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Friends of the Library READING LIST


Compiled by Phyllis Mahoney ’76 and Julie Walton ’91


The works below were written by Friends of the Library and Learning Society guest speakers, Queens faculty and MFA graduates. There is something for everyone to read this summer. Please visit our website for membership information and upcoming events: library.queens.edu/fol Enjoy, and happy reading!


Mary Alice Monroe Te Summer Girls Beach House for Rent


Kathryn Schwille What Luck, Tis Life


Kate Quinn Ribbons of Scarlet Te Huntress


Bruce Holsinger Te Gifted School


Abigail DeWitt News of Our Loved Ones


Megan Miranda Te Last House Guest Te Girl From Widow Hills


Cathy Pickens True Crime of Eastern North Carolina


Jean-Michel Cousteau My Father, Te Captain: My Life With Jacques Cousteau


Michelle Alexander Te New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness


John Hart Te Unwilling


(Left to right) Ben Pearce, Jim Pearce, Valerie Elder Pearce ’92, Elizabeth Pearce and Allie Pearce in Greenville, North Carolina, as Valerie accepts a new position as chief deputy district attorney.


2001 Carole Morton Gassaway, her husband, Vernon, and two kids, Sadie and Jonathan, have moved back to her hometown in Western North Carolina. Carole manages the front of house and social media and marketing for Te Rural Seed, a farm-to-table restaurant featuring local farms and wineries. She is also a Girl Scout leader and a homeschool mom. In her free time, she enjoys camping and hiking in the mountains of North Carolina.


Tiffanie Beaver Kellog and her husband, Rob, live in sunny Tampa, Florida. In the beginning of 2020, Tiffanie celebrated the release of her third book, Socks to Success: Be Memorable! Branding to Generate More Referrals.


child welfare attorneys and judges. Scott is the federal grant officer for U.S. Child Welfare Court Improvement Programs, which work to improve practices for families in or at risk of foster care.


1999 Brooke Harshbarger Schmidt won her bid for city council in Canton, Georgia, and was sworn in for a


40


four-year term on January 2. She got to work immediately, proposing the city install bottle fillers on water fountains at city parks and buildings in an effort to cut down on single-use plastics and make going green easier for citizens. As chair of the Economic Development Committee, Brooke looks forward to helping Canton and its team of leaders usher in growth responsibly.


Kimary Vigliano Schatten lives and works as a nurse midwife in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia with her husband, Jeff; daughter, Sam (age 4); and son, Milo (age 2). After living in the big city of Atlanta for five years, where Kimary and Jeff met, married and had their first child, the family is adjusting to the small, rural college town of Lexington, where the population is 7,000. When not working at the community health center as the only midwife in town, Kimary enjoys frequenting the family-friendly breweries in the area and playing in the beautiful Blue Ridge mountains.


Scott Trowbridge ’98 joined the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Children’s Bureau in 2019. He is the federal grant officer for U.S. Child Welfare Court Improvement Programs, which works to improve practices for families in or at risk of foster care.


In February, Tiffanie Beaver Kellog ’01 released her third book, Socks to Success: Be Memorable! Branding to Generate More Referrals.


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