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  • Art & Museums , Lit , Mixed media , Nonfiction

Review: 44 Posters, Weeds Tavern, by Dave Hoekstra and Sergio Mayora

Weeds Tavern is a bar biography, but something more, and slightly less. More or less an artist’s monograph, SunTimes writer and critic Dave Hoekstra covers the titular Chicago tavern’s background […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • June 14, 2024
    • Dialogs , Events , Lit , Live Lit , Music , Nonfiction , Pop , Stages

    Dialogs: Reggie Watts Celebrates Glorious Black Nerds at the Old Town School

    Reggie Watts is far more than James Corden’s bandleader on the former The Late Late Show. He’s an innovative musician (keyboard, looping machine, beatboxer), dry comedian, wearer of cool geometric […]

  • Karin McKie
  • June 14, 2024
    • Dialogs , Events , Lit , Music , Nonfiction , Stages , Talk show

    Dialogs: Feminist Punk Kathleen Hanna at the Chicago Humanities Festival’s Illinois Tech Day

    Kathleen Hanna, founding Riot Grrrl, Bikini Kill frontwoman and the person who told Kurt Cobain that he smelled like teen spirit, is currently on tour to promote her memoir Rebel […]

  • Karin McKie
  • May 28, 2024
    • Dialogs , Events , Lit , Music , Nonfiction , Stages , Talk show

    Dialogs: Chicago Humanities Festival Explores Hip-Hop History and Black Punk Now

    Chicago musicians Chance the Rapper, Jennifer Hudson, plus legendary producer Quincy Jones, recently opened the renovated Ramova Theatre. The interior’s quaint cityscape-inside-a-building balconies and windows have been restored to usher […]

  • Karin McKie
  • May 11, 2024
    • Essays , Fiction , Lit , Museum , Nonfiction , Poetry , Writing

    Review: Watching the Writer’s Mind Work, Write Cut Rewrite: The Cutting Room Floor of Modern Literature, by Dirk Van Hulle and Mark Nixon

    Everyone, I suppose, has a sense of the what-if of history. What if Abraham Lincoln hadn’t gone to Ford’s Theater that night and avoided assassination? What if I had taken a […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • May 10, 2024
    • Comics and Graphic Novels , Fiction , Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: In Evil Eyes Sea, Two Women Uncover a Mystery at the Heart of Turkish Culture: by Özge Samancı

    Evil Eyes Sea is preoccupied with objects: how they become imbued with their owners’ lives and remain after those people are gone. In her autobiographically-inspired graphic novel, Özge Samancı skillfully […]

  • Devony Hof
  • May 4, 2024
    • Chicago history , Lit , Museums , Nonfiction , Parks and zoos , Suburbs and exurbs

    Review: 100 Things to Do in Illinois Before You Die, by Melanie Holmes

    Everyone knows they’ll die, but few people believe it. For the sole species aware of its mortality, personal nonexistence is inconceivable. Many have come near death. A number of folks […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • April 18, 2024
    • Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: A Warning to Heed and Hope to Build with Mark Larson’s Working in the 21st Century

    One of the first questions a stranger usually asks to identify who you are is, what do you do? But our job is more than how we make money, it […]

  • Caroline Huftalen
  • April 10, 2024
    • Lit , Nonfiction , Reviews

    Review: The Lies of the Land Is a Lopsided But Informative Read

    Like many history books, Steven Conn’s The Lies of the Land: Seeing Rural America For What It Is—And Isn’t is a showcase of and argument for nuanced thinking. In his […]

  • Adam Kaz
  • April 1, 2024
    • Lit , Live lit events , Nonfiction , Stages , Talk show

    Dialogs: Kara Swisher Talks Tech Bros— They’re “Frequently Wrong But Never in Doubt”—at CHF Event

    Kara Swisher has a lot of opinions—and she doesn’t hesitate to share them, both in her new book and in her conversation with social work professor Brené Brown before a sold-out […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • March 23, 2024
    • Interviews , Lit , Nonfiction

    Interview: Elizabeth Flock Explores Women Versus the World in New Book, The Furies

    Interview and article by Katherine Frazer. The Furies: Women, Vengeance, and Justice tells the story of three women across the globe, all united in their search for justice against their […]

  • Guest Author
  • March 21, 2024
    • Chicago history , Chicago history , Lit , Nonfiction , Suburbs and exurbs

    Review: Maps and Martyrs, Encounters in the New World: Jesuit Cartography of the Americas, by Mirela Altic

    A strikingly drawn and boldly colored map, attributed to the Jesuit priest and explorer Jean de Brebeuf, is the image used on the cover of Mirela Altic’s Encounters in the […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • March 14, 2024
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