More Praise for Silence is Death

Silence is Death: the Life and Work of Tahar Djaout byJulija Sukys “Sukys . . . has written a beautiful but unsentimental book about her search for Algerian poet Tahar Djaout, who was killed in 1993 at the height of Islamic terrorism against intellectuals. No work of dreary lit crit, this is creative nonfiction at its best."—CHOICE To read earlier praise for Silence is Death, please visit http://nebraskapress.typepad.com/university_of_nebraska_pr/2007/05/praise_for_sile.html. Continue reading More Praise for Silence is Death

Praise for Blacks, Indians, and Spaniards in the Eastern Andes

Blacks, Indians, and Spaniards in the Eastern Andes: Reclaiming the Forgotten in Colonial Mizque, 1550-1782 by Lolita Gutiérrez Brockington “In the first serious study of slavery in the eastern Andes, Brockington convincingly demonstrates that Africans did not replace indigenous labor, but added new skill sets."—CHOICE Continue reading Praise for Blacks, Indians, and Spaniards in the Eastern Andes

Praise for Becoming Two-Spirit

Becoming Two-Spirit: Gay Identity and Social Acceptance in Indian Country by Brian Joseph Gilley “[A]n important ethnography of two-spirit societies and their attempt to valorize and transform gay identity into a culturally valued, socially accepted place in Indian country. . . . This study reveals yet another dimension of the complexities of Native American identity and those who would reclaim authentic tradition.”—CHOICE Continue reading Praise for Becoming Two-Spirit

University of Nebraska Press Holiday Web Sale!

Get Ready to Deck Your Shelves! It’s time for the University of Nebraska Press Holiday Web Sale. Shop the sale and save 25% on your University of Nebraska Press book order! Just visit our Web site, place your order, and enter ZHL74 in the discount code field of your shopping cart. This offer is good on all regularly priced books purchased through our Web site.* Discount expires December 21, 2007. Browse our gift book ideas: http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/pages/giftbooks.aspx  Happy Ho-lit-days from the University of Nebraska Press! *excludes books published by the Buros Institute of Mental Measurements Continue reading University of Nebraska Press Holiday Web Sale!

The Sweetest Part of Thanksgiving

Per my promise, here are links to traditional Thanksgiving desserts for your very special Linking in Lincoln Thursday.  I know, it’s not quite Thursday yet, but it’s close enough.  Plus, who wants to go shopping or who wants to bake on Thanksgiving?  I don’t!  So check out these recipes and make a list for today for pie tomorrow!  So, Linking in Lincoln is a Wednesday this week. By the way, before I begin, it’s snowing here.  Huge white flakes are flurrying around, sticking on rooftops, but not on ground.  Makes me want hot chocolate or coffee or tea.  Today, my … Continue reading The Sweetest Part of Thanksgiving

Praise for Pitch Woman

Pitch Woman and Other Stories: The Oral Traditions of Coquelle Thompson, Upper Coquille Athabaskan Indian edited and with an introduction by William R. Seaburg, collected by Elizabeth D. Jacobs “This book is a gift to anthropology, linguistics, and folklore . . . . A chapter in which Seaburg isolates and analyzes four particular tales is valuable and rich. . . . [T]his important work chronicles a person who represents a largely undocumented and little-known Native American group.”—CHOICE Continue reading Praise for Pitch Woman

Praise for Being Lakota

Being Lakota: Identity and Tradition on Pine Ridge Reservation by Larissa Petrillo with Melda and Lupe Trejo “Only after finishing the richly detailed episodes does one realize how skillfully Petrillo develops her purpose, convincing readers that, as Lupe insists, widespread intermarriage between Indian nations is indeed traditional, and consequently, an Indian person has several ways to live as an Indian. The Trejos’s voices are vivid, the book thought-provoking.”—CHOICE Continue reading Praise for Being Lakota

Praise for A History of Icelandic Literature

A History of Icelandic Literature edited by Daisy Neijmann “Each of the book’s four sections is written by a different Icelandic scholar, but all share the same high level of readability thanks to excellent translations. . . . Although obscure, Icelandic literature deserves serious attention; this volume provides an excellent introduction.”—CHOICE Continue reading Praise for A History of Icelandic Literature