University of Washington Press E-Newsletter
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We've Moved!
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New street location (only couriers such as Fed-Ex, UPS):
4333 Brooklyn Ave NE
Seattle, WA 98195-9570
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Greetings!
With
early fall weather, we're launching some wonderful new books that will
be featured widely across the Northwest in the coming months. If you
have any quetsions, please feel free to get in touch!
All the best,
Rachael
(206) 221. 4995 / [email protected]
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Jim Kershner
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Carl Maxey:
A Fighting Life
Most
Washingtonians know the name Carl Maxey. In his own words, he was "a
guy who started from scratch -- black scratch." He was sent, at age
five, to the scandal-ridden Spokane Children's Home and then kicked out
at age eleven with the only other "colored" orphan. Yet Maxey managed
to make a national name for himself, first as an NCAA championship
boxer at Gonzaga University, and then as eastern Washington's first
prominent black lawyer and a renowned civil rights attorney.
During the tumultuous civil rights and Vietnam War eras, Carl Maxey
fought to break down color barriers in his hometown of Spokane and
throughout the nation. As a defense lawyer, he made national headlines
working on lurid murder cases and war-protest trials, including the
notorious Seattle Seven trial. He even took his commitment to justice
and antiwar causes to the political arena, running for the U.S. Senate
against powerhouse senator Scoop Jackson.
In Carl Maxey: A Fighting Life,
Jim Kershner explores the sources of Maxey's passions as well as the
price he ultimately paid for his struggles. The result is a moving
portrait of the man called a "Type-A Gandhi" by the New York Times, a man whose personal misfortune spurred his lifelong, tireless crusade against injustice.
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Lawney Reyes
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B Street
B Street
tells the intimate stories of the street of shops, restaurants, bars,
and brothels where the workmen who built the Grand Coulee Dam spent
their recreational hours and wages. From the beginning, B Street was
the place to play and let off steam for the white workingmen who had
faced the hard times of the Depression. It was a raucous playground
that denied blacks and most dark-skinned Indians access to the
frivolity, good times, and pretty ladies that were the main attractions
of that provocative place.
This vivid account of a colorful era is based largely on the memories
of Lawney Reyes. As a young boy, Lawney wandered B Street with his
little sister, Luana, and their dog, Pickles, while their Indian mother
and Filipino father eked out a living running a Chinese restaurant. His
mother's diaries and the stories told by his parents and older members
of the Sin-Aikst tribe contribute to his story.
Lawney L. Reyes is the author of White Grizzly Bear's Legacy: Learning to Be Indian and Bernie Whitebear: An Urban Indian's Quest for Justice.
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John Witte
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Second Nature: Poems
John Witte's poetry sweeps the reader immediately into its
crosscurrents, its passionate engagement, and its ambivalence. Composed
of staggered tercets, the poems in Second Nature track the chaotic rush
and swerve of life as we live it. Wide open to the world, Witte writes
with uncommon energy and urgency and his vision is exhilarating.
Second Nature teems with expertly realized lyrics, monologues, and
narratives, as well as poems based on historical figures from Ovid to
Janis Joplin. The metaphors for human endurance, and the transformative
power of art and community, are accurate and rich. Alert to the dangers
of love and loss, Witte finds his poems where sorrow and transcendence
converge. Like birds singing their "desperate psalm" in a clear-cut,
his poems bring us a rare kind of hope.
John Witte's poems have appeared in the New Yorker, Paris Review,
American Poetry Review, and, among numerous anthologies, The Norton
Introduction to Literature. The recipient of two fellowships from the
National Endowment for the Arts, he lives with his family in Eugene,
Oregon, where he teaches at the University of Oregon and edits
Northwest Review. Second Nature is his third book of poetry.
Friday, September 12 at Open Books, at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, September 13 at Elliott Bay Books, at 2 p.m.
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Judy Yung and Eddie Fung
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The Adventures of Eddie Fung
Judy Yung and Eddie Fung discuss The Adventures of Eddie Fung in Texas, where Eddie lived before joining WWII and becoming the only Chinese American prisoner of war taken by the Japanese.
Saturday, September 13 at Barnes and Noble, Austin Arboretum, TX, at 7 p.m.
Saturday, September 20 at Bookstop, Houston, TX, at 2 p.m.
Sunday, September 21 at Barnes and Noble, San Antonio, TX, at 1 p.m.
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David F. Arnold
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Fishermen's Frontier
In The Fishermen's Frontier, David Arnold
examines the economic, social, cultural, and political context in which
salmon have been harvested in southeast Alaska over the past 250 years.
The book is about Native and Euro-American fishermen, local fishing
communities, industrialists, and resource managers and the ways in
which these various groups have imagined, shaped, exploited, and
managed the salmon fishery and its resources, arranging it to conform
to understandable patterns of social organization and endowing it with
cultural meaning.
Join David on Thursday, September 25 at University Book Store at 7 p.m.
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James Schamus
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Carl Theodor Dreyer's Gertrud
If there is one film in the canon of Carl Theodor Dreyer that can be
said to be, as Jacques Lacan might put it, his most "painfully
enjoyable," it is Gertrud. The film's Paris premier in 1964 was covered
by the Danish press as a national scandal; it was lambasted on its
release for its lugubrious pace, wooden acting, and old-fashioned,
stuffy milieu. Only later, when a younger generation of critics came to
its defense, did the method in what appeared to be Dreyer's madness
begin to become apparent. As do so many of the
heroines of Dreyer's other films, such as La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc
(1928), Gertrud serves as a locus for Dreyer's twin fixations: written
texts, and the heroines who both embody and free themselves from them.
Dreyer based Gertrud not only on Hjalmar Soderberg's play of 1906 but
also on his own extensive research into the life of the "real" Gertrud,
Maria van Platen, whose own words Dreyer interpolated into the film. By
using his film as a kind of return to the real woman beneath the text,
Dreyer rehearsed another lifelong journey, back to the poor Swedish
girl who gave birth to him out of wedlock and who gave him up for
adoption to a Danish family, a mother whose existence Dreyer discovered only later in life, long after she had died. James Schamus
is a professor in the School of Arts, Columbia University, and the CEO
of Focus Features, the studio behind a number of celebrated films,
including Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, The Constant Gardener,
and Brokeback Mountain. His screenwriting and producing credits include
The Ice Storm, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, and a number of other
films from his long collaboration with Ang Lee.
Join James at the Museum of Modern Art in New York on Thursday, September 25 at 5:30 p.m.
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Just a reminder to put on mark your calendars: Joseph S. Miller will
be in Seattle October 23 at 7 p.m. in Kane Hall 210 on the
UW campus to discuss The Wicked Wine of Democracy.
We'll be joined by UW Alumni Association and University Book Store
for the details of Joe's work as an early Democratic lobbyist for
Washington state politicians like Frank Church, "Scoop" Jackson,
and Warren Magnuson, straight through to the likes of JFK and LBJ.
This will be a great evening -- not one to miss!
Also, local writers Lesley Hazelton and Peter Pereira will be at the
Frye Art Museum on September 25 at 7 p.m. to share their creative
works about pieces on either permanent display or exhibition at the Frye.
This always makes for a wonderful evening!
All the best,
Rachael Mann
University of Washington Press |
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