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Books by UU authors, Fall 2007

A selection of books written by Unitarian Universalists.
By Jane Greer
Fall 2007 8.18.07

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Fiction

Summers at Blue Lake. Jill Althouse-Wood. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2007; $23.95. B.J. Elling­ton returns to her grandmothers’ house, where she spent many summers, to claim an inheritance and put her life back together after a divorce. The author is a member of the Unitarian Univer­salist Church of Lancaster, Pa.

Young adult fiction

Swede Dreams. Eva Apelqvist. speak, Penguin Group, 2007; $6.99. College student Calista Swanson spends a semester abroad in Stock­holm, motivated in part by her desire to reconnect with a certain Swedish exchange student. Eva Apelqvist is a member of Blue Hills Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in Rice Lake, Wisc.

The Pea Soup Poisonings. Nancy Means Wright. Hilliard Harris, 2006; $14.95. Winner of the 2006 Agatha Award for Best Children’s/Young Adult Novel. To be admitted to the Northern Spy Club, Zoe Ellwood has to solve the mystery of who poisoned Tiny Alice Fairweather’s grandmother. The author is a member of the Champlain Valley Unitarian Universalist Society in Middlebury, Vt.

The Opposite of Music. Janet Ruth Young. Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2007; $15.99. A family copes with a father’s deep depression, developing some of their own therapeutic treatments. The story is written in the voice of the teenage son. The author is a member of the Independent Christian Church, UU, in Gloucester, Mass.

Poetry and nonfiction

More Than Anything: Poems. By Hiram Larew. VRZHU Press, 2007; $12.01 (www.vrzhu.com). Hiram Larew’s work has been called “quirky, engaging [and] sneakily profound.” He is a member of Davies Memorial Unitarian Universalist Church in Camp Springs, Md.

How to Bury a Goldfish: And Other Ceremonies and Cele­brations for Everyday Life. By Virginia Lang and Louise Nayer. Skinner House Books, 2007; $15. A guide to creating rituals for everyday events and special occasions like adopting a child, going off to college, honoring an elder, and, yes, burying a goldfish. Nayer is a member of First UU Society of San Francisco.

In Praise of Animals: A Treasury of Poems, Quotations and Readings. Collected by Edward Searl. Skinner House Books, 2007; $14. An anthology celebrating cats, dogs, and other beasts. The Rev. Edward Searl is editor of a series of quotation books and is the author of In Memoriam: A Guide to Modern Funeral and Memorial Services.

The Book of Rude and Other Outrages: A Queer Self-Portrait. By Stephan Sure. Ed. by Charles Suhor. MBF Press, 2007; $16.95. A collection of the poems and writings of Stephan Sure, killed at 39, collected and edited by his father. Charles Suhor is a member of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Montgomery, Ala.

Willow, Wine, Mirror, Moon: Women’s Poems from Tang China. Trans. with an introduction by Jeanne Larsen. BOA Editions, 2005; $16.50. Women’s poetry from the Tang dynasty (618–907), the golden age of Chinese poetry. A professor of English at Hollis University, Larsen is a member of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Roanoke, Va. She is the author of three historical novels set in China and a collection of poetry.

The Stork Market: America’s Multi-billion Dollar Unregulated Adoption Industry. Mirah Riben. Advocate Publications, 2007; $18.50. Describes domestic and international adoption from ethical, legal, and financial points of view. Riben is a member of the UU Congre­gation of Princeton, N.J.


Submissions for Books by UU Authors may be sent to UU World, 25 Beacon Street, Boston MA 02108. Indicate publisher, date, price, and the author's UU affiliation. We cannot include every title and cannot return books. Preference will be given to books of general interest; self-published books will be included selectively.

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