Word: publishability
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...psychologist Carol Gilligan's book about adolescent girls, "In a Different Voice," became an influential international bestseller. In 1996, TIME named Gilligan, by then a Harvard professor, one of the 25 most influential people in the U.S. In May, Knopf will publish Gilligan's new book, "The Birth of Pleasure," which Kirkus calls "an intellectual tour de force." According to Gilligan's publisher, her new book "explores the ways that humans experience and express love. Tracing a lineage from classical mythology to our own intimate relationships, Gilligan shows us why love between a man and a woman is so often...
...February, Hyperion plans to publish a book that will make women wince: "Cad: Confessions of a Toxic Bachelor" by Rick Marin, a former senior writer at Newsweek and former reporter for the New York Times Sunday Styles section. According to his publisher, "After a doomed marriage dissolves into divorce, journalist Rick Marin goes from devoted husband to serial dater, and embarks on a sort of rampage, dating and sleeping his way through the ranks of New York's women. Marin's behavior becomes increasingly ungentlemanlike - in fact, he becomes something of a cad. In this finely written, wildly entertaining...
...might be that aspiring academics do not quite fit the senior tutor bill. First, there is no reason that a would-be professor would be able to perform the senior tutor’s responsibilities better than any other. And, second, academics undergo publish-or-perish strains that others dont have to grapple with. Undergraduates need concerned and informed senior tutors who value student success above their own, and who prioritize advising and counseling above managing and administrating. And once the College finds such stellar senior tutors, they need to make every effort to hold onto them...
...talk with TIME [INTERVIEW, April 1], writer Stephen King said he is not retiring from writing, only publishing. No, wait, not from publishing: he'll still publish if he writes something he deems worth publishing. King just won't be publishing "on a yearly basis." Will he continue to write on a regular basis but just choose not to publish? Unless he writes something worth publishing--then, of course, he will publish? You willful press people, can't you understand anything? RANDY EVANS Atlanta...
...said his decision may address the concerns of the Black Law Students Association (BLSA), which sent an open letter to Law School administrators last week demanding that the Law School publish a written reprimand of Nesson in The Crimson and the Harvard Law Record...