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Johns Hopkins University Press News
Brian May, founding guitarist of the famous rock band Queen, is now a Press author! A longtime astrophysics enthusiast, Chancellor of Liverpool John Moores University, and recent Ph.D. recipient, May will be in Los Angeles this month promoting his book Bang!: The Complete History of the Universe.
On Monday May 5, he'll be on KLOS Radio for a mix of conversation and music from his days with Queen. On Tuesday, he'll be signing books at Book Soup on Sunset Blvd. And later in the week, he'll be taped for the NPR program Day to Day. The interview will air on May 8, and the archive audio will be availabe from Day to Day.
The Domestic Architecture of Benjamin
Henry Latrobe, by Michael Fazio and Patrick Snadon, won the 2008
Alice Davis Hitchcock Book Award from the Society for Architectural
Historians. The Hitchcock prize is for the most distinguished work of scholarship in the history of architecture published by a North American scholar. This is the third honor for the book, having previously
taken the Publications Award given by the Southeast Chapter of the
Society of Architectural Historians and an Honorable Mention in the
Architecture and Urban Planning category of the Professional and
Scholarly Publishing Awards.
JHUP received three awards from the Professional and Scholarly Publishing Division (PSP) of the Association of American Publishers (AAP). The 2007 PSP Awards for Excellence were chosen for their unique contribution to scholarly publishing by a 15-member panel consisting of librarians, academics, and working publishers. Constitutional Democracy, by Walter Murphy, received the
first ever Best of Social Sciences Award and the Award for Excellence in Government and Politics. The Treasure of the San José, by Carla Rahn Phillips, won the Award for Excellence in World History and Biography/Autobiography.
Leslie Day, author of Field Guide to the Natural World of New York City was awarded the Earth Trustee Award by the Earth Society Foundation in a ceremony on March 20, 2008.
Tribe, Race, History, by Daniel R. Mandell, won the inaugural Lawrence W. Levine Award given by the Organization of American Historians. The prize is awarded annually to the best book on American cultural history.
Two JHUP titles have been included in Library Journal's list of Best Consumer Health Books for 2007: Take Your Pediatrician with You: Keeping Your Child Healthy at Home and on the Road by Christopher S. Ryder and From Crib to Kindergarten: The Essential Child Safety Guide by Dorthey A. Drago. Read the complete story in Library Journal.
Choice Magazine, the official publication of the Association of College and Research Libraries, has announced its list of Outstanding Academic Titles for 2007. Eight JHUP titles were selected for this year's list.
January 3, 2008, The Johns Hopkins University Press (JHUP) announced that it will provide promotion, marketing, warehousing, and order fulfillment services for books published by the Maryland Historical Society (MdHS), effective January 1. MdHS Press will retain editorial autonomy and production control.
There is a natural affinity between America's oldest university press and Maryland's oldest continuously operating cultural institution, said JHUP Director Kathleen Keane. "In many ways our lists complement each other," she said. "Both presses are committed to scholarship and substance, and both presses publish in history and the Chesapeake Bay region."
In welcoming the agreement, MdHS Director Robert W. Rogers said "While the MdHS Press has consistently produced books that have made significant scholarly and cultural contributions to the study of Maryland history, we have lacked the ability to market our books as widely as they deserve. This agreement will put the powerful marketing expertise of JHUP behind our publications, thereby bringing them to the attention of a much wider audience."
The Maryland Historical Society, located in the Mount Vernon area of downtown Baltimore, houses the most extensive collection of fine and decorative arts, prints, photographs, maps, books, documents, manuscripts and other artifacts relating to Maryland history in the world. Since its founding in 1844, the Society has been committed to publishing new scholarship on the state's history and culture. MdHS publications provide a forum for Maryland topics of scholarly and general interest. Recently published MdHS Press titles include A Maryland Sampling: Girlhood Embroidery 1738-1860 by premier textile scholar Gloria Seaman Allen; and Challenging Slavery in the Chesapeake: Black and White Resistance to Human Bondage, 1775-1865 by T. Stephen Whitman. Both books provided the intellectual underpinning for two major exhibitions at MdHS in 2006.
The Hopkin's Review was featured on WYPR 88.1's Maryland Morning with Sheilah Kast. Susan McCallum-Smith reviews the first edition (Winter, 2008) of the resurrected literary quarterly journal The Hopkins Review, a collaboration between the Johns Hopkins University Writing Seminars and the Johns Hopkins University Press. McCallum-Smith raved, "Baltimore finally has a magazine that proves it does read, and it reads way, way beyond the 3rd grade level." For more information and to hear the audio from the show visit WYPR's website.
For more information on the journal visit The Hopkins Review.
JHUP announces the launch of three new journals in 2008.
The Hopkins Review, edited by John T. Irwin, is the culmination of years of labor and inspiration from the halls of the Writing Seminars of the Johns Hopkins University Press. The first issue, January 2008, features works by Max Apple, John Barth, Donald Barthelme, Douglas Basford, Karol Berger, Wayne Biddle, Logan Browning, Stephen Dixon, Edward Hirsch, John Hollander, Christine Jowers, Millard Kaufman, Frank Kermode, Sharon Kopriva, Charles Martin, Erin McGraw, Ronald Paulson, Mary Jo Salter, and Richard Wilbur.
The Journal of Late Antiquity, edited by Ralph Mathisen, will fill a gap in academic literature. A multi-disciplinary journal covering the world of Late Antiquity, broadly defined as the late Roman, western European, Byzantine, Sassanid and Islamic worlds ca. AD 250-800 (i.e. the late and post-classical world up to the Carolingian period). JLA will provide a voice for scholarship dealing with both practical and theoretical issues and will bridge the gap between literary and material culture scholarship.
The Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth, edited by Brian Bunk, Laura Lovett, Karen Sanchez-Eppler, and Martha Saxton, is the official journal of the Society for the History of Children and Youth. This new, exciting journal explores the development of childhood and youth cultures and the experiences of young people across diverse times and places.
JHUP now publishes the NWSA Journal.
The NWSA Journal the flagship publication of the National Women's Studies Association, now makes its home at the JHUP. In its nineteenth year of publication, NWSA Journal, edited by Becky Ropes-Huilman, provides a forum that fosters research and dialogue among those dedicated to feminist education and change. The Journal has made its stellar reputation through publication of the most up-to-date, interdisciplinary, multicultural feminist scholarship.
JHUP author and director of the Woodrow Wilson Center's Middle East Program, Dr. Haleh Esfandiari, returned home September 6, 2007 after a 105-day confinement in Tehran. She was inprisoned in May due to allegations of endangering Iranian national security. More is available from The Woodrow Wilson Center site.
JHUP author Robert Pallitto was the special guest on Comedy Central's The Daily Show with John Stewart. He discussed his new book Presidential Secrecy and the Law. A webcast of the program is available from Comedy Central.
Four JHUP books were honored at the June 12 Washington Book Publishers Design and Effectiveness Awards ceremony, according to Martha Sewall, JHUP art director.
Hopkins was awarded first place in the large nonprofit publishers category for the cover of Blind Landings. The Press swept the awards for illustrated text winning first place for Feeling Like a Kid, second place for Birds of the World, and third place for Worthy of the Nation.
Washington Book Publishers is a membership organization created in 1976 to nurture and celebrate book publishing in the Washington, D.C. area.
Tim Flannery, coauthor of Prehistoric Mammals of Australia and New Guinea was named Australian of the Year 2007 by the National Australia Day Council and the governmant of Australia. Each year the country celebrates the achievements and contributions of eminent Australians through the Australian of the Year Awards. More coverage of this event is found at Australian of the year.
Upcoming JHUP Author appearances and lectures, Spring 2008:
The month of May highlights mental health and stroke awareness as well as historic preservation. During this Mental Health Awareness Month, Stroke Awareness Month, and National Preservation Month, discover these excellent resources published by JHUP:
- Poets on Prozac
Richard M. Berlin, M.D.
- Journalists under Fire
Anthony Feinstein
- Better But Not Well
Richard G. Frank and Sherry A. Glied
- Working with Families of Psychiatric Inpatients
Alison M. Heru, M.D., and Laura M. Drury, M.S.W., L.I.C.S.W.
- Bipolar Disorder, 2nd edition
Francis Mark Mondimore, M.D.
- Adolescent Depression
Francis Mark Mondimore, M.D.
- Depression, the Mood Disease, 3rd edition
Francis Mark Mondimore, M.D.
- Living Longer Depression Free
Mark D. Miller, M.D. and Charles F. Reynolds III, M.D.
- The 36-Hour Day, fourth edition
Nancy L. Mace, M.A. and Peter V. Rabins, M.D., M.P.H.
- Women Under the Influence
The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University
- When Your Loved One Has Dementia
Joy A. Glenner, Jean M. Stehman, Judith Davagnino, Margaret J. Galante, and Martha L. Green
- Teaching Dementia Care
Nancy L. Mace, with Dorothy H. Coons and Shelly E. Weaverdyck
- Keeping Busy
James R. Dowling
- Concepts of Alzheimer Disease
Peter J. Whitehouse, M.D., Ph.D., Konrad Maurer, M.D., Ph.D., and Jesse F. Ballenger, M.A.
- Dementia, second edition
V. Olga B. Emery, Ph.D. and Thomas E. Oxman, M.D.
- The Person with Alzheimer's Disease
Phyllis Braudy Harris
- The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease, second edition
Stephen G. Post
- The Handbook of Dementia Care
Jean M. Stehman, M.A., A.C.C., Geraldine I. Strachan, R.N., M.S.N.Ed., Joy A. Glenner, George G. Glenner, M.D. and Judith K. Neubauer
- Doing Things
Jitka M. Zgola
More information? Visit the National Mental Health Association.
The Johns Hopkins University Press will receive a gift of $750,000 from the Hodson Trust to fund a monumental publishing project,The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot. The project will be developed under the editorial direction of Ronald Schuchard, the renowned Eliot scholar and professor at Emory University, and co-published with Faber and Faber, the literary publisher founded by Eliot in the 1920s.
Schuchard anticipates that there will be significant discoveries and impact
resulting from the project, noting that only about 10 percent of Eliot's prose writing has ever been published and available
The Press envisions a seven-volume work to be compiled, edited, and annotated by a team of scholars led by Professor Schuchard and published by Hopkins and Faber over a nine year period. In addition, the Press will develop an electronic edition that will enormously enhance access to the work and its usability for scholars and students around the world.
With the publication of The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot, the Press continues a long tradition of publishing significant documentary editions, including The Works of Edmund Spenser: A Variorum Edition , The Papers of Dwight D. Eisenhower, The Papers of Thomas Edison, The Complete Poetry of Percy Bysshe Shelley, and The Papers of Frederick Law Olmsted.
Inspired by the success of Project MUSE, the Press has been increasingly committed to creating electronic editions of these large documentary works. A portion of the Hodson Trust funding allows the Press to develop the electronic edition of The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot.
The Hodson Trust, established in 1920 by the family of Beneficial Corporation founder Colonel Clarence Hodson, benefits four Maryland educational institutions: the Johns Hopkins University, Hood College, St. John's College, and Washington College. For more than 86 years, the Hodson Trust has awarded in excess of $166.2 million in support of higher education in the State of Maryland.
9 September 2007 from 10 am to 5 pm, Bryan MacKay, author of Baltimore Trails and Hiking, Cycling, and Canoeing in Maryland will appear at the Catonsville Arts and Crafts Fair, Catonsville, MD. The event is free and open to the public.
15 September 2007, Evelyn Edson will sign copies of her new book The World Map, 1300—1492 at the New Dominion Bookshop in Charlottesville, VA. For information about this event, contact ndb@ncstone.net or 434-295-2552.
18 September 2007, the New York Public Library hosts a lecture and book-signing with Graham Russell Gao Hodges for his new book, Taxi!: A Social History of the New York City Cabdriver. This event is free and open to the public. For information about this event, contact NYPL or (212) 340-0849.
September health awareness includes many topics, from leukemia to addiciton recovery. Discover these great resources from JHUP:
The Baltimore Book Festival returns to Mount Vernon Square, 28-30 September. Visit the Johns Hopkins University Press tent in historic Mount Vernon, browse books, and meet these favorite Press authors.
- Saturday, 30 September:
- Sunday, 30 September:
For the full schedule of festival events, please visit the The Baltimore Office of Promotion. For more information on JHUP events during the festival, please email Jack Holmes or phone (410) 516-6928.
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Author and Mellon Professor in the Humanities Mary Lefkowitz was one of the distinguished recipients of the 2006 National Humanities Medal. During a White House ceremony on November 9, President Bush presented the awards to nine individuals and one institution for their contributions to the humanities.
The Modern Language Association is pleased to announce that it has awarded the thirty-seventh annual James Russell Lowell Prize to Paula R. Backscheider for her book Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry. She shares the prize with W. J. T. Mitchell, of the University of Chicago. The prize is awarded annually for an outstanding book-a literary or linguistic study, a critical edition of an important work, or a critical biography-written by a member of the association.
The 7 September issue of Library Journal Academic Newswire includes its 2006 list of best selling books in mathematics. JHUP makes a proud showing with 4 books in the top 20, including the number one selling book, John M. Henshaw's Does Measurement Measure Up?. Other Press titles include The Art of Conjecturing, Arthur Cayley, and James Joseph Sylvester. The complete story is available through Library Journal Online.
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