Category: Books
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Meals at Maize Served with Authenticity, Love for Community
Armando likes to talk, and he breaks the ice when we first sit down by telling me about a well-known C-U writer who drunkenly approached the Sandovals only two weeks after Maize opened in 2011, seemingly coming at them with a complaint near closing time on a Friday night. But the this person wasn’t complaining.…
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Q&A with Archer Cook: ‘Her Second Husband’ and a Second Chance
The memoir Her Second Husband by Archer Cook was the surprise read of 2024 for me. It’s about “a husband who lived through an abusive relationship” with a woman named Hildegard. I thought at first this was an odd premise for someone’s life story, but as I delved into Cook’s world, I saw how his…
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An inspiring Christmas book for aspiring artists
The paintings in “A Village Christmas” are best viewed in a dim light, perhaps next to the glow of lights on a Christmas tree. That’s because most of them are nighttime illustrations of extravagant, lit-up houses surrounded by snowy yards and streets, lots of dressed-up people, and horses and carriages. Kinkade’s pieces take place in…
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Author Daniel Kraus Shares His Whalefall
Daniel Kraus is an unapologetically multi-genre author who has written almost every type of fictional book except a western, and even that type of read is coming soon from the Chicago resident. An “omnivorous” reader and writer by his own account, Kraus enjoys everything from romance books to thrillers, calling himself an “agent’s nightmare” because…
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I Am Book, Hear Me Roar
Founded by a dedicated two-man team from the southwest region of the UK — Andy and Roger — BookRoar has proven to be a viable platform for book authors who are looking to get their reads reviewed.
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Good Old Chicago: A Q&A with Photographer and Nurse Practitioner Sam Logan
Photographer and nurse practitioner Sam Logan talks about his inspiration for his publication “Old Chicago: Street Portraits of Older People,” and reveals his on-the-job observations in the health care field.
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Tearjerker of a Book Reveals What Perfect Truly Means
My mom has always been a big reader. And even though she’s experiencing the long, slow slide of a deteriorating brain, I like to bring her books when I visit her at the memory care facility where she lives. Mom still gets absorbed in books despite her condition; for a long time, I’ve seen with…
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Paper Power: How Lists and Homework Can Spark Laughs and Fond Memories
Bill Keaggy likes his grocery lists, and I like old scratch paper. See how the two intermix in “Paper Power: How Lists and Homework Can Spark Humor and Memories.”

