Talking Book Topics November-December 2017

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Talking Book Topics November-December 2017 Talking Book Topics November–December 2017 Volume 83, Number 6 Need help? Your local cooperating library is always the place to start. For general information and to order books, call 1-888-NLS-READ (1-888-657-7323) to be connected to your local cooperating library. To find your library, visit www.loc.gov/nls and select “Find Your Library.” To change your Talking Book Topics subscription, contact your local cooperating library. Get books fast from BARD Most books and magazines listed in Talking Book Topics are available to eligible readers for download on the NLS Braille and Audio Reading Download (BARD) site. To use BARD, contact your local cooperating library or visit nlsbard.loc.gov for more information. The free BARD Mobile app is available from the App Store, Google Play, and Amazon’s Appstore. About Talking Book Topics Talking Book Topics, published in audio, large print, and online, is distributed free to people unable to read regular print and is available in an abridged form in braille. Talking Book Topics lists titles recently added to the NLS collection. The entire collection, with hundreds of thousands of titles, is available at www.loc.gov/nls. Select “Catalog Search” to view the collection. Talking Book Topics is also online at www.loc.gov/nls/tbt and in downloadable audio files from BARD. Overseas Service American citizens living abroad may enroll and request delivery to foreign addresses by contacting the NLS Overseas Librarian by phone at (202) 707-9261 or by email at [email protected]. Page 1 of 128 Music scores and instructional materials NLS music patrons can receive braille and large-print music scores and instructional recordings through the NLS Music Section. To learn more, email [email protected], call 1-800-424-8567 ext. 2, or visit www.loc.gov/nls/music/index.html. Publication feedback? Share your thoughts about this publication by writing us at: NLS Publications and Media Section Library of Congress Washington, DC 20542 or email us at [email protected]. Library of Congress, Washington 2017 Catalog Card Number 60-46157 ISSN 0039-9183 Contents Talking Book Topics September–October 2017 Contents In Brief Books for Adults Adult Fiction Adventure Animals and Wildlife Family Fantasy General Gothics Historical Fiction Human Relationships Humor Page 2 of 128 Legal Themes Medical Themes Mystery and Detective Occult and Horror Political Themes Psychological Themes Religious Themes Romance Science Fiction Spies and Espionage Suspense War Stories Westerns Adult Nonfiction Arts Astronomy Biography Business and Economics Computers Cooking Crime Diet and Nutrition Drama and Theater Family Folktales Gardening General Geography Government and Politics Hobbies and Crafts Page 3 of 128 Language Legal Issues Literature Marriage and Sex Medicine and Health Music Nature and the Environment Philosophy Poetry Psychology and Self-Help Religion Science and Technology Social Sciences Sports and Recreation Stage and Screen U.S. History World History Books for Children Children’s Fiction Adventure Animals Family Fantasy Friendship Growing Up Historical Fiction Holidays Humor Mystery Scary Stories Page 4 of 128 School Science Fiction Sports Stories Children's Nonfiction Animals Biography History Medicine and Health Nature and the Environment Science and Technology Sports and Recreation Foreign Language Books Español Audio Magazines In Brief Audio magazine about retirement savings available on BARD Published monthly, Kiplinger’s Retirement Report covers practical strategies to help grow retirement savings, how to make money last during retirement, maximization of Social Security and Medicare benefits, and other retirement- related topics. An audio version of Kiplinger’s Retirement Report produced by volunteers at the Florida Bureau of Braille and Talking Book Library in Daytona Page 5 of 128 Beach is now available for download from the NLS Braille and Audio Reading Download (BARD) website and also for subscription through the NLS Magazine on Cartridge program under the magazine code KRR4.Contact your local cooperating braille and talking book library to change your Magazine on Cartridge subscription. Newsletter on new NLS initiatives launches NLS has many new things on the horizon in the next two years and in July a newsletter called “NLS on the Move” was launched to keep libraries and subscribers updated on the progress of four new pilot projects designed to create greater efficiencies for our network of cooperating libraries and get more NLS materials to more patrons faster: Duplication-on-Demand. To reduce wait times for talking books, NLS is testing a system that allows network libraries to duplicate talking-book files onto digital cartridges at their own state-based locations. Synthetic Speech. In-person voice recording is still our gold standard, but synthetic speech can help us make available material we couldn’t easily record and bring new, time-sensitive materials to patrons more quickly. Wireless Download. NLS is exploring wireless transmission of talking-book files directly to simple devices in patrons’ homes, which would then load the files onto blank cartridges for use in NLS’s players. Braille eReader. Braille eReaders can turn a digital file instantaneously into braille for tactile reading. NLS—working with the renowned Perkins Library in Massachusetts—is studying the viability of providing eReaders to our patrons. The following is a reprint of the first four newsletter issues: NLS on the Move July 13, 2017 We’re glad to share this introductory issue of our On the Move bulletin. We’ll use it to give you the latest updates on NLS initiatives—updates that you can reuse in Page 6 of 128 your own communications. Look for On the Move toward the end of every month. —Karen Keninger, Director A new front door on the Web The NLS website at www.loc.gov/nls opened its new front door on Sunday, July 9, when our long-awaited revamping of it went live. Most major URLs important to longstanding users within the website have not changed, or have been made painless by internal redirects. New, more explicit, navigation will lead first-time visitors to what they need to find quickly. Three reasons make this the right moment for a new NLS website. First, we are undertaking several major pilots during 2017 and 2018 whose results, we hope, will help us widen our audiences and improve our services to cooperating net- work libraries, and, through them, to our end-user patrons. Second, we want to address a vast audience that has been, in the past, somewhat neglected by our website: visitors who do not use screen readers, but for whom features like monitor contrast tools and font-size adjustments are helpful. Third, a new generation of patrons makes a fresh website crucial. A website in 2017 must be meaningful to longstanding patrons—but also to younger users and others who reach us on mobile devices, to a new generation of veterans and those with physical disabilities who don’t yet see themselves as seniors, and to new organizations who want to help us share the message of our services with their staff and patrons. And if those three reasons weren’t enough, the NLS offices in Washington, D.C., have been undergoing a major renovation this year—so it’s good timing to have a virtual renovation on the web in parallel with our architectural renovation. Websites in 2017 are never truly “done,” and ours is no different. We’ll be iterating on improvements over the next few weeks, so please make your voices heard if there are problems you encounter, fixes that are necessary, or suggestions you would like to make. You’ll find a link right on the homepage asking for your feedback. Make use of it—that’s what it’s for! July 27, 2017 Libraries begin testing duplication-on-demand NLS has now completed initial development and is staging all the materials necessary for its duplication-on-demand pilot, working with six libraries from our cooperating network, in Arkansas, the District of Columbia, Kentucky, North Dakota, and Virginia (where two libraries are participating). The libraries in the pilot all have WebREADS as their integrated library system (ILS)—a prerequisite for participation in the pilot. But the long-term aspiration is for the duplication- Page 7 of 128 on-demand functionality to be available in other library automation systems, including CUL and KLAS, permitting users of those systems to participate. Why do we need this? When the distribution of digital talking-book files on cartridges commenced, it was implemented in a way that mirrored the system used for books on cassette: one book per cartridge, which circulated to patrons and was stored until required. Duplication-on-demand allows the cooperating network libraries across the country to create customized cartridges at their own location, containing books based on the specific requests of the patrons whom they serve. And it makes all the titles in the NLS collection available all the time for all patrons without requiring libraries to stock physical copies of books or to anticipate demand. “Ease of circulation is the key theme here, and also the long term goal,” says Michael Katzmann, chief of the Materials Development Division at NLS. “Think of it not just as a more convenient duplication system, but as groundwork for an electronic, Internet-based service to come. That’s where all circulation is headed. If our pilot shows the success we expect, we would urge all of our network libraries—not just those using WebREADS—to talk to their ILS providers so we can roll out the service more widely.” Duplication-on-demand helps with several key problems faced by our network libraries: current centralized duplication of talking-book cartridges requires network libraries to estimate demand and then to store cartridges not circulating; excess inventory must eventually be recycled; and centralized selection of what goes on a cartridge prevents customization for patrons and limits circulation to the copies already available—which may not include older titles recently converted to digital cartridge format.
Recommended publications
  • Investigating the Cryptogenic Status of the Sea Squirt Didemnum Perlucidum (Tunicata, Ascidiacea) in Australia Based on a Molecular Study of Its Global Distribution
    Aquatic Invasions (2016) Volume 11, Issue 3: 239–245 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3391/ai.2016.11.3.02 Open Access © 2016 The Author(s). Journal compilation © 2016 REABIC Research Article Investigating the cryptogenic status of the sea squirt Didemnum perlucidum (Tunicata, Ascidiacea) in Australia based on a molecular study of its global distribution P. Joana Dias1,2,*, Rosana Rocha3, Scott Godwin4, María Ana Tovar-Hernández5, Maria V. Delahoz6, Simon McKirdy7,8, Paul de Lestang7, Justin I. McDonald1 and Michael Snow1 1Department of Fisheries, Government of Western Australia, PO Box 20 North Beach 6920, Western Australia 2School of Animal Biology, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley 6009, Western Australia 3Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Federal do Paraná, C.P. 19020, 81.531-980, Curitiba, PR, Brazil 4National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Sanctuaries, 1845 Wasp Blvd, Bldg 176, Honolulu 96818 Hawaii, USA 5Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Laboratorio de Biosistemática, San Nicolás de los Garza, Nuevo León, México 6Instituto Latinoamericano de Ciencias Marinas y del Ambiente, Miami, USA 7Chevron Australia Pty Ltd, Dynons Plaza 905 hay Street, Perth 6000, Western Australia 8School of Veterinary and Life Sciences, Murdoch University, South St, Murdoch 6150, Western Australia *Corresponding author E-mail: [email protected] Received: 29 January 2016 / Accepted: 31 March 2016 / Published online: 28 April 2016 Handling editor: Noa Shenkar Abstract Didemnid species are assessed as species with a high invasive potential for Australia and as such are listed as target species for both state and national monitoring programs. The presence of the sea squirt Didemnum perlucidum (Monniot, 1983) was first documented in Australia in 2010 and has since then been detected extensively throughout the state of Western Australia and in the Northern Territory.
    [Show full text]
  • 2021 Event Author Line-Up
    2021 Event Author Line-Up Peter Baker and Susan Glasser Peter Baker and Susan Glasser are longtime Washington journalists who have written for years about the intersection of politics and the world. They are co-authors of Kremlin Rising, and most recently New York Times bestseller and award-winning book The Man Who Ran Washington: The Life and Times of James A. Baker III. Baker is the chief White House correspondent for The New York Times and an MSNBC political analyst. He has covered the last five presidents for The Times and The Washington Post and is the author or co-author of six books. Glasser is a staff writer for The New Yorker and author of the weekly “Letter from Biden’s Washington” as well as a global affairs analyst for CNN. She previously was the editor of POLITICO, founder of POLITICO Magazine, and editor-in- chief of Foreign Policy magazine following a long stint at The Post. Baker and Glasser live in Washington with their son and are currently at work on a book on the Trump presidency. George W. Bush George W. Bush served as the forty-third President of the United States, from 2001 to 2009. He had previously served as Governor of Texas. He and his wife, Laura, live in Dallas, where they founded the George W. Bush Presidential Center at Southern Methodist University. President Bush is the author of three #1 bestsellers: Decision Points, his presidential memoir; 41, a biography of his father, President George H. W. Bush; and Portraits of Courage, a collection of oil paintings and stories honoring the sacrifice of America’s military veterans.
    [Show full text]
  • Reglas De Congo: Palo Monte Mayombe) a Book by Lydia Cabrera an English Translation from the Spanish
    THE KONGO RULE: THE PALO MONTE MAYOMBE WISDOM SOCIETY (REGLAS DE CONGO: PALO MONTE MAYOMBE) A BOOK BY LYDIA CABRERA AN ENGLISH TRANSLATION FROM THE SPANISH Donato Fhunsu A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of English and Comparative Literature (Comparative Literature). Chapel Hill 2016 Approved by: Inger S. B. Brodey Todd Ramón Ochoa Marsha S. Collins Tanya L. Shields Madeline G. Levine © 2016 Donato Fhunsu ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT Donato Fhunsu: The Kongo Rule: The Palo Monte Mayombe Wisdom Society (Reglas de Congo: Palo Monte Mayombe) A Book by Lydia Cabrera An English Translation from the Spanish (Under the direction of Inger S. B. Brodey and Todd Ramón Ochoa) This dissertation is a critical analysis and annotated translation, from Spanish into English, of the book Reglas de Congo: Palo Monte Mayombe, by the Cuban anthropologist, artist, and writer Lydia Cabrera (1899-1991). Cabrera’s text is a hybrid ethnographic book of religion, slave narratives (oral history), and folklore (songs, poetry) that she devoted to a group of Afro-Cubans known as “los Congos de Cuba,” descendants of the Africans who were brought to the Caribbean island of Cuba during the trans-Atlantic Ocean African slave trade from the former Kongo Kingdom, which occupied the present-day southwestern part of Congo-Kinshasa, Congo-Brazzaville, Cabinda, and northern Angola. The Kongo Kingdom had formal contact with Christianity through the Kingdom of Portugal as early as the 1490s.
    [Show full text]
  • Student Recital: Raul Dominguez, April 15, 2021
    2020-21 Season Digital program Contents Click on an item to navigate to its page. The future, faster Performance program CU Presents Digital Your support matters CU Presents personnel is the home of performing arts at the University of Colorado Boulder. The mission of the University of Colorado Boulder College of Music is to inspire artistry and discovery, together. As we gather, we honor and acknowledge that the University of Colorado’s four campuses are on the traditional territories and ancestral homelands of the Cheyenne, Arapaho, Ute, Apache, Comanche, Kiowa, Lakota, Pueblo and Shoshone Nations. Further, we acknowledge the 48 contemporary tribal nations historically tied to the lands that comprise what is now called Colorado. Acknowledging that we live in the homelands of Indigenous peoples recognizes the original stewards of these lands and their legacies. With this land acknowledgment, we celebrate the many contributions of Native peoples to the fields of medicine, mathematics, government and military service, arts, literature, engineering and more. We also recognize the sophisticated and intricate knowledge systems Indigenous peoples have developed in relationship to their lands. We recognize and affirm the ties these nations have to their traditional homelands and the many Indigenous people who thrive in this place, alive and strong. We also acknowledge the painful history of ill treatment and forced removal that has had a profoundly negative impact on Native nations. We respect the many diverse Indigenous peoples still connected to this land. We honor them and thank the Indigenous ancestors of this place. The University of Colorado pledges to provide educational opportunities for Native students, faculty and staff and advance our mission to understand the history and contemporary lives of Native peoples.
    [Show full text]
  • DAHP Official BLM Newsletter
    TER ES MAT CK LIV De Anza HBLAono rs Newsletter LEARN. SUPPORT. EDUCATE. E 'S GUID GINNER THE BE TER S MAT K LIVE BLAC LISTEN. EMPATHIZE. ACT. “If you have come here to help me you are wasting your time, but if you have come because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together.” er Lilla Watson, Australian Indigenous Activist tt a m De Anza Honors Program es deanza.edu/honors v li [email protected] | 408-864-8833 k Lounge S33-B | M-R 930am-4pm c la b # De Anza Honors Newsletter LEARN. SUPPORT. TER LISTEN. EMPATHIZE. S MAT EDUCATE. K LIVE ACT. BLAC FILM RESOURCES Show ; We're Watching Black-ish "Watch this episode and it'll give you that very entry-level groundwork for what we're talking about and what we're yelling about and what we're in the ABC streets about," says Thompson." - USA Today 13th "Named after the 13th Amendment which abolished slavery in 1865, DuVernay’s Emmy-winning documentary follows history from slavery through to the mass incarceration of Black people in the United States. The Netflix documentary shows why many people have been calling for reform against police brutality for years." - Connellan Just Mercy "The movie makes it clear early on that the Alabama court system convicted McMillian despite stunningly weak testimonies and evidence. It may not be Amazon the flashiest courtroom drama, but these smaller stories of racial injustice are crucial." - Dallas Observer The Hate U Give "The Hate U Give" takes on themes of Black Lives Matter, police brutality and black identity and puts them in the thought-provoking story of a black girl Hulu growing up "in a black inner-city community and going to a white private school across town." - USA Today When They See Us “When They See Us” is DuVernay’s strongest work to date....
    [Show full text]
  • The Hate U Give Book Recommendations
    The Hate U Give Book Recommendations Is Orin fourscore or trimestrial when swaged some smut swig indifferently? Utterable Ferd beshrew astride. Tackier and positivist Leonidas exteriorizes, but Benjie nary goggled her Nazareth. Bestselling the book was zimmerman allowed some girls need help the recommendations for everyone a trailer left when referring to follow along, understandings of all the reader with If you can hear it be allowed myself this hate u give by members who have expressed concern about with. Thank you had no extra layer of systemic racism from the various factors that? Osborne never heard anybody who helped me. You guys already took over Facebook. How do i recommend this book recommendations. What actions are taken to address injustice? Open new books above highlight important book recommendations delivered to give and thought and try ignorance and. The rap for introducing me with chris offers information on this book is the world that means that there were you are the. That book is also a really powerful book with a fair amount of violence in it. Language Arts in Honduras, Central America, so I thought the struggles in the book would not resonate with my homogenous Honduran group of students. Starr the hate u give book recommendations. Matthew, who receive be that escape. Would this book be entitle for one middle schooler? As does my process, I immediately try at least always write an approach chart. As as one statistic. Funny how teenagers are so close up big political issues like you give? It helps me to better understand the backgrounds of some of my students and the issues that they may be dealing with at home.
    [Show full text]
  • Linguistic Justice; Black Language, Literacy, Identity, and Pedagogy
    6 “THUG LIFE” Bonus Chapter: Five Years After Leadership Academy The following is a passage from Angie Thomas’ award-winning young adult novel The Hate U Give (2017). That means flipping the switch in my brain so I’m Williamson Starr. Wil­ liamson Starr doesn’t use slang—if a rapper would say it, she doesn’t say it, even if her white friends do. Slang makes them cool. Slang makes her “hood.” Williamson Starr holds her tongue when people piss her off so nobody will think she’s the “angry black girl.” Williamson Starr is approachable. No stank-eyes, none of that. Williamson Starr is non-con­ frontational. Basically, Williamson Starr doesn’t give anyone a reason to call her ghetto. I can’t stand myself for doing but I do it anyway. —Starr, from the novel The Hate U Give In the passage, the protagonist Starr, a Black teenager who attends a pre­ dominantly white high school (Williamson) but lives in a predominantly Black community (Garden Heights), is describing how she navigates and negotiates her Black identity in a white space that expects her to perform whiteness, especially through her language use. Albeit fictional, Thomas’ depiction of Starr accurately captures the cultural conflict, labor, and exhaus­ tion that many Black Language-speakers endure when code-switching; that is, many Black Language-speakers are continuously monitoring and policing their linguistic expressions and working through the linguistic double consciousness they experience as a result of having to alienate their cultural ways of being and knowing, their community, and their blackness in favor of a white middle class identity.
    [Show full text]
  • 9781412929998.Pdf
    Duck-3494-Prelims.qxd 1/16/2007 10:39 AM Page i Human Relationships Duck-3494-Prelims.qxd 1/16/2007 10:39 AM Page ii Duck-3494-Prelims.qxd 1/16/2007 10:39 AM Page iii Human Relationships 4th Edition Steve Duck Duck-3494-Prelims.qxd 1/16/2007 10:39 AM Page iv © Steve Duck 2007 First published 2007 Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form, or by any means, only with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publishers. SAGE Publications Ltd 1 Oliver’s Yard 55 City Road London EC1Y 1SP SAGE Publications Inc. 2455 Teller Road Thousand Oaks, California 91320 SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd B 1/I 1 Mohan Cooperative Industrial Area Mathura Road, New Delhi 110 044 India SAGE Publications Asia-Pacific Pte Ltd 33 Pekin Street #02-01 Far East Square Singapore 048763 British Library Cataloguing in Publication data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978-1-4129-2998-1 ISBN 978-1-4129-2999-8 (pbk) Library of Congress Control Number: 2006929060 Typeset by C&M Digitals (P) Ltd, Chennai, India Printed in Great Britain by The Alden Press, Witney Printed on paper from sustainable resources Duck-3494-Prelims.qxd 1/16/2007
    [Show full text]
  • Copyright and Use of This Thesis This Thesis Must Be Used in Accordance with the Provisions of the Copyright Act 1968
    COPYRIGHT AND USE OF THIS THESIS This thesis must be used in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1968. Reproduction of material protected by copyright may be an infringement of copyright and copyright owners may be entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. Section 51 (2) of the Copyright Act permits an authorized officer of a university library or archives to provide a copy (by communication or otherwise) of an unpublished thesis kept in the library or archives, to a person who satisfies the authorized officer that he or she requires the reproduction for the purposes of research or study. The Copyright Act grants the creator of a work a number of moral rights, specifically the right of attribution, the right against false attribution and the right of integrity. You may infringe the author’s moral rights if you: - fail to acknowledge the author of this thesis if you quote sections from the work - attribute this thesis to another author - subject this thesis to derogatory treatment which may prejudice the author’s reputation For further information contact the University’s Copyright Service. sydney.edu.au/copyright PROFESSIONAL EYES: FEMINIST CRIME FICTION BY FORMER CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROFESSIONALS by Lili Pâquet A thesis submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences University of Sydney 2015 DECLARATION OF ORIGINALITY I hereby certify that this thesis is entirely my own work and that any material written by others has been acknowledged in the text. The thesis has not been presented for a degree or for any other purposes at The University of Sydney or at any other university of institution.
    [Show full text]
  • For Those Who Won't Fail Themselves
    ~For Those Who Won’t Fail Themselves~ Black Sun Imperium 2 Mine is a Heart of Carnelian, Crimson as Murder on a Holy Day. Mine is a Heart of Corneal, the Gnarled Roots of a Dogwood and the Bursting of Flowers. I am the Broken Wax Seal on my Lover's Letters. I am the Phoenix, the Fiery Sun, Consuming and Resuming Myself. I Will what I Will. Mine is a Heart of Carnelian, Blood Red as the Crest of a Phoenix. ~To My Beloved Master Enlil Hiro-kura Hoshigaoka~ 3 Phagos Angmar Hoshigaoka Black Sun Imperium Bringing Forth the Noesis of the Ancient Darklords 4 Black Sun Imperium Index Foreword ………………………………….. 7 Preface …………………………………... 9 Imperium of the Black Sun …………………………………On 16 The Deathtrap of Mental Inertia: The Yoke of the Herd ………………………………. Two 26 The Black Sun ……………………………… . Thr 35 Darklords in Disguise ……………………………… Four 55 The 5 Second Rule ……………………………… Fi 91 The Abysmal Bridge ………………………………… Six 100 The Bridge of Manifestation ………………………………… S n 122 Prelude to the Styx ………………………………… ight 130 The Styx ov Power ………………………………… Nin 144 The Styx ov Wealth ………………………………… Ten 199 The Styx ov Eminence ………………………………… le n 220 The Styx ov Strife ………………………………… Twl 252 The Nine Pointed Star Black Sun Working ………………………………… . 13 266 Glossary ………………………………….. 274 List of Resources …………………………………… 277 5 6 Foreword Foreword from the Editor When first I was asked to proof read and correct this book, I had no idea what to expect; I myself was an open book as far as this subject was concerned. Always a fan of Darkside characters but never having done too much research into the subject, I had no formed opinions and absolutely no idea there was a culture dedicated to living life in this manner.
    [Show full text]
  • Works by Tom Stoppard
    Works by Tom Stoppard ‘A Play In Three Acts’ 56n, 463n, 581n, 582n Dogg’s Hamlet, Cahoot’s Macbeth xxiv, A Separate Peace 499, 528n xxvi, 55, 176, 354n, 393, 423, 557, 582 A Walk on the Water 516 After Magritte xxxi, 5, 8–11, 18, 39, 55–56, Empire of the Sun 7, 414, 440n 437, 470, 491, 504, 504n, 535n, 581 Enigma 77 Albert’s Bridge 155, 551 Enter a Free Man 254, 399, 454, 516n, 524, Anna Karenina 257 560, 560n, 583 Another Moon Called Earth 37n, 121, 156, 239, Every Good Boy Deserves Favour xxv–xxvi, 239n, 320, 323, 441, 443, 455, 582 xxix, 50–52, 55, 56, 59n, 90, 121, 136, Arcadia xxii, xxiv–xvii, 15, 17, 23, 37, 182–184, 235–237, 286–289, 294, 298, 38–41, 55, 74–79, 88, 88n, 118n, 126, 327n, 381–384, 437, 447, 473, 479, 136–152, 179, 185, 212, 222, 231, 234, 238, 490, 496n, 582 248, 260, 309, 313, 315, 322, 337, 347, 350–352, 369, 377n, 398n, 399, 407, ‘First Person’ 244n 412, 418, 424, 436n, 441, 451, 470, 473, ‘Freedom but thousands are still 488–489, 505, 514, 521, 523, captive’ 277n 531, 552, 566, 568–572, 575, 578–579, Funny Man 458, 559 581, 583 Article on James Thurber 5 Galileo 144, 258–259, 260, 471 Artist Descending a Staircase xxiii, xxvi, 11–14, 26, 62, 63, 64, 64n, 66, 118, 120–121, Hapgood xxiii–xxvi, xxvii–xxix, 15, 40, 153n, 157–159, 236n, 238, 326, 329, 352, 52, 55, 56, 127, 129, 135–137, 143, 145, 363, 370–372, 423, 533, 551, 560–565, 222n, 238, 258, 259n, 260, 309, 343, 347, 579, 582 349, 351, 362, 365–369, 398n, 400–407, 400n, 423–424, 426, 428, 471, 478, 488, ‘But For The Middle Classes’ 251n, 261n, 492–495, 502–503,
    [Show full text]
  • The Posse Foundation
    THE POSSE scholar 2010 ANNUAL REPORT introduction Becoming a Posse Scholar is no small feat. The journey begins with the student being nominated by her high school followed by an intensive set of interviews with Posse staff to assess CONTENTS leadership and academic potential, communication skills, propensity for group work and level of motivation. Only the best 2. CONCEPT, MISSION, GOALS will receive four-year, full-tuition scholarships from one of Posse’s 38 top-tier partner colleges and universities. But before 4. LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT + FOUNDER a Scholar matriculates on campus, she will also complete AND CHAIR Posse’s rigorous, eight-month Pre-Collegiate Training Program consisting of two-hour weekly workshop sessions designed to sharpen her growing leadership skills. 6. PROGRAM COMPONENTS The result of this involved process is a student uniquely prepared 8. COLLEGE + UNIVERSITY PARTNERS to make her mark on campus. And that’s exactly what Posse Scholars have been doing since the program’s inception in 9. CAREER PARTNERS 1989. In addition to graduating at a rate of 90 percent— nearly double the national average—more than 70 percent of Posse Scholars found or become presidents of campus 10 . HIGHLIGHTS organizations. Over the years they have earned a reputation as student leaders who enliven classroom discussions, build 12 . CITY REPORTS bridges between disparate sections of the campus community and foster an atmosphere of integrated diversity. 19 . MEET THE SCHOLARS There are currently more than 1,500 Posse Scholars on campuses across the country. They hail from some of our 36. CONTRIBUTORS country’s largest cities.
    [Show full text]