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« November 2007 | Main | January 2008 »

December 31, 2007

More Praise for Twilight of the Long-ball Gods

Twilight_of_the_longball_godsTwilight of the Long-ball Gods: Dispatches from the Disappearing Heart of Baseball by John Schulian

“For those who love baseball but sometimes wonder why, amidst the barrage of headlines about steroid use, grand jury investigations, and lavish excesses, John Schulian’s Twilight of the Long-ball Gods will, lyrically and poetically, reaffirm your affection for America’s greatest game. This sparkling anthology of columns . . . solidifies Schulian’s place among the elite of contemporary baseball writers. In fact, I prefer Schulian to, for example, Roger Angell and Tom Boswell . . . because the subjects Schulian chooses to write about are more intriguing. . . . Hopefully, there will be more gifted writers like John Schulian to capture stories that are filled with the same insight and eloquence found in Twilight of the Long-ball Gods.”—C. Paul Rogers III, Elysian Fields Quarterly

Read earlier praise for Twilight of the Long-ball Gods at http://nebraskapress.typepad.com/university_of_nebraska_pr/2005/12/twilight_of_the.html.

Praise for From Lead Mines to Gold Fields

From_lead_mines_to_gold_fields From Lead Mines to Gold Fields: Memories of an Incredibly Long Life by Henry Taylor

“[A] delightful and entertaining gold rush memoir. . . . [A] rich addition to the body of gold rush literature, as well as a pleasant book to read.”—Nebraska History

December 28, 2007

Praise for Dixie Betrayed

Dixie_betrayed Dixie Betrayed: How the South Really Lost the Civil War by David J. Eicher

“This fine book . . . . comes as a sort of eye opener to anyone who was raised on the popular assumption that the South lost the war because of bad luck, no foreign assistance in their ‘just cause’ and overwhelming Union strength.”—The Manhattan Mercury

More Praise for Bigger than Life

Bigger_than_life Bigger than Life: A Murder, a Memoir by Dinah Lenney

Dinah Lenney’s stirring memoir about the murder of her father and its aftermath has been featured on E! Online’s “The Books You Must Read: Picks for 2007” list. On Bigger than Life, reviewer Samantha Dunn writes, “[T]here is no abuse, drug use, crazy parents or even a hot Italian lover, just beautiful sentences, deep emotions and intellectual stimulation.” Click here for the full article.

To read earlier praise for Bigger than Life, please visit http://nebraskapress.typepad.com/university_of_nebraska_pr/2007/03/praise_for_bigg.html.

December 27, 2007

Praise for The Canoe and the Saddle

Canoe_and_the_saddle The Canoe and the Saddle: A Critical Edition by Theodore Winthrop, edited and with an introduction by Paul J. Lindholdt

“The long-cherished notion that the Pacific Northwest’s unique topography and climate produce a special breed of men will find eloquent support in the recently republished account by Theodore Winthrop, The Canoe and the Saddle. . . . Paul J. Lindholdt . . . provides an excellent introduction. . . . The Canoe and the Saddle is an extraordinary example of literary nonfiction informed by personal experience.”—Western American Literature

Praise for Identity Politics of the Captivity Narrative after 1848

Identity_politics Identity Politics of the Captivity Narrative after 1848 by Andrea Tinnemeyer

“The book’s great strengths are its close readings of understudied materials pertaining to an understudied topic. . . . Tinnemeyer makes a valuable contribution to the field with perceptive analyses and creative archival work. . . . [She] has brought together an exciting group of texts, admirably parsing them from her readers.”—Western American Literature

December 26, 2007

Praise for From the Garden Club

From_the_garden_club From the Garden Club: Rural Women Writing Community by Charlotte Hogg

“Hogg convincingly argues that the literate artifacts produced and inspired by women in post-World War II Paxton, Nebraska, in effect 'grew' a community of people such as herself. . . . Her interpretive lens encourages further study about women sponsoring literacy in post-World War II America.”—Western American Literature

More Praise for Lana's Lakota Moons

Lanas_lakota_moons Lana’s Lakota Moons by Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve

“[An] unassuming yet potent chronicle of a fateful year in the lives of two preteen cousins.”—Publishers Weekly

December 25, 2007

More Praise for Pulp Writer

Pulp_writer Pulp Writer: Twenty Years in the American Grub Street by Paul S. Powers, edited and with biographical essays by Laurie Powers

“Paul Powers’ autobiography disappeared into a closet for 40 years until his enterprising granddaughter found it, annotated it and unveiled its extraordinary account of a writing life at the lower end of the critical spectrum.”—J. C. Martin, Arizona Daily Star, 2007 Southwest Books of the Year Special Feature

Read earlier praise for Pulp Writer at http://nebraskapress.typepad.com/university_of_nebraska_pr/2007/04/praise_for_pulp.html.

Praise for Triumph

Triumph Triumph by Philip Wylie

“[A]s intriguing today as it was when first released.”—BlogCritics Magazine

Triumph is an excellent example of books that warn about the horrors of nuclear war. It is a powerful reminder that we have too complacently abandoned efforts to achieve nuclear disarmament.”—Jewish Journal

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