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Hot Reads for the Summer

patty limerick jim sheeler and scarlet bowen

Sharing some of their favorite books are, from left to right, Jim Sheeler (MJour鈥07) of journalism, Patty Limerick of history and Scarlet Bowen of English, taking a break from classes to gather in front of Old Main.

Forget Oprah鈥檚 Book Club or听The New York Times听bestseller list. If you鈥檙e looking for diversity 鈥 both in subject matter and artistic form 鈥 when compiling your summer reading list, read on.

From hard-hitting memoirs and haunting historical fiction to painstakingly illustrated children鈥檚 books and visually captivating graphic novels, a handful of 麻豆免费版下载professors and one dean share here what their favorite books are, including those they assign to their students.

鈥淚 think the tradition of literature is bigger than just prose,鈥 points out English associate professor William Kuskin, whose course 鈥淎dvanced Graphic Novel鈥 explores everything from postmodern fiction to graphic novels and comics. A graphic novel is a type of comic book that is often similar to a novel in its complex story line. As Kuskin notes in one of his course descriptions, 鈥淛ointly pictorial and textual [the graphic novel] represents the human condition through both words and images.鈥

Pulitzer Prize-winning writer听Jim Sheeler听(MJour鈥07), who joined the journalism school faculty in 2008, agrees with the notion that good literature can have a pictorial dimension. He loves to indulge in a well-illustrated junior reader with his 9-year-old son.

鈥淚鈥檓 always looking for new ways to tell stories,鈥 Sheeler says. 鈥淚 love that children鈥檚 literature has so often led the way.鈥

In the spirit of mixing it up a little this summer, we tapped journalism, English, history and business professors for recommendations. Here鈥檚 a look at some surprising picks.

What English assistant professor Scarlet Bowen recommends:

A Mercy听(Random House) by Toni Morrison: The Nobel Prize-winning author of听Beloved听spins a tragic tale set in the late 1600s 鈥 just as the slave trade was getting started 鈥 about a mother who casts off her daughter in order to save her. 鈥淚t is beautifully written 鈥 pristine and poetic sentences with emotional depths that will haunt you for days,鈥 Bowen says.

Notes from a Writer鈥檚 Book of Curses and Spells听(Peepal Tree Press) by Marcia Douglas: Penned by a CU-Boulder creative writing professor, the novel tells the story of Flamingo, a young writer living among the economic and social upheavals of Jamaica. Bowen calls it 鈥渁 complete wonder 鈥 inventive, surprising and incredibly moving.鈥

Evelina听(Oxford University Press) by Frances Burney: This pre-Jane Austen writer is 鈥渏ust as delightful to read,鈥 says Bowen, and her novel about a young girl鈥檚 journey to maturity is a British 18th-century classic.

What history professor and Center of the American West faculty director Patty Limerick recommends:

Killing for Coal: America鈥檚 Deadliest Labor War听(Harvard University Press) by Thomas G. Andrews: This painstakingly researched book traces the social and environmental factors leading up to the 1914 Ludlow massacre, in which 19 died during a clash between the Colorado National Guard and striking coal miners in Ludlow, Colo. The strikers had killed at least 30 men, destroyed six mines and laid waste to two mining towns in what has been called the deadliest strike in American history. Limerick calls it a 鈥渞are and providential convergence of an extraordinary author and an extraordinary topic.鈥

Some Horses听(Vintage) by Thomas McGuane: Nine thoughtfully crafted personal essays about riding, caring for and working with horses.

What her students are reading:

Mayordomo: Chronicle of an Acequia in Northern New Mexico听(University of New Mexico Press) by Stanley Crawford: This story is about a white, middle-class discontented man who finds himself managing an irrigation ditch in New Mexico. 鈥淭his offers a wonderful, detailed account of how a water system really works,鈥 Limerick says. 鈥淥nce it is in your head, your relationship to the faucet is transformed.鈥

Desert Solitaire听(Touchstone) by Edward Abbey: This book is the author鈥檚 enduring 1968 memoir about life as a park ranger in the desert Southwest. Limerick estimates she has read it more than 15 times with her classes over the years.

What associate English professor William Kuskin recommends:

Tamara Drewe听(Mariner Books) by Posy Simmonds: This widely heralded graphic novel by a Guardian cartoonist is inspired by the Thomas Hardy classic听Far from the Madding Crowd听(Nelson Doubleday). It follows a sexy, post-plastic surgery gossip columnist staying at a stuffy British writing retreat with her rocker boyfriend and uses expressive drawing to playfully poke fun at the English upper middle class. 鈥淭his is sort of intellectual-lite fare but well drawn and nicely plotted . . . a bit of a mystery, a bit of a sex scandal, a bit of a story about writers,鈥 Kuskin says. 鈥淧erfect for an easy summer day of doing nothing.鈥

City of Glass: The Graphic Novel听(Picador) by Paul Auster, Paul Karasik and David Mazzucchelli: A comic adaptation of the existentialist novel by the same name, this novel focuses on a reclusive mystery writer who is mistaken for a detective, decides to take the case nonetheless and ends up losing his mind. 鈥淚t鈥檚 smart and thoughtful and truly intellectual,鈥 Kuskin says.

What his students are reading:

The Naked Lunch听(Grove Press) by William S. Burroughs: This seminal 1959 work features a series of loosely connected vignettes (which Burroughs reportedly said could be read in any order) following a drug addict named William Lee (Burroughs鈥 alter ego) as he travels throughout the United States, Mexico and a dark, fictional land called Interzone. 鈥淗e rethought how the novel might work to tell a story,鈥 Kuskin says.

What journalism scholar-in-residence Jim Sheeler (MJour鈥07) recommends:

The Invention of Hugo Cabret听(Scholastic Press) by Brian Selznick: Winner of the 2008 Caldecott Medal, this 550-page junior reader (ages 9 鈥 12) has captured the attention of adults and is lauded for its artistic mix of prose and vivid charcoal drawings. It tells the story of a 12-year-old orphan living in a Paris train station where he tends to the clocks, pilfers toys and uses them to fix a mechanical man.

The Unforgiving Minute: A Soldier鈥檚 Education听(Penguin Press) by Craig Mullaney: This is a memoir of a working-class boy turned West Point graduate turned Oxford Rhodes Scholar turned platoon leader in Afghanistan. 鈥淚t shines a light on a country trying to come of age during wars that my students have lived with since they entered middle school,鈥 Sheeler says.

What his students are reading:

Old Friends听(Mariner Books) by Tracy Kidder: This features a collection of resident portraits written from the year the author spent in a nursing home in Massachusetts. Students will read it as part of a new course called 鈥淪torytelling and Civic Engagement,鈥 in which they鈥檒l spend time collecting life stories in a local assisted living center.

What business school dean Dennis Ahlburg recommends:

Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces that Shape Our Decisions听(HarperCollins) by Dan Ariely: A professor of behavioral economics explores why our headaches persist after a 1-cent aspirin but go away after taking a 50-cent aspirin; why we clip coupons to save 50 cents and then splurge on a lavish dinner and why we go for second helpings when we are full. 鈥淎s an economist who has always assumed that people are essentially rational, it is time that I explored the dark side of irrationality,鈥 Ahlburg says of the book.

Cold in Hand听(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) by John Harvey: 鈥淚 read about 50 books a year, mostly crime fiction, and Harvey is one of the best writers of crime fiction anywhere,鈥 Ahlburg says.