E.E. ‘Doc’ Smith’s Triplanetary

Leave all feminist thought at the door.  For that matter, leave all modern thought at the door.  This is not a book for that.  This is a book from a simpler time.  A time when good was good, bad was bad, men were men, and women were emotional and threw themselves at the men, exclaiming, “Oh, Ted!” or whatever the current hero’s name is.  I conducted an informal poll and so far no woman I talked to has ever thrown herself on a man exclaiming, “Oh, Whatsyerface!”.  No man has had this done to him.  And no one has ever … Continue reading E.E. ‘Doc’ Smith’s Triplanetary

Firsts

Greetings!  Welcome to my first post on the UN Press blog.  My name is Jason McIntosh and I’m here to write about sci-fi, dark fantasy, speculative fiction and other fantastic stuff.  There’s another sci-fi blogger around here somewhere, probably above or below this post.  Hi Leigh!  Hopefully we’ll get some cross-talk going. So who am I and why am here?  Well, I’m a PhD candidate in the English department here at UNL.  I’m a teacher and writer, but not of science fiction.  Nope, I’m a fan, just like you.  My love of fantastic stories began on Saturday afternoons during the … Continue reading Firsts

Cassoulet

I made cassoulet this week. The creation of cassoulet, the regional peasant dish of southwestern France is not something to be undertaken lightly. Most recipes recommend a two-day composition period. It is said that Anatole France’s favorite version tasted as if it had been cooking for twenty years—which I’m not so sure is a good thing. Cassoulet includes five kinds of meat, white beans, and a sauce rich in tomatoes, onion, garlic, and herbs. A duck and a pork shoulder are roasted; lamb, salt pork, and sausage are browned. (This is not a dish for vegetarians.) Then the whole thing … Continue reading Cassoulet

Most Beautiful Man in the World

Greetings to the blog world. I (Janis Londraville) am the co-author of THE MOST BEAUTIFUL MAN IN THE WORLD: PAUL SWAN, FROM WILDE TO WARHOL and am happy to entertain comments and questions about the book or Paul Swan, the man or the movie. Additionally, I am beginning work on the biography of American artist Jon Corbino, called A MAN MADE MAD BY PAINTING: JON CORBINO, FROM RUBENS TO RINGLING. (More than one critic focused on Corbino’s ability to draw the perfect horse, posterior highlighted.) Anyone having information about him, please feel free to get in touch with me. Continue reading Most Beautiful Man in the World

New in March from the University of Nebraska Press

New from the University of Nebraska Press: an accessible writing guide by U.S. Poet Laureate Ted Kooser and lifelong editor and publisher Steve Cox, a Shiloh Civil War battlefield guide, a study on the lives of the wives and girlfriends of NFL players and coaches by Shannon O’Toole (an NFL wife), a Sports Illustrated top 100 sports book of all time covering the 1908 National League pennant race, an account of Jackie Robinson’s first spring training available for the first time in paperback, plus much more. Browse our new March books here: http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/special/newThisMonth.jsp Continue reading New in March from the University of Nebraska Press

Speaking to the Rose by Robert Walser "Middleton translates to perfection both the text and the spirit. . . . Walser’s central themes of self-effacement, the primacy of the imagination, the liberating aim of creative play are richly displayed in the new volume. You’ll find both the Walser deadpan . . . and his pratfall. Walser’s lightness is lighter than light, buoyant up to and beyond belief, terrifyingly light. . . . At times, he seems closer to writers like the French poet Francis Ponge than to his ‘weightier’ peers such as Musil, Broch, or Mann. Both Ponge and Walser, … Continue reading

New Books from the University of Nebraska Press

New from the University of Nebraska Press this month: a catalog featuring a selection of the most influential pieces in the Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery’s sculpture collection, a biography of baseball legend Tris Speaker, paperback editions of American and French cookbooks, a new edition of Nebraska: A Guide to the Cornhusker State, plus much more. Browse our new January books here: http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/special/newThisMonth.jsp Continue reading New Books from the University of Nebraska Press

Praise for Twilight of the Long-ball Gods

Twilight of the Long-ball Gods: Dispatches From the Disappearing Heart of Baseball by John Schulian “For baseball fans, John Schulian’s Twilight of the Long-Ball Gods is the perfect antidote to winter. Schulian does something remarkable in this book: He brings to life an all-but-lost world of semipro teams and American Legion ball, of old Negro leagues and the Class D minors. . . . Schulian can flat-out write. Boxing and baseball have, by far, produced our best sports prose, and Schulian crafts sentences with the best of American journalists. Quotidian struggles here become the stuff of literature because American mythology, … Continue reading Praise for Twilight of the Long-ball Gods

The Usual Mistakes by Erin Flanagan “If this second release to the fledgling ‘Flyover Fiction‘ series is typical, one can safely predict that the series will be among the most significant in American letters. Flanagan writes with some of the same penetrating insights into the human condition that one finds in the work of Eudora Welty, Katherine Anne Porter, and Tennessee Williams. . . . Flanagan has a remarkable ability to penetrate the real people behind the facades they present to an often-judgemental public. This first collection augurs well for Flanagan’s future. Hers is a singular talent. This book belongs … Continue reading

Cobb Named New Editor of American Indian Quarterly

Amanda J. Cobb, Associate Professor of American Studies and director of the Institute for American Indian Research at the University of New Mexico, has been named the new editor of the American Indian Quarterly. Cobb, a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma, received her Ph.D. in English from the University of Oklahoma in 1997. Specializing in Native American Studies, Cobb is the author of Listening to Our Grandmothers’ Stories: The Bloomfield Academy for Chickasaw Females, 1852-1949 (University of Nebraska Press, 2000) which was selected as a winner of the 2001 American Book Award as well as the 1998 North … Continue reading Cobb Named New Editor of American Indian Quarterly