Off the Shelf

Recent books with Harvard connections

Old and new along the Mississippi: Holy Rosary Cemetery and Dow Chemical Corporation, Taft, Louisiana, 1998. From <i>Petrochemical America</i>

Petrochemical America, by Richard Misrach and Kate Orff, M.L.A. ’97 (Aperture, $80). Misrach’s 1998 photographs of the lower Mississippi River, from Baton Rouge to New Orleans—published in their entirety for the first time—evoke the old, rural South as transformed by industry. Orff, assistant professor at Columbia’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation, interprets the deeply impacted landscape, and proposes an alternative vocabulary—as she did recently for the famously polluted Gowanus Canal in New York.

The Fragile Wisdom: An Evolutionary View on Women’s Biology and Health, by Grazyna Jasienska, Ph.D. ’96, RI ’06 (Harvard, $35). Exercise, eat right—and still fall prey to breast cancer and osteoporosis: why is that women’s fate? The author, a professor at Krakow’s Jagiellonian University, focuses on the evolutionary pressure to produce reproductively fit bodies, rather than sustain lifelong health.

When Doctors Don’t Listen, by Leana Wen and Joshua Kosowsky ’88, M.D. ’96 (St. Martin’s, $25.99). Respectively a clinical fellow in medicine and an assistant professor of medicine, both at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, the authors fear the decline of diagnosis and offer practical lessons in doctor-patient relationships to avoid mistakes and unnecessary tests.

With Robert Lowell and His Circle, by Kathleen Spivack, BF ’71 (Northeastern University, $19.95 paper). A mosaic memoir of the poet—a two-year undergraduate at Harvard, and then a teacher from 1963 to 1977—full of Crimson connections (explored in these pages in Adam Kirsch’s “The Brahmin Rebel,” May-June 2004).

Colbert’s America: Satire and Democracy, by Sophia A. McClennen ’87 (Palgrave Macmillan, $25 paper). A scholarly appraisal was bound to happen, no? The author, a philosophy concentrator, now professor of comparative literature, Spanish, and women’s studies at Penn State, reminds us that for some viewers, this is the news.

Success on the Tenure Track: Five Keys to Faculty Job Satisfaction, by Cathy Ann Trower (Johns Hopkins, $45). The research director of the Graduate School of Education’s collaborative on academic careers in higher education details the factors that keep junior faculty members in harness: clarity about tenure policies, work-life balance, collegiality, research support, and good leadership. With public institutions (surveyed here) reeling from economic shocks and demographic change, the fate of their faculties and education enterprise is especially fraught today.

An Enlarged Heart: Personal History, by Cynthia Zarin ’81 (Knopf, $24.95). The poet, children’s-book author, teacher, and New Yorker staff writer creates a novelistic, episodic memoir.

Blindspot: The Hidden Biases of Good People, by Mahzarin R. Banaji, Cabot professor of social ethics, and Anthony G. Greenwald, Ph.D. ’63, RI ’05 (Delacorte, $27). Banaji and her colleague from the University of Washington explain, accessibly, important research on the mental categories—implicit biases, unconscious judgments—that everyone uses as a fundamental part of navigating life every day.

Usable Social Science, by Neil J. Smelser ’52, Ph.D. ’58, JF ’58, and John S. Reed (University of California, $65). A serious-minded overview resulting from an unusual collaboration of the academic (Smelser is a preeminent sociologist) and business realms (Reed is former chairman and CEO of Citigroup, and now chairs the MIT Corporation). Helpfully, they write well: “Bankers and sociologists seldom work together,” they begin, noting further, “some probably like it that way.”

Round About the Earth: Circumnavigation from Magellan to Orbit, by Joyce E. Chaplin, Phillips professor of early American history (Simon & Schuster, $35). The environmental and intellectual historian—a Ben Franklin specialist—engages in a much broadened, briskly written overview of human globetrotting.

Star of Wonder, by Mary Lee Hanford Wile ’69 and Sage Stossel ’93 (Forward Movement, $18). Just in time for the season, a picture-book retelling of the Nativity, by an aunt (archdeacon for formation and continuing education of the Episcopal Diocese of Maine) and niece (The Atlantic contributing editor and illustrator) team, published for the trade by the outreach ministry of the Episcopal Church.

Later Poems, Selected and New: 1971-2012, by Adrienne Rich ’51, Litt.D. ’90 (W.W. Norton, $39.95). A generous collection, chosen by the poet herself before her death earlier this year.

You might also like

Historic Humor

University Archives to preserve Harvard Lampoon materials

Academia’s Absence from Homelessness

“The lack of dedicated research funding in this area is a major, major problem.”

The Enterprise Research Campus, Part Two

Tishman Speyer signals readiness to pursue approval for second phase of commercial development.  

Most popular

Claudine Gay in First Post-Presidency Appearance

At Morning Prayers, speaks of resilience and the unknown

The Gravity of Groups

Mina Cikara explores how political tribalism feeds the American bipartisan divide.

Poise, in Spite of Everything

Nina Skov Jensen ’25, portraitist for collectors and the princess of Denmark. 

More to explore

Exploring Political Tribalism and American Politics

Mina Cikara explores how political tribalism feeds the American bipartisan divide.

Private Equity in Medicine and the Quality of Care

Hundreds of U.S. hospitals are owned by private equity firms—does monetizing medicine affect the quality of care?

Construction on Commercial Enterprise Research Campus in Allston

Construction on Harvard’s commercial enterprise research campus and new theater in Allston