Recent Releases
Recently released work by Bennington alumni.
Rima Faber 鈥65, co-authored with Sandra Mintonco, Thinking with the Dancing Brain.
Anne Waldman 鈥66鈥檚 new book of interwoven poems of crossroads and protest, Trickster Feminism will be published by Penguin this June. It is her sixth book with Penguin.
Jim Bloom 鈥72 published a new book, Reading the Male Gaze in Literature and Culture: Studies in Erotic Epistemology.
Betsy Robinson 鈥73, along with Dawn Baumann Brunke, has published The Practice: Dee and Bea鈥檚 Quick & Easy Guide to Enlightenment. It is available on Kindle.
Gordon Robert Abrams 鈥80 released his novel, Charon鈥檚 Ferry, in March.
In 2015, Megan Chaskey 鈥80 published a book, Birdsong Under the Wisdom Tree, a collection of poems, journal entries, and sections of memoir.
Florian Louisoder 鈥82 released his new novel, Shock Wave, a fantasy actionadventure story, last August.
Jill Eisenstadt 鈥85 published her third novel, Swell, in June 2017 by Little Brown and Co., along with a re-issue of her first book, From Rockaway. Swell came out in paperback in June 2018.
In November, Sign of the Apocalypse by John Getchell 鈥86, was published through Skyhorse Publishing.
Gioia Chilton 鈥89 recently published a book, co-authored with Rebecca Wilkinson, Positive Art Therapy Theory and Practice: Integrating Positive Psychology with Art Therapy.
The Optimum Imperative: Czech Architecture for the Socialist Lifestyle, 1938鈥1968 by Ana Milja膷ki 鈥95 was published by Routledge in November.
Becky Strohmer 鈥03 has co-authored a philosophy book, Friendly Philosophies, with a close friend. It was released in February.
Leslie McGrath MFA 鈥05 published her third poetry collection, Feminists Are Passing from Our Lives, in April by The Word Works.
In August, Sandra Worsham 鈥06 published her memoir titled Going to Wings through Third Lung Press.
CORRECTION: Botticelli鈥檚 Muse, by Dorah Blume (Deborah Rubin Bluestein 鈥65), was selected as one of Artnet鈥檚 15 best summer reads, not as the Best Book of 2017. It was released by Juiceboxartists not The New Press, as we incorrectly printed in the last issue. We apologize for this error.