By Joel C. Boehm
As I think about where, perhaps, Lloyd falls short in his considerations, I turn to the patron saint of Wicker Park Writers, Nelson Algren, with whose writing I was casually obsessed with for a while as an undergraduate, and who lived for a time near the Artful Dodger’s location on Wabansia. I later learned about Saul Bellow living in the neighborhood, too, and while I read The Adventures of Augie March last winter, as far as literature influencing me along my own journey, it’s been Algren near the top. I read much of The Neon Wilderness on a cold few days at my grandparents farm in Wisconsin, as opposite from Algren’s urban decay as one could get. In that era I also read The Man with the Golden Arm, which hits one much the same way as the Velvet Underground’s first album: for all its merits and flaws, it’s fresh, it’s both unsettling and inspiring, and it’s authentic. As I said before, it’s on the elusive edge. It suggests to one the possibility of a new way of doing things. Like Wicker Park once did.
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Posted on October 6, 2006