Books by Alums
- By Aimee Hoben (Engl’95) (She Writes Press, 312 pages; 2022) Buy the Book After losing her college scholarship, Arden Firth—with the help of Justin Kirish, a law student with a mysterious past—becomes the reluctant leader
- By Kathryn Hilton (MBA’85) (Self-Published, 58 pages; 2022) Buy the Book A beautifully illustrated book highlighting 12 gardens in the Bay Area. From small informal gardens at the Los Altos History Museum to the
- Borrelia is the second novel featuring Maya Maguire, a medical detective, in her journey as an Asian American veterinarian solving microbial mysteries.
- Through the heart of Hollywood cinema runs an unexpected current of progressive politics. Sports movies, a genre that has flourished since the mid-seventies, evoke the American dream and therefore represent the nation to itself in idealized form.
- Here Comes Ralphie is a children's book about a little buffalo who dreams of becoming the next face of Colorado.
- Alice's Trading Post is the story of an untamable, unforgettable woman with a wry wit who lived 103 adventurous years. She survives all the west could throw at a woman, fights to be herself, live free, and find love.
- Award-winning Denver poet Jessica Lawson’s first full-length collection, Gash Atlas, portrays the nightmarish cartography of life in and beyond the Trump era. Through poetic and visual “maps,” this new work, selected by Erica Hunt for first place in Kore Press Institute’s Poetry Prize, surveys the cultural present while folding back nested histories of personal and cultural violence.
- Seventeen-year-old Sophia Palmer isn’t especially fond of most people on general principle, but she really hates Eva Flores. After all, Eva ruined Sophia’s life—stole her look, took away her home, and used her Tik-Tok-famous status to turn the entire school against Sophia. So when something unspeakable happens to Eva on a class trip, everyone knows: Sophia killed Eva Flores.Â
- In Rocky Mountains – A Self-Portrait, Gunnufson’s personal narrative offers an inside look at the “golden years” of the ski community’s past and showcases the Rocky Mountain’s dramatic B&W landscape.