Off the Shelf: A Double Life by Lisa Catherine Harper

Harper Read the beginning of "Expecting" from A Double Life: Discovering Motherhood by Lisa Catherine Harper:

"The story of motherhood doesn’t really begin, at least not always, with the fact of conception. Ask anyone who has found her life transformed by a baby and she will tell you about the time before—the moment, days, weeks, months, or even years—when she waited. Sometimes, of course, as in my mother’s case, a pregnancy takes you by surprise so that one day you find yourself suddenly, unexpectedly pregnant. But for very many others, there is first the decision—the Yes! Sure! Why not? Let’s have a baby!—and then the inevitable wait. Some couples make this decision easily; children are what they’ve always wanted. Others make the choice only after long reflection and deliberation. Our friends, for instance, came to it after nearly ten years of marriage. But once that decision is made, there’s a gap. Some will tell you they got pregnant immediately. Others will tell you long stories about agonizing years of infertility treatments. Every story is different, but the waiting is not. All parents experience that interregnum, a time between two rulers, a time when the solo life seems less sovereign but the dictatorship of the child is not yet an established fact. For many women, it can be a chaotic, unsettling time: we’re not pregnant, which is the one thing we long to be. It makes a lot of us irrational—crazed with the desire for the thing that seems obtainable but which remains always out of reach—until that shock of a day when it isn’t. This time of waiting is a pause, a hiccup, a disjunction in your life when you’re trying to get ready, and you think you are ready, but there’s nothing yet to be ready for.

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Happy birthday, Bison Books!

John F. Kennedy becomes the 35th President. Barbie gets her boyfriend, Ken. And The Supremes are signed with Motown Records. The year is 1961. For the University of Nebraska Press, the Bison Books trade paperback line was introduced as a way to bring affordable works of enduring literary merit to a mass audience. This month in Publishers Weekly, Bison Books is being celebrated for its 50th anniversary of its "groundbreaking print imprint.”   Read the full article here. Continue reading Happy birthday, Bison Books!

Off the Shelf: Riding the Trail of Tears by Blake M. Hausman

Hausman Read the beginning of Chapter 1 from Riding the Trail of Tears by Blake M. Hausman:

"Tallulah Wilson never dies in her dreams.

It’s true. I dreamed with her last summer, for four months. At least I think it was four months. I watched her watching the calendars. I saw the reflections of her eyes in the plastic of her digital clocks. I heard the sounds of coffee machines and I smelled the beans grinding. I had her eyes, her ears, her nose, her whole skin—I sensed the world through Tallulah’s body for those precious four months. Yes, four months. No. It must have been more. Five months. Yes, it must have been five months, because the sickness didn’t hit until the second month of my residence in her head. Maybe five and a half.

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Book donation for young poets

Calling all poets! The Nebraska Arts Council is coordinating the state’s Poetry Out Loud program for the sixth year. This national program encourages high school students to learn about poetry through memorization, performance and competition. This year 31 schools throughout Nebraska are registered and each school was invited to send their recitation winner to a regional competition. Students who advance to the state finals will receive various prizes including books donated from the University of Nebraska Press! For more information on Nebraska’s Poetry Out Loud program, click here.  Continue reading Book donation for young poets

UNP author in Foreign Affairs

University of Nebraska – Lincoln History Professor James D. Le Sueur’s article “Postcolonial Time Disorder” was featured in Foreign Affairs this week. Le Sueur, who is also a UNP author and series editor, discusses the era of when Hosni Mubarak first took power. At that time, Le Sueur writes, leaders in the postcolonial world saw a strong, repressive state as a necessary way to secure national liberty. With that era over, Le Sueur asks the question: Will the region's other autocrats now meet similar fates? He dives into the situation in Egypt and the Middle East and describes the Postcolonial … Continue reading UNP author in Foreign Affairs

Women’s college basketball buzz

For all you basketball fans out there, on Saturday, Feb. 19 UConn and Notre Dame’s Women Basketball teams will be facing off once more. Why is this important? It is a reunion game of what was arguably the greatest game in the history of women's collegiate basketball. On March 6 of 2001, these two top women’s college basketball teams played each other for the Big East Tournament championship. UConn’s Sue Bird hit twelve-foot pull-up jumper at the buzzer over national player of the year Ruth Riley and it was the end of an epic contest between the teams. Bird at … Continue reading Women’s college basketball buzz

Off the Shelf: Valentines by Ted Kooser

Read "A Perfect Heart", a poem from Valentines by Ted Kooser: To make a perfect heart you take a sheetof red construction paper of the typethat’s rough as a cat’s tongue, fold it once,and crease it really hard, so it feelsas if your thumb might light up like a match, then choose your scissors from the box. I likethose safety scissors with the sticky bladesand the rubber grips that pinch a little skinas you snip along. They make you careful,just as you should be, cutting out a heart for someone you love. Don’t worry that your curvewon’t make a valentine; … Continue reading Off the Shelf: Valentines by Ted Kooser

Poems from an ex

Ever wonder what an ex thinks about you after the break-up? Lisa Harper, author of A Double Life: Discovering Motherhood, got an unexpected look into just that.  She wrote about the experience for the Poetry Foundation, and the piece has since been picked up by the Huffington Post, the Rumpus and elsewhere. A few years ago, Harper noticed that her ex-boyfriend had published a book of poetry, 15 years after they had broken up. Harper writes, “I bought a copy, partly out of curiosity, partly out of loyalty to a fellow writer and former friend.” It took her months to … Continue reading Poems from an ex

New book trailer

My Ruby Slippers: The Road Back to Kansas, by Tracey Seeley, is a memoir in which the author chronicles a series of visits over several years to her childhood home of Kansas.  Though Seeley left Kansas shortly after high school and redefined herself as a city girl, she discovered that even after decades away, she still felt a strong connection to the landscape — and people — from her past. Check out the book trailer below:   Continue reading New book trailer