Reviews and interviews

This past weekend, The Circus of Dr. Lao by Charles G. Finney, was mentioned in the LA Times Book section as “a splendid fable of a miserable-looking little circus that visits a dusty Arizona town and leaves an unforgettable impression.” Click here to read the full review. Also earlier this week, UNP author John Schulian had a Q&A session with Lary Wallace of The Faster Times. Wallace introduced Schulian by listing great sports writers but then saying, “If I’m forgetting anyone, it’s because I’m eager to get to the writer with perhaps the purest talent of them all, the closet … Continue reading Reviews and interviews

Nebraska Book Award winners

The results are in and two UNP books have been named winners for the 2011 Nebraska Book Award! Lamb Bright Saviors by Robert Vivian won the Fiction Award, and Stolen Horses by Dan O'Brien won the Fiction Honor Award. Lamb Bright Saviors follows several troubled young men, a wandering preacher, and his young assistant, whose lives intersect for a few hours on a desolate Nebraska farmstead. Stolen Horses takes readers to McDermot, Nebraska, a pleasant, scenic western cattle town situated in the Pawnee River valley, as a local journalist uncovers a medical scandal epitomizing the problems facing the community. Award … Continue reading Nebraska Book Award winners

Off the Shelf: Sometimes They Even Shook Your Hand by John Schulian

Schulian Read the beginning of the Introduction from Sometimes They Even Shook Your Hand: Portraits of Champions Who Walked Among Us by John Schulian:

"In an age when it seems that no royal perk is enough for the athletes who have been crowned our heroes, the helicopter that whisks Kobe Bryant to the Lakers’ home games strikes me as more practical than self-indulgent. After all, the drive from his manse can take as long as two hours, even in a Lamborghini. What better reason to fly over the traffic jams that snarl the sprawling mess of Los Angeles, where his name and likeness are indelible in every subdivision and strip mall? L.A. is his kingdom, and a kingdom must be a hard thing to ignore when it is yours, but still I hope Kobe looks beyond it once in a while. I hope he looks until he sees the past.

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Q & A with H. Lee Barnes

Today, Time Magazine Online posted a Q & A with author H. Lee Barnes about his new book, When we Walked above the Clouds. In the Q & A, Lee discusses what he learned during Vietnam, what drove him to write book, and about the relevance of the book with today’s fighting in Afghanistan.   When asked what lessons he learned in Vietnam, Lee answered this way: "I learned the value of humility and that heroism, in order to be recognized, requires both a substantial act and witnesses to verify it, but courage is the simple act of pulling on a … Continue reading Q & A with H. Lee Barnes

Off the Shelf: Bohemian Girl by Terese Svoboda

Svoboda Read the beginning of Chapter 1 from Bohemian Girl by Terese Svoboda:

"Pa lost me on a bet he could not break, nor would, having other daughters to do for, and other debt besides. The bet with the Indian—really a race, Pa liked any kind of bet—was who could walk first to the mouth of this river that flows so flat into the distance that the eye starts to water following it. Too thick to drink, too thin to plow, he says every time we cross it. My Pa traps and knows the land but maybe not so much the river, or maybe he stopped to take refreshment the way he does and got himself confused because that bet was not won although he and the Indian spent most of one winter chasing the river down, with the Indian squat at the mouth by the time Pa showed.

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Ted Kooser celebration

Last Friday, University of Nebraska-Lincoln libraries hosted a celebration for Ted Kooser at the Van Brunt Visitors Center. Ted recently donated a collection of manuscripts, journals, workbooks and correspondence from 1966-2010 to the libraries. Ted Kooser has published many books with UNP such as Valentines, Local Wonders and The Blizzard Voices, just to name a few. University and community members gathered to celebrate Ted's work and to thank him for his donation.  UNL Chancellor Harvey Perlman introduces Ted at the celebration.  Ted Kooser addresses the crowd. All photos courtesy of the University Libraries. Continue reading Ted Kooser celebration

Baseball book sale

As MLB teams start to clinch playoff spots, UNP is getting in the baseball spirit with a sale! Now you can get baseball titles for 25 percent off. 1921: The Yankees, the Giants, and the Battle for Baseball Supremacy in New York by Lyle Spatz and Steve Steinberg captures the crucial moment in the history of baseball, telling the story of a season that pitted the New York Yankees against their Polo Grounds landlords and hated rivals, John McGraw’s Giants, in the first all–New York Series and resulted in the first American League pennant for the now-storied Yankees’ franchise. Today … Continue reading Baseball book sale

A new Collaborative Agreement with the Jewish Publication Society

We're pleased to announce that the University of Nebraska Press will soon begin handling the publication, distribution and marketing of books released by The Jewish Publication Society. The agreement will become effective Jan. 1, 2012. Founded in 1888, The Jewish Publication Society (JPS) is the preeminent publisher of classic and contemporary Jewish texts for readers of English worldwide. The current list includes nearly 300 scholarly and popular works of history, philosophy, ethics, and theology. JPS is best known for its acclaimed Bible commentary, and the most widely read English translation of the Hebrew Bible, the JPS TANAKH. For more information, visit … Continue reading A new Collaborative Agreement with the Jewish Publication Society

Off the Shelf: Up from These Hills: Memories of a Cherokee Boyhood

Lambert Read the beginning of "Forethoughts" from Up from These Hills: Memories of a Cherokee Boyhood by Leonard Carson Lambert Jr. As told to Michael Lambert:

"When I was young my father, Leonard Carson Lambert Jr., told us “poor stories” about his experiences growing up as an Indian on and near the reservation of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in the mountains of western North Carolina. He told these stories to contrast the conditions in which he was raised with our comparatively comfortable upbringing. I caught glimpses of the world of his youth during our annual visits to my grandparents who lived on the reservation. I still remember visiting their house in Birdtown in the early 1960s. It was an old small house nestled on a hillside just above the main road. I remember dodging chickens as I walked along a narrow path that went over a stream to the outhouse. I also remember the cove where my grandfather built the family home in the 1930s. It was still standing in the late 1990s, and every so often we would trek over the Oconuluftee River and follow the road up the mountainside to see it. Despite the fact that over the years additions had been made to the original house, it remained a modest structure until it was taken down in the late 1990s, essentially the same as the one my father knew when he was a boy. The home was nestled at the foot of a small cove that gently rose behind the house up the mountainside. You could still see the garden beds that once nourished my father’s family. I could easily imagine my father and his siblings playing on the mountainside while my grandfather tended to cattle in the barn and my grandmother washed clothes in a washbasin in the back of the house.

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Football book sale

As the Huskers get ready for the second game of the season, UNP is offering 25 percent off football books to get you ready for fall. You can save on books like these: Scoreboard Baby: A Story of College Football, Crime, Crime and Complicity by Ken Armstrong and Nick Perry,which goes behind the scenes of University of Washington’s 2000 scandalous football season. Forever Red: Confessions of a Cornhusker Football Fan by Steve Smith immerses readers in the mad, mad world of Cornhusker football fandom—where wearing the scarlet-and-cream Huskers gear has its own peculiar rules. Check out the rest of the … Continue reading Football book sale