Linking in Lincoln: May, 14 2008

ALL THAT GLITTERS…..IS LINKING IN LINCOLN! New this month from the University of Nebraska is The Golden Volcano by Jules Verne. The  French master of science fiction  who has given us such gems as Around the World in 80 Days, Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, and Journey to the Center of the Earth did not abandon us, even in death. This manuscript, edited and altered by Verne’s own son, is about two cousins searching for the mythical Golden Volcano during the Gold Rush.  Hmm… a golden volcano, I’m going to go out on a limb here and say there … Continue reading Linking in Lincoln: May, 14 2008

Tuesday Trivia: May 12, 2008

WELCOME TO THE HOTEL “TRIVIA” We have all longed for different lives at some point or another. The lure of the unfamiliar has captured many a person, and propelled them into lives of distinction and sometimes disappointment. What would happen, however, if we were constantly faced with individuals as opposite from ourselves as day is to night? In the center of the rural boomtown of Soda Springs, Idaho, stands the historic Enders Hotel, Café, and Bar, a three-story brick building that has been many things to many people. But to one family who bought it as an attempt to renew … Continue reading Tuesday Trivia: May 12, 2008

Into That Silent Sea

Now for science fact! I wanted to write "More science fiction!" since the post below was all about sf links and clearly the webmistress and I dated the same guys in high school (was one of those guys named Eric?), but this is all true.  And amazing. Starting with Gagarin and the Russian space program, authors Francis French and Colin Burgess take us person by person and mission by mission through the space programs of Russia and the U.S. from 1961-1965.  But they do more than just discuss the missions.  They talk about the people behind the missions, describing backgrounds … Continue reading Into That Silent Sea

Linking in Lincoln: May, 7 2008

                                           RETURN OF THE "LINKING IN LINCOLN" New, to us, this month from the University of Nebraska Press, is The Great Romance by the Inhabitant, edited by Dominic Alessio. This two volume novella published in the late nineteenth century under the pseudonym “The Inhabitant” has had countless influences on the history of science fiction. Most commonly known was the book, Looking Backward by Edward Bellamy. Reuniting these two very rare volumes, Alessio discusses the significance, and the revolutionary nature of the work.  Today, in respect for … Continue reading Linking in Lincoln: May, 7 2008

UNP Author Interview!

UNP Author on Fresh Air (show Barber/Songs cover art) UNP author Charles Barber appeared recently on NPR’s Fresh Air discussing his new book Comfortably Numb: How Psychiatry Is Medicating a Nation. During the fascinating sixteen-minute interview, guest host Dave Davies mentioned that he had also read Songs from the Black Chair, Barber’s account of his personal experiences with mental illness published by UNP. Davies called it “a truly absorbing and beautifully written story,” and said that he “couldn’t put it down.” Give the interview a listen here: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=89882885 Continue reading UNP Author Interview!

Back on the (Bike) Saddle and off the Bookshelf

For those of us in the Midwest, warm spring weather appears to finally be here for good. Whether we’re ready to spend most of our free time on the trails or because we want to save at the pump with a cycling commute to and from work, people are pulling their bikes out of storage, checking their gears, and they’re ready to ride. Current and future users of Nebraska’s Cowboy trail, which stretches from Norfolk to Valentine and when completed will reach Chadron, should pick up a copy of our new guidebook. Author Keith Terry describes flora and fauna along … Continue reading Back on the (Bike) Saddle and off the Bookshelf

A Couple of Comic Books

So lately I’ve been researching a new book that contains science and is indeed fiction, but isn’t science fiction per se. Not even alternate history. And this hasn’t left me much time to look at anything sf lately. (sorry) But, life has a way of reminding me that I’m still a fangirl at heart and this time it was the New York Comic Con. I saw it and had to go, rationalizing this need by announcing to friends and family that I have a blog to keep up. Of course, I did check out what the big comic companies were … Continue reading A Couple of Comic Books

Tuesday Triva: Pilgrims on Ice

TUESDAY TRIVIA: PILGRIMS ON ICE “By far the most authoritative analysis of Scott’s Discovery expedition ever written.” New this month from University of Nebraska Press is, Pilgrims on Ice: Robert Falcon Scott’s first Antarctic Expedition by T.H. Baughman.  Baughman chronicles the exciting, albeit tragic, 1912 South Pole expedition that ended with the deaths of Scott and his crew; shedding light on both the renowned hero, and the “bumbling fool whose mistakes killed him and his entire party.” In today’s Tuesday Trivia, we are going to take a long, perhaps cold, look at our own knowledge of the continent. Fancy an … Continue reading Tuesday Triva: Pilgrims on Ice

Guest Blogger: Gregory McNamee of Moveable Feasts

In the 1993 film So I Married an Axe Murderer, Canadian comic Mike Myers, contemplating the strange thing that is haggis, observes that Scottish cuisine is the only one in the world that is based on a dare. This is not strictly so: The same can be said of nearly every cuisine in the world, at least at some point in its history. What brave Roman was commissioned to determine when the flamingo buried in the back yard was ready to eat? How many Aymara Indians had to die before the potato was finally bred out of its poisonous ways? … Continue reading Guest Blogger: Gregory McNamee of Moveable Feasts