Alumni Authors

Digging for the Disappeared: Forensic Science After Atrocity, by Adam Rosenblatt ’96

Posted by on Oct 6, 2015 in 2015 Fall Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on Digging for the Disappeared: Forensic Science After Atrocity, by Adam Rosenblatt ’96

Digging for the Disappeared: Forensic Science After Atrocity by Adam Rosenblatt ’96 Stanford University Press, March 2015 The mass graves from a long history of genocide, massacres and violent conflict form an underground map of atrocity that stretches across our planet’s surface. In the past few decades, due to rapidly developing technologies and a powerful global human rights movement, the scientific study of those graves has become a standard facet of post-conflict international assistance. Digging for the Disappeared provides readers a...

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Married Sex, by Jesse Kornbluth ’64

Posted by on Oct 6, 2015 in 2015 Fall Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on Married Sex, by Jesse Kornbluth ’64

Married Sex by Jesse Kornbluth ’64 Open Road Media, August 2015 When a husband convinces his wife to join him in a tryst with another woman, there are unintended consequences, in this sharply observed, erotic tale about the challenges of modern marriage. As a divorce lawyer for Manhattan’s elite, David Greenfield is privy to the intimate, dirty details of failed marriages. He knows he’s lucky to be married to Blair. A Barnard dean and the mother of their college-age daughter, she is a woman he loves more today than he did when they tied...

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Creating a College That Works, by Grace G. Roosevelt ’59

Posted by on Oct 6, 2015 in 2015 Fall Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on Creating a College That Works, by Grace G. Roosevelt ’59

Creating a College That Works by Grace G. Roosevelt ’59 State University of New York Press, March 2015 In 1964, education activist Audrey Cohen and her colleagues developed a unique curricular structure that enables urban college students to integrate their academic studies with meaningful work in the community. Creating a College That Works chronicles Cohen’s efforts to create an innovative educational model that began with the Women’s Talent Corps, evolved into the College for Human Services, and finally became, in 2002, what is now...

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Beyond Freedom’s Reach: A Kidnapping in the Twilight of Slavery by Adam Rothman ’89

Posted by on Oct 6, 2015 in 2015 Fall Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on Beyond Freedom’s Reach: A Kidnapping in the Twilight of Slavery by Adam Rothman ’89

Beyond Freedom’s Reach: A Kidnapping in the Twilight of Slavery by Adam Rothman ’89 Harvard University Press, February 2015 Born into slavery in rural Louisiana, Rose Herera was bought and sold several times before being purchased by the De Hart family of New Orleans. Still a slave, she married and had children, who also became the property of the De Harts. But after Union forces captured New Orleans in 1862 during the American Civil War, Herera’s owners fled to Havana, taking three of her small children with them. Beyond Freedom’s...

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Palm Beach Nasty by Tom Turner ’66

Posted by on Oct 6, 2015 in 2015 Spring Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on Palm Beach Nasty by Tom Turner ’66

Palm Beach Nasty by Tom Turner ’66 Permanent Press, April 2015 Burned-out, New York homicide cop Charlie Crawford goes south to steamy Palm Beach, Florida, but after six months of pink- and green-collar crime, he’s bored out of his mind. Palm Beach has plenty of glitz, glam and hedonism, but not one murder in the last ten years. One Halloween night, Crawford is first on the scene to find a 20-year-old male swinging from a stately banyan tree. This sets in motion colliding plots involving a billionaire with a thing for young girls, a...

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The Social Profit Handbook: The Essential Guide to Setting Goals, Assessing Outcomes, and Achieving Success for Mission-Driven Organizations by David Grant, former faculty

Posted by on Apr 1, 2015 in 2015 Spring Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on The Social Profit Handbook: The Essential Guide to Setting Goals, Assessing Outcomes, and Achieving Success for Mission-Driven Organizations by David Grant, former faculty

The Social Profit Handbook: The Essential Guide to Setting Goals, Assessing Outcomes, and Achieving Success for Mission-Driven Organizations by David Grant, former faculty

The Social Profit Handbook: The Essential Guide to Setting Goals, Assessing Outcomes, and Achieving Success for Mission-Driven Organizations by David Grant, former faculty Chelsea Green Publishing, Spring 2015 People working in non-profit organizations can and will lead us out of our world’s “mess,” David Grant believes, but to achieve that, they have to change the way they think about assessment — measuring their success. To begin with, David argues for a shift in vocabulary. We are familiar with organizations that create or...

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Out of Left Field by Liza Ketchum ’64

Posted by on Apr 1, 2015 in 2015 Spring Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on Out of Left Field by Liza Ketchum ’64

Out of Left Field by Liza Ketchum ’64

Out of Left Field by Liza Ketchum ’64 Untreed Reads, July 2014 The summer of 2004 is full of promise for Brandon McGinnis. He has a job, a spot on the varsity swim team, loving parents, and loyal friends. Brandon and his dad, ardent Red Sox fans, wonder: Could this be the year the Sox finally win the World Series? Then Brandon’s father dies suddenly. His will, signed just before his death, reveals a secret kept for 30 years. As shadows of the Vietnam War bleed into the escalating war in Iraq, Brandon sets out to solve the mystery his...

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The Big Trip: A Family Gap Year by Martha McManamy ’75

Posted by on Apr 1, 2015 in 2015 Spring Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on The Big Trip: A Family Gap Year by Martha McManamy ’75

The Big Trip: A Family Gap Year by Martha McManamy ’75

The Big Trip: A Family Gap Year by Martha McManamy ’75 Lulu Publishing, July 2014 Taking a year off from the “rat race” is an idle dream for many, but the McManamy family — including their three teenagers — decided to make it happen. The Big Trip: A Family Gap Year tells how they put high school, college and work on hold while they learned Spanish in Spain and volunteered in Bolivia, Guatemala and Kenya. Choosing home stays and local transportation over hotels and rental cars, they undertook a deeply immersive journey...

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The Season of Migration: A Novel by Nellie Hermann ’96

Posted by on Apr 1, 2015 in 2015 Spring Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on The Season of Migration: A Novel by Nellie Hermann ’96

The Season of Migration: A Novel by Nellie Hermann ’96

The Season of Migration: A Novel by Nellie Hermann ’96 Farrar, Straus and Giroux, January 2015 Vincent van Gogh is one of the most popular painters of all time, and yet we know very little about the difficult period in his youth when he and his brother, Theo, broke off all contact. In The Season of Migration, Nellie Hermann conjures a profoundly imaginative, original and heartbreaking vision of Van Gogh’s early years. In startlingly beautiful and powerful language, Hermann transforms our understanding of Van Gogh and the redemptive power...

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Duck & Goose Go to the Beach, by Tad Hills ’81

Posted by on Nov 6, 2014 in 2014 Fall Issue, Alumni Authors | Comments Off on Duck & Goose Go to the Beach, by Tad Hills ’81

Duck & Goose Go to the Beach, by Tad Hills ’81

Duck & Goose Go to the Beach by Tad Hills ’81 Schwartz & Wade Books, April 2014 Duck and Goose have shared, explored, learned and quarreled in a long series of picture books, every time returning to the importance of their friendship. Duck & Goose Go to the Beach is the tenth book in the New York Times bestselling Duck & Goose series. Duck wants to go on an adventure. Goose doesn’t. He doesn’t see the point. After all, why would they go anywhere when they’re happy right where they are? But then Goose sees the ocean and...

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