With chapters contributed by a diversity of higher education staff and faculty, Belonging in Higher Education illuminates autoethnographic stories of belonging in higher education in the United States.
2024 Book Festival
In Before the Storm Takes It Away, he steps away from poetry and into short explorations in nonfiction—alternately dark, wry, contemplative, and explosive.
Retired Louisville Times and Courier-Journal columnist Bob Hill worked with Jones for three years to write Always Moving Forward, an inspiring and insightful autobiography of the healthcare business titan and philanthropist.
All the Gold Stars, is an examination, dismantling, and reconstruction of ambition, where burnout is the symptom of our holiest sin: the lonely way we strive.
Written with his daughter, Courtney Roker Laga, a recipe developer and trained chef who has worked in two Michelin-starred restaurants, Al Roker’s Recipes to Live By celebrates the joy of cooking for family, friends and loved ones, of gathering people together and not just for the big events but for everyday occasions, which are even […]
After five decades of life at the Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky and ten published books of poetry, his A Matter of the Heart mingles reflections, meditations, insights, and wanderings with outward experiences in nature, community, and sketches of monks-saintly, comical, or strange-poetic moments, for a multi-colored, diverse, and surprising display of what it is […]
A Home for Friendless Women follows the Home’s benevolent benefactors and several of the fallen women who live there through their daily religious lessons and hard work while grappling with a terrible secret that has the power to unravel the Home entirely.
The poems in A Field of First Things are evocations of experience, attempts to clarify, preserve, and share first things.
1666: A Novel, her second work of historical fiction based on interviewing tribal elders, researching colonial documents, and studying the Patawomeck language, tells the story of her people and their unlikely survival due to the courage of two Patawomeck women.