In Print
September/October 2009
The Snakehead: An
Epic Tale of the Chinatown Underworld and the American Dream
by Patrick Radden Keefe '05JD
Doubleday,
$27.50
Cheng Chui Ping, "Sister" Ping to her
neighbors, was a hardworking middle-aged mother who ran a small clothing store
and a restaurant in New York’s Chinatown. She was also a "snakehead"—the boss
of a human trafficking enterprise—who made an estimated $40 million smuggling
Chinese residents into the United States. In his gripping true-life account,
Keefe describes this sordid operation and the rise and fall of its mastermind.
2nd Tour, Hope I
Don’t Die
by Peter van Agtmael '03
Photolucida, $24
A few years after he
graduated, freelance photographer van Agtmael began documenting the conflicts
in Iraq and Afghanistan. "I was searching for something, and I found it in
war," he writes. The result of his explorations as an embedded photographer is
a gritty and often heartbreaking collection of images, from the war zones and
the United States, that capture the effects and aftereffects of battle.
The Garden of
Invention: Luther Burbank and the Business of Breeding Plants
by Jane S. Smith '74PhD
Penguin, $25.95
At the beginning of the twentieth century, Luther
Burbank was "the most famous gardener on the planet," writes cultural historian
Smith. Thanks to his skill at breeding new varieties, Burbank gave us the
Shasta daisy, the fragrant calla lily, and of course, the Burbank potato.
"[When] we want a better plum, a larger berry, a brighter, more fragrant
flower, we turn to Burbank, and he gives it to us," said California governor
George C. Pardee. Smith shows how Burbank helped transform gardening into
agribusiness.
The Yale Indian:
The Education of Henry Roe Cloud
by Joel Pfister
'85PhD
Duke University Press, $22.95
Henry Roe Cloud, Yale College Class of 1910, was "a remarkable American
Indian who migrated from a reservation to Yale and became a major Indian
educator and leader," notes Pfister, an American Studies professor at Wesleyan.
He shows how a Yale education helped shape the life of the first Indian to
graduate from the college, and how Cloud later worked for the laws that
reconstituted tribal governments and that granted citizenship to Native
Americans.
Naming Nature: The
Clash between Instinct and Science
by Carol Kaesuk Yoon
'85
W. W. Norton, $27.95
To most people, taxonomy—the work of classifying organisms in their
correct genus, family, order and so on—seems a genteel, even fussy, pursuit.
But biologist-turned-New York Times science writer Carol Kaesuk Yoon was
struck instead by how often taxonomists seemed to disagree. Drawing on science
and history, she chronicles the controversies and demonstrates how the human
instinct to name and order things can help us reconnect to the natural world.
1688: The First
Modern Revolution
by Steve Pincus, Professor of
History
Yale University Press, $40
In December 1688, William of Orange’s army deposed King James II of
England. In the traditional view, this "Glorious Revolution" was bloodless and
not particularly revolutionary. Pincus, working with new archival material,
compares the level of violence to that of the French Revolution. He argues
that, in altering England’s foreign policy, economic priorities, and religious
affiliations, the "radically transformative event" was the "culmination of a
long and vitriolic argument about how to transform England into a modern
nation.”

More books by Yale authors
Fenton Babcock 1956PhD
A Mercurial Intelligence Career: Between Two Book Ends
Infinity, $10.95
John R. Bockstoce 1966
Furs and Frontiers in the Far North: The Contest among Native and Foreign Nations for the Bering Strait Fur Trade
Yale University Press, $35
Thad Carhart 1972
Across the Endless River: A Novel
Doubleday, $26.95
Frank M. Chipasula 1982MA, editor
Bending the Bon: An Anthology of African Love Poetry
Southern Illinois University Press, $22.95
Laura DeNardis, executive director, Yale Information Society Project, and lecturer, Yale Law School
Protocol Politics: The Globalization of Internet Governance
MIT Press, $35
Roberto Gonzalez Echevarria 1970PhD, Sterling Professor of Hispanic and Comparative Literature, editor; and Margaret Sayers Peden, translator
Celestina, by Fernando de Rojas
Yale University Press, $24
Gerald Elias 1975MusM
Devil’s Trill: A Novel
Yale University Press, $25.99
Eileen Flanagan 1989MA
The Wisdom to Know the Difference: When to Change—and When to Let Go
Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin, $22.95
Lori D. Ginzberg 1985PhD
Elizabeth Cady Stanton: An American Life
Hill and Wang, $25
William Gladstone 1972
The Twelve: A Novel
Vanguard Press, $19.95
E. D. Hirsch Jr. 1957PhD
The Making of Americans: Democracy and Our Schools
Yale University Press, $25
Christina Baker Kline 1986
Bird in Hand: A Novel
William Morrow, $24.99
Leonard Marcus 1972, editor
Funny Business: Conversations with Writers of Comedy
Candlewick Press. $19.99
Megan McAndrew 1995MBA
Dreaming in French: A Novel
Scribner, $25
Jay Michaelson 1997JD
Everything Is God: The Radical Path of Nondual Judaism
Trumpeter, $17.95
Martin Austin Nesvig 2004PhD
Ideology and Inquisition: The World of the Censors in Early Mexico
Yale University Press, $60
Kenneth M. Pollack 1988
A Path Out of the Storm: A Grand Strategy for America in the Middle East
Random House/ Brookings Institution, $18
Chandra Prasad 1997
Breathe the Sky: A Novel, Inspired by the Life of Amelia Earhart
Wyatt-MacKenzie, $14.99
Paul A. Rahe 1977PhD
Montesquieu and the Logic of Liberty: War, Religion, Commerce, Climate, Terrain, Technology, Uneasiness of Mind, the Spirit of Political Vigilance, and the Foundations of the Modern Republic
Yale University Press, $45
Jim Rosapepe 1973 and Sheilah Kast
Dracula Is Dead: How Romanians Survived Communism, Ended It, and Emerged As the New Italy Since 1989
Bancroft Press, $25.95
James C. Scott 1967PhD, Sterling Professor of Political Science
The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia
Yale University Press, $35
Eliza Slavet 1996, 1997MusM
Racial Fever: Freud and the Jewish Question
Fordham University Press, $28
Harlow Giles Unger 1953
The Last Founding Father: James Madison and a Nation’s Call to Greatness
Da Capo Press, $26
John Wargo 1984PhD, Professor of Environmental Policy, Risk Analysis, and Political Science
Green Intelligence: Creating Environments That Protect Human Health
Yale University Press, $27
Mark Williams 2006PhD
The Brittle Thread of Life: Backcountry People Make a Place for Themselves in Early America
Yale University Press, $45

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