New Books

Mission Statement

  • The University of Nebraska Press Blog is a space for lovers of literature, science fiction, sports, history, and Native studies to share their opinions and thoughts with readers and potential readers of UNP titles. It is a market to announce new works and journals to the reading public. It is a forum for authors to discuss their new or forthcoming books and projects.

Disclaimer

  • The University of Nebraska Press staff manages this blog. Postings and comments do not represent the views or policies of the University of Nebraska Press or the University of Nebraska. Readers' comments are welcome and will be reviewed before they are posted. The University of Nebraska Press reserves the right to edit or remove any post or comment at any time.

Google Search

  • Google

    WWW
    nebraskapress.typepad.com
Blog powered by TypePad

UNP Website Features

« July 2007 | Main | September 2007 »

August 30, 2007

Creating Public Change

Roots_of_change by Mary Ridder

Organic.  Marketing cooperative. Community owned. These and other words thrill some people and throw chills into others. They’re risky. They’re new (or very, very old). And they describe some of the creative activity described in Roots of Change whereby energetic folks are working hard to add value to their products in order to retain more of the profit dollars, wholesomeness, and control of their business’ destiny.

Some of the endeavors in Roots never made it, never even got off the ground. Others are a testament to tremendous drive and talent. All of these fascinating profiles can, however, serve as a teaching moment for writing forward-thinking public policy, developing wise legislation, or building a business with some great do’s and don’ts as a guideline.

--------------------------------------

Mary Ridder is the author of Roots of Change.  Mary also runs Ridder Ranch with her family.  Read an earlier post she wrote for our blog here.

August 29, 2007

Author Events August 30 thru September 5

Falling_room_2

Falling Room
By Eli Hastings


Wednesday, September 5, 2007 · 7:30 PM
University of Nebraska Omaha· The Webber Art Gallery
6001 Dodge Street · Omaha, NE 68182-0324
Author appearance, reading and book signing.







View Larger Map

August 28, 2007

An Integrated Intimacy

by Anna-Lisa Cox

The extraordinary story of Covert, Michigan’s radical integration and racial equality has long fascinated me, and, like any author, I could not help but be changed by my years of research into its history.  Yet,A_stronger_kinship my experience with the contemporary community of Covert has also profoundly affected me. 

I still remember visiting Covert many years ago to conduct an oral history interview.  I was to meet with the elderly descendants of some of the first black pioneers to settle in Covert.  I was in graduate school at the time, and had just finished taking a seminar on the practice and theory of oral history, and I really wanted to make sure that I got everything just right.  When I arrived I was very conscious that I was a white stranger in the home of a black family who had generously given me an opportunity to ask them intimate questions about their ancestors.  I was already nervous by the time I had to set up the recording equipment, and in that process made things even worse.  Soon the machines were rebelling, and I could feel myself starting to blush, and then was mortified to see my hands start shaking.  All of a sudden I felt a firm hand on my shoulder -- it was one of my interviewees.  The elderly gentleman smiled at me and said, “Girl, relax!  I’ve got cousins who are whiter than you!”  He started to laugh and I joined him.  After the interview I mulled over what he had said.  Intellectually I knew that Covert had been an integrated community, where whites and blacks had created a socially, economically, politically and physically integrated community a century before the Civil Rights movement.  Finally, however, I truly understood that this was a community where race was not just about theories; it was about intimacy – about family.

__________________________________________
Anna-Lisa Cox is the award-winning author of A Stronger Kinship: One Town's Extraordinary Story of Hope and Faith.  You can learn more by listening to an NPR story on Covert, Michigan and Cox's research.

August 27, 2007

(downtown) Omaha Lit Fest

Mark your calendars for (downtown) Omaha Lit Fest 2007!  I know, I should have this posted on a Wednesday during author events, but there are so many UNP authors involved that I felt that the festival needed a post of its own!  The festival takes place on September 14th and 15th.

On the (downtown) Omaha Lit Fest's website, there is a disclaimer about the malleability of the list, but it is rumored that the writers listed below will be in attendance:

Fiction and nonfiction writer Jonis Agee (her newest novel, The River Wife, was published by Random House.  Her novel Sweet Eyes is a UNP book)

John Price, author of the memoir Not Just Any Land

Fiction writer and editor of UNP books The Big Empty and A Different Plain, Ladette Randolph

Aaron Raz Link, co-memoirist of What Becomes You

Hilda Raz, editor of The Prairie Schooner, poet, and co-memoirist of What Becomes You

Editor of American Jewish Fiction, co-editor of Food and Judaism Gerald Shapiro will be there.  He also wrote the very funny short story collection Bad Jews and Other Stories.

Novelist Kellie Wells, author of Skin

August 24, 2007

August CHOICE Reviews

The August 2007 issue of CHOICE includes reviews of four UNP titles. Following are selected excerpts:

Fuzzy Fiction by Jean-Louis Hippolyte        Recommended
"Providing fascinating insights, this persuasive, thought-provoking book explains how authors have adapted to an ever-changing environment."

Riding Pretty by Renee M. Laegreid              Recommended
"Laegreid offers an interesting case study of how some women negotiated the boundaries of gender and sometimes even race within the mythic US West."

Boarding School Blues, edited by Clifford E. Trafzer, Jean A. Keller, and Lorene Sisquoc    

Highly recommended

"The strength of this book . . . is the intentional decision by many of the authors to escape the restrictive positive/negative dichotomy that has limited the interpretations of many others who have examined the history of American Indian boarding schools. As a result, readers can experience the areas of gray that students experienced, thereby learning to appreciate the complexity of boarding school life. . . . These brave students' stories are a testament to their adaptability, tenacity, and love for their people."

The Niobrara by Paul A. Johnsgard    Recommended

CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Literature is a publication of the Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association.

August 22, 2007

After a long hiatus...

I've spent most of the summer largely sf and fantasy free for no particular reason.  Just catching up on other things on my reading list.  Except Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows of course, but I figure everyone else has discussed that to death so I don't need to.  At least I know when my opinion doesn't really matter.

There have been a lot of movies with fantasy elements out this summer, but in between the superheroes, pirates, boy wizards, and falling stars you may have missed the one honest to goodness science fiction film that came out at the end of June.  Sunshine, written and directed by the same team that gave us 28 Days Later (Alex Garland and Danny Boyle respectively, in case you were wondering).  Is it going to set the world on fire the way 28 Days Later did?  No.  But it's still good and the sort of sf flick that only comes along every once in awhile, so it's worth the look.

It follows a team of astronauts on a mission to reignite the sun with a bomb the size of Manhattan (okay.  Sure.  Maybe if they get all the superheroes, wizards, and pirates behind them, but, hey, this is what suspension of disbelief is for.  For what it is worth if you check out the blog for the film they have a whole explanation of why the science is plausible, but it all boils down to something quite theoretical and still isn't plausible enough for me.  But moving on now...) when they receive a distress signal from the first ship that tried and failed at this mission.  Then the decision must be made whether to go investigate the first ship and the consequences of that decision, which are predictably bad.

The cast is all (forgive the pun) stellar barely-knowns, people you'll recognize but may not know their names.  Most of them are much too young to actually be astronauts--compare the cast ages to the ages of the actual crew in space right now and you'll see what I mean, but this is movie world where young actors typically play characters in career positions a real person wouldn't achieve for another decade at least.  The producers were already taking a chance on making a space movie, can you imagine if all the cast were over 30 too?

But for all my grousing, the actors do well (unlike Kate Bosworth trying to play a mother and Pulitzer winning writer).  The three main characters are the soft hearted pilot (Rose Byrne), the practical and focused engineer who brings the grit and determination that Naomie Harris's character Selena brought to 28 Days Later (Chris Evans--and I'll admit Selena and Mace are my favorite characters of the two movies for pretty much the same reasons) and the middle ground physicist who is our hero (Cillian Murphy) with wonderful support from Michelle Yeoh as the biologist and Hiroyuki Sanada as the captain.

The most terrifying moment in the film isn't any of the deaths (of course there are deaths), but the moment they realize they only have enough oxygen for four out of the seven people on board to complete the mission and save the earth.  They are faced with the choice of killing each other to continue the mission and save the billions of people on earth, or all suffocating together and letting earth die with them.

Unfortunately the movie cops out on that question and goes in for some raving about God's will to end the earth, but the idea is chilling none-the-less.  Go see Sunshine when you feel humanity is worth saving but still feel cynical enough to see our flaws.

Author Events August 23 thru August 29

Because_a_fire_was_in_my_head

Because a Fire Was in My Head By Lynn Stegner
Saturday, August 25, 2007 — 7:00 PM
Northshire Bookstore
4869 Main Street
Manchester Center, VT 05255
802.362.3565
Author appearance, reading and book signing with Amy Hempel, author of The Collected Stories.



Crazy_horse

Crazy Horse (Second Edition)
By Mari Sandoz
With an introduction by Vine Deloria Jr.

Friday, August 24 - Monday, September 3, 2007
Nebraska State Fair
Heritage Village
Lincoln, NE
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.


For all author events, please visit our Author Events & Book Signings page.

August 17, 2007

Cilvil War Books and Links

While perusing our newest additions to our list this month, The Mysterious Private Thompson by Laura Leedy Gansler caught my eye.   Private Thompson served during the American Civil War in The  First Battle of Bull Run, The Second Battle of Bull Run, the Peninsula Campaign, and The Battle of Fredericksburg.  She also claimed to have been a spy.  Yep, I used the right pronoun.

That reminds me of a riddle I learned in a class years (let's not say how many) ago:

A man and his son were in a horrible car accident.  They were taken to the emergency room with extensive injuries.  When the boy was brought into the OR, the attending doctor protested, "I can't operate on this child.  He is my son!"

But Private Franklin Thompson was really Sarah Emma Edmonds.  She disguised herself as a man in order to enlist in the Union Army.  Actually, Sara dressed and lived as a man well before the Civil War.

So for your links this Friday, I have a couple of Civil War blogs/posts to share.  Civil War Women chronicles the lives of women during the Civil War.  Draw the Sword has a post about The Gettysburg Civil War Women’s Memorial.  Last, but definitely not least, Nursing Innovator - Clara Burton 1821 - 1912 is a short blog tribute to the Civil War nurse.

Enjoy your weekend!  Oh, and did you figure out the riddle?  I hope so.

August 15, 2007

No Author Events August 16 thru August 22

Please visit our Author Events & Book Signings page for all events.  In other news:

Soon, colors will swirl, links will re-direct you, and the University of Nebraska Press world you know and love--at least the UNP world online--will change.  For now, sit tight.

Your faithful blog coordinator will be in and out for the next two weeks, but posts still will appear here and there.  To be sure and catch them when they do, subscribe to this blog's feed.

Have an idea for a theme for our Linking Fridays?  Then email me using the link to your right.  I'll carefully consider it and give you credit.

Enjoy your Wednesday.

August 14, 2007

Writers Make Good Pitchers

On August 8, Lee Lowenfish, author of Branch Rickey: Baseball's Ferocious Gentleman, threw the first ball for the Hudson Valley Renegades vs Batavia Muckdogs at Duchess Stadium in Wappinger Falls, N.Y. 

The weather was beautiful and Lee was in good form!

Lee_pitching_a_strikeLee_on_the_ready_2





Photos courtesy of Donna Elkin

Pages

Powered by FeedBurner

Site Meter

AddThis Social Bookmark Button