• Art & Museums
  • Beyond
    • Soapbox
    • Today
  • Film & TV
  • Food
  • Games & Tech
  • Lit
  • Music
    • Audio
  • Stages
  • About Us
  • Our Writers
  • Write With Us
  • Subscribe
  • Support
  • Contact
  • Art & Museums
  • Beyond
  • Film & TV
  • Food
  • Games & Tech
  • Lit
  • Music
  • Stages
  • 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
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events , Nonfiction

    Dialogs: Actor/Performer/Etc. Alan Cumming Brings Charm and Stories to Chicago Humanities Festival

    By Carr Harkrader With its dramatic palazzo ornamentation, twinkling star-lit ceiling, and mischievous cherubs nuzzling within insets, the Music Box Theatre was perhaps the perfect place for a talk with […]

  • Guest Author
  • November 27, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events

    Dialogs: Salman Rushdie and Srikanth Reddy Discuss Power, Truth, and the Imaginary in CHF Panel

    Salman Rushdie is sometimes asked why, in this age of lies, he chooses to write fiction, adding more untruths to this disjointed world. Rushdie and poet Srikanth Reddy’s Chicago Humanities […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • July 14, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events

    Dialogs: Cornelius Eady and Joe Morton Discuss the Rhymes of History in CHF Panel

    History doesn’t repeat, Mark Twain said: it rhymes. And, as poet and playwright Cornelius Eady and performer Joe Morton both noted during their conversation about Eady’s Brutal Imagination, it keeps […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • June 20, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events

    Dialogs: Carol Leonnig and Andrea Mitchell Discuss the Secret Service, Politicization, Failures of Imagination

    Both Leonnig and Mitchell cover Washington, or elements thereof, and they began the conversation by noting that the Secret Service is not, for the most part, its own beat. Since […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • June 14, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events , Nonfiction

    Dialogs: Elizabeth Kolbert and Eula Biss Talk Unintended Consequences and Problems Caused by Solutions in CHF Panel

    The Chicago River, as many of us know, once flowed the other way, into Lake Michigan. It was reversed—a triumph of engineering, at the time—to move sewage and waste water […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • June 5, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events , Nonfiction

    Dialogs: Michio Kaku and LeVar Burton Bring Joy and Excitement to the Solar System and Beyond

    What do junior high school science, science fiction, string theory, the God equation, and Elvis Presley have in common? They all played a starring role in physicist Michio Kaku and […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • May 13, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events

    Dialogs: Heather McGhee and Helene Gayle Discuss Stories, Politics, Economics, and the Hope for Change in CHF Panel

    Most of us probably don’t think of economics as an optimistic field. For some of us it pulls up thoughts of Milton Friedman; for others, it’s relegated to a class […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • May 11, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events , Nonfiction

    Dialogs: Louis Menand Commingles Art, Ideas and the Cold War in CHF Discussion

    A parade of artists and pop art, literary and music figures from mid-century America populate Louis Menand’s new book, The Free World: Art and Thought in the Cold War. The […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • May 7, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events

    Dialogs: Jhumpa Lahiri and Jennifer Scappettone Discuss Mother Tongues, Displacement, and the Verb Trovarse in CHF Panel

    When one speaks more than one language, and moves from one to another with any degree of frequency, one runs into them: words that don’t quite translate, because they’re not […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • May 5, 2021
    • Art & Museums , Fiction , Lit , Live lit events

    The Illustrative Man: New Exhibit on Local Speculative Fiction Writer Ray Bradbury

      Ray Bradbury’s work and reputation have aged like fine dandelion wine. Unlike many of his fellow 20th century science-fiction and fantasy writers, he’s entered the current millennium fairly woke […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • April 25, 2021
    • Dialogs , Lit , Live lit events , Poetry

    Dialogs: Joy Harjo and Layli Long Soldier Discuss Mapping, Decoloniality, and the Wind in CHF Panel

    What if you could build a holographic map, in which all America’s Indigenous poets, from the beginning of time until now, were mapped, linking out to their works and their […]

  • Caitlin Archer-Helke
  • April 21, 2021
  • Prev
    1234567...9
    Next
    • Film & TV
    • Film
    • Review
    • Music
    • Reviews
    • Stages
    • Theater
    • Games & Tech
    • Game
    • Review

    About us

    • About Us
    • Our Writers
    • Write With Us
    • Subscribe
    • Support
    • Contact

    Useful Information

    For general inquiries, or to submit an article idea, correction or comment, write to us here or contact us

    Support Chicago Indie Media

    Enjoying Third Coast Review news and reviews? Please consider supporting our arts and culture coverage by making a small monthly pledge or making a donation via PayPal. Choose the amount that works best for you, and know how much we appreciate your support!

    Third Coast Review is a member of the Chicago Independent Media Alliance.

    Developed By Utopian | Copyright 2016-2024, Third Coast Review LLC & Respective Authors. All Rights Reserved. No Content May Be Reproduced Without Express Written Permission From Third Coast Review.    Login