Off the Shelf: More Than Winning by Tom Osborne

Read from the new introduction to More Than Winning by Tom Osborne with John E. Roberts: "Following the 1983 football season I was approached by a publisher to write a book. I was asked to write about my life experiences, starting with my formative years on through coaching the Nebraska Cornhusker football team. Special emphasis was placed on my years as head coach at the university from 1973-83. Jack Roberts, who at that time was working with the Fellowship of Christian Athletes in Kansas City, Missouri, agreed to help write the book. Jack and I had a series of interviews, … Continue reading Off the Shelf: More Than Winning by Tom Osborne

Julie & Julia (and two University of Nebraska cookbooks)

Julie and Julia, a movie based on a memoir based on a blog about a woman who attempts to cook every single recipe in Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking, opens tomorrow. I read the book when it was published a few years ago, and loved a lot of things about it, including that if Julie, on her sort of broken stove in her tiny apartment kitchen in a city where grocery shopping is inconvenient and time-consuming, could cook every single recipe in Mastering the Art of French Cooking, then I was probably capable of making one or … Continue reading Julie & Julia (and two University of Nebraska cookbooks)

Football titles on sale and two American history titles in the news

The fourth-floor offices of the University of Nebraska Press offer a clear view of the Memorial Stadium Jumbotron, which the past few weeks has been on at all times – a clear signal that football season is nearly upon us. Nebraskans – and a lot of non-Nebraskans, too – know that football season is a big, big, big deal here. And like most of the rest of the state, the University of Nebraska Press participates in the football madness. We publish a number of football titles, and, in honor of football season, many of those titles are on sale. Sale … Continue reading Football titles on sale and two American history titles in the news

On Tattoos

Remember the Skin Project in which writer Shelley Jackson asked volunteers to each have one word of a short story tattooed onto their bodies? Perhaps the participants in that project will have another shot at literary/tattoo fame. A call for submissions of literary tattoos has been all over the book blogosphere of late, most recently on The Millions (those of you who follow the link, note the montage of Where the Wild Things Are tattoos). Authors Justin Taylor and Eva Talmadge are seeking to compile the images into the book, complete with name and location of the bearer of each tattoo, … Continue reading On Tattoos

Off the Shelf: Call Me Ahab by Anne Finger

Finger Read from "Helen and Frida" in Call Me Ahab: A Short Story Collection by Anne Finger:

"I’m lying on the couch downstairs in the tv room in the house where I grew up, a farmhouse with sloping floors in upstate New York. I’m nine years old. I’ve had surgery, and I’m home, my leg in a plaster cast. Everyone else is off at work or school. My mother re-covered this couch by hemming a piece of fabric that she bought from a bin at the Woolworth’s in Utica (“Bargains! Bargains! Bargains! Remnants Priced as Marked”) and laying it over the torn upholstery. Autumn leaves—carrot, jaundice, brick—drift sluggishly across a liver-brown background. I’m watching the Million Dollar Movie on our black-and-white television: today it’s Singin’ in the Rain. These movies always make me think of the world that my mother lived in before I was born, a world where women wore hats and gloves and had cinched-waist suits with padded shoulders as if they were in the army. My mother told me that in The Little Colonel Shirley Temple had pointed her finger and said, “As red as those roses over there,” and then the roses had turned red and everything in the movie was in color after that. I thought that was how it had been when I was born, everything in the world becoming both more vivid and more ordinary, and the black-and-white world, the world of magic and shadows, disappearing forever in my wake.

Continue reading “Off the Shelf: Call Me Ahab by Anne Finger”