The Kent State University Press Spring 2019 Catalog
Contents New Releases Award Winners Previously Announced Journals Order Form Sales Information Sales Representatives Author Index Acken, Blue-Blooded Cavalryman Batiuk, The Complete Funky Winkerbean 8 Brady, Witnessing the American Century Bryner & Davis, Learning to Heal Dekle, Six Capsules Fernandez, Zoar Flagel, War, Memory, and the 1913 Gettysburg Reunion Fleming, Resurrection of the Wild Finoli, Classic ‘Burgh Heffron & Heffron, Classic Reds Kahan, The New Ray Bradbury Review 6 Lewis & Roos, Reading Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms McConnell, The Belle of Bedford Avenue Mitchell, Baseball Goes West Prufer, Small Town, Big Music
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Schlotterbeck, et al., James Riley Weaver’s Civil War 11 Stagno & Blackie, From Reading to Healing 12 Watkins & Maloney, Classic Bengals 14 Wick Poetry Center, Speak a Powerful Magic 2 Title Index Baseball Goes West 20 The Belle of Bedford Avenue 7 Blue-Blooded Cavalryman 10 Classic Bengals 14 Classic ‘Burgh 13 Classic Reds 15 The Complete Funky Winkerbean 8 18 From Reading to Healing 12 James Riley Weaver’s Civil War 11 Learning to Heal 20 The New Ray Bradbury Review 6 16 Reading Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms 17 Resurrection of the Wild 4 Six Capsules 6 Small Town, Big Music 1 Speak a Powerful Magic 2 War, Memory, and the 1913 Gettysburg Reunion 9 Witnessing the American Century 8 Zoar 5
Cover Illustration: My Voice, designed by Tong Zhao. From Speak a Powerful Magic, see pp. 2-3.
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Small Town, Big Music
The Outsized Influence of Kent, Ohio, on the History of Rock and Roll Jason Prufer Foreword by Joe Walsh Four decades of enduring performers and unforgettable performances Relying on oral histories, hundreds of rare photographs, and original music reviews, Small Town, Big Music explores the counter cultural fringes of Kent, Ohio, over four decades. Firsthand reminiscences from musicians, promoters, friends, and fans recount arena shows featuring acts like Pink Floyd, the Clash, and Paul Simon as well as the grungy corners of town where Joe Walsh, Patrick Carney, Chrissie Hynde, and DEVO refined their crafts. From back stages, hotel rooms, and the saloons of Kent, readers will travel back in time to the great rockin’ nights hosted in this small town. More than just a retrospective on performances that occurred in one midwestern college town, Prufer’s book illuminates a fascinating phenomenon: both up-and-coming and major artists knew Kent was a place to play—fertile ground for creativity, spontaneity, and innovation. Previously overshadowed by our attention to Cleveland as a true music epicenter, Prufer’s book is an excellent and corrective addition. Extensively researched for eight years and lavishly illustrated, Small Town, Big Music is the most comprehensive telling of any of these stories in one place. Rock historians and fans alike will want to own this book.
MUSIC/REGIONAL HISTORY January 2019, 216 pp., 8 x 10, 164 Illustrations Cloth $29.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-347-9
Jason Prufer has written for the Cleveland Free Press, Kent Patch, and numerous historical rockand-roll blogs. Since 2011, Prufer has also worked as publicist and social media manager for the Numbers Band(15-60-75), an experimental rock band formed in Kent in 1969.
“What brought all those people—those artists, photographers, poets, filmmakers, and musicians— together? College. Kent State is what made Kent such a magical place at the time and what continues to make it special. And I would never be able to be where I am now without that experience. It was just a magical time.” —Joe Walsh Related Interest
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Rock ’n’ Roll and the Cleveland Connection Deanna R. Adams Paper $39.00 ISBN 978-0-87338-691-3
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Speak a Powerful Magic Ten Years of the Traveling Stanzas Poetry Project The Wick Poetry Center Foreword by Naomi Shihab Nye
Striking artwork paired with poems, showcasing the creative voice in all of us This beautiful and moving book, featuring a representative collection of Traveling Stanzas poetry illustrations, celebrates the tenth anniversary of this award-winning community arts project. Launched in 2009 as a collaboration between Kent State University’s Wick Poetry Center and Professor Valora Renicker’s visual communication design students, Traveling Stanzas pairs poems with striking graphic designs. The resulting images, in both print and
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digital forms, have been featured in galleries, in community spaces, in interactive media, and on regional and national mass transit. Speak a Powerful Magic features poems by schoolchildren, immigrants and refugees, patients and caregivers, and veterans, alongside the work of well-known contemporary American poets, and it demonstrates that poetry is truly of the people. We turn to poetry to give voice to what is troubling us, to honor what we love, to make sense of our lives, to remember our past, and to commemorate what we’ve lost. Here, it becomes clear that poetry, especially when coupled
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Nye, “reminds us why we fell in love with poetry to begin with: it lights up the darkness of which we have plenty, it brilliantly restores the magic of language and hope and connection.” with the visual arts, has the potential to broaden our understanding and bring people together in ways that more traditional communications simply cannot. While the eye is drawn to the colors, lines, and images of these graphic representations, we are rewarded with far deeper meanings by reading the poetry gathered in this book. Speak a Powerful Magic demonstrates that there is a place for poetry even among those who think they have no interest in it, that there is space for conversation beyond our normal divisions, and that our human responses are more common than not.
™ BL ACK SQUIRREL BOOKS POETRY ANTHOLOGY/ART April 2019, c. 136 pp., 8½ x11 Cloth $29.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-377-6
The Wick Poetry Center encourages new voices
by promoting opportunities for individuals and communities locally, regionally, and nationally. Wick engages emerging and established poets and poetry audiences through readings, publications, workshops, and scholarship opportunities. Founded in 1984, the Center was established by Robert Wick, a sculptor and former art department faculty member at Kent State University, and his brother, Walter Wick, in memory of their sons Stan (1962–1980) and Tom (1956–1973).
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Resurrection of the Wild Meditations on Ohio’s Natural Landscape Deborah Fleming An impassioned call for recognizing and preserving the ecological wonders of the Allegheny Plateau
NATURE/ENVIRONMENT/REGIONAL April 2019, c. 144 pp., 51/2 x 81/2 Cloth, $24.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-375-2
Deborah Fleming is an equestrian, mountain climber, and organic gardener who writes poetry, fiction, essays, and works of scholarship. The recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, American Council of Learned Societies, and Ashland University, she has published books on Yeats, Jeffers, and Synge and has edited two collections of essays on Yeats. Three of her poems have been nominated for Pushcart Prizes.
Related Interest
▾ The Prairie Peninsula Gary Meszaros and Guy L. Denny Paper $24.95 ISBN 978-1-60635-320-2
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Yosemite National Park, Louisiana’s bayou, the rocky coasts of New England, the desert Southwest—America’s more dramatic locations are frequently celebrated for their natural beauty, but far less has been written about Ohio’s unique and beautiful environment. Author Deborah Fleming, who has lived in rural Ohio and cared for its land for decades, shares fourteen interrelated essays, blending her own experiences with both scientific and literary research. Resurrection of the Wild discusses both natural and human histories as it focuses on the Allegheny Plateau and hill country in Ohio’s eastern counties. These lyrical meditations delve into life on Fleming’s farm, the impacts of the mining and drilling industries, fox hunting, homesteading families, the lives of agriculturalist Louis Bromfield and John Chapman (better known as Johnny Appleseed), and Ohio’s Amish community. Fleming finds that our very concept of freedom must be redefined to include preservation and respect for the natural world. Ultimately, Resurrection of the Wild becomes a compelling argument for the importance of ecological preservation in Ohio, and Fleming’s perspective will resonate with readers both within and beyond this “forgotten” state’s borders.
Zoar
The Story of an Intentional Community Kathleen M. Fernandez The fascinating history of Zoar, from the German Separatists who settled there to the present-day historical village In 1817, a group of German religious dissenters immigrated to Ohio. Less than two years later, in order to keep their distinctive religion and its adherents together, they formed a communal society (eine güter gemeinschaft or “community of goods”), where all shared equally. Their bold experiment thrived and continued through three generations; the Zoar Separatists are considered one of the longest-lasting communal groups in US history. Fernandez traces the Separatists’ beginnings in Württemberg, Germany, and their disputes with authorities over religious differences, their immigration to America, and their establishment of the communal Society of Separatists of Zoar. The community’s development, particularly in terms of its business activities with the outside world, demonstrates its success and influence in the 19th century. Though the Society dissolved in 1898, today its site is a significant historical attraction. Zoar is based on ample primary source material, some never before utilized by historians, and illustrated with thirty historic photographs.
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THE STORY OF AN INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY
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Kathleen M. Fernandez
REGIONAL/HISTORY June 2019, c. 320 pp., 6 x 9 Cloth $29.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-374-5
Kathleen M. Fernandez has been intrigued by the German religious separatists who settled the village of Zoar, Ohio, since she began working there in 1975. Her first book, A Singular People: Images of Zoar, won the Distinguished Publication Award from the Communal Studies Association in 2004. Currently, she serves as Executive Director of the Communal Studies Association (CSA), a position she has held since 2004.
Related Interest
▾ A Singular People: Images of Zoar Kathleen Fernandez Cloth $29.95 ISBN 978-0-87338-767-5
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Six Capsules
The Gilded Age Murder of Helen Potts
The Gilded Age Murder of Helen Potts 88 George R. Dekle Sr.
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TRUE CRIME HISTORY TRUE CRIME May 2019, c. 240 pp., 6 x 9 Paper $24.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-370-7
George R. Dekle Sr. served as a legal skills professor at the University of Florida, where he directed the Prosecution Clinic. His most recent book, Prairie Defender: The Murder Trials of Abraham Lincoln, won a Superior Achievement Award for Scholarship from the Illinois State Historical Society and Gold Medals for Biography and Politics from the Florida Authors and Publishers Association.
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The Insanity Defense and the Mad Murderess of Shaker Heights: Examining the Trial of Mariann Colby William L. Tabac Paper $19.95 ISBN 978-1-60635-352-3
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The permanent solution to a wife’s chronic headache As Ted Bundy was to the 20th century, so Carlyle Harris was to the 19th. Harris was a charismatic, handsome young medical student with an insatiable appetite for sex. His trail of debauched women ended with Helen Potts, a beautiful young woman of wealth and privilege who was determined to keep herself pure for marriage. Unable to conquer her by other means, Harris talked her into a secret marriage under assumed names, and when threatened with exposure, he poisoned her. The resulting trial garnered national headlines and launched the careers of two of New York’s most famous prosecutors, Francis L. Wellman and William Travers Jerome. It also spurred vigorous debate about Harris’s guilt or innocence, the value of circumstantial evidence, the worth of expert testimony, and the advisability of the death penalty. Six Capsules traces Harris’s crime and his subsequent trial and highlights what has been overlooked—the decisive role that the second-class status of women in Victorian Era culture played in this tragedy. The Harris case is all but forgotten today, but Six Capsules seeks to recover this important milestone in American legal history.
The Sensational BrooksBurns Murder in Turn-of-theCentury New York Virginia A. McConnell Affluenza leading to bad behavior among the youth of an earlier century—ultimately ending in murder At the turn of the 20th century, many affluent Brooklyn teens and young adults were bucking the constraints of their immigrant parents and behaving badly: drinking, having sex, staying out all night, stealing, scamming local businesses—and even more serious activities. The culmination for twenty-year-old Walter Brooks was being murdered in a seedy Manhattan hotel in 1902. The ensuing court case was front-page news throughout the country. The hearings featured testimony about these young people’s secret lives, which shocked parents and inspired much editorial commentary in the newspapers. From start to finish, the case was viewed as a cautionary tale for parents, for boys who could be led astray, and for girls who risked their reputations to be popular. Set against the colorful backdrop of Coney Island, roadhouses, forbidden dance halls, and vaudeville, The Belle of Bedford Avenue follows the young woman at the heart of the case from her trial for the murder of Walter Brooks to her adulthood. The crime itself, interestingly, occurred in the location of Ground Zero and today’s September 11 memorial. The trial was conducted by William Travers Jerome, who went on to become a legendary New York City prosecutor.
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The Belle of Bedford Avenue
Virginia A. McConnell
TRUE CRIME HISTORY TRUE CRIME March 2019, 224 pp., 6 x 9 Paper $24.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-366-0
Virginia A. McConnell is an acclaimed writer of
historical true crime books, including Arsenic under the Elms: Murder in Victorian New Haven, Sympathy for the Devil: The Emmanuel Baptist Murders of Old San Francisco, and The Adventuress: Murder, Blackmail, and Confidence Games in the Gilded Age. In 2011, The Adventuress was awarded the Gold Medal in the True Crime category by the Independent Publisher Book Awards.
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The Killing of Julia Wallace Jonathan Goodman Paper $19.95 ISBN 978-1-60635-311-0
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Witnessing the American Century
Via Berlin, Pearl Harbor, Vietnam, and the Straits of Florida
WITNESSING THE AMERICAN CENTURY Via Berlin, Pearl Harbor, Vietnam, and the Straits of Florida
CAPT. ALLEN COLBY BRADY, USN with Dawn Quarles
U.S. HISTORY/HISTORY/MEMOIR March 2019, 258 pp., 6 x 9 Cloth $29.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-362-2
Capt. Allen Colby Brady is a retired Naval Aviator. Throughout his thirty-plus years of service, Capt. Brady found himself in the front row to all of the major events surrounding the emerging Cold War, nuclear proliferation, America’s fight to defeat the Communists in Cuba, and, most notably, his long stint as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. Following his retirement, Capt. Brady lived for over six years aboard a sailboat, even using his sailing expertise to liberate exiled communities of Cubans in the early 1980s. Dawn Quarles graduated from the University of West Florida with a degree in social studies. She is a blogger and the author of the memoir Aprils and Decembers.
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Forgotten under a Tropical Sun: War Stories by American Veterans in the Philippines, 1898–1913 Joseph P. McCallus Cloth $39.95 ISBN 978-1-60635-319-6
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Capt. Allen Colby Brady, USN with Dawn Quarles A US Naval Aviator’s odyssey through pivotal moments in 20th-century history The rise of Adolf Hitler, America’s Great Depression in the heartland, the bombing of Pearl Harbor, American life following World War II, the Korean War, America’s development of atomic weapons in the Cold War age, the Bay of Pigs Invasion and the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Vietnam War, and the Mariel boatlift. Captain Allen Brady not only witnessed all of these events but actually participated in them, in many instances as a US Naval Aviator. So many Americans and global citizens alike are not even aware of the importance of these pivotal moments; as generations age and pass on, without important accounts like this one, much is forgotten. More than just a memoir, Brady’s book is an important document from one of the last of his generation, reminding us of the pivotal moments that should not be lost to history. Witnessing the American Century is Captain Brady’s firsthand account of his incredible life, and his memories elucidate America’s role in the most significant world events from the previous century.
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War, Memory, and the 1913 Gettysburg Reunion
GETTYSBURG
Thomas R. Flagel Union and Confederate veterans meet at Gettysburg on the 50th anniversary of the battle This June 29–July 4 reunion drew over 55,000 official attendees plus thousands more who descended upon a town of 4,000 during the scorching summer of 1913, with the promise of little more than a cot and two blankets, military fare, and the presence of countless adversaries from a horrific war. Most were revisiting a time and place in their personal history that involved acute physical and emotional trauma. Contrary to popular belief, veterans were not motivated to attend by a desire for reconciliation, nor did the Great Reunion produce a general sense of a reunified country. The reconciliation premise, advanced by several major speeches at the anniversary, lived in rhetoric more than fact. Recent scholarship effectively dismantles this “Reconciliation of 1913” mythos, finding instead that sectionalism and lingering hostilities largely prevailed among veterans and civilians. Flagel examines how individual veterans viewed the reunion, what motivated them to attend, how they acted and reacted once they arrived, and whether these survivors found what they were personally seeking. While politicians and the press characterized the veterans as relics of a national crusade, Flagel focuses on four men who come to the reunion for different and very individual reasons. Flagel’s book adds significantly to Gettysburg literature and to Civil War historiography.
REUNION Thomas R. Flagel
US HISTORY/MILITARY HISTORY May 2019, c. 192 pp., 6 x 9 Cloth $29.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-371-4
Thomas R. Flagel is associate professor of history
at Columbia State Community College in Tennessee. The author of several books, Flagel has also worked with multiple historic preservation groups including the Civil War Trust and the National Park Service.
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Gettysburg’s Other Battle: The Ordeal of an American Shrine during the First World War Mark A. Snell Cloth $29.95 ISBN 978-1-60635-331-8
My Gettysburg: Meditations on History and Place Mark A. Snell Cloth $29.95 ISBN 978-1-60635-293-9
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Blue-Blooded Cavalryman
Captain William Brooke Rawle in the Army of the Potomac, May 1863–August 1865 Edited by J. Gregory Acken An intimate look into the daily life of a cavalry officer serving with the Army of the Potomac
CIVIL WAR SOLDIERS AND STR ATEGIES CIVIL WAR/U.S. HISTORY/MILITARY HISTORY April 2019, c. 352 pp., 6⅛ x 91/4 Cloth $49.95s, ISBN 978-1-60635-372-1
J. Gregory Acken served for twelve years on the
board of governors of the Civil War Library and Museum of Philadelphia. He is the editor of Inside the Army of the Potomac: The Civil War Experience of Francis Adams Donaldson, which was an alternate selection of the History Book Club, and Service with the Signal Corps: The Civil War Memoir of Louis R. Fortescue.
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Meade: The Price of Command, 1863–1865 John G. Selby Cloth $49.95 ISBN 978-1-60635-348-8
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In May 1863, eighteen-year-old William Brooke Rawle graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and traded a genteel, cultured life of privilege for service as a cavalry officer. Traveling from his home in Philadelphia to Virginia, he joined the Third Pennsylvania Cavalry and soon found himself in command of a company of veterans of two years’ service, some of whom were more than twice his age. Within eight weeks, he had participated in two of the largest cavalry battles of the war at Brandy Station and Gettysburg. Brooke Rawle and the Third Pennsylvania Cavalry would serve with the Cavalry Corps of the Army of the Potomac through April 1864, fighting partisans and guerillas in Northern Virginia and also seeing action during the Bristoe Station and Mine Run battles of late 1863. A meticulous diarist and letter writer, Brooke Rawle documented nearly everything that came under his observant eye in 150 well-written letters home to his family. These letters, supplemented by his diary entries, provide a fascinating, richly detailed look into the life of a regimental cavalry officer during the last two years of the Civil War in the East.
James Riley Weaver’s Civil War
The Diary of a Union Cavalry Officer and Prisoner of War, 1863–1865 Edited by John T. Schlotterbeck, Wesley W. Wilson, Midori Kawaue, and Harold A. Klingensmith 666 days of diary entries documenting the life of a Union officer held in Confederate prisons Captured on October 11, 1863, James Riley Weaver, a Union cavalry officer, spent nearly seventeen months in Confederate prisons. Remarkably, Weaver kept a diary that documents 666 consecutive days of his experience, including his cavalry duties, life in a series of prisons throughout the South, and his return to civilian life. It is an unparalleled eyewitness account of a crucial part of our history. Weaver’s observations never veer into romanticized descriptions; instead, he describes the “little world” inside each prison and outdoor camp, describing men drawn from “every class of society, high and low, righ and poor, from every country and clime.” In addition, Weaver records details about life in the Confederacy that he gleans from visitors, guards, new arrivals, recaptured escapees, Southern newspapers, and even glimpses through windows. As the editors demonstrate, Weaver’s diary-keeping provided an outlet for expressing suppressed emotions, ruminating on a seemingly endless confinement that tested his patriotism, religious faith, and will to survive. In the process, he provides not only historically important information but also keen insights into the human condition under adversity.
CIVIL WAR SOLDIERS AND STR ATEGIES CIVIL WAR/U.S. HISTORY/MILITARY HISTORY February 2019, 328 pp., 6⅛ x 9¼ Cloth $49.95s, ISBN 978-1-60635-368-4
John T. Schlotterbeck is the A. W. Crandall Profes-
sor of History, Emeritus, at DePauw University. He is the author of Daily Life in Colonial America. Wesley W. Wilson is the coordinator of archives and special collections at DePauw University. He received the Sister M. Claude Lane, O.P., Memorial Award from the Society of American Archivists in 2017. Midori Kawaue is a doctoral student in history at Princeton University. She is the recipient of the Gilder Lehrman History Scholar Award. Harold A. Klingensmith worked for the Boeing Company for over eighteen years and holds a master’s degree in military studies from American Military University. Related Interest
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Penitentiaries, Punishment, and Military Prisons: Familiar Responses to an Extraordinary Crisis during the American Civil War Angela M. Zombek Cloth $45.00 ISBN 978-1-60635-355-4
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From Reading to Healing From Reading to Healing Teaching Medical Professionalism through Literature Edited by Susan Stagno & Michael Blackie
Teaching Medical Professionalism through Literature Edited by Susan Stagno and Michael Blackie Foreword by Arthur W. Frank Selected readings and commentary for the medical humanities
LITER ATURE AND MEDICINE MEDICAL HUMANITIES March 2019, 336 pp., 6⅛ x 9¼ Paper $34.95s, ISBN 978-1-60635-369-1
Susan Stagno, MD, is professor of psychiatry and bioethics at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine and holds the Sihler Family Professorship in Psychiatry. She is currently the Director for Education for the Psychiatry Department and faculty lead for the Humanities Pathway. Michael Blackie, PhD, is visiting associate professor in the department of medical education at the University of Illinois Chicago College of Medicine. He is associate editor of the Journal of Medical Humanities, book review editor for the journal Literature and Medicine, and editor of the Literature and Medicine book series for Kent State University Press. Related Interest
▾ When the Nurse Becomes a Patient: A Story in Words and Images Cortney Davis Cloth $19.95 ISBN 978-1-60635-230-4
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Learning how to behave and engage professionally can be one of the most challenging parts of embarking on a career in the medical field. But using the “power of stories” can teach, heal, and enlighten; encourage the development of empathy; and help healthcare providers “be with suffering” and appreciate who their patients are, not just what disease they have. The humanities offer knowledge and skills that may move students toward becoming better physicians. The incorporation of the humanities into the traditional medical education curriculum can truly make a difference. In this expansive anthology, Susan Stagno and Michael Blackie assemble an insightful group of contributors to discuss the ways in which medical professionals can powerfully engage with their students through a variety of literary texts. Examples as diverse as Charles Bukowski, Leo Tolstoy, William Carlos Williams, Sherwood Anderson, Mary Shelley, Stephen King, the comic strip Pearls Before Swine, and the sayings of Buddha will provide both teachers and students a rich cache of stories for discussion and inspiration.
Classic ’Burgh
The 50 Greatest Collegiate Games in Pittsburgh Sports History David Finoli The great tradition of collegiate sports in western Pennsylvania told through 50 memorable games When sports fans think of collegiate sports in western Pennsylvania, most think of football at the University of Pittsburgh, but there is much more. In the 1940s and 1950s, Duquesne University basketball was not only the most revered team in the city but also won the area’s only Division I national championship ever in a tournament. Carnegie Mellon University, considered one of the premiere academic institutions in the country today, was still called Carnegie Tech in 1926 when its football team defeated the great Knute Rockne and Notre Dame in one of the most incredible upsets the sport has ever seen. Recently, the women’s basketball program at California University of Pennsylvania has become one of the best in the nation, capturing two national championships in the 21st century. Robert Morris is the area’s newest Division I school, also building a successful men’s hockey program that has beaten the number one team in the nation. Pitt Football is an incredible part of the college sports traditions in western Pennsylvania, but this book highlights athletic moments from a variety of wonderful institutions together for the first time.
™ BL ACK SQUIRREL BOOKS CL ASSIC SPORTS SPORTS/REGIONAL February 2019, 248 pp., 6 x 9 Paper $19.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-363-9
David Finoli is a passionate fan of western Pennsylva-
nia sports and a graduate of the Duquesne University School of Journalism. Finoli has penned twenty-six books highlighting the stories of the great franchises in the Pittsburgh area. He is the winner of the 2018 Pittsburgh Magazine’s Best of the ’Burgh local author award and featured on the “Wall of Fame” in Duquesne’s Journalism and Multimedia Department.
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Rockne and Jones: Notre Dame, USC, and the Greatest Rivalry of the Roaring Twenties Thomas Rupp Paper $29.95 ISBN 978-1-60635-330-1
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Classic Bengals The 50 Greatest Games in Cincinnati Bengals History
Steven Watkins and Dick Maloney Foreword by Dave Lapham The stories behind the 50 greatest games in Bengals history, sure to spark much interest and argument among legions of loyal fans
™ BL ACK SQUIRREL BOOKS CL ASSIC SPORTS SPORTS/FOOTBALL November 2018, 232 pp., 6 x 9 Paper $19.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-360-8
Steve Watkins is a reporter at the Cincinnati Business
Courier. A native of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, and graduate of Carroll University, he has lived in Greater Cincinnati for more than 25 years and has attended plenty of Bengals games, including several featured in this book. Dick Maloney, a Cincinnati journalist for over 34 years and a lifelong Bengals fan, currently works as a freelance journalist. As a sports editor, he was part of the award-winning sports department at the Community Press newspapers in Cincinnati.
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Kardiac Kids: The Story of the 1980 Cleveland Browns Jonathan Knight Paper $16.95 ISBN 978-0-87338-761-3
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Who can forget the famous “Freezer Bowl” AFC championship victory over the San Diego Chargers or the heart-stopping Super Bowl classic against the San Francisco 49ers and Joe Montana? Watkins and Maloney set the stage for these and other memorable games, detailing the big plays, stunning comebacks, and fantastic finishes and painting a picture that makes fans feel as though they were there. Classic Bengals: The 50 Greatest Games in Cincinnati Bengals History includes a list of the 50 greatest games by opponent, “near misses” that almost made the list, stats on each game, and an insightful foreword from “Mr. Bengal,” Dave Lapham, who has played or broadcast games for the team in 42 of its 50 seasons.
Classic Reds
The 50 Greatest Games in Cincinnati Reds History Joe Heffron and Jack Heffron Foreword by Jeff Brantley The 50 most historically significant games of baseball’s first all-professional team Choosing the 50 greatest games is hard to do; ranking them is even harder. Now every Reds fan can relive memories of baseball before and after the Big Red Machine, debate about these choices, or make a list of their own. Highlighting these moments is a unique way of telling the great story of the Cincinnati Reds. While many fans will know about Frank Robinson, Pete Rose, Johnny Bench, and Tony Perez, how many will remember names like Bumpus, Bubbles, and Noodles, who each had their moments of glory in a Reds uniform? It’s easy for players and moments to disappear in a history that spans 150 years, but baseball roots run deep in Reds country. Classic Reds keeps those roots strong.
™ BL ACK SQUIRREL BOOKS CL ASSIC SPORTS SPORTS/BASEBALL April 2019, c. 192 pp., 6 x 9 Paper $19.95t, ISBN 978-1-60635-313-4
Joe Heffron worked as a local umpire for many years and attended the Bill Kinnamon Umpire School in St. Petersburg, Florida. He has an encyclopedic knowledge of the game and of the Reds. Jack Heffron has written about the Reds for Cincinnati magazine, winning two ASJA awards for sportswriting. He has edited numerous books on baseball. He works at a marketing agency in Cincinnati and teaches in the journalism department at the University of Cincinnati. Both Joe and Jack are members of the Society for American Baseball Research. Related Interest
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Cincinnati Reds Legends Mike Shannon, Chris Felix, Scott Hannig, and Donnie Pollard Cloth $29.95t ISBN 978-1-60635-231-1
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THE NEW RAY BRADBURY REVIEW
THE NEW
Number 6
2019
RAY BRADBURY REVIEW
The New Ray Bradbury Review No. 6, 2019
Edited by Jeffrey Kahan Jonathan R. Eller, General Editor
Number 6
Ray Bradbury recognized as a master of horror fiction
2019
LITERATURE/LITERARY CRITICISM April 2019, 160 pp., 7 x 10 Paper $25.00s, ISBN 978-1-60635-365-3
Guest editor Jeffrey Kahan is the author of many books, including Reforging Shakespeare, The Cult of Kean, Caped Crusaders 101: Composition through Comic Books, Bettymania and the Birth of Celebrity Culture, and Shakespeare and Superheroes. He co edits the Robert E. Howard journal The Dark Man. Jonathan R. Eller is Chancellor Professor of English at IUPUI, director of the Center for Ray Bradbury Studies, and editor of The Collected Stories of Ray Bradbury. He is the author of Becoming Ray Bradbury and Ray Bradbury Unbound, extensive studies of Bradbury’s early and middle career.
Related Interest
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The Collected Stories of Ray Bradbury A Critical Edition: Volume 3, 1944–1945 Jonathan R. Eller Cloth $75.00 ISBN 978-1-60635-302-8
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Bradbury, though a celebrated author, is often shortchanged. He is valorized within one genre (science fiction) and marginalized in others (detective fiction, film scripts, poetry, and, yes, horror fiction). His importance and influence have been distorted by critics who never foresaw our present paradigm, one in which horror writers like Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith are imprinted by Oxford, and Stephen King, once dismissed as a schlock meister par excellence, is awarded the National Medal of Arts. While indeed a genre-defying giant in science fiction, Bradbury deserves a place alongside the traditional masters of the macabre. The essays in this collection decrypt Bradbury’s horror tales and decipher their social and artistic impact. Just scratching the surface of Bradbury’s genius, these essays demonstrate that, while much remains buried in the Bradbury corpus, none of it is dead. The New Ray Bradbury Review, prepared and edited by the Center for Ray Bradbury Studies, examines the impact of Bradbury’s writings on American culture and his legacy as one of the master storytellers of his time. The New Ray Bradbury Review and the multivolume Collected Stories of Ray Bradbury are the primary publications of the Center for Ray Bradbury Studies, the major archive of Bradbury’s writings located at Indiana University– Purdue University, Indianapolis (IUPUI).
Reading Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms
Glossary and Commentary Robert W. Lewis and Michael Kim Roos Close analysis and commentary on Hemingway’s great novel of love, war, and ideas In this comprehensive guide, Lewis and Roos reveal how A Farewell to Arms represents a complex alchemy of Hemingway’s personal experience as a Red Cross ambulance driver in 1918, his extensive historical research of a time period and terrain with which he was personally unfamiliar, and the impact of his vast reading in the great works of 19th-century fiction. Ultimately, Lewis and Roos assert, Hemingway’s great novel is not simply a story of love and war, as most have concluded, but an intricate novel of ideas exploring the clash of reason and faith and deep questions of epistemology. The commentary also delves deeply into the roots of controversy surrounding the novel’s treatment of gender issues through the characters of Frederic Henry and Catherine Barkley. Catherine, they argue, is far more than an object of love; she is a real feminist heroine who is responsible for Frederic’s maturation in developing a capacity for true love. Written in clear and accessible prose that will appeal to scholars and Hemingway neophytes alike, Reading Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms is the most sweeping guide yet available to Hemingway’s finest novel and contributes to a richer understanding of the writer’s entire body of work.
Reading Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms glossary and commentary Robert W. Lewis and Michael Kim Roos
READING HEMINGWAY LITERARY CRITICISM/HEMINGWAY STUDIES June 2019, c. 384 pp., 6 x 9 Paper $39.95s, ISBN 978-1-60635-376-9
The late Robert W. Lewis was the Chester Fritz Distinguished Professor Emeritus of English at the University of North Dakota. One of the founding members of the Hemingway Society, he was elected its president for multiple terms. Michael Kim Roos is professor emeritus of English at the University of Cincinnati Blue Ash College. His work has appeared in the Hemingway Review and Midwestern Miscellany and in the books Teaching Hemingway and the Natural World and Hemingway and Italy: 21st Century Perspectives. He also created The Hemingway Blog, which can be found on his website, MikeRoos52.com. Related Interest
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Reading Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea Bickford Sylvester, Larry Grimes, and Peter L. Hays Paper $34.95t ISBN 978-1-60635-342-4
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The Complete Funky Winkerbean Volume 8, 1993–1995 Tom Batiuk Foreword by Dennis Diken Follow award-winning cartoonist Tom Batiuk as he chronicles Funky’s evolution from gags to situational humor to behavioral humor ™ BL ACK SQUIRREL BOOKS HUMOR/COMICS/GRAPHIC NOVELS February 2019, 512 pp., 10 x 7½ Cloth $45.00t, ISBN 978-1-60635-361-5
“I have all six volumes of Funky and enjoy Crankshaft in the Los Angeles Times.” — David Schwartz, coauthor of The Encyclopedia of TV Game Shows
In this eighth volume, Funky Winkerbean continues to move forward in real time, tackling issues of relevance and substance with characters whose lives are increasingly fateful and destined. Funky has placed Batiuk at the forefront of a new genre in comic art history as the strip pursues stories ahead of their time: guns in schools and teen suicide. The humor in Funky continues to grow as it evolves from sitcom gags to a deeper and more engaging behavioral style of humor. Tom Batiuk is a graduate of Kent State University.
“There are laughs to be had, but they are just one element of a recipe that delivers one short story after another about people just trying to make it from day to day.” —Brian Steinberg, Variety
Related Interest
His Funky Winkerbean and Crankshaft comic strips are carried in hundreds of newspapers throughout the United States. He was recognized as one of three finalists in the editorial cartooning category of the 2008 Pulitzer Prize awards competition for the singular series of daily comic strips that chronicled the death of longtime character Lisa Moore, which were collected in the book Lisa’s Story. His Complete Funky Winkerbean series and Roses in December were finalists for the 2016 Eisner Awards.
▾ The Complete Funky Winkerbean: Volume 7, 1990–1992 Tom Batiuk Cloth $45.00 ISBN 978-1-60635-337-0
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Lisa’s Story: The Other Shoe Tom Batiuk Paper $18.95 ISBN 978-0-87338-924-2
Award Winners IPPY SILVER AWARD Rockne and Jones: Notre Dame, USC, and the Greatest Rivalry of the Roaring Twenties Thomas Rupp 978-1-60635-330-1 $29.95 | Paperback
IPPY BRONZE AWARD Forgotten under a Tropical Sun: War Stories by American Veterans in the Philippines, 1898–1913 Joseph P. McCallus 978-1-60635-319-6 $39.95 | Cloth
IPPY BRONZE AWARD Death of an Assassin: The True Story of the German Murderer Who Died Defending Robert E. Lee Anne Marie Ackermann 978-1-60635-304-2 $24.95 | Cloth
Pittsburgh Magazine Local Author of the Year KSU Press author David Finoli has been named Local Author of the Year in Pittsburgh Magazine’s Best of the ‘Burgh 2018: Readers’ Choice Poll. It’s a well-deserved honor in light of his output chronicling the history of Pittsburgh sports teams, including these from the Press: Classic Pens: The 50 Greatest Games in Pittsburgh Penguins History 978-1-60635-307-3 $19.95 | Paper
Classic Steelers: The 50 Greatest Games in Pittsburgh Steelers History 978-1-60635-198-7 $18.95 | Paper
Classic Bucs: The 50 Greatest Games in Pittsburgh Pirates History 978-1-60635-160-4 $18.00 | Paper
IPPY BRONZE AWARD Disqualified: Eddie Hart, Munich 1972, and the Voices of the Most Tragic Olympics Eddie Hart and Dave Newhouse 978-1-60635-312-7 $29.95 | Cloth
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RECENT PUBLICATIONS
Learning to Heal
Reflections on Nursing School in Poetry and Prose Edited by Jeanne Bryner and Cortney Davis Foreword by Judy Schaefer Fifty nurses share their poignant and inspirational stories What is it like to be a student nurse? And how might nurses, looking back, relate these experiences in ways that bring these memories to life again and provide historical context for how nursing education has changed and yet remained the same? In brave, revealing, and often humorous poetry and prose, Learning to Heal explores these questions with contributions by nurses from a variety of social, ethnic, and geographical backgrounds. Readers meet a black nursing student who is surrounded by white teachers and patients in 1940, a mother who rises every morning at 5 a.m. to help her family ready for their day before she herself heads to anatomy class, and an itinerant Jewish teenager who is asked, “What will you become?” These individuals, and many other women and men, share personal stories of finding their way to nursing school, where they begin a long, often wonderful, and sometimes daunting, journey. Paper $29.95/ISBN 978-1-60635-358-5
Baseball Goes West
The Dodgers, the Giants, and the Shaping of the Major Leagues Lincoln A. Mitchell How the Dodgers’ and Giants’ historic moves to California revitalized baseball “Baseball Goes West is an absolute must-read for all baseball fans, all Dodger fans, all Giants fans, all New Yorkers, all Californians, and for everyone interested in baseball history and, indeed, in our nation’s history—baseball fan or not. The twentieth century saw tremendous change in America, and the relocation of New York’s Giants and Dodgers to California in 1958 was a catalyst for a great deal of that change. Lincoln Mitchell’s book sheds new light on how the opening of the West by baseball forever changed our national pastime as well as the country. This book is simply fascinating.” —Corey Busch, former San Francisco Giants executive and consultant to Commissioner Bud Selig Cloth $39.95/ISBN 978-1-60635-359-2
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Fearsome Redemption in the Work of C. S. Lewis, Dorothy L. Sayers, and T. S. Eliot Janice Brown The gospel is a thing of terror—and triumph As bombs fell on London almost nightly from the autumn of 1940 through the summer of 1941, the lives of ordinary people were altered beyond recognition. A reclusive Oxford lecturer found himself speaking, not about Renaissance literature to a roomful of students but about Christian doctrine into a BBC microphone. A writer of popular fiction found herself exploring not the intricacies of the whodunit but the mysteries of suffering and grace. An erudite poet and literary critic found himself patrolling the dark streets and piecing together images of fire and redemption. C. S. Lewis, Dorothy L. Sayers, and T. S. Eliot became something they had not been before the war: bearers of a terrible, yet triumphant, message that people could not expect to be spared from pain and suffering, but they would be redeemed through pain and suffering. Cloth $45.00/ISBN 978-1-60635-338-7
The Faun’s Bookshelf C. S. Lewis on Why Myth Matters Charlie W. Starr Foreword by Devin Brown C. S. Lewis’s theory of myth is key to everything he knew to be true While visiting with Mr. Tumnus in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Lucy Pevensie notices a bookshelf filled with such titles as Nymphs and Their Ways and Is Man a Myth? Beginning with these imaginary texts, Charlie W. Starr offers a comprehensive study of C. S. Lewis’s theory of myth, including his views on Greek and Norse mythology, the origins of myth, and the implications of myth on thought, art, gender, theology, and literary and linguistic theory. For Lewis, myth represents an ancient mode of thought focused in the imagination—a mode that became the key that ultimately brought Lewis to his belief in Jesus Christ as the myth become fact. Paper $16.95/ISBN 978-1-60635-349-3
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RECENT PUBLICATIONS
The Lion in the Waste Land
JOURNALS
Journal orders may be placed at www.KentStateUniversityPress. com or by emailing: journals@ kent.edu.
Civil War History Brian Craig Miller, Editor Now in its seventh decade, Civil War History is the foremost scholarly journal of the American Civil War era. Focusing on social, cultural, economic, political, and military topics from the antebellum period through Reconstruction, Civil War History belongs in every major library collection, including those for students, historians, Civil War buffs, and the interested general reader. Civil War History is published quarterly in March, June, September, and December.
Submit articles for consideration to: Brian C. Miller, Editor Civil War History Mission College 3000 Mission College Blvd., M/S #26 Santa Clara CA 95054 civilwarhistoryjournal@gmail.com
Ohio History Donna M. DeBlasio, Editor For more than 100 years Ohio History, a semiannual peer-reviewed journal, has published scholarly essays, research notes, edited primary documents, and book reviews spanning the political, military, social, economic, ethnic, archaeological, architectural, and cultural history of Ohio and the Midwest. Published twice a year in spring and fall, the journal also includes essays on subjects concerning the nation and the Midwest with an Ohio focus. Under the editorship of Donna M. DeBlasio, Ohio History continues this venerable and useful scholarly work in its second century.
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Submit articles for consideration and books for review to: Donna M. DeBlasio, Editor Department of History Youngstown State University One University Plaza Youngstown OH 44555 dmdeblasio@ysu.edu
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This catalog contains descriptions of books scheduled for publication during 2019 and some already published of continuing interest. All prices are subject to change without notice. The Kent State University Press participates in the Cataloging-in-Publication program of the Library of Congress. Professional cataloging data appear on the copyright page in each of our new publications. The paper in most of our books meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. Editorial and Marketing Offices The Kent State University Press, 1118 University Library, P.O. Box 5190, Kent OH 44242-0001 330-672-7913 Fax 330-672-3104 Sales and Distribution Trade and Library Orders: The Kent State University Press, c/o Baker & Taylor Publisher Services 30 Amberwood Parkway, Ashland OH 44805 800-247-6553 Fax 419-281-6883 Customer service/inquiries 419-281-1802 orders@btpubservices.com Returns and Discounts Prior permission to return is not required. Booksellers may return books within one year of the date of the invoice if they are in new, resalable condition (no price marks or stickers) and currently in print. Books that are out of print and books in unsalable condition are not returnable and will be sent back at the customer’s expense. A packing list showing quantities, discounts received, and invoice number(s) must accompany returns. If no invoice number is given, credit will be issued at maximum discount. Written notice should be sent to Baker & Taylor Publisher Services within 30 days of receipt of damaged or defective books. Direct all returns to ordering address given above. Discount schedules will be furnished to booksellers upon request; write the Marketing Department of the Press. The letter “t” following the price of a book indicates trade discount; the letter “s” indicates short discount. Individual Orders Individuals are encouraged to order through booksellers. Direct orders from individuals must be prepaid in US funds or may be charged to MasterCard, VISA, or Discover. Postage and handling costs should be added to each order: $6.50 for one book, $1.50 for each additional book; outside the U.S., $7.50 for one book, $2.00 for each additional book. Ohio residents, add 7% sales tax. All prices are retail list and are subject to change without notice. Books will be billed at the prices prevailing at the time an order is received regardless of the prices appearing in this catalog. Send orders with payment to Baker & Taylor Publisher Services at the ordering address listed above. Examination and Desk Copy Policy Requests for examination copies must be submitted in writing on departmental letterhead and include the course title and number, estimated enrollment, semester it will be taught, and bookstore information. Please limit your selection to three titles. All requests must be accompanied by $6.50 per title (check or money order only) to cover shipping and handling. Any paperback book priced at $15 or less is available at no cost above the shipping and handling fee. Prepayment at a 20% discount (plus shipping) is required for hardcover books and paperbacks priced over $15; check, MasterCard, VISA, or Discover will be accepted. If a book is adopted for a class of 10 or more students, the prepayment will be refunded; requests for refunds must be accompanied by the name and phone number of the bookstore that placed the order. Examination copies not adopted as texts may be returned for refund of the purchase price. All refund requests must be made within 60 days of receipt of the book. Desk copies are granted on 10-copy orders when books are required (rather than recommended). The Press reserves the right to limit availability of exam and desk copies.
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