In The News: Department of English

Alta

Douglas Unger鈥檚 Dream City is the most ambitious novel ever written about Las Vegas. It鈥檚 an audacious attempt to explain what makes the city tick. Unger has taken up Tom Wolfe鈥檚 call to make research鈥攔eporting鈥攖he bedrock of a big, realistic work of fiction. The result is a novel in which Las Vegas is the main character, as much as if not more than the humans who populate the narrative.

Las Vegas Sun

Whether they鈥檝e been cemented in culture since antiquity, since the turn of the 21st century or anytime in between, the traditions and symbols of Christmas, from decorated trees to the Grinch, share a DNA of identity and community.

Newswise

As we march toward another new year, we put more distance between ourselves and the origins of the traditions many of us hold dear. Fruitcake, gift giving, and hanging ornaments 鈥 they鈥檙e all a blend of cultural ideas crackling aside the hearty yule log on a holiday hearth.

The Bitchuation Room (with Francesca Fiorentini)

Writer Roberto Lovato joins Francesca to talk about the need to use the R word: revolutionary!

Nevada Independent

Las Vegas is many cities to many people, and that鈥檚 part of what makes it such a challenge to capture in a book. For many, it exists as much in the past as present. For some, it鈥檚 an irresistible canvas on which to paint a dystopian future. Fortunately for us, some very good writers continue to tell the Las Vegas story as they perceive it.

KNPR News

It鈥檚 getting cold in Las Vegas, which is nice after that brutal summer. And for many people, reading a good book is the perfect thing to do when it鈥檚 this cold out. So today, four local authors and editors are with us to talk about their books, ones we think you really might be interested in.

Geo

Growing up in California, the historically most important destination for migrants in the Americas, the Spanish word exodo had a familiar ring. My Salvadoran parents used it to describe their journey along the Pan-American Highway as they left El Salvador for San Francisco in the 1950s. The exodo also included the stories of family members like my cousin Ana, who crossed the border illegally after surviving the perilous train ride from war-torn El Salvador in the 1980s.

KNPR News

Summer is for book lovers. And this has been a momentous summer for readers in Las Vegas. Besides all the summer programs happening at the Las Vegas-Clark County Library District and the numerous book clubs happening across the valley, two notable local authors released books: author and 性视界传媒 professor Wendy Chen's Their Divine Fires and poet and 性视界传媒 emeritus professor Donald Revell's Canandaigua.

Las Vegas Review Journal

鈥淐ommunity.鈥 鈥淐urious.鈥 鈥淓xpectant.鈥 鈥淯nified.鈥 In one word, each person explains his or her feelings at this particular moment. Seated in a circle of red plastic chairs, an array of community spiritual leaders and 性视界传媒 students and faculty pass a microphone to introduce themselves at the 鈥淗ow to Be a Peacemaker鈥 discussion group, part of the university鈥檚 ongoing Diversity Dialogues series.

Black Fox Literary Magazine

His blistering dystopian adventure novel Hammer of the Dogs was published by the University of Nevada Press in September.

Publishers Weekly

Majoring in English as undergrads in the early 1990s, Gen Xers like me hid our passions from the professors.

KNPR News

Jarret Keene, an assistant professor of English at 性视界传媒, recently published a novel called Hammer of the Dogs, set in a post-apocalyptic Las Vegas. It tells the story of Lash, a 21-year-old woman who is trying to save her peers and Las Vegas from forces that use technology in nefarious ways.