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Books: Spring 2022

Book cover collage

Books recently published by Macalester alumni, faculty, and staff.

    Comic by Rivi Handler-Spitz

    When the COVID-19 pandemic began, Asian Languages and Cultures professor and chair Rivi Handler-Spitz turned to a beloved old hobby to cope with the uncertainty and worry she was feeling: one day in March 2020, she sketched her fears about her parents鈥 exposure to the virus. The next day, she drew again. Before long, her daily drawing became routine, and Handler-Spitz started sharing her work with friends and family via email. Then she committed to keeping her daily project going for at least a year.

    In 2021, ten of her comics were featured in The COVID Chronicles: A Comics Anthology, a collection of graphic narratives from artists around the world, edited by Kendra Boileau and Rich Johnson. In November, The Washington Post featured the anthology on its 鈥淏est Graphic Novels of 2021鈥 list. And most days, Handler-Spitz still draws. 鈥淚n the beginning I thought I鈥檇 need a reserve of ideas to keep this up,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut over time, I realized there鈥檚 never any dearth of material. Sometimes it can be cathartic to realize I鈥檝e come to understand a problem better by drawing about it.鈥


    Marlon James, Moon Witch, Spider King (Riverhead Books, 2022)

    鈥淚n the second book of his Dark Star trilogy, James coaxes beauty from dark thoughts, leaving readers with a concaved, mystical, and African-inspired world that begins in free-fall. . . . In a world as thoroughly imagined as J.R.R. Tolkien鈥檚, no detail seems spared. Full figured and richly drawn, Moon Witch, Spider King is the bridge of a trilogy and also a creation that, like James鈥 talent, stands alone.鈥 鈥擭atashia De贸n, Los Angeles Times


    Gretchen Legler 鈥84, Woodsqueer: Crafting a Sustainable Rural Life (Trinity University Press, 2022)

    鈥淎fter my dip in the pond, I felt a profound physical sense of wellbeing鈥攃ool, dry, rejuvenated. Ruth and I sat on a rustic wooden bench in the woods and talked about our days. It came to me suddenly, inexplicably鈥攁 powerful yes! I could live in this place, in the woods of rural Maine, for a long time. Maybe even forever. I tested the feeling鈥攑ushed against it鈥攍ike a goat testing a fence. I didn鈥檛 have to stay here, but I didn鈥檛 necessarily want to leave. That seemed like something new. Other places I鈥檇 inhabited, other lives I鈥檇 lived, didn鈥檛 feel quite right. I鈥檇 felt hemmed in by them, constrained; 鈥榯rapped鈥 might be a better word. But this place, this landscape of woods and pastures, dirt roads, barns, stone walls, ponds, and old mountains, finally felt like it could be home. And so, when Ruth said she鈥檇 found us an almost perfect house, a house we could make perfect for us, I was willing to make a commitment. For better or worse, we felt as if we were ready鈥攆or each other, for the house, for the land, and for a farming, gardening, and foraging way of life. I had no idea in the beginning how that commitment would be tested.鈥


    Tim Paulson 鈥75, Forty Years of Making 鈥楪ood Trouble鈥: The Selected Labor Writings of a San Francisco Labor Leader (Senders Publishing, 2021)

    Tim Paulson 鈥75 recently retired after a career that included being the first person to lead the over 150 unions of both the San Francisco Labor Council, AFL-CIO, and the San Francisco Building and Construction Trades Council. Over the years, his efforts included collective bargaining, policy research, legislative campaigns, and get-out-the- vote efforts. 鈥淓verything I did was for people to have a voice at work,鈥 he says.

    Making History: Our labor council ran a legislative campaign for a bill called the San Francisco Health Care Security Ordinance, to get employers of more than twenty people to provide health care. [US Representative and Speaker] Nancy Pelosi brought it as part of the national legislation that became the Affordable Care Act. That all started here in San Francisco, and I鈥檓 pretty proud of the campaign we developed to make it happen.

    Formative Lesson: When I was a young organizer, some construction workers told me they鈥檇 like to join our union. We did a very thorough campaign with the workers, and almost all of them signed cards pledging to join. I was a monitor at the union election, and as they walked past me, I could tell something was askew鈥攖hey wouldn鈥檛 look me in the eye. All of their votes flipped, and I found out later that the boss and foreman had gone to their houses and threatened their employment, which is against the law. That changed how I approached union elections. We started trying out other tactics: getting out on the street, threatening boycotts, bringing in politicians and people from faith communities, doing media campaigns.

    Advice for Organizers: I tell organizers that it鈥檚 not about you鈥攜ou鈥檙e not coming in as a knight in shining armor. It鈥檚 about the workers. Harry Bridges, who led a citywide strike in San Francisco in the 1930s, said, 鈥淲e don鈥檛 do anything unless the workers want it.鈥 You have to always listen to the workers.


    Voices from Pejuhutazizi book cover

    Jonathan Leo 鈥86, Medical Neuroanatomy for the Boards and the Clinic (Springer, 2022)

    Kathleen West 鈥99, Home or Away (Berkley, 2022)

    Jillian Scudder 鈥09, Astroquizzical: Solving the Cosmic Puzzles of Our Planets, Stars, and Galaxies: The Illustrated Edition (MIT Press, 2022)

    Walter LaBatte Jr. 鈥70 and Teresa Peterson, Voices from Pejuhutazizi: Dakota Stories and Storytellers (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2022)

    Katya Tylevich 鈥06, author of Gus Van Sant: The Art of Making Movies (Laurence King, 2021) and editor of The Marina Abramovic Method: Instruction Cards to Reboot Your Life (Laurence King, 2022)

    Heidi Waterhouse 鈥99, Jared Bhatti, Zachary Sarah Corleissen, Jen Lambourne, and David Nunez, Docs for Developers: An Engineer鈥檚 Field Guide to Technical Writing (Apress, 2021)

    Corina McKendry 鈥98 and Nik Janos, editors, Urban Cascadia and the Pursuit of Environmental Justice (University of Washington Press, 2021)

    81 Questions for Parents book cover

    Kris Amundson 鈥71, 81 Questions for Parents: Helping Your Kids Succeed in School (Rowman & Littlefield, 2021)

    Kate Bowler 鈥02 and Jessica Richie, Good Enough: 40ish Devotionals for a Life of Imperfection (Convergent Books, 2022)

    Lei X. Ouyang 鈥97, Music as Mao鈥檚 Weapon: Remembering the Cultural Revolution (University of Illinois Press, 2022)

    Dan Leon 鈥02, Arrian the Historian: Writing the Greek Past in the Roman Empire (University of Texas Press, 2021)