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Especially the area around Austin Ave and Roosevelt Road near where I grew up.
PS. I'd like to accept that invite from you by the way. You never replied back on email.
"The South Side Chicago suburb that McNally describes mirrors his native Burbank, Ill. Chicago men of letters -- both exalted (think Saul Bellow and The Adventures of Augie March) and underrated (Stuart Dybek and I Sailed with Magellan) -- have frequently made the Second City their canvas, then daubed versions of their memories upon it. While Hank Boyd might evince some of the yin and yang of hard-won, proto-Midwestern common sense and derring-do found in Dybek's characters, McNally nevertheless carves out his own turf.
The Chicago he paints has little to do with stockyards, far-flung adventures or lakeside trysts. McNally's Chicago stars John Wayne Gacy and Styx, corrupt aging hippies and fake Jesuses, untouchable Catholic schoolgirls and tough Tootsie Roll-plant workers."
No Excuses: The True Story of a Congenital Amputee Who Became a Champion in Wrestling and in Life
By Kyle Maynard
The "kid" was born with his arms ending at his elbows and his legs at his knees. Growing up his parents treated him like the others in the family and he playes sports like other kids. Now he's on the U of Georgia wrestling team. He's an amzing young man and such an inspiration.
I'm buying it for my young wrestler and his two cousins, because they can use the lessons right now as teens to become better people. Plus, I want to read it. I'm in awe of this young man.
http://www.randomhouse.com/crown/devilinthewhit...
And for even lighter reading, a book that I have been giving out for years is "The Tao of Pooh" by Benjamin Hoff, which does a unexpectedly admirable job of explaining taoist philosophy through an analysis of the stories of Winnie the Pooh. Don't laugh, I have given out countless copies of the book,and every recipient has enjoyed it to no end.
I wonder what Churchill and McCormick the isolationist talked about.
I agree Tao of Pooh was a very good read.
A history of Leo High School. A must for every Southside Irishman.
It is also a good way to understand George Washington as a man with very human traits. Plus, there were many devoted other solders and officers that got short-shrifted in many histories of the revolution.
** "Challenging the Daley Machine: A Chicago Alderman's Memoir," by Leon Despres and Kenan Heise
** "American Pharoah: Mayor Richard J. Daley -- His Battle for Chicago and the Nation," by Cohen & Taylor
** "Chronicles, Vol. One," by Bob Dylan
** "Dean and Me (A Love Story," by Jerry Lewis
No, it's not really Illinois related. Except that it may help us to keep local mismanagement and political chicanery in perspective.
http://www.illinoishistory.com/oshbook.html
The Outfit by Gus Russo. Good history of the Chicago mob. Not sure if Russo is from here, but most of the characters are from Illinois and are quite recognizable.
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini. Powerful, the next book you read after this will not have a chance.
by Robert A. Holland
"1491 new Revelations of the Americas before
Columbus" by Charles C. Mann
"Mercy Falls" by William Kent Krueger (Simon &
Schuster) cop mystery set in the Boundary
Waters Wilderness Canoe Area in Nothern
Minnesota; he has written a few others with
the same sheriff as main character--all are
good
"Ordinary Heroes" by Scott Turow
"Skeletons on the Zahara: A True Story of Survival" by Dean King
"Back to the Front : An Accidental Historian Walks the Trenches of World War I" by Stephen O'Shea
"A Child's Christmas in Wales" by Dylan Thomas
"Letters from Father Christmas" by J. R. R. Tolkien
Northern Protest- Jim Ralph
good reads
William Cronon's Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West shows how the growth of the city in the late nineteenth century was intertwined with the development of the railroads and the transformation of the surrounding countryside (extending beyond Illinois to the Great Plains) into commodities for trade in the city.
David Pellow's Garbage Wars: The Struggle for Environmental Justice in Chicago puts Operation Silver Shovel into a larger context of waste management and inequality over the past century.
Then go out and get a Rosetta Stone course for Chinese. Just goes to show how woefully behind the tech infrastructure curve the US really is.
Know it's off topic, but Thank You.
a book by Daniel H. Wilson
Third Edition
by David P. Clark and Lonnie D. Russell
(both from Southern Illinois University per the book)
P.S. Daniel Wilson (mentioned in an earlier posting) is Carnegie Mellon student and may not have an Illinois connection (not sure).
What? I missed it the first time around.