The Union Bookshelf regularly features new books written by alumni authors and
other members of the Union community. If you're an author and would like to be included in
an upcoming issue, please send a copy of the book as well as your publisher's news release
to the Office of Communications, Union College, Schenectady, N.Y. 12308-3169.
Frederick Maser '30
The Little Known Appearances of Jesus is
a fantasy containing several vignettes of Jesus appearing after his ressurection. The
confrontations covered in the book are speculative accounts of what could have happened if
Jesus met again with people he had dealings with in the Gospels, such as Pontius Pilate,
Caiaphas, Herod, the rich young ruler, and the woman at the well. The author says that his
book is an effort to “fill in the gaps” and proposes that there were moving
conversations between Jesus and people other than the disciples. He notes that the early
manuscripts from which these stories were taken do not follow the generally-accepted New
Testament chronology. The 100-page paperbound book is published by Academy Books, of
Rutland, Vt.
Nguyen Dinh-Hoa '50
Professor emeritus in the Department of Linguistics at Southern Illinois University,
Nguyen Dinh-Hoa has written several books. Two volumes, Beginning
English for Vietnamese Speakers and Intermediate
English for Vietnamese Speakers, are designed for the student who has no
knowledge of the English language. Language in Vietnamese Society: Some Articles by Nguyen
Dinh-Hoa is a compilation of nine articles designed to acquaint the reader with Vietnamese
culture, concentrating on linguistic and literary topics.
Vietnamese Literature: A Brief Survey,
published in 1994, is what the author calls “a bird's-eye view of the vast garden of
Vietnamese literature from the earliest times down to the 1980s.” The book reveals
various aspects of the life of peasants and scholars alike and includes hymns and poems
written by Zen Buddhist monks, writings by classical Chinese and southern Vietnamese
writers, and stories carried down by oral traditions. The 190-page book is published by
San Diego State University.
In 1997, Dinh-Hoa completed Vietnamese, an Introduction
to Southeast Asian Language prepared from lecture notes the author used in
his Vietnamese grammar classes over the years. The work is included in the London Oriental
and African Language Library, Europe's largest institution specializing in the study of
languages and cultures of Africa and Asia. Each volume in the series is written by an
acknowledged expert who has carried out original research and who has firsthand knowledge
of the area in which it was spoken.
Vietnamese Literature: An Anthology,
completed in 1998, has poems and prose texts by a large number of authors, both historic
and contemporary. The author says the work will enable the reader to “enjoy the
masterpieces of a literature that has been called a literature of the people, by the
people, and for the people.” This book was published by San Diego State University.
Chauncey Wood '57
Herbert's Golden Harpe or His Heavenly Hymne
is a compilation of 238 numbered entries of paragraph length accompanied by a list of
biblical passages from which the author put together his text. The readings, written by
George Herbert in the early 1600s, are described as “an attempt to cast the sinner's
prayer entirely in the words of God, thereby showing the author's dependence upon God for
anything of a positive spiritual nature.” For inquiries about this volume or others
in the series, contact Editor, George Hebert Journal, Department of English, Sacred Heart
University, Fairfield, Conn. 06432 or e-mail spgottllieb@aol.com.
Hershel Raff '75, Ph.D.
Physiology Secrets, published by Hanley and Belflus, is a Socratic-method study guide
to medical physiology for use primarily by medical and dental students in their first year
of study. The book is intended especially for study in Part I of the medical and dental
board exams. Raff, who lives with his wife, Judy Kornfeld Raff '75, in Milwaukee, is
professor of medicine and physiology at the Medical College of Wisconsin and director of
the Endocrine Research Laboratory at St. Luke's Medical Center.
David Strom '76
How do you solve common e-mail problems such as avoiding unwanted spam, reading
attachments, securing your messages, and interpreting errors? In
Internet Messaging: From the Desktop to the Enterprise, Marshall T. Rose
(one of the inventors of Internet e-mail) and David Strom '76 (a mathematics major who has
written many articles about networking and Internet-related topics for computer trade
magazines) offer lots of practical advice and explain the latest e-mail and Internet
standards and the ways they are implemented in several popular e-mail products. The book is helpful for both information systems professionals and advanced e-mail users alike. The book was published by Prentice Hall.