Books and Beyond

The can't-miss books, podcasts, films, and multimedia with a Queen's connection.

Summer 2022

  • Book cover showing crumbled ruins.

    Ruin

    Rebecca Jaremko Bromwich, Law鈥01, LLM鈥02

    In her 2020 debut novel, Rebecca Jaremko Bromwich, Law鈥01, LLM鈥02, introduced Enid Alger Kimble, a former lawyer and stay-at-home mom whose carefully crafted life belies a complicated past and an uncertain future. In Ruin, Bromwich鈥檚 2022 sequel from Demeter Press, Enid is back, and her life is once again in disarray as she contends with midlife, divorce, single parenthood, and COVID-19.

  • Book cover showing a map of Africa with a carved head necklace on top.

    Sometime in Africa

    Neil B. Dukas, Artsci鈥83

    Not long after graduation, Neil B. Dukas, Artsci鈥83, hitchhiked across the length of Africa, filling three journals with the tales of his travels and 鈥渟elf-inflicted near-death experiences.鈥 Almost 40 years later, those journals became the inspiration for Dukas鈥檚 memoir of his life-defining adventure. Sometime in Africa was released in May 2022 by Kaladar Books in San Francisco and is available on Amazon.

  • Green book cover with gold text 鈥 Field Guide to the Lost Flower of Crete by Elenore Schonmaier

    Field Guide to the Lost Flower of Crete

    Eleonore Sch枚nmaier, Artsci鈥85, NSc鈥86

    Eleonore Sch枚nmaier, Artsci鈥85, NSc鈥86, mixes intimate reflection with highly charged political and environmental issues to create the surreal feeling that winds its way through her fourth poetry collection, Field Guide to the Lost Flower of Crete, released in 2021 by McGill-Queen鈥檚 University Press. Sch枚nmaier is also celebrating the release of the German translation of an older collection, Wavelengths of Your Song. was released in Germany in time for the Frankfurt Book Fair last fall.

  • Book cover showing a hockey stick and puck in front of a vintage style microphone.

    The Legend

    Jean (Bangay) Mills, Artsci鈥78, MA鈥80

    Longtime sports reporter Jean (Bangay) Mills, Artsci鈥78, MA鈥80, honed her craft as a student, working as sports director at CFRC radio and writing for the Queen鈥檚 Journal鈥檚 sports section before spending a decade on the media bench for Curling Canada. Mills draws on those experiences in her third young adult novel, published in November 2021 by Red Deer Press. The Legend tells the story of a teenaged hockey player who finds a job as a radio sports reporter while recovering from an injury.

Spring 2022

  • Book cover 鈥 blue background with white text

    Called! A Longshot鈥檚 Story

    Rev. Dr. Gordon Postill, Arts鈥71

    How does a cynical, addicted university dropout find faith, purpose, and a fulfilling career as a United Church of Canada minister? Rev. Dr. Gordon Postill, Arts鈥71, tells the story of his unlikely transformation in Called! A Longshot鈥檚 Story, his deeply personal memoir, self-published through FriesenPress in late 2021. While his story is candid and revealing, he says he is sharing it 鈥渢o convey some hope and compassion to those readers who are desperately longing for a second chance.鈥

  • Book cover 鈥 Summits of Self written large on the cover with an image of people climbing a hill inset in the letters of 'self'

    Summits of Self: The Seven Peaks of Personal Growth

    Alan Mallory, Sc鈥07

    A year after graduating from Queen鈥檚 Engineering, Alan Mallory, Sc鈥07, and three of his family members made history when they became the first family to scale Mount Everest together. Mallory, who now works as a speaker and performance coach, uses this and other mountain-climbing adventures as a metaphor for self-discovery in Summits of Self: The Seven Peaks of Personal Growth. The book weaves stories of Mallory鈥檚 exploits with practical strategies for understanding motivation, improving mental health, finding balance, and living with purpose.

  • Book cover 鈥 woman in a tank top and red shorts is running in a field of yellow flower

    Running Sideways: The Olympic Champion who Made Track and Field History

    Jeff Todd, Artsci鈥04

    Bahamian track star Pauline Davis is probably best known as the winner of the Caribbean鈥檚 first individual Olympic gold medal in sprinting 鈥 a medal she received in 2009, nine years after running the race. Writing under the pseudonym T.R. Todd, Jeff Todd, Artsci鈥04, tells the story of Davis鈥檚 rise from poverty to Olympic glory, and the doping scandal that resulted in her unlikely gold medal. Running Sideways: The Olympic Champion who Made Track and Field History was released by Rowman & Littlefield in February.

  • Book cover 鈥 torn black and white photo of two little girls, only the face of one girl is now visible, sitting on top of sand

    Horses in the Sand

    Lorrie Potvin, Ed鈥03

    After publishing her memoir in 2009, Lorrie Potvin, Ed鈥03, realized her story wasn鈥檛 quite finished. Horses in the Sand, her second memoir, is coming this spring from Inanna Publications. With this short story collection, Potvin details the milestone events in her life and the ways they impacted her evolving identity: coming out to her family, meeting her birth father and his family, and discovering her M茅tis ancestry and the community and sense of belonging that came with it.

Winter 2021

  • Book cover

    Bitcoin and the Future of Fundraising

    Anne Connelly (Artsci鈥07)

    Cryptocurrency has had its share of publicity over the last few years, but its impact on the non-profit sector is less widely known. Is Bitcoin a viable fundraising tool? Not only does Anne Connelly (Artsci鈥07) think it is, she鈥檚 also convinced it鈥檚 the technology that will take fundraising into the future. In Bitcoin and the Future of Fundraising, co-authored with Jason Shim, she introduces fundraisers to the world of cryptocurrency and outlines an easy-to-implement plan to set up a Bitcoin donation program and get donors excited about using it.

  • Book cover

    The Limestone City: Stone Buildings in the Kingston Region 1790-1930

    Jennifer McKendry (MA鈥84, PhD, Toronto)

    Architectural historian Jennifer McKendry (MA鈥84, PhD, Toronto) has carved out a reputation as an expert on Kingston鈥檚 historic architecture. So it was only a matter of time before she turned her attention to limestone, the building material that inspired Kingston鈥檚 nickname. In her sixth book, Kingston, The Limestone City: Stone Buildings in the Kingston Region 1790-1930, she tackles limestone quarrying and construction methods, stone landscaping, fences, wall construction, and carving.  Kingston, The Limestone City is available exclusively in the Limestone City at Novel Idea bookstore.

  • Book cover

    Into the Dragon鈥檚 Jaws: A Canadian Combat Surgeon

    Dr. Garry Willard (MED鈥63) and Dr. Kenneth Bradley (MED鈥63)

    A few years after earning their medical degrees at Queen鈥檚, Dr. Garry Willard (MED鈥63) and Dr. Kenneth Bradley (MED鈥63) became the first two Canadian medical officers deployed in the Vietnam War, performing combat-casualty surgeries near the Demilitarized Zone in the wake of the Tet Offensive. Dr. Willard details their adventures in Into the Dragon鈥檚 Jaws: A Canadian Combat Surgeon in the Vietnam War, a candid, dramatic, and often heartwarming look at the human consequences of war, published by Tellwell Talent.  A portion of the proceeds will go toward post-traumatic stress disorder research and treatment.

  • Book cover

    The Ethics of Exile: A Political Theory of Diaspora

    Ashwini Vasanthakumar

    Ashwini Vasanthakumar, a Queen鈥檚 Law associate professor, explores the complex, but often-vital relationships between exiles and their homelands in The Ethics of Exile: A Political Theory of Diaspora, from Oxford University Press. Through a series of case studies, she illustrates how exiles often play important moral and political roles in countering injustices in the countries they鈥檝e left, and asks her readers to think about the responsibilities we have toward those who have been forced to leave their homes.

Fall 2021

  • Lessons from Thor cover

    Lessons from Thor

    Kimberley DeFiori, MBA'20

    As the world evolves toward a deeper understanding of mental illness and the importance of seeking treatment, Kimberly DeFiori (MBA鈥20) shares an unusual perspective on her own recovery. Lessons from Thor, her debut book from Tactical 16 Publishing, tells the story of DeFiori鈥檚 struggles with post-traumatic stress disorder while serving in the U.S. Army and the life-changing lessons she鈥檚 learned from her service dog, Thor. 

  • Chasing the Blues cover

    Chasing the Blues: A Traveler鈥檚 Guide to America鈥檚 Music

    Craig Jones, PhD'97

    Musician Craig Jones (PhD鈥97) traces the cultural and geographic journey of perhaps the single most influential modern music genre in Chasing the Blues: A Traveler鈥檚 Guide to America鈥檚 Music, which he co-authored with Kingston-based travel writer Josephine Matyas. Together they chart the history of the blues, from its birth in the pre-Emancipation Mississippi Delta to its modern-day influence on nearly every form of popular music.

  • Ava Jean's Wings cover

    Ava Jean's Wings

    Catherine Taylor, MSc'16

    Catherine Taylor (MSc鈥16) turned personal tragedy into a heartwarming lesson for young children. She wrote Ava Jean鈥檚 Wings, a rhyming story of a young angel who refuses to hide her wings, in 2019 while pregnant with her first child. Although her pregnancy ended in miscarriage, the story ultimately became a children鈥檚 book, illustrated by Champa Gunawardana, which Kickstarter recognized with the Project We Love label for its 鈥渃ompelling message and creativity.鈥 The book, which was released in August, encourages children to recognize their unique qualities, use their talents, and be proud of who they are.

  • Free Radical by Tyler Black book cover

    Free Radical

    Lawrence Finlay, Artsc'92

    A backpacking trip through Soviet-era Estonia and a decades-long career in the tech industry inspired Free Radical, the debut novel by Lawrence Finlay (Artsci鈥92), which he released under the pseudonym Tyler Black. The book, published by FriesenPress, tells the story of James, a U.K. tech-firm employee who finds himself fighting for his life in the middle of a northeastern European forest, his only support coming from a toy-sized robot with the ability to learn by watching and listening to humans.