Review roundup

Mr. Wrigley’s Ball Club by Roberts Ehrgott earned a Kirkus star! Shrink by Lawrence R. Samuel and Traveling the Power Line by Julianne Couch also received reviews from Kirkus. Barrie Jean Borich’s Body Geographic was reviewed by Publishers Weekly. Jason Anthony, author of Hoosh, was interviewed on Maine Public Radio. Alan Wilkinson discussed Backstage by Ron Hull on his blog. Tim Boxer of 15 Minutes Magazine called Culture and Customs of the Sioux Indians by Gregory O. Gagnon an “insightful” account of history. The Rumpus reviewed Descanso for My Father by Harrison Candelaria Fletcher. David Luhrssen reviewed American Naval History, … Continue reading Review roundup

2012 Award Winning Recap

2012 was a great year and we are proud of all of our authors and their accomplishments. See our previous award winners below:


The History of the Holocaust in Romania

The History of the Holocaust in Romania

By Jean Ancel

The National Jewish Book Award

Writing Based on Archival Material category


No Word for WelcomeNo Word for Welcome
The Mexican Village Faces the Global Economy
By Wendy Call
First place in the Best History/Political Book in English category

Banzai Babe Ruth

Banzai Babe Ruth
Baseball, Espionage, and Assassination during the 1934 Tour of Japan
By Robert K. Fitts
IPPY Awards
Silver Medal in the sports/fitness/recreation category
 

Continue reading “2012 Award Winning Recap”

Bookish Links and Delightful Miscellany

Let's start with some bookish links of the local variety . . . A Lincoln Native, Brandon Sanderson, Authored the "Final Wheel of Time" Book I remember how highly anticipated the new books in this series were back when I worked in a bookstore. We always had standing orders for these (the only other series I remember having standing orders for was UNP's Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition). Anyway, the final book became available this month. It's called A Memory of Light and you can see what it looks like being printed and assembled in a photo essay on the Tor … Continue reading Bookish Links and Delightful Miscellany

2012 National Jewish Book Award announcement

The History of the Holocaust in Romania by Jean Ancel published by UNP and Yad Vashem won the Writing Based on Archival Material category of the 2012 National Jewish Book Awards. The History of the Holocaust in Romania is a comprehensive analysis of the Holocaust in Romania during World War II. Jean Ancel (1940–2008) was a Romanian-born Israeli independent historian and a research associate of Yad Vashem’s International Institute for Holocaust Research. To see the full press release, check out the Jewish Book Council. Congrats to all the winners and finalists! Continue reading 2012 National Jewish Book Award announcement

Review roundup

We’ve started off the New Year right! Body Geographic by Barrie Jean Borich received a Kirkus star. The following titles were also reviewed by Kirkus: Champion of Choice by Cathleen Miller The Days Are Gods by Liz Stephens Works Cited by Brandon R. Schrand Also in the news: Larry Ruttman’s American Jews and America’s Game was in Boston.com The National Forgotten League by Dan Daly and Intercepted  by Michael McKnight were in the Boston Globe North Lake Tahoe Bonanza reviewed Almost Somewhere by Suzanne Roberts Double No-Hit by James W. Johnson was on azstarnet.com Up from These Hills by Leonard Carson Lambert Jr.and Wink … Continue reading Review roundup

Resolve to read!

Thirteen reasons to read more in 2013 (in no particular order): 1.) To become aware of your own body’s geography.     2.) To examine the pros and cons of fuel sources by traveling across the country .       3.) To discover prize-winning writing.       4.) To discern a woman who didn’t exist.        5.) To be inspired to find out just how much truth is in nonfiction, or how much is a lie.        6.) To learn about world leaders that made a difference, like Nafis Sadik.        7.) To be … Continue reading Resolve to read!

Bookish Links and Delightful Miscellany

Happy New Year! Let's get started . . . Indiana Jones Mystery Package The University of Chicago received a package addressed to “Henry Walton Jones, Jr.” Once they realized who that was they set to work trying to figure out exactly what they had and who sent it to them The package contained an incredibly detailed replica of “University of Chicago Professor” Abner Ravenwood’s journal from Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark. It looks only sort of like this one, but almost exactly like this one . . . The book itself is a bit dusty, and the … Continue reading Bookish Links and Delightful Miscellany

Krissed Off: Seeing Nebraska in New Orleans

Like many Americans, I first saw Nebraska from the interstate, zooming through at seventy-five. My early encounters with the University of Nebraska Press were more numerous and more substantial. As a grad student and then editor living in the Northeast and Deep South I saw the Nebraska name on dozens of spines at bookstores and in my professors’ offices, and I read reviews of UNP books in the scholarly and general-interest press. Associations (all of them positive!) were formed. Nebraska – the publisher but also in some meaningful sense the university and the place – became, for me, much more … Continue reading Krissed Off: Seeing Nebraska in New Orleans