Another John Lardner Reader review, and a Christmas sale

Earlier this week the John Lardner Reader was reviewed by the Boston Globe. Bill Littlefield, who hosts National Public Radio’s “Only A Game’’ at WBUR in Boston, said that it is a “terrific book because the best of John Lardner is extraordinarily good.” The John Lardner Reader is a collection of Lardner’s writings which are often classified as wry humor and tireless reporting that helped elevate sportswriting to art.   To read the full article, click here. The holidays are approaching fast and UNP is offering a holiday sale on books! Receive 25 percent off on your book purchase now … Continue reading Another John Lardner Reader review, and a Christmas sale

Off the Shelf: Palmento by Robert V. Camuto

Palmento Read the beginning of Chapter 1, "Benvenuti in Sicilia" from one of our featured holiday gift books, Palmento: A Sicilian Wine Odyssey by Robert V. Camuto:

"I had arrived in Sicily only a few hours earlier, and on the drive to dinner I would break more laws than I had violated during any prior twenty minutes of my life. Indeed, I could always say that I was an innocent straniero merely following a lawless guide in Valeria, the waif with the brick-sized monogrammed Dolce & Gabbana belt buckle and the ever-singing telefonino, who greeted me at Azienda Agricola COS, which I’d chosen as my first stop in Sicily for all noble reasons. I was here because—more than two and a half decades after its founding by a group of university friends—COS had become a thriving symbol of the new Sicily. Its wines were fashionably sipped in cosmopolitan capitals the world over, and COS was considered on the cutting edge of the growing and wholesome natural wine movement. Indigenous grape varietals were farmed biodynamically (using herbal tea treatments and a few practices that resembled alchemy tied to the phases of the moon) and wines were produced with naturally occurring yeasts found in grapes and with minimal added sulfur (sulfites). More than that—burnishing COS’s authenticity credentials—the winery had been fermenting some of its wines not in wood barrels or steel or cement vats but in clay amphorae, a process reminiscent of the Greeks who had first settled Sicily; and therefore it elevated my role here to something like an epicurean archaeologist.

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Off the Shelf: The Year 3000 by Paolo Mantegazza

Mantegazza Read the beginning of Chapter 1 from The Year 3000: A Dream by Paolo Mantegazza, edited and with an introduction by Nicoletta Pireddu, translated by David Jacobson:

"Paolo and Maria left Rome, capital of the United States of Europe, in the largest of their aerotachs, the one intended for long trips.

This is an electrically run airship. By releasing a spring, they convert the two comfortable armchairs in the middle of the ship into quite comfortable beds. Opposite the chair-beds are a compass, a small table, and a quadrant bearing the three words motion, heat, light.

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ORLAN discussion and exhibit at the Sheldon Museum

Fabulous Harlequin: ORLAN and the Patchwork Self, which was published by University of Nebraska Press earlier this year, features the life and artwork of internationally renowned French artist ORLAN who is most famous for her series of cosmetic-surgery performances in the 1990s in which she reconfigured her face and body as a critique of the standards of beauty imposed on women. The book is full of photographs from her career from her Harlequin hybrid figures who sit in chairs, displaying a collection of hybridized garments and her transforming sugeries.    For those of you who are in the Lincoln area, ORLAN will be having a "round chair … Continue reading ORLAN discussion and exhibit at the Sheldon Museum

UNP author on panel and open house invite

For three days and nights reading, writing and books were celebrated in Missoula at the Montana Festival of the Book. The festival featured writers from across the region in a variety of readings, panels, exhibits and signings. One of the panels had five history writers, including UNP author Sue Resnick, who dived into a plethora of Western topics including Irish in the American West to the Smith Mine disaster, which was the topic of Resnick’s book, Goodbye Wifes and Daughters. To read more about the panel discussion click here.     For those readers who are in Nebraska, UNP author … Continue reading UNP author on panel and open house invite

Off the Shelf: Soccer Stories by Donn Risolo

Risolo Read "1881: Women’s Soccer Is Born; "What next?"" from Chapter 1, "Everyone, Everywhere" of Soccer Stories: Anecdotes, Oddities, Lore, and Amazing Feats by Donn Risolo:

"Today, women have their own World Cup, under-20, and under-17 world championships, and Olympic soccer tournament, plus continental championships. There was a time, though, when the (male) soccer establishment considered organized women’s soccer something of an outrage.

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UNP author discusses health care

In Cover Me: A Health Insurance Memoir, Sonya Huber tells readers of her own personal relationship with health care. Growing up, she viewed health care as did most of her peers: as an inconvenience or not at all. However, when in adulthood she worked a string of job with that did not provide health insurance (ironically, several were in the health care industry), she quickly learned how physically — and financially — devastating something as innocuous as a toothache or sinus infection could be. She also became an expert at navigating the world of free and reduced-cost heath care for … Continue reading UNP author discusses health care

UNP sport books reviewed in three publications

October is a great month to be a sports fan. The World Series playoffs are televised, the NBA season begins, NFL fans are still cheering on their favorite teams – college teams included – and the NHL schedule is well underway. October is also a great time for sports-related reading, and UNP has several new sports books that have attracted national attention. Scoreboard, Babywas reviewed by Steve Weinberg of The Seattle Times, who wrote “The book shocked me — because I do not follow college football as a spectator, I knew almost nothing about the unethical and even lawless nature … Continue reading UNP sport books reviewed in three publications

Off the Shelf: Death as a Side Effect by Ana María Shua

ShuaRead the beginning of Chapter 2 from Death as a Side Effect by Ana María Shua, Translated by Andrea G. Labinger:

"The telephone woke me like a scream. It was my father. It was nighttime. I called a taxi. There are several dangerous blocks between his house and mine, but in an armored car, I felt safe. Taxis are little fortresses on wheels, one of the few trustworthy institutions we’ve got left.

Until a few years ago, you could still walk in the city. When we started seeing each other, I allowed myself to dream that one day we would walk along the street together, that one day you wouldn’t mind being seen in public with me. I even imagined holding your hand on some solitary stroll, caressing your short, delicate fingers, the sensitive oval of your fingernails. You didn’t like your hands; you thought they were too small: you used to spread out your fi ngers, displaying them for me, comparing them with the size of your palms, criticizing their shortness. You didn’t like them, but to me, your childlike hands on my chest were so beautiful—deceitful, touching, and perfect: yours.

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