'Tis the season! Who doesn't like to win free stuff?
Send me an email with the word "Giveaway" in the subject line for a chance to win one of our fall 2013 titles. This will also add you to our mailing list if you haven't been added already. Three winners will be randomly selected and each will choose one book from the list below. The offer ends 12/16/2013.
Email: UMPmarketing@missouri.edu
For great UMP special offers check out our sale page.
Prairie Sky: A Pilot's Reflections on Flying and the Grace of Altitude by W. Scott Olsen
Prairie Sky explores the reality as well as the metaphor of flight: notions of ceaseless time and boundless space, personal interior and exterior vision, social history, meteorology, and geology. W. Scott Olsen takes readers along as he chases a new way of looking at the physical world and wonders aloud about how the whole planet moves in interconnected ways not visible from the ground. While the northern prairie may call to mind images of golden harvests and summer twilight such images do not define the region. The land bears marks left by gut-shaking thunderstorms, hard-frozen rivers, sweeping floods, and hurricane-size storms. Olsen takes to the midwestern sky to confront the ordinary world and reveals the magic--the wondrous and unique sights visible from the pilot’s seat of a Cessna.
Prairie Sky explores the reality as well as the metaphor of flight: notions of ceaseless time and boundless space, personal interior and exterior vision, social history, meteorology, and geology. W. Scott Olsen takes readers along as he chases a new way of looking at the physical world and wonders aloud about how the whole planet moves in interconnected ways not visible from the ground. While the northern prairie may call to mind images of golden harvests and summer twilight such images do not define the region. The land bears marks left by gut-shaking thunderstorms, hard-frozen rivers, sweeping floods, and hurricane-size storms. Olsen takes to the midwestern sky to confront the ordinary world and reveals the magic--the wondrous and unique sights visible from the pilot’s seat of a Cessna.
Lucky That Way: Rediscovering My Father's World by Pamela Gerhardt
Lucky That Way, a nuanced, richly engaging memoir, chronicles the joys and tribulations of a daughter who rediscovers her father as he nears the end of his life. Ernie Gerhardt, an artist and teacher, is largely estranged from his five children, but when he suffers a debilitating stroke, his daughter Pamela must fly to Las Vegas to tend to him. When she arrives to find Ernie newly and shockingly fragile, she is hit by an unexpected wave of tenderness. Pamela Gerhardt’s heartfelt story about a family coming to terms with their aging father’s illness and imminent death takes readers on an emotional roller coaster that highlights love, loss, humor, and sadness.
They Raised Me Up: A Black Single Mother and the Women Who Inspired Her by Carolyn
Marie Wilkins
In
They Raised Me Up, Carolyn Marie Wilkins
juxtaposes her personal story as an up-and-coming musician and single mother in
the 1980s with the histories of influential women from her family’s past. This
poignant and telling narrative not only offers insights on the travails of a
musician and single mother but also humanizes the struggles of black and
biracial women from the early twentieth century into the 1980s. The interweaving of memoir with family
history creates a cohesive, entertaining, informative, and engrossing read that
will appeal to anyone with an interest in African American Studies, Women’s
History, Ethnomusicology, or simply looking for an intriguing story about music
and family.
American Relief
Aid and the Spanish Civil War tells the story of the political
campaigns to raise aid for the Spanish Republic as activists pushed the limits
of isolationist thinking. Those concerned with Spain’s fate held a range of
political convictions (including anarchists, socialists, liberals, and
communists) with very different understandings of what fascism was. Yet they
all agreed that fascism’s advance must be halted. With labor strikes,
fund-raising parties, and ambulance tours, defenders of Spain in the United
States sought to shift the political discussion away from isolation of Spain’s
elected government and toward active assistance for the faltering Republic.
A Civilian in Lawton’s 1899 Philippine Campaign: The Letters of Robert D. Carter edited by Michael E. Shay
In
the midst of the Philippine-American War, twenty-two-year-old Robert Dexter Carter
served in Manila as a civilian quartermaster clerk. Through his letters to his
family, he provided a vivid picture of army life in Manila—the sights, the
smells, and his responses to the native culture. In addition to his letters,
his diary, and several related articles present a firsthand account of the
historic voyage of the United States Army Transport Grant through the Suez Canal to Manila in early 1899. Carter’s
writings not only tell of his sometimes harrowing experiences but also reveal
the aspirations and fears of a young man not quite sure of his next steps on
life’s journey. Enhanced
by photographs from collections at the Library of Congress and the Military
History Institute, as well as many of Carter’s own whimsical drawings, the book
will appeal to armchair historians and scholars alike.
Ozarks in
Missouri History: Discoveries in an American Region, edited by Lynn
Morrow is a collection of 15 previously published essays that originally
appeared in the Missouri Historical Review, the journal published by the State
Historical Society. Interest in
scholarly study of the Ozarks has increased markedly in recent years, and this
collection of old and new essays is directed at the growing audience for work
on the history, culture, and geography of the region. These essays demonstrate
that mainstream trends in national and state histories shape the character of
the Ozarks region, while the oft-quoted Ozarks traditionalism adjusts to play
significant roles locally. Historians and Ozarks enthusiasts alike will find
these micro-studies an enjoyable read.
Protest and Propaganda: W. E. B. Du Bois, the Crisis, and American History edited by Amy Helene
Kirschke and Phillip Luke Sinitiere
In looking back on his editorship of the Crisis magazine, W. E. B. Du Bois said, “We condensed more news about Negroes and their problems in a month than most colored papers before this had published in a year.” Since its founding by Du Bois in 1910, the Crisis has been the primary published voice of the NAACP. Born in an age of Jim Crow racism, often strapped for funds, the magazine struggled and endured, all the while providing a forum for people of color to document their inherent dignity and proclaim their definitive worth as human beings. The contributors show how the essays, columns, and visuals published in the Crisis changed conversations, perceptions, and even laws in the United States, thereby calling a fractured nation to more fully live up to its democratic creed.
Under
the broad umbrella of the Christian religion, there exists a great divide
between two fundamentally different ways of thinking about key aspects of the
Christian faith. Eugene Webb explores the sources of that divide, looking at
how the Eastern and Western Christian worlds drifted apart due both to the
different ways they interpreted their symbols and to the different roles
political power played in their histories. Previous studies have focused on
historical events or on the history of theological ideas. In Search of the
Triune God delves deeper by exploring how the Christian East and the
Christian West have conceived the relation between symbol and experience.
Theodore
Roosevelt was a man of wide interests, strong opinions, and intense ambition
for both himself and his country. When he met Leonard Wood in 1897, he
recognized a kindred spirit. Moreover, the two men shared a zeal for making the
United States an imperial power that would challenge Great Britain as world
leader. For the remainder of their lives, their careers would intertwine in
ways that shaped the American nation. Teddy Roosevelt and Leonard Wood: Partners
in Command is a revealing and long
overdue look at the dynamic partnership of this fascinating pair and will be
welcomed by scholars and military history enthusiasts alike.
In the last years of his life, Richard Wright, the fierce and original American novelist known for Native Son and Black Boy, wrote over four thousand haiku. In Richard Wright and Haiku, Yoshinobu Hakutani considers Wright the poet and his late devotion to the spare, unrhymed verse that dwells on human beings’ relationship to the natural world rather than on their relationships with one another, a strong departure from the intense and often conflicted relationships that had dominated his fiction. Richard Wright and Haiku is a valuable addition to the critical discussion of the life and works of Richard Wright as well as a welcome contribution to scholarship on haiku in the West.
2 comments:
اللمسةالذهبية
شركات مقاولات في دبى
عامل بلاستر دبى
خدمات دبي
تقدم اقوى جهاز تنظيف بالبخار يستخدم في غسل السجاد والستائر والكنب والمجالس والمفروشات نعلم مدى بذل الجهد وإضاعة الكثير من الوقت في تنظيف البقع هذا الجهاز يعمل على لمعان القماش والحفاظ على رونقه
شركة تنظيف كنب في ابوظبي
شركة تنظيف كنب ابوظبي
Post a Comment