This Week in History: December 8-12, 2008

Well readers it’s been a good week. We are now just two weeks away from Christmas, and of course the holiday season is overwhelming! Everywhere you look there are sales going on, and ideas for practical, homemade gifts. I have to tell you it seems that one of the few good things to come out of this recession will be creativity! Who knows maybe this economy will help us all find our own inner Martha Stewart. I’m sorry to say there are no tips for xmas gifts in this edition of This Week in History but we do have John … Continue reading This Week in History: December 8-12, 2008

Linking in Lincoln: December 11, 2008

 New this month from the University of Nebraska Press is Northern Tales: Traditional Stories of Eskimo and Indian Peoples by Howard Norman. With tales from the tribal peoples of Greenland, Canada, Siberia, Alaska, Japan, and the polar region, told and retold during months-long winter nights, Northern Tales gathers together a rich diversity of traditions and cultures, spanning the Way-Back Time through the coming of the first white explorers. By turns tragic and comic, fantastic and earthy, frivolous and profound, this collection transports the reader to the haunting, little-known world of the far North, with all its fragile majesty and power. … Continue reading Linking in Lincoln: December 11, 2008

Tuesday Trivia: December 8, 2008

    New this month from the University of Nebraska Press is The Real Thing by Kurt Andersen. You may already know that Belgium is the most boring country on planet Earth, but do you know why? From cities to sitcoms, from scotch to soda, from English monarchs to French movies, The Real Thing is a compendium of the quintessential, providing definitive answers to some of the most compelling questions of our time. Author Kurt Andersen’s pithy pronouncements sparkle with wit, sophistication, and a healthy dose of skeptical good humor as he strips world culture of accumulated hype and accepted wisdom. … Continue reading Tuesday Trivia: December 8, 2008

Off the Shelf: Wally Yonamine: The Man Who Changed Japanese Baseball by Robert K. Fitts

Read from chapter 1, “Just a Country Boy from Olowalu, Maui” of Wally Yonamine: The Man Who Changed Japanese Baseball by Robert K. Fitts: "Today, Olowalu on Maui’s west coast is part of paradise. Tourists fly from around the world to relax on its pristine beaches, snorkel in its dazzling coral reefs, and be pampered in luxury resorts. But it wasn’t always paradise. In the 1920s and ’30s, when sugar cane plantations dominated the area, life was hard. Thousands of immigrants toiled from dawn to dusk in the cane fields for poverty-level wages. The work was dangerous, and many dreams … Continue reading Off the Shelf: Wally Yonamine: The Man Who Changed Japanese Baseball by Robert K. Fitts

This week in History: December 1-5, 2008

Ok readers, Thanksgiving is finally over, and are you suitably stuffed? I hope not too much, because you wouldn’t want to infringe on the any of the food you may have to consume during the always busy December month. Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanza… they may be different holidays but they definitely all end in food! So to help subdue your appetite, let’s get started on this week. We’ve got Iceland, Communism (as we can’t seem to get away from it), and the first heart transplant in history. Are you ready, reader? December 1, 1918: Iceland becomes a sovereign state, yet remains … Continue reading This week in History: December 1-5, 2008

Linking in Lincoln: December 4, 2008

New this month from the University of Nebraska Press is Why She Plays: The World of Women’s Basketball by Christine A. Baker. From the local court, to the high school court, to the WNBA court filled with screaming fans, the question remains the same. Why does she play basketball?  Avid player, assistant varsity coach, and writer for Full Court Press, Christine A. Baker attempts to dismantle how and why, since 1972, women have chosen this lifestyle. Through a series of interviews she takes us into the “heart and soul of the sport”. This week Linking in Lincoln will provide a … Continue reading Linking in Lincoln: December 4, 2008

New this month from the University of Nebraska Press

New this month from the University of Nebraska Press: a new civil war battlefield guide, a new edition of The Buffalo Hunters by Mari Sandoz, a collection of stories and interviews about women's basketball, plus many others. Read about all of our new books here. Found something you'd like to purchase for yourself or as a gift? There's still time to take advantage of our 25% off holiday sale. (Offer expires December 19, 2008.) Enter ZHL84 in the discount code field of your shopping cart and click "apply". Continue reading New this month from the University of Nebraska Press

Tuesday Trivia: Cinderella Ball

New this month from the University of Nebraska Press is Cinderella Ball: A Look Inside Small College Basketball in West Virginia by Bob Kuska. West Virginia was once a “basketball hotbed” but interest has begun to wane in the past few decades and now most of these teams play in obscurity. What Cinderella Ball does is tell the moving story of one small town team’s rise to success. Following their day to day struggles over 4 seasons, Kuska shows us this game from both the “bleachers and the court.” This week Tuesday Trivia is going to work with the Cinderella … Continue reading Tuesday Trivia: Cinderella Ball