Career
Inventing the Child is an account of childhood at the start of a new millennium. Zornado analyzes several of the dominant notions of childhood which lead to this moment, such as those of Calvin, Freud, and Rousseau, and finally the "consumer childhood" era of Doctor Spock and television The book has been praised by writers such as Daniel Quinn, who calls it "among the two or three most eye-opening, illuminating, and important books I"ve ever read."
The first two volumes of Zornado"s 2050 trilogy have been published by Iron Diesel Press.
2050 is set two thousand years after the fall of civilization, when a wanderer named Vilb sets out on a personal journey, only to discover that he may be little more than a pawn of “the gods,” a remnant of ancient human beings who have been waiting for this very moment to fulfill their destiny, not his.
lieutenant is set in a post-apocalyptic version of Antarctica, which though habitable remains extremely dry. The lack of water and food has set this new "Little Earth" on a course for crisis, and Vilb holds - though he hardly knows it - both its cause and its resolution.
Zornado is Professor of English and Director of the Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning at Rhode Island College in Providence, Rhode Island.