Booknotes
“Alliances: A Theory of Concerted Human Behavior,” by Stephen W. Eubank ’91 (Catellus, 2006)
“Caritas Pirckheimer: A Journal of the Reformation Years, 1524–28,” edited by Jane Chance, professor of English and director of the Medieval Studies Program at Rice (Library of Medieval Women, Boydell and Brewer, 2001)
“Charles Darwin and Victorian Visual Culture,” by Jonathan Smith ’84 (Cambridge University Press, 2006)
“Contemporary Management, 4th ed.,” by Jennifer M. George, Mary Gibbs Jones Professor of Management and professor of psychology at Rice, and Gareth R. Jones (McGraw Hill Irwin, 2007)
“Cradle of Liberty: Race, the Child and National Belonging from Thomas Jefferson to W.E.B. De Bois,” by Caroline F. Levander, professor of English and director of the Center for the Study of Cultures at Rice (Duke University Press, 2006)
“Engaging the Enemy,” by Elizabeth Moon ’68 (Del Rey, 2007)
“Engineering of Functional Skeletal Tissues,” edited by Antonios G. Mikos, John W. Cox Professor in Bioengineering and Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at Rice, Felix Bronner and Mary C. Farach-Carson (Springer, 2006)
“A Jealous God,” by Dee Wilbur (Dee Sapp Pipes ’78 and Charles Wilbur Yates ’91) (Booksurge, 2006)
“The Life and Legend of Gerbert of Aurillac: The Organbuilder Who Became Pope Sylvester II,” by Anna Marie Flusche ’95 (Edwin Mellin Press, 2006)
“Making Innovation Work: How to Manage It, Measure It and Profit from It,” by Marc Epstein, distinguished research professor of managament at Rice, Tony Davila and Robert Shelton (Wharton School Publishing, 2006)
“The Nation’s Region: Southern Modernism, Segregation and U.S. Nationalism,” by Leigh Anne Duck ’89 (University of Georgia Press, 2006)
“Nobody Roots for Goliath,” by Phil Hutcheon ’74 (Willowgate Press, 2006)
“Palgrave Advances in Charles Dickens Studies,” edited by Robert Patten, Lynette S. Autrey Professor in Humanities at Rice, and John Bowen (Palgrave Macmillan, 2005)
“Rainer Maria Rilke and Lou Andreas-Salome: The Correspondence,” by Edward Snow, professor of English, and Michael Winkler, professor emeritus of German, both at Rice (Norton, 2006)