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  • Fiction , Lit , Reviews

Book Review: Peace Talks, the Latest Installment of Dresden Files Holds Up, Even for Latecomers

Peace Talks By Jim Butcher Ace In the 16th installment of Chicago-based urban fantasy series The Dresden Files, wizard-for-hire Harry Dresden is tapped to work security for a treaty negotiation […]

  • Terry Galvan
  • July 16, 2020
    • Lit , Reviews

    Book Review: A Vibrant Novel about Random Life, Right after the Weather, by Carol Anshaw

    Right after the Weather by Carol Anshaw Atria Books, 269 pages, $27 It’s one of those random moments in life. Cate, running late, drives into Neale’s alley, puts on her […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • July 15, 2020
    • Lit , Reviews

    Book Review: From Black Boy Lane to Anson Place, The Address Book, by Deirdre Mask

    The Address Book: What Street Addresses Reveal About Identity, Race, Wealth and Power by Deirdre Mask St. Martin’s Press In her introduction to The Address Book: What Street Addresses Reveal […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • June 27, 2020
    • Fiction , Lit , Reviews

    Book Review: Keep It Clean—Cleanness by Garth Greenwell

    Gospodine they call our narrator. “Master” or “sir” in Bulgarian, it’s a designation of authority from the students he teaches literature to at a high school in Sofia. What it […]

  • Guest Author
  • June 24, 2020
    • Lit , Reviews , Uncategorized

    Book Review: South Side Chick Lit, Saving Ruby King by Catherine Adel West

    Saving Ruby King by Catherine Adel West Park Row Books, 312 pages, $27.99 In the closing pages of Catherine Adel West’s Saving Ruby King, two men and two women can […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • June 16, 2020
    • Essays , Lit , Reviews

    Essay/Book Review: Founding American Towns on Paper, Cities of the American West, Part 2

    Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Urban Planning By John W. Reps Princeton University Press, 827 pages, out of print, available on the internet starting at $40 […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • June 11, 2020
    • Fiction , Lit , Reviews

    Book Review: The Problem of Being Female—Rodham: A Novel

    Rodham: A Novel By Curtis Sittenfield Random House We think we should all know her by now. After decades in the limelight, Hillary Rodham Clinton remains, for many, an enigma. […]

  • June Sawyers
  • June 5, 2020
    • Essays , Lit , Reviews

    Essay/Book Review: The Vast Chicago Street Grid, Cities of the American West, Part 1

    Cities of the American West A History of Frontier Urban Planning By John W. Reps Princeton University Press, 827 pages, available on the internet starting at $40 Part One of […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • June 4, 2020
    • Lit , Reviews

    Book Review: Radical of Radicals, Formed in Chicago, Dorothy Day by John Loughery and Blythe Randolph

    Dorothy Day: Dissenting Voice of the American Century By John Loughery and Blythe Randolph Simon and Schuster Dorothy Day—that radical of 20th century radicals, that voice of conscience in the face of a […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • May 28, 2020
    • Comics and Graphic Novels , Lit , Reviews

    Book Review: Banned Book Club—By Kim Hyun Sook, et alia

    Banned Book Club By Kim Hyun Sook, Ko Hyun-Ju, and Ryan Estrada Iron Circus Comics Alongside guns, flags, and cats, few things spark people’s passions more than books. And why […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • May 18, 2020
    • Lit , Reviews

    Book Review: “The Best Color for Everything Anyway”—Stateway’s Garden by Jasmon Drain

    Stateway’s Garden By Jasmon Drain Penguin Random House There are many reasons to read Stateway’s Garden, Jasmon Drain’s debut story collection, but perhaps the most unexpected is the case it […]

  • Guest Author
  • May 8, 2020
    • Lit , Reviews , Uncategorized

    Book Review: Fighting Racism with a Teacup, Roots of the Black Chicago Renaissance, edited by Richard A. Courage and Christopher Robert Reed

    Roots of the Black Chicago Renaissance: New Negro Writers, Artists and Intellectuals 1893–1930 Edited by Richard A. Courage and Christopher Robert Reed University of Illinois Press, 296 pages, $28 In […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • May 5, 2020
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