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  • Lit , Nonfiction

Review: A Spirit of Discord, Reform and Unorthodoxy, The English Soul: Faith of a Nation, by Peter Ackroyd

Peter Ackroyd’s The English Soul: Faith of a Nation, is a rich and odd book. Rich because of the author’s storytelling skill and odd because it doesn’t tell the story […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • March 14, 2025
    • Chicago history , Chicago history , Lit , Nonfiction , Suburbs and exurbs

    Review: The How, When, and Why of Rail Lines, A History of the Railroad in 100 Maps, by Jeremy Black

    The 1897 image on pages 110 through11 of Jeremy Black’s A History of the Railroad in 100 Maps is a striking bird’s-eye view of Chicago, looking across downtown to the […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • March 9, 2025
    • Essays , Lit , Nonfiction , Poetry , Reviews

    Review: Learning to Love the Feel of Words in The Braille Encyclopedia

    Cover image of The Braille Encyclopedia by Naomi Cohn. A taupe background with the title in all caps and braille characters beneath each letter.

    “I grew up in a nest feathered with words, texts, and books,” Naomi Cohn writes in the first essay of her lyrical debut memoir, The Braille Encyclopedia: Brief Essays on […]

  • Elizabeth Niarchos Neukirch
  • March 2, 2025
    • Interviews , Lit , Music , Nonfiction

    Review: The Harder I Fight the More I Love You: A Memoir, by Neko Case

    Before a full house at the Fine Arts Building’s Studebaker Theater, singer-songwriter Neko Case appeared on stage in conversation with Lior Phillips, a Chicago-based South African music journalist. Case received […]

  • June Sawyers
  • February 8, 2025
    • Events , Fiction , Lit , Live lit events , Nonfiction , Writing

    Chicago Is Lit: A Literary Pub Crawl & More February Events

    Authors are frequently asked, “When is your book coming out?” I heard this question when I finished the first draft of my novel, and while I was editing the sixth […]

  • Elizabeth Niarchos Neukirch
  • January 31, 2025
    • Architecture , Art & Museums , Chicago history , Chicago history , Design , Lit , Museum , Nonfiction , Painting & sculpture , Sculpture

    Review: An Elegant Tour of Great Buildings, The Story of Architecture, by Witold Rybczynski

    The 1902 plan to revamp and expand the National Mall in Washington, DC, was the product of a commission of prominent Americans. Three of them worked closely together to produce […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • January 24, 2025
    • Events , Fiction , Lit , Live lit events , Nonfiction

    Channeling Book Fair Nostalgia: Call & Response Books’ Grown Up Book Fair

    Many adult readers remember, with a good dose of nostalgia, the excitement and awe they felt at the annual Scholastic Book Fair. Books were trundled into the school and displayed, […]

  • Holly Smith
  • January 17, 2025
    • Chicago history , Chicago history , Lit , Nonfiction , Suburbs and exurbs

    Review: “Dark Omen Indigo,”Postmortem, by Courtney Lund O’Neil

    Brushes with fame create anecdotes; brushes with infamy leave scars. Such is the case with author Courtney Lund O’Neil’s mother Kimberly Byers-Lund, and by extension O’Neil herself. In her book […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • January 12, 2025
    • Fiction , Interviews , Lists , Lit , Nonfiction

    Best of 2024: The Third Coast Review Lit Section

    The Third Coast Review Lit section has continued to grow in its coverage of the city and region’s ongoing literary scene. Below, several of TCR’s Lit writers share their favorite […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • January 1, 2025
    • Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: The Working Class of the Plant World, Weeds, by Nina Edwards

    For eight months—September 1940 to May 1941—the German Luftwaffe conducted a ferocious bombing campaign over London and other British cities and towns. An estimated 40,000 civilians were killed and as […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • December 26, 2024
    • Architecture , Chicago history , Lit , Nonfiction , Photography

    Review: They All Stand Up, Louis Sullivan: An American Architect, by Patrick F. Cannon and James Caulfield

    Can something be both overexposed and unseen? After years of black and white images of Louis Sullivan’s buildings being demolished or in the midst of eradication, we tend to think […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • December 10, 2024
    • Chicago history , Chicago history , Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: A Testament to Survival and Listening, Also Here: Love, Literacy, and the Legacy of the Holocaust, by Brooke Randel

    In 1944, at the age of 13, Brooke Randel’s grandmother Golda Indig was with her older sister in the German death camp of Auschwitz. They had been separated from the rest […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • December 10, 2024
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