
Tony D'Souza has traveled far since graduating from Carthage in 1995. He has lived in Scotland, Germany, the Côte d'Ivoire and Madagascar; in Africa, he served three years in the Peace Corps. In addition, he earned master's degrees in writing from Hollins University and the University of Notre Dame. He now holds a 2006 National Endowment for the Arts literature fellowship in prose. The Hedberg Library congratulates Mr. D'Souza on the publication of Whiteman, issued this year by Harcourt. |
BOOKS
Whiteman. Orlando, FL: Harcourt, 2006. [PS 3604 S66 W48 2006]
The Way of Jesus: A Contemporary Edition of a Spiritual Classic, ed. Tony D'Souza. Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans, 2004.
REVIEWS
Mason, Wyatt. "Volunteers of America." New York Times Book Review, 16 April 2006, Sec. 7, p. 26. [For fulltext, at upper right of Abstract page, select Page Image—PDF.]
Parker, Cherie. " A Fresh Take on the White Man in Africa; Tony D'Souza crafts an authentic and intriguing novel around his experience as a Peace Corps worker." Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune, 23 April 2006, p. 16F. (Non-proxy version also available.)
Chell, Samuel. "Passing for Black." Amazon.com Spotlight Review. [29 April 2006]
|
OTHER WRITINGS
"Sogbo's Wife." Prospect Magazine, 121 (April 2006).
"Club des Amis." New Yorker, 81, 26 (5 Sept. 2005), 134-41. (Non-proxy version also available.)
"The Red Coat." Literary Review, 48, 1 (Fall 2004), 118-27.
"Young." Scholastic Literary Special (Univ. of Notre Dame), 27 Jan. 2000.
"In the House of Blue Lights" [review of Susan Neville book]. Hollins Critic, 36, 3 (June 1999), 16.
INTERVIEWS & PRESENTATIONS
Keith, Sallyann. "Kill Your Babies." Writers' Forum (Redding, CA), March 2005, pp. 1, 3.
Varma, Anu. "From the Heart: Tony D'Souza's Peace Corps Experience in Africa Sparked a Searing First Novel." Sarasota Magazine, 28 (Dec 2005), 182-85.
Coyne, John. "Talking with Tony D'Souza." Peace Corps Writers, March 2006.
WEB PAGES
Tony D'Souza—Author & Poet
http://www.tonydsouza.com/
Tony D'Souza
http://www3.shastacollege.edu/tdsouza/
Most of the works listed above are available in the Hedberg Library in paper or electronic format.
To access the stories and reviews from offcampus computers, current Carthage students, staff, and faculty may need to install a proxy. Others are welcome to read the articles in the library.
Compiled by Tina Eger
17 May 2006 |