Books by Alums

  • Conscious Designs
    In the near future, Eugene, a wealthy executive for a company that grows organs for human transplantation, looks for ways to escape the pain and disability of his biological existence as a paraplegic.
  • The Eyes of the Leopard
    Based on Dr. Brian Hayden's lifetime experience as an archaeologist and anthropologist, Eyes of the Leopard brings to vivid life Old Stone Age France—an age of painted caves, fearsome cave lions, and gigantic mammoths.
  • All My Friends Live in My Computer: Trauma, Tactical Media, and Meaning
    All My Friends Live in my Computer combines personal stories, media studies, and interdisciplinary theories to examine case studies from three unique parts of society.
  • Chattahoochee Cats
    A family of kittens and their friends travel the world and beyond in a series of wild adventures. The mischievous kittens tumble into trouble and learn to solve problems and to help each other and their animal friends.
  • Champagne Widows: First Woman of Champagne, Veuve Clicquot
    “This effervescent historical novel paints a richly detailed portrait of the enterprising Veuve Clicquot. The twinned plots of Clicquot and Napoleon Bonaparte’s rise and fall are filled with detail that give life to this far-off time.
  • Babies Don't Make Small Talk (So Why Should I?): The Introvert's Guide to Surviving Parenthood
    A baby can be a good excuse to skip a party, but . . . goodbye alone time, hello awkward new social obligations.
  • Scared Fearless: An Unlikely Agent in the US Secret Service
    The era: the 1970s. The location: an airplane en route to Washington, DC. Kathryn Clark Childers chats with a fellow passenger.
  • Lady Daimyo and The Silver Lining Curse
    It’s 2002, and Natsu Nashakatani is a brilliant, driven woman with an unusual heritage and education. Mentored by respected Japanese business scions, she discovers her life’s purpose and learns from The Art of War, the samurai code, Shakespeare and Deming.
  • Due North
    Life for Nelson Carpenter had taken a turn for the better. A retired banker living in the appropriately named Paradise Valley of southwest Montana, Nelson had lost his wife of 35 years to cancer, but was happy once again.
  • Somewhere Different Now
    Somewhere Different Now is an exploration of racism in the U.S after the Second World War portrayed through the eyes of two teenage girls, Annie (a white middle-class girl) and Clydeen (a poor black girl).
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