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| Dr. Howard Jones |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Choice magazine’s newest
issue names a book authored by Dr. Howard Jones, research professor
of history at The University of Alabama, one of its “Outstanding
Academic Titles” of 2003.
Jones’ book, “Death of a Generation: How the Assassinations
of Diem and JFK Prolonged the Vietnam War” (Oxford University
Press) is listed in the January issue as among the best in scholarly
titles reviewed by Choice. The magazine is a publication
of the Association of College & Research Libraries, a division
of the American Library Association.
According to the publication’s web site, only 10 percent
of the approximate 6,600 works reviewed in Choice each
year receive the designation. Choice editors base their
selections on the reviewer’s evaluation of the work, the editor’s
knowledge of the field, and the reviewer’s record, the site
states.
Criteria for selection include: overall excellence in presentation
and scholarship, importance relative to other literature in the
field, distinction as a first treatment of a given subject in book
or electronic form, originality or uniqueness of treatment, value
to undergraduate students, and importance in building undergraduate
library collections.
In “Death of a Generation,” Jones reveals that John
F. Kennedy was on the verge of implementing a withdrawal plan that
would have spared the lives of 58,000 Americans and countless Vietnamese.
Had Kennedy lived, Jones argues, all those lost souls’ children
and grandchildren would be alive today.
In its November 2003 review, Choice called Jones’
book “exhaustively detailed” and the “culmination”
of new works arguing that Kennedy intended to de-escalate America’s
involvement in Vietnam.
“It is foolish to call any work about the Vietnam War definitive,
but Jones does effect a shift in the balance of the argument and
leaves the ball squarely in the court of those on the other side
of the debate,” the review stated. “This is an important,
persuasive book about a significant topic.”
Jones was a featured speaker at the recent regional conference
of the Coalition on Political Assassinations in Dallas. He spoke
from the “Grassy Knoll” on Nov. 22, the 40th anniversary
of JFK’s assassination.
Jones joined UA’s history department, part of the College
of Arts and Sciences, in 1974. He authored “Mutiny on the
Amistad,” a 1987 book which received wide critical acclaim.
He was a special consultant on Steven Spielberg’s movie production
of “Amistad.”
The College of Arts and Sciences
is the University’s largest division and the largest public
liberal arts college in the state, with approximately 5,500 undergraduates
and 1,000 graduate students. The College has received national recognition
for academic excellence, and the College’s students have been
selected for many of the nation’s top academic honors, including
13 Rhodes Scholarships, 14 Goldwater Scholarships, seven Truman
Scholarships, and 15 memberships on USA Today’s Academic All-American
teams.
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