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

NYT review

This is Not the Ivy League by Mary Clearman Blew is Blew’s behind-the-scenes memoir of pursuing a career at a time when a women’s place in the world was supposed to have limits. Her education began at home, on a remote cattle ranch in Montana. She graduated to a one-room rural school, then escaped, via scholarship, to the University of Montana, where, still in her teens, she met and married her first husband. It is her account of what it was to be that girl, and then that woman—pressured by husband and parents to be the conventional wife of the … Continue reading NYT review

Lifetime achievement award

UNP author and sports journalist, Ron Thomas, is the recent recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award for Excellence in Sports Journalism given by Sport in Society and the Northeastern University School of Journalism. He is receiving this award based on the articles he has written over the last 38 years, as well as his book, They Cleared the Lane (University Nebraska Press, 2002). They Cleared the Lane tells the story of what basketball was really like for the first black NBA players, including recent Hall of Fame inductee Earl Lloyd, and early superstars such as Maurice Stokes and Bill Russell. … Continue reading Lifetime achievement award

The PEN Center USA literary awards

UNP is proud to announce that Quotidiana by Patrick Madden was a finalist for the 2011 PEN Center USA Literary Awards in the Creative Nonfiction category. PEN Center USA’s annual awards program recognizes literary excellence in eleven different categories. Quotidiana is a collection of essays in which Madden muses on the origins of human language, the curative properties of laughter, and the joys and woes of fatherhood, among other topics. Madden received widespread praise for his writing style: Madden/Quotidiana: 2011 PEN Center USA Literary Awards, finalist, Creative Nonfiction category. "Words form constellations; they glitter on the pages. . . . … Continue reading The PEN Center USA literary awards

Scandal after scandal

College football season is almost back, but the season never seemed to actually end in the first place. Over the past few months, scandal after scandal has began to surface. From coast to coast, teams are taking the field and universities are reacting and recovering to a variety of events involving Ponzi schemes and selling team memorabilia for profit. The NCAA has been busy with investigations. Dj Gallo from ESPN wrote “2011 offseason scandal power rankings” published June 30, if you would like a quick recap of the teams that were in the news. More recently University of Miami has … Continue reading Scandal after scandal

Off the Shelf: Brassies, Mashies, and Bootleg Scotch by Bill Kilpatrick

Kilpatrick Read the beginning of "The Founding Father, Part I" from Brassies, Mashies, and Bootleg Scotch: Growing Up on America's First Heroic Golf Course by Bill Kilpatrick:

"I called him dad, Daddy when I was younger, and more often than not as the years went by I called him Pop. He called me Willie. I referred to him as my father, my dad, and the Old Man. His name was William, known as Bill, and he remains indelible in my consciousness.

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Off the Shelf: Black Elephants by Karol Nielsen

Nielsen Read the beginning of chapter 1, "The New Zealand Sheep Farmer and the Recruit" from Black Elephants: A Memoir by Karol Nielsen:

"The minivan bumped along hills that hugged Lake Titicaca. Haze made the water look silver. I sat behind Dirk, a German traveler with a ponytail. It hung to the middle of his back, streaked bronze from the South American sun. He wore dusty jeans and a tank top that skimmed his torso. Dirk was one of those hard-core travelers, the kind I’d met along the way, who took regular trips through Latin America, Africa, and the Far East. They seemed so worldly, and despite the army tanks, tear gas, and guns I’d seen during my year as a writer for an English-language newspaper in Argentina, I still felt sheltered. I was only beginning to understand the underbelly of the world, something the serious travelers seemed to have understood from birth.

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Wendy Call Interviewed on PRI’s The World

Wendy Call, author of No Word for Welcome: The Mexican Village Faces the Global Economy, recently discussed her new book with Lisa Mullins on PRI's The World radio program. Listen to Wendy explain what drew her to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, an area of the country that Mexicans call "little waist". Listen to an additional interview with Wendy as she talks about her visits to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and the effect of economic globalization on the area: http://uprisingradio.org/home/?p=21550 Continue reading Wendy Call Interviewed on PRI’s The World