Your weekly guide to Chicago Tribune's favorites in books, authors and events
Thursday, Sep 27 During Banned Books Week, John Warner reflects on the dangers of censorship. | | |
| A roundup of giant coffee table books that consider the history of art in Chicago, from the Hairy Who and comic book artists to the Black Arts Movement on the South Side |
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| Chicago author Samuel Park wrote 'The Caregiver' as he was dying of stomach cancer; the resulting novel is a poignant glimpse into how we cope. |
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| "The Mermaid and Mrs. Hancock" by Imogen Hermes Gowar, "America for Beginners" by Leah Franqui, and "Convenience Store Woman" by Sayaka Murata reviewed in this week's audiobook roundup. |
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| Traister's "Good and Mad" and Chemaly's "Rage Becomes Her" are two urgent, enlightening books that I hope will be read together, works that are well timed for this moment even as they transcend it, the kind of accounts often reviewed and discussed by women but that should certainly be read by men. |
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| Now, in "Transcription," Atkinson has wandered out from the preserves of "high art" once again by writing a traditional spy story. |
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| Doris Kearns Goodwin has spent much of her professional life grappling with the character of four American presidents: Lyndon Johnson , Franklin Roosevelt, |
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| Descriptions and sale information about the Chicago Tribune's print books |
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