Page 11 - 2018 Fall Newsletter
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TCU PRESS NEW RELEASES






        Sports Makes You Type Faster by Dan Jenkins
        A brand-new passel of essays by one of America’s best-known and best-loved sportswriters. Served
        up with the acerbic wit that is Dan Jenkins’s hallmark, this new collection ranges over the whole
        world of sports, taking aim at owners, players, fans and franchises alike—with results that will
        make you laugh out loud.

                                          Talking to the Stars by Bobbie Wygant
                                          In her memoir, Bobbie Wygant recalls her trailblazing career
                                          as an arts and entertainment reporter for Dallas-Fort Worth’s
                                          Channel 5. Started in 1948 by Amon G. Carter, WBAP (now
                                          KXAS) was the first television station west of the Mississippi
                                          and Wygant was there from the beginning. Like everyone
                                          on that early Channel 5 staff, Wygant pitched in to do a little of everything—writing
                                          copy, performing live on-air skits, presenting commercials—but she soon became
                                          known for the way she connected with celebrities. In a career spanning seven
                                          decades, Wygant has interviewed literally thousands of the most notable entertainers
                                          and celebrities since the 1950s—from Bob Hope, Jane Fonda and Denzel Washington
                                          to Meryl Streep, Gwyneth Paltrow and Matt Damon. Wygant was live on the air
                                          with her popular midday program Dateline on November 22, 1963, when news
                                          broke of JFK’s assassination. A few months later, during their debut tour of the
                                          US, she interviewed the Beatles. In addition to charming and often funny accounts
        of her interviews with the stars, Wygant’s personal observations of television broadcasting as it emerged at WBAP-TV
        offer fascinating insights into the infancy of today’s multi-billion-dollar industry. This engaging and informative volume
        includes more than three hundred photographs of her favorite celebrity encounters.


        Learning through a PRISM by Tracy Rundstrom Williams
        This book introduces the PRISM, an academically grounded and experientially driven pedagogy
        for faculty wishing to design courses and experiences that develop students’ inter-cultural
        competence. It includes suggested readings, adaptable assignments and clear rubrics. While the
        book focuses on study abroad settings, its concepts and resources can be adapted to any course
        focused on the development of inter-cultural competence. The PRISM will challenge faculty and
        students to engage, interact, and create meaning in study abroad, intercultural and global contexts.


                                Portraits of a Soldier by Jon Lippens and J.W. Wilson
                                At age thirteen, most boys are finding trouble in all its infinite forms. In
                                1939, thirteen-year-old Jon Lippens’s worst troubles found him in a
                                predawn Nazi invasion that left his hometown of Ghent, Belgium, enveloped in mass death and
                                destruction. His childhood ended that day. Jon’s life thereafter was a series of traumatic events
                                and close scrapes with death. He resisted Hitler Youth recruiters and avoided being sent to death
                                in a labor camp, disappearing into the Belgian Underground Resistance, where he ultimately
                                joined the Allied effort. Jon was witness to unspeakable horrors and suffering, but those years of
                                clandestine struggles taught him not only how to survive but how to fight back. Life in postwar
                                Europe was a struggle and ultimately Jon was able to emigrate to the US, eventually
                                settling in Texas. The horrors of World War II and his part in it still dogged his memories, but
                                Jon learned to make peace with his past through painting and map making. His artistic talent
                                kept his belly full, while newfound faith kept his soul alive. As he aged, Jon turned from his
        haunting memories to create beauty with his paintbrush. At once a remarkable hero and a very modest man, he finally
        decided, as his life neared its conclusion, to share his unparalleled story of survival and healing—a story largely unknown
        until now.




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