University of Nebraska Press in the Omaha World-Herald

Are you finding yourself drawn to books that describe the place where you live in these tough economic times? According to a story in Saturday’s Omaha World-Herald, you’re not alone. Bookstores are noticing a trend toward regional-interest books, particularly non-fiction, as readers seek out books depicting people, places and events that are familiar to them. Call it comfort reading. As University of Nebraska Press Marketing Manager Rhonda Winchell, who was quoted in the story, says “Everyone is looking for the book form of macaroni and cheese in a blue box.” The full story is here. Along those lines, wouldn’t some of those comforting … Continue reading University of Nebraska Press in the Omaha World-Herald

Off the Shelf: Take Me Out to the Ball Game by Amy Whorf McGuiggan

Take Me Out to the Ball Game cover image Read from Chapter 4, "1908: The Year of the Song", in Take Me Out to the Ball Game: The Story of the Sensational Baseball Song by Amy Whorf McGuiggan:

"That magical 1908 season seemed to have turned every New Yorker into a Giants—and baseball—fan. The old wooden grandstand was routinely filled with celebrities, politicians, and the stars of Broadway and vaudeville. But the thrills of that 1908 season, its ecstasies and agonies, were all still months away on the April day when Jack Norworth, riding the New York subway, saw a gaudy, lithographed poster of a silk-hosed baseball player standing with a bat on his shoulder.

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A. B. Guthrie Jr. in the Gallery of Outstanding Montanans

Today, A. B. Guthrie Jr. will be inducted into the Montana State Historical Society’s Gallery of Outstanding Montanans. In honor of his induction, here's a synopisis of why he's notable: Shortly after graduating from college with a journalism degree, Guthrie took a job with the Lexington Leader, in Kentucky, and worked there for 30 years. In 1944, 18 years after he started at the paper (and when he was 43 years old), he received a Nieman Fellowship to Harvard University, where he wrote his first novel, The Big Sky. Many other titles followed, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Way West, … Continue reading A. B. Guthrie Jr. in the Gallery of Outstanding Montanans

Remembering Jim Johnston, Yellowstone Autumn reviewed

Jim Johnston, author of the University of Nebraska Press title, The Long Road of War: A Marine’s Story of Pacific Combat, died earlier this month. He was 86 years old. Johnston lived most of his life in southwest Nebraska community of Wauneta, in Chase County, where he established Johnston Real Estate in 1963. His wife and three sons still live there. In 1998, the University of Nebraska Press published The Long Road of War, in which Johnston told his story of service during WWII, which he served mostly in the Pacific. The book was well received in military circles and … Continue reading Remembering Jim Johnston, Yellowstone Autumn reviewed

More poetry during National Poetry Month

An interview with Terese Svoboda (author of Trailer Girl and Other Stories, which will be published as a Bison paperback in December) was featured on the arts and culture blog The Millions last week, as part of a National Poetry Month feature. In the interview, Svoboda discusses the importance of song in Sudan, something she spent time researching and translating years ago – and also something she discussed at an event in Grand Island a few weeks back. Click here for an interesting interview with a surprise coincidence. In other, more general, National Poetry Month news, ForeWord Magazine has is … Continue reading More poetry during National Poetry Month

Off the Shelf: Kokomo Joe: The Story of the First Japanese American Jockey in the United States by John Christgau

Kokomo Joe Read an excerpt from the title chapter of Kokomo Joe: The Story of the First Japanese American Jockey in the United States by John Christgau:

"The radio news was that Santa Anita Race Track had opened. Tucked up against the wall of the San Gabriel Mountains, the track seemed an inviting playground, utterly free of irritating stiff rules of conduct. Those magazines he read pictured rich gamblers wearing bowties standing alongside bathing beauties and movie actors, all of them flashing exactly the same broad smiles that had become his trademark. It was obvious that a good smile was the passkey to American success.

Carrying his small suitcase again, Joe hitchhiked across Los Angeles to Santa Anita racetrack. He made his way through a sea of pansies planted around the track to a gate at the backstretch, where a guard in a baggy suit and a police hat stopped him.

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Two quilt exhibits and two quilt books

Grace Snyder grew up in a sod home in the Nebraska Sandhills, wishing she could grow up to marry a cowboy and make beautiful quilts (she got an early start on quilting, making her first while as a girl when she was keeping an eye on her family’s cattle). She did both, and became such an influential quilter that her creations were featured in exhibitions across the country. Her best-known design, “Flower Basket Petit Point,” modeled after a china pattern, was named one of the top 100 quilts of the 20th century. In 1963, Snyder, with the help of her … Continue reading Two quilt exhibits and two quilt books

Wine, Twitter and Nebraska

This Thursday brings more wine news (something there’s been a lot of on the University of Nebraska Press blog lately): Robert Camuto, author of Corkscrewed: Adventures in the New French Wine Country,  is featured in a new video on chow.com. This is the first of several chow.com videos in which Robert will discuss French wine. We’re proud of our resident French wine expert. For our Lincoln readers, the founder of Twitter will be on University of Nebraska-Lincoln campus tomorrow. Twitter, for the uninitiated, is sort of the opposite of a book – users post extremely short updates on what they’re … Continue reading Wine, Twitter and Nebraska

Guest blogger: Kate Flaherty

Frequent University of Nebraska Press blog contributor Kate Flaherty recently read The Blue Tattoo by Margot Mifflin and Searching for Tamsen Donner by Gabrielle Burton. The two books — both invovling journeys west gone awry — are among her favorite UNP titles this season. Read on:

How to Have a Roadtrip Without Leaving the Couch, by Kate Flaherty

My favorite offerings from Nebraska this spring are The Blue Tattoo by Margot Mifflin and Searching for Tamsen Donner by Gabrielle Burton. While both books are different in scope—the first is a biography, the other more of a biography intertwined with memoir—the similarities between them are striking, and not just because they both look at the role of pioneer women in mid-1800s America. I was particularly captivated by how each author dispels myths and misconceptions in order to better understand the complex realities of these women’s lives in the west.

In The Blue Tattoo, Margot Mifflin deftly traces the amazing history of Olive Oatman, who at thirteen was part of an ill-fated Mormon pilgrimage to California when most of her family, including her parents, were massacred by Yavapai Indians in what is now the American southwest. Taken captive by the Yavapai, Olive was then traded to the Mohave who took her in as one of their own. She lived as a Mohave and spoke their language, ultimately assimilating into the tribe so deeply she was given a chin tattoo just like other young Mohave women and, Mifflin believes, freely underwent a sexual initiation as well. When Oatman is finally “rescued” Mifflin shows how after grieving the loss of her first family following the massacre, Oatman must deal with the loss of her second family, as she is taken from the Mohave and thrust overnight back into the white pioneer world.

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Holocaust Survivor and UNP author featured in documentary, The Last Survivor

Hédi Fried, author of The Road to Auschwitz: Fragments of a Life will be featured in the forthcoming documentary, The Last Survivor presented by Righteous Pictures. The documentary focuses on genocide awareness, prevention, and survivor advocacy and is working in efforts with the Genocide Prevention Project to promote April as Genocide Prevention month. See a short film that focuses on Hédi and her story of survival. Learn more about Hédi and the documentary in the Huffington Post. Continue reading Holocaust Survivor and UNP author featured in documentary, The Last Survivor