Honoring Our Faculty Achievements 2003

Browse or jump to the faculty member's last name:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

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Atlas Shrugged 
by Ayn Rand

While seeking to find my sense of identity and individuality in the collectivist culture of India, Atlas Shrugged was a pillar of strength that bolstered me during some dark years of internal (and external) struggle. It served as a beacon for the United States, gave me the conviction to dream, and the dedication to pursue those dreams to fruition.

Rajshree Agarwal 
Department of Business Administration

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Mere Christianity 
by C.S. Lewis

Few books have had as profound influence on my as this one. Both as an example of clarity in writing -- few academics do this well -- and as a compelling argument for seeing Christianity in a new light, this book is one of the few that I keep re-reading every few years, and one of the few that makes me stop and think deeply about what I am reading every time.

Scott Althaus 
Department of Speech Communication

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Prajasvamyamlo Karmika Sanghalu 
by Aluru Subhasbabu

I like the following book as it was written by my Dad and he is a big source of inspiration for my career.

Narayana Aluru 
Department of General Engineering

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The Emergence of Man 
by John Pfeiffer

This was one of my first textbooks in Anthropology and it sparked my lifelong passion for seeking answers to questions of how we became human. I decided to pursue my career in paleoanthropology because of this book.

Stanley H. Ambrose 
Department of Anthropology

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Manual of Steel Construction, 3rd Edition 
by the American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC)

The Manual of Steel Construction published by the American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC) is highly regarded by architects, engineers, fabricators, contractors and others in the structural steel construction industry in the United Stated as well as many other countries. It is also a required reference book in structural steel design courses at universities in the United States and abroad. It contains the latest engineering design specifications as well as aids for design and construction of steel structures. The AISC Manual is often referred to as the Bible of the structural steel industry.

Abbas Aminmansour 
School of Architecture

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Collected Works. K-theory / Vol. 2 
by Michale Atiyah

The papers in this volume -- and it's companions -- have been both an inspiration and a direct aid in my own research.

Matthew A. Ando 
Department of Mathematics

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And So It Goes 
by Linda Ellerbee

Linda Ellerbee had a huge impact on the way I viewed my role as a journalist. She is a fabulous writer, who focuses not only on getting the facts, but also on telling the story in an interesting and meaningful way. She has overcome a lot in her personal life as well. She keeps reinventing herself -- but journalism is always at the core.

Nancy J. Benson 
Department of Journalism

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Victorian Anthropology 
by George W. Stocking, Jr.

It was on reading this book that I decided to become an anthropologist. My greatest fortune was to be able to study with its author, George Stocking.

Matti Bunzl 
Department of Anthropology

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Guan Zhui Bian 
by Zhongshu Qian

A classic in the 20th century Chinese literary scholarship.

Zong-qi Cai 
Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures

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Farewell to Kai Tak 
by Wilson Yeung

I would like to dedicate this book to all faculty members, students and friends of UIUC who came to the University by way of Kai Tak.

Winnie Chan 
University Library

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Complete Works of Chuang Tsu 
translated by B. Watson

I select this book for its wisdom and universal relevance to humanity. The thought of Chuang Tzu celebrates individual differences and transcends social conventions and linguistic boundary. He teaches us the value of cultural pluralism and the meaning of being human, i.e. being a unique individual among other fellow human beings.

Kai-wing Chow 
Department of History

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Not Much of an Engineer: An Autobiography 
by Sir Stanley Hooker (with Gunston, Bill)

Obviously I enjoyed this book when I first read it in 1992. It's about the field (aeronautical engineering) in which I worked before becoming a librarian. It's about someone else who started down one career path and finished on another. And then of course there's the title.

Timothy Cole 
University Library

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Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood 
by Marjane Satrapi

In today's world, it is important to understand other societies, and the best way to do so is to experience them through the eyes of the people who live there. To this end, there is no better set of eyes than those of a child. A true story, this book gives a glimpse into Persian culture through the eyes of a little girl. The use of images and drawings helps to immerse the reader into the world of the heroine, and keep him there till the end.

George Deltas 
Department of Economics

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The Critique of Judgment 
by Immanuel Kant

Kant's aesthetic theory has grown in significance in the wake of poststructuralist critical positions and questions. Kant's aesthetics of the sublime, for example, offers an epistemic position where discursive understanding breaks down, and indeterminate felt sense indicates wholeness. Importantly, this iconic Western philosopher provides points of contact with non-Western, particularly Indic-Buddhist, thought.

Pradeep A. Dhillon 
Department of Educational Policy Studies

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The Crafty Reader 
by Robert Scholes

In a series of books beginning with Texual Power in 1985 and continuing through The Crafty Reader, Robert Scholes has consistently taught the craft of reading complex texts through practices that are theoretically informed and pedagogically reasonable. In short, Scholes is the craftiest and wisest teacher of reading in English studies today and the model of teacher, reader, and writer to which I aspire.

Mark A. Dressman 
Department of Curriculum and Instruction

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Control of Uncertain Sampled-data Systems 
by Geir E. Dullerud

Geir E. Dullerud 
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering

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Food Chemistry 
by Owen Fennema

This is the first edition of what is often considered to be the "bible" of food chemistry. It is one of the most widely used books by food scientists. In addition to being my most-used reference text, it has been an inspirational book to me demonstrating how complex and intriguing the field of food chemistry is.

Nicki J. Engeseth 
Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition

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Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books 
by Axar Nafisi

This book is a memoir of an enthusiastic teacher who has struggled to enrich the lives of those around her under difficult conditions in Iran. The book highlights the important roles that humanities and keen analysis of human traits and relations can play in transforming lives, of both students and teachers. The book is also important for many other reasons. Among them, it richly documents the experiences of many individuals who have tried to create a space for personal and intellectual freedom in the face of totalitarian forces disposed blindly to impose narrow visions on all aspects of life. The book focuses on the role of classic Western literature, but its message is broader and can be seen as a tribute to all imaginative works that help us better our lives in complex social situations.

Hadi Esfahani 
Department of Economics

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Two Sister: Our Poetic Journey Out of Poverty, into a Life of Hope 
by Sheila Wade and Maureen Brown

The authors summarized one of the many reasons (impact of poverty on peer relations) I study bullying in schools.

Dorothy L. Espelage 
Department of Educational Psychology

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Corals of the World 
by J.E.N. Veron

I study corals and this book is the invaluable reference for corals around the world.

Bruce W. Fouke 
Department of Geology

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Alex: The Life of a Child 
by Frank Deford

Our childhood experiences serve as the basis for our behavior as adults. My brother was born with Cystic Fibrosis when I was seven years old. In that instant, my childhood stopped. I became the big sister, an additional caregiver, a people watcher. I began observing other people's behavior, began caring more about others, and most of all, cared deeply for this new little five pound baby.Cystic Fibrosis became a norm in our house. Diet changed, activities changed, my parents changed. I changed too. I went from being a taker to being a giver. For that, I'll always be grateful. This book selection is a tribute to my brother, who profoundly changed my life. His courage, to this day, after a double lung transplant, and as he approaches forty years old, is a constant source of inspiration to me.

Lisa German 
University Library

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History of British Rule in India 
by Harriet Martineau

Lauren Goodlad 
Department of English

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In Vivo Optical Imaging of Brain Function 
edited by Ron D. Frostig

It represents my area of research.

Gabriele Gratton 
Department of Psychology

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Identity and Control: A Structural Theory of Social Action 
by Harrison C. White

Harrison White was my graduate advisor at Columbia and the various draft version of the book was used in his seminars. It was crucible as a young structuralist, in which my way of seeing and thinking was shaped. Even now, and perhaps more importantly, it keeps urging me to "imagine hard."

Shin-Kap Han 
Department of Sociology

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An Experiment in Criticism 
by C.S. Lewis

C.S. Lewis is best known for his Christian apologetics, less well-known is that he lived the life of a scholar, too. Although his is considered old fashioned scholarship these days, his work still contains pearls of wisdom, especially about reading. Many years ago I picked up his tiny book An Experiment in Criticism. In it Lewis spells how to appreciate literature. He emphasizes reading as an activity that should first and foremost be experienced as joy. And at the end of the book he gives one of the great summations of what we mean by a general or liberal education: ""Literary experience heals the wound, without undermining the privilege, of individuality. There are mass emotions which heal the wound; but they destroy the privilege. In them our separate selves are pooled and we sink back into sub-individuality. But in reading great literature I become a thousand men and yet remain myself. Like the night sky in the Greek poem, I see with a myriad eyes, but it is still I who see. Here, as in worship, in love, in moral action, and in knowing, I transcend myself; and am never more myself than when I do." I usually read this book at least once a year, often in January. Partly I read for the content, but in addition, the style of the book is a joy to behold. Lewis once said "Any fool can write learned language. The vernacular is the real test. If you can't turn your faith into it then either you don't understand it or you don't believe it." In this small book Lewis meets this standard many times over.

William S. Hammack 
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

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Off-Road Vehicle Engineering Principles 
by Goering, Stone, Smith, and Turnquist

I have been using this textbook in draft form for a class over the past two years before its final publication in July 2003. It is meaningful to me because of my association with its preparation. In addition the main author is an emeritus professor in my department.

Alan C. Hansen 
Department of Agricultural Engineering

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Morse Theory 
by John Milnor

I got tenure in part for my work in computational topology applying the theorems from Morse Theory to the accurate display of isosurfaces.

John C. Hart 
Department of Computer Science

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Minding the Darkness 
by Peter Dale Scott

P.D. Scott is a true hero. In this 3rd installment of his Seculum trilogy he meditates on forgiveness yet also rips away the absurd comforts of neo-Liberal Colonialism. It's a masterpiece of investigative poetry!

Stephen J. Hartnett 
Department of Speech Communication

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Dune 
by Frank Herbert
Frank Herbert's

Dune had an early impact on my intellectual development because it helped to make me aware of the interplay among societies, humanity and individuality in forming the future. Herbert's fictional worlds can make us question the balance of free will and fate in our daily lives.

P. Bryan Heidorn 
Graduate School of Library and Information Science

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"The Having of Wonderful Ideas" and Other Essays on Teaching and Learning" 
by Eleanor Duckworth

I selected this book because it captures the very essence of teaching young children. I particularly like the quote, There are two aspects to providing occasions for wonderful ideas. One is being willing to accept children's ideas. The other is providing a setting that suggests wonderful ideas to children-different ideas to different children-as they are caught up in intellectual problems that are real to them."My area of interest is gifted education and my research focuses on ways to challenge all children. In particular, I am interested in examining environments and teaching practices that foster students' creative thinking and problem solving skills. This book highlights the need to individualize and personal instruction to make learning meaningful and purposeful for all children. The author holds key the uniqueness of each child!

Nancy B. Hertzog 
Department of Special Education

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L'Antiamericanisme: Anti-Americanism at Home and Abroad 
by Sylvie Mathe

The book-plating program struck me as an opportunity to order a book that is not widely available in the United States. Based on the title (I have been unable to obtain a copy), this book has great contemporary relevance and speaks to my interests in the history of the United States in world context.

Kristin L. Hoganson 
Department of History

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The Arcades Project 
by Walter Benjamin

This book represents the origins of many important theories of visual culture.

Lauretta J. Hogin 
School of Art and Design

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The Optimist's Daughter 
by Eudora Welty

I have chosen this book to honor the memory of my sister, the late Melanie Hook Rice, who loved this book and who was also a southern writer like Welty. Also, my first fully-produced choreographic project was inspired by passages from this novel which my sister had underlined. I am also honoring the memory of my father, the late Rev. Dr. Wade Franklin Hook who inspired and supported my career. This novel sensitively tracks the relationship between a father and a daughter and the new insights the daughter gains about life and love after her father's death.

Sara Hook 
Department of Dance

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Pox Americana 
by Elizabeth A. Fenn

This book reminds us that disease can change the world. One smallpox epidemic permanently altered the political and social landscape of North America, decimating the aboriginal population and even blocking the expansion of the American revolution to Canada. Today similar events unfold as AIDS rewrites the future of Sub-Saharan Africa.

James A. Imlay 
Department of Microbiology

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Illinois: Land and Life in the Prairie State 
edited by Ronald E. Nelson

This book was the text for Geography 214, Geography of Illinois, the first geography class in which I enrolled. At the end of the semester, I told my parents that I was changing my major from biology to geography. When they asked what I was going to do with a degree in the social sciences, I told them that I was going to be a map librarian. Look where I am now!

Jenny M. Johnson 
University Library

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Environmental Management in Animal Agriculture 
by Stanley E. Curtis

It is the best reference in the area of my research. This area is a new and expanding one. If Fritz and Clark had not written this book, I would have!

Rodney W. Johnson 
Department of Animal Science

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Environmental Isotopes in Hydrogeology 
by Ian Clark and Peter Fritz

Dr. Curtis gave me an unbound pre-print of this text when I was a student in his lab. My prior studies in animal sciences focused on disparate physiological systems but not on how the systems worked together to make the animal whole. This book taught me to think in an integrative way.

Thomas M. Johnson 
Department of Geology

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Theory of Operator Algebras I 
by Masamichi Takesaki

The theory of operator algebras is a subject which became suddenly important for my research. For me Takesaki's first book on this subject opened my mind to this wonderful subject and enabled me to learn the important concepts and beautiful results due to its unique style.

Marius Junge 
Department of Mathematics

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Das Glasperlenspiel 
by Herman Hesse

I must have been fourteen of fifteen years old when I read this book and in particular the "Glassperlenspiel" itself caught my imagination. I wanted to play the game so badly that I tried to find descriptions of it everywhere but the only thing I found out is that Mathematics and Music are integral parts of it. In the end I think I finally found my version fo the game -- at least this is how I feel when I do my research.

Ralf Koetter 
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

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Bauernleben im Zeitalter des Dreissigjährigen Krieges : die Stausebacher Chronik des Caspar Preis, 1636-1667 
by Casper Preis

This book is a peasant's chronicle of survival and daily life during and after the devastating Thirty Years' War in Germany (1618-48). We might assume that there are no peasant diaries from the 17th century, but Caspar Preis, literate peasant, has preserved for us the lives of ordinary people surviving terrible times with quiet dignity.I also chose this book to reflect the extraordinary collections in the University of Illinois libraries. This publication, part of a series of Hessian regional history, is not widely available in Germany or the U.S., but the Illinois library acquired it as soon as it appeared in 1998.

Craig M. Koslofsky 
Department of History

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Matching Theory 
by Laszlo Lovasz

Alexandr V. Kostochka 
Department of Mathematics

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Management Education in the New Europe: Issues of Content and Process 
by Monica Lee, Hugo Letiche, Robert Crawshaw, and Michael Thomas

The book provides a diverse set of perspectives on the challenges and opportunities for educating and developing managers in Poland as this country transitions from a centralized command economy to a free market system. The strength of the book lies, in my mind, in the rejection of the notion of management development as simple technology transfer from West to East. Rather, the theoretical commitment of the authors is to critical reflection of dominant paradigms and the search for indigenous ways of leading organizations through action learning. Although the book reports on field work and observations during the initial stage of economic transformation in Poland, the fundamental challenges addressed in the text remain highly relevant as Poland prepares to join the European Union in 2004.

K. Peter Kuchinke 
Department of Human Resource Education

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Polymeric Stabilization of Colloidal Dispersions 
by D.H. Napper

This book has been a valuable resource for my research group.

Jennifer A. Lewis 
Department of Materials Science and Engineering

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A Brief History of Time 
by Stephen Hawking

This book is a masterpiece! Stephen Hawking's relentless pursuit of scientific truths is a great source of inspiration for me.

Zhi-Pei Liang 
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

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Tao Te Ching 
by Lao Tsu [translators: Gia Fu Feng and Jane English]

It is a book that I studied in my very first term paper in graduate school, which received an A+. The paper later became my first single-authored journal publication. Tao Te Ching is a must read in this day and age if we are to achieve world peace. This particular translation is poetic, enhanced by the photos.

Futing Tim Liao 
Department of Sociology

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Foundations of Neurobiology 
by Fred Delcomyn

Biology offers many hints for engineering design, to make devices cheaper and better. Engineers have a lot to learn from biololgy. It is a book done by my wonderful collaborator, with whom I had a wonderful collaboration.

Chang Liu 
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

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Ancient Herbs, Modern Medicine: Improving Your Health by Combining Chinese Herbal Medicine and Western Medicine 
by Henry Han, Glenn Miller, and Nancy Deville

One of my hobby is studying food therapy and Chinese herbal medicine to cure disease. I learned that Chinese medicine and western medicine work to cure illness from different perspectives -- western medicine focuses on the sick spot while Chinese medicine digs into the causes of the illness. If the two could be integrated, there could be miracles.

Wei Ma 
University Library

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African Sociology: Towards a Critical Perspective 
by Bernard M. Magubane

I selected this book because it was written by my father who inspired me to be a sociologist.

Zine Magubane 
Department of Sociology

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Markets and Hierarchies: Analysis and Antitrust Implications 
by Oliver E. Williamson

Markets and Hierarchies is a scholarly research book written for posterity.

Joseph T. Mahoney 
Department of Business Administration

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Spanish American Saints and the Rhetoric of Identity, 1600-1810 
by Ronald J. Morgan

I have chose this book because it centers on one of the topics of my book-length project: the role of hagiographic texts in the process of identity construction in colonial Latin America. The book examines the importance of saints as political and cultural symbols in the national projects of the colonial period. In my project I focus specifically on female religious texts.

Mariselle Melendez 
Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese

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Digital Watermarking: Principles & Practice 
by J. Bloom, M. L. Miller and I. Cox

This book introduces an emerging communications topic and is very well written. Digital watermarking refers to methods for hiding information in host data (such as an image, text, or audio file). Applications include copyright protection and covert communications. I selected this book because the topic is current, and the book itself has significant educational value.

Pierre Moulin 
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

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Ecosystems and Human Well-being: A Framework for Assessment 
edited by Elena Bennett, et al.

Global warming became a focal point for scientific research, debates about the future of earths environmental health and global negotiations in the 1990s. The state of the worlds ecosystems will play a similar role in the 21st century. This book represents a unique multidisciplinary effort to provide a conceptual framework for assessing ecosystem condition and capacity for delivering useful services sustainably. It is an initial output of ongoing research by participants in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. My own research on economic modeling of land use has both contributed to the effort and been enriched by my many interactions with the wide range of participants.

Gerald C. Nelson 
Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics

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Benjamin Franklin 
by Edmund S. Morgan

Benjamin Franklin was a very important man in US History but he was also so much more! He was a scientist, diplomat, athlete, socialite, and more. This book is a very elegantly written biography of this fascinating man who accomplished so much. (I must admit that I am rather envious of Mr. Franklin - I don't know how he was able to do so much).

Romana A. Nowak 
Department of Animal Science

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The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down 
by Anne Fadiman

This book is a poignant-told story of an immigrant Hmong family's encounter with the American health care system. I selected this book because it touches beautifully on many of my central scholarly interests, namely Asian American immigrants, culturally competent service delivery, and family resilience.

Sumie Okazaki 
Department of Psychology

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The Last Generation 
by Cherríe Moraga

Moraga's prose and poetry captures the pleasures and challenges a committed author can convey to her readers. Moraga's writing transgresses gender, sexuality, race, and color lines affirming a politics of survival based on the passions and politics of everyday life and reminds me to "keep it real" in the academy.

Wanda S. Pillow 
Department of Educational Policy Studies

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The Wilder Shores of Love 
by Lesley Blanch

These are stories of four people who transcended the rigid expectations of their place and time. Their journeys to exotic climes awaken sleeping identities and abilities. The love stories illustrate the strength arising from devotion to a person other than one's self. This book makes an excellent case for romance.

Elizabeth T. Powers 
Department of Economics and Institute of Government and Public Affairs

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The Day the Voices Stopped: A Memoir of Madness and Hope 
by Ken Steele and Claire Berman

Founder of the newsletter New York City Voices, Ken Steele was perhaps the first person with schizophrenia to reach a broad audience as a mental health advocate. I chose his memoir because the study of disability as an academic discipline cannot grow without acknowledging the contributions of the disabled themselves.

Catherine J. Prendergast 
Department of English

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Handbook of Mathematical Psychology 
edited by Luce, R. Duncan, Robert R. Bush, and Eugene Galanter

The chapter by Luce and Suppes on "Preference, utility and subjective probability" in the Handbook of Mathematical Psychology has profoundly influenced my thinking. It lays out some of the foundations that are required in order to develop a unified theory of decision making. Much of my research aims to reconcile and synergize the multidisciplinary decision sciences. Luce and Suppes' chapter is one of the key milestones in that domain. Similarly, the entire Handbook of Mathematical Psychology continues to be widely recognized as one of the beacons of mathematical psychology.

Michel Regenwetter 
Department of Psychology

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The Technological Society 
by Jacques Ellul

This book stands out as seminal in my thinking about the relationship between human beings and the technology in our society. Written by a neo-Luddite, the ideas espoused caused me to carefully re-think the manner in which I approach scholarly communication and my work with users of the library. Although I find much that Ellul says about techne extremist, the work has caused me to use careful reasoning in exploring the relationship between man and technology that is so essential to the librarian. 

Lynne M. Rudasill 
University Library

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Animal Farm 
by George Orwell

The book has fascinated me as a fairy tale on the first reading, but later, on continuous never ending reflection, presented with the simplest language the most tragic truths of all times: "all animals are created equal, but some animals are more equal than others". Universal humanism remains a utopia.

Muhammed Taher A. Saif 
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering

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Clinical Virology 
by Douglas Richman

One of the most dynamic areas of human and veterinary medicine is virology. As a veterinarian and a molecular and diagnostic (clinical application) virologist, clinical virology engages my interests as a faculty member at the University of Illinois. Consequently, I have selected a book that addresses pivotal concepts in this field.

Gail Scherba 
Department of Veterinary Pathobiology

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T he Chicago Auditorium Building: Alder and Sullivan's Architecture and the City 
by Joseph Siry

This book not only concentrates on Louis Sullivan's first masterpiece design but also places Sullivan's work in a comprehensive context. Sullivan's architectural designs were an inspiration for the Sullivanesque, which is the subject of my own book, Sullivanesque: Urban Architecture and Ornamenatation (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2002). Therefore, Siry's publication is a valuable compliment to my book. Furthermore, Siry's book won the Society of Architectural Historians' highest honor, the "Alice Davis Hitchcock Award," in April 2003.

Ronald E. Schmitt 
School of Architecture

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Bambi, Eine Lebensgeschichte aus dem Walde
by Felix Salten

It was a difficult task for someone whose life is so devoted to books to pick out a single book. I picked this book partly because it shows the way in which German and American culture are so closely intertwined, a fact that we Americans often forget, and partly with thoughts of the role my own children play in my life. Also, I thought it would be nice if more people realized that a story that is taken as the prototypical American/Disney production is originally based on this German language book.

Frederick W. Schwink 
Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures

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The Life and Legacy of G.I. Taylor 
by G.K. Batchelor

G.I. Taylor was the most outstanding fluid mechanician of our time. His remarkable physical insight and his ability to design the most simple of experiments that explained very fundamental fluid behaviours are an inspiration to us all.

Mark Short 
Department of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics

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Hurricane Audrey 
by Nola Mae Wittler Ross and Susan McFillen Goodson

This book provides an excellent memorial for the many victims of the 1957 hurricane "Audrey" that swept through a very remote area in coastal Louisiana. This storm colored the lives of three generations in my family, so I would be most honored to have the book plated with my name in the UI Library.

Gerald K. Sims 
Department of Crop Sciences

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The Princess Bride: S. Morgenstern's Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure 
by William Goldman

This is a delightful story and was the first book that my wife gave to me. After many fond memories of the book, 13 years of marriage, the birth of our daughter, and our second child soon to arrive, I cannot wait to read the book again with our children.

Andrew Singer 
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

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Continuous Martingales and Brownian Motion 
by Daniel Revuz and Marc Yor

This is a book on stochastic analysis and it covers almost all important aspects of stochastic analysis. It is very well written. It is regarded as the "Bible" in stochastic analysis.

Renming Song 
Department of Mathematics

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Quantitative Seismology, 2nd edition 
by Keiti Aki and Paul G. Richards

The first edition of the book was my early introduction to seismology as an authoritative textbook. In 1996, I had the fortune of working with one of the authors (Dr. Paul Richards) on the discovery of the inner core differential rotation. Over the years, the book has served as an excellent reference for my research and teaching.

Xiaodong Song 
Department of Geology

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Polish National Cinema 
by Marek Haltof

I have always been interested in the history of Polish film. This book is a compendium of solid, "broad knowledge, well thought-through and systematized". I would like this book to be donated to the Reference collection of the Slavic and East European Library.

Marek Sroka 
University Library

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Sankt-Peterburg v ob"ektive fotografov kontsa XIX -- nachala XX veka 
[St. Petersburg through the lens of photographers at the end of the Nineteenth and Beginning of the Twentieth Centuries]

The fin-de-siècle photographs collected in this volume are powerful, though wordless, texts about a city created as an act of modern imagination and power. Facing a modernity suffused with seeing and being seen, the Russian photographers who wandered their capital in search of defining images were at once its most flagrant flâneurs and its best archivists.

Mark D. Steinberg 
Department of History

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Architecture: Choice or Fate? 
by Leon Krier
This is a beautiful book that captures so concisely and eloquently the problem with contemporary civic urban space. It communicates the nature of urbanism, the civic realm, the meaning of human scale, the downfall of modernist urbanism and the compatibility between tradition and progress in a way that is creative and meaningful, especially for urban planners. I especially like the way the author uses cartoons to communicate these important concepts.

Emily Talen 
Department of Urban and Regional Planning

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World Weeds: Natural Histories and Distribution 
edited by LeRoy Holm

This book -- along with its companion book, "The World's Worst Weeds" (Holm et al. 1979) -- is a great starting point for detailed information about major weed species. More importantly, I selected this book because of what it reveals about weeds; they comprise only a small minority of plant species. A challenge to Weed Science is understanding the unique traits that grant "weed" status to these relatively few species.

Patrick J. Tranel 
Department of Crop Sciences

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The Development, Nutrition, and Management of the Young Calf 
by James K. Drackley

I chose this book for practical reasons and because I knew that it would be used by veterinary students. When I discovered that "The Development, Nutrition, and Management of the young calf" by Carl L.Davis and James K. Drackley was not in our library, I jumped at the chance to add it to the collection of books veterinary students will have to find resources on calf health. It also helped that the authors are from U of I and colleagues of mine.

Richard L. Wallace 
Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine

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The Alexandria Quartet 
by Lawrence Durrell

I read this book at the beginning of my first job abroad, working as a travel courier in Greece. The colour, feel, mystery and spirit of Alexandria resonated with my own experiences in Athens, the synthesis of modern and ancient Greek culture. Some portions of the book reach dizzying imaginative heights, others fall painfully short: the highs and lows of creative powers: ours to emulate. Re-reading passages still brings back the passion and excitement of those times.

Andrew G. Webb 
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

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Environmental Organic Chemistry, 2nd ed. 
by Rene P. Schwarzenbach et al.

It's a great book.

Charles J. Werth 
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

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The New Oxford Annotated Bible, 3rd edition 
(New Revised Standard Edition) 

Every time I open its pages, I discover something new about myself and the world in which I live. Its truths are ageless and its message is heart changing. No other book has influenced or shaped me more completely - spiritually, intellectually, and emotionally - than the Bible. 

Douglas A. Wiegmann 
Institute of Aviation

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Going to Meet the Man 
by James Baldwin

I first came to writing because of, and through the works of James Baldwin, notably because of his story "This Morning, This Evening, So Soon."

David Wright 
Department of English

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All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror
by Stephen Kinzer

One of the biggest challenges that face our nation today is the treat of terrorism. Unfortunately, much of what has been talked about in our country since in 9/11 has been focused on finding ways to stop terrorism from reaching US soil rather than getting at the root of it. The book that I am recommending is about events in Iran in early 1950's, when US helped overthrow a democratically elected government and reinstall Mohammad Reza Shah as King. Of course, much of the motivation for the US involvement at the time came from threat of communist Soviet Union. However, as the book argues the events in early 1950's and US role at the time shaped Iran's future and its relation to the US for the decades to follow. As an Iranian-born American I found this book fascinating and incredibly timely. For those who like to understand the roots of extremism against the US in the Middle East, this is a great book to read.

Ali Yazdani 
Department of Physics

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The Handy Physics Answer Book 
by P. Erik Gunderson

I intended to buy this book as a reading materials for my 4 years old son - It ended up that I enjoyed the most. It may be too early for a four-year old yet, but it is definitely not too late for a university professor to learn from it. A great book for all ages.

Yuanhui Zhang 
Department of Agricultural Engineering

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