Archive for July, 2011

Chronicle that is. In her San Francisco Chronicle review of Andrei Codrescu’s latest book, Jenny Hendrix writes, “Whatever Gets You Through the Night nominally includes only one of the 1,001 stories that, told over several nights by Sheherezade, keep the king curious enough to spare her. But Codrescu’s is not so much a retelling as a treatise on or demonstration of the Nights’ mechanics; in his hands, this story becomes almost infinite.”

She continues to praise Codrescu’s writing and story-telling, saying, “Like Borges before him, Codrescu shows the borders between fiction and truth to be ragged, if not nonexistent. A kind of linguistic alchemy occurs between word and flesh….Although much of the book is dedicated to, and may be read as, a serious investigation of storytelling and its place in our future (our own iSheherezade), Codrescu never loses sight of the fact that these stories are meant to be ‘entertainments’ above all.”

Read the complete review here.

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Over at the Canadian bird blog Island Nature, they are giving away a copy of The Crossley ID Guide: Eastern Birds. All you have to do to be entered is to leave a comment on their review of the book — seems simple enough. More info on their site: http://islandnature.ca/2011/07/book-review-the-crossley-id-guide-eastern-birds/.

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At the KaHolly blog they are giving away a copy of Avian Architecture, so if you missed our earlier Press-sponsored giveaway, here’s your second chance to win this great book. The details of the giveaway are here: http://kaholly.blogspot.com/2011/07/avian-architecture-book-review-and-give.html. Essentially, you just have to leave a comment, or share news of the giveaway to be entered into the contest.

This is definitely a book any birder or naturalist would love to own, so head over to KaHolly and put your name in the hat.

Also, listen in to this great interview between Peter Goodfellow and WICN’s Mark Lynch: http://www.wicn.org/podcasts/audio/peter-goodfellow-avian-architecture.

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From the Sacramento News & Review:

Get your network on:

If you give a damn about the local music scene, are interested in changing things and can afford to fork over 50 bills, this Friday night’s annual Midtown Business Association gala might house the elbows you should be rubbing. Not to mention the guest speaker: Elizabeth Currid, author of The Warhol Economy: How Fashion, Art and Music Drive New York City, who’ll speak about how we can transform all our city’s abandoned warehouses into acid-washed ingenuity engines for the socially abstract. Who’s game? (This Friday, July 15, from 5 to 9 p.m. at Harlow’s, 2708 J Street; $50; www.mbasac.com.)

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Jul
13
2011

Tune in to The Daily Show tonight

Matthew Richardson, one of the co-authors of Guaranteed to Fail: Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Debacle of Mortgage Finance, will be interviewed by Jon Stewart tonight on the subject of the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac collapse. This issue has slipped from the news in recent months,but housing finance in general is still broken and it is time to re-engage with these issues.

Tune in tonight to learn more about how and why Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac failed and what our blueprint for mortgage finance reform should look like going forward.

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Princeton University Press author David Scheffer (his book All the Missing Souls is forthcoming early next year) will be interviewed in a documentary described as “a searing and personal investigation of one of the 20th century’s most infamous instances of planned mass murder — the Khmer Rouge ‘killing fields’ of Cambodia.”

Scheffer will contribute to the program from his unique perspective as the United States first Ambassador for War Crimes and a figure instrumental in the creation of the war crimes tribunals for Cambodia and elsewhere in the late 90s. PBS has posted a Q&A with Scheffer on their web site to promote the documentary.

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Last week European Advisory Board member David Goodhart, the founding editor of Prospect Magazine, acted as a judge for the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize, the most prestigious award in the UK for non-fiction. The award ceremony was filmed as a special edition of the Culture Show on the BBC and can be seen here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b012fvh3/The_Culture_Show_BBC_Samuel_Johnson_Prize_for_NonFiction_2011_A_Culture_Show_Special/

An ever increasing number of our rights deals are for translations into Chinese, and this week saw the sale of the Chinese (complex) rights for Daniel Bell and Avner de Shalit’s THE SPIRIT OF CITIES.

It was a terrific week for coverage of PUP books in the European media, with a two-page review of Emma Rothschild’s THE INNER LIFE OF EMPIRES appearing in the Times Higher Education, and John Ikenberry’s LIBERAL LEVIATHAN and Diane Coyle’s THE ECONOMICS OF ENOUGH listed as summer “must reads” in the Financial Times. Timothy Garton Ash praised Yan Xuetong’s ANCIENT CHINESE THOUGHT, MODERN CHINESE POWER in the Guardian , while Ian Goldin’s EXCEPTIONAL PEOPLE was noticed in Le Monde and the Polish daily Gazeta Prawna.

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After the short week last week, we’re back with another giveaway! This week’s book, named one of the 2010 Books of the Year in Nonfiction Round-Up in the Science & Environment list by the Financial Times (FT.com), is Honeybee Democracy by Thomas D. Seeley.

Honeybees make decisions collectively—and democratically. Every year, faced with the life-or-death problem of choosing and traveling to a new home, honeybees stake everything on a process that includes collective fact-finding, vigorous debate, and consensus building. In fact, as world-renowned animal behaviorist Thomas Seeley reveals, these incredible insects have much to teach us when it comes to collective wisdom and effective decision making. A remarkable and richly illustrated account of scientific discovery, Honeybee Democracy brings together, for the first time, decades of Seeley’s pioneering research to tell the amazing story of house hunting and democratic debate among the honeybees.

An impressive exploration of animal behavior, Honeybee Democracy shows that decision-making groups, whether honeybee or human, can be smarter than even the smartest individuals in them.

“Dr. Seeley is an engaging guide. His enthusiasm and admiration for honeybees is infectious. His accumulated research seems truly masterly, doing for bees what E.O. Wilson did for ants.”—Katherine Bouton, New York Times

“[E]ngaging and fascinating. . . . Seeley writes with infectious enthusiasm. . . . Honeybee Democracy offers wonderful testament to his career of careful investigation of a remarkable natural phenomenon. The breadth and depth of the studies reported in it should inspire all students of animal behavior.”—Science

The random draw for this book with be Friday 7/15 at 11 am EST. Be sure to “Like” us on Facebook if you haven’t already to be entered to win!

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PUP author G. John Ikenberry has an article adapted from his book, Liberal Leviathan: The Origins, Crisis, and Transformation of the American World Order, in the latest issue of Democracy: A Journal of Ideas.

Ikenberry provides the most systematic statement yet about the theory and practice of the liberal international order, and a forceful message for policymakers, scholars, and general readers about why America must renegotiate its relationship with the rest of the world and pursue a more enlightened strategy—that of the liberal leviathan.

For the full article in Democracy, please visit: http://www.democracyjournal.org/21/a-world-of-our-making-1.php?page=1

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Jul
7
2011

In Memoriam: Herbert S. Bailey, Jr.

July 5, 2011

Dear Colleagues and Friends of the Press,

Herbert S. Bailey, Jr., the fifth director of Princeton University Press, and one of the most influential and well-respected scholarly publishers of his time, died on June 28, 2011, after a brief illness, just weeks short of his 90th birthday. He directed the Press from 1954 to 1986. A member of the Princeton University class of 1942, Bailey joined the Press in 1946 as its first science editor. Then, after a brief stint as its editor in chief, Bailey was named PUP’s director. At 32, he was the youngest head of a major university press in the United States. He served as president of the Association of American University Presses in 1972 and, upon his retirement from Princeton in 1986, received the prestigious Curtis Benjamin Award of the Association of American Publishers and the Bowker Award for Creative Publishing.

During his long tenure at the Press, Bailey brought its publication program to a new and unprecedented level of distinction, enhanced its international reputation, placed it on firm financial footing, and propagated its surpassing standards for book production and design. He undertook a number of long-term, monumental projects, including The Papers of Woodrow Wilson, The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau, and, most notably, The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein. In 1969, he acquired the world-renowned Bollingen Series, established to publish the Collected Works of C. G. Jung and eventually comprising over 250 extraordinary titles from archaeology through religion. Some of the individual titles include Kenneth Clark’s The Nude; E. H. Gombrich’s Art and Illusion; Aleksandr Pushkin’s Eugene Onegin, translated and with commentary by Vladimir Nabokov; and the Wilhelm/Baynes translation of The I Ching, or Book of Changes (which remains the Press’s single best-selling book with more than 900,000 copies in print).

By the end of Bailey’s PUP years, he and his colleagues had nearly tripled the Press’s annual title output. Among his many legacies was the establishment of the Press’s modern Editorial Board, comprising Princeton faculty members from different and complementary fields. Closely resembling its present form, it served the purpose of preserving and enhancing the scholarly quality of the Press’s books. Bailey’s emphasis on editorial excellence shone through his legacy. During his 32 years as Princeton’s director, the Press won some 250 prizes, including 2 National Book Awards, 7 Pulitzer Prizes, and 2 Bancroft Prizes. Included among many important PUP authors of the time were George F. Kennan, John Tyler Bonner, Herman Kahn, Richard Ullman, Herbert Feis, R. R. Palmer, Albert O. Hirschman, Richard Rorty, Robert Pinsky, Richard Feynman, Earl Miner, and Wilfred Cantwell Smith.

Herbert S. Bailey, Jr., was born in New York City in 1921 and there attended the Horace Mann School for Boys. Following his 1942 graduation from Princeton, he spent three years as a naval radar instructor in World War II. In his inaugural role as editor, he built up the Press’s offerings in the sciences and mathematics, and later, as director, in poetry and in translations. Eventually he helped move the Press into positions of publishing leadership in the social sciences and political theory while bolstering its traditional strengths in history and the humanities. This balanced scholarly publishing portfolio, reflecting the broad and inclusive intellectual character of Princeton and of liberal learning itself, continues today at the Press. William G. Bowen, president of Princeton during many of the years when Bailey was at the Press, gave Bailey credit for the exceptionally close relationship that existed between the Press and the University. “The two were seen by Bailey as highly complementary resources, and so they were.”
In the words of his successor, Walter H. Lippincott, who served as PUP’s director from 1986 through 2005, “Another important legacy was Bailey’s restructuring the Press into well-functioning departments—editorial, design, production and printing, marketing, accounting, and general management—a structure,” notes Lippincott, “that to a great extent remains in effect today.” Lippincott adds that under Bailey’s leadership, PUP built a separate printing plant, modernized its offices, and launched a highly successful paperback publication program.

Having institutionalized the modern identity and structure of Princeton University Press, Bailey exercised a commensurate influence throughout the larger world of publishing and letters. According to Sanford G. Thatcher, who served as PUP’s editor in chief under Bailey, and later as director of the Pennsylvania State University Press, Bailey played a prominent role in several important initiatives, including the National Enquiry into Scholarly Communication (1976–1979), “whose final report (published in 1979 by the Johns Hopkins University Press) made numerous recommendations that are still relevant today, including more widely distributing the financial burden for supporting the system of scholarly publishing.”

Thatcher recalls, too, that Bailey championed the adoption of acid-free paper throughout American publishing and was an early innovator in the propagation and application of computer technologies, noting his role in the Library of Congress’s Optical Disk Project Advisory Committee in the 1980s, and subsequent efforts. Adds Harvard University Library director and former PUP Editorial Board member Robert Darnton, “Herb retired Princeton’s linotype presses reluctantly, but was one of the first to foresee the possibilities of digital book delivery.”

Bailey’s 1970 book, The Art and Science of Book Publishing, originally published by Harper & Row and subsequently republished by the University of Texas Press and later by the Ohio University Press, “became a classic in its field virtually on the day of publication,” in the words of publisher Charles Scribner, Jr., and stands as an enduring testament to the breadth and depth of his command of publishing.

Beyond his contributions to PUP and to the broader world of scholarly communications, Bailey is remembered fondly as a teacher and a leader. Admired for his shrewd business sense, he was equally appreciated for the way he treated his staff and the collegiality he fostered. Joanna Hitchcock, a PUP managing editor during the Bailey years who went on to become director of the University of Texas Press, puts it as only a close colleague could: “As a leader, Herb was energetic and inspiring. Ideas were tossed around, and even junior employees were encouraged to speak out. Herb ran a tight ship and we worked hard, but the environment was challenging and there were ample opportunities for mobility and advancement. He was both idealistic and practical, imaginative, fair, and loyal to colleagues even when he disagreed with them.”

Bailey’s professional influence can best be measured in the work of younger Princeton colleagues who carried the lessons they learned from him beyond PUP’s walls into leadership roles throughout the nation. Sanford Thatcher and Joanna Hitchcock not only became distinguished and highly successful press directors in their own right, but succeeded Bailey as presidents of the Association of American University Presses. Other future directors trained by Bailey included John Irvin at Minnesota, Carol Orr at Tennessee (also a later AAUP president), and John Putnam at Northwestern. Putnam would go on to become executive director of the AAUP.

Joining Bailey in the leadership of Princeton University Press during his decades at the helm were three outstanding fellow publishers, R. Miriam Brokaw, associate director and editor, William C. Becker, associate director and controller, and Harold W. McGraw, Jr., chairman of the board of McGraw-Hill, Inc., and president of Princeton University Press’s Board of Trustees.

Mr. Becker and Ms. Brokaw served as Bailey’s closest advisers and, along with him, formed the core management of the Press. Mr. McGraw, who died in 2010, served on the Press’s board from 1962 onward for 25 years, 8 as its chairman, and provided the Press with the endowment to fund the most ambitious publishing project in its history, The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein.

Bailey is survived by his beloved wife, Betty, four children, five grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren. Their sixth grandchild, Emily, passed away in 2000. After his retirement in 1986, he and Betty lived in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. He visited the Press only a few times during his later life. A particularly notable occasion was its centennial reception in June 2005. One of the speakers that evening quoted a line from Bailey’s 1970 book—a line that rings as true today as it did then:

What makes a great publishing house are great books, written by great authors, edited by great editors, designed with taste, produced with skill and efficiency, and energetically and widely sold.

This spare, yet wise and powerful sentence stands as the goal that the current staff of Princeton University Press pursue, inspired as we are by the enduring example of Herbert S. Bailey, Jr., and by the magnificent legacy he has left us.

Respectfully,

Peter J. Dougherty
Director

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PUP author Viktor Mayer-Schönberger gave an interesting interview in the Guardian last week. In it he proposes an idea that most of us would find counter-intuitive: that it is a blessing, rather than a human weakness, to forget.

It is at first tricky to understand–after all, human beings tend to value memory. Knowledge is made up of memories linked together to form our personal bank of experience, without which we would never be able to learn and innovate. Throughout history human progress has been based in remembering, the ability to learn from what our forefathers have discovered and built in order to create something new. Cave paintings and hieroglyphs were the first images and diagrams preserving human memory for future generations.

Yet Mayer-Schönberger believes that there is such a thing as too much memory. In our time, the development of digital technology has made the storage and recall of memory an entirely different process. In his book, Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age, he outlines what the digital age is doing to human experience. Rather than being forced to weigh the value of a memory, a piece of knowledge, humans are able to retain it all–but at what cost? Can one ever forgive a slight if it is stored in an email bank for eternity, never to be forgotten? Should our memories be shared with the world on sites like Facebook? Is it really best for human beings to have no secrets? And, nowadays, do we have any other choice?

Mayer-Schönberger notes, “Quite literally, Google knows more about us than we can remember ourselves.” The article provides a fascinating look at the power technology holds over us. Check it out, and pick up Delete to learn more about what solutions Mayer-Schönberger has to offer.

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Jul
5
2011

Dispatch from PUP Europe

Another week, another party.

Last Wednesday Caroline Priday and I represented Princeton University Press at a celebration in honour of Emma Rothschild’s new book, The Inner Life of Empires, at Spencer House in London. Prof. Rothschild gave a wonderful speech, describing her chance discovery of the Johnstone family – the subject of her book – while tracking down the details of an obscure court case involving Adam Smith.

It was also a busy week for PUP authors in the press, with Frederico Varese’s Mafias on the MoveE garnering not one but two high profile reviews, in the London Review of Books and the TLS. The Guardian marked the imminent publication of the paperback of Viktor Mayer-Schönberger’s Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age with a substantial profile.

The week ended with the first license for translation of Roman Frydman & Michael D. Goldberg’s important recent book, Beyond Mechanical Markets: Asset Price Swings, Risk, and the Role of the State. Wiley VCH will publish the book in German.

Best wishes from PUP Europe
Al

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