Reviews and other mentions of our new fall books continue to roll in. Following is a sampling of some of the notice UNP books and authors have received recently.
Yesterday, Between Panic and Desire by Dinty W. Moore was reviewed in the Coal Hill Review by Sue Kreke Rumbaugh. Between Panic and Desire documents the disorienting experience of growing up in a postmodern world.
In Moore’s book, Rumbaugh says, “With subtle wit and outright humor, Dinty W. Moore takes the reader on a journey like no other in his latest memoir.”
Click here to read the full review.
Earlier this week, The Spokesman-Review called Drylands: A Rural American Saga by Steve Turner and photographer Lionel Delevingne “a stunning new coffee table book" which "celebrates an under-celebrated corner of our region: the drylands country of Adams County.”
Read the whole review here.
On Oct. 1, UNP author Terese Svoboda interviewed fellow UNP author (and former editor) Ladette Randolph for The Nervous Breakdown. The two discuss life in the NFL (Nebraskan, Female, and Literary), which MLN (Male, Literary, and New Yorker) they would trade places with, and much more.
Click here to read their conversation.
Last month High Country News profiled author and professor Mary Clearman Blew. Andrea Clark Mason wrote about Blew’s family history and writing career. Blew has published many books, including Jackalope Dreams with UNP, and her most recent memoir, This is Not the Ivy League, has received attention in Blew's native Montana and elsewhere (even the New York Times).
Read the full profile here.