|
 | | | |
 |
Find out what folks at MHCC are reading!
| FACULTY
|
|
Kathleen Hannigan-McNamara
Instructor, Nursing
|
One of my recent favorites is Kitchen Table
Wisdom by Naomi Remen, M.D. This is a collection of short stories related
to being a patient or a caregiver, and it teaches us about connecting with
our hearts. It is a wonderful book, and I have shared it with students,
family, and friends. It is a "must read" for those in the helping
professions but worthwhile for all. |
|
Dr. Catha Loomis
Counselor
|
One
of my favorite recent books is On Celtic Tides, by Chris Duff.
It's a wonderful travel memoir of a man's solo kayak trip around
the entire island of Ireland. I enjoyed it for several reasons:
it's beautifully written, very vivid
in detail, and, at times, almost poetic;
it gives you a feel for the journey and
for Duff's personal experience, as well as for the land and people
of Ireland;
while Duff's experience involved a
great deal of personal risk and enormous skill and fitness, he has written
without the self-indulgent "bravado" that is often found in
tales of skill and risk;
it's as much about self-discovery and
an awakening awareness of his own roots as it is about the feat he accomplished.
I'm planning a trip to Ireland and
plan to read the book again. It's that good!
|
|
Lidia Yuknavitch
Instructor, English
|
Since my own work is in the area of "fiction hybrids,"
I find myself devouring work which
performs the formal questions which obsess me.
These books will definately take you beyond
your comfort zone and challenge the very
definition of what we mean when we say "fiction" and
the "novel." I am at work on a hybrid novel project
myself.
VAS: An Opera in Flatland, by Steve Tomasula
(also online at: www.slipstudios.com/vas/vascfm
The Beauty of the Husband, Anne Carson
Men in the Off Hours, Anne Carson
AVA, Carole Maso
Art and Lies, Jeanette Winterson
|
|
Dr. Janet Campbell
Instructor,
Political Science
|
A
great book is No Future Without Forgiveness, by Desmond Tutu, about
the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa. Tutu headed this
commission, which was designed to reveal the "victims'" side
of apartheid. The greatest thing about this book was that the meaning of
victim is quite expansive--including members of the South African Security
Forces who actually carried out torture. These folks were viewed as "victims"
in the sense that the system not only allowed this sort of behavior to become
legitimate but actually encouraged it. These hearings were not trials, but
were meant to expose the "truth" of what happened in an effort
to begin to heal the country of its wounds. As Tutu is a bishop, the book
gets a bit preachy at times, but even the non-religious can draw lessons
from it. To get the most out of the book, one should know what apartheid
was, but it's not necessary. |
Dr.
Mike Russell
Instructor, Chemistry |
Here
are two of my favorite books, both of which are by Robert Pirsig: Zen
and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and Lila: An Inquiry into
Morals. Both moved me deeply when I read (and re-read!) them. Zen
combines a cross-country motorcycle journey by "Phaedrus" and
his son with a detailed investigation of the term "quality." Lila
combines a sailing trek by the narrator and a "loose" woman from
New York with a discussion of what makes morals "good" or "bad."
Both novels can be taken as either light or heavy reading, depending on
the mood of the reader, and I cannot emphasize their value adequately in
words. |
|
David Wright
Instructor, English
|
My
summer reading reached its peak with Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire.
I love this book because it's never clear who is on shaker ground--the
dissembling narrator, his glorified poet, or the reader, mesmerized by the
exuberant prose and off-beat humor. Zany, ornate, beautiful, and bizarre,
this work might be a bit confusing at first for the novice reader, but it's
well worth the effort. |
Sally Skelding
Instructor,
Early Childhood Education |
I have just finished 1,000 White Women: the Journal of May Dodd,
edited by Jim Fergus. This is a fascinating story, and there is probably
a grain of truth in it--in some lost sentence in some archive! The
book deals with the U.S. exchanging 1,000 white women for 1,500 horses from
Indian tribes. This idea was put forth to help the tribes in the process
of assimilation into American society. As one can imagine, the usual madness
of inhumane treatment of the Indians occurs. A very interesting read!
|
|
Lynne Wolters
Adjunct Instructor,
Computer Applications/Webmaster Program
|
Here's
a great book: Tao Mentoring: Cultivate Collaborative Relationships
in All Areas of Your Life, by Chungliang Al Huang and Jerry Lynch. This
book was the winner of the 1996 Athena Award for excellence in mentoring:
"Tao mentoring is a two-way circular dance that provides opportunities
for us to experience both giving and receiving without limitations and fears.
If limits and fears are placed on either the giving or the receiving of
this gift, the process comes to a halt." |
|
Terry Folen
Instructor,
Physical Education
|
One
of the best books I have read lately is Where the Heart Is, by Billie
Lettes. It's the story of an 18-year-old woman who is penniless and
pregnant and who gets ditched by her boyfriend in a little Midwest town.
She lives in the town's Wal-Mart until her child is born. She
meets folks, and lives become interchanged; she grows up making a difference
in the lives of those who helped her. |
|
Jack Fassel
Instructor and Program Coordinator,
Electronics
|
I
go for humorous midlife stuff, so I recommend Jimmy Buffett's A
Pirate Looks at Fifty. This is must reading for anybody who thinks that
life is too short, one hasn't accomplished anything, parenting is tough,
and who is looking towards the future. This is all related and funny (or
maybe I was just lost in Margaritaville). Also, Tim Allen's I'm
Not Really Here is typical "toolman" stuff. If you liked the
"toolman," you'll like this. Consider Tim's opening
concern: "Quantum physicists say that unless certain conditions
are met, subatomic particles don't actually exist . . . ; [if]
we're just a bunch of quantum particles, I hope this doesn't mean
I'm not really here!" An untypical midlife crisis journey. |
|
Dr. Celia Carlson
Instructor,
English
|
Housekeeping,
by Marilynne Robinson, is a beautiful, sad, poetic novel about love, loss,
and longing. Two young sisters' mother commits suicide, and their aunt
Sylvie comes to take care of them in an isolated Idaho town marked by tragedy.
Sylvie's last name is Fisher, and she becomes an odd kind of Christ
figure who teaches the older sister Ruth a contemptus mundi that
is mystical. The final line--"No one watching this woman smear her
initials in the steam on her water glass with her first finger . . . could
know how her thoughts are thronged by our absence, or know how she does
not watch, does not listen, does not wait, does not hope, and always for
me and Sylvie"--is pure poetry. |
|
Marilyn Pitts
Adjunct Instructor,
Developmental Education;
President,
Part-Time Faculty Association
|
I
recommend The Leopard Hunts in Darkness, by Wilbur Smith. Smith has
written over 25 novels which are based in Africa, where he was born and
raised. His books explore the texture of Africa within an exceedingly well
written storyline. I remember that when I read this book, I had to put it
down at one point because the chase scene was causing my heart to beat too
quickly. I was "there"! |
|
Jonathan Morrow
Instructor,
English
|
One
of the most illuminating books that I've read recently is Deborah Willis's
history of Black photographers, Reflections in Black: A History
of Black Photographers from 1840 to the Present. This work not only
offers a narrative of a marginalized group's contributions to the medium,
but it also places these people, photographers and subjects alike, in their
changing historical contexts. Whether or not they all intended to, many
of the photographers successfully undermined the sterotypical representations
of African Americans of their day, displaying in their subjects humor instead
of menace, pride instead of poverty, confidence instead of awkwardness,
and self-awareness instead of stupidity. This is a stunning collection.
|
Return
to top.
| STAFF
|
Robin Cash
Worksite Placement Specialist,
Steps to Success |
I am currently reading A Widow for One Year by John Irving. I do
love Irving's books; I think he is a great story teller. He has
many provocative ideas, which is what I look for in fiction. This book is
about, among other things, writing, and I think it would be especially interesting
for people interested in become writers. However, I think Irving uses his
character, Ruth Cole, to present radical feminist views that I think are
exaggerated. I would not say Irving is exactly sexist, but I think he has
hostile feelings about feminists. Nevertheless, I think this book is really
autobiographical in that Irving discusses criticisms of the main character's
books that I think he must have heard about his own books. In general, this
is a good story that offers many things to think about and opportunities
for good discussion. |
Pamela Russell
CASS Coordinator |
Les Misérables, the full, fat, unabridged edition, is fantastic!
Even the three-plus chapters on the Paris sewer system--actually, especially
those! Also, Ivan Doig's Dancing at the Rascal Fair is
wonderfully written, with lots of great details about settling Montana. |
Dee Murphy
Financial Aid Coordinator |
I recommend How to Think Like Leonardo daVinci by Michael J. Gelb.
Through step-by-step exercises and lessons you learn how to master life-changing
abilities such as:
problem solving;
creative thinking;
self-expression;
enjoying the world around you;
goal setting and life balance;
harmonizing body and mind.
I have found this book absolutely enthralling. |
Pat Evans
Budget Analyst |
I like East of the Mountain, by David Guterson, the author of Snow
Falling on Cedars. It's a good choice for more mature people;
it probably wouldn't be of interest to those under 50, but maybe. The
story is about a gentleman coming to grips with his life-ending situation.
I found it insightful as well as enjoyable. |
Ginny Christian
Workforce Development Specialist, Steps to Success |
One of my favorite books is Welcome to my Country, by Lauren Slater.
It is the account of a young psychiatrist's work in Mental Health.
Her approach is inspiring and refreshing, and I'm sure somewhat controversial.
Slater's writing is extroardinary, and her insights are very powerful.
I think this book would be interesting and important to anyone entering
the mental health field. |
Chrissy Bloome, RN
Health Coordinator |
A
great book I just read is The Singing Creek Where the Willows Grow:
The Rediscovered Diary of Opal Whitely, presented by Benjamin Hoff.
This book is the childhood diary of Opal Whitely, born in 1897 near Cottage
Grove, OR. At age 6, she began to keep a diary in which she described her
home, her elaborately named plant and animal friends, her cathedral among
the trees, and the singing creek where the willows grew. Upon its publication
in 1920, The Story of Opal became an immediate best-seller, only
to be discredited by skeptics' reports. You can go to the U of O Library
and look at the remains of her belongings in the archives, which I plan
to do! |
|
Gary Novak
MHCC Webmaster
Networking Specialist
|
If
I could select only one book, that book would be Thomas L. Pangle's
translation of The Laws of Plato. I like this book so much that the
cover is long gone, the edges are all beat up, and you can hardly read the
title of the book on the spine. What sets The Laws apart from other
books? It is, after all, supposed to be the last work of the old, disillusioned
Plato. Even the interlocutors are all (grumpy?) old men.
Who could possibly like such a thing? The Laws is a book written
for people who love to think. It deals with nearly all the great questions:
justice, rule of law, the origin of cities; Plato was the first to
coin the word "theology." The first line reads: "Is
it a god or some human being, strangers, who is given the credit for laying
down your laws?" Plato puts a critique of the existence of gods
into the mouths of young men who are guided by passion (thumos)
and makes temperate old men defend the gods. What is at stake? Only
your soul: only the decisions you make as to the best way to live,
only your choice of justice versus injustice, obeying the laws versus not
obeying the laws. Plato's Laws has the power to shake your assumptions,
convictions, and understanding right to the very core. If that doesn't
make a good book, I don't know what does! |
Return
to top.
| STUDENTS
|
|
Elizabeth A. Pitts
Major:
Elementary Education
|
I recommend Emma, by Jane Austen. This
book has a wonderful plot and is not very difficult to read. As soon as
you put it down, you can't wait to pick it up again! I
find myself re-reading it every year! |
|
David Harrison
Major:
Agriculture or
Fish and Wildlife
|
Radigan, by Louis L'Amour, is
a great western that emphasizes the old west idea of life, and always, always
the good guy wins and gets the girl. |
|
Rochelle Gurusinghe-Thorpe
Major:
Undeclared
|
Sherman Alexie has written three great books:
Indian Killer, Reservation Blues, and Toughest Indian in
the World. Excellent author. Poetic. Interesting insights to the American
Indian experience. Beautiful prose. Characters you are interested in and
care about. |
|
Shawn M. Cardwell
Major:
Political Science
|
On Liberty by John Stuart Mill opens
up students to higher thoughts on liberty, tolerance, and the freedom of
open discussion. |
|
Zack Veselik
Major:
Undeclared
|
I recommend The Case for Christ by
Lee Strobel, because many people have really great questions about Christianity
and Jesus but never seek answers to their questions. Here is a non-fiction
book where the author deals with his own questions. He finds no other explanation
for life but God, and salvation through the person of Christ (Jesus). |
|
Jennifer Galeski
Major:
Psychology
|
I like A Child Called "It",
by Dave Pelzer. It is an autobiography, and the message is powerful. It
talks about a boy named Dave who is treated like a slave in his own house.
His mother and father are alcholics. His mother abuses him physically and
verbally. She calls him "it," not Dave, because she thinks he
is not deserving of being called by his name. If you are interested in psychology,
this is a great book. It is the first of a series of three; the second
and third are A Child Searching for Love and A Man Named Dave. |
|
Laura Sandgren
Major:
MAT, Education
|
William Faulkner's The Sound and the
Fury is wonderful. The story is told from three different perspectives,
and you gain a different insight into the same story as it develops. You
are left wondering how the same incident can have so many diffent interpretations.
It is a great way to see that not everyone interprets the same incident
the same way. The book dealt with several important issues before it was
kosher to do so: incest, mental retardation, premarital sex, suicide,
and racial prejudice. Excellent. |
|
Tiegan Tidball
Major:
Undeclared
|
The Long Walk by Stephen King is not
scary, and the impact of the simple ending is mind-blowing in the way it
affects everything before it. |
|
Tad Davis
Major:
Liberal Arts
|
The Hiding Place, by Corrie Ten Boom,
is excellent literature; the author has a great grasp of literary devices,
and the book is well written. It's an intriguing first-hand look at
the human condition in light of the atrocities of World War II, and the
book really illustrates how joy can survive in suffering when a person has
come to resolve the question: "What is the chief end of man?"
Ten Boom was a Jewish sympathizer during the war, and she and her family
worked with an organization called the Dutch Underground to hide Jews. She
and her sister Betsie were later caught and imprisoned. They both endured
severely harsh treatment, and her sister eventually died in prison. Through
it all, however, Ten Boom came to realize that God was in control of human
events, and by trusting Him and yielding her will to His, she allowed God
to make her and her sister vessels of mercy to other prisoners. |
|
Brandilee Schwark
Major:
Veterinary Medicine
|
Josh Harris's I Kissed Dating Goodbye
teaches the basis of "pure" dating. If you are a young (maybe)
or early 20's dater, then this book points out the do's and don't's
of dating: how to handle dating in a mature manner, and the way God
wants you to date and treat the other person. Not only that, this book gives
growing Christians insight into God's love for us. |
|
Andreea Toma
Major:
Business Administration
|
Jacqueline Briskin's The Naked Heart
is very suspenseful; it keeps you on your toes. You will not know what
is going to happen next. The action takes place in Europe in the 1930's,
the time period when World War II was going on. It is an awesome book. You
will laugh and you will cry, but you will not be able to put the book down. |
|
Irene Fassel
Major:
Electronics Technology
|
I love King Arthur stories and stories from
around that time. Marion Zimmer Bradley's The Mists of Avalon
as well as some others is written from the woman's point of view. It's
very descriptive, and it really sucks the reader into the storyline. |
|
Tage Smith
Major:
Undecided
|
Günter Grass's The Tin Drum
mixes the historical and the surreal in treating the city of Danzig (Gdansk)
during World War II. |
|
Elliot Reynolds
Major:
Physical Therapy
|
I like J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit,
because it is very well written. |
|
Dani Hunter
Major:
Youth Worker/ Counselor
|
Stone Butch Blues, by Leslie Feinberg,
is a truthful bit of reality, told through the life of someone who broke
all the boundaries of gender stereotypes. It is a heartwarming tale of strength
and courage in the face of adversity. |
|
Aaron Sale
Major:
Communications
|
The River God, by Wilbur A. Smith,
is an Egyptian adventure story that takes place during the age when pharaohs
ruled Egypt and conquered much of Africa. |
|
Julie Grochowski
Major:
Education
|
The Mists of Avalon, by Marion Zimmer
Bradley, is the story of King Arthur from the point of view of women. Told
from Morgan's point of view, the story reveals the women around King
Arthur: Guinevere, the Lady of the Lake, Morgause, Morgan herself.
A different perspective into the King Arthur story. |
|
Susan Arthur
Major:
Business/ Office Technologies
|
Mark Q. Sutton's Introduction to Native
North America gets into the daily life of each culture. Lots of interesting
ideas and lots of facts about how the different Indian cultures lived. I
liked the VIP profiles in each chapter. Sutton takes each culture from a
prehistoric view to modern day; he gives descriptions of each tribe's
environment and their clothing and the tools they used. Every chapter follows
the same format; this can get a little tiresome, but the information is
great. |
|
Tony Whipps
Major:
General
|
Prophet, by Frank Peretti, has an excellent
story line and is very intense. The book keeps you guessing up through the
last page. It gives some interesting looks behind the scenes of news stations
and abortion clinics. The book includes a strong dosage of Christian morals
and challenges you to think about what you believe and why. |
|
Natalya Demyashkevich
Major:
Physical Education
|
I like Sergey: The Story of My Love,
by Ekaterina Gordeva, because it is so connected to my life; I think
it is very close to what I have in my life. Anyway, it is a wonderful love
story, which made me cry more than once. Also, it is a neat inside look
into the lives of professional athletes. |
Return
to top
| ADMINISTRATORS
|
Carol
Foster
Assistant Director,
Workforce Development |
I like Wayne Dyer's Wisdom of the
Ages. He has collected writings, poems, and sayings by many of the wisest
people of the past 25 centuries and has added his original thoughts in brief
essays that give us ideas about applying these teachings to our modern lives.
Dyer is good about how to deal with the everyday things we encounter in
our lives, and in sharing how to practice and attain such behaviors as serenity,
calmness, detachment from outcomes, and really trying to get to our higher
selves, where we can truly focus on giving. |
|
Dr. Joe Dunlap
Dean,
Industrial Technology
|
I recently read The Leadership Challenge,
by James Kouzes and Barry Posner, for a leadership course. It's an
excellent book. Its purpose is to assist individuals in furthering their
abilities as leaders; in other words, it is a field guide. The book
is not about defining leadership; rather it is about how leaders get
extraordinary results in organizations through their behaviors. The focus
of the book is "personal-best cases," instances where people have
led, not "managed," projects to a plateau beyond traditional expectations;
these are experiences in which "everything came together." This
book combines keen insights with practical applications and captures both
why and how leadership is everyone's business. |
|
Dr. Bill Becker
Interim President,
MHCC
|
I read Moby Dick and Billy Budd
over and over, just because I love the way Melville uses English. But a
book I really enjoyed for the fun of reading it was Dancing at the Rascal
Fair by Ivan Doig. It provides a wonderful description of the settling
of the Montana frontier and the struggles of a smitten young man. |
|
Dr. Valerie Ward
Dean,
Evening/Weekend Program
|
I
have been working my way through Allison Weir's historical fiction
series on the British monarchy: Henry VIII, The Wives of Henry
VIII, The Children of Henry VIII, and Elizabeth.
|
|
Dee Ann Melland
Supervisor,
Office for Community Service
Campus Information
|
The
book I have recently enjoyed most is Blackbird: A Childhood Lost
and Found, the autobiography of Jennifer Lauck, who lives in Portland.
It is the story of a little girl who, despite the odds, manages to survive
to her twelfth year of life in modern-day America. Lauck's mother
died when she was young (in the book she watches her mother's
physical and mental decline), and then her father died while she
was still an adolescent. Her step-mom had a mental illness of some sort
and could not care for her. The insight and clarity this little girl shows
for her everyday surroundings and for the physical and mental illnesses
she observes are amazing. Lauck is currently working on the sequel, and
I am most eager to read it. I don't think I've enjoyed a book
so much since reading Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes.
|
Peggy Redmond
Director,
Registration and Records |
I loved Angela's Ashes, by Frank McCourt. The writing style
is something unique that I don't think I have ever read before. It
is captivating and funny and down to earth. |
Return
to top.
|

 |
|
|
|