The past is a foreign country. One side of the culture wars sees “otherness” almost exclusively in terms of contemporary ideas and/or patterns regarding race, gender, class, and sexual preference, but as Mary Lefkowitz demonstrates, Greek myths dating back to Homer and beyond in many ways comprise a more complex and nuanced view of human …
Greek gods, human lives : what we can learn from myths
Jody Tyler is reading...
Indian Country Today
By: Four Directions Media
Indian Country is one of the publications that was requested through myself and the Native American Student Association (NASA) for public review here at the college. Indian Country contains information from all over North, Central and South America pertaining to all aspects of our lives as native peoples. The publication is a Native organized reference …
Professor Potholm is reading...
Panicking Ralph
By: Bill James
[Professor Potholm is also reading “The Campaigners” by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles.] These books come from two different series from which I read and re-read a half dozen selections every year. “Panicking Ralph” is from the Harpur and Iles mystery series of Bill James who does the most intriguing and engaging (with almost Shakespearean word pictures) on …
Rachel Dicker is reading...
The Maine Woods
By: Henry David Thoreau
The Maine Woods, by Henry David Thoreau, is a classic book that I felt obliged to browse through as a resident of a large patch of woods in Northern Maine. During his several trips to Maine, Thoreau proves that, despite his plethora of inspirational quotes, he is a less than inspirational lumberjack, navigator, and boat-handler. …
Omm Lucarelli is reading...
The Sandman
By: Neil Gaiman
The Sandman, by Neil Gaiman, is a tour de force in the graphic novel genre. Originally published as a series of comic books, the comics have been condensed into four bound volumes. This dark epic follows Morpheus, the personified Lord of Dreams, in his adventures (and misadventures) within his realm of dreams, as well as …
Suzanne Astolfi is reading...
Snow Flower and the Secret Fan
By: Lisa See
My recently formed book club read Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See for our first selection. It was interesting how differently we viewed this book. All of us in the group were glad we weren’t women living in China during that time. And yet, even though women’s suffering was the theme throughout …
Jeff Selinger is reading...
Benito Cereno
By: Herman Melville
Herman Melville’s “Benito Cereno” is a novella, a short novel. I read two of his novellas in high school (“Bartleby, the Scrivener” and “Billy Budd, the Sailor”). A friend recommended “Benito Cereno” to me promising that it was a penetrating meditation on morality and slavery in 19th century America. He was right. It is about …
Emily Tong is reading...
Atonement
By: Ian McEwan
Ian McEwan captures the life of a child, Briony, who struggles with growing up too quickly. Her notion between the real world is tainted by the fantasy world, only able to place people in the categories of heroes and villains. Briony is caught in a series of events where she is quick to become the …
Paul Hoffman is reading...
Forty Stories
By: Donald Barthelme
A disgruntled princess, ax-wielding dryads, porcupine wranglers who dream of hitting it big on the Country Western charts, a catered hanging — this collection of straight-faced, angst-ridden whimsy, which I first read 20 years ago and have come back to several times, was my introduction to Donald Barthelme’s singular riffs on the ambiguities of life, …
Sean Campos is reading...
Haunted house
By: Pierre Reverdy
I got really into John Ashbery this summer, and stumbled across this translation he did of Pierre Reverdy’s Haunted House. After reading the brief seventy pages, I came across one truth: Pierre Reverdy is out of his mind. The book has very little to do with a haunted house in any physical way, and the …