| Title | Authored on | Link to edit Content | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Janis Robinson Daly's Women in History | The following compiled list of historical fiction represents thirty-one titles to read, discover, learn, and celebrate women who’ve made history, individually or collectively. Their achievements languish in the shadows, awaiting authors to write their stories and readers to embrace them. |
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| Book Review: “Bianca’s Cure” by Gigi Berardi | In “Bianca’s Cure” by Gigi Berardi (She Writes Press, February 10, 2026), Berardi brings her own training and expertise, first as a biologist at University of California San Diego and then as a social scientist at Cornell, in tackling provocative subjects to uncover the who and why of… |
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| Opening the door to speculative fiction, in the Spirit of Tlingit culture | Caskey Russell, an enrolled member of the Tlingit Nation (Eagle / Kooyu Kwáan) of Alaska, is a father, a professor and a musician. Russell currently teaches Indigenous studies and literature at Fairhaven College at Western Washington University, where he also attended for his undergraduate… |
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| Professor Gigi Berardi’s ‘Bianca’s Cure’ is an anthem to women in science | |||
| WWU’s Derek Moscato Publishes 'Environmental Communication and the Wild' | |||
| History’s Sarah Zarrow publishes ‘Displays of Belonging’ | |||
| English's Kami Westhoff's new poetry chapbook “Sacral” wins national competition | |||
| WWU’s Kathryn Trueblood wins literary award for her new essay, 'Blank Spaces, Black Frames' | |||
| A new book looks at how border closures divided lives during COVID | It’s been five years since Covid 19 began spreading around the world from its origin in Wuhan, China. In that emergent time of the pandemic, there was widespread concern about clusters of the virus, in Italy, then Iran, then an outbreak at a nursing home in the Pacific Northwest. By… |
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| WWU’s Sandra Alfers revives the legacy of poet, journalist and Holocaust survivor Else Dormitzer |