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Spotlight: Gifts of prose

Photo: Whether it is a coffee table art catalog or a contemplate book of poetry, UC Davis writers (and our alumni) are worth reading. (Karin Higgins/UC Davis photo)

Whether it is a coffee table art catalog or a book of essays on soccer, UC Davis writers (and our alumni) are worth reading. (Karin Higgins/UC Davis photo)

Ideas for beer lovers and bikers, sci fi fans and Wikipediaists

Books always make good gifts, especially at the holidays. Here are 13 new titles, published by UC Davis faculty, alumni or staff during the past year, with two 2007 exceptions.

Included are books that will appeal to beer lovers, bike enthusiasts and science fiction fans as well as soccer nuts, farmers’ market regulars and conspiracy theorists.

Three of the books, in addition to being written by authors with UC Davis ties, also focus on the campus: One is a photographic tribute to the arboretum; another is a full-color catalog of works by Wayne Thiebaud and other renowned art department faculty; and the third is a novel set on campus in the ’60s.

Thanks to Paul Takushi, UC Davis Bookstore bookseller, for compiling the eclectic holiday list.

Book cover: Grape vs. Grain: A Historical, Technological and Social Comparison of Wine and Beer

Grape vs. Grain: A Historical, Technological and Social Comparison of Wine and Beer by Charles Bamforth

For beer lovers. Or wine lovers. Or beer-and-wine lovers: This book is written by the chair of food science and technology and the Anheuser-Busch Endowed Professor in Malting and Brewing Sciences at UC Davis. Says Alan Tardi, author of Romancing the Vine: “ Grape vs. Grain offers a thorough, comparative look at mankind’s two most beloved and culturally significant beverages (and) will surely change the mind of anyone who thinks of beer as wine’s less-sophisticated ‘poor relation.’ (The book’s) jovial approach to the subject is as clean and refreshing as a Blanche de Bruges on a hot summer day … I’d love to sit down and share a pint with its author!”

Book cover: Marysville’s Chinatown

Marysville’s Chinatown co-authored by Brian Tom ’70, law

For California history and Chinese American history buffs: While enrolled in law school at UC Davis, Tom led a coalition that established the Asian American Studies Program, the first student-founded academic program in the university’s history and one of the first Asian American studies programs nationwide. Tom went on to practice law in San Francisco for more than 25 years and now directs the Chinese American Museum of Northern California, which he also founded. Marysville’s Chinatown, part of Arcadia Publishing’s Images of America series, provides a wealth of information about one of the most important Chinatowns in America.

Book cover: Myself Painting: Poems

Myself Painting: Poems by Clarence Major

For poets and painters: Prizewinning poet, painter and novelist — and professor emeritus of English Clarence Major evokes form and color to communicate images: “Desire, artichoke green … leaves all radiant, / creating the thickness of blue shadows.” He also “paints” sounds. Major is a National Book Award Bronze Medal finalist, winner of the National Council on the Arts Award and the New York Cultural Foundation Prize. He is the author of numerous books of poetry as well as critically acclaimed fiction and nonfiction.

Book cover: The Global Game: Writers on Soccer

The Global Game: Writers on Soccer co-edited by Alon Raab

This book includes poetry and prose from Ted Hughes, Gay Talese, Eduardo Galeano, Günter Grass, Giovanna Pollarolo, Mario Vargas Llosa and Elvis Costello, among others. The volume is edited by Alon Raab, a lecturer in religious studies, together with freelance soccer writer John Turnbull and Thom Satterlee, an associate professor of English at Taylor University. Andrei Markovits, author of Offside: Soccer and American Exceptionalism, praises the book’s “wonderfully rich essays” and “deeply nuanced literature.”

Book cover: YOU SEE: The Early Years of the UC Davis Studio Art Faculty

YOU SEE: The Early Years of the UC Davis Studio Art Faculty

This book will catch the eye of art lovers on your holiday gift list. The softbound volume is a full-color catalog of works in the campus’s permanent collection by Robert Arneson, Roy De Forest, Manuel Neri, Wayne Thiebaud and William T. Wiley, five of the most significant artists to live and work in Northern California. The catalog, published in 2007 and available only at the UC Davis Bookstore, was created to accompany “YOU SEE,” an exhibit of the works held last summer at the Nelson Gallery on campus. The collection is now on a two-year tour of four other cities in California and Nevada.

Book cover: Health at Every Size: The Surprising Truth About Your Weight

Health at Every Size: The Surprising Truth About Your Weight by Linda Bacon

Weight-conscious readers, slogging their way through holiday feasts and dreading the perennial News Year’s diet resolution, may find welcome relief in this book by a UC Davis nutritionist and independent nutrition consultant. Bacon encourages readers to emphasize healthy living rather than dieting or exercise programs, and to pay more attention to internal body cues that signal hunger and fullness than to calorie-counting. Her research has shown that obese women who follow this strategy make significant improvements in both metabolic and psychological health.

Book cover: A Walk through Nature at the University’s Arboretum in Davis, California

A Walk through Nature at the University’s Arboretum in Davis, California by Carol Chandler

Arboretum fans will recognize some of their favorite places in this book that was photographed and written by Chandler, an administrative assistant at UC Davis’ Crocker Nuclear Laboratory. The 52-page, full-color book is a tribute to the 100-acre refuge and was published in 2007.

Book cover: California’s New Green Revolution: Pioneers in Sustainable Agriculture

California’s New Green Revolution: Pioneers in Sustainable Agriculture by Desmond Jolly

Cooperative Extension specialist Desmond Jolly profiles a cross-section of farmers and marketers who use and seek out innovative methods to protect natural resources while building community links with consumers through farmers markets and community-supported agriculture. Jolly, former director of the Small Farm Program, wrote the book with Isabella Kenfield, a former staff member. The full-color volume is available from the Small Farm Center.

Book cover: Delancey’s Stapler: Love, Lust, Duty, Doom, Rage, Revelation and Pizza

Delancey’s Stapler: Love, Lust, Duty, Doom, Rage, Revelation and Pizza by Dave Veith ’66

This novel by alum Dave Veith is a flashback to UC Davis in the ’60s, when draft boards loomed, “guys had to sign out the girls from their dorms” and female students “wore nylon stockings to the pizza parlor.” Veith, now retired, lives with his wife in Northern California. His book, based on his undergraduate years on campus, is available on his Web site.

Book cover: The Bike to Work Guide: What You Need to Know to Save Gas, Go Green, Get Fit

The Bike to Work Guide: What You Need to Know to Save Gas, Go Green, Get Fit co-written by Paul Dorn

This book is written by Dorn, assistant director of marketing for campus recreation, and Roni Sarig. The paperback guide is for cyclists who want to extend the fun they have biking on weekends to their daily commute. Those who haven’t been on a bike in years but want to start saving on fuel and car costs will also find useful information.

Book cover: Nanovision: Engineering the Future

Nanovision: Engineering the Future by Colin Milburn

For scientists and science fiction lovers: In this book, Milburn, an assistant professor of English, argues that nanotechnology theories, laboratory instruments and research programs are inextricable from fictional narratives. Davis-based science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson has this to say about the book: “There has been so much hype and controversy surrounding nanotech that it has been hard to figure out what it really is or might become. This wonderful book spectacularly clarifies matters … That Colin Milburn is also often wickedly funny is much appreciated, and a very appropriate response to nanotech’s constant evocations of paradise or apocalypse.”

Book cover: How Wikipedia Works: And How You Can Be a Part of It

How Wikipedia Works: And How You Can Be a Part of It co-written by Phoebe Ayers

For Wikipedia users (and who isn’t one?): This guide by Phoebe Ayers (user=phoebe), a librarian at the UC Davis Physical Sciences and Engineering Library and organizer of Wikimania conferences, Charles Matthews, a mathematician who has taught at Cambridge and Harvard, and Ben Yates, a technical editor who writes a blog about Wikipedia. In How Wikipedia Works, the trio offers insight, anecdotes and tips for finding information and evaluating the quality and reliability of articles; contributing to existing articles; adding new articles that conform to Wikipedia’s guidelines and best practices and therefore won’t be deleted; and communicating with other Wikipedians.

Book cover: 25¢ Rocket Ship to the Stars

25¢ Rocket Ship to the Stars by Gary Osgood Clark

For science fiction fans who also appreciate poetry: Written by Gary Osgood Clark, the book is slim enough to fit in any stocking. Reviewer Paul Di Filippo, writing in Asimov’s Science Fiction, calls it “enchanting.” Clark, retired after 25 years as a library assistant at UC Davis, has published three other collections of poetry. He lives in a Davis mobile home with his cat, Ariel.

Claudia Morain covers law, business, education. social sciences and the humanities for the UC Davis News Service.