Seven books by 黑料网 faculty worth packing this summer
Summer is here, and the sound of waves rolling into the shoreline can be a beckoning call to spend a relaxing day at the beach with a good book.
Anyone looking for something to read can turn to, well, The Beach. Cal State Long Beach has many writers among its faculty who share knowledge and creativity on the page. Recent works include an award-winning history of the CIA, a food scientist鈥檚 exploration of Barbados鈥 rum industry and novels inspired by faculty members鈥 experiences and teaching.
Selected faculty books:
Donna Nicol 鈥99: 鈥鈥 (University of Rochester Press, 2024)
Nicol, the incoming dean of the College of Liberal Arts, is a historian of higher education focused on the Black community's relationships to colleges and universities. 鈥淏lack Woman on Board,鈥 a Best Indie Book Award honoree making the 2025 PEN Open Book Award Longlist, tells the story of Claudia H. Hampton. The first Black woman to join the California State University Board of Trustees, Hampton devoted herself to convincing board colleagues and others to adhere to affirmative action requirements and increase access to CSU campuses.
"This book provides the first sustained analysis of the trustees and the role that race and gender played in board activities," Nicol said. "The book has had local and national impact. On the local level, the book has generated interest in the origins, challenges, and value of the (CSU) system. On the national level, the book has introduced the concept of 'sly civility' into the leadership studies lexicon."
Uche Okafor: 鈥鈥 (Africa World Press, 2026)
A new novel centers on a woman surviving spousal abuse and an uncaring world. Okafor, an Africana Studies Department lecturer, evokes empathy and awareness in this work, nominated for the Maya Angelou Book Award.
鈥淚mages that writers produce about women carry values, and these values contribute to social attitudes towards women,鈥 Okafor said.
Zara Raheem 鈥19: 鈥鈥 (William Morrow, 2023)
Raheem penned her debut novel, 鈥淭he Marriage Clock鈥 on her way to a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing. Now an English Department lecturer, Raheem鈥檚 follow-up novel explores two sisters鈥 relationship in the context of one鈥檚 disintegrating marriage and their South Asian culture.
鈥淏y bringing these experiences to the page, I hope to connect with readers navigating similar societal and cultural pressures, so they feel seen, less alone and more empowered to shape their own paths despite those expectations,鈥 Raheem said.
Cheryl Rock (with Elizabeth Metzger): 鈥" (Innovative Ink Publishing, 2025)
Rock, professor for the Food Science Department, leads study-abroad trips to Barbados to teach the "glass to grass" story of rum on her home island. With her co-author, Rock covers centuries of distilling history, infused with Barbados鈥 political and economic past.
鈥淭ogether, we are reclaiming the narrative of Barbadian rum 鈥 tracing its scientific fingerprints and cultural heartbeat from the 16th century to the modern day,鈥 Rock said.
Jacob Ter谩n 鈥18, 鈥21: 鈥鈥 (Daxson Publishing, 2025)
This is a story of a young man who, after being unable to enlist in the Marine Corps, tries to find his life鈥檚 path. A lecturer for the Chicano and Latino Studies Department, Ter谩n drew upon his own experiences growing up in a Chicanx community while writing 鈥淭he Calling.鈥
鈥淭his story is a reflection of the people I grew up with in my barrio and myself,鈥 Ter谩n said. 鈥淗ow I saw myself as a Chicano trying to serve my community but went a different route.鈥
Hugh Wilford: 鈥鈥 (Basic Books, 2024)
Wilford, a history professor, examines the CIA in the context of other Western powers that dispatched spies into colonial territories. Wilford鈥檚 book earned plaudits as a 2024 New Yorker Book of the Year and London Times History Book of the Year.
鈥淢y hope is that 鈥楾he CIA: An Imperial History鈥 sheds some new light not just on American intelligence but also on the broader operation of U.S. power in the world, both in the past and moving forward,鈥 Wilford said.
D茅sir茅e Zamorano: 鈥鈥 (RIZE Publishing, 2024)
鈥淒ispossessed鈥 is a novel following a man seeking reunification with the family he lost in the 1930s upon his parents鈥 deportations. Zamorano, a Teacher Education Department lecturer, covers Depression-era deportations of Latine people in classes, teaching how groups can be included or left out of educational opportunities.
鈥淚 kept waiting for some writer to tackle this subject, until I realized 鈥榯hat writer鈥 was me,鈥 Zamorano said.
Check out more 黑料网 authors
Looking for more options? . With titles focused on the arts, history, the natural and social sciences and numerous other subjects in addition to original works of poetry and literature, these books showcase faculty members鈥 many areas of expertise.