The Last Word (for 100 Books)

August 11, 2011

Usually we concentrate on the opening lines to great books, however, this collection of titles shows off their last lines. See how many you can guess and compare their impact on their respective novels. This is presented as a group of covers that are interactive- scroll over the cover and the start of the line […]


Clybourne Park Coming to Steppenwolf Theatre

August 10, 2011

Bruce Norris’ s 2011  Pulitzer Prize- winning drama Clybourne Park  will have its Chicago premiere this fall, opening the Steppenwolf season from September 8 through October 6.  Set in a Chicago bungalow, the first act takes place in 1959 and flashes forward to 2009 in Act 2. The Pulitzer Prize committee’s citation described Norris’ play […]


Philip Levine, the next U.S. Poet Laureate

August 9, 2011

This October, Philip Levine will become the 18th Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress, succeeding W. S. Merwin. In the words of Dr. James H. Billington, the Librarian of Congress, Mr. Levine “is one of America’s great narrative poets. His plainspoken lyricism has, for half a century, championed the art of telling […]


“Black in Latin America” Out in Book and DVD

August 7, 2011

Prof. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. just published a companion book to the DVD shown on PBS this spring called Black in Latin America. According to the article, only a small fraction of Africans (from the slave trade) ended up in the United States, with many more living permanently in other countries. Judging by the enormous […]


Happy Birthday World Wide Web!

August 6, 2011

Today, August 6th, marks the 20th anniversary of the World Wide Web. Its beginnings were far from what we know as the Internet today, but you have to start somewhere. According to Cnet, It began when scientist Tim Berners-Lee posted a summary of a project for organizing information on a computer network using a “web” […]


In Demand Books Lifted From Libraries and Bookstores

August 5, 2011

In the wake of the major theft of historical documents this summer from the Maryland Historical Society, this PW blog turned up a short list of most stolen books from bookstores.  According to various sources, the 5 most stolen books are: anything by Charles Bukowski and William Burroughs,  On the Road by Kerouac,  The New […]


King Kong: Cutting Edge Technology 80 Years Ago

August 5, 2011

This rebroadcast of a very enjoyable interview about the production of the original King Kong caught my attention. Music, Kong himself, and Fay Wray’s high-pitched screams are all covered. Compared to seeing today’s fantastic effects, it was fun to remember watching this much simpler film years ago and being suitably impressed (and scared).  A visit […]


Check out the original Prime Suspect

August 4, 2011

Prime Suspect follows the adventures of Jane Tennison, an intelligent, tough Detective Chief Inspector in Scotland Yard. As described by Dame Helen Mirren, her character is  “… extremely directed, ambitious, talented and very uncompromising. Therefore she is deeply frustrated by her job; the way her sex is a barrier. But she knows how to work […]


Book Publishers, Fight Back!

August 4, 2011

Aaron Gilbreath’s op/ed piece in today’s Chicago Tribune urges publishers of traditional books to fight the tidal wave of e-Reader marketing with their own clever campaigns. He argues for a well thought out marketing strategy in media that targets the general public as opposed to those that are already preaching to the choir (e.g., NY […]


New, Temporary (very) “Art” Display at North Branch

August 3, 2011

We can’t identify the artist, nor the exact date and time of installation, but Don Westphal from Maintenance noticed a stunning new display at the North Branch library this morning when he stopped by with the delivery. Devised from an assortment of individual pieces left behind by patrons past, and set on the checkout counter […]


Translate »