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Alumni Authors, A - C
Sunset Blues
Bob Adamov, ’72
When a mysterious explosion destroys the Put-in-Bay home of Emerson Moore’s aunt and she disappears, Moore gathers a team of easily sidetracked and hilarious reprobates to find her while knocking heads with a gang of Russian drug runners.
Just the Girls: A Kaleidoscope of Butterflies; A Drift of Honeybees
Pamela R. Anderson-Bartholet, ’89, M.A. ’94, MFA ’12
“Just the Girls” is a celebration of women and what it means to be connected to the female whole.
The Road Unpaved - Border to Border with a Brain Tumor and a Bike
Risa August, ’04
After a shocking diagnosis for a rare pituitary disease and with her eighteen-year marriage in shambles, Risa’s life has fallen far from picture-perfect. Recovering from brain surgery and desperate to get back to her former self, she signs up for the bike tour of a lifetime—six weeks from Canada to Mexico on the Pacific Coast Highway. A remarkable story of transformation and resilience.
The Journey of a Bear Hug
Kristin Barton, ’10, MA ’13
A children’s book about how love keeps us close. Back Cover: Have you ever had someone you really love move away? When Emilie moved away, Philip felt lonely and sad, but he also had a brilliant idea. Get ready for Hug's big adventure from one distant friend to another!
Your Brother
Angela Baldree, MLS ’99
Based upon the author's own family and told through their actual letters, "Your Brother" is a historical WWII novel. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, four of six Julian brothers enlist to fight for the U.S. Who will survive the war and how did the family back home cope without their sons? Spanning from Okinawa, to Utah, to Normandy, the reader will feel like they're part of a big Italian family.
The Galloping Garbage Truck
Pamela R. Anderson-Bartholet, ’89, M.A. ’94, MFA ’12
This playful romp through childhood reflects on healthy lifestyle choices (“Kale Salad”)—challenges friendship expectations (“Could We Be Friends?”)—grapples with self-image (“The Girl with the Bow in Her Hair”)—and more. Early Childhood Educator Dr. Nancy Barbour says these poems have “something for young and old alike—for everyday life and aspirational dreams.”
Widow Maker
Pamela R. Anderson-Bartholet, ’89, M.A. ’94, MFA ’12
My husband's sudden cardiac arrest and heroic (and successful) efforts to save his life are chronicled in this poetry chapbook. From the "Widow Maker" blockage of his left anterior descending artery (the first poem in the book) to his full recovery in the triumphant final poem "Tap Dancing," these poems take the reader on the frightening journey that defines SCA from a caregiver's perspective.
Swole Planet: Building a Better Body and a Better Earth
Ryan Andrews, MA ’05, MS ’05
Swole Planet is a guide to help people build a body that’s functional and fit, while at the same time building a planet that’s more sustainable and equitable.
Best Day Ever
Michael J. Armstrong, '86, MBA '89
William wants to have the BEST DAY EVER! But can a buttoned-up, Type-A kid let loose and embrace a day free range fun?
Aerosmith to ZZ Top: A Dad and Daughter's Rock and Roll Journey
Terry Armstrong, ’04
A family shares their journey spanning 27,000 miles, 200-plus performers, and 58 unique venues seeing rock concerts and related stories from their lives. It's not just concerts but also the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Graceland and encounters with their musical idols. Even their car provides the backdrop for memorable moments. Northeast Ohio serves as home base for their Rock & Roll journey!
REMF Life Inside The Wire
Kevin Baldwin, ’69
I was sitting on the Cambodian border on May 4, 1970. From my KSU graduation in 1969 I proceeded directly into the US Army vis-a-vis the draft. This book was driven by my thesis that modern portrayals have substantially missed the experience of the average Vietnam veteran. My fervent hope is to reset the record and provide a more realistic view of what it was really like for the vast majority!
Magnificent
Chris Baum, ‘16
Q, an alien that escapes from Area 51. Mel, a powerful clairvoyant female human. One chance to save the world from ruin.
Fathers and Sons
Steven Begleiter, ’80
A seminal photography book about the relationship between Fathers and Sons with Portraits and Interviews of famous and not so famous.
Ecology and Evolution: Islands of Change
Richard Benz, '73
Big, complex ideas--how ecological pressures shape the evolutionary processes of adaptation and natural selection--are examined in a setting kids will love learning about: the Galapagos Islands. The hands-on activities, games, and investigations in Ecology and Evolution will guide your students to explore integrated topics from biology and Earth science. Each lesson has a section on the Standards, assessment rubrics, and suggestions.
Red and Purple Hiking Boots: An Older Woman's Trek to "It's Never too Late"
Donna Billings, '65
Feel hemmed in by life roles and circumstances? Looking to live your dreams? If so, this book is for you. A Nicaraguan trip to visit her son in the Peace Corps awoke in her a desire to question the assumptions and roles that kept her from realizing her dreams. The result: she moved from a traditional career to an executive coach, while trekking through mountains all over the world - all beginning in her early 60's.
At Home with the Weeds: A Memoir
Baleigh Bognar, ’20
Baleigh takes you through a rollercoaster of love lost and found while grappling with anxiety in the small town of Kent, Ohio.
“Who’s Having More Fun than Me”
Wendy Borom-Eugene, ’77
I was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis in 1987, after moving back to Akron and working at Kent State. Divorced and a single parent of 2 daughters, I had to navigate a new life, an unpredictable disease and possibly date. The book takes the reader on a journey through turbulent weather as my new husband and our family adjust, ride the storms and thrive through the challenges of MS.
I Want To Be Like Parker
Carol Sumilas Boshears, '66
I am proud to have this special book. I juggle many genres but I'm especially happy this picture book will teach children something important. How to eat right. Plus, the illustrations are colorful and great to catch their attention. Make a child happy!
Meathead: Unraveling the Athletic Brain
Allison Brager, Ph.D. '11
A popular science book debunking the myth of the "dumb jock" as well as a performance and recovery manual for athletes.
Imagine That!
Jayke Brown, ’07
Three friends that play all day, deal with a life lesson, then have magical dreams at night about what they played and solve their life lesson.
Locked Away
Amanda Bryk, ’06
When a fight breaks out inside the jail where Heather works and her safety is at risk, an unlikely hero emerges. Now she must choose between the man who saved her life and a brand new relationship with a flirtatious co-worker. Are either of these men worth the risk? Will she find the happily ever after that she’s been looking for her whole life, or will she end up being alone again?
Between The Holidays
Amanda Bryk, ’06
Even though she was named after Love’s favorite holiday, Val’s relationships left much to be desired. The men in her life seemed to change with the seasons, and love began to feel like a lie she told herself so life wouldn’t feel so pointless. Or rather, it did, until she met them. Kold and Darc have come to heat up the holidays, and they intend to stick around long past New Year’s Eve.
The Hearing-Loss Guide: Useful Information and Advice for Patients and Families
John Burkey, M.A. '89
The Hearing-Loss Guide provides useful first-hand advice from people who have experienced hearing loss themselves, along with accurate treatment information based on Mr. Burkey's 25 years as an audiologist at the Lippy Group for ENT.
If You Should Go at Midnight: Legends and Legend Tripping in America
Jeffrey Carl, ’02
Tonight, across America, countless people will embark on an adventure. They will prowl among overgrown headstones in forgotten graveyards, stalk through darkened woods and wildlands, and creep down the crumbling corridors of abandoned buildings. They have set forth in search of a profound paranormal experience and may seem to achieve just that. They are part of the growing cultural phenomenon called legend tripping.
Quality Lesson Plans for Secondary Physical Education
Lois Carnes, '71, M.Ed. '74
This book provides curriculum for middle school and high school physical education teachers. The material spans the content needed for a complete year's course. Fitness, major & minor units, and one day lesson plans are included.
Covenant
Catherine E. Carter, ’84, M.A.s ’94
This book provides curriculum for middle school and high school physical education teachers. The material spans the content needed for a complete year's course. Fitness, major & minor units, and one day lesson plans are included.
When I Die, Take My Panties: Turning Your Darkest Moments into Your Greatest Gifts
Jennifer Coken, '85, M.A. '87
When I Die, Take My Panties is a wake-up call about the personal transformation that comes from tragedy. Jennifer takes us through her journey of her mother (Jan Storti, PhD Education 1999) dying from ovarian cancer in 2011 and how she was able to discover the gifts in her own life by appreciating what was right in front of her.
In Russian Wonderland: An American's Odyssey in Soviet Russia
Charles Cole, '72
A personal memoir of my experiences in the USSR serving as a Russian-speaking guide on a USIA exhibit in 1972.
The History of Karate and the Masters Who Made It
Mark Cramer, '73
This first concise yet comprehensive history of traditional Okinawan and Japanese karate includes authoritative biographies of the great karate masters of the past and the philosophical issues they faced as karate changed and evolved.
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Alumni Authors, D - F
My Brother's Keeper
John Dabrowski, Ph.D ’96
The novel follows a clandestine attempt by Vatican officials to spirit 100 Jews from the clutches of the SS to the safety of neutral Sweden--while enlisting the help of elements within the German military. The story is set in 1943 against the backdrop of WWII Europe from Italy to Sweden, as well as many other wartime locales. Available online via Amazon, Barnes and Noble and Winged Hussar Pub.
Cultivating Minds To Own Thyself
Jameel Davis, '13
Cultivating Minds To Own Thyself, encourages readers to define, identify and to accept thyself and to modify their thoughts, so that they can become their best self and make a difference in the lives of others.
How Success Became My Focus
Jameel Davis, '13
Have you ever felt so lost in life that you don't know where you are heading to? Do you ever feel like giving up after you've give your all? Does it seem like your best isn't just enough? Well, worry no more. Set aside you anxieties, be inspired, and reach greater heights with "How Success Became My Focus." With enthusiasm, Davis will stir your passion and divert your energies toward determination.
An Evolved, Professing Christian Man™
Bryon Demery, ’01, MPA, ’09
Byron Demery invites us into his personal journey of faith, vulnerability and love. He details his shortcomings as a man, as he voyages through an uncertain wilderness period in his life. In testifying of God’s goodness, this book encourages Christian Men to lead with love and learn to enjoy everyday life while embracing the process of growth in the midst of life’s most trying circumstances.
Underwater: How Our American Dream of Homeownership Became a Nightmare
Ryan Dezember, ’02
In this deeply personal story, Dezember shows how decisions on Wall Street and in Washington played out on his street in a corner of the Sunbelt that was convulsed by the foreclosure crisis.
The Culture Builders: One company’s journey to building a sense of belonging
Rebecca Dinovo, ’03
How does your organization promote culture builders: Facilitators, Executive Support, Cheerleaders, Questioners, and Committees? This work provides a case study on how culture programs built a sense of belonging and what those programs allowed and inspired the employees at one company to do.
The Incredible Shrinking Woman
Athena Dixon, ’02
This slim memoir-in-essays explores themes of belonging and taking up space through the lens of being fat, Black and Midwestern.
Into the Air
Aimee Downing, '91
When a mysterious letter arrives, Mia Bryn is allowed to do something no one has done in over one hundred years — leave the ground and travel into the air. But Mia quickly learns that surviving in the outside world is more difficult and dangerous than she could have ever imagined.
Sweet Unrest
Lisa Dunick, '00
A girl from Chicago moves to New Orleans where her dark dreams of the past start becoming a part of her waking life.
Additional publications by Dunick:
UnhookedPursuing John Brown: On the Trail of a Radical Abolitionist
Joyce Dyer, Ph.D. ’78
It begins in Hudson, where John Brown grew up, and where the author now lives, and then moves across the country to sites both on and off the road in a ten-year pursuit of controversial John Brown and the difficult questions he raises. A mix of genres, including memoir, history, biography, and travel writing, her book was called “a thoughtful, elegantly written contribution to American studies” by Kirkus Reviews.
Railroad Town: Kent and the Erie Railroad
Bruce Dzeda, '70, M.A. '79
The opening of the A&GW Railroad in 1863 transformed little Franklin Mills, Ohio. into Kent almost overnight. The Erie's impact on Kent was significant in several ways; at one time it employed over half the workers in the town. The 1875 depot was built to impress and later became the catalyst for Kent's recent downtown redevelopment.
DEBBI: And Other Stories in the Helen of Mars Universe
George Ebey, ’98
Helen Hunter’s father hopes to make his fortune by sending a robotic rover, controlled from Earth, to mine the surface of Mars for precious ores. But there’s a catch. To do it, he’ll have to assume financial responsibility for the rover. And on the harsh and desolate surface of Mars, one false move can mean the difference between untold riches and utter disaster.
Additional publications by Ebey:
Rover: Helen of Mars Book 1I Saw My PA Today
Lavette Shirley Elee, ’09
A young lady is having a wonderful day playing outside when she falls and hurts herself. She has to go to the urgent care for help. She is initially scared, but she soon finds out that she has nothing to fear.
Guide to Producing a Fashion Show, 3rd edition
Judith Everett, '72, M.A. '74
From a small informal affair to a large, complex event, this is a resource for anyone interesting in fashion shows. All aspects of planning and producing a fashion show are covered.
Missing: Coming to Terms with a Borderline Mother
Kathy Ewing, '73, M.A. '76
In this engaging and thoughtful personal memoir, Kathy Ewing shows what it’s like to be raised by someone variously sullen, pleasant, angry, demanding, manipulative, and engaging—sometimes changing from one mood to the next in a single conversation. She writes of her memories from her childhood, showing her mother’s troubling behavior — the behavior that mystified her until she found a name for it, until she could put it in the context of borderline personality disorder. The diagnosis, the wrestling with her history, and the very writing of that history have provided, if not healing, at least comfort and acceptance.
High Heels and Hard Hats
Roni Faller, '79
In the tradition of Sex and the City and The Notebook, High Heels and Hard Hats is women’s fiction at its finest—a humorous and heartfelt coming-of-age story of a fellow KSU graduate that explores our career choices, romance, female friendships, and the choices that define us.
The Burroughs Corporation, Detroit's Dynamic Dwarf
Lee Featheringham, '54
This book is a case study and personal chronicle of an American information systems company. Burroughs survived over 100 years until a merger of 1986 to become Unisys.
Three Months of Socialism: Living in USSR During the 1970s
Gary Featheringham, '66
Diary of living and working in Dubna, small town north of Moscow at the Joint Institute of Nuclear Research in the 1970s.
Water Politics
David Feldman, '73
Water Politics analyzes the processes that determine how water issues get the attention of governments. It also examines how varied sources of power – economic, legal, and expert – determine its governance: how we allocate, use, and protect this irreplaceable resource. Finally, we chronicle the purposes that direct decisions over its cost, availability, and access. The book offers a wide-ranging analysis complete with sidebars– from Flint, Michigan to Mumbai, India; Sao Paulo, Brazil; and Beijing.
Finding the Grain
Linda Fifer, ’74
Izzy Stark arrives in Colorado following her service in Afghanistan and the unexpected death of her husband in an IED blast. Haunted by their shared dreams, she negotiates between honoring him and feeling adrift. Facing secrets her husband never meant for her to know, she redefines herself as she is FINDING THE GRAIN in her life.
The Road Between Two Skies
Linda Fifer, ’74
A bizarre abduction shatters Brenniss' promising future, compounded by a memory loss. Now as Maggie, she recalls only pieces of who she was, while new friends support her as a survivor. Only by saying goodbye can she reconcile her past and present. Experience the journey on The Road Between Two Skies by Linda Fifer.
Peer interaction in university-level distance education: Reasons for interaction, communication methods used, and the perceived value of peer interaction in academic success
Mark Fink, '95
Worldwide, the use of the Internet to deliver instruction has increased exponentially. Course management systems (CMS) are widely used to deliver courses completely at a distance. Implications and recommendations for higher education institutions include promoting best practices, providing functional policies and procedures centered on student learning, and providing faculty training and services to facilitate meaningful learning outcomes.
The Number Two Pencil Solution
Harry Fitch, '68
A high school language arts teacher battles the forces, including standardized testing, that he believes are destroying education. Self-published, the novel is print on demand and also available as an e-book.
Home Sweet Homes: How Bundt Cakes, Bubble Wrap, and My Accent Helped Me Survive Nine Moves
Diane Laney Fitzpatrick, '81
Wit and wisdom from a lifetime of cross-country moves with colicky babies, sulky teens, dogs, frogs and goldfish. Moving might be the second most dreadful life event, but if you can find humor in it, you can survive it!
Where the Wind Wills
Dee Flower, ’63
Dee soars with eagles as she treks in the Himalayas, dances with dust devils while living in a grass-roofed hut in Kenya, learns Maasai ways as she documents their ancient sacred ceremonies, crawls through stinging nettles in Rwanda to look into the eyes of mountain gorillas, and flirts with death on the Omo River in Ethiopia, all while navigating one of the toughest roads - love.
Axioms on Leadership A Companion Guide for Developing Leaders
Michael Frank, M.S. '88, Ph.D. '91
Companion guide for learning to lead – challenges, tools to manage those challenges, and how to lead people.
And Now You Know Too! The Story of How the Black Squirrel Came to Kent
Deborah Walker, M.A. '78 and Kathleen Frazier, '70, M.A. '76, EDS '81
It is a children's book that is historically and scientifically factual and for all readers to learn the true story of how the black squirrel came to Kent. On their bold adventure, Bucky, the black squirrel and his new friend Fletcher, search for the answer. Along the way, they find one person who knows the true story. Join them!
FLUTTER! Wisdom For Living, Loving, Dying
Ed Frierson, Ph.D. '64
FLUTTER! addresses the question, “What Happens When You Die?” A young man, Casey, engages insects from caterpillar, Monarchus IV, to Sir Charles, Mantis Clan crown prince. However, the greatest Insight comes from Idyllica, the spirit of a “dead” butterfly. Casey’s notebook also cites seers and masters from several traditions offering wisdom for creative living, deep loving and peaceful dying.
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Alumni Authors, G - H
A Leap of Faith
Mary Aiello Gauntner, '68
Additional publications by Aiello Gauntner:
The Doctors' Wives - Marriage to doctors, divorce, death and survival and the friendship of three women
Continuing friendship of the women and how they triumph鶹ý Athletics: Images of Sports
Cara Gilgenbach
A brief history of nearly 100 years of Kent State athletics told through historical photographs and substantive captions. Includes 10 chapters, each with a historical overview of that decade's highlights. Co-author: Theresa Walton.
Rest in Piece
Breanne (B.W.) Ginsburg, ’14
Though decades apart, two young girls are connected in a way that is both fantastical and surreal.
Strategic Practice Management: Business and Procedural Considerations. 2nd Edition
Robert Glaser, M.A. '72, Ph.D. '74
Whether a student, an independent practitioner, a clinician employed in an audiology/ENT practice or hospital, or a manager of a university based clinic, this text offers essential information for the operation and business management of your practice setting. It is an informative text for any health care practitioner in that it provides critically important information about functioning in today's competitive and dynamic health care marketplace.
THE BEST OF ALL THINGS GOLF: An Exploration of the Best Travel, Courses, Architects, Players, Books, Movies, & Hobbies
Jack Hammel, ’79
A "One Stop Shop" where the golf lover can examine the best about golf's major topics in one book. Jack Hammel has played and photographed over 250 of the greatest and/or most unique courses in Great Britain, Ireland and the USA and read more than 1,000 books on virtually every golf subject. Over 100 color photos and illustrations.
Tears of a Hummingbird
Tonisha Glover, ’13, Med ’18
Could You Fly with A Broken Wing? The dark tragedies from her childhood have followed her into her adult life like déjà vu. Symone Baker-Michaels, a delicate, yet strong Black woman finds it nearly impossible to obtain freedom as she remains locked down and struggles to break free from the shackles of abuse. Somehow, she seeks out a slither of hope and finds inner strength to fight for her life.
World Wrecker: An Annotated Bibliography of Edmond Hamilton
Richard Gombert, '91
An annotated bibliography of the Ohio Science Fiction author Edmond (Moore) Hamilton.
Four Dead in Ohio: Was There a Conspiracy at Kent State?
William Gordon, '73
An investigative account re-examining the different theories for May 4, based on over 200 new interviews, FBI reports, trial transcripts, and other archival material. One professor complained it read too well. The book also uses satirical techniques to highlight the many absurdities of May 4. Updated edition covers the controversy over what is actually on the May 4 tape.
1,001 Tips for Writers
William Gordon, '73
This quotation book offers the best advice about writing and getting published today. The tips were culled from a wide variety of books, magazines, newspaper articles, trade journals, and speeches. Gordon collects the wisdom of literary greats and working writers alike. In the introduction Gordon writes: This book should give writers, especially aspiring writers, a better head start.
Academic Tapestries: Fashioning Teachers and Researchers Out of Events and Experiences
Alan Graham
Teaching and research benefit from recognizing why we function as we do personally and professionally. Raised in the historic Sixth Ward of Houston, Texas during the 1940s, and educated at Texas, Michigan, and Harvard, the author was in Biological Sciences/Geology at Kent for 38 years winning awards for outstanding teaching and research. An early member of the UFPA, Grievance Committee Chairman, his wife's partner in a successful, seven-year gender discrimination suit with the University, and presently a Senior Research Associate at the Missouri Botanical Garden, Academic Tapestries is an account of these experiences.
Charlie Chan’s Poppa: Earl Derr Biggers
Barbara Gregorich, '64
Charlie Chan’s Poppa: Earl Derr Biggers is a biography of the Golden-Age-of-Mystery author from Warren, Ohio, who was known around the world for creating the Chinese-Hawaiian police detective, Charlie Chan.
Guide to Writing the Mystery Novel: Lots of Examples, Plus Dead Bodies
Barbara Gregorich, '64
Guide to Writing the Mystery Novel draws from the author’s life as a mystery reader, mystery writer and writing teacher. The book illuminates the author’s points with examples from her mysteries, as well as with charts, graphs, diagrams and other matter that show how much or how little is called for in the way of planted clues, exposition, etc.
The F Words
Barbara Gregorich, '64
Fifteen-year-old cross-country runner Cole Renner needs to spring his dad from Chicago’s Cook County Jail, hide his best friend’s mom from ICE, trust the new-girl anarchist, and, yeah, write f-words poetry for his English teacher. Above all, he wants justice — for his father, for himself, for his best friend Felipe and for his fellow students.
How We Vote: Innovation in American Elections
Kathleen Hale, Ph.D. ‘05
How We Vote explores innovations in election administration in the United States.
Flash back: A Young Man' s Search for Truth About the Kent State Shootings
Daryl Hall, '74
Told in the first person, this book follows the aftermath of the Kent State shootings and the facts of the tragic event.
Black Students White Teacher: Ruminations and Lamentations
David A. Hancock, '68
Many are asking, what is wrong with teaching, learning, schooling, and education, and what can be done? You will get the answers (panacea) from the letters of a mad public school teacher: intrepid, irascible, cantankerous, provocative, passionate, thought-provoking, iconoclastic, and enhanced with vitriolic demagoguery.
The Diary of A Mad Public School Teacher
David A. Hancock, '68
As a grad student/colleague said, "Thanks for an enjoyable class on education issues in society. I also enjoyed your letters to the editor. I've been told that I say what other people think. Well, you write and publish what we're all thinking".
Freedom Knows My Name: Poems
Kelly Harris, ’00
Freedom Knows My Name is a journey of personal and collective freedom. Poems celebrate migration, womanhood and the African American experience.
12 Amazing Franchise Opportunities Second Edition
John Hayes, '71, M.A. '73
12 Amazing Franchise Opportunities is the Ultimate Franchise Guide to helping you discover new and amazing franchise opportunities worthy of your investment! This franchise guidebook includes step-by-step instructions to investigating franchises and lists many of the questions you must ask before you buy a franchise. Need money to buy a franchise? Uncertain if you're a good fit for franchising? Those topics are explored, too.
The Personal Trainer: A Tale of Pain, Gain, Greed & Lust
David Herbert, '71
The novel explores the nuances of both the fitness industry and the legal system and presents a rather dramatic case for personal trainers to visualize what could happen if they ever come into the crosshairs of the legal system. The book involves a personal trainer who became a certified personal trainer and due to the services he provided to one young mother, turned her life upside down and led to his involvement with the legal system.
Makerspaces for Adults: Best Practices and Great Projects
Jennifer Hicks, MLIS, ’16
One of the first books published to talk about adult makers in makerspaces. Topics and projects cover both academic and public libraries.
The Warden of Aneurin
Jessi Houtz, '13
When Darren Hull’s helicopter crashes in Aneurin, a city created for souls of the dead, he learns of his ancient connection with the city’s mysterious founder and is forced into a struggle for control of life on Earth. He is too scared to be a savior, but the lives of Aneurin’s inhabitants depend upon it.
29 Things that Will Tank Your Life and What to do to Avoid Them: How to Get Unstuck, On Track and Getting More of What You Want in Life
Ingeborg Hrabowy, '84
Your road to a great life can start right here by reading this highly acclaimed book written by a Cleveland psychologist who witnessed the disasters that nearly tanked 5,000 of her clients’ lives. Get straight talk and expert advice from Dr. Ingeborg Hrabowy who shows you the 29 ways you can be tanking your life and not even know it; and she shows you a way out. Read this delightful gem to save yourself from sleepless nights, struggle, and regret — and get more of what YOU WANT in life.
Sail The Seven C's
Clyde Hunt, ’64, MFA ’65
Hunt's book and demo CD demonstrate the proper way of playing "Seven Cs." Beginning with double pedal "C" and ascending to Pedal "C", C1, C2, C3, C4. Clyde E. Hunt Sr. demonstrates the complete range of the trumpet..
Cancer Songs: Psalms for Pilgrims on the Cancer Journey
Judy Johnson, MLS ’85
Cancer Songs: Psalms for Pilgrims on the Cancer Journey contains fifty meditations on five emotions—fear, anger, sorrow, joy, and gratitude—experienced by patients with cancer or other serious illnesses. An original poem and abstract watercolor introduce each section; a verse from the book of Psalms begins every selection. It is designed to companion and comfort cancer patients and caregivers.
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Alumni Authors, I - Q
The Business Zoo
Brad James, '69
Written by a senior executive with both CFO and CEO experience in a wide range of organizations. The book uses fun and informative stories to illustrate important business and life concepts and lessons. The book is aimed at both those entering the work force and those moving up. Animals and other creatures are used to explain things along the way.
We Did What? Offensive and Inappropriate Behavior in American History
Timothy Jay, M.A. '74, Ph.D. '76
Offensive and Inappropriate Behaviors from past to present. Topics include: sexuality, politics, personal hygiene, mental illness, popular culture, entertainment, comedy, religion, drugs, crime, bad habits.
hippies: a kent state love story
Peter Jedick, '71
A love story set on campus of 鶹ý during the events leading up to the May 4, 1970 tragedy.
鶹ý Men’s Club & Varsity Soccer Media Guide & Record Book of 1949-80
Fred Jermyn, ’74
A complete history of the Men’s Soccer former program from its inception as a Club sport through its years of Varsity status. Rosters, schedules including game results and statistics plus post-season honors and photos are in chronological sequence along with Team and Players Record Books. The Appendix features the history of Men’s Intercollegiate Soccer in both the U.S. and Ohio with listings of the Mid-American Conference, All-Ohio, All-Midwest and All-America teams. The book is 696 pages, posted online and FREE for download.
Additional Publications by Jermyn:Mustang
Jim Kalin
Biography on National Wrestling Hall of Fame coach Mike Milkovich (Kent State alumnus) and his influence on Ohio and American wrestling. This book includes pictures, interviews, stories, and historical content. Milkovich was the Patton of high school wrestling, as intense as the Great Santini and unable to settle for anything but victory.
Animal Crackers
Scott Kraynak, '99
Animal Crackers is a mix of art and poetry, written and illustrated to show what would happen if nature had the power to do to us what we are doing to it.
Loving What Doesn't Last: An Adoration of the Body
Christina Kukuk, ’00
Through lyric essays and poetry, Christina Kukuk finds the spiritual in the most material bodily experiences: from a girl's tumble through adolescent food scarcity to a woman waiting for her lover on the transplant floor. Earthy and divine, funny at times, these pages invite readers into an adoration of the body” birth, food, love, pain, death, and water become skin-wrapped windows into the holy.
Poodle Mistress: An autobiographical story of life with nine toy poodles
Sandi Latimer, '65
The story of my husband and me raising nine toy poodles during our first 27 years of marriage.
Entries In The International Design Competition For The Tokyo International Forum 1989
Daniel Lawrence, '76, M.A. '78
Architectural Design Entries To The Tokyo International Forum 1989 #371 Daniel T Lawrence, Architect, NCARB.
Additional publications by Lawrence:
Historical Dictionary of World's Fairs and Expositions
Entries In The International Design Competition For The Tokyo International Forum 1989
Feasibility Report, Atlantic City Transportation CenterThe Gospel Truth: Where Did Matthew, Mark, Luke and John Get Their Information?
William Lazarus, '71, M.A. '74
The authors of the first four books of the New Testament disagree consistently on basic details of the life of Jesus. Clearly, the writers had to get their information from somewhere. Matthew and Luke are known to have relied on Mark. But, what were Mark’s sources? How about John, who definitely didn’t read Matthew or Luke? This book threads through much of the available literature from the time period to isolate ideas that the authors of the Gospels wove together into four of the most important and enduring texts ever written.
Black Girl's Guide to Ladyhood
Chantrell Lewis, ’15
Black Girl's Guide to Ladyhood was written for girls in their transition to ladyhood. The pitstop between girlhood and womanhood. One of the most challenging times in our lives, the time between ages 12 and 18 years old. Ladies, this guide will help you connect deeper to yourself as you move through this transitional stage of your life with beauty, grace, and self-awareness.
Whitecaps On The Lake, A novel published by TouchPoint Press, March, 2021
Alice Licata, MA ’85, PhD ’88
Whitecaps On The Lake is an exploration of love and loss, guilt and regret, the pursuit of happiness and quirky family relationships, while offering insights into Depression & Anxiety and Alzheimer's disease. It was released March 23rd, 2021 and can be found on Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other major booksellers.
Nurses Making Policy: From Bedside to Boardroom
Ruth Ludwick, ’73, MSN ’81, Ph.D ’93
As COVID-19 evolved, there was no doubt that the world needed nurses. There is no doubt that their voices are essential for reimagining healthcare policies post-pandemic. This book, edited with Becky Patton,’80 and Margarete Zalon makes the case that RNs nurses are ethically bound and uniquely skilled to foster, develop, and evaluate the policies locally, nationally and globally.
The Cassette
Lance Lumley, ’00
Junior high students Alex and Kari met on a summer day and bonded instantly due to their favorite band. From then on, they were inseparable, vowing to always be friends, bonded through their love of music. One cassette album, in particular, defined those days. Years later, Alex drives to his hometown in Ohio as memories flood his mind of a time when music was the soundtrack of their lives.
The Baseball Stadium Insider: A Dissection of All Thirty Ballparks, Legendary Players, and Memorable Moments
Matt Lupica, ‘17
The most comprehensive book written on the MLB ballparks (as of 2015) featuring quotes from players and broadcasters.
Mello's Manuscript: $0 to 5-Figures
Tramell Orr, ’22
This e-book serves as a helpful guide to anyone who has ever been interested in becoming an entrepreneur. It is not a know-it-all guide and you shouldn't expect to read it and become rich overnight. You must read and apply what you learn from it. If you are ready to change your life, this book will kickstart your entrepreneurial journey. Within, you'll learn a bit about the author and the struggle.
Both Career and Love: A Woman's Memoir 1959-1973
Anne Rankin Mahoney, ’59
I graduated from Kent in 1959 with intent on becoming a college professor, then a man's occupation. I also wanted a true partnership marriage. Both were rare in 1959! This is my story, mostly set in New York City, from 1959 to 1973, when I achieved my goal at the U. of Denver. This book is a piece of women's history before there was a women's movement, a love story and a good read.
Loukas and the Game of Chance
Anthony L. Manna, Ph.D. '17
Destiny, Sun, and Moon will allow Loukas to reverse his misfortune and win back all he treasures and loves, won't they?
Interior Design in Practice: Case Studies of Successful Business Models
Terri Maurer, '78
A collection of case studies of interior design firms, from sole proprietors to larger, firms with multiple and international office locations. Case studies are matched with business concepts required to start, grow and eventually plan exit strategies for retirement or the sale of the business.
Advancing Higher Education with Mobile Learning Technologies: Cases, Trends, and Inquiry-Based Methods
Dr. Marian Maxfield, M.Ed. '04, Ph.D. '11
Advancing Higher Education with Mobile Learning Technologies: Cases, Trends, and Inquiry-Based Methods examines the implementation and success of mobile digital learning tools. With the inclusion of data on specific learning environments enhanced by ubiquitous educational technologies, this publication emphasizes the benefits of exploration and discovery in and out of the classroom. This book is an essential reference source for academicians, professionals, education researchers, school administrators, faculty, technology staff, and upper-level students interested in understanding the future of higher education.
The Music of My Life: Finding My Way After My Mother's MS Diagnosis
Steve McClain, ’01, MA ’03
The Music of My Life begins as a narrative of life following Steve McClain’s mother’s diagnosis with Multiple Sclerosis in northeast Ohio. He weaves the story of her struggles with treatment and life as a single mother along with his own experiences with music as a child and later, as a performer. Little did he know during the process of writing this book how much MS would impact his own life.
The Kent State Shootings and What Came Before
David B. McCoy, M.L.S. '90
David B. McCoy earned his history teaching degree from Ashland University and his graduate degree from 鶹ý. His work at Kent explored the influences of socialization on personality development.
Additional publications by McCoy:
Join the Parade of Horses and HeroesBubbles Can't Hold Rain
Jennifer McGlincy, '06
A little girl learns to step out of her bubble of safety and into the scary world of friendship.
Broken Collar
Ron Mitchell, '77
A Catholic priest gets reassigned to his hometown, an industrial village in the Appalachian foothills. He struggles with ego, spirituality, and human desires.
Don’t Touch Your Face, Wash Your Hands + Safety Contract
Antwone J. Morris, ’14
A fun rhyming kid’s book on frequent hand washing.
Changing Collars: Lessons in Transitioning from Blue-Collar Roots to White-Collar Success
Daniel Muller, ’75, MBA ’91
Changing Collars is focused upon helping white-collar professionals succeed in their career journeys.
The Gifted Parenting Journey: A Guide to Self-discovery and Support for Families of Gifted Children
Gail Post, Ph.D.’83
Raising a gifted child can be a challenge. This book combines research, theory and clinical insights associated with the challenges parents of gifted children face and recommends how to find the guidance and support they need. Readers will explore questions that should increase self-awareness and are offered both practical tools for managing emotions and improving their parenting skills.
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Alumni Authors, R - S
Pediatric Nursing: The Critical Components of Nursing Care
Daniel Rausch, '00
Pediatric Nursing Textbook for undergraduate students. Authored Chapter 9- School Age Children. A better way to learn pediatric nursing! This unique, multi-media presentation provides tightly focused pediatric coverage in a highly structured text.
Chronic
Christine Rich, ’02
“Chronic” is the story of how a serious health scare in her late twenties caused Christine Rich to reevaluate and change her focus to wellness and self-love rather than illness and fear. Through raw and personal stories and insights, Rich shares her journey of living with and befriending her less-than-glamorous, often times invisible, illness.
Revelation: An Apocalypse in Fifty-Eight Fights
Andrew Rihn, ‘09
Revelation responds to the fights of Mike Tyson in 100 word prose poems.
The Pasta Family (Goes to Marinara Beach)
Cory Tilson, '10, Laureen Tilson, '11, and Alex Rodgers, '09
When The Pasta Family heads to Marinara Beach for a day of fun in the sun, you know that excitement is right around the corner! But when the family dog (Ziti) wanders off of his leash, the family goes in search of their favorite pet. Join The Pasta Family on their latest beach adventure, catch a wave at the annual surfing competition, and help find Ziti in a surprise ending!
Food & Fitness After 50
Christine Rosenbloom, '73
Food & Fitness After 50 is the opposite of a fad diet book. It counters the confusing clutter in the 'health help' arena by giving readers from age 50 forward simple, straight-forward, common sense tools that put them on the path to a more active and healthy life.
A Guy's Guide to Throat Cancer: Do's and Don'ts for Recovery
Ed Rossman, MLIS '03
His upbeat style encourages people to look at illness through a guy's eyes, not being a victim.
Moments of Truth-A Photographer's Experience of Kent State 1970
Howard Ruffner, ’71
Ruffner not only reproduces a collection of nearly 150 of his photographs―many never published―but also offers a stirring narrative in which he revisits his work and attempts to further examine these events and adds his own experience of them. It is, indeed, an intensely personal journey that he invites us to share.
A Century of Flight at Paton Field: The Story of 鶹ý’s Airport and Flight Education
William D. Schloman, ’98 and Barbara Schloman, MA '89, Ph.D. '98
Kent State's involvement in aviation started in 1939 but the airport's history is now a century old.
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Damned Yankee: The Story of a Marriage
Carolyn Poling Schriber, '60
He was from Massachusetts; she was born and raised in South Carolina. This is the story of their struggle to deal with their ideological differences and hold their family and marriage together as the storm clouds of the Civil War swirl overhead.
Additional publications by Schriber:The Musical World of Halim El-Dabh
Denise Seachrist, Ph.D. '93
The Musical World of Halim El-Dabh focuses on the composer’s career from his arrival in the U.S. in 1950 to his retirement from the faculty of 鶹ý in 1991.
Additional publications by Seachrist:
Snow Hill: In the Shadows of the Ephrata CloisterLineability: The Search for Linearity in Mathematics
Juan Seoane, Ph.D. '06
Bringing together research that was otherwise scattered throughout the literature, Lineability: The Search for Linearity in Mathematics collects the main results on the conditions for the existence of large algebraic substructures. It investigates lineability issues in a variety of areas, including real and complex analysis.
A Ribbon Weaver's Handbook
Sally Shore, '68
An instructional book for weaving with ribbons. Includes equipment and supply lists and photo illustrations for six weave structures. 35 pages of color photographs of the author's work and samples.
RELAUNCH! Stagnation, Change, and Renewal in Mid-Career and Beyond
Steven Simon, Ph.D. '81
RELAUNCH! is about finding or renewing a sense of passion for work. It’s about the antidotes to stagnating in a job or career one doesn’t love or even like or finds boring day in and day out. The book is based on listening to what mid and late career clients have confided as their most distressing career issues and presents an approach to finding a new love for the work one does.
Memoirs of a Shop Teacher
Stanley Sipka, ’64, MS ’72
The book is about me and my interaction with students, faculty and everyone else. I move through my life from birth to the present. I want to convey the events that guided me through my early years, grade and high school, Army, marriage, teaching and retirement. Each day was a learning experience. The goal was to make teaching more rewarding to the students.
Look How Lovely! ¡Mira qué lindo!
Marti Rosario Skarupa, '68, M.S. '81
An exciting journey full of wondrous images and sensory connections, every grandparent's favorite day is now yours as well. Share the marvels of our world with your own child as you help him or her learn a new language and remind yourself that each day is a gift and every child is the most important person in the world .
Black Bonnets and Buggies: Memories of an Amish Life
Joseph Skvarenina, ’71, MEd ’72
Amish family life and culture in today’s world as told through first person experiences.
The Pyramid of Business Success
Christopher Sopko, '82
15 Characteristics All Leaders Need In Order To Build A Successful, Long Term Business
Today's Mathematics: Concepts, Methods and Classroom Activities
William Speer, Ph.D. '76
First published by KSU Mathematics Education Professor Dr. James Heddens, in 1964, the 12th edition of Today’s Mathematics provides a valuable set of ideas and reference materials for K-8 classroom use. Offering a combined coverage of content and methods, this book creates a long-lasting resource, helping pre-service and in-service teachers see the relationship between the mathematics they teach and how they teach it.
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The Secret of Ekaterinburg
Robert Spirko, '65, M.B.A. '70
A spine-tingling tale about Anastasia and what happened to her. Best-selling author, Robert Spirko, serves up a spy-thriller of epic proportions.? Anastasia is the Amelia Earhart of Russia.
Additional publications by Spirko:
The Palestine Conspiracy - Rick Waite, a long-forgotten UPI reporter, discovers a secret plan to destroy Israel, then gets himself kidnapped by the PLO. He and his accomplices discover a secret desert missile base where a mysterious terror organization is ready to launch two missiles armed with nuclear warheads against Haifa and Tel Aviv.These Americans
Jyotsna Sreenivasan, ’86
Winner of the Rosemary Daniell Fiction Prize, this collection of 8 short stories and a novella explores what it means to be an American, from the birth of a child to an immigrant couple to the death of a first-generation mother. Many stories take place in Ohio. "Thought-provoking and diverse" says Midwest Book Review.
Stories of a Hypocrite
Michael Stover, ’13
An autobiography of past relationships that I’ve had and the lessons I learned from them. It’s a written reality show.
Hope's Harbor: A Devotional Journal to Guide Your Healing
Trish Stukbauer, ’91
In the stormy seas of life, grief often pounds us like relentless waves, leaving us desperately searching for a safe harbor. Embracing the metaphorical journey of grief, these 60 devotions offer a lifeline for those navigating the unpredictable waves of sorrow, affirming that God is an unwavering anchor in our tumultuous seas of emotions.
Uncertainty, Fear, Perspective and Prayer. Change, Creativity, Curiosity and Hope in a Crisis Called Pandemic
Trish Stukbauer, ’91
Can we cling to hope amid crisis? Can we one day become the nation we were meant to be, where equality, truth and empathy rise about color, money and power. Can we find normal amid chaos, fear and uncertainty. Poetry and essays by 13 authors edited and compiled by Trish Stukbauer and former Kent State Journalism Professor Glenn Proctor.
Zero Balancing Expanded: The Attitude of Awaiting a Fish
Judith Sullivan, '68
Published by the Upledger Institute and filled with detailed descriptions and illustrations, Zero Balancing Expanded offers excellent information to further assist students in incorporating cranial work and visceral work into the Zero Balancing session and offers excellent ways to further assist their clients to recover and retain their health. ZB is therapy without words, acupuncture without needles, massage without removing clothes.
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Alumni Authors, T - Z
Managerial Accounting, with Karen Braun, 4th edition, Pearson Prentice-Hall, 2014
Wendy Tietz, Ph.D. '07
This book is a managerial accounting textbook used at universities across the U.S. and Canada.
The Pasta Family (Goes to Marinara Beach)
Cory Tilson, '10, Laureen Tilson, '11, and Alex Rodgers, '09
When The Pasta Family heads to Marinara Beach for a day of fun in the sun, you know that excitement is right around the corner! But when the family dog (Ziti) wanders off of his leash, the family goes in search of their favorite pet. Join The Pasta Family on their latest beach adventure, catch a wave at the annual surfing competition, and help find Ziti in a surprise ending!
Rings of Passage: A Time Travel Novel with Richard III
Karla Tipton, '82
Modern-day woman Anise Wynford stumbles down her porch steps into a raging medieval battle. She finds her way to the king’s court in the final days of the Wars of the Roses and falls in love with Richard III. Knowing Richard will soon die in battle, Anise must choose whether to save his life and alter the course of history.
Steam - Its Generation and Use - 42nd Edition
Greg Tomei, '84
First published in 1875 and now in its 42nd edition, "Steam/its generation and use" is the longest continually published engineering textbook in the world. It has evolved to become a highly technical and comprehensive reference for advanced steam generation and emissions control technologies, steam fundamentals, and related subjects, and is relied upon by educators, students, engineers and other utility and industry professionals around the world.
I'll Never Forget
Dana Ullom-Vucelich, ’86
In her inaugural book, I’ll Never Forget, Dana Ullom-Vucelich, 鶹ý graduate, shares her passion for intergenerational relationships. A child is born, a grandmother’s heart swells and a lasting promise begins. The repeating prose touching each page of the book is one that every young and old heart yearns to hear, “I’ll love you always, just as you are.”
Global Indios: The Indigenous Struggle for Justice in Sixteenth-Century Spain
Nancy Van Deusen, '76
This book examines over one hundred lawsuits that indio slaves brought to the Spanish court in the mid-sixteenth century to gain their freedom. The category indio was largely constructed during these lawsuits, and the book emphasizes the need to situate colonial indigenous subjects and slavery in a global context. Published by Duke University Press, 2015.
American Vistas – The Life and Art of John Van Alstine
John Van Alstine, ’74
For nearly 50 years, John Van Alstine has created abstract sculptures forged with stone and steel. At their essence, they explore natural forces and man-made elements, conveying the American experience as the confluence/conflict between wilderness and industrialization.
And Now You Know Too! The Story of How the Black Squirrel Came to Kent
Deborah Walker, M.A. '78 and Kathleen Frazier, '70, M.A. '76, EDS '81
It is a children's book that is historically and scientifically factual and for all readers to learn the true story of how the black squirrel came to Kent. On their bold adventure, Bucky, the black squirrel and his new friend Fletcher, search for the answer. Along the way, they find one person who knows the true story. Join them!
"Pickles & Preserves: A Savor the South Cookbook"
Andrea Weigl, '97
This book is part of a series of single-subject cookbooks from University of North Carolina Press. It contains 50 recipes for pickles and preserves and easy instructions on canning.
Love Letters from the Marine Wolf: A US Hospital and Transport Ship, an Army Medic Afloat, and a War Bride in World War II
Michele Makros Weitzel, '77
A captivating, evocative biography that shares the historical perspectives from those who fought in World War II.
Closing Chapters: Urban Change, Religious Reform, and the Decline of Youngstown's Catholic Elementary Schools, 1960-2006
Thomas Welsh, Ph.D. '09
Closing Chapters attempts to explain the disintegration of urban parochial schools in Youngstown, Ohio, a onetime industrial center that lost all but one of its eighteen Catholic parochial elementary schools between 1960 and 2006. Through this examination of Youngstown, Welsh sheds light on a significant national phenomenon: the fragmentation of American Catholic identity.
Fractured Legacy
Felicia Wetzig, MA ’12
Unraveling the hotel’s secrets won’t be easy but Kaylyn soon finds herself the target of a dark entity that has been trapped in the building for decades.
"I AM Powered"
MaryAnn Wohlwend, '92
Biblical Counselor, Maryann Wohlwend walks alongside encouraging you through the valleys and edifying you toward the mountaintop. Journal
Cancer & Other Things I'm Grateful For: How Self-Advocacy and Integrative Medicine Led to Holistic Healing
Erika K Wolf, ’94
Follow Erika on her journey as she writes from the heart in real time about her diagnosis, treatment, and ultimate recovery from an advanced form of breast cancer. Alongside traditional oncology care, Erika’s natural curiosity and self-determination led her to explore the holistic therapies of integrative medicine. She demonstrates how to remain positive, even when facing an uncertain future.
Fundamentals of Nursing: Active learning for collaborative practice
Barbara Yoost '77, MSN '94
This first edition nursing textbook is designed for the 21st century student with active learning strategies throughout to help build critical thinking and clinical decision-making skills necessary for practice in our current fast-paced healthcare environment. In addition to the textbook, online ancillaries help students integrate theory and practice, and support the transformation of nursing students to professionals.
Cooper: a fish, a flower shop, a funeral home and a happy ending
Beth Snode Zbasnik, ’87, M.A.’96
Cooper, a sweet betta fish, accidentally ends up at a funeral home right alongside the flower arrangements.
It Sucks to Be a Gimp: Pedaling to Freedom
Peter Zeidner, '86
Pete’s story, in his own words, pulls you in from the start and keeps you riveted. As much as the cerebral palsy he is born with limits him physically, it only serves as a catalyst for daring to dream how to defeat it, both in his own life and on behalf of others affected by it.
Just as Heavy: A Collection of Poetry
Terrii Zernechel, ’08
A collection of poetry following the diagnosis of chronic major depressive disorder, a death, a divorce and the ending of another significant relationship. This book is a personal journey of one woman struggling to find her way through a dark time. Join the author on her journey from the depths of depression into acceptance and the next phase of her life.