Aimee Nezhukumatathil’s Bite by Bite explores the nourishing and narrative properties of food.
Books & Multimedia
80 stories. Showing page 1 of 3.
Aerospace-engineer-turned-artist Mary Jo Hoffman ’87 captures quiet moments in her blog-turned-book, Still: The Art of Noticing.
In Moments of Happiness, former UW band director Mike Leckrone recounts a sparkling career.
In Chasing the Stars, Kelly Tyrrell MS’11 and James Lattis MA’87, PhD’89 salute UW astronomers.
In Ylla, Pryor Dodge ’71 pays tribute to a seminal photographer.
Michelle Ephraim MA’93, Phd’98 looks at her life through Shakespearean eyes in Green World.
In The Object at Hand, Beth Py-Lieberman ’83 tells America’s story via the Smithsonian collection.
Ali DeWalt ’13’s novel My Life with the Walter Boys gets new life as a streaming series.
In Wine People, Michelle Wildgen ’97 is less interested in pairing wines than she is in pairing people.
In Legacy on Ice, Sam Jefferies ’11 pays tribute to a hockey great’s life after skates.
In The Third Act, Josh Sapan ’75 talks with remarkable individuals about making their later years the best ones yet.
Debra McClutchy ’92’s The Martha Mitchell Effect remembers the woman the Nixon administration wanted everyone to forget.
A jaded author gets more mystery than she bargains for in The Writing Retreat by Julia Bartz ’06.
In Human Kindness, John Francis PhD’91 shares encouraging tales from around the world.
In Cherokee Earth Dwellers, Christopher Teuton MA’95, PhD’03 explores humanity’s role in an interconnected web of lifeforms.
Father-son duo Ben ’67 and Leo ’99 Sidran give new life to timeless tunes.
Sarah Thankam Mathews ’17’s All This Could Be Different explores the challenges of young adulthood in a tumultuous world.
In Tailspin, John Armbruster ’89 takes inspiration from an aviator who survived a World War II crash.
In Descendant, Kern Jackson MA’91 documents the discovery of the last illegal slave ship and the people who never forgot it.
Novelist Hanna Halperin MFA’16 lays bare the shared experiences that unite long-divided paths.
Anita Mannur ’96 explores the ways in which othered communities reclaim space through food.
"Matrix," by novelist Lauren Groff MFA’06, portrays an unlikely feminist utopia.
In Blindspotting, Rafael Casal x’10 explores a single mother’s struggles.
In Home Made, Liz Hauck MA’17, PhDx’23 explores the philosophical implications of dinner.
Pao Lor PhD’01 chronicles his American journey in Modern Jungles: A Hmong Refugee’s Childhood Story of Survival.
Sarah Brailey MM’07, DMA’21 wins a Grammy for Best Classical Solo Vocal Album.
In "Beginners," Tom Vanderbilt ’91 proves that old folks can learn new tricks.
In A Wilderness of Error, Errol Morris ’69 revisits a notorious murder case.
Alex Gee Jr. ’85 brings his unique perspective to Black Like Me.