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    Dec 1, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  1. Dog books certain to give you paws

    My first dog was a golden retriever named Tisha. Tisha was quiet and friendly, a perfect golden for a 4-year-old boy; my mother swears that when we took her to the vet one last time, as the dog lay dying on the operating table, Tisha lifted her head at the sound of my voice, though I doubt this actually happened. My next dog, the dog that I remember best, was an Irish setter named Hombre. I would wrap him in a blanket and drag him around the house and he loved it.  
    My first dog was a golden retriever named Tisha. Tisha was quiet and friendly, a perfect golden for a 4-year-old boy; my mother swears that when we took her to the vet one last time, as the dog lay dying on the operating table, Tisha lifted her head at...

    Tags: Arthur Miller, T Coraghessan Boyle, Newspaper and Magazine, Malcolm Gladwell, Chicago Tribune

  2. Dec 21, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  3. Time for a teacher's conference with Mr. Boone

    Learning last year that Bob Boone, one of my former teachers at Highland Park High School (never mind when), was still teaching creative writing to children and adults filled me with the kind of joy you get when you return to your hometown decades later and see a favorite childhood haunt is still open for business.
    Learning last year that Bob Boone, one of my former teachers at Highland Park High School (never mind when), was still teaching creative writing to children and adults filled me with the kind of joy you get when you return to your hometown decades later...

    Tags: Hack Wilson, Telecommunication Service, Networking, Teachers, William Faulkner

  4. Nov 24, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  5. James Wood champions realism in new book of essays

    There's a certain type of reader — often also a writer, with a leaf-fring'd MFA — who has it all figured out. The realist novel is a scam, a factory producing cardboard imitations of bourgeois life. This is the person at the party who mentions having read “Gravity's Rainbow” twice and says things like, “Oh, that's too narrative for me.” The critic James Wood was born to drive this person crazy.
    There's a certain type of reader — often also a writer, with a leaf-fring'd MFA — who has it all figured out. The realist novel is a scam, a factory producing cardboard imitations of bourgeois life. This is the person at the party who mentions...

    Tags: John Ashbery, Saul Bellow, Paul Auster, Religion and Belief, Jane Austen

  6. Nov 16, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. Not Your Momma's Book Club

    <strong>We meet every</strong> six to eight weeks. More than half of our meetings are at local bars; the rest are at the host member's house.
    We meet every six to eight weeks. More than half of our meetings are at local bars; the rest are at the host member's house. We are Chicago-based, 99 percent on the North Side. We do not read Oprah books! We are very proud of how diverse we are in...

    Tags: Jack Kerouac, Clubs and Associations, Authors, Lifestyle and Leisure

  8. Sep 23, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Louis Simpson dies at 89; Pulitzer-winning poet

    "A poet," Louis Simpson once wrote, "should wish for enough unhappiness to keep him writing."
    "A poet," Louis Simpson once wrote, "should wish for enough unhappiness to keep him writing." Simpson may not have wished for trouble, but he kept writing for 60 years — spare, powerful poems about war, infidelity, suburban alienation and other...

    Tags: University of California, Berkeley, Jamaica, Adultery, The Washington Post, Vanderbilt University

  10. Oct 12, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  11. Living in dangerous times

    The prospect of interviewing Don DeLillo produces a certain anxiety. DeLillo, one of the most heralded American novelists of the past 40 years, has a reputation for being inaccessible, emotionally and otherwise. While by no means a recluse like J.D. Salinger, DeLillo, 75, gives interviews rarely, and on those occasions divulges little about his personal life. And like his famously intense, highly polished, vaguely chilly books &mdash; reviewers often describe his characters as cold &mdash; there's something about him that discourages intimacy. He is, first and last, a mystery, and seems to prefer it that way.
    The prospect of interviewing Don DeLillo produces a certain anxiety. DeLillo, one of the most heralded American novelists of the past 40 years, has a reputation for being inaccessible, emotionally and otherwise. While by no means a recluse like J.D....

    Tags: John F. Kennedy Assassination (1963), The Washington Post, John Malkovich, David Cronenberg, Carl Sandburg

  12. Sep 26, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  13. Cartoonist Chris Ware is in his own category

    If you were building a Chris Ware, if you were constructing the most celebrated cartoonist of the past couple of decades, drawing up the plans for an Oak Park illustrator so routinely referred to as a genius that the accolade is more like fact than opinion, the first thing you would need is doubt. Preferably, self-doubt. But uncertainty, self-flagellation, humility-verging-on-delusion &mdash; any of these would work.
    If you were building a Chris Ware, if you were constructing the most celebrated cartoonist of the past couple of decades, drawing up the plans for an Oak Park illustrator so routinely referred to as a genius that the accolade is more like fact than...

    Tags: Chicago Cultural Center, Fiction, Tribune Tower, University of Chicago, Newspapers

  14. Sep 21, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  15. Lyrical centennial

    Arguing over poetry's cultural relevance is a little like debating the potential effects of drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, says Poetry magazine editor Christian Wiman. &ldquo;For many people, poetry will remain remote, inaccessible and on the same plane of perception as that Arctic refuge,&rdquo; Wiman contends. &ldquo;But who knows by what unconscious routes poetry is reaching into lives that seem to have nothing to do with it?&rdquo;
    Arguing over poetry's cultural relevance is a little like debating the potential effects of drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, says Poetry magazine editor Christian Wiman. “For many people, poetry will remain remote,...

    Tags: Book, University of Chicago, Columbia College Chicago, Charity, Pharmaceuticals

  16. Sep 19, 2012 |Story| Petoskey News
  17. Michigan author Elmore Leonard wins prestigious book award

    BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP, Michigan (AP) &mdash; For a man who built his career on word economy, the title is pretty darned long &mdash; The National Book Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters.
    BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP, Michigan (AP) — For a man who built his career on word economy, the title is pretty darned long — The National Book Foundation's Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters. Still, Elmore Leonard says he's...

    Tags: Fiction, Arthur Miller, Awards and Prizes, General Motors Corp., Timothy Olyphant

  18. Jul 8, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Review: Jim Holt's compelling 'Why Does the World Exist?'

    <strong>Why Does the World Exist?</strong>
    -------------------- Why Does the World Exist? An Existential Detective Story Jim Holt Liveright: 310 pp., $27.95 -------------------- "How old is the Universe?" Kurt Vonnegut asked in his 1973 novel "Breakfast of Champions." "It is one half-second...

    Tags: Fiction, Cosmology, Literature, Applied Physics, Stephen Hawking

  20. Jun 22, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. Wading into existential waters

    Sometimes Dave Eggers' accomplishments off the page can eclipse his literary talent. He has launched an energetic network of tutoring centers for young readers and writers &mdash;including Chicago's 826CHI &mdash; and established an innovative, socially engaged publishing empire, the San Francisco-based McSweeney's. But Eggers' soon-to-be-released seventh book, &ldquo;A Hologram for the King,&rdquo; is perhaps some of his most ambitious work yet.
    Sometimes Dave Eggers' accomplishments off the page can eclipse his literary talent. He has launched an energetic network of tutoring centers for young readers and writers —including Chicago's 826CHI — and established an innovative, socially...

    Tags: Dave Eggers, Arts and Culture, Cancer, Companies and Corporations, Literature

  22. Aug 12, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. Review: 'The Way the World Works' maps Nicholson Baker's mind

    <strong>The Way the World Works</strong>
    -------------------- The Way the World Works Essays Nicholson Baker Simon & Schuster: 319 pp., $25 -------------------- Nicholson Baker's new book, "The Way the World Works," is a miscellany: a collection of 34 essays originally published in...

    Tags: World War II (1939-1945), Arts and Culture, Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., Newspaper and Magazine, Annie Dillard

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