Off the Shelf: Reconsidering Happiness by Sherrie Flick

Reconsidering Happiness cover image Read from the first chapter of Reconsidering Happiness: A Novel by Sherrie Flick:

"Vivette knew nothing about Des Moines except for the lovely ease of the letters—the way its name sounded out like a yoga chant, exotic and foreign. Des Moines, with those silent s’s beckoning with a sexy finger, a promise. It whispered to her as she lay in her tousled New Hampshire bedsheets. The wooden shutters on her windows escorting cross-stitched moonlight across the dusty floor. The tugboats, with their deep-throated howls, stretched at their moors, the buoys offering cowbell clangs. Des Moines. Des Moines. Her friends thought she was crazy.

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Terese Svoboda and The Rumpus

On this Friday afternoon, I’m posting a link to something UNP author Terese Svoboda wrote for The Rumpus. Some backstory: Earlier this year, Terese and a handful of other writers visited Kenya to talk about writing with Kenyan writers, and with Somalian refugees. This piece tells of her experiences doing so, and of the unimaginable circumstances in which she found young people writing.  And speaking of The Rumpus, I love The Rumpus. It’s a fun writerly Web site filled with offbeat, interesting stuff relating to books (articles about the prevalence of stripper memoirs, and a call for submissions of photos … Continue reading Terese Svoboda and The Rumpus

Fall Preview

Fall books are starting to arrive in the University of Nebraska Press offices, and, very soon, they will begin arriving in bookstores and in libraries, too. I have a big stack on my desk right now: pristine covers with beautiful, modern designs, smooth pages, straight spines. They smell new, too, like crisp, clean paper and a little bit of glue. I am admiring them as I write. And I figured that now, with these new books in plain sight, would be a good time for a preview of our small season. A small sampling of what’s to come this fall: … Continue reading Fall Preview

That’s one small step for man…

Today is the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11’s lunar landing. The University of Nebraska Press (as previously mentioned on this blog) is the publisher of the Outward Odyssey series, which chronicles the evolution of spaceflight. One of the books in this series, In the Shadow of the Moon, chronicles the early days of the space race with Russia through the July 20, 1969 moon landing. I love this book. It’s fast-paced and suspenseful and full of interviews with astronauts, their families, and others instrumental in reaching the moon. It’s also a wealth of moon-landing trivia including: – The average age … Continue reading That’s one small step for man…

Off the Shelf: Rock, Water, Wild: An Alaskan Life by Nancy Lord

Rock, Water, Wild cover image Read from "Being Peter" in Rock, Water, Wild: An Alaskan Life by Nancy Lord:

"In John McPhee’s 1977 classic, Coming Into the Country, he describes a typical Alaskan yard full of tarps, tires, oil drums, and dismantled snow machines, and comments that “when you drive along an old back road in the Lower Forty-Eight and come across a yard full of manufactured debris. . . you have come upon a fragment of Alaska. The people inside are Alaskans who have not yet left for the north.” He’s not mean-spirited in this; he makes an honest and reasonably accurate observation about what it takes to live in the north.

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Speaking of summer reading lists…

The University of Nebraska Press title In the United States of Africa made a summer reading list put together by Public Radio International program The World. Here’s the description of In the United States of Africa that The World posted on its Web site: "In the United States of Africa by Abourahaman A. Waberi. Translated from the French by David and Nicole Ball. University of Nebraska Press. Waberi, a French-speaking African writer, makes expert use of an acidic satiric set-up worthy of Swift. History has reversed itself: millions flee the poverty of the United States and Europe for the prosperity … Continue reading Speaking of summer reading lists…

The UNP’s summer reading list, on sale

  Select University of Nebraska Press titles that lend themselves well to lazy afternoons of summer reading are on sale through August 15. Titles on sale include novels Jackalope Dreams, Because a Fire was in my Head and The Plain Sense of Things, as well as adventure and travel memoirs including Kayaking Alone, Bicycling Beyond the Divide and Searching for Tamsen Donner. Also on sale is How to Cook a Tapir, a book I’ve been meaning to blog about all summer. How to Cook a Tapir is the story of author Joan Fry’s year in Belize. Fry was a 20-year-old … Continue reading The UNP’s summer reading list, on sale

Duel in the Sun

The British Open, believed to be the most challenging tournament in professional golf, begins tomorrow on the Ailsa Course at Turnberry, Scotland. It was on this course in 1977, that a legendary Duel in the Sun took place, which has spurred articles recounting the famous match to pop up all over the place, (this one, for example).   In 2005, the University of Nebraska Press published a book about this head-to-head golf championship titled, aptly, Duel in the Sun. During the famous match, Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus battled over the last thirty-six holes with Watson winning with a closing birdie. … Continue reading Duel in the Sun

This day in history

On this day in history, 1930, the first World Cup matches took place in Montevideo, Uruguay. Interestingly, many of the best teams didn’t even compete in the tournament – Europe was in a depression, and many European players opted not to take time off work to play, for fear that their jobs would no longer be theirs upon return. The final match was played on July 30, and Uruguay won, beating Argentina 4-2. The Global Game, edited by John Turnbull, Thom Satterlee, and Alon Raab, is a collection of writers’ reflections on the game of soccer, which, unlike that first … Continue reading This day in history

Off the Shelf: In Rooms of Memory by Hilary Masters

Masters Read from "Going to Cuba" in the forthcoming book, In Rooms of Memory: Essays by Hilary Masters:

" “Where is the Isle of Pines?” It is August of 1951, and the basement dive of Louis’s on Sheridan Square is a frosty enclave within the steamed province of Greenwich Village. Rosemary Clooney is singing “C’mon to My House,” and the woman who has just sat down at my table has jumped up to dance to the quasi-Arabic melody, swaying in her summer dress to the blast of the jukebox. No one takes any notice of her; she moves within a cell of her own, a figurine turning within a bell jar.

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