I would normally never have read a book like this, not only because I would never have cared to seek it out, but also because it seemed to be overly scholarly for leisure reading. However, when your flight is delayed by six hours and you have finished the two books you packed with you, you …
Method and Meaning in Polls and Surveys
Sarah Seames is reading...
Three Cups of Tea
By: Greg Mortenson
Three Cups of Tea is the true story of Greg Mortenson, a former mountain climber who turned his failed attempt at summiting K2 into a life’s mission to build schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Wandering off a trail, Mortenson found himself in the village of Korphe, where he was drawn to their kindness and moved …
Professor McCalla is reading...
The Sight of Death: An Experiment in Art Writing
By: T. J. Clark
I read a lot of art history and criticism partly because I like it, and partly because art scholars seem able to write simultaneously for the professional and non-professional, something less common among music historians. Part of this, of course, is that the painting sits there while you look at it, and can be more …
Tara Rajiyah is reading...
East, West: Stories
By: Salman Rushdie
Salman Rushdie is, perhaps, the most beloved and controversial author of our time. His works have conjured up feelings of both admiration and anger. In 1989, the religious leader of Iran issued a fatwa against him because of his questionable depiction of the prophet Muhammad in The Satanic Verses. Rushdie, then, is as much a …
Peter McLaughlin is reading...
Kafka on the Shore
By: Haruki Marukami
Haruki Marukami’s Kafka on the Shore is a story told through two concurrent narratives. The odd-numbered chapters tell the story of Kafka Tamura, a fifteen-year-old boy, who runs away from home to find his long-lost mother and sister and to escape an Oedipal prophecy put on him by his oppressive father. The even-numbered chapters tell …
Lawrence Wang is reading...
Lawrence Wang
By: Lawrence Wang
Enchanting. If I had to use only one word to describe Neil Gaiman’s Stardust, it would be enchanting. Stardust is, of course, more than that. It is a rip-roaring adventure with daring deeds and dastardly villains. It is also a charming and surprisingly bloodthirsty imagining of fairy tales. It is, above all, a love story. …
Professor Denery is reading...
The Dunwich Horror and Others
By: The Dunwich Horror and Others
I imagine there comes a moment in everyone’s life when they think to themselves, “I need to read the complete works of H.P. Lovecraft.” For me, that moment came last April and after a surprisingly difficult time I managed to track down the three volumes of his collected stories, At the Mountains of Madness, Dagon …
Kevin Johnson is reading...
Our Story Begins: New and Selected Stories
By: Tobias Wolff
Tobias Wolff is a prolific writer of contemporary short fiction. Though, most readers are familiar with his memoir This Boy’s Life (which will endure as a masterpiece). In any genre, Wolff cuts to the bone. His prose is bright and precise. The characters in his short stories are most often in the process of shedding …
Professor Yepes is reading...
Eyes to See Otherwise / Ojos de otro mirar (A bilingual selection)
By: Homero Aridjis, edited by Betty Ferber and George McWhirter
Eyes to See Otherwise is a careful selection that offers a precious panoramic view of Aridjis’ poetry in Spanish from 1960 to 2001, with English versions by thirteen well-known translators. It documents the spiral progression from the clean free verse of “Unfolded Eyes”, Aridjis first book in 1960, to the complex meditative tone of his …
Addison Boyland is reading...
White Privilege
By: Paula Rothenberg
White Privilege, by Paula Rothenberg, is a book that is dedicated to discussing less popular topics in regards to race relations in America. It is a collection of articles that addresses the veiled privileges that white Americans possess. In an effort to mobilize whites to use white privilege as an invaluable weapon against racism, both …