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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Judging books by their covers

As I was perusing some book blogs this morning, I stumbled across this essay on The Millions about the process (and the mystery) of designing a book jacket. First-time novelist Sonya Chung writes that when it came time to offer input on the cover of her book, she didn’t know what to say other than that she didn’t want the cover to be too literal or to be a montage of fans, cranes, cherry blossoms and other stereotypical images associated with Asian culture. She loved image the book jacket designer sent to her – a woman taking a photograph of … Continue reading Judging books by their covers

Spaceflight on sale!

It was on July 20, 1969 that astronaut Neil Armstrong, a member of the Apollo 11 spaceflight mission, stepped foot on the moon. To mark this historic event, newspapers are asking readers to write in sharing their memories of the moon landing, television stations will rebroadcast footage of Armstrong’s space stroll, and the University of Nebraska Press is offering 25 percent off our spaceflight titles, including those in our popular Outward Odyssey series. Among the sale books is A Journal for Christa, Christa being Christa McAuliffe, the “Teacher in Space” aboard the Challenger shuttle that exploded in 1986. A Journal for Christa was … Continue reading Spaceflight on sale!

Mark Twain and the University of Nebraska Press

On this day in history in 1862, Samuel Clemens began working as a reporter for a newspaper in Virginia City, Nevada. This is notable for two reasons: It allowed him to hone his writing skills, and it’s also where he began using his pen name, Mark Twain. The University of Nebraska Press is the publisher of two books by Mark Twain: How Nancy Jackson Married Kate Wilson and Other Tales of Rebellious Girls and Daring Young Women, and Tales of Wonder. Neither of these are exactly typical Twain books: How Nancy Jackson Married Kate Wilson and Other Tales of Rebellious Girls … Continue reading Mark Twain and the University of Nebraska Press

Off the Shelf: Lights on a Ground of Darkness by Ted Kooser

KooserLights Read from Ted Kooser's forthcoming book, Lights on a Ground of Darkness:

"Summer, 1949. Above the Mississippi, the noon sun bleaches the blue from a cloudless midsummer sky. So high in their flight that they might be no more than tiny motes afloat on the surface of the eye, a few cliff swallows dive and roll. At the base of the shadowy bluffs a highway weaves through the valley, its surface shimmering like a field of wheat; to the south, a semi loaded with squealing hogs shifts down for the slow crawl up out of the bottoms and into the bright, flat cornfields of eastern Iowa. The bitter odor of exhaust clings like spider webs to the long grass lining the shoulders of the road. Toward the top of the grade the sound of the engine levels out into a brash and steady saxophone note that rattles back through the cut, and then, with a fading whine, the truck is gone, leaving the hot road shining empty down the length of the valley.

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Happy two days before Independence Day!

We here at the University of Nebraska Press celebrated the upcoming holiday with pie. Our first ever Pie-A-Palooza was today, and about a dozen UNP employees entered their most beautiful, best tasting and most creative creations. Here’s a pic of the lovely, lovely pies, with more to come on Monday.Have a safe and happy July 4! Our office will be closed tomorrow for the holiday, but we’ll be back on Monday. Continue reading Happy two days before Independence Day!

Louise Pound’s birthday party

Louise Pound’s birthday party was yesterday, as was the launch party for a new biography about her titled Louise Pound: Scholar, Athlete, Feminist Pioneer. The University of Nebraska Press attended, and this party was notable for several reasons. Among them: Hostess Paige Namuth actually met Louise Pound. Her parents were friends of Pound and her siblings,  Roscoe and Olivia,  and sometimes visited them at their Victorian home in downtown Lincoln (which, sadly, has been torn down). One visit, Louise Pound, who by then was in her 80s, took an interest in Paige, who was then about 10 years old. They … Continue reading Louise Pound’s birthday party