UNP comes away with two awards at WHA

The University of Nebraska Press attended the Western History Association’s 52nd annual conference last week in Denver, Colorado. Brian Frehner’s Finding Oil: The Nature of Petroleum Geology, 1859-1920 won the Hal K. Rothman Award for the best book in western environmental history and Anne Hyde’s Empires, Nations, and Families: A History of the North American West, 1800-1860 (part of UNP’s History of the American West series) won the Caughey Western History Prize for the best book of the year in western history. Congratulations to Brian and Anne! We enjoyed seeing so many of our authors at the conference and are … Continue reading UNP comes away with two awards at WHA

Hometown: Petaluma, CA

Bluegrass BaseballBelow is a guest blog from Katya Cengel, author of Bluegrass Baseball. She writes about one of her "many" hometowns and what it did for its little league team that made it to the World Series.

One of the good
things about having moved around a lot in my formative years is that I can
claim many places as my “hometown”. 
Petaluma, California is one of them. My first newspaper internship was
in Petaluma and this summer around the same time my first book was released the
city sent their first little league team to the World Series.

The timing
couldn’t have been better.

Continue reading “Hometown: Petaluma, CA”

Colorado voter insight


Colorado Politics and PolicyBelow is a guest blog from authors
Thomas
E. Cronin and Robert D. Loevy. Their new book,
Colorado Politics and Policy, is a revised and expanded look at the government, politics, and political traditions
of this purple state.

Because the subtitle of our book is “Governing a Purple State,” many readers ask us: “Why is a once ‘reliably Republican’ state such as Colorado now a swing state, just as likely to vote Democratic as vote Republican?”

The answer is a simple one: “Because of the realignment of upper class, upper income, well-educated voters from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party."

Colorado is filled with high mountains and verdant valleys and lots of cattle grazing on the mountainsides. But the fact is most Coloradans live on a highly urbanized strip of land running from North to South for 150 miles at the eastern foot of the Rocky Mountains. In the center of this highly urbanized North/South corridor are Colorado’s two most populous cities – Colorado Springs and Denver.

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Award-winning author: Patrick Madden

Patrick Madden is spending the end of 2012 on a Fulbright Fellowship in Uruguay with his family, teaching some seminars and writing some essays. During his stay, he is writing a series of “Dispatches from Montevideo” for McSweeney’s Internet Tendency. You can read those essays from him about every two weeks here. His book, Quotidiana, is a collection of essays that explores the connections between the ordinary and commonplace in everyday life. In 2011, Quotidiana was the winner of the Association for Mormon Letters Award in the Personal Essay and the Independent Publisher Book Gold Award in the Essay/Creative Nonfiction … Continue reading Award-winning author: Patrick Madden

Caxton Press spotlight

Help author Mike Medberry go on tour to share his amazing story! A Kickstarter project was launched by the author to help with travel costs, watch his video and pledge to help here. Medberry's book, On the Dark Side of the Moon, details his journey to recovery after suffering a stroke in the remote wilderness of Craters of the Moon in Idaho. And in other Caxton news, Blazing a Wagon Trail to Oregon by Lloyd W. Coffman was reviewed by Dad of Divas saying that it was ”…an amazing book that really brings you closer to the Oregon Trail.” Continue reading Caxton Press spotlight

Bookish Links and Delightful Miscellany

Show Notes: Report from the Digital Book World Marketing and Discoverability Conference The Digital Book World Marketing and Discoverability Conference was held Sept. 24-25 and Book Business shared some highlights. On discoverability: Context, he [Perseus Book Group’s Rick Joyce] said, is one of the most important factors in the new world of discoverability, espousing the need for new types of recommendation engines. Referencing Arthur C. Clarke ’s Three Laws of Prediction (No. 3: “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic”), he explained that publishers should focus less on what other customers have purchased and more on what the individual consumer … Continue reading Bookish Links and Delightful Miscellany

Judge Urbom: Called to Justice

Early in his judicial career, U.S. District Judge Warren K. Urbom was assigned a yearlong string of criminal trials arising from a seventy-one-day armed standoff between the American Indian Movement and federal law enforcement at Wounded Knee, South Dakota. In his new book, Called to Justice, Urbom provides the first behind-the scenes look at what quickly became one of the most significant series of federal trials of the twentieth century. But that was only one monumental case Urbom presided over during his years on the bench. Called to Justice offers a rare inside view of what it means to be … Continue reading Judge Urbom: Called to Justice

Colorado: Presidential election hotspot

The first presidential debate is tonight at the University of Colorado in Denver at 8:00–9:30 p.m. CT. President Barack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney will debate domestic policy. But Colorado is more important to this election than just the location of the first debate. It’s a swing state with many undecided voters. According to NPR, one-third of the state's voters are Republican, one-third are Democrat and one-third are unaffiliated, and that unaffiliated vote has “…the presidential candidates returning to the state again and again.” In Colorado Politics and Policy: Governing a Purple State by Thomas E. Cronin and Robert D. … Continue reading Colorado: Presidential election hotspot