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I am committed, as Ive been throughout
my eighteen years in publishing, to helping great thinkers make
their important work accessible to as many readers as possible.
I greatly enjoy the challenge of working with authors who are pioneering
new areas of thought or proposing innovative ways to look at old
ones. And I have significant experience in helping individuals find
the right context, the right voice, and the right venue for telling
their stories effectively and substantively. My list of clients
includes journalists, memoirists, academics, and a variety of other
professionals who are interested in developing their ideas and visions
for a wide readership.
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Memoirs and Personal Storytelling:


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Ive had the privilege of working with many people who were
in the process of writing their personal stories for public consumption.
Working with the gifted novelist Alix Kates Shulman (Memoirs
of an Ex-Prom Queen) on A Good Enough Daughter, her candid
and moving account of returning home to care for her aging parents,
reflects one end of this spectrum. My own book, Pregnancy Stories:
Real Women Share the Joys, Fears, Thrills, and Anxieties of Pregnancy
from Conception to Birth, represents the other. In the process
of compiling a collection of stories that would represent the experience
of pregnancy and childbirth in all of its emotional, physical, and
psychological complexity, I sought out more than three dozen women
(most with no writing experience at all) and worked closely with
them as they attempted to articulate, in writing, the breadth and
substance of their meaningful experiences.
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History, Feminism, and Race:

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One of the most rewarding experiences Ive had is the role
I played in conceiving and publishing a womens history textbook
that was responsible for changing the way the field of womens
history is taught. The book, Unequal Sisters: A Multicultural
Reader in U.S. Womens History was originally published
in 1990 and is now in its third edition.
I had the idea for a more inclusive womens history textbook
after spending a great deal of time discussing the future of the
field, as well as the limitations of existing books, with prominent,
forward-thinking womens historians. Eager to publish the first
and seminal work in multicultural womens history, I approached
one of the top historians in the country, Ellen DuBois of
UCLA, to see if shed be willing to serve as editor. Together
we recruited another big name in the field, Vicki Ruiz of
the University of Arizona, and the project was born. Now in its
thirteenth year of publication, not only has the book been a bestseller
in the field, but it has also greatly influenced the way people
think about and teach womens history in the U.S.
Ive worked with a number of thinkers who have been responsible
for challenging and furthering the study of race and ethnicity.
In addition to Ellen DuBois and Vicki Ruiz, that list
includes Rickie Solinger, David Roediger, Noel Ignatiev, Joy
James, and Marilyn Halter. I have collaborated with these
innovative thinkers on subjects including the study of whiteness
and what it has to tell us about race relations, the many ways that
ethnicity is marketed and sold, and the intersection of race and
reproductive rights.
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Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of A
Lesbian Community by Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy and Madeline
Davis is another paradigm-shifting book that I had the privilege
of nurturing, editing, and publishing. This study of a working-class
lesbian community was based on more than thirteen years of groundbreaking
oral history research. Not only did it have a major impact on the
field of history, it was also an early and seminal work in the emerging
field of lesbian and gay studies. I was only one of many publishing
professionals eager to work with Liz and Madeline so I was thrilled
when they decided to trust me with their painstaking work. Together
we published their wonderful book, which would go on to win a prestigious
Lamda Literary Award as well as a significant paperback deal, to
a plethora of amazing reviews.
Other visionaries who have made significant contributions to the
way we think about and define the history of the U.S. with whom
Ive had the pleasure of working include Elliot Gorn, Harvey
Kaye, Paul and Mari Jo Buhle, Stephanie Coontz, and John
DEmilio.
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Spirituality:

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I spent a great deal of time working with the gifted writer,
teacher, and spiritual counselor Katherine Kurs on the rich
and insightful collection Searching for Your Soul: Writers of
Many Faiths Share Their Personal Stories of Spiritual Discovery
as she imagined the volume and subsequently searched for material
to include. The book brings together the stories of more than fifty
writers who have eloquently explored the spiritual impulses that
inform their lives. Whether Jewish, Hindu, Muslim, Roman Catholic,
Methodist, Mormon, Buddhist, Pagan, Vodou or Jehovah's Witness,
the rich experiences shared in this volume illustrate the uneven
terrain that is often part of the spiritual journey and simultaneously
inspire readers to follow their spiritual paths as unorthodox or
complicated as they might be.
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| A Judge, A Journalist, Three Crafty
Gals, and an Organization Supporting Multicultural Families: |
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The people with whom I work are too diverse to be described in
a few sentences. A sampling of my recent clients, which includes
a N.Y. State Supreme Court Justice, a journalist whose areas of
specialty includes the extreme right in Eastern Europe, three young
webmistresses whose brilliant and edgy website on craftiness has
hit a nerve with a new generation of women crafters, and an entrepreneur
who is creating a multi-faceted venture devoted to multiracial and
multicultural families, illustrates this point. They all, however,
have one thing in common--their commitment to making the world a
better and more interesting place to live.
What Doug Has Done
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