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Well written, a little short, and sparsely illustrated, this is nevertheless a singular volume about an intriguing subject, narrated by an insider. Readers will feel markedly better after reading about archaeologists’, preservationists’, and the general public’s care and responsibility for preserving world heritage.
Highly recommended for information professionals seeking to explore cultural humility as a framework for fostering empathy and positive change across a range of library settings.
This book is chock-full of research and advice, though some readers may want more perspectives and examples from parents who have neurodivergent children.
A fascinating study of what celebrity means, how it makes and unmakes women, and what stories go untold in the relentless manufacturing of women as objects of desire. This book offers intersectional and intentional subversions of dominant narratives about women in ways that will engage readers curious about the strange, oscillating power of fame, especially as it impacts women’s sense of self.
Kuhne describes the harrowing experience of the rafters in painstaking detail, using the trial transcripts as a primary source. This book grippingly exposes the disastrous events that played out on the rafting trip, while delivering a sobering mediation on accountability and survival and raising haunting questions.
Using archival records, stories from Maynial’s family, and an interview with the last surviving nurse from the Blue Squadron, this book delivers a gripping, affectionate account of these women’s heroic work. Best for history, gender studies, and human-interest readers.