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  • 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
    • Chicago history , Interviews , Lit , Nonfiction

    Interview: In Olde Chicago: A Talk with David Anthony Witter about His Book Oldest Chicago

    David Anthony Witter was born in Miller, Indiana—“across the lagoon from Nelson Algren’s summer home,” as he puts it—but has spent most of his life in Chicago. Growing up in […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • October 13, 2021
    • Lit , Music , Nonfiction

    Review: What Played in Peoria—Punks in Peoria, by Jonathan Wright and Dawson Barrett

    Punks in Peoria: Making a Scene in the American Heartland Jonathan Wright and Dawson Barrett University of Illinois Press I told a friend I was reviewing a book called Punks […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • October 4, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Nonfiction

    Dialogs: Qian Julie Wang and Greta Johnsen Discuss Beauty, Secrecy, Fear, and Freedom at CHF panel

    We all carry secrets, but not everyone has the courage to sit under stage lights, before an audience awash in shadows, and tell them to the world. But immigration attorney […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • October 4, 2021
    • Lit , Poetry , Reviews

    Review: Poetry Collection Darkness on the Face of the Deep Takes Risks with Emotional Depths

    Darkness on the Face of the Deep by Patrick T. Reardon Kelsay Books Review by Renny Golden In Darkness on the Face of the Deep, Third Coast Review writer Patrick […]

  • Guest Author
  • October 2, 2021
    • Lit , Nonfiction , Reviews

    Review: Literary Festivals, Salons, and Words Aloud in Ellen Wiles’s Live Literature

    Live Literature: The Experience and Cultural Value of Literary Performance Events from Salons to Festivals Ellen Wiles Palgrave Macmillan With music, open mics, and more—live performance is slowly coming back […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • October 1, 2021
    • Blues , Chicago history , Lit , Music , Nonfiction

    Review: Dark, Rough, Brutal, and Real: Bessie Smith by Jackie Kay

    Bessie Smith: A Poet’s Biography of a Blues Legend By Jackie Kay Vintage Books Bessie Smith, Empress of the Blues, liked to spend money on herself and on her friends, […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • September 28, 2021
    • Art & Museums , Feature , Lit

    Feature: We Visit the Artist at Work, Retyping a Chicago Literary Masterpiece

    I could hear the clickety-clack of his typewriter a block away. It was quiet around the Union Stock Yards Gate with only an occasional car or truck passing. And as […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • September 26, 2021
    • Fiction , Lit

    Review: Raising Issues Beyond Entertainment, In the Aftermath, by Jane Ward

    In the Aftermath By Jane Ward She Writes Press Jane Ward’s In the Aftermath is an earnest, even affecting examination of the strong waves of guilt, sadness, and anger among […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • September 20, 2021
    • Lit , Nonfiction , Photography

    Review: The Adventures of an Urbex Photographer in Abandoned Chicagoland: Rust on the Prairies

    Abandoned Chicagoland: Rust on the Prairies By Jerry Olejniczak Arcadia Publishing I’ve always been drawn to—and repelled by—demolition sites. Crumbling walls, shattered by a  wrecking ball and revealing shards of […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • September 18, 2021
    • Lit , Music , Nonfiction

    Review: Mellencamp Biography Reveals a Belligerent, Multi-Talented Artist

    Mellencamp By Paul Rees Atria Books/Simon & Schuster Release date September 14, 2021 The first music he loved was Motown soul music that he listened to on AM radio stations […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • September 10, 2021
    • Fiction , Lit

    Review—Jane of Battery Park Escapes Evangelicalism and Finds Love

    Jane of Battery Park By Jaye Viner Red Hen Press Jane, a nurse who escaped an ultra-conservative evangelical upbringing to live in hiding in LA, runs into her college crush […]

  • Terry Galvan
  • September 7, 2021
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