New in December from the University of Nebraska Press

New books this month from the University of Nebraska Press: a collection of the complete letters of Henry James, 1855-1872, volumes 1 and 2, the first book to provide a detailed guide to the Civil War Battlefields of Wilson’s Creek, Pea Ridge, and Prairie Grove, a history of Americana music, a new paperback edition of Black Planet: Facing Race during an NBA Season, plus much more. Browse our new books here. Continue reading New in December from the University of Nebraska Press

Crazy Horse, Oglala Sioux

Today is the birthday of Oglala Sioux military leader Crazy Horse (12/4/1849 – 9/5/1877), of  Little Bighorn fame. Crazy Horse: The Strange Man of the Oglalas (Second Edition) By Mari Sandoz With an introduction by Vine Deloria Jr. "Sandoz displayed an exquisite sensitivity to the spiritual and cultural impact of landscape and topography, and intensely conveyed the emotional, psychological, and religious universe of the Plains Indians. . . . That sensitivity makes this, the most accomplished biography of Crazy Horse and one of the best and most moving books ever written about the American West, a strange, often unsettling work."—Benjamin … Continue reading Crazy Horse, Oglala Sioux

More Praise for Nocturnal America

Nocturnal America by John Keeble “Nocturnal America, winner of the 2006 Prairie Schooner Prize for fiction, is a supremely satisfying set of nine loosely connected stories that interweave raw emotion, spiritual searching and violence. . . . For the most part, the men and women of Nocturnal America are as real as your next-door neighbor, struggling with matters of body and spirit against an Eastern Washington backdrop of stark lines, sweeping curves and treeless horizons. Keeble illuminates his characters with uncommon clarity, showing the care of an author who’s spent 30 years perfecting his form.”— Mary Ann Gwinn, Seattle Times … Continue reading More Praise for Nocturnal America

How many Husker fans will be tuning in at home?

 ow many spectators will be in Kansas City tomorrow night in the wintry Arrowhead Stadium?  How will the Nebraska Huskers fare against the Oklahoma Sooners?  Will it be anything like that fateful Thanksgiving game in 1971? What?  You don’t know about the game of the century?   Then you don’t know jack and should read, The Game of the Century: Nebraska vs. Oklahoma in College Football’s Ultimate Battle. Continue reading How many Husker fans will be tuning in at home?

Author Events

Pamela Carter Joern, author of The Floor of the SkyThursday, November 30, 20067:00 PMMagers & Quinn Booksellers3038 Hennepin AvenueMinneapolis, MN(612)822-4611Appearance, book signing, and reading with Alicia Conroy, author of Lives of Mapmakers. Joel Sartore, author of Nebraska: Under a Big Red SkyThursday, November 30, 20067:00 PMGreat Plains Art Museum1155 Q StreetLincoln, NE 68588You are cordially invited to a reception celebrating the paperback Bison Books edition of Nebraska: Under a Big Red Sky. Remarks by the photographer followed by a reception and book signing. The National GrasslandsBy Francis Moul Photography by Georg JoutrasFriday, December 1, 200611:00 AM – 12:30 PMUniversity of … Continue reading Author Events

An Evening on Chuck Hagel

n October 26, 2006, the University of Nebraska Press and the Joslyn Castle Institute for Sustainable Communities hosted a discussion on the book Chuck Hagel: Moving Forward with author Charlyne Berens.  Michael R. McCarthy, co-founder and manager of the McCarthy Group in Omaha, and Geitner Simmons, editorial page editor of the Omaha World-Herald, participated as panelist at the event. To listen to a recording of the live event, please download our podcast. Continue reading An Evening on Chuck Hagel

Reading Nocturnal America

here are places in this country that go unnoticed. I grew up in one of them—eastern Washington. John Keeble has lived in eastern Washington for thirty years and has written movingly about the people there and the unremitting landscape, most recently in Nocturnal America, winner of the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction and just released from University of Nebraska Press. Even when the stories (which are loosely linked across time and place) venture into Saskatchewan or onto a giant oil freighter headed north toward Valdez, the settings whistle the same tune. What is it about these places that won’t … Continue reading Reading Nocturnal America

November Featured Bookstore

Lee Booksellers
Edgewood Center
5500 S. 56th Street, Suite 4
Lincoln, NE 68516

(We spoke with Linda Hillegass of Lee Booksellers, in November about bookselling and the holidays. Linda and her husband Jim McKee own the bookstore.)

1. What are
some of the traditions at Lee Booksellers for the holidays, such as sales or
events?

All year long we keep a pot of coffee for our customers
and in November and December, we put a plate of homemade Christmas cookies
alongside. Joni, a longtime staff
member loves to bake and for the two months before Christmas, not even the
Keebler elves are busier in the evenings. We’re pretty sure some of our customers come into the store in December
just to get one of her meltingly buttery Scotch shortbread cookies.

2.  Is there
anything Lee Booksellers is doing new this year?

We also do lots of store autographings and fall is our
busiest season. November usually sees
one or two events a week. In December
we’ll be hosting a favorite suspense writer, Omahan Sean Doolittle. This year we’ll also have a free children’s
concert featuring The String Beans, a local group that features its own
original children’s songs for ages 3 to 8. They have a new Christmas CD, Rocking Your Christmas Stocking,
and will intersperse songs from that album with outrageously goofy jokes. We’ve also started two store knitting clubs
that have drawn a very enthusiastic response.

Continue reading “November Featured Bookstore”

Happy 385th Thanksgiving

It turns out that Thanksgiving is more of a holiday than I thought.  The Pilgrims that migrated to America practiced many days of fasting and thanksgiving in response to “internal and external threats and blessings” according to Martha L. Finch’s essay in  Eating in Eden: Food & American Utopias, edited by Etta M. Madden & Martha L. Finch.  The chapter begins with a recounting of a two month long drought in 1623 Plymouth.  The colonists called a fast for God’s mercy and broke their fast with a day of Thanksgiving when it finally rained. A Pokanoket namedEating_in_eden
Hobomok, who lived with the colonists, said that the colonists’ god “‘is a good God, for he hath heard you, and sent rain.’” 

Included in this chapter is an account of the thanksgiving on which we base our Thanksgiving Holiday.  The Pilgrims were only in New England for about a year in 1621. 

Continue reading “Happy 385th Thanksgiving”