Around the World through Books

"Celebrating Our Differences and Similarities"

A Free Public Forum

Sponsored by the Book Subcommittee of JSRCC Multicultural Enrichment Council

Book Subcommittee members: Elizabeth Bensen-Barber, Lisa Bishop, Ashley Bourne, Stephen Brandon, Atalissa (Bitsy) Gilfoyle, Barbara Glenn, Ghazala Hashmi, Norma Hijaz, Marian Macbeth, Deborah Mathews, Randy Pittman (Chair), Kelly Plantan, Maria Ramos, Karen Steele, Laurie Weinberg, Hong Wu,


Freedom Writers Essay Writing Contest

Deadline: 7 pm, Monday, 31 March 2008
Guidelines
Flyer
Contact Beth Bensen-Barber at 523-5754 or at ebensen-barber@reynolds.edu for more information.

 

 Book Discussion Series 2007-2008

Schedule of Events

Title

Author

Discussion Leaders

Date and Time

Location

What Is the What

Dave Eggers

Marty Watkin

Thurs., Oct. 18, 2007   7:00 - 8:30 pm

The Gallery, Georgiadis Hall*

The Bastard of Istanbul
 

Elif Shafak

Mayda Topoushian & Ghazala Hashmi

Thurs., Nov. 29, 2007
7:00 - 8:30 pm

The Gallery, Georgiadis Hall*

A Short History of Nearly Everything

Bill Bryson

Panel

Thurs., Feb. 21, 2008  7:00 - 8:30 pm

The Gallery, Georgiadis Hall*

The Freedom Writers Diary

Freedom Writers and Erin Gruwell

Panel

Thursday, April 17, 2008   7:00 - 8:30 pm

The Gallery, Georgiadis Hall*

*The Gallery: Room 101, Georgiadis hall, JSRCC Parham Road Campus, 1651 E. Parham road, Richmond, VA 23228.


About the Authors and the Books:

What Is the What
 by Dave Eggers

Dave Eggers

About the author:

Dave Eggers grew up close to Chicago and attended the University of Illinois. He is the author of the memoir A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (2000), the novel You Shall Know Our Velocity! (2002), the story collection How We Are Hungry (2004), and the novel What Is the What (2006). In 1998, he founded McSweeney's, an independent book-publishing house in San Francisco that puts out the McSweeney's quarterly literary journal; the monthly magazine The Believer; a daily humor website, www.mcsweeneys.net; and Wholphin, a DVD quarterly of short films. In 2002, Eggers opened 826 Valencia, a writing lab for young people located in the Mission District of San Francisco, where he teaches writing to high-school students and runs a summer publishing camp; there are now branches of 826 in Brooklyn, Los Angeles, Seattle, Chicago, and Ann Arbor, and in 2007 a seventh center will open in Boston. With the help of his workshop students, Eggers edits a collection of fiction, essays, and journalism called The Best American Nonrequired Reading. He is also the co-editor of the Voice of Witness series of oral histories. - from http://www.mcsweeneys.net/authorpages/eggers/eggers.html.

 

About the book:

Valentino Achak Deng, real-life hero of this engrossing epic, was a refugee from the Sudanese civil war-the bloodbath before the current Darfur bloodbath-of the 1980s and 90s. In this fictionalized memoir, Eggers (A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius) makes him an icon of globalization. Separated from his family when Arab militia destroy his village, Valentino joins thousands of other "Lost Boys," beset by starvation, thirst and man-eating lions on their march to squalid refugee camps in Ethiopia and Kenya, where Valentino pieces together a new life. He eventually reaches America, but finds his quest for safety, community and fulfillment in many ways even more difficult there than in the camps: he recalls, for instance, being robbed, beaten and held captive in his Atlanta apartment. Eggers's limpid prose gives Valentino an unaffected, compelling voice and makes his narrative by turns harrowing, funny, bleak and lyrical. The result is a horrific account of the Sudanese tragedy, but also an emblematic saga of modernity-of the search for home and self in a world of unending upheaval. - From Publishers Weekly. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
 

 


The Bastard of Istanbul  
by Elif Shafak

Elif Shafak

 

About the author:

Elif Shafak was born in Strasbourg, France in 1971. She spent her teenage years in Spain before returning to Turkey. She has published five novels, most recently, The Saint of Incipient Insanities, which is her first novel in English and which was published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux in the fall of 2004.

Shafak is also a social scientist, graduated from International Relations at Middle East Technical University. She holds a Master of Science degree in Gender and Women Studies, and earned her PhD from the Department of Political Science. Her major in Contemporary Western Political Thought and her minor in Middle Eastern Studies, Shafak's academic background has been nurtured by a critical, interdisciplinary, and gender-conscious rereading of the literature on the Middle East & West, Islam, and modernity. - from http://www.elifsafak.net/.

 

About the book:

In her second novel written in English,  Turkish novelist Shafak tackles Turkish national identity and the Armenian "question" in her signature style. In a novel that overflows with a kitchen sink's worth of zany characters, women are front and center: Asya Kazanci, an angst-ridden 19-year-old Istanbulite is the bastard of the title; her beautiful, rebellious mother, Zeliha (who intended to have an abortion), has raised Asya among three generations of complicated and colorful female relations (including religious clairvoyant Auntie Banu and bar-brawl widow, Auntie Cevriye). The Kazanci men either die young or take a permanent hike like Mustafa, Zeliha's beloved brother who immigrated to America years ago. Mustafa's Armenian-American stepdaughter, Armanoush, who grew up on her family's stories of the 1915 genocide, shows up in Istanbul looking for her roots and for vindication from her new Turkish family. The Kazanci women lament Armanoush's family's suffering, but have no sense of Turkish responsibility for it; Asya's boho cohorts insist there was no genocide at all. As the debate escalates, Mustafa arrives in Istanbul, and a long-hidden secret connecting the histories of the two families is revealed. Shafak was charged with "public denigration of Turkishness" when the novel was published in Turkey earlier this year (the charges were later dropped). She incorporates a political taboo into an entertaining and insightful ensemble novel, one that posits the universality of family, culture and coincidence. (Jan. 22) - from Publishers Weekly. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
 


 A Short History of Nearly Everything

by Bill Bryson

Bill Bryson

Bill Bryson

About the author:

Bill Bryson was born in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1951. A backpacking expedition in 1973 brought him to England where he met his wife and decided to settle. He wrote for the English newspapers The Times and The Independent for many years, writing travel articles to supplement his income. He lived with his family in North Yorkshire before moving back to the States in 1995, to Hanover, New Hampshire, with his wife and four children. In 2003 he and his family moved back to England, where they currently reside. - from http://www.randomhouse.com/features/billbryson/flat/about.php

About the book:

As the title suggests, bestselling author Bryson sets out to put his irrepressible stamp on all things under the sun. As he states at the outset, this is a book about life, the universe and everything, from the Big Bang to the ascendancy of Homo sapiens. "This is a book about how it happened," the author writes. "In particular how we went from there being nothing at all to there being something, and then how a little of that something turned into us, and also what happened in between and since." What follows is a brick of a volume summarizing moments both great and curious in the history of science, covering already well-trod territory in the fields of cosmology, astronomy, paleontology, geology, chemistry, physics and so on. Bryson relies on some of the best material in the history of science to have come out in recent years. This is great for Bryson fans, who can encounter this material in its barest essence with the bonus of having it served up in Bryson's distinctive voice. But readers in the field will already have studied this information more in-depth in the originals and may find themselves questioning the point of a breakneck tour of the sciences that contributes nothing novel. Nevertheless, to read Bryson is to travel with a memoirist gifted with wry observation and keen insight that shed new light on things we mistake for commonplace. To accompany the author as he travels with the likes of Charles Darwin on the Beagle, Albert Einstein or Isaac Newton is a trip worth taking for most readers. - from Publishers Weekly. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc
 

 

A Short History of Nearly Everything: Special Illustrated Edition


The Freedom Writers Diary
by Freedom Writers and Erin Gruwell

About the book and the authors:

When Gruwell was a first-year high school teacher in Long Beach, CA, teaching the "unteachables" (kids that no other teacher wanted to deal with), she discovered that most of her students had not heard of the Holocaust. Shocked, she introduced them to books about tolerance. A first-person accounts by the likes of Anne Frank and Zlata Filopvic, who chronicled her life in war-torn Sarajevo. The students were inspired to start keeping diaries of their lives that showed the violence, homelessness, racism, illness, and abuse that surrounded them. These student diaries form the basis of this book, which is cut from the same mold as Dangerous Minds: the outsider teacher, who isn't supposed to last a month, comes in and rebuilds a class with tough love and hard work. Most readers will be proud to see how these students have succeeded; at the end of their four-year experience, the Freedom Writers as they called themselves, in honor of the Freedom Riders of the 1960sAhad all graduated; Grunwell now works at the college level, instructing teachers on how to provide more interactive classes for their students. - from Library Journal
 


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Created by the Book Subcommittee of Multicultural Enrichment Council on 1/7//2008.