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Böcker utgivna av University of North Texas Press,U.S.

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  • av Leigh Anne Couch
    300,-

    This collection's title - as in tether, strike, eyelash, welt - is a nod to the fluidity of language and the foolish penchant we have for naming things, including ourselves. The poems refuse to navigate, choosing instead to face head-on the snares of gender, patriarchy, and parenting.

  • av Carolyn Glenn Brewer
    366,-

  •  
    546,-

    Helen Corbitt is to American cuisine what Julia Child is to French. In The Best from Helen Corbitt's Kitchens, Patty MacDonald serves up more than 500 favourite recipes from Helen Corbitt's Cookbook and her four later cookbooks, as well as many never before published recipes from her cooking schools.

  • av Mike Alberti
    300,-

    The nine stories in Mike Alberti's debut collection shine a sharp light on small-town American life - not the Arcadian small towns of yesteryear, but the old mill towns hanging on after the mill has stopped running, the deserted agricultural communities in the middle of vast industrial farms, places where bad luck has become part of the weather.

  • - A Memoir of County Line, a Texas Freedom Colony
    av Beatrice Upshaw
    406,-

    Captures the lore of a community through the eyes of Beatrice Upshaw. The book is a memoir, but it shares more than merely family memories of significant events. It tells of beliefs, home remedies, folk games, and customs, as well as the importance of religion and education to a community of like-minded people.

  • - Lieutenant Powhatan Clarke, Frederic Remington, and the Tenth U.S. Cavalry in the Southwest
    av John P. Langellier
    636,-

    On a summer's day in Montana, a frontier cavalry officer, Powhatan Henry Clarke, died at the height of his career. He was a fearless field commander, gaining glory and first-hand knowledge of what it took to campaign in the West. A chance meeting brought Clarke together with artist Frederic Remington, who brought national attention to Clarke.

  • - Bootlegging Los Angeles, Santa Monica, and the Old Soldiers' Home
    av Donald Chaput
    470,-

    Most readers of the Wild West know Wyatt Earp, Virgil Earp, and Morgan Earp for the famous shootout on the streets of Tombstone, Arizona. But few know the later years of the close-knit Earp family, which revolved around patriarch Nicholas Earp, and their last push at a major monetary coup in Los Angeles.

  • - Officers and Offenders, the Texas Prison Story
    av Bob Alexander
    636,-

    Provides the first comprehensive history of Texas prisons. Bob Alexander and Richard Alford chronicle the significant events and transformation of the Texas prison system from its earliest times to the present day, paying special attention to the human side of the story.

  • - Half a Century of Texas Culture, One Newspaper Column at a Time
    av Burle Pettit
    406,-

    A collection of columns from the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. The editorial columns included tell stories, and tell about telling stories. They also reflect boyhood dreams... and foolishness, fears, beliefs, customs, traditions, and sometimes things that are no longer part of our culture but we wish were.

  • - The Official Modern History of the United States Marshals Service
    av David S Turk
    420,-

    Provides a comprehensive official modern history of the US Marshals, the oldest federal law enforcement organisation. Turk takes the reader on an informative, easy-to-read round-up of federal marshal activities through the decades.

  • - Broad-based Community Organizing in the Texas Industrial Areas Foundation
    av Kathleen Staudt
    466,-

    Texas-based affiliates in the Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) offer a strong, mature organizing model compared with other community organizations. In Hope for Justice and Power, Kathleen Staudt examines the twenty-first-century activities of the Texas IAF in multiple cities and towns around the state.

  • - The Confederate Surrenders after Appomattox
    av Steven J. Ramold
    636,-

    Despite popular belief, the Civil War did not end when Robert E. Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox in April 1865. The Confederacy still had tens of thousands of soldiers under arms, in three main field armies and countless smaller commands. The book tells the actual story of the messy and complicated end to the Confederacy.

  • - From the Red River to the Rio Grande
    av Chuck Parsons
    560,-

    Jesse Lee Hall (1849-1911) was one of many young men seeking a new life following the Civil War, when he left North Carolina to find adventure in Texas. The old warrior died in San Antonio in 1911, loved and respected, having a reputation equaled by few. This book tells hi story.

  • - An Iconoclast in Houston's Emerging Art Scene
    av Sandra Jensen Rowland
    790,-

    Bob Camblin was a central figure in the period of artistic fermentation in Houston that is now beginning to receive increasing critical attention. Rowland's insights into him are based on personal letters and conversations. In addition, she brings to bear professional expertise about his place in regional and American art.

  • av Steve Bellin-Oka
    240,-

    This poetry collection is the record of an American's return home after a decade abroad, an exile imposed solely because he loved another man. In a virtuoso display of lyric and formal inventiveness, Bellin-Oka's poems meditate on the myriad losses engendered by diaspora: of home, family and sexual identity, and spiritual certainty.

  • - Images and Messages of Early Twentieth-Century Photo Postcards
    av Kenneth Wilson
    790,-

    Examines the photographic postcards of the first half of the twentieth century as illustrated, first-hand accounts of American life. With a meticulous eye for detail, painstaking research, and astute commentary, Wilson surveys more than 160 postcards that provide insights into every aspect of life in a time not far removed from our own.

  • - Where Theater Meets Music
    av Joseph Rescigno
    546,-

    Discusses operas in the standard repertory from the perspective of a conductor with a lifetime of experience performing them. The book focuses on Joseph Rescigno's approach to performing these masterworks in order to realize what opera can uniquely achieve: a fusion of music and drama resulting in a whole greater than the sum of its parts.

  •  
    330,-

    Collects the winners of the 2019 Best American Newspaper Narrative Writing Contest at UNT's Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference.

  • av James Najarian
    300,-

    The poems in James Najarian's debut collection are by turns tragic and mischievous, always with an exuberant attention to form. Najarian turns his caprine eye to the landscapes and history of Berks Country, Pennsylvania, and to the middle east of his extended Armenian family. These poems examine our bonds to the earth, to animals, to art and to desire.

  • - French Revolutionary, Utopian Leader, and Texas Frontier Photographer
    av Paula Selzer
    620,-

    Tells the story of artist, revolutionary, and early North Texas resident Francois Ignace (Adolphe) Gouhenant (1804-1871).

  • - Violence Unleashed in Texas
    av David Johnson
    546,-

    During the late 1880s, the Cornett-Whitley gang rose on the Texas scene with a daring train robbery at McNeil Station. In the frenzy that followed the robbery, the media castigated both lawmen and government officials, and at times lauded the outlaws. Readers of the Old West and true crime stories will appreciate this sordid tale of outlawry.

  •  
    376,-

    Collects the ten winners of the 2016 Best American Newspaper Narrative Writing Contest at the Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference, an event hosted by the Frank W. Mayborn Graduate Institute of Journalism at the University of North Texas.

  • av Jenn Hollmeyer
    300,-

    In abuse situations, people can go to court for orders of protection. But in these twelve stories, people also seek protection from various demons in unusual ways. The characters don't always find their way to safety or even survival, but somehow optimism prevails anyway.

  • - New Interpretations of the Vietnam War
     
    560,-

    Provides a series of provocative, important, and timely essays on the politics, combatants, and memory of the Vietnam War. These essays pose new questions, offer new answers, and establish important lines of debate regarding social, political, military, and memory studies.

  • av Owen McLeod
    270,-

    Owen McLeod's extraordinary debut maps the contours of an ordinary life: the rise and fall of romantic love, the struggle against mental illness, and the unending quest for meaning and transcendence. Ranging from sonnets and sestinas to experimental forms, these poems are unified by their musicality, devotion to craft, and openness of heart.

  • - Memoirs of a Madrigal Ensemble Singer
    av Alexander Tumanov
    636,-

    The musical career of Alexander Tumanov extends from Stalinist and Soviet Russia through contemporary Canada, and as such provides an inspiring portrait of one person's devotion to his art under trying circumstances.

  • - The Memoirs of Ward Schrantz, 35th Division, 1917-1919
    av Ward Schranz
    620,-

    The WWI memoir of Ward Schrantz, a National Guard officer and machine gun company commander in the Kansas-Missouri 35th Division. He documents his experiences from training at Camp Doniphan to the voyage across the Atlantic, and his time in the trenches in France's Vosges Mountains and ultimately his return home.

  •  
    376,-

    This anthology collects the eleven winners of the 2018 Best American Newspaper Narrative Writing Contest at the Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference, an event hosted by the Frank W. Mayborn Graduate Institute of Journalism at the University of North Texas.

  • - Genetic Risk and Preventative Mastectomy
    av Kim Horner
    420,-

    After learning that she inherited a BRCA2 genetic mutation that put her at high risk for breast and ovarian cancer, Kim Horner's doctors urged her to consider having a double mastectomy. But how do you decide whether to have a surgery to remove your breasts to reduce your risk for a disease you don't have and may never get?

  • - The Memoirs of Captain J. R. Ritter, Seabee Commander during the Pacific War, 1942-1945
     
    466,-

    Tells the story of J.R. Ritter (1902-1994), a civil engineer from Texas who became a US Navy Seabee officer during World War II. For his memoir he preserved personal papers, letters, photos, and other items, many of which are reproduced in this book.

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