This week in North Philly Notes, the staff at Temple University Press close out 2024 by suggesting the Temple University Press books they would give along with some non-Temple University Press titles they hope to receive and read this holiday season.


Mary Rose Muccie, Director
Give: I’d give Tongyu Wu’s Play to Submission to a friend who worked in, and escaped from, the tech industry. It’s a terrific study of an unnamed tech company’s use of gaming to undermine and exploit employees and the impact it has within and beyond the workplace.
Get: (Is now the time to admit that I didn’t follow through on last year’s vow to read The Nix?) After seeing New York Times and NPR reviews of, and its inclusion on a few “notable titles” lists, this year I’d like to get The God of the Woods, by Liz Moore. I was a fan of her earlier book, Long Bright River, and can see spending time over the holidays with this one.
Karen Baker, Associate Director, Financial Manager
Give: Black History in the Philadelphia Landscape, by Amy Cohen. I know so many people who would appreciate the wealth of information packed in this book, and it is written so well that it is both easy and enjoyable to read.
Get: Gray Malin: Dogs: Photographs. I am an animal lover, and this book just caught my eye. I mean, who doesn’t want to see pictures of dogs?
Aaron Javsicas, Editor-in-Chief
Give: Building Ghosts: Past Lives and Lost Places in a Changing City, by Molly Lester and photographer Michael Bixler. This is a completely unique project in subject matter and format, identifying the traces of demolished row homes and other attached buildings as portals to the personal histories of everyday people and businesses that inhabited those structures. This project represents another key entrant in the Press’s developing library of books that make Philadelphia’s living history visible and meaningful to readers today. Other relevant recent titles in this vein include Philadelphia: Finding the Hidden City (which, like Building Ghosts, connects the Press to the important work of Hidden City Philadelphia), and our recent and forthcoming projects with Monument Lab.
Get: To the Success of Our Hopeless Cause: The Many Lives of the Soviet Dissident Movement, by Benjamin Nathans. The publisher describes it as, “A gripping history of the Soviet dissident movement, which hastened the end of the USSR—and still provides a model of opposition in Putin’s Russia.” Many of us could use some moral support in our continued pursuit of hopeless causes (my family has a long tradition of supporting such efforts), and this book feels especially relevant at the moment in a number of ways, even beyond Russia.

Ryan Mulligan, Editor
Give: The Big Story, by David Grzybowski. Come for Philadelphia’s most recognizable characters talking about their work, workplaces, and colleagues, stay to get a look at how news stations differentiate themselves from the competition in the modern media landscape.
Get: James by Percival Everett. Mark Twain needs the favor this book loans him of raising him up a peg and taking him down a peg at the same time.
Shaun Vigil, Editor
Give: While it’s always difficult to choose just one title, I’ll certainly be gifting James T. Sears’ Queering Rehoboth Beach: Beyond the Boardwalk to a number of friends this year. In this book, Sears offers not only an incredibly in-depth, thoughtful history spanning across generations, but also presents a work of scholarship that never loses its grounding in narrative while fleshing out the lived experiences of the individuals and town it focuses upon.
Get: While my personal reading list has been a bit backlogged this year, one volume I’m looking forward to finally reading during some holiday downtime is Emil Ferris’ My Favorite Thing Is Monsters Book Two. The first volume has stayed with me since its debut, and I can’t wait to see how the journey concludes.
Stephen Bassett Gluckman, Graduate Editorial Assistant
Give: Norbert Wiley’s Inner Speech and the Dialogical Self offers a thoughtful exploration of internal dialogue, examining how self-conversations shape our thoughts and identity. Treating the idea of an internal conversation seriously, Wiley’s book is a great read for anyone who experience racing thoughts or finds themselves frequently “talking to themselves.”
Get: I’ve been intrigued by Ed Park’s Same Bed Different Dreams, a sprawling alternate history of the Korean War that has been compared to Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow. Park’s novel weaves together multiple narratives, imagining a world where the Korean Provisional Government didn’t dissolve after WWII. Praised as both funny and deeply complex, it’s a book I’d be thrilled to receive this season.

Ashley Petrucci, Senior Production Editor
Give: I would give John Fairfield’s Crossing Great Divides, as the concerns with environmentalism were relevant at the time of publication earlier this year but have become increasingly more so as we’ve approached the current moment, where environmental threats abound. I particularly believe the discussion about environmentalism from a rural vs. urban perspective is important.
Get: I plan on continuing to re-read the Redwall series over break and would welcome copies of any other than the handful of books from the series I already own. Sometimes, we just need a light series from childhood to get us through!
Faith Ryan, Production Assistant
Give: I would love to give out copies of Digital Girlhoods by Katherine A. Phelps. This book takes a close look at a group whose opinions and concerns are usually ignored—tween girls—and studies the ways they use and interact with social media, and how being constantly online can help and harm girls’ social lives and self-esteem in various ways. As successive generations become more and more entwined with social media at younger and younger ages, I think it’s very important to study its effects, especially on children.
Get: I would love to get Robert A. Caro’s The Path to Power: The Years of Lyndon Johnson. I read Caro’s The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York earlier this year, and it’s now one of my all-time favorite books. I’ve never read a biography of Johnson before, so I’m very curious to learn more about him beyond the bullet points, and to see how Caro tackles him as a subject, as well as American politics through the decades, over such a long span (four volumes and counting!).
Irene Imperio, Senior Manager, Advertising and Promotions
Give: Digital Girlhoods, by Katherine A. Phelps to my girl mom friends. Here’s hoping that we decode and understand the next generation!
Get: Richard Osman’s Thursday Murder Club series. I need to catch up before the next installment!!
Gary Kramer, Assistant Director, Sales and Publicity
Give: William Gee Wong’s Sons of Chinatown. This memoir, a true labor of love, chronicles Bill’s life and work as a writer—as well his father’s experiences—in America. (n.b., father/son stories are my Kryptonite; so too are stories of writers and journalists.) The book, which is full of emotional moments, moved me deeply. Early on in Sons of Chinatown, Bill is told by his Chinese cousins that he had “youthlim,” or “had heart.” Bill writes with a lot of heart. It’s what makes Sons of Chinatown so endearing.
Get: If I get either Allan Hollinghurst’s novel, Our Evenings, or André Aciman’s memoir, Roman Year, I would likely ignore the stack of unread books on my nightstand to devour them.
HAPPY HOLIDAYS AND BEST WISHES FOR 2025 FROM TEMPLE UNIVERSITY PRESS!
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