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  • Children's books , Dialogs , Events , Film & TV , Interviews , Lit , Live lit events

Dialogs: “The Only Moral Is Run!” – R. L. Stine at the Chicago Humanities Festival

This Guest Post was written by Holly Smith I entered the Music Box Theatre with anticipation. I was there to see the first episode of the Goosebumps TV show and […]

  • Guest Author
  • October 30, 2024
    • Children's books , Dialogs , Events , Fiction , Lit , Live lit events , Writing

    12 Years of Crafting Mad Science: Kate McKinnon Discusses Her New Book The Millicent Quibb School of Etiquette for Young Ladies of Mad Science

    By Guest Writer Holly Smith A Cosplayer Welcome As I sat down in the Athenaeum Center for Thought and Culture to see a live interview with comedian Kate McKinnon about […]

  • Guest Author
  • October 9, 2024
    • Children's books , Events , Fiction , Lists , Lit , Nonfiction

    Chicago Is Lit: July Author Events & Book Releases

    New books Pretty, Until Next Summer, Hombrecito and Keyana Loves School

    Chicago’s literary scene is, in a word, “lit”: from the Midwest’s largest free outdoor literary festival to pop-up typewritten poetry encounters to the nation’s only museum devoted to American writers, […]

  • Elizabeth Niarchos Neukirch
  • June 28, 2024
    • Children's books , Fiction , Lit , Poetry

    Review: Mother Goose for English Majors, The Lamb Cycle: What the Great English Poets Would Have Written about Mary and Her Lamb, by David R. Ewbank, with illustrations by Kate Feiffer

    If Shakespeare, instead of Mother Goose, had written “Mary Had a Little Lamb,” perhaps he would have penned a sonnet to take the young girl to task for abandoning “Thy […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • December 14, 2023
    • Architecture , Beyond , Chicago history , Chicago history , Children's books , Comics and Graphic Novels , Fiction , Lit , Nonfiction , Poetry

    Essay: In Defense of “Unregulated” Little Free Libraries

    Ald. Raymond Lopez (15th) thinks the little free libraries along many Chicago sidewalks are bad—very bad. They are “unregulated”! And they’re “popular”! And many of them are planted in city soil! (Collective […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • October 12, 2023
    • Chicago history , Chicago history , Children's books , Essays , Event , Lit , Live lit events , Nonfiction , Poetry

    Printers Row on Saturday: A Celebration of Community

    Near the end of Saturday at this year’s Printers Row Lit Fest, an 80-year-old Italian painter from the North Shore told me she’s going to have a huge party if […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • September 9, 2023
    • Children's books , Fiction , Lit

    Review: Wonder and Joy and Questions, The Happy Prince & Other Tales, by Oscar Wilde

    It’s something of a surprise to be reminded that Oscar Wilde—the author of The Picture of Dorian Gray and the subject of a scandalous 1895 trial over consensual homosexual acts—wrote […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • August 24, 2023
    • Chicago history , Children's books , Essays , Fiction , Lists , Lit , Nonfiction , Reviews

    2022 in Review: A Lit Retrospective

    What was 2022 like in the world of Chicago, Illinois, and Midwest letters? I’ve asked the Lit section writers to share their favorite reviews and stories of the past year. […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • January 5, 2023
    • Children's books , Fiction , Lit , Reviews

    Review: A Spooky Morality Play—The Merchant’s Curse, by Antony Barone Kolenc

    Antony Barone Kolenc’s The Merchant’s Curse is a historical mystery with a strong supernatural element, set in 12th-century England and written for children and young teens. Even more, it’s a […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • October 24, 2022
    • Chicago history , Children's books , Interviews , Lit , Nonfiction

    Interview: Hearts Beat Still—Maggie Schmieder, Author of Hopeful Hearts in Highland Park

    Hopeful Hearts in Highland Park is author Maggie Duplace Schmieder’s attempt to make sense out of something senseless. She and her family attended the Highland Park Independence Day parade this […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • September 7, 2022
    • Children's books , Dialogs , Fiction , Film & TV , Lit , Live lit events

    Kids Can Learn Sign Language, Storytelling and Teamwork with Sweet Animated Video Calvin Can’t Fly

    Jennifer Berne wrote the storybook Calvin Can’t Fly: The Story of a Bookworm Birdie in 2010, and her second cousin Sarah Michaelson directed and produced a video version last year. […]

  • Karin McKie
  • January 30, 2022
    • Children's books , Lit

    Feature: Local Author Taps into Her Childhood with Two New Children’s Books

    It’s not often that Third Coast Review has an opportunity to review children’s books. Fortunately, Chicagoland author J.B. Frank has given us a fantastic reason to do so. Somewhere in […]

  • Cynthia Kallile
  • October 29, 2021
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