Changing catalog cards into art?

June 24, 2013

A library in Greenfield, MA, boasts a display of catalog cards signed by the author noted on the card. Hope Schneider has been requesting autographs from authors for 14 years (since the end of the catalog) and the collection is up to 128 items. See this article for interesting responses to her requests- is it an honor to the […]


Retirement For Alice Munro

June 21, 2013

81-year-old short story author Alice Munro told  The National Post‘s editor Mark Medley that she’s retiring. After accepting the Trillium Book Award (the top Ontario literary prize) for her collection Dear Life, she said: “I’m probably not going to write anymore. And, so, it’s nice to go out with a bang.” Her suggestion to disappointed […]


Creating great book covers, an insider's view

June 19, 2013

I enjoyed this short article because it provides insight into book cover creation from the book designer’s perspective. Before and after choices with text are presented in a slideshow. NYTimes writer John Williams says this is the first in a four part series. While an effective cover may greatly enhance a book and whet our appetite […]


Poetry 365

June 14, 2013

This month for Poetry 365 we’re featuring the profound eighth book from influential poet Frank Bidart.  In Metaphysical Dog, the Wallace Stevens Award winner focuses his “spiky free verse” on poignant explorations of “the war between the mind and body, ecstasy and obliteration, his mother’s death, and his coming out.”  Unconventional, emotional, and intellectually rewarding, […]


Some noir with your Pinot Noir?

June 13, 2013

What could be better than coffee and a good book? Why, wine, of course. Here is yet another variation of the wonderful notion of books and food: a book bar. The BookBar that just opened in Denver offers a small menu and plenty of books. Cheers to another independent book venture. Shira S.


Prism gives Big Brother a bump

June 13, 2013

Well, well, well. What with all the discomfitting news about government spying through its program code-named Prism, it seems that Americans do seek food for thought in classic literature. Booksellers across the nation have reported surges in sales of George Orwell’s chilling (and predictive?) novel 1984 according to this June 11th Bloomberg News article. It’s no. 2 right now on Amazon’s […]


The Book That Made Me. . .

June 12, 2013

[youtube=http://youtu.be/mEPuoldGjmY] In honor of this week’s publication of Neil Gaiman’s The Ocean at the End of the Lane, here’s a video of Mr. Gaiman discussing the book that made him want to be a writer. Heather N.


Men and Cooking (in honor of Father's Day)

June 11, 2013

Chicagoans are extremely serious about their grilling. I have seen neighbors struggling to cook meat in subfreezing January temps. While I’m not especially skilled at BBQ, I respect others’ ability to turn out a tasty offering after flipping, poking, basting, etc, until the magic moment that the food is deemed perfect. In this spirit, here […]


Film in "Blume"

June 7, 2013

Judy Blume has been a best-selling author since her first novel Iggie’s House was published in 1970. Although she’s sold more than 80 million books none of them have been produced as a feature film until today. Her 1981 young adult novel Tiger Eyes will open in select theaters around the country – and has […]


Local Art @ EPL

June 7, 2013

We are thrilled to introduce local collage artist Maria Zamora Garcia as the next to be featured in our ongoing exhibition series Local Art @ EPL.  From now through the end of June, her collection Sequences will be on display on the 2nd floor of EPL’s Main Library.  A native of Madrid who splits time […]


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