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  • Fiction , Interviews , Lit , Nonfiction

Interview: Willa, Ernest, William, and Scott—A Talk with Dr. Michelle Moore about Chicago and American Modernism

Dr. Michelle Moore is a professor of English at the College of DuPage whose most recent book is Chicago and the Making of American Modernism: Cather, Hemingway, Faulkner and Fitzgerald […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • August 4, 2021
    • Fiction , Lit

    Review: Renée Rosen Brings Readers on a Jaunty Tour of Gilded Age High Society in The Social Graces

    The Social Graces By Renée Rosen Penguin Random House Chicago author Renée Rosen turns east in The Social Graces, a romp through Gilded Age New York’s High Society. From outspending […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • July 15, 2021
    • Essays , Fiction , Lit , Nonfiction , Reviews

    Essay: True West

    One Sunday afternoon a number of years ago I found a finger puppet lying outside Maclean House, the former dormitory (now apartments) named in honor of the late Norman Maclean, […]

  • June Sawyers
  • July 6, 2021
    • Fiction , Lit , Nonfiction , Reviews

    Review: Small-Town Ghosts, Spoon River America, by Jason Stacy

    Spoon River America: Edgar Lee Masters and the Myth of the American Small Town By Jason Stacy University of Illinois Press It’s ironic that Spoon River Anthology—perhaps the most famous […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • May 13, 2021
    • Art & Museums , Fiction , Lit , Live lit events

    The Illustrative Man: New Exhibit on Local Speculative Fiction Writer Ray Bradbury

      Ray Bradbury’s work and reputation have aged like fine dandelion wine. Unlike many of his fellow 20th century science-fiction and fantasy writers, he’s entered the current millennium fairly woke […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • April 25, 2021
    • Fiction , Lit , Reviews

    Review: Looking Just Like Jesus, Imagine the Dog by Cecilia Pinto

    Imagine the Dog By Cecilia Pinto Texas Review Press The red-haired cop looks at Ricky Rudolph and, with an angry edge to his voice, asks, “You think Jesus Christ is […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • April 25, 2021
    • Fiction , Interviews , Lit

    Interview: Gloria Chao on Love and Romance in the Asian Diaspora

    In Gloria Chao’s third YA novel Rent A Boyfriend, University of Chicago freshman Chloe Wang suddenly has to worry about more than grades when her parents start pressuring her to […]

  • Terry Galvan
  • April 22, 2021
    • Events , Fiction , Interviews , Lit , Live lit events , Nonfiction , Poetry

    Interview: Don Evans, Sandra Cisneros, and the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame

    Even via Zoom, Don Evans is passionate about Chicago’s relationship with the written word. A writer, editor, and teacher, Evans is also the executive director of the Chicago Literary Hall […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • March 11, 2021
    • Fiction , Interviews , Lit

    Interview: Julia Fine on Modernism, Motherhood, & Margaret Wise Brown

    In her newest novel, The Upstairs House, Julia Fine delivers a chilling depiction of postpartum depression interlaced with the story of modernist women creators who lived a century before. When Megan […]

  • Terry Galvan
  • January 22, 2021
    • Fiction , Lit , Uncategorized

    Review: Decent People Facing Strangeness, Dark Black, by Sam Weller

    Dark Black by Sam Weller Hat & Beard Press One of the opening paragraphs of Sam Weller’s short story “All the Summer Before Us” is this: “We were eighteen, me […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • December 10, 2020
    • Fiction , Lit

    Book Review: The Right Amount of Daring: How to Walk on Water by Rachel Swearingen

    By Allison Manley How to Walk on Water by Rachel Swearingen New American Press It’s energizing to pick up a short story collection, knowing almost nothing about it, and finding yourself […]

  • Guest Author
  • November 5, 2020
    • Comics and Graphic Novels , Fiction , Interviews , Lists , Lit

    Featured Creatures: Chicago Horror Writers and Artists Share Their Favorite (or Un-favorite) Scary Stories

    Chicago and horror may not seem synonymous, but the city and surrounding area have produced a bevy of creators of chilling art and hair-raising tales. Author Ray Bradbury hailed from […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • October 30, 2020
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