AWF is pleased to post Books in Brief, a compendium of titles recently received in the office. Full-length reviews will often be forthcoming, but we hope BIB provides a quick peek at new works in time for your next bookstore or library visit. So many good things to share!

cover of Bringing Home the White House: The Hidden History of Women who Shaped the Presidency in the Twentieth Century, by Melissa Estes Blair

Bringing Home the White House: The Hidden History of Women Who Shaped the Presidency in the Twentieth Century

By Melissa Estes Blair

University of Georgia Press; 2023

In Bringing Home the White House, Auburn professor Melissa Estes Blair introduces us to five fascinating yet largely unheralded women at the heart of campaigns to elect and reelect some of our most beloved presidents. By examining the roles of these political strategists in affecting the outcome of presidential elections, Blair sheds light on their historical importance and the relevance of their individual influence.

Dear Denise: Letters to the Sister I Never Knew

By Lisa McNair

University of Alabama Press; 2022

Lisa McNair was born in 1964, one year after her older sister, Denise, was murdered in the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham. Dear Denise is a collection of forty letters from Lisa addressed to the sister she never knew. These letters offer an intimate look into the life of a family touched by one of the most heinous tragedies of the Civil Rights Movement.

Dixie Heretic: The Civil Rights Odyssey of Renwick C. Kennedy

By Tennant McWilliams

University of Alabama Press; 2023

Drawn from letters, daily-diary writings, and extensive interviews, Dixie Heretic: The Civil Rights Odyssey of Renwick C. Kennedy offers a life-and-times biography of the Alabama Black Belt minister, Renwick C. Kennedy (1900-1985). Tennant McWilliams, former dean and professor emeritus at University of Alabama at Birmingham, gives an unvarnished account of Kennedy’s tortuous efforts to make his congregants and other southern whites “better Christians.”

Everyone’s Gone to the Moon: July 1969, Life on Earth, and the Epic Voyage of Apollo 11

By Joe Cuhaj

Rowman and Little Field Publishers, Inc.; 2023

Mobile resident Joe Cuhaj’s Everyone’s Gone to the Moon is a week-by-week journey through July 1969, one of the most pivotal months in human history. This deep dive into the Apollo 11 mission’s most crucial weeks and events occurring simultaneously back on Earth gives a vivid new perspective to the month that launched humanity into the future.

Faith. Virtue. Wisdom: A History of Montgomery Catholic Preparatory School, 1873-2023

By Foster Dickson

Montgomery Catholic Preparatory School; 2023

Montgomery Catholic commissioned author Foster Dickson to write a commemoration of the 150th anniversary of Montgomery’s longest-standing and continuously operated school. Faith. Virtue, Wisdom follows the evolution of the school from its 1873 founding by the Sisters of Loretto to the present day.

It’s a Southern Thing: Life’s Different Here, Y’all

By Kelly Kazek

Alabama Media Group; 2023

In this book of essays written for her column, “It’s a Southern Thing,” Huntsville-based humorist Kelly Kazek evokes the beauty and quirky character of the South that raised her.

Stumbling Blocks and Other Unfinished Work

By Delores Phillips, with Delia Steverson (Editor), Linda Miller (Foreword), Trudier Harris (Afterword), Delia Steverson (Introduction)

University of Georgia Press; 2023

Stumbling Blocks expands and contextualizes the unpublished works of the late Georgia-born African American writer Delores Phillips, best known for her 2004 novel The Darkest Child. This volume, edited by University of Alabama professor Delia Steverson with an afterword by scholar and Alabama Writers Hall of Fame inductee Trudier Harris, illuminates and expands the legacy of an underrepresented writer who is uniquely situated at the intersections of multiple identities including race, gender, disability, and region.

The Travels of Dr. Rebecca Harper

By Elizabeth Woolsey

Horse Doctor Press; 4 volumes

Author Elizabeth Woolsey, a graduate of Auburn University, practiced equine veterinary medicine in Australia for over three decades. In the four-volume “Rebecca Harper” series, Woolsey documents the time-traveling adventures of “horse doctor” Rebecca Harper, evoking historical personages and tropes of the American West.