Chicago - A message from the station manager

Historic Leaps

Over the transom.
1. New Book Examines The History Of The Gay Press And Its Contribution To Gay Rights.
“As gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) individuals became more visible in the 1950s and 1960s, the mainstream media perpetuated the attitude that they were mentally ill and morally depraved queers, freaks, degenerates, perverts, misfits, and even threats to national security. In many cities, the police raided gay bars, harassing and arresting patrons.

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Posted on December 5, 2012

Tuesday Funk #52

By Tuesday Funk

Come kick off the holiday season in style with your friends at Tuesday Funk, Chicago’s eclectic reading series where good writing and good beer mix!
We’re pleased to present the first in a series of readings featuring authors from the new 2nd Story essay anthology Briefly Knocked Unconscious by a Low-Flying Duck.
Julia Borcherts and [former Beachwood White Sox Report correspondent] Andrew Reilly will be on hand to read their contributions, and we’ll also have Maggie Kast, Stephen Markley, and Jodi Eichelberger with us. Throw in one of our patented Poems by Bill, not to mention your pick of cold beers from around the world, and you have the recipe for a fantastic hour or two of live literature.

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Posted on December 4, 2012

The Chambers Report: Paterno

By Robert Chambers

Joe Posnanski, named best sportswriter in America this year by the Sportswriters and Sportscasters Hall of Fame, agreed to pen Joe Paterno’s biography just a few months before the notorious Jerry Sandusky pedophilia scandal, in November 2011, obliterated Paterno’s carefully built pristine image, as well as that of his employer, Pennsylvania State University.
As the scandal was unfolding before all of us, Posnanski came more and more to view the great football coach’s remarkable life story as a riveting soap opera in which an apparently profoundly moral man was suddenly brought low by human weakness, carrying down with him the now celebrated institution that he had done more than anyone else to build.
The eventual shape of Paterno, in fact, took on that of an opera, with Posnanski dividing his book into five acts, complete with arias, intermezzos, a beginning overture, a closing finale, and even an encore. Its flowery chapters are also melodic and dramatic, bearing such titles as “The Grand Experiment,” “Sainthood,” “Mountaintop,” “Evil and Good,” and “To Be or Not to Be.” In the end, such bombast seems fitting to Posnanski’s task. His subject, after all, was anything but an ordinary man.

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Posted on November 17, 2012

Local Book Notes: R.L. Stine Has Steak In Chicago

Also Grisly: Poets’ Photos Go On Display

Over the transom.
1. From Simon & Schuster:
Before J.K. Rowling, Stephenie Meyer or Suzanne Collins, there was R.L. Stine. Stine invented the teen horror genre with Fear Street, the bestselling teen horror series of all time. He also changed the face of children’s publishing with the mega-successful Goosebumps series that went on to become a worldwide multimedia phenomenon and which Guinness World Records cites as the Best-Selling Children’s Books of all time. The Goosebumps series celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2012.
Now Stine writes for the adult fans of Fear Street and Goosebumps – those twenty- and thirtysomethings with RED RAIN: A Novel, delivering a terrifying new adult horror novel centered on a town in the grip of a sinister revolt.

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Posted on November 8, 2012

Local Book Notes: Weird Fiction, Rooster-Footed Devils And Twisted Poetry

Moby-Dick Makeover; Korean Haiku

Over the transom, with value added.
1. Weird Fiction at Roosevelt University.

China Miéville, the award-winning author whose writing is sometimes characterized as ‘weird fiction,’ visits Roosevelt University on Nov. 5, reading from his latest work at 5 p.m. in the Angell Reading Room of the University’s 10th floor library, 430 S. Michigan Ave.
“The author of nine novels, including The City & the City, Embassytown and Railsea, the short-story collection, Looking for Jake, as well as non-fiction essays and the book, Between Equal Rights, Miéville is part of a new generation of writers who are loosely categorized as being part of what is known as the New Weird genre.
An associate professor of creative writing at Warwick University in England, Miéville is the winner of many literary awards including: the Arthur C. Clarke and British Fantasy awards in 2001 for Perdido Street Station; the British Fantasy and Locus awards in 2003 for The Scar; the Arthur C. Clarke and Hugo awards in 2010 for The City & the City, which drew comparisons to the works of Franz Kafka, George Orwell and Philip K. Dick; and for one of his most recent novels, Embassytown, which has been widely praised for its foray into science fiction.
Sponsored by the Creative Writing Program at Roosevelt University, the reading is free and open to the public.

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Posted on November 2, 2012

Boo! It’s Pedophile Santa!

Halloween Comics Recs From Zanadu Comics

“We’ve got some books that will put you in the Halloween spirit such as Bedlam and Ghost, as well as a bunch of other great stuff such as the first Turtles book that Kevin Eastman has done in 20 years.”

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Posted on October 31, 2012

Dummy: The Memoir Of An Autistic Former Chicago Drug Dealer

Blamed, Punished, Pathologized

“David Patten was born in 1954 with a cognitive disorder (later diagnosed in the Autism Spectrum) that profoundly challenged his ability to process the world around him. Unable to concentrate or learn the basics of reading and writing, he withdrew into an inner world. Because he grew up in a time when his dysfunctions were not understood, David was labeled lazy, stupid, a troublemaker. He was blamed, punished, pathologized, and unable to get the help he needed. By the time he was a teenager, David had drifted into the dark underbelly of American life.
“David attempted suicide at age fourteen, attended one of America’s most dangerous inner city schools for troubled youth, became a drug dealer in Chicago’s criminal underworld, and spent nine months as a virtual prisoner in an abusive experimental psychiatric home. He then spent fifteen years in a spiritual community where he practiced meditation and inquired into the very nature and inherent limitations of identity itself.
“Eventually, David’s exceptional abilities in abstract and analytical thinking, and his acute observational skills, led him to become a highly sought-after crisis manager and trouble shooter traveling around the country debugging computer systems for major corporations and even U.S. military installations.”
Dummy is available November 2012.

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Posted on October 24, 2012

Local Book Notes: Howard Zinn, The Bears’ Comics Nerd, Chris Ware And Zombie, Illinois

A People’s History

Over the transom.
1. Howard Zinn Speaks.

A Book Launch Celebration Featuring Dramatic Readings and Songs, Nov. 9
Friday, Nov. 9, 7 p.m. at Young Chicago Authors, 1180 N. Milwaukee, 2nd Floor, with editor Anthony Arnove, Kevin Coval, Young Chicago Authors, and Special Guests TBA.
Cosponsored by Haymarket Books, Voices of a People’s History, and Young Chicago Authors
Free | RSVP | Facebook
Division Blue Line, Ashland Bus, Milwaukee Bus, Division Bus

More from Haymarket Books:

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Posted on October 22, 2012

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