Athena Becomes a Swallow and Other Voices from The Odyssey by Brent MacLaine (English) is a collection of 27 monologues spoken by minor characters from Homer's Odyssey. The poems demonstrate how the shine of the gods falls on the common folk as well as the nobility. MacLaine creates a world as real and immediate to us today as it may have been 3,000 years ago. (Goose Lane Editions)
Voice of the Community, featuring photos by Carlos Reyes-Manzo, is the result of a three-year research project exploring the strengths and challenges facing rural PEI communities. The book is a collaboration between Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Reyes-Manzo, and a research team led by Dr. Vianne Timmons (former Vice-President, Academic Development and Adjunct Professor of Education) and consisting of Drs. Sandy McAuley and Fiona Walton (Education), Barb Campbell and Kim Critchley (Nursing), and Jennifer Taylor (Family and Nutritional Science). (Andes Press Agency)
The Trans-Canada Writer, edited by Mark Connelly (Milwaukee Area Technical College), Greg Doran, and Wendy Shilton (English) is a composition text that includes a full reader, rhetoric, research skills and a handbook. Its blend of concepts and practical strategies, intellectual rigour and readability, critical thinking and emphasis on writing for the "Real World" makes it a flexible learning tool and helps student strengthen their writing skills. (Nelson Canada)
In Shades of Green, the English Department’s Brent MacLaine brings his artist’s eye to the poetic form, exploring the chromatic complexity of experience. Whether emerging from the local landscapes of memoir or the present-day streetscapes of Manhattan, these poems are at once personal and speculative, capturing modulations of tone and hue of the Prince Edward Island landscape. This is Brent’s third book. (Acorn Press)
Why have birth rates in most developed countries plunged to all-time lows in the last century? In The Sterilization Movement and Global Fertility in the Twentieth Century, Ian Dowbiggin (History) draws on a wide variety of archival records, revealing how these revolutionary events can be traced to the efforts of a small group who tried mightily to convince governments that birth rates needed to be cut and that sterilization was the best way to do it. (Oxford University Press, 2008)
Jerusalem on the Amur by Dr. Henry Srebrnik (Political Studies) describes the involvement of Canadian Jewish Communists in the development of Birobidzhan, a Jewish autonomous region in the far east of the Soviet Union, from the 1920s to the 1950s. (McGill-Queen's University Press)
Storm and Dissonance: L. M. Montgomery and Conflict is a collection of essays edited and with an introduction by Jean Mitchell (Anthropology). Montgomery’s work is generally known for her pastoral sensibility. However, in this volume, scholars explore the undercurrents of anger and violence, obsession and gossip, bringing a rich perspective to Montgomery’s artistry. (Cambridge Scholars Publishing)
Terminal Damage: The Politics of VLTs in Atlantic Canada by Peter McKenna (Political Studies)looks at the critical aspect of social harm caused by VLTs, and examines just how enveloped VLTs are in Atlantic Canadian politics and policy. The author explains VLT gaming decisions in a political context one province at a time — bringing in electoral, economic, personal, bureaucratic and cultural factors to shed some much-needed light on these public policy outcomes. (Fernwood Books)
The second edition of Veterinary Epidemiologic Research by Ian Dohoo, Henrik Stryhn (Health Management), and Wayne Martin, is a newly revised and expanded graduate-level text on the principles and methods of veterinary epidemiologic research. The first edition (2003) quickly became the standard graduate-level text for veterinary epidemiology programs around the world. (VER Inc.)
A Magnificent Gift Declined: The Dalton Sanatorium of Prince Edward Island, 1913-1923 by Leonard Cusack (History), tells of the rise and fall of the state-of-the-art sanatorium donated by Charles Dalton to the Province of PEI. Built in 1913 on an isolated hilltop in Emyvale, the hospital was demolished in 1923. Cusack skilfully portrays the political manoeuvring and social context surrounding PEI's first TB hospital. (Island Studies Press)
Athena Becomes a Swallow and Other Voices from The Odyssey by Brent MacLaine (English). These 27 finely crafted monologues spoken by minor characters from Homer’s The Odyssey demonstrate how the shine of the gods falls on the common folk as well as the nobility. MacLaine creates a world as real and immediate to us today as it may have been 3,000 years ago. (Goose Lane Editions)
Afternoon Horses by Deirdre Kessler (English): poetry that reflects the poet’s bond with island landscapes—particularly those of Prince Edward Island and Tasmania—and with childhood and family—the sinews that hold families together through distance, aging, and death. (Acorn Press)
Spirits in the Material World: The Challenge of Technology by Gil Germain (Political Studies) uses an analysis of four French philosophers to illuminate our implication in technology and our tenuous hold on reality. Germain provocatively argues that humans are fast becoming disembodied or spirit-like creatures, and gives reasons why this inclination towards spiritization ought to be resisted. (Lexington Books)
Romantic Cosmopolitanism by Esther Wohlgemut (English) shows how cosmopolitanism in the early nineteenth century offers a non-unified formulation of the nation, in sharp contrast to more unified models such as Edmund Burke's, which found nationality in, among other things, language, history, blood, and geography. (Palgrave Macmillan)
Texts and Traditions of Medieval Pastoral Care: Essays in Honour of Bella Millett, edited by Catherine Innes-Parker (English) and Cate Gunn (author/ed), explores the growth of pastoral and devotional literature that flourished throughout the middle ages. Ranging from Anglo-Saxon pastoral texts to the reading of women in late-medieval England, the essays reveal a transformation into the literature of vernacular spirituality. (York Medieval Press)
Remote Control: Governance Lessons for and from Small, Insular, and Remote Regions, edited by Godfrey Baldacchino (Island Studies), Rob Greenwood, and Lawrence Felt. How does one transform small size and relative isolation into a powerful combination for sustainable growth and prosperity? By using tools and strategies that demonstrate a creative “resourcefulness of jurisdiction”—proactive, creative, and assertive approaches to governance that achieve remote control. (ISER Press)
Civility: A History by Benet Davetian (Sociology) explores a core concept of our social life: civility, from the Middle Ages to the present, in France, England, and the US. The book not only historicizes the development of civility but also locates the concept in today’s society and offers a renewed perspective on crucial issues such as multiculturalism. (University of Toronto Press)
Shannon Murray (English) has written a children's picture book, Bounce and Beans and Burn. Based on a story that won the L. M. Montgomery Children's Literature Award in 2006, the book tells the story of Sam who is so full of energy that his family sends him out to the garden to play. Little do they know that when he goes he has extraordinary adventures with samurai, giants, and dragons. (Acorn Press).
Malcolm Murray (Philosophy) has published two books this year. The Moral Wager: Evolution and Contract (Springer) illuminates and sharpens moral theory by analyzing the evolutionary dynamics of interpersonal relations in a variety of games. Liberty, Games and Contracts: Jan Narveson and the Defence of Libertarianism, edited by Murray, brings together significant critics of Jan Narveson, one of the most important contemporary defenders of the libertarian political position. (Ashgate).
Madness, Architecture and the Built Environment: Psychiatric Spaces in Historical Context, edited by James Moran (History), with Leslie Topp (University of London) and Jonathan Andrews (Newcastle University), is the first volume of papers devoted to an examination of the relationship between mental health/illness, and the construction and experience of space. This is the first rigorous scholarly analysis of its kind in book form. (Routledge)
In Shape of Things to Come, poet Richard Lemm (English) traces his own journey from the west coast of North America to the east coast of Canada with his first foray into the world of short fiction. His hard-living characters follow their own paths through relationships with parents and siblings, friends and lovers, discovering and sometimes crossing their limits as they try to find their own way in the world. (Acorn Press)
In Agents of Empire: British Female Migration to Canada and Australia, 1860–1930, Lisa Chilton (History) explores the work of the women who promoted, managed, and ultimately transformed single British women's experiences of migration to Canada and Australia between the 1860s and the 1920s. (University of Toronto)
Dr. Sean Hennessey (Business) and Dr. Lawrence Gitman (San Diego University) have just produced the second edition of Principles of Corporate Finance, which looks at concepts, techniques and practices, that students require to make corporate financial decisions in a competitive, global business environment. The new edition has been updated to present current and emerging issues and techniques that affect the practice of financial management. (Pearson Education Canada)
"Pulling Strings: Policy Insights for Prince Edward Island from other Sub-National Island Jurisdictions" is based on research emerging from a UPEI research project on sub-national island jurisdictions. Edited by Godfrey Baldacchino and Kathleen Stuart (Island Studies), it includes chapters by Baldacchino, Stuart, Hans Connor, Crystal Fall, Barbara Groome Wynne, and Lawrence Liao, with an Introduction by John Eldon Green and Conclusion by Jean Mitchell (Anthropology). (Island Studies Press)