Off the Shelf: Breathing in the Fullness of Time by William Kloefkorn

Breathing in the Fullness of Time cover image Here's another excerpt from our featured gift book ideas. Read from Breathing in the Fullness of Time by William Kloefkorn. Visit our holiday sale page for a special discount code.

"Desire. Without it, you might as well pack up and go home. Fran Welch, Coach Welch, had said this when the season began, then repeated it at frequent but irregular intervals as the season moved along. By now, I had decided I no longer wanted to play college football. So I turned in my gear and went home, but not before Coach Welch gave me an asschewing I'll not live long enough to forget. Before the chewing began, though, he wanted to know why in the name of Christ I was quitting.

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Off the Shelf: Lights on a Ground of Darkness by Ted Kooser

Kooser
Here's an excerpt from a featured gift book idea, Lights on a Ground of Darkness: An Evocation of a Place and Time by Ted Kooser. If you'd like to purchase Lights on a Ground of Darkness, check out our holiday sale for a special discount code.

"Summer, 1949. Above the Mississippi, the noon sun bleaches the blue from a cloudless midsummer sky. So high in their flight that they might be no more than tiny motes afloat on the surface of the eye, a few cliff swallows dive and roll. At the base of the shadowy bluffs a highway weaves through the valley, its surface shimmering like a field of wheat; to the south, a semi loaded with squealing hogs shifts down for the slow crawl up out of the bottoms and into the bright, flat cornfields of eastern Iowa. The bitter odor of exhaust clings like spider webs to the long grass lining the shoulders of the road. Toward the top of the grade the sound of the engine levels out into a brash and steady saxophone note that rattles back through the cut, and then, with a fading whine, the truck is gone, leaving the hot road shining empty down the length of the valley.

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UNP on the WWW – A round-up

As I was drinking my morning coffee and getting ready for work today, I checked one of my very favorite   book blogs and found a review of TWO University of Nebraska Press titles featured prominently on the homepage. Which was a great way to start the day. In her short story collection Call Me Ahab, Anne Finger explores disability and the way it affects (and doesn’t) art, relationships, legacy and a host of other topics. It’s a powerfully and beautifully written book, which has gained it much notice.  Including from Millions reviewer Amy Halloran, who calls Finger “a talented … Continue reading UNP on the WWW – A round-up

Off the Shelf: Corkscrewed by Robert V. Camuto

Corkscrewed cover image
Today we're highlighting one of the books featured in our cooking sale. Read from "As the Corkscrew Turns" in Corkscrewed: Adventures in the New French Wine Country byRobert V. Camuto:

"It was a perfect day to lose faith in wine. By midmorning on June 21, 2005, the heat and humidity were conspiring to make it another in a series of stifling hot days in Bordeaux. I’d set out from Saint-Émilion in my tiny Citroën rental car—windows rolled down to make up for the lack of air conditioning—en route to Vinexpo, the world’s largest wine convention held once every two years in the sprawling convention site north of the city.

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Nebraska Book Festival is tomorrow!

A note to all our literary Lincoln friends: The Nebraska Book Festival is tomorrow! Michael Forsberg, Allison Hedge Coke, William Kloefkorn, Ted Kooser and Hilda Raz are among just some of the UNP authors to conduct workshops or read at the event. A full listing of tomorrow's activities is on the NBF's snazzy Web site (I love their logo this year).   Have a great weekend! Continue reading Nebraska Book Festival is tomorrow!

In time for Thanksgiving, cooking titles on sale

Halloween, to me, signals the arrival of an annual event I think of as The Official Two Months of Eating Well. It begins with apple cider and popcorn balls, moves into apple cake and pumpkin bread territory, before arriving in full-fledged Thanksgivingland, then giving way to peanut brittle, fancy holiday breads with raisins, currants and nuts, and, of course, cookies. Being The Official Two Months of Eating Well are rooted in tradition, the potential for falling into a rut (albeit a savory rut) runs high. But the University of Nebraska Press is here to help. On sale through November are twelve … Continue reading In time for Thanksgiving, cooking titles on sale

Off the Shelf: Double-Edged Sword by Bart Paul

PaulRead the beginning of Chapter 1, "The Bull" from Double-Edged Sword: The Many Lives of Hemingway's Friend, the American Matador Sidney Franklin byBart Paul:

"He was born Sidney Frumpkin on July 11, 1903, one of nine surviving children to Abram and Lubba Frumpkin of Minsk and Kazan, respectively. His parents, both Orthodox Jews, emigrated from Imperial Russia in 1888. After eight years in this country and the birth of his first few children, Abram joined the New York City Police Department, eventually working out of Brooklyn’s Seventy-Eighth Precinct. The borough of Brooklyn was completing the transition from a semirural community of farms, shade trees and backyard gardens to a noisy city, becoming further transformed by the new immigrants from eastern and southern Europe. The city had been an independent municipality until just five years before Sidney’s birth, when it was incorporated into New York City. The Brooklyn Eagle, the paper that would eventually chronicle the rise of its hometown matador, was for a time edited in the late 1840s by Walt Whitman, another homeboy whose private life was also best kept from the public eye.

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Hurt Book Sale tonight and UNP author on CNN

Happy Friday, UNP blog readers. Two items of note today: First of all, the University of Nebraska Press Hurt Book Sale is tonight from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Swing by our warehouse (on R Street between 8th and 9th streets, in the Lincoln Haymarket) for cheap, cheap books ($2 paperbacks and $4 hardcovers) on the following topics: history and literature of the American West, Indigenous studies, translated literature, literary fiction, classic works by Nebraska authors including Willa Cather, Mari Sandoz, Ted Kooser, Bill Kloefkorn and others, sports history (particularly baseball) and much more. More information on this sale is … Continue reading Hurt Book Sale tonight and UNP author on CNN

UNP author winner of France’s top literary award

And the winners of major literary awards just keep rolling in: Marie NDiaye is the winner of the Prix Goncourt, France’s top literary Prize. NDiaye is the first black woman to win the award, which was announced on Monday. NDiaye won the award for her novel Trois femmes puissantes, which translates to Three Powerful Women. The book traces the lives of three women in Africa and France and the places their lives intersect. More details about book, award and author are in this story in The Guardian. Interesting fact about the Prix Goncourt via the L.A. Times – the prize money … Continue reading UNP author winner of France’s top literary award

Guest blog from UNP author Rob Fitts

Rob Fitts, author of University of Nebraska Press title Wally Yonamine, is our guest blogger today, posting about the 75th anniversary of the 1934 All-American tour of Japan. Additional posts will appear on Fitts’ personal Web site throughout the week: Seventy-five years ago yesterday, nearly 500,000 Japanese had lined the streets of Ginza to welcome Babe Ruth and the All American ballplayers to Tokyo.  Rows of fans, often ten to twenty deep, crowded into the road to catch a glimpse of Ruth and his teammates.  The pressing crowd reduced the broad streets to narrow paths just wide enough for the … Continue reading Guest blog from UNP author Rob Fitts