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« December 2006 | Main | February 2007 »

January 30, 2007

UNP Author in Bud Greenspan Documentary

On February 1, 2007, Showtime will begin airing the Bud Greenspan documentary Pride Against Prejudice: The Larry Doby Story.  Larry Doby was the second black baseball player to cross the color line when he joined the Cleveland Indians, soon Branch_rickey after Branch Rickey signed Jackie Robinson to the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Lee Lowenfish, author of Branch Rickey: Baseball's Ferocious Gentleman, (UNP, April 2007) is featured in the film.  Famed Sportscaster and actor Bob Costas remarked, "[j]ust about everyone knows that Branch Rickey played a major role in modern baseball’s most important development, the breaking of the color line. Yet, even if you somehow put that aside, 'The Mahatma' would still rank as one of baseball's most influential and enduringly significant figures. It’s that complete Branch Rickey, ‘Rickey in Full,’ that Lee Lowenfish presents here."

Showtime schedule for Pride Against Prejudice: The Larry Doby Story

Branch Rickey: Baseball's Ferocious Gentleman book page, which include an excerpt and table of contents

January 29, 2007

Author Events

Castros_curveball Castro's Curveball
By Tim Wendel

Friday, February 2, 2007
7:30 PM
Black Oak Books
1491 Shattuck Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94709
(510) 486-0698
Tim Wendel and Screenwriter Melanie Dixon will read from Castro's Curveball, the novel and the script.

Crazy_horse_1 Crazy Horse
By Mari Sandoz

With an introduction by Vine Deloria Jr.

Saturday, February 3, 2007
Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center
Chadron State College 1000 Main Street
Chadron, NE 69337
The Mari Sandoz historical biography, Crazy Horse:The Strange Man of the Oglalas has been selected as the featured book for the 2007 statewide celebration of One Book One Nebraska. Exhibit opens at the Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center.

Rock_ghost_willow_deer_2 Rock, Ghost, Willow, Deer
By Allison Adelle Hedge Coke

Saturday, February 3, 2007
University of California Riverside
Riverside Library
Riverside, CA 92501
Author appearance and reading.

January 26, 2007

Author Events

Boarding_school_blues Boarding School Blues
Edited and with an introduction by Clifford E. Trafzer, Jean A. Keller, and Lorene Sisquoc

Saturday, January 27, 2007
3:00 PM
Riverside Public Library
3581 Mission Inn Avenue
Riverside, CA 92501
(951) 826-5213
Meet the editors and book signing.

Praise for The Complete Letters of Henry James

Complete_letters_of_henry_james_v1 The Complete Letters of Henry James, 1855–1872: Volumes 1 and 2
Edited by Pierre A. Walker and Greg W. Zacharias

“These extraordinary, profoundly welcome volumes are the first fruits of an epic undertaking by two heroic American scholars, Pierre Walker and Greg Zacharias. . . . The two volumes here contain 161 painstakinglyComplete_letters_of_henry_james_v2   edited, spaciously presented letters (52 previously unpublished). The total number of James letters known to be in existence today is 10,423. . . . The editors coolly estimate that ‘this project will produce at least 140 individual volumes.’ A comprehensive edition is overdue. . . . [T]hese early volumes give a wonderfully pleasurable picture of a writer at the beginning of his journey, enduring setbacks and barren spells, but already showing the impressive resilience, wisdom and wit that were the foundations of his astonishing career.”—Philip Horne, The Daily Telegraph

“Luxuriously spacious design. . . . The textual editing of the letters is fantastically thorough, every blot, deletion, insertion and misspelling being lucidly presented in the text itself and further described in endnotes to each letter; for the reader this evokes the dash and spontaneity of James’s pen, and for the scholar it clarifies every possible ambiguity caused by that dash. . . . The letters themselves are so vivid, funny and revealing that [the edition] is already indispensable.”—Alan Hollinghurst, The Guardian

"[James’s] letters have never before appeared in their entirety. The University of Nebraska Press is attempting, slowly, to make up for that fact in a scholarly edition that obviates the need for any other.”—Benjamin Markovits, Times Literary Supplement

“Rippling through these letters are the first imaginative stirrings of one of the greatest fiction and travel writers in the language. He was also one of the most entertaining—and prolific—correspondents. . . . James’s correspondence, its editors estimate, will run to at least 140 volumes and will include more than 10,000 letters. The most comprehensive edition before this . . . offered just 1,000 or so. The partiality of that selection is revealed by this magisterial new venture, whose two opening volumes brim with a wealth of hitherto unpublished letters. . . . These are richly enthralling letters. The sooner the next 138 or so volumes appear, the better.” —Peter Kemp, The Sunday Times (London)

“The volumes are beautiful, solidly put together, with big type, wide margins, and copious annotations remarking on cross-outs and misspellings and new words written over old ones. . . . [They] bring a high seriousness to letters that were usually dashed off; certainly the scholars preparing these volumes will have spent many more hours on each letter than did either James or the recipients he was addressing.”—Edmund V. White, The New York Review of Books

“[T]he general public has been deprived of James’s full epistolary record until now. . . . All the more reason to celebrate the present volumes, handsomely produced and extensively and intelligently annotated, which inaugurate a complete edition in some 140 volumes, and to feel gratitude toward the editors and the University of Nebraska Press.”—Peter Brooks, Bookforum

“[This] collected edition of James’s letters was needed. . . . These two volumes . . . . throw much light on [Henry James’] relationship with his family and his country of birth while at the same time helping us towards some understanding of his health problems, such as they were. Some of the letters from Italy are small masterpieces of description; they are alert and sensitive and full of astute judgments. Sometimes, too, James is funny, irreverent and outspoken.”—Colm Tóibín, London Review of Books

January 25, 2007

Cather Archive Grows

Hundreds of Willa Cather's letters and other materials were donated to the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.  The donated collection, previously unknown, includes more than 350 letters and a number of postcards, photographs and books. 

This donation triples the University Archives' of Cather's letters.  And although instructions in Willa Cather's will do not allow the publication of any of her personal correspondence, scholars are free to visit the UNL libraries and view the materials. 

Willa Cather (1873-1947)--Nebraska raised and an alumnus of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln-- was an award-winning author.  She is most remembered for her books My Antonia and Death Comes for the Arch BishopOne of Ours, a World War I story based on her cousin G. P. Cather, won the Pulitzer Prize.

To learn more about the new addition to UNL's collection of Willa Cather materials, please visit the UNL Libraries Archives and Special Collections, The Willa Cather Archive, and read the article Family donates hundreds of Willa Cather letters to UNL Libraries.  To learn more about Willa Cather,

January 23, 2007

There and Back Again

A few years ago, when there was only talk of a movie of The Lord of the Rings being made, a friend of mine went to a Halloween party dressed as Gandalf the Grey. The first guess made, "Are you Moses?" I doubt the same mistake would be made today. It has been about two years since The Return of the King came out and I am just about ready to read them again.

Yes, I am one of the fans, ever since I was about twelve. I used to read them every year or two along with The Hobbit, The Simarillion, The Lays of Beleriand, and Unfinished Tales. But recently, I haven't picked them up since just after the movie of Fellowship of the Ring came out.

It's not that I minded the movies and the attention they brought to the books. I loved them and still do. I guess I just got sick of it all. Books are quiet things. They are something you sit and envision on your own. You embody the characters, you live with them, even if you are hearing them read aloud with someone else, the real imagery, the real book, is in your head. Books are private. Movies are shared.

And because I and all of my friends are fantasy and science fiction fiends, I got a lot of LOtR submersion. The movies would be on in the background of parties. There were LOtR themed parties where we watched the movies that were out before the next one was released. We discussed the history of Middle-Earth and its peoples. We argued about this or that change from book to movie. One friend even took a stab at learning elvish. Some of these people were fantasy fans new to LOtR and others weren't fantasy geeks at all, but now interested because of the movies. That is good.

But it got to be a bit much for me. In my copy of LOtR, the old Ballantine edition from the 1980s with the awful artwork (on The Two Towers a white haired Legolas actually has a mullet) there is a great introduction by Peter S. Beagle. He talks about finding LOtR in the stacks of the Carnegie Library after searching for them for four years. He's read about it in a New York Times review. He's nostalgic for the time before the book exploded "into popularity almost overnight." I wonder what he thinks of its popularity now.

There was a time when you could tell who were the fantasy fans by who knew The Lord of the Rings. I've made quick friends with people for recognizing a snatch of elvish or a balrog on the calender. Those days are gone. But I'm not nostalgic. I'm glad the movies brought these stories to new people.

But Entertainment Weekly has moved on to many other covers and parties now have other movies in the background. I don't know if my friend ever learned elvish, and my copies of the Extended Edition DVDs are sitting on the shelf and it has been a long time since anyone asked me if Gandalf was one of the ringbearers. I'm ready to read again.

In that great introduction by Peter S. Beagle he describes why I love these books: "[Tolkien] is a great enough magician to tap our most common nightmares, daydreams and twilight fancies, but he never invented them either: he found them a place to live, a green alternative to each day's madness here in a poisoned world. We are raised to honor all the wrong explorers and discoverers--thieves planting flags, murderers carrying crosses. Let us at last praise the colonizers of dreams."

January 22, 2007

Praise for The Struggle for Self-Determination

The Struggle for Self-Determination by David R. M. Beck Struggle_for_selfdetermination

“Beck skillfully synthesizes the downward spiral of the Menonimee economy, but he also admirably documents their successful legal fight to restore their tribal status and maintain their cultural values. Utilizing a vast array of sources, including numerous interviews with Menominees and their tribal records, he has produced the best single book on the subject.”—CHOICE

Praise for The National Grasslands

National_grasslands_2 The National Grasslands by Francis Moul

“[A]s this book shows, it might be wise to take a side trip to spend some hours in the total serenity of the National Grasslands. Moul writes with the passion and poetry needed to stimulate the traveler to look beyond the bold and the gaudy and see into the very heart of the American continent. The photographs by Georg Joutras are seductive enough to lure any traveler seeking a less hectic pace. . . . This book is the first to describe each of the National Grasslands in a manner that emphasizes their value as well as their beauty.”—Library Journal

“Two Nebraskans here provide a descriptive guide and excellent discussion of the 20 American National Grasslands and the Grasslands National Park of Canada.”—CHOICE

“This rich introduction to the region encompasses the geological history, unique arid environments, and social and political movements that characterize it. . . . [T]he striking color photographs by Georg Joutras provide engaging evidence of the sweeping vistas linked to this geographic masterpiece.”—Bloomsbury Review

January 19, 2007

Praise for Dining with Marcel Proust and Pampille’s Table

Dining_with_marcel_proust_1 Dining with Marcel Proust and Pampille’s Table by Shirley King

“The At Table series published by the University of Nebraska Press provides several welcome additions to the culinary library. Shirley King’s Dining with Marcel Proust, first published in 1979, is a natural, given what even someonePampille_for_food_2 who has not read Proust knows about him: master of the evocative, sensory life and, of course, the source of that famous passage about those madeleines. . . . King has translated the work of one author spoken of with reverence by Proust: Marthe Daudet, author of the 1919 Les Bons Plats de France. King has adapted the work for 21st-century kitchens and renamed it Pampille’s Table. . . . Daudet’s wry observations make this cookbook a treat to read. . . . For those who would like to try French cooking or wish to improve their repertoire, Daudet is a wonderful guide and culinary philosopher.”—Kay Ackerman, Bloomsbury Review

Praise for True to the Roots

True to the Roots by Monte Dutton

True_to_the_roots_1

“The book’s golden.” —Booklist

True to the Roots is an engaging . . . account of Americana as it is lived today, a breezy read, evocative of the kinds of places many of us will never know.”—Music and Letters

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