Around the World Through Books

"Celebrating Our Differences and Similarities"


A Free Public Forum

Sponsored by the Book Subcommittee of the JSRCC Diversity Committee

Book Discussion Series 2005


Schedule of Events

Title

Author

Discussion Leader

Date and Time

Location

The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven
 

Sherman Alexie  

Maria Ramos

Thurs., Feb. 24 7:00 - 8:30 pm

Borders on W. Broad*

All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror
 

Stephen Kinzer

Ghazala Hashmi; Zia Hashmi

Thurs., April 7
7:00 - 8:30 pm

Gallery at the Parham Campus**

* Borders Books & Music, 9750 West Broad Street, Glen Allen, VA 23060.
** 1651 East Parham Road, Richmond, VA 23228. Building B, Room 101.


About the Authors and the Books:

 Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven  
by Sherman Alexie

Sherman Alexie

About the author:

Sherman J. Alexie, Jr., was born in October 1966. A Spokane/Coeur d'Alene Indian, he grew up on the Spokane Indian Reservation in Wellpinit, Washington. He learned to read by age three, and devoured novels, such as John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, by age five. He received his B.A. in American studies from Washington State University in Pullman. His first collection of short stories, The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven, received a PEN/Hemingway Award for Best First Book of Fiction. Alexie has published 16 books to date, including his most recent collection of short stories, Ten Little Indians.
                                  - Adapted from
Shermanalexie.com
 

About the book:

"In this darkly comic short story collection, Sherman Alexie, a Spokane/Coeur d'Alene Indian, brilliantly weaves memory, fantasy, and stark realism to paint a complex, grimly ironic portrait of life in and around the Spokane Indian Reservation. These twenty-two interlinked tales are narrated by characters raised on humiliation and government-issue cheese, and yet are filled with passion and affection, myth and dream. There is Victor, who as a nine-year-old crawled between his unconscious parents hoping that the alcohol seeping through their skins might help him sleep, Thomas Builds-the-Fire, who tells his stories long after people stop listening, and Jimmy Many Horses, dying of cancer, who writes letters on stationary that reads "From the Death Bed of Jimmy Many Horses III," even though he actually writes then on his kitchen table. Against a backdrop of alcohol, car accidents, laughter, and basketball, Alexie depicts the distances between Indians and whites, reservation Indians and urban Indians, men and women, and mostly poetically between modern Indians and the traditions of the past." - From Amazon.com

 


All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror
 by  Stephen Kinzer
 

Stephen Kinzer

About the author:

"Stephen Kinzer is a veteran New York Times correspondent who has reported from more than fifty countries on four continents. During the 1980s he covered revolution and social upheaval in Central America. In 1990 he was named chief of the Times bureau in Berlin, and spent the next six years covering the emergence of post-Communist Europe. Later Kinzer became the first Times bureau chief in Istanbul. He is coauthor of Bitter Fruit: The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala and author of Blood of Brothers: Life and War in Nicaragua, Crescent and Star: Turkey Between Two Worlds, and All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror. Kinzer is currently a New York Times correspondent based in Chicago."  - From Tantor.com.
 

About the book:

"With breezy storytelling and diligent research, Kinzer has reconstructed the CIA's 1953 overthrow of the elected leader of Iran, Mohammad Mossadegh, who was wildly popular at home for having nationalized his country's oil industry. The coup ushered in the long and brutal dictatorship of Mohammad Reza Shah, widely seen as a U.S. puppet and himself overthrown by the Islamic revolution of 1979. At its best this work reads like a spy novel, with code names and informants, midnight meetings with the monarch and a last-minute plot twist when the CIA's plan, called Operation Ajax, nearly goes awry. A veteran New York Times foreign correspondent and the author of books on Nicaragua (Blood of Brothers) and Turkey (Crescent and Star), Kinzer has combed memoirs, academic works, government documents and news stories to produce this blow-by-blow account. He shows that until early in 1953, Great Britain and the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company were the imperialist baddies of this tale. Intransigent in the face of Iran's demands for a fairer share of oil profits and better conditions for workers, British Foreign Secretary Herbert Morrison exacerbated tension with his attitude that the challenge from Iran was, in Kinzer's words, "a simple matter of ignorant natives rebelling against the forces of civilization." Before the crisis peaked, a high-ranking employee of Anglo-Iranian wrote to a superior that the company's alliance with the "corrupt ruling classes" and "leech-like bureaucracies" were "disastrous, outdated and impractical." This stands as a textbook lesson in how not to conduct foreign policy." - From Publishers Weekly


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Created by the Book Subcommittee on 12/19/04.  For more information, contact Hong Wu at hwu@reynolds.edu or 804-523-5329.