Tag Archives: Great Reads from Great Places

Books Chosen to Represent Nebraska at National Book Festival

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
July 9, 2025

FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Tessa Timperley
402-471-3434
800-307-2665

Books Chosen to Represent Nebraska at National Book Festival

“Ted Kooser: More Than a Local Wonder” and “The Long March Home” chosen for the National Book Festival’s Great Reads from Great Places program.

The Nebraska Center for the Book has selected one children’s book and one adult book by Nebraska authors to represent the state at the 2025 National Book Festival: Ted Kooser: More Than a Local Wonder by Carla Ketner, illustrated by Paula Wallace and The Long March Home by Marcus Brotherton and Tosca Lee.

Both titles will be part of the National Center for the Book’s Great Reads from Great Places program. Great Reads from Great Places features books and authors representing the literary heritage of all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and Northern Marianas. For over 20 years this program has included a highlighted youth title from each affiliate center. In 2022, Great Reads from Great Places began including titles for adults for the first time.

This year’s National Book Festival on September 6th will be held in-person in Washington, D.C., but will include many livestreamed and recorded virtual programs celebrating books and authors.

The Festival Near You

This year Nebraskans will have the opportunity to join in the fun with programming during the month of August. The Festival Near You, is a statewide initiative celebrating the 2025 National Book Festival by bringing Nebraska’s Great Reads from Great Places children’s book to communities, and offers Nebraskans a chance to engage with literature close to home.

As part of the programming, four Nebraska libraries, Grand Island, Papillion, Beatrice, and Cozad, will host Carla Ketner for an author visit and presentation. During the month of July, Wahoo Public Library will feature Carla Ketner’s award-winning picture book, Ted Kooser: More Than a Local Wonder, as their July bookwalk and in partnership with TBBS they will have a braille addition to the bookwalk for visually impaired community members to join in on the story. In August, the Braille addition will move to Papillion’s Community Bookwalk. This family-friendly activity encourages readers of all ages to enjoy the story outdoors. During the month of August twenty additional Nebraska Libraries will feature Ted Kooser: More Than a Local Wonder as their community bookwalks. On August 6th, the Nebraska Library Commission will host Carla Ketner on their NCompass Live webinar series to talk about her book, the National Book Festival, and the Great Reads from Great Places program. Find a full list of the communities participating in The Festival Near You bookwalks, details on author visits, and more at https://centerforthebook.nebraska.gov/programs/nationalbookfestival.html.

About the Books

Ted Kooser: More Than a Local Wonder” by Carla Ketner, illustrated by Paula Wallace (University of Nebraska Press, 2023)

“Long before Ted Kooser won a Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, served as the U.S. Poet Laureate, and wrote award-winning books for children, he was an unathletic child growing up in Iowa, yearning to fit in. Young Teddy found solace in stories, and one specific book, Robert McCloskey’s Lentil, inspired him to become a writer. As a child and later, while working in the insurance industry, Ted honed his craft and unique style as he wrote about the people and places of the rural Midwest. Ted Kooser: More Than a Local Wonder celebrates the power of stories and of finding oneself through words.”

Nebraska’s Great Reads from Great Places book is chosen from the previous year’s Nebraska Book Award winners and this book was awarded the 2024 Nebraska Book Award in the Children’s Book category.

The Long March Home: A World War II Novel of the Pacific” by Marcus Brotherton and Tosca Lee (Revell, 2023)

The Long March Home is a historical fiction novel inspired by true stories of friendship, sacrifice, and hope on the Bataan Death March. It is a gripping coming-of-age tale of friendship, sacrifice, and the power of unrelenting hope. “In this tour de force from Brotherton (A Bright and Blinding Sun) and Lee (A Single Light), four friends’ lives change irrevocably when America becomes embroiled in WWII. Brotherton and Lee masterfully capture what it was like for soldiers to face war’s atrocities, as well as the heartbreak of those waiting for them back home. This is a winner.” ― Publishers Weekly

Chosen as the 2025 One Book One Nebraska selection, libraries across Nebraska and other literary and cultural organizations have participated in book discussions, activities, and events that encourage Nebraskans to read and discuss this book.

The Nebraska Center for the Book is housed at the Nebraska Library Commission and brings together the state’s readers, writers, booksellers, librarians, publishers, printers, educators, and scholars to build the community of the book, supporting programs to celebrate and stimulate public interest in books, reading, and the written word. The Nebraska Center for the Book is supported by the Nebraska Library Commission.  

As the state library agency, the Nebraska Library Commission is an advocate for the library and information needs of all Nebraskans. The mission of the Library Commission is statewide promotion, development, and coordination of library and information services, “bringing together people and information.”  
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The most up-to-date news releases from the Nebraska Library Commission are always available on the Library Commission Website, http://nlc.nebraska.gov/publications/newsreleases.

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Books Chosen to Represent Nebraska at National Book Festival

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
July 29, 2024

FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Tessa Timperley
402-471-3434
800-307-2665

Books Chosen to Represent Nebraska at National Book Festival

“Eat Your Woolly Mammoths!: Two Million Years of the World’s Most Amazing Food Facts, from the Stone Age to the Future” and “Dancing with the Octopus: A Memoir of a Crime” chosen for the National Center for the Book’s Great Reads from Great Places program.

The Nebraska Center for the Book has selected one youth book and one adult book by Nebraska authors to represent the state at the 2024 National Book Festival: Eat Your Woolly Mammoths! by James Solheim and Dancing with the Octopus by Debora Harding.

Both titles will be part of the National Center for the Book’s Great Reads from Great Places program. Great Reads from Great Places features books and authors representing the literary heritage of all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and Northern Marianas. For over 20 years this program has included a highlighted youth title from each affiliate center. In 2022, Great Reads from Great Places began including titles for adults for the first time.

This year’s National Book Festival on August 24th will be held in-person in Washington, D.C., but will include many livestreamed and recorded virtual programs celebrating books and authors.

About the Books

Eat Your Woolly Mammoths!: Two Million Years of the World’s Most Amazing Food Facts, from the Stone Age to the Future” by James Solheim

“If there’s one thing that transcends time, it’s our love for food! But what did people generations ago consume? And what will we eat in the years ahead? James Solheim’s Eat Your Woolly Mammoths! serves up the stories behind the world’s most delicious, nutritious, and amazing foods—from the Stone Age to the future. For readers who love the fascinating facts that bring history to life. Let the feast begin!

Would you like a plate of woolly mammoth? Or perhaps a sample of fresh tuna eyeballs? From scorpions on sticks and llama salami to oysters and chocolate chip cookies, you’ll travel through the centuries and around the world and discover the amazing foods that have been eaten—and enjoyed—throughout history.

Eat Your Woolly Mammoths! explores the history of food and is full of fun, digestible facts that young historians, cooks, and scientists will gobble up. An accessible, educational, and funny text combined with laugh-out-loud illustrations make this ideal pick for independent readers and snackers everywhere. A great choice for readers who munched through Ripley’s Believe It or Not: Fun Facts and Silly Stories and the National Geographic Kids: Weird but True books. Includes sidebars, fun facts, recipes, additional resources, and more!”

Nebraska’s Great Reads from Great Places book is chosen from the previous year’s Nebraska Book Award winners and this book was awarded two 2023 Nebraska Book Award in the Children’s Nonfiction Book category and the Children’s Books Design category.

Dancing with the Octopus: A Memoir of a Crime” by Debora Harding

This memoir of native Nebraskan, Debora Harding, is all about a traumatic childhood event, the aftereffects of which would change her family forever. Harding expertly weaves the past with the present in a riveting story of survival and family dynamics. Harding’s debut book has been compared to bestsellers like The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls and Educated by Tara Westover.

“With remarkable narrative skill, Harding untangles the lingering effects of family dysfunction and criminal trauma. This is a page-turner with a deep heart and soul, full of forgiveness but demanding of accountability.”  —BookPage, “Best Books of 2020: Memoirs”

Chosen as the 2024 One Book One Nebraska selection, libraries across Nebraska and other literary and cultural organizations have participated in book discussions, activities, and events that encourage Nebraskans to read and discuss this book.

The Nebraska Center for the Book is housed at the Nebraska Library Commission and brings together the state’s readers, writers, booksellers, librarians, publishers, printers, educators, and scholars to build the community of the book, supporting programs to celebrate and stimulate public interest in books, reading, and the written word. The Nebraska Center for the Book is supported by the Nebraska Library Commission.  

As the state library agency, the Nebraska Library Commission is an advocate for the library and information needs of all Nebraskans. The mission of the Library Commission is statewide promotion, development, and coordination of library and information services, “bringing together people and information.”  

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The most up-to-date news releases from the Nebraska Library Commission are always available on the Library Commission Website, http://nlc.nebraska.gov/publications/newsreleases.

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Great Reads from Great Places Online Panel with Nebraska’s Astronaut Clayton Anderson

Letters in Space by Astronaut Clayton Anderson was chosen to represent Nebraska at the 2022 National Book Festival. Nebraska’s Great Reads from Great Places book was chosen from its 2021 Nebraska Book Award winners.

Author Clayton Anderson took part in an online panel conversation with other chosen authors from state Centers for the Book in the Midwest Region. He talked about his book, what inspired him, what he likes most about Nebraska, and more.

Astronaut Clayton Anderson is Nebraska’s only Astronaut. He spent 167 days in space and 38 hours and 28 minutes in executing 6 spacewalks. He applied 15 times before NASA selected him as an Astronaut in 1998. He spent 30 years working for NASA, 15 as an engineer and then 15 as an Astronaut.

Astronaut Clayton “Astro Clay” Anderson is the author of three children’s books; Letters from Space, A is for Astronaut: Blasting through the Alphabet, and It’s a Question of Space: An Ordinary Astronaut’s Answers to Sometimes Extraordinary Questions, and his award winning memoir, The Ordinary Spaceman.

Find out more about Astro Clay and his current and upcoming books at www.AstroClay.com. Follow him on social media @Astro_Clay

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Check out the Library of Congress’ YouTube channel for other videos from the 2022 National Book Festival.

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