I’m Currently Reading…

With winter break coming up, who doesn’t love to grab their favorite hot beverage, sit down with a blanket, and lose themselves in a good book?  Not only could you explore the suggestions from our previous list, but we have some more suggestions for you!

Professor Victoria Karre gave us two recommendations!  The first is a non fiction book, Maybe You Should Talk to Someone by Lori Gottlieb.  It’s written from Lori’s perspective as a mental health therapist who is also pursuing her own psychotherapy.  As she processes her break-up with the help of her therapist, Lori shares what takes place in those sessions with her clients.  The book offers comedic relief while normalizing psychotherapy in society.  For those that love psychological thrillers, Victoria recommends Local Woman Missing by Mary Kubica.  In this book, two women and a child go missing soon after one another.  As the search continues, a connection is made between the cases which leads to more confusion.  After 11 years, the child returns but the truth isn’t what it seems.

Professor Alexey Ignatchenko recommended a must read for instructors called, Please Understand Me II: Temperament, Character, Intelligence by David Keirsey.  The book has provided insight to allow Alexey to better understand the people around him.  This has included the motivations and behaviors behind his students, colleagues, friends, and family!

Dr. Todd Sodano has quite the stack of books he has been reading lately.  First on his list is The Shakespeare Requirement by Julie Schumacher, which is a follow-up novel in her series about Professor Jay Fitger, an English department chair of the fictional Payne University, who is trying to juggle the chainsaws of saving the humanities while tending to his faculty.
It’s a great follow-up to Schumacher’s Dear Committee Members, where we first met Fitger.  A few months ago, Schumacher published The English Experience, in which we follow Fitger to England on a trip with his students.  Also on his list is from Upstate New York’s own Richard Russo’s latest novel, Somebody’s Fool, his follow-up to Nobody’s Fool and Everybody’s Fool.  The final book on his currently reading list is, Deliver Me from Nowhere: The Making of Bruce Springsteen’s Nebraska by Warren Zanes, who happens to be a UR Ph.D. Nebraska is a classic Bruce album, released just before his Born in the USA record; by classic, Dr. Sodano is paraphrasing Mark Twain, in that it’s an album that everyone wants to own but no one wants to listen to.

Quilting Our Community – The Design

As Dean Ann Marie Fallon stated when describing the project, “Quilt-making has a long and storied tradition in the U.S. and especially New York.  Susan B. Anthony was herself a noted quilter who went to quilting bees to advocate for suffrage.  Quilts are historically the ways we patch together different materials to create something new.  At Fisher we come from different places, are interested in different things, but we come together to make something new.”

A quilt itself is a great representation of our school.  Not only is there the art in its design, but there’s also the math in piecing the design together.  Quilting Our Community came about to help not only create a tangible representation of the School of Arts and Sciences, but also to make connections amongst its members.

On October 19th and November 30th, faculty, students, and staff gathered in Tepas Commons for our own modern quilting bee.  While quilts typically contain different patterns and motifs made out of fabric scraps, our quilt square designers were equipped with markers, fabric paint, and their imaginations to show one of their favorite parts of the Arts and Sciences.  Many decided to design a square representing their major, while others elected to depict one of their hobbies.

With nearly 80 squares, the quilt is almost ready to be sewn together.    Thank you to all of those that participated!  We are looking forward to having the quilt all put together and on display in Basil for everyone to see.  If you weren’t able to join us but would like to make a square, be sure to stop by Kearney 203!  All quilt squares should be submitted before the new year.