News & Reviews (2/17-3/2)

Reviews

Thank You for Staying With Me

Review in Hippocampus Magazine:

“The title stands as both a request and a promise and reminds us that staying—with our pain, our questions, and each other—is a deeply courageous act.”

The Great Christmas Boycott of 1906

Review in The Reporter:

“Seligman specializes in writing about lesser-known Jewish events that offer lessons beyond their seemingly narrow scope.”

Indigenous Enlightenment

Review in Historical Studies in Education:

“[The book] will no doubt serve as an indispensable resource for those who wish to dig deeper into the history of Indigenous literacy practices across the globe, as well as those tracing the print literature traditions of subsequent generations of Indigenous writers and readers.”

On the Backs of Others

Review in Journal of Historical Geography:

On the Backs of Others combines archival depth, theoretical clarity, and methodological innovation, making it a valuable contribution to studies of exploration, empire, labour, and the body.”

Disintegrating Empire

Review in Connections:

“In Disintegrating Empire, Elise Franklin presents a highly interesting and exciting book about ruptures and continuities in the decolonization process of the relations between France and Algeria from 1954 to 1981.”

Frontier Comrades

Review in Gay and Lesbian Review:

“Wilke has written a fascinating, informative, and entertaining history of LGBT folks in the American west.”

Red Skin Dreams

Review in Global Europe:

“As [Mithlo] shakes up the international arts exhibition sphere, she questions Indigeneity itself, in all its diversity, sensibilities, positionings, lineages, dreamings, and unique, land-based histories. She considers what it means to be at the same time seemingly included (present at the Biennale) and excluded (invisibilized) from arts circles, and by extension from a dominant global society.”

Twinless Twin

Review in North Carolina Literary Review:

“[Twinless Twin] will likely appeal to a broad swath of readers who will certainly glean different takeaways from Tuck’s wonderful writing, especially if one returns to its pages again and again.”

Author Interviews

Jill Christman

Hunger Mountain

Randolph Lewis

Austin Tadarida

Mimi Nichter

Getting Work to Work

Leave a comment