<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Susan Barron, a new PhD in psychology, struggles to transition from graduate student to assistant professor. She must handle a second shift of cultures when she moves from New York City to Victoria, British Columbia, Canada to assume her first faculty position. Set in 1974, shortly after Richard Nixon resigns the US presidency, the book describes the era when women psychologists begin academic careers in greater numbers---an era with few female mentors and before the recognition of a 'chilly climate' for female professors.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>The year is 1974 and Susan Barron has finished her PhD in psychology. She looks forward to moving from graduate student to assistant professor. After months of an unsuccessful job search, she faces another unexpected transition---a move from New York City to another country. Her dissertation advisor, Dan Kavline, accepts a senior faculty position at a university in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He recommends Susan apply for an opening in a nearby institution in Victoria. He offers her a co-authorship on a textbook as an incentive to make the move. Faced with financial hardships but determined to start her academic career, Susan opts to accept the only faculty position offered. <p/>Susan arrives in British Columbia and encounters a series of shocking surprises about Dan, his marriage, and his influence in obtaining her academic position. She feels isolated from her asocial department colleagues, and the embittered department chairman is hostile toward new faculty. Some see her as an interloper from the States taking a job away from a qualified Canadian. Her research and writing are stalled by the overwhelming burden of her teaching responsibilities. <p/>Her first year as an assistant professor finds Susan caught between a budding friendship with a first-year faculty colleague, Lucas Selkirk, and an unwanted personal relationship with Dan Kavline. Susan eventually achieves her goals and receives praise from the department but her rocky transition from graduate student to assistant professor causes Susan to question the cost she paid to pursue her chosen career path. <p/>The novel explores the conflicts faced by women entering the professoriate in the 1970's and 1980's. Sexual harassment policies were non-existent and female mentors were scarce. Personal needs often clashed with career ambitions as women struggled to establish themselves as scholars and academics.<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Clare Porac has a doctorate in psychology and is currently Professor Emerita of Psychology at Penn State University. She is a dual citizen (Canada/USA) and has taught in universities in both countries. She also worked in senior management at the American Psychological Association national headquarters in Washington DC. She has authored/co-authored two editions of the textbook, Sensation and Perception, the book, Lateral Preferences and Human Behavior, and over two hundred scholarly articles and presentations. Her most recent book is Laterality: Exploring the Enigma of Left-handedness, published in 2016. Her blog, In Your Hands, (sites.psu.edu/clarep) expands on topics dealt with in this book. In Strange Places is her first novel.<br>Clare Porac lives with her husband in Pittsburgh, PA.
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