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60th Anniversary Sale

60th Anniversary Sale: Great Summer Beach Reads

60th Anniversary Sale

60th Anniversary Sale: Great Summer Beach Reads

May 28th, 2021 , Posted by Marty Brown

All year long, in celebration of our 60th anniversary, we're offering a 60% discount on a rotating selection of books. You'll never find a better price on these gems from our publishing past, but you'll need to act fast, as the selection changes monthly. For July, we're offering a selection of great summer beach reads. You have through Tuesday, August 3, to get 60% off these titles when ordering through our website. To get the discount, enter the promo code OSU60 at checkout.

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Love Labor Unions? We've Got You Covered.

June 3rd, 2019 posted by Zoe Ruiz

Red Coast

 

We’re delighted to tell you that The Red Coast is now available!

 

Aaron Goings, Brian Barnes, and Roger Snider present an accessible and engaging history of radicalism and anti-radicalism in Southwest Washington from the late nineteenth century until World War II, focusing on Wobblies, “Red” Finns, and Communists.

 

The authors write that The Red Coast demonstrates “that at one time Southwest Washingtonians organized by the thousands to protest injustices great and small, ranging from the horrors of laboring in a deadly workplace to the insult of a short paycheck.”

An Excerpt from Northwest Voices: Language and Culture in the Pacific Northwest

May 30th, 2019 posted by Carolyn Supinka

Interested in the linguistic heritage of the Pacific Northwest? Northwest Voicesis for regional residents, language lovers, and anyone interested in learning more about the fascinating ways that language, culture, and place intersect.

 

In Northwest Voices, editor Kristin Denham gathers perspectives from a variety of contributors, including a middle school teacher, a tribal linguist and language teacher, and the leader of the Lushootseed Language Institute, among others. These chapters cover everything from place names in the Pacific Northwest to Indigenous language revitalization to addressing the common belief that the region is “accent-less”.

A Q&A with Alan Contreras, Editor of Edge of Awe

May 8th, 2019 posted by Carolyn Supinka

Contreras Photo

It's May, and we are welcoming springtime flowers and a brand new book here at the OSU Press office! Edge of Awe: Experiences of the Malheur-Steens Country is fresh off the press. This anthology explores the perspectives and experiences of visitors to this beautiful region in eastern Oregon with a special focus on birds and featuring illustrations and poetry by Ursula K. Le Guin. Today on the blog, editor Alan Contreras speaks with OSU Press Griffis Publishing Interns Carolyn Supinka and Zoë Ruiz.

From the Field: A Q&A with Cindy Talbott Roché

May 2nd, 2019 posted by Carolyn Supinka

Want to learn more about an important part of ecosystems in the Pacific Northwest? Field Guide to the Grasses of Oregon and Washington is a beautifully illustrated guide to all species, subspecies, and varieties in the region. Co-author Cindy Talbott Roché visits the OSU Press blog to answer some questions that our OSU Press Griffis Publishing Interns Carolyn Supinka and Zoë Ruiz had about the book and the process of studying grasses.

Oregon Book Award Winner: Dangerous Subjects

April 29th, 2019 posted by Zoe Ruiz

Dangerous Subjects Book Cover

Congratulations to OSU Press author Kenneth R. Coleman!

 

His first book, Dangerous Subjects: James D. Saules and The Rise of Black Exclusion in Oregon, won the Frances Fuller Victor Award for General Nonfiction at the 2019 Oregon Book Awards.

Dangerous Subjectsexamines the history of black exclusion in Oregon through the story of James D. Saules, a black sailor who was shipwrecked off the Oregon coast in 1841. Coleman follows Saules’ story as he settles in Oregon and is faced with mounting dangers and racism from white settlers and the government as Oregon Trail emigrants arrive in the region.

Reflecting on Rivers, Part Two

April 24th, 2019 posted by Carolyn Supinka

Welcome back to Part 2 on our blog series on literature about rivers!

We're thrilled to feature this guest blog post by Peter Brewitt, author of Same River Twice: The Politics of Dam Removal and River Restoration.

*****

There’s always a dam.

 

The neighborhood where I live in South Carolina is built around a lake, created by a dam. The pond down the street from my wife’s home in Vermont? Plugged up by a dam. The environmental studies center where I teach? Just below one dam, which hides another, older dam – we see it when the water’s low. This afternoon I biked through Columbus, Ohio, where I attended the American Society for Environmental History conference earlier this month. In a brief ride I saw two dams.

Reflecting on Rivers, Part One

April 12th, 2019 posted by Zoe Ruiz

Here at the OSU Press office in Corvallis, we’ve been watching the high flows on the Willamette this week and rivers are on our mind. Today we’re featuring three recent Press books that tell the story of rivers, in Oregon and around the world.

 

 

Speaking for the River book cover

Speaking for the River: Confronting Pollution on the Willamette, 1920s-1970s

Though the state of Oregon has a reputation for being green, one of its major rivers, the Willamette, has struggled with pollution throughout history and in the present day. James Hillegas-Elting looks to the past to explain the present, examining the complex political and technological issues that challenge this Or

New Book Alert! The Eclipse I Call Father

April 4th, 2019 posted by Carolyn Supinka

We were thrilled to debut this new book at AWP 2019 in Portland and excited to share that it is available for purchase online.

Memory, place, and experience intersect in David Axelrod’s new collection of essays, The Eclipse I Call Father.David’s writing is lyrical and observant, reflecting his identity as a poet and traveler. Though he has lived and worked abroad for periods of time, David calls the Northwest home, and home is a central image in the essays of this book. Take a look at an excerpt from the essay “To Live as We Dream”, one of the essays in The Eclipse I Call Father also featured online at Terrain:

Celebrating Women

March 15th, 2019 posted by Zoe Ruiz

We’re celebrating Women’s History Month by sharing powerful stories by and about women from our recent titles.

Paulus CoverThe Only Woman In the Room: The Norma Paulus Story is an inspiring look at the life and work of Norma Paulus, the first woman to be elected to state-wide office in Oregon. This book follows Paulus’ journey, which includes surviving polio, graduating from law school with honors despite not having a college degree, running for governor, and being elected Secretary of State. Paulus, who recently passed away, left behind a powerful legacy in Oregon politics.

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