Chicago - A message from the station manager

By The Beachwood Book Bureau

“StoryCorps, a national nonprofit organization dedicated to recording, preserving, and sharing the stories of people from all backgrounds and beliefs, will record interviews in Chicago from August 16 – September 15 as part of its cross-country MobileBooth tour,” the organization announced Tuesday.
Before we get to the details, let’s take a listen to a smattering of previous StoryCorps segments emanating from Chicago.
1. “Nineteen-year-old Noe Rueda talks to his high school economics teacher, Alex Fernandez about growing up poor in Chicago.”

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Posted on July 25, 2012

The Chambers Report: A Tale Of Three Cities

By Bob Chambers

I.
Cities have been around for a long time. As ancient, entirely rural populations grew and became more complicated three millennia ago, people increasingly banded together for security and economic reasons. The earliest such gatherings would be largely unrecognizable to us today, but cities pretty much as we know them were established fairly early on in China and Europe, primarily to provide protection against marauding armies and to offer central places of trade and interaction. As they expanded, they became more complex and naturally developed both benefits and costs. Among the benefits were reduced transport expense, the exchange of ideas, the sharing of natural resources, the provision of local markets, and, later on, such amenities as sewage disposal and running water. The costs of expanding cities included rising crime rates, higher living expenses, pollution, and, in time, the replacement of the bicycle and buggy by the automobile and alarmingly dangerous high-speed traffic.
With the creation and growth of cities inevitably came the need for organizing and managing them – and thus the necessity of political systems with all their divisions, jealousies, and corruption. Bad as these could be, though, they also became the stuff of art, literature and written history. Just as The Eternal City inspired Gibbon to pen The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire and as eighteenth century Paris and London led to Dickens’ A Tale Of Two Cities, so, in our own time, cities have spawned an industry of political fiction and historical investigation.

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Posted on July 23, 2012

About That Pulitzer Fiction Jury

By Steve Rhodes

The literary world went ballistic last April when the Pulitzer people announced there would be no winner in the fiction category this year. That hadn’t happened in 35 years.
The jurors, who had forwarded the names of three finalists to the 20-member Pulitzer board, went public with their anger and bewilderment.
Public sympathy clearly lied with the jury, while the board was mercifully mocked for supposing that there were no books published in 2011 worthy of their prissy prize.
Pulitzer administrator Sig Gissler would only say that “It’s unusual for the fiction award to be a problem, but it was a problem this year.”
Now we know what the problem was.

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Posted on July 10, 2012

A Happy Ending: City Libraries Back To Regular Schedule

By Keep Chicago Working/AFSCME Council 31

We wanted to let you know some very good news: Thanks to you and thousands of other Chicago residents who made clear the importance of your neighborhood branch, staffing and hours have been almost completely restored throughout the Chicago Public Libraries system. Over the past few weeks, nearly all of the library employees who were laid off last winter were recalled to work, and the library’s “summer hours” have returned the system to its regular schedule.
As you know, last fall Mayor Emanuel proposed a budget that would have cut library hours on Mondays and Fridays and eliminated 552 library staff positions. Knowing how much Chicagoans value their public libraries, we launched a campaign that let library lovers like you push back against these cuts.

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Posted on July 6, 2012

The Chambers Report: Melville, Elvis And Baseball

By Bob Chambers

I.
Why is Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick; or The Whale probably the least-read fictional masterpiece in America? Its daunting length, of course (800-plus pages in the famous 1930 Random House edition containing the celebrated illustrations of Rockwell Kent), has something to do with it. And then there are all those countless chapters on whales and whaling, reminiscent of Leo Tolstoy’s hundreds of detailed pages on Napoleonic battling in War and Peace (1865, 1869), another notoriously unread classic. Who needs these pontifical chapters, after all? Just tell the story! And, finally, there is the likely, yet usually unmentionable, prospect that most readers simply do not have the smarts to take on such a lofty challenge. “I’m just not up to this!”

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Posted on July 2, 2012

The Chambers Report: The Last Boy Of Summer

By Bob Chambers

Roger Clemens was just acquitted of lying to Congress about using performance-enhancing drugs in the latest of so many tabloid sports stories that they no longer shock.
But it wasn’t always that way, and the demarcation of public awareness about what really goes on in clubhouses is often marked as Ball Four, former pitcher Jim Bouton’s rousing expose that blew the doors off the squeaky clean image of baseball and its heroes – in particular, Mickey Mantle, the subject of a biography last year by Jane Leavy called The Last Boy.
The two books together provide seminal reading for baseball fans and students of the American hero industry; links in a chain to today’s sports universe.

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Posted on June 21, 2012

The Loathsome World Of Ivan Brunetti

‘What The Hell Is Wrong With This Guy?’

“Ivan Brunetti makes dark, misanthropic comics that channel taboo-laden subject matter – making his adoring readers gasp with relish,” says GravityFreeDesign in a YouTube upload on Monday.
“Brunetti was born in Mondavio, Italy and moved to Chicago in the 1970s, always with a reverence for comic book art. He is most famous for his Schizo series, wherein he vents about capitalism, politics, and his own shortcomings.
“The Chicago Reader describes Brunetti’s work as follows: ‘A sense of humor as black an ink . . . a darkly funny, intensely personal, uncompromisingly nihilistic comic book.’
Spin magazine writes, ‘Brunetti’s self-loathing and seething disgust is so unrelenting that it begs a simple question: What the hell is wrong with this guy?’
“He’s contributed cover designs for The New Yorker magazine, and he is also the editor of An Anthology of Graphic Fiction, Cartoons, and True Stories.
“Currently, he teaches classes on comics, drawing, and design at Columbia College of Chicago.”

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Posted on June 18, 2012

RockBookNotes: Memoir City

Shawn Colvin vs. Buddy Guy

“Shawn Colvin, the three-time Grammy-winner best known for the 1997 hit ‘Sunny Came Home,’ released a new album All Fall Down, as well as a memoir this week,” Laura Rowley writes for the Huffington Post.
Diamond in the Rough is an utterly raw account of Colvin’s childhood in South Dakota and Illinois; her life-long battle with anxiety and depression that started in middle school; conquering the alcoholism that dogged her through her 20s; her numerous romantic debacles (and two divorces); and finding happiness in her career and motherhood in her 30s and 40s. Lyrical, funny and painfully honest, Colvin’s memoir reads like a seriously fractured fairy tale.”

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Posted on June 14, 2012

BookNotes: Keynote Genius, Indie Comics And Regional Paintings

By The Beachwood Book Bureau

Quickly.
1. From The Chicago Writers Conference:
“Acclaimed author Aleksandar Hemon will be the Opening Keynote Speaker at the inaugural Chicago Writers Conference, announced conference Founder Mare Swallow.
“Born in Sarajevo and now living in Chicago, Aleksandar Hemon is the author of Love and Obstacles, The Lazarus Project, Nowhere Man and The Question of Bruno.
“He’s also a winner of a MacArthur ‘genius grant,’ finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and a Guggenheim Fellowship recipient.”
Registration for the conference is now open.

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Posted on June 12, 2012

Ray Bradbury’s 2009 Commencement Speech at Columbia College

Be Who You Want To Be. Love What You Love.

“Martians, robots, dinosaurs, mummies, ghosts, time machines, rocket ships, carnival magicians, alarming doppelgangers who forecast murder and doom – the sort of sensational subjects that fascinate children are the stuff of Ray Bradbury’s fiction,” Michiko Kakutani wrote for the New York Times this week after the author’s death.
“Over a 70-year career, he used his fecund storytelling talents to fashion tales that have captivated legions of young people and inspired a host of imitators. His work informed the imagination of writers and filmmakers like Stephen King, Steven Spielberg and James Cameron, and helped transport science fiction out of the pulp magazine ghetto and into the mainstream.”
In 2009, Columbia College awarded Bradbury with an honorary degree at its commencement ceremony. Bradbury was introduced by authorized biographer and faculty member Sam Weller before appearing via satellite from Los Angeles:

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Posted on June 8, 2012

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