Professor Johnson is reading...

Pegasus
By: Robin McKinley '75

Robin McKinley (’75, H ‘86) is a Bowdoin alum and Newberry Award winner. I discovered McKinley’s writing when at the college bookstore to buy, for my father’s birthday, Billy Watson’s Croker Sack by Franklin Burroughs (an eloquent exploration of the tensions between human connections to nature, human relationships with creatures and human nature as hunters). …

Zulmarie Bosques '11 is reading...

Conversation in the Cathedral
By: Mario Vargas Llosa

In Conversation in the Cathedral, Mario Vargas Llosa gives his readers access to former President Manuel A. Odria’s dictatorship in Peru in the early 1950s. The two main characters share memories about their past through a conversation happening in a cathedral. In this conversation we get a glimpse of what the society in Lima was …

Carmen Greenlee is reading...

The Anchor Book of New American Short Stories
By: Ben Marcus. editor

I love electronic readers, and pleased that Hawthorne-Longfellow Library has loaded Kindles and Sony EReaders with a variety of books. I also love short stories, and use my iPhone to download audio versions of them through our OverDrive Download Library. This collection, edited by Ben Marcus and released in 2004, includes stories from Wells Tower, …

Hanna Flaten '13 is reading...

Bel Canto
By: Ann Patchett

In Bel Canto , Ann Patchett explores how people of different nationalities, ages and interests interact when isolated from the outside world. The book begins when, through a series of unlikely events, the head of a successful electronics company, an accomplished opera singer and numerous government officials of a Latin American country all become hostages …

Amy Sham '13 is reading...

Tuna: A Love Story
By: Richard Ellis

Sometime this past summer, I read an incredibly engaging piece in The New York Times that detailed the impending dearth of bluefin tuna to overfishing. What excited me most about the article was neither the issue nor the message––both of which were not surprises, even though I am not particularly passionate about aquatic sustainability––but rather …

Professor Schwartz is reading...

Musicologia : musical knowledge from Plato to John Cage
By: Robin Maconie

Maconie is one of the most fascinating writers on music I’ve ever encountered. He’s a New Zealander who’s lived and taught in Britain and America. He’s also worked with Messiaen in Paris and Stockhausen in Cologne. I love the fact that Maconie’s interests cover a broad range: he can be found discussing philosophy one moment, …