavian
countries has been strengthened by gay unions.
Jump at the Sun: A Novel
By Kim McLarin ’86. William Morrow, 2006. 320 pages. $24.95.
Grace Jefferson’s grandmother, Rae, abandoned her children
to fulfill her own dreams. Grace’s mother, Mattie, a child
of the Jim Crow South, chose instead to sacrifice her own needs
to raise her children right. Now Grace, a modern, self-made
woman with a Ph.D. in sociology, two daughters, and a scientist
husband who desperately wants a son, must find her own way.
Vietnam: A Natural History
By Eleanor Jane Sterling, Martha Maud Hurley, and Le Duc Minh.
Illustrations by Joyce Ann Powzyk Ph.D. ’97. Yale University
Press, 2006. 448 pages. $40.00.
Vietnam is a naturalist’s wonderland. Rich in plants, animals,
and natural habitats, it shelters a significant portion of
the world’s biological diversity. This comprehensive guide
to the country’s spectacular flora, fauna, and rich variety
of habitats explores the historical relationship between humans
and the environment and chronicles recent conservation efforts.
Powzyk, a visiting assistant professor of biology at Wesleyan
University, contributes thirty-five original watercolor paintings
of rare and unusual species.
Miss American Pie: A Diary of Love, Secrets, and Growing up
in the 1970s
By Margaret Sartor. Bloomsbury, 2006. 273 pages. $19.95.
Sartor’s memoir evokes a teenage girl’s coming of age in the
Deep South of the 1970s. Drawn from diaries, notebooks, and
letters Sartor, now an instructor at Duke’s Center for Documentary
Studies, kept from the ages of twelve to eighteen, the story
has been edited and shaped, its narrative threads sewn together.
Sartor, the adolescent, shares mundane preoccupations with
bad hair and describes serious issues of family estrangement,
sexual awakening, depression, the racial integration of her
school, and her struggle with evangelical Christianity.
Body, Soul, and Baby: A Doctor’s Guide to the Complete Pregnancy
Experience, from Preconception to Postpartum
By Tracy W. Gaudet ’84, M.D. ’91, with Paula Spencer. Bantam
Dell, 2007. 528 pages. $26.00.
Gaudet, director of Duke’s Center for Integrative Medicine
and a practicing obstetrician and gynecologist, believes pregnancy
can and should be a journey of self-awareness, self-discovery,
and self-enrichment, rather than just a means to an end. She
describes strategies for custom-building a pregnancy team and
releasing the anxieties and stresses surrounding pregnancy,
and discusses how soon-to-be mothers can achieve a healthier
pregnancy, a more fulfilling birth experience, and a deeper
bond with their baby by tuning into physical, psychological,
and spiritual clues.
The 10 Best of Everything: An Ultimate Guide for Travelers
By Nathaniel Lande ’56 and Andrew Lande. National Geographic,
2006. 480 pages. $19.95, paper.
Where in the world can you find the best hamburger? The best
vista? Flea market? Garden? This book comprises a series of
detailed top-ten lists ranking the best-of-the-best in a stunning
variety of categories, with recommendations spanning the globe.
Also included are ten-best activities lists for various cities:
New York, Istanbul, St. Petersburg, and Sydney among them;
and twenty “classic adventures for the 21st-century traveler.”
Packed with colorful illustrations and travel tips, the book
draws on the experiences of journalist and filmmaker Nathaniel
Lande.
Success through Failure: The Paradox of Design
By Henry Petroski. Princeton University Press, 2006. 235 pages.
$22.95.
What makes a great design? Petroski, Aleksandar S. Vesic Professor
of civil engineering and professor of history, argues that
the best designs are born of past failures. Making something
better—by carefully anticipating and thus averting failure—is
what invention and design are all about. He explores the nature
of invention using examples ranging from child-resistant packaging
for drugs to bridges and skyscrapers. Emphasizing that there
is no surer road to eventual failure than modeling designs
solely on past successes, he sheds new light on the destruction
of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in 1940 and the collapse of the
World Trade Center towers in 2001.
The Initials of the Earth
By Jesús Díaz. Translation by Kathleen Ross. Duke University
Press, 2006. 430 pages. $24.95, paper.
Many critics consider this to be the quintessential novel of
the Cuban Revolution and the finest work by Cuban writer and
filmmaker Díaz. Born in 1941, Diaz was a witness to the Revolution
and an ardent supporter of it until the last decade of his
life. He died in 2002 in Madrid. Originally written in the
1970s, then rewritten and published in 1987, it is Díaz’s first
book to be translated into English. With a foreword by Fredric
Jameson, William A. Lane Professor of comparative literature
and Romance studies at Duke.
Blame It on Paris
By Laura Florand A.M. ’00. Forge, 2006. 383 pages. $12.95,
paper.
In her first novel/memoir, Florand, a senior lecturing fellow
in Duke’s Romance studies department, provides an account of
her unexpected romantic entanglement while on a Fulbright scholarship
in Paris. Finding herself obsessing over a handsome waiter
at a quaint restaurant, she invites him to a party and is thrilled
when he calls her for a proper date instead. She soon finds
herself unable to resist falling in love with Sebastian. But
her scholarship is coming to an end. Will their love survive? |