Happy New Year!

May 2009 find you and yours happy and in good health. With a new year, come new resolutions (at least for some of us). Of course, finding the perfect resolution is easier said than done. Getting to the gym more often – too predictable. Keeping a cleaner house – too boring.  Let the University of Nebraska Press books come to the rescue: Want to learn more about wine? Robert Camuto’s Corkscrewed: Adventures in the New French Wine Country, in which the author details his move from the United States to France, and his evolution from wine novice to wine lover. … Continue reading Happy New Year!

Tuesday Trivia: December 30, 2008

New this month from the University of Nebraska Press is Farewell to Sport by Paul Gallico. For fourteen years during the golden age of sports, Paul Gallico was one of America’s ace sportswriters. He saw them all—the stars and the hams, the immortals and the phonies in boxing, wrestling, baseball, football, golf, tennis, and every other field of muscular endeavor. But before he departed the world of sports, he left his legions of fans one last hurrah: a collection of his best sports essays. This week Tuesday Trivia is going to quiz you on some other famous farewells, are you … Continue reading Tuesday Trivia: December 30, 2008

Off the Shelf: Bicycling beyond the Divide by Daryl Farmer

Bicycling Read from "On How Not to Begin" in Bicycling beyond the Divide: Two Journeys into the West by Daryl Farmer:

"Saturday, May 7. I said good-bye to Joan and my parents, wobbled down the driveway, pedaled to the end of the street, King to 30th, and onto Pikes Peak, to the four-way stop on 36th. The mountain air was cool, the sun behind me, the shadows long. I crossed Colorado Avenue and merged onto Highway 24 and Ute Pass. I rode for about a mile, but the seat wasn’t set right, so I stopped to adjust it. After placing my tools back into the front pocket of my rear pannier, I neglected to cinch it. As I pedaled, the strap caught in my spokes and ripped. Then I realized that my cyclometer wasn’t working. Not used to the altitude, or the climb, I was already panting. I hadn’t ridden for nearly three weeks, was in probably the worst shape of my life, and it was clear I’d packed too much gear. I stopped to catch my breath and tried to decide what to do about the cyclometer. I didn’t want to ride without it, and I wouldn’t be near a bike shop until Breckenridge, maybe three days away. Best to get it fixed now, I thought.

Continue reading “Off the Shelf: Bicycling beyond the Divide by Daryl Farmer”

This Week in History: December 22-26, 2008

Ok readers, Christmas is finally here! We can all look forward to a week full of food, presents, time off of work, no school, and lots of snow (especially you’re living in Nebraska). We’ve been enjoying a week full of below zero temperatures, but I think I can safely say that the Christmas spirit has not been dampened. After all, the weather will make for the perfect excuse to stay indoors and curl up with a University of Nebraska Press book. They also make great gifts!  If you’re unsure what to get, I’ve got a week’s worth of suggestions for … Continue reading This Week in History: December 22-26, 2008

Linking in Lincoln: December 25, 2008

New this month from the University of Nebraska Press is The Buffalo Hunters: The Story of the Hide Men (2nd edition) by Mari Sandoz. In 1867 there were fifteen million buffalo in the trans-Missouri region, but by the mid 1880’s there were only a few hundred to speak of. It is the decimation of this species that The Buffalo Hunters centers around. This week Linking in Lincoln is going to center on buffalo as well. We’ve got Buffalo University, Buffalo Gals, and just a little Mari Sandoz to spice things up. Are you ready reader? 1.    Mari Sandoz has written … Continue reading Linking in Lincoln: December 25, 2008

Happy Holidays!

We hope this holiday season is one spent among friends, family … and a few good books. When I was growing up, there were certain books I read each Christmastime, the same way I always made a point to watch “White Christmas,” “It’s a Wonderful Life” and “A Christmas Story.” My annual winter reading list consisted, at various times, of several young adult novels about Christmas Pageants gone awry, as well as assorted Little House on the Prairie books, which always had vivid descriptions of holiday celebrations. There was also A Lantern in her Hand, by Bess Streeter Aldrich, a … Continue reading Happy Holidays!

Tuesday Trivia: December 23, 2008

New this month from the University of Nebraska Press is No Planets Strike by Josh Bell. No Planets Strike, the debut collection of poetry by Josh Bell, reads as a playfully serious record of modernity. Subversive in their treatment of the contemporary voice, broad in their subject matter, and often delightfully funny, the poems in this collection have a brilliant ear language.This week Tuesday Trivia is going to test you on your poetry prowess. Try and match the famous poem with its equally famous writer. Good luck, reader! 1.    I, Too, Sing America2.    Where the Sidewalk Ends3.    If You Forget … Continue reading Tuesday Trivia: December 23, 2008

Off the Shelf: The Enders Hotel: A Memoir by Brandon R. Schrand

Read the first chapter, "Restless Men", from The Enders Hotel: A Memoir by Brandon R. Schrand: "On a rain-soaked afternoon in August of 1975 my mother took her shift behind the counter in the bar of the Enders Hotel. It would have been an ordinary afternoon in Soda Springs, Idaho, if not for the sudden downpour in that stretch of summer’s furnace-breath. The rains drove farmers into the dank hollows of their Quonset huts that hugged the rocky landscape. And they sent, too, the ore-mine roughnecks scampering for cover. Some jobs shut down all together. Irrigation lines stopped surging their … Continue reading Off the Shelf: The Enders Hotel: A Memoir by Brandon R. Schrand

This Week in History: December 15-19, 2008

Well readers, another week has passed. There’s a lot happening in the news; Oprah apparently gained 40 pounds, a certain Illinois governor was arrested  for trying to sell President Elect’s Obama’s senate seat and a winter storm is on its way to our little town of Lincoln (which should make for a fun weekend!)…. but best of all its another installment of This Week in History! We’ve got France, and Alcatraz, and Space, oh my!   December 15, 1852: Henri Becquerel, French physicist and Nobel laureate is born. Onitsha by J.M. G. Le Clezio, while not related physics, was written by … Continue reading This Week in History: December 15-19, 2008