13 Books Written by Faculty Members That Make Terrific Holiday Gifts
Fiction, nonfiction, memoir, history, sports, essays—we’ve got you covered with this diverse list of books.
From James Shapiro's The Playbook, which is about the Federal Theatre Project, a Works Progress Administration program that, from 1935 to 1939, staged over a thousand productions in 29 states; to the novel, Long Island, the sequel to Colm Tóibín’s much-loved Brooklyn; Keeping the Faith, Brenda Wineapple's account of the Scopes Trial; and Hisham Matar's novel, My Friends, about a relationship that traverses revolution and safety, as well as family and exile, Columbia faculty have published a wide range of books in 2024. Here is a sampling, all of them great gift ideas for this holiday season.
In Search of an Open Mind
By Lee C. Bollinger
![In Search of an Open Mind by Columbia University President Emeritus Lee C. Bollinger](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/search-open-mind-book-lee-bollinger_1.png?itok=iuVExYfN)
Throughout his 21-year tenure as president of Columbia, Lee C. Bollinger was an outspoken national leader on many of the major issues confronting higher education and society more broadly. One of the country’s preeminent First Amendment scholars, he published frequently on free speech and press while leading a wide range of transformational University initiatives. During a period marked by profound change, he spoke within and beyond the academy about the challenges facing journalism, global free speech, and academic freedom, as well as the critical value of increasing racial and cultural diversity in higher education through affirmative action. In Search of an Open Mind is a curated selection of Bollinger’s speeches, articles, and opinion columns during his time as president of Columbia, reflecting on many significant events and challenges. These pieces cover an array of topics, from civil rights and civil liberties to the nature of the university and living a good life. Bollinger spoke often about the essential role of affirmative action in college admissions in overcoming the long legacy of racial discrimination, having led the litigation in the landmark case of Grutter v. Bollinger, in which, for the first time, a majority of the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the practice as constitutional.
Read a Columbia News interview with Lee C. Bollinger about the book.
The Hearing Test
By Eliza Barry Callahan
![The Hearing Test by Columbia University Professor Eliza Barry Callahan](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/hearing-test-book-eliza-barry-callahan_0.jpg?itok=esGCodWm)
When the narrator of The Hearing Test, an artist in her late twenties, awakens one morning to a deep drone in her right ear, she is diagnosed with Sudden Deafness, but is offered no explanation for its cause. As the specter of total deafness looms in this novel by Eliza Barry Callahan, an adjunct professor in the Writing Programat School of the Arts, the narrator keeps a record of her year—a score of estrangement and enchantment, of luck and loneliness, of the chance occurrences to which she becomes attuned, all while living alone in a New York City studio apartment with her dog. Through a series of fleeting and often humorous encounters—with neighbors, an ex-lover, doctors, strangers, family members, faraway friends, and with the lives and works of artists, filmmakers, musicians, and philosophers—making meaning becomes a form of consolation and curiosity, a form of survival.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Callahan about the book.
We're Alone
By Edwidge Danticat
![We're Alone by Columbia University Professor Edwidge Danticat](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/were-alone-book-edwidge-danticat_1.jpg?itok=eBvWvfvC)
The essays gathered in We’re Alone by Edwidge Danticat, Wun Tsun Mellon Professor of the Humanities, trace a loose arc from childhood to the pandemic and recent events in Haiti. The pieces include personal narrative, reportage, and tributes to mentors and heroes such as James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, Paule Marshall, and Gabriel García Márquez that explore several themes—environmental catastrophe, the traumas of colonialism, motherhood, and the complexities of resilience. From hurricanes to political violence, from her days as a new student at a Brooklyn elementary school knowing little English to her account of a shooting hoax at a Miami mall, Danticat moves from the personal to the global and back again. Throughout, literature and art are her reliable companions and guides through both tragedies and triumphs.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Danticat about the book.
Harold Arlen and His Songs
By Walter Frisch
![Harold Arlen and His Songs by Columbia University Professor Walter Frisch](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/harold-arlen-songs-book-walter-frisch_1.jpg?itok=jdcDDV3L)
Harold Arlen and His Songs, by Walter Frisch, the H. Harold Gumm/Harry and Albert Von Tilzer Professor of Music, is the first comprehensive book about the music of one of the great song composers of the 20th century. Arlen wrote many standards of the American Songbook—including "Get Happy," "Over the Rainbow," "Stormy Weather," "Come Rain or Come Shine," and "The Man That Got Away"—which today rank among the best known and loved. Frisch places these and other songs in the context of a long career that took Arlen from Buffalo, New York, to Harlem's Cotton Club, Broadway stages, and Hollywood film studios. Even with their complex melodies, harmonies, and formal structures, Arlen's tunes remain accessible and memorable. As Frisch shows, he blended influences from his father's Jewish cantorial tradition, his experience as a jazz arranger and performer, and peers like George Gershwin, Jerome Kern, and Irving Berlin. Arlen always emphasized the collaborative nature of songwriting, and he worked with the top lyricists of his day, including Ted Koehler, Yip Harburg, Johnny Mercer, and Ira Gershwin. Harold Arlen and His Songs is structured around these and Arlen's other partnerships, analyzing individual songs as well as the shows or films in which they appear. The book also treats Arlen's performances of his own music as a vocalist and pianist, through numerous recordings and appearances on radio and television. A final chapter explores the interpretations of his songs by great singers, including many who worked with him, among them, Ethel Waters, Lena Horne, Judy Garland, Frank Sinatra, and Ella Fitzgerald.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Frisch about the book.
The Stadium
By Frank Guridy
![The Stadium by Columbia University Professor Frank Guridy](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/stadium-book-frank-guridy_0.jpg?itok=ms_VB8JT)
Stadiums are monuments to recreation, sports, and pleasure. Yet from the earliest ballparks to the present, stadiums have also functioned as public squares. Politicians have used them to cultivate loyalty to the status quo, while activists and athletes have used them for anti-fascist rallies, Black Power demonstrations, feminist protests, and much more. In The Stadium, Frank Guridy, Dr. Kenneth and Kareitha Forde Professor of African American and African Diaspora Studies, recounts the contested history of play, protest, and politics in American stadiums. From the beginning, stadiums were political, as elites turned games into celebrations of war, banned women from the press box, and enforced racial segregation. By the 1920s, these arenas also became important sites of protest as activists increasingly occupied the stadium floor to challenge racism, sexism, homophobia, and more. Following the rise of the corporatized stadium in the 1990s, this complex history was largely forgotten. But today’s athlete-activists, like Colin Kaepernick and Megan Rapinoe, belong to a powerful tradition in which the stadium is as much a place of protest as of pleasure.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Guridy about the book.
Liberty, Equality, Fashion: The Women Who Styled the French Revolution
By Anne Higonnet
![Liberty, Equality, Fashion by Barnard College Professor Anne Higonnet](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/liberty-equality-fashion-book-anne-higonnet_0.jpg?itok=tFLtvmmP)
In 2017, Anne Higonnet, Barbara Novak Professor of Art History at Barnard, was checking footnotes for an essay she was writing when she came across a cryptic catalog entry from the Morgan Library & Museum. It indicated that the Morgan owned a complete set of extremely rare and revolutionary fashion plates on the history of costume. “Very specialized scholars were unaware of the location of any complete set of these plates, so it seemed unlikely to me,” she said. “But the Morgan is only a subway ride away, so I went to investigate.” To her astonishment, the museum did indeed have a full set of engravings from the Journal des Dames et des Modes, a groundbreaking Parisian style magazine that began publishing in 1797, after the French Revolution upended European society, including fashion. The result of Higonnet’s research is Liberty Equality Fashion: The Women Who Styled the French Revolution. In the book, Higonnet examines the lives of Joséphine Bonaparte, future Empress of France; Térézia Tallien, one of the most beautiful women in Europe; and Juliette Récamier, a muse of intellectuals. After surviving incarceration and forced incestuous marriage during the worst violence of the French Revolution of 1789, they dared sartorial revolt. Together, Joséphine and Térézia shed the underwear cages and massive, rigid garments that women had been obliged to wear for centuries. Instead, they wore light, mobile dresses, cropped their hair short, wrapped themselves in shawls, and championed the handbag. Juliette made the new style stand for individual liberty. Their erotic audacity conquered Europe, starting with Napoleon. Everywhere a fashion magazine could reach, women imitated the news coming from Paris—one of the fastest, most complete changes in clothing history. Two centuries ahead of its time, this fashion revolution was rolled back after only a decade by misogynist rumors of obscene extravagance.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Higonnet about the book.
Splinters
By Leslie Jamison
![Splinters by Columbia University Professor Leslie Jamison](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/splinters-book_2.png?itok=YCA2T8V7)
In her first memoir, Splinters: Another Kind of Love Story, Leslie Jamison, the head of the nonfiction concentration in the Writing Program at School of the Arts, turns her powers of perception on some of the most intimate relationships of her life. In examining her love for her young daughter, her ruptured marriage, and the legacy of her parents’ complicated bond, Jamison explores what it means for a woman to be many things at once—a mother, an artist, a teacher, a lover. In a book that grieves the departure of one love even as it celebrates the arrival of another, Jamison asks: How do we move forward into joy when we are haunted by loss? How do we claim hope alongside the harm we’ve caused?
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Jamison about the book.
My Affair With Art House Cinema
By Phillip Lopate
![My Affair With Art House Cinema by Columbia University Professor Emeritus Phillip Lopate](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/affair-art-house-cinema-book-phillip-lopate_1.jpg?itok=5rWs1UxX)
Phillip Lopate, who taught for many years in the Writing Program at School of the Arts, fell hard for the movies as an adolescent. As he matured into an acclaimed critic and essayist, his infatuation deepened into a lifelong passion. My Affair With Art House Cinema presents Lopate’s selected essays and reviews from the last quarter century, inviting readers to experience films he found exhilarating and beguiling—and sometimes disappointing or frustrating—through his eyes. Lopate captures the mastery, imagination, and intensity of art house essentials like Yasujirō Ozu’s Late Spring, David Lynch’s Mulholland Drive, and Andrei Tarkovsky’s Solaris, along with works by contemporary filmmakers such as Maren Ade, Hong Sang-soo, Christian Petzold, and Jafar Panahi. Essays explore Chantal Akerman’s honesty, Ingmar Bergman’s intimacy, and Frederick Wiseman’s vision of the human condition. Lopate also reflects on the work of fellow critics, including Roger Ebert, Pauline Kael, and Jonathan Rosenbaum.
Read a Columbia News interview with Phillip Lopate about the book.
My Friends
By Hisham Matar
![My Friends by Barnard College Professor Hisham Matar](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/my-friends-book-hisham-matar_1.jpg?itok=qoKLD51I)
As a young boy growing up in Benghazi, Libya, Khaled hears a short story read aloud on the radio, about a man being eaten alive by a cat. Khaled has the sense that his life has been changed forever by the story. Obsessed by the power of those words—and by their author, Hosam Zowa—Khaled eventually embarks on a journey that takes him far from home, to pursue a life of the mind at the University of Edinburgh. This is how My Friends, the new novel by Hisham Matar, a professor of English and Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures at Barnard, begins. While in college, Khaled starts to change. He attends a protest against the Qaddafi regime in London, where he is seriously injured, and unable to leave Britain, much less return to Libya. He cannot tell his mother and father back home what has happened, on tapped phone lines, as it would expose them to danger. When a chance encounter in a hotel brings Khaled face-to-face with Hosam Zowa, the author of the short story, he begins the deepest friendship of his life. The friendship eventually forces Khaled, as the Arab Spring erupts, to confront tensions between revolution and safety, family and exile, and how to define his own sense of self against those closest to him.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Matar about the book.
American Diva
By Deborah Paredez
![American Diva by Columbia University Professor Deborah Paredez](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/american-diva-book-deborah-paredez_1.jpg?itok=tyolCFmZ)
What does it mean to be a diva? A shifting, increasingly loaded term, the word “diva” has been used to both deride and celebrate charismatic and unapologetically fierce performers like Aretha Franklin, Divine, and the women of the funk rock band Labelle. In American Diva, a blend of criticism and memoir, Deborah Paredez, chair of the Writing Program at School of the Arts, unravels the enduring fascination with divas, and explores how they have challenged American ideas about feminism, performance, and freedom. American Diva journeys into Tina Turner’s performances, Celia Cruz’s command of the male-dominated salsa world, the revival of Jomama Jones after a period of exile, and the excellence of Venus and Serena Williams. Recounting how she and her mother endlessly watched Rita Moreno’s portrayal of Anita in West Side Story, and how she learned much about being bigger than life from her Tía Lucia, Paredez chronicles the performers who not only shaped her life, but expressed the aspiration for freedom among brown, Black, and gay communities. Paredez also traces the evolution of the diva through the decades, dismayed at the mid-aughts’ commodification and juvenilizing of its meaning, but eventually finding the diva’s lasting beauty and power.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Paredez about the book.
The Playbook
By James Shapiro
![The Playbook by Columbia University Professor James Shapiro](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/playbook-james-shapiro_1.jpeg?itok=cAR8VBaB)
From 1935 to 1939, the Federal Theatre Project staged over a thousand productions in 29 states that were seen by 30 million (or nearly one in four) Americans, two thirds of whom had never seen a play before. At its peak, the program employed more than 12,000 struggling artists, some of whom, like Orson Welles and Arthur Miller, would soon be famous, but most of whom were ordinary people eager to work again at their craft. The project resulted from a moment when the arts, no less than industry and agriculture, were thought to be vital to the health of the country, bringing Shakespeare to the public, alongside modern plays that confronted the pressing issues of the day—from slum housing and public health to racism and the rising threat of fascism. The Playbook by James Shapiro, Larry Miller Professor of English and Comparative Literature, takes readers through some of the project’s productions, including a groundbreaking Black production of Macbeth in Harlem, and an adaptation of Sinclair Lewis’s anti-fascist novel It Can’t Happen Here, which opened simultaneously in 18 cities, underscoring the Federal Theatre’s wide range and vitality. But this once-thriving Works Progress Administration relief program did not survive, and has left little trace. The Federal Theatre was the first New Deal project to be attacked and halted on the grounds that it promoted un-American activity, sowing the seeds not only for the McCarthyism of the 1950s, but also for our own polarized times.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Shapiro about the book.
Long Island
By Colm Tóibín
![Long Island by Columbia University Professor Colm Toibin](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/long-island-book-colm-toibin_1.jpg?itok=yr_m5m3R)
Colm Tóibín, Irene and Sidney B. Silverman Professor of the Humanities, has written Long Island, a sequel to his novel, Brooklyn, which features, once again, Eilis Lacey. Eilis is Irish, and married to Tony Fiorello, a plumber and one of four Italian American brothers, all of whom live in neighboring houses on a cul-de-sac in Lindenhurst, Long Island; a huge extended family. It is the spring of 1976, and Eilis is now 40, with two teenage children. Though her ties to Ireland remain stronger than those that hold her to her new home, she has not returned in decades. One day, an Irishman comes to the door, asking for Eilis by name. He tells her that his wife is pregnant with Tony’s child, and that when the baby is born, he will not raise it, but instead deposit it on Eilis’s doorstep. What Eilis does—and what she refuses to do—in response to this news is at the heart of Tóibín’s new novel.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Tóibín about the book.
Keeping the Faith: God, Democracy, and the Trial That Riveted a Nation
By Brenda Wineapple
![Keeping the Faith by Columbia University Professor Brenda Wineapple](/sites/default/files/styles/cu_crop/public/content/2024/keeping-faith-book-brenda-wineapple_1.jpg?itok=T72eEyaz)
“No subject possesses the minds of men like religious bigotry and hate, and these fires are being lighted today in America,” said attorney Clarence Darrow in 1925, as hundreds of people descended on the town of Dayton, Tennessee, for the trial of a schoolteacher named John T. Scopes, who was charged with breaking the law by teaching evolution to his biology class in a public school. Brenda Wineapple, an adjunct professor in the Writing Program at School of the Arts, explores how and why the Scopes trial quickly seemed a circus-like media sensation, drawing massive crowds and worldwide attention, in her book Keeping the Faith: God, Democracy, and the Trial That Riveted a Nation. Darrow, in his defense of Scopes, said that people should be free to think, worship, and learn. William Jennings Bryan, a three-time Democratic nominee for president, argued for the prosecution that evolution undermined the fundamental, literal truth of the Bible, and created a society without morals, meaning, or hope. Wineapple examines the early years of the 20th century—a time of racism, intolerance, and world war—to illuminate, through this pivotal legal showdown, a seismic period in American history. At its heart, the Scopes trial dramatized conflicts over many of the essential values that define America—and continue to divide Americans today.
Read a Columbia News interview with Professor Wineapple about the book.