Recent books with Harvard connections

Recent books with Harvard connections

Wrong Place, Wrong Time: Trauma and Violence in the Lives of Young Black Men, by John A. Rich, M.P.H. ’90 (Johns Hopkins, $24.95). The author, now a professor at Drexel University School of Public Health, offers a gritty, sobering view—sometimes from the blood-soaked ER—of epidemic shootings, stabbings, and street beatings.

 

 

Paleoclimates: Understanding Climate Change Past and Present, by Thomas M. Cronin, Ph.D. ’77 (Columbia, $95). Lest anyone doubt that there is science involved in assessing climate change, the author—a geologist associated with Georgetown University and the U.S. Geological Survey—delivers a dense text on the hard (rock) evidence.

 

 

The Ideological Origins of American Federalism by Alison L. LaCroix, Ph.D. ’07 (Harvard, $35). “Federalism is everywhere and nowhere in American legal and political history,” observes the author, a lawyer and historian now professing at University of Chicago Law School. Intrigued, she has sought out the ideas that resulted in a federalist government, before their inclusion in the Constitution.

 

 

A Vision for Venture Capital: Realizing the Promise of Global Venture Capital and Private Equity , by Peter A. Brooke ’52, M.B.A. ’54, with Daniel Penrice (University Press of New England, $29.95). A memoir of a life in finance by the founder of TA Associates and Advent International, who has his eye clearly on the economic value of investment, global growth, and a world untainted by excessive debt and quick-buck financial engineering.

 

 

Flawless, by Scott Andrew Selby, J.D. ’98, and Greg Campbell (Union Square, $24.95). A breathless “inside,” blow-by-blow, if not actually how-to, account of “the largest diamond heist in history” ($128 million)—in Antwerp, naturally, on Valentine’s Day weekend, of course.

 

 

The Upside of Turbulence, by Donald Sull ’85, M.B.A. ’92, D.B.A. ’96 (Harper Business, $27.99). A business-strategy book aimed at “seizing opportunity in an uncertain world” (prospective audience, these days: everyone), by a former Mc- Kinsey consultant, now a professor of strategy at the London Business School.

 

 

The Artist's Eyes: Vision and the History of Art, by Michael F. Marmor ’62, M.D. ’66, and James G. Ravin (Abrams, $40). A sort of forensic aesthetics, copiously illustrated, by a retina specialist and an art-minded fellow ophthalmologist, who interpret the eye and vision as seen through the works of, and by their effects on, Seurat, Matisse, Titian, Chuck Close, and others.

 

 

King of the Lobby, by Kathryn Allamong Jacob (Johns Hopkins, $40). The curator of manuscripts at Radcliffe’s Schlesinger Library provides a colorful look at Sam Ward, who parlayed good food, fine wine, and dinner conversation into power in Gilded Age Washington, D.C., pioneering the art of lobbying in a scandal-marred era.

 

 

Historic Photos of Harvard University, text and captions by Dana Bonstrom ’77 (Turner, $39.95). A gallery of black-and-white archival images, especially of buildings and architecture, from a panorama of pre-Business School Allston to Lowell House under construction to Churchill reviewing cadets in the Yard, and more.

 

You might also like

A theatrical reenactment explores a 1976 clash between science and democracy.

Readers Respond to Our Adaptations Survey

We asked people to share their favorite art adaptations. Here’s what they said.

The Harvard Arts Medalist wants his smash-hit Cats revival to reach “as many young queer people” as possible.

Most popular

The Supreme Court Affirmative Action Rulings: An Analysis

The underlying arguments project clashing worldviews of race and appropriate remedies.

An animal’s journey from grief to love shows how much humans need each other, too.

Dani Rodrik profiled by Marina Bolotnikova

Dani Rodrik’s views on trade, development, and democracy enter the mainstream.

Explore More From Current Issue

Singer performing on stage with a guitar, wearing a hat, and surrounded by band instruments.

Singer Elisa Smith’s whiskey-soaked voice and subversive feminism is part of the genre’s urban shift.

An open book with a film strip emerging, trailing popcorn and a dancer silhouette.

Readers Respond to Our Adaptations Survey

We asked people to share their favorite art adaptations. Here’s what they said.

A woman with long, silver hair rests her chin on her hand, wearing a black top.

Author and Harvard Divinity School writer-in-residence Terry Tempest Williams finds beauty in the world around us.