| Title | Links | Published | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. |
Mary MacLane |
1901 | |
| 2. |
Olivia Howard Dunbar |
1947 | |
| 3. |
Jeannie Morris |
1972 | |
| 4. |
Himself!: The Life and Times of Mayor Richard J. Daley |
Eugene C. Kennedy |
1978 |
| 5. |
Lost Prophet: The Life and Times of Bayard Rustin |
John D'Emilio |
2003 |
| 6. |
Jeff Griggs |
2005 | |
| 7. |
Ali: A Life Chicago author (and recent Pulitzer Prize winner) includes in this life story a fair bit about Chicago’s importance to Ali. In a WTTW interview on August 9, 2021, Eig says, “Ali lived here for some of the most important years of his career. You could say that he had his racial awakening here, because it's when he begins to box as an amateur and travels to Chicago for the first time that he sees that the rest of America is different [than Louisville].” Later in the interview, he says, “He says he lost his virginity in Chicago, so that's a big deal. But it's also a place where he started to get national attention. He loved those two things a lot: sex and media attention. But to be serious about it, Chicago was really where he began to find a national stage and to realize that he could be special. He’s still in high school [when he first comes to Chicago for the Golden Gloves tournament], and he’s cocky, but he doesn't know yet whether he's special as a boxer. |
Johnathan Eig |
2017 |
| 8. |
Ann Durkin Keating |
2019 | |
| 9. |
Ali A biomusical that premiered at Chicago’s James M. Nederlander Theatre from April 22-May 18. |
Clint Dyer |
2025 |
Chicago Literary Hall of Fame
Email: Don Evans
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