Stephanie Foote: 5 books

Book cover of We Walk Alone
by Ann Aldrich, Stephanie Foote
Language: English
Release Date: September 1, 2015

The 1950s queer-life groundbreaker by “a literary pioneer . . . [who] forever changed perceptions of same-sex love and desire” (Advocate.com). Ann Aldrich flung a provocative assertion at her readers in 1955 when she opened her landmark account of lesbian life in New York City by saying...
Book cover of We, Too, Must Love
by Ann Aldrich, Stephanie Foote
Language: English
Release Date: August 29, 2015

A literary lesbian landmark that “will transport today’s readers . . . to the 1950s homosexual scene” (Marcia M. Gallo, author of Different Daughters). Three years after the publication of her groundbreaking 1955 bestseller, We Walk Alone, Ann Aldrich expanded on her journalistic portraits...
Book cover of Beyond Addiction

Beyond Addiction

How Science and Kindness Help People Change

by Jeffrey Foote, Carrie Wilkens, Nicole Kosanke
Language: English
Release Date: February 18, 2014

The groundbreaking method that upends current treatment models and “offers collective hope to families of substance abusers” (Kirkus Reviews), helping loved ones conquer addiction and compulsion problems through positive reinforcement and kindness—from the leaders in progressive addiction treatment...
Book cover of The Historical Animal
by Jason Colby, Abraham H. Gibson, Sandra Swart
Language: English
Release Date: September 22, 2015

The conventional history of animals could be more accurately described as the history of human ideas about animals. Only in the last few decades have scholars from a wide variety of disciplines attempted to document the lives of historical animals in ways that recognize their agency as sentient beings...
Book cover of Rhetorics Haunting the National Mall

Rhetorics Haunting the National Mall

Displaced and Ephemeral Public Memories

by Derek Alderman, Teresa Bergman, Ethan Bottone
Language: English
Release Date: September 15, 2018

Rhetorics Haunting the National Mall: Displaced and Ephemeral Public Memories vividly illustrates that a nation’s history is more complicated than the simple binary of remembered/forgotten. Some parts of history, while not formally recognized within a commemorative landscape, haunt those landscapes...
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