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Roaring Chicago

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

by Donald G. Evans

Chicago provides a fertile landscape for literature, perhaps even more in the 1920s than now. The considerable body of literature set in that era includes Beer Wars, flappers, jazz and blues, and all other celebrated aspects of that post-War, pre-Depression historical time. But the best historical novels seek a higher ground, often exploring the rich tapestry of struggle beneath the gay…

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Thanks for a Great Year; Here’s to Another

Monday, January 1, 2024

by Donald G. Evans

Happy holidays. January 1 is a somewhat arbitrary marking point—we don’t really stop there and begin again here. We just keep going. But everything does slow down around this time of the year. “Hello, I am currently away until…” “administrative offices are closed.” “I am largely offline, spending time with my family.” When all the banks and schools and post offices…

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A Conversation with Fuller Award Recipient Scott Turow

Sunday, September 24, 2023

by Donald G. Evans

Scott Turow speaks in fully formed, piercing sentences, so much so that if his off-the-cuff remarks were transcribed, they would read like polished prose.

(Photo by David Joel)

I’ve seen him deliver truly delightful and smart lectures, pitch perfect down to deliberate pauses, with nary a notecard in sight. He is a writer and attorney—a sentence that, while true,…

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38th Annual Printers Row Lit Fest

Monday, September 4, 2023

On Saturday and Sunday, September 9 and 10, Printers Row becomes all about literature. The free outdoor gathering, now in its 38th year, features author and book events in multiple locations starting at 10 a.m. each morning and going until 6 p.m. Practically the entire neighborhood is blocked to traffic to accommodate the 38th Annual Printers Row Lit Fest. Used and new book vendors, publishers,…

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Chicago’s Literary “Prehistory”

Sunday, June 4, 2023

by Jesse Raber

Chicago’s literary history, according to most accounts, begins around 1893. The Chicago Literary Hall of Fame’s earliest writers, such as Jane Addams, Henry Blake Fuller, and Carl Sandburg, started publishing around that time, with Fuller’s 1893 novel The Cliff-Dwellers sometimes cited as the first significant work of Chicago literature. Along with writers like…

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The First Randall Albers Young Writers Award

Wednesday, May 10, 2023

by Donald G. Evans

Writers, contrary to Hollywood stereotypes, do not materialize in a magical poof, or rise to prominence on the wings of talent alone. Becoming a serious, productive writer requires labor, learning, grit, determination. And support. There is perhaps no apprenticeship longer than that which the average writer undergoes. So much reading. So many drafts to critique and be critiqued. So…

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The Book Cellar: A Pillar in Lincoln Square for Almost Two Decades

Thursday, April 27, 2023

The Book Cellar

[June 12, 2004—Present]

Owner: Suzy Takacs

Location: 4736 N. Lincoln Avenue

Neighborhood: Lincoln Square

Independent Bookstore Day Specials: Booksellers tote bags for sale; big balloon photo op; drawings for discounts; free popcorn.

by Donald G. Evans

Books and wine. A simple enough concept, but nobody else had done it, was…

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David W. Berner’s New Novella,The Islander

Monday, April 10, 2023

by Floyd Sullivan

An aging writer wishes to end his days alone on a remote island off the west coast of Ireland. Work becomes difficult; walking becomes difficult. His son seems to be concerned for his safety, but only out of perceived filial duty. A young woman, a solitary traveler, appears on the island and needs shelter from a storm. In the end it is she…

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A Month for Poetry

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

by Donald G. Evans

We celebrated Black History Month in February, then Women’s History Month in March. Poetry claims our collective attention in April. That was by design, according to the Academy of American Poets, who established National Poetry Month in 1996. There are only so many months to go around, and the Academy of American Poets wanted to stake its claim before…

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Interview with Linda Robinet

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

By Donald G. Evans

Sitting in the Oak Park family home that she has known her entire life, Linda Robinet projects and embodies a certain dignity, warmth, humility and generosity that radiate as she patiently listens to the conversation around her. She never interrupts. She always responds thoughtfully. Her intelligence is effortless. She grew up in this house and stayed through young adulthood, dropping out…

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