Reediana Briefs

levine

Reculer Pour Mieux Sauter (volumes 2–5), by Anne-Marie Levine ’61 (limited edition, 2013). Pianist, poet, and painter Anne-Marie makes the case for the unique and lasting value of print by creating a print book that is a unique blend of poetry and prose; 20th-century history; and personal memoir, images, and art. Both this book and volume 1 are available from Anne-Marie or from Amazon.

baldwin

The Reign of Boris Gudunov, by Geoff Baldwin ’62 (Nast, de Brutus & Shortt, 2013). The publication of this volume and an additional volume, The Reign of Ivan the Terrible, represent a portion of a project Geoff is near to completing: the translation of N.M. Karamzin’s 12-volume History of the Russian State. Never before available in English, the two volumes and impending History are intended for the reader, who is, in Geoff’s words, “that endangered mythical beast, the intelligent layman.” Karamzin was a writer, poet, and critic who served as historiographer on the Russian court and wrote his History over a span of 23 years until his death in 1826. Geoff has retired from his work as a systems software programmer. His superb training in the Russian language and experience as a translator support this monumental accomplishment.

wood

Kant: Lectures on Anthropology, edited by Allen Wood ’64 and Robert Louden (Cambridge University Press, 2012). Kant was one of the inventors of anthropology, and his lectures on the subject were very popular. This volume includes several lectures from various sources that together demonstrate Kant’s coherent empirical theory of human nature. Allen is professor of philosophy at Stanford. He served as coeditor of the Cambridge History of Philosophy in the Nineteenth Century (1790-1870) and has two more books due out in 2014.

raphael

Mr. President: How and Why the Founders Created a Chief Executive, by Ray Raphael ’65, MAT ’68, is now available in paperback. Other writing includes “The Democratic Moment: The Revolution and Popular Politics,” an article in The Oxford Handbook of the American Revolution. Ray also writes the “MythBuster” column for the online Journal of the American Revolution: All Things Liberty (allthingsliberty.com). A revised edition of Founding Myths will be released in April 2014. (More about Ray online in Reed.)

robinson

Eating on the Wild Side: The Missing Link to Optimum Health, by Jo Robinson ’69 (Little, Brown, and Company, 2013). Ever since farmers first planted seeds 100,000 years ago, humans have been unwittingly selecting plants that are high in starch and sugar and low in vitamins, minerals, fiber, and antioxidants. Eating on the Wild Side presents a radical way to select fruits and vegetables—even in grocery markets—and reclaim the flavor and nutrients that have been lost. Jo is an investigative journalist and author or coauthor of 14 books. Learn more online.

mehlman

Transhumanist Dreams and Dystopian Nightmares: The Promise and Peril of Genetic Engineering, by Max Mehlman ’70 (The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012). In his latest book, Max considers the promises and perils of using genetic engineering in an effort to direct the future course of human evolution. He addresses scientific and ethical issues without choosing sides in the dispute between transhumanists and their challengers, and reveals that radical forms of genetic engineering could become a reality much sooner than many people think. Reviewers have found the book to be highly readable, timely, well balanced, and well documented—“a thought-provoking read for genetics professionals, ethicists, interested scientists, and concerned citizens.”

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greenbaum-maya

Burrowing Song, by Karen Greenbaum-Maya ’73 (Kattywompus Press, 2013). Karen’s new chapbook of prose poems follows in the tradition of her chapbook Eggs Satori, previously a Pudding House Publications selection that will be published by Kattywompus at the year’s end. “Prose poems have been around a while, although not under that name,” says Maya. “You may find them reminiscent of the short pieces of Kafka, or Buber, also of shaggy dog stories, fairy tales, and dreams. Who knew that most of the preoccupations of my adult life would find a place in one genre?” For a copy of Burrowing Song that is signed and is free of shipping charges, order directly from Karen (“be sure to leave me your address”). You may also visit Karen’s photo and poetry blog.

chciuk-celt

Parachuting into Poland, 1944: Memoir of a Secret Mission with Józef Retinger, by Jan Chciuk-Celt ’76 (McFarland & Company, 2013). Jan’s book, a translation from Polish to English of his late father’s last book, is the true story of the daring parachute mission to Poland that his father, war hero Tadeusz Chciuk-Celt, made in 1944. The book was the subject of the article “Found in Translation,” published in the September 2010 issue of Reed magazine.

marks

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bevilaqua

torchin

Creating the Witness: Documenting Genocide on Film, Video, and the Internet, by Leshu Torchin ’90 (University of Minnesota Press, 2012). Leshu’s book examines the role of film and the internet in creating virtual witnesses to genocide over the past 100 years. Using a broad survey of media and the social practices around them, she investigates the development of popular understandings of genocide to achieve recognition and response, ultimately calling on viewers to act on behalf of human rights. The book has been described as stunning, urgent, forceful, and necessary. “Creating the Witness exorcises the ghostly and ghastly representations of genocide and pushes them beyond the graveyards and the archives of trauma.”

silver

Hat Couture, by Theressa Silver ’93 (Cooperative Press, 2013). For Theressa, a hat is not just a head warmer—it is a statement! “A great hat projects style or courage or mischief or sultriness—or all of the above.” In Hat Couture, she shares 13 patterns intended to match the mood of the wearer and to enable a knitter, even a beginner, to be successful and creative. Theressa loves the mathematical and technical aspects of knitting and is inspired by the physical characteristics of knit fabrics to test the limits and create the unexpected. She lives in Oregon with her husband, Stephen Gerken ’91, and son, who share their home with five cats and a dog. Theresa says that everyone participates one way or another in the knitting process.

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franklin

Computational Methods for Physics, by Joel Franklin ’97, associate professor of physics at Reed (Cambridge University Press, 2013). In his new textbook, Joel presents numerical techniques for solving familiar physical problems where a complete solution is inaccessible using traditional mathematical methods. The techniques are clearly laid out, with a focus on the logic and applicability of the method. The same problems are revisited multiple times using different techniques, so readers can easily compare the methods. The book features more than 250 end-of-chapter exercises, and Joel has prepared a web component for the book on his Reed faculty page. His previous book, Advanced Mechanics and General Relativity, was published by Cambridge University Press in 2010.

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edwards

The Aversive Clause, by B. Carter Edwards ’98 (Black Lawrence Press, 2013). Carter’s first collection of short stories, The Aversive Clause, was awarded the 2011 Hudson Prize for fiction. Says one reviewer: “Like a cross between Etgar Keret and Harlan Ellison, Edwards has an affinity for the fantastic, but an even greater proficiency for being really readable. This is the kind of book where you think you’ll hunt and peck throughout the collection, seeing which titles in the table of contents catch your eye, but once you start in on the first story, you just read them all straight through.” Carter has published the chapbook To Mend Small Children in 2012 and has two publications in the wings, a novella and a full-length collection of poetry. He is a regular contributor to BOMBlog, FAQNP, and the Brooklyn Review. Read some of his recent work in Red Line Blues, Lyre Lyre, the Sink Review, Food I Corp, and Hobart, which nominated him for a 2012 Pushcart Prize.

harris-mccoy

Artemidorus’ Oneirocritica, by Dan Harris-McCoy ’02 (Oxford University Press, 2012). A guide to prophecy through dreams written in Greek in the 2nd century CE is now available with facing English translation, a detailed introduction, and scholarly commentary, in Dan’s new publication. Seeking to demonstrate the richness and intelligence of this understudied text, he gives particular emphasis to Oneirocritica’s composition and construction, and its aesthetic, intellectual, and political foundations and context. “Should anyone require dream-analysis, a copy is available in Reed’s Hauser Library.”

branch

Dark Chatter, by Andrew Branch ’09 (Grappling Book, 2013). Andrew’s first novel, written in the style of French novelist Boris Vian, introduces readers to Quicklime Petterson, who is stalled in a postcollege daze until he is prompted to write a porn script for a policeman in exchange for being cleared of an arrest charge. Media frenzy for the script rises as a tween star takes interest in it. When the would-be one-off deal threatens to become a vocation, Quicklime attempts to find the honest career he meant to start after college. Grappling Book is Andrew’s own publishing company.

Many of the books featured here can be purchased at the Reed Bookstore.