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 21, 2008

Author Guest Blog: Beth Boosalis Davis

Reaching for the Brass Ring

By Beth Boosalis Davis, author of Mayor Helen Boosalis: My Mother’s Life in Politics

212673947product_largetomediumimage Flat on my back and sick as I’d ever been, I managed to write on the back of a nearby dental reminder card a specific timetable to do something I’d never before considered – write a book about my mother, Helen Boosalis, and her political life. Days later, after I recovered, I studied my scratchy bedside notes expecting to dismiss them as some delusional sickbed rant. Instead, I realized writing my mother’s story had not come out-of-the-blue but rather from a desire buried deep within. Perhaps my illness had knocked me into a rare state of stillness, a state where something deeper than the next to-do item on my list could command my attention.

Even with clarity of purpose I still had practical matters to consider, such as the fact that I knew nothing about what was involved in writing a book.  I may not have doubted the goal but I certainly doubted my ability to achieve it. That’s when I recalled advice my mother was given when she hesitated to jump into her first race for mayor:  “the brass ring may not come round again.”  I had my timetable, I had my parents still with me, I had my husband’s support.  Time to reach for the brass ring.

I didn’t presume to think I could just sit down and type out a book, no matter how familiar the subject.  First I converted a little-used 8 X 9 feet space to a “room of my own” for writing.  I started journaling, and on my daily walks along Lake Michigan I practiced by writing three descriptions of the lake each day. I bought several books on writing and even read a few, hoping the rest would be absorbed through osmosis. 

Continue reading "Author Guest Blog: Beth Boosalis Davis" »

July 08, 2008

Tuesday Trivia: July 7, 2008

212673333product_largetomediumimag New this month from the University of Nebraska Press is, Their Own Frontier: Women Intellectuals Re-Visioning the American West edited by Shirley A. Leckie and Nancy J. Parezo is dedicated to the female pioneers of the Twentieth Century.  Their philanthropic efforts, study into native studies, folklore, and ethnology have all retained their significance and are pervasive to modern day research.  This week Tuesday Trivia is going to see how much you know about these amazing women.

Match the Woman to her accomplishment:

Annie Heloise Abe
Gertrude Simmons Bonnin
Angie Debo
Isabel T. Kelly
Majorie Ferguson Lambert
Dorothea Cross Leighton
Alice Marriot
Mari Sandoz
Ruth Underhill

A.    Wrote Southern Paiute Shamanism
B.    Is best known by the name Zitkala-Sa
C.    Studied the Navajo, Inuit in Alaska, Papago, Hope and Sioux children.
D.    Is co-founder of the Marriot Hotel Chain
E.    Won the Justin Winsor Prize in 1906 for “The History of Events Resulting in Indian Consultation west of the Mississippi River.
F.    Served as a pastor at her local Methodist church during WWII
G.    Wrote the Ist life history of a Southwestern Indian woman
H.    Was one of the first woman curators in the country at the museum of New Mexico
I.    Won the Indian Achievement award in 1943.
J.    Is famous for her book Crazy Horse: Strange Man of the Oglalas.

Check back tomorrow for the answers!!!

May 23, 2008

Praise for Nebraska's Cowboy Trail

Terry Nebraska’s Cowboy Trail: A User’s Guide by Keith Terry
“Terry’s book is ideal for anyone ambitious enough to want to walk, run or ride along the trail. . . . The book is broken down into sections, much like the Cowboy Trail is. It not only makes it easier for readers to find information about one particular part of the trail, but it also makes it more inviting for those who might be tempted to try to traverse the whole thing.”—Jerry Guenther, Norfolk Daily News

April 21, 2008

Willa Cather has been Webified

Catherarchive Fans of Willa Cather should spend a little time or perhaps a lot of time perusing the Willa Cather Archive (http://cather.unl.edu), a site over ten years in the making and supported by the Center for Digital Research in the Humanities at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Visitors can read digital text from a variety of Cather's works, including book-length publications, such as One of Ours, as well as interviews, letters, and speeches. An extensive and searchable image collection from the Archives and Special Collections of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln libraries is also included. The site continues to evolve and expand; a map-based geographic chronology of Cather's life is planned for publication this year. New materials are featured on the Archive's home page as they are added.

UNP continues to publish many of Cather's works in book form, including classics such as O Pioneers! as well as fresh scholarship, such as Axes, a new study of the relationship between Cather's and William Faulkner's texts that were published between 1922 and 1962 . Browse a complete list of available Cather books here.

April 14, 2008

Praise for Nebraska's Cowboy Trail

Nebraskas_cowboy_trailNebraska’s Cowboy Trail: A User's Guide by Keith Terry

“Should prove an invaluable resource for Nebraskans and visitors to the state. . . . The reader will benefit from Terry’s vivid descriptions of the trail’s various segments. . . . Kudos to the University of Nebraska Press and Keith Terry for highlighting some of Nebraska’s most remarkable scenery.”—Omaha World-Herald

April 03, 2008

Local Event Alert!

Restoring_the_burnt_childNebraska residents will want to mark their calendars for an appearance, reading, and signing by celebrated local author William Kloefkorn at the O Street Barnes & Noble in Lincoln on Saturday, April 26th. He will read from Restoring the Burnt Child, the second volume in the author's four-part memoir, which will cover the four elements: water, fire, earth, and air. Negotiating the no man’s land between ages nine and thirteen, this memoir of a small-town boy’s life in 1940s Kansas continues the story Kloefkorn began in his much-loved volume This Death by Drowning. The event is part of National Poetry Month and a celebration of Restoring the Burnt Child as a 2008 One Book, One Nebraska selection.

April 26, 2008
2:00-3:00PM
Barnes & Noble
5150 O Street
Lincoln, NE 68510

We hope you can join us for this exciting event!

March 27, 2008

Linking in Lincoln: March 27, 2008

Interior_placesIn celebration of Lisa Knopp's Interior Places, today's LIL features links to people and places featured in this outstanding new book. Link away!

Amelia Earhart’s Kansas hometown: http://www.ameliaearhartmuseum.org/

Aldo and Frederick Leopold: http://www.aldoleopold.org/

Burlington, Iowa: http://www.burlingtoniowa.org/

P. T. Barnum: http://www.ringling.com/explore/history/ptbarnum_1.aspx

Nuclear weapons in southeastern Iowa: http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/facility/aap-iowa.htm

Lincoln, Nebraska: http://www.lincoln.org/

The Platte River: http://platteriver.unk.edu/

With all of these interesting topics, how could you resist a trip to your local bookstore to pick up Interior Places??? It's futile to resist, so why even try? Get your copy today!

March 05, 2008

UNP Author Event at the Great Plains Art Museum

Calendar_clip_artIf you're a Lincoln, Nebraska resident, mark your calendar for a great event with James W. Hewitt, author of Slipping Backward: A History of the Nebraska Supreme Court, hosted by the Center for Great Plains Studies at the Great Plains Art Museum. The event, part of the Paul A. Olson Seminars in Great Plains Studies series, will take place on Wednesday, March 12th at 3:00 PM. It is free and open to the public.

Great Plains Art Museum
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
1155 Q Street, Hewit Place
Lincoln, NE 68588

For a full listing of UNP author events, check out our author event page here.

February 18, 2008

Praise for Nebraska Moments

Nebraska_momentsNebraska Moments, New Edition by Donald R. Hickey, Susan A. Wunder, and John A. Wunder

“This new edition of a 1992 classic book is a must addition to the library of any fan of Nebraska history.”—Francis Moul, Lincoln Journal Star

February 06, 2008

Where's Ted?

Valentines_2 Or maybe that should be, "where's Ted's Valentines book?" or "Desperately Seeking Valentines". The popularity of Ted Kooser's collection of Valentine poems has depleted our own warehouse stock, so I decided to trek around Lincoln to see where you could still get copies.

Continue reading "Where's Ted?" »

Pages

Powered by FeedBurner

Site Meter

AddThis Social Bookmark Button