Books


  • Writing Toward Clarity

    Jennifer Chang on Plato, patriarchy, and her Pulitzer-finalist poetry collection

    Writing Toward Clarity

  • Encountering Albania

    Chelsi West Ohueri explores belonging and the communist afterlife

    Encountering Albania

  • Foreign in a Domestic Sense

    Mónica Jiménez on Puerto Rico and “Making Never-Never Land”

    Foreign in a Domestic Sense

  • Don’t Call It a Cult

    Bret Anthony Johnston on his new novel, “We Burn Daylight”

    Don’t Call It a Cult

  • A Tale of Three Nations

    Sociologist Kim Pernell on what financial policy can tell us about what nations do or don’t prioritize — and why

    A Tale of Three Nations

  • Writing Portraits

    Javier Auyero on his new book, “Portraits of Persistence: Inequality and Hope in Latin America”

    Writing Portraits

  • Eye of Guaraná

    Historian Seth Garfield tells the rich cultural and commercial story of guaraná, the world’s most caffeine-rich plant

    Eye of Guaraná

  • The Clothes Make the Manuscript

    In “Fashioning Spanish Cinema: Costume, Identity, and Stardom,” Jorge Pérez decodes Chanel suits and starched shorts in Spanish cinema.

    The Clothes Make the Manuscript

  • Art, Science, and the Wide World of Infowhelm

    Overwhelmed by information about climate change? Heather Houser has a word for a that, and a possible solution: Art.

    Art, Science, and the Wide World of Infowhelm

  • Creating Human Nature: Government professor Benjamin Gregg delves into the fraught politics of genetic engineering

    For Benjamin Gregg, professor of government at The University of Texas at Austin and author of the new book Creating Human Nature: The Political Challenges of Genetic Engineering, the potential of gene editing technologies is too great to leave it to ad hoc reactions, either from a skittish public, a sensationalistic media, or a heavy-handed…

    Creating Human Nature: Government professor Benjamin Gregg delves into the fraught politics of genetic engineering

  • Book Excerpt: How and How Not to Be Happy

    Could happiness lie in health, wealth, responsibility, or pleasure? Should we settle for imperfect happiness? What would it even mean to attain perfect fulfillment? In his new book, J. Budziszewski separates the wheat from the chaff, exploring how to attain happiness—and just as importantly, how not to.

    Book Excerpt: How and How Not to Be Happy

  • Her Neighbor’s Wife: Uncovering the Hidden History of Lesbian Desire in Post-war American Marriage

    Lauren Jae Gutterman’s new book explores lesbian desire in the context of post-war heterosexual marriage.

    Her Neighbor’s Wife: Uncovering the Hidden History of Lesbian Desire in Post-war American Marriage

  • Spring Books Unfold

    Disentangling: The Geographies of Digital DisconnectionOxford University Press, July 2021Edited by Paul C. Adams, Professor, Department of Geography and the Environment, and André Jansson, Karlstad University After the rapid rise of digital networking in the 2000s and 2010s, we are now seeing a rise of interest in how people can disentangle their lives from the…

    Spring Books Unfold

  • Book Excerpt: A Time to Gather by Jason Lustig

    The Nazi Party’s rise to power and the concomitant exclusion of Jews from public life led to a somewhat surprising strengthening of Jewish institutions, the Gesamtarchiv included.

    Book Excerpt: A Time to Gather by Jason Lustig

  • Leaf Through a Good Book

    Keep your to-read list up-to-date with our fall book list, featuring a selection of titles from College of Liberal Arts faculty members and alumni.

    Leaf Through a Good Book

  • Book Excerpt: With the Bark Off by Neal Spelce and Thomas Zigal

    In all the years I was working at KTBC as a reporter and then as news director—making decisions about what stories to air and what not to air—never once did LBJ or the Johnson family give orders to cover this and not that.

    Book Excerpt: With the Bark Off by Neal Spelce and Thomas Zigal

  • History and Black Studies Scholar Awarded Prestigious Nonfiction Grant

    Ashley D. Farmer, associate professor of history and African and African Diaspora Studies at The University of Texas at Austin, has been awarded a 2021 Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant to complete her historical biography of radical activist Audley Moore.

    History and Black Studies Scholar Awarded Prestigious Nonfiction Grant

  • Book Excerpt: From Prophets of Doom to Chroniclers of Gloom by M.R. Ghanoonparvar

    Much of the post-revolution fiction of Iranian authors presents the reader with often confused and desperate characters who live in an unstable world and express, as it were, a sense of urgency and focus on the present rather than the future. 

    Book Excerpt: From Prophets of Doom to Chroniclers of Gloom by M.R. Ghanoonparvar

  • Book Excerpt: Gaslighted by Christine Williams

    After years of education policy and diversity campaigns encouraging women to pursue scientific careers, the industry was kicking them out.

    Book Excerpt: Gaslighted by Christine Williams

  • Book Excerpt: Armies of Arabia by Zoltan Barany

    A major legacy of the conflict is Arabia’s increased dependence on US weapons, training, and power projection capabilities, and this reliance has only increased in the past three decades.

    Book Excerpt: Armies of Arabia by Zoltan Barany

  • A Look at Our Latest Books

    2021 Spring and Summer titles from our college community.

    A Look at Our Latest Books

  • Travel by the Book

    Literature and life guide Peter LaSalle’s latest collection of travel essays, The World is a Book, Indeed.

    Travel by the Book

  • Shake Up Your Winter Reading

    Winter 2020-21 books from our college community.

    Shake Up Your Winter Reading

  • Writing to Beauvoir

    In her new book, Sex, Love, and Letters, Judith Coffin reveals the private lives and intimate bond found in Simone de Beauvoir’s letters with her fans.

    Writing to Beauvoir

  • Ticket to Read

    Fall 2020 books from our college community.

    Ticket to Read