This month’s featured titles by A&S alumni and faculty include a look at the urban-rural divide, a biography of an anti-poverty activist, and a business guide for "winning dream jobs, awards, and elite opportunities.”
Rural Versus Urban
Suzanne Mettler, PhD ’94 & Trevor Brown, PhD ’25
“Why have Americans living in different places come to experience politics as a battle between ‘us’ and ‘them’?” says the book’s publisher, Princeton University Press.
As the press describes, its authors “argue that political polarization is not just about red states and blue states, or coastal elites who alienate those in fly-over country. Instead, polarization permeates every region and every state—and has become organized through a pernicious rural-urban division.”
Mettler is the of American Institutions; Brown is a postdoc at Johns Hopkins who’ll join the University of Oregon faculty in fall 2026. In —sܲپٱ The Growing Divide That Threatens Democracy—they explore the dangers of political polarization.
Skelton—herself an antipoverty activist who has worked for the U.N.—offers of Rabagliati, whom she knew personally and professionally. A in history and in Russian and Soviet studies on the Hill, Skelton is an editor of the Journal of Poverty and Social Justice.
Pitch Your Potential
Vicki Johnson ’01
This offers (per the subtitle) a “formula for winning dream jobs, awards, and elite opportunities.”
It’s penned by Johnson, a former government major in Arts & 鶹Ƶ who founded , a curated database of fellowships, grad schools, and awards.
Topics include forming a winning mindset, becoming memorable to a selection committee, having timely goals, crafting a mutually beneficial pitch, and effectively using detail.