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    Oct 14, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. Heavenly book by former U. of C. writer-in-residence

    If an engine can be a hybrid, why not a book?
    Cultural critic
    If an engine can be a hybrid, why not a book? "A More Perfect Heaven: How Copernicus Revolutionized the Cosmos" (Walker), the new work by science writer Dava Sobel, author of "Longitude" (1995) and "Galileo's Daughter" (2000) is half-narrative, half-...

    Tags: Astronomy, Galileo Galilei, Science

  2. Jul 8, 2011 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  3. Novel puts reporter amid international skullduggery

    When your 5-year-old daughter wants to play "I Spy" and says, "I spy with my little eye ..." and decides that her mystery object starts with a "B," and then she points to a bar — one of the iron bars on the door of a jail cell — you know you're in a pickle.
    When your 5-year-old daughter wants to play "I Spy" and says, "I spy with my little eye ..." and decides that her mystery object starts with a "B," and then she points to a bar — one of the iron bars on the door of a jail cell — you know you'...

    Tags: The New York Times, Madison (Dane, Wisconsin), Crime, Law and Justice, Prisons

  4. Jul 1, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  5. Here's the pitch from Wilfred Santiago

    He was a man in motion — the beautifully controlled fury of a great athlete.
    Cultural critic
    He was a man in motion — the beautifully controlled fury of a great athlete. How, though, to convey that energy and grit and grace on the flat page of a graphic novel? How to suggest the up-and-at-'em vigor of a Roberto Clemente in a venue that...

    Tags: Texas, 21 (movie), Culture, Puerto Rico, Arts and Culture

  6. Oct 13, 2011 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  7. New novel by Russell Banks tackles tough subject

    The late John Updike once opined that we are all "trapped in solitary confinement inside our own skins." We can't ever really know what someone else is feeling, no matter how hard we try or how desperately she or he wants us to. Our unique souls are stuffed in our bodies like runty sophomores shoved into school lockers by a bunch of senior bullies, and while we can pound and scream our heads off, nobody's going to hear. Especially not if it's after school has let out.
    The late John Updike once opined that we are all "trapped in solitary confinement inside our own skins." We can't ever really know what someone else is feeling, no matter how hard we try or how desperately she or he wants us to. Our unique souls are...

    Tags: John Updike, Literature, Documentary (genre), Vernon (Tolland, Connecticut), Arts and Culture

  8. Oct 21, 2011 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  9. Poetic justice

    A good anthology is like a dartboard in a crowded bar on a Saturday night. Everybody lines up to take their best shot. Everybody wants the chance to squint, aim and let fly. The more august and monumental and definitive-seeming the anthology —...

    Tags: Wallace Stevens, Culture, Rita Dove, Marianne Moore, Arts and Culture

  10. Oct 19, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  11. Make-up calls – and musings on the 2011 Man Booker

    Cultural critic
    In the sporting world, there is something called the "make-up call." Umpires and referees deny it exists, but the idea is that when they blow a call — and the crowd is always happy to point out when this has occurred, employing the time-honored...

    Tags: Elizabeth Taylor, Movies, Julian Barnes, Culture, Human Interest

  12. Oct 26, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  13. From Walter Payton to John Matusak, the great ones return in former Chicago sportswriter's new collection

    Sportswriting is one of those professions that looks easy – all you do is watch a game and sling an opinion, right? – but is actually quite difficult precisely because of that apparent ease. Opinions are a dime a dozen. Being able to articulate an opinion, though, and to paint a unique and compelling portrait of a moment, a season or a sports-related personality is a rare art indeed.
    Cultural critic
    Sportswriting is one of those professions that looks easy – all you do is watch a game and sling an opinion, right? – but is actually quite difficult precisely because of that apparent ease. Opinions are a dime a dozen. Being able to...

    Tags: Larry Bird, Chicago Sun-Times, Paul William Bryant, Ernie Banks, Sports Illustrated

  14. Oct 28, 2011 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  15. When author gets in the way

    Modern psychiatry has robbed the world of its monsters. We know so much more about the brain, about the complex interaction of chemicals that determines an individual's fate, than ever before. Thus to look upon a heinous act and attribute it to...

    Tags: Crimes, Personal Weapon Control, Mergers, Acquisitions and Takeovers, Interior Policy, Firearms

  16. Oct 28, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  17. First-person singular: 'Hemingway's Boat' gets to the rugged heart of a complicated, captivating man

    Cultural critic
    Every writer has two lives: The life that contains elements common to all lives — birth and death and everything in between — and a second life. The second life is another thing entirely. It consists of the world's reaction to the writer's...

    Tags: Social Media, Chicago Tribune, Ernest Hemingway, Nobel Prize Awards, Boats

  18. Oct 31, 2011 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  19. They're playing our poem

    If you want to make Stephen Sondheim mad enough to swat you over the head with a rolled-up musical score, try this:
    If you want to make Stephen Sondheim mad enough to swat you over the head with a rolled-up musical score, try this: Call him a poet. As Sondheim insists in interviews, essays and in the introduction to his book "Finishing the Hat: Collected Lyrics...

    Tags: Services and Shopping, Music Industry, Marilyn Manson, England, Arts and Culture

  20. Jul 15, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. Books, films and fans: Nervous "Help" fans try the movie

    Take a beloved book, turn it into a film – and take cover, because the millions who adore the book will come out swinging. Their affection makes them protective. Love makes them loyal – and ready to punch anyone who messes with the object of their affection.
    Cultural critic
    Take a beloved book, turn it into a film – and take cover, because the millions who adore the book will come out swinging. Their affection makes them protective. Love makes them loyal – and ready to punch anyone who messes with the object of...

    Tags: Jackson (Hinds, Mississippi), Drama (genre), Movies, African Americans, Octavia Spencer

  22. Jul 15, 2011 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  23. Do out-of-date travel books have any use for more modern journeys?

    It's time for the travel two-step: First, deciding where in the world you'd like to go for your summer vacation. Second, finding the perfect travel guide to accompany you. I've been known to stand in a bookstore aisle for long agonizing stretches, reading and sighing, trying to choose between Fodor's or Lonely Planet or Rough Guide or Rick Steves or those gorgeously illustrated travel guides published by DK.
    It's time for the travel two-step: First, deciding where in the world you'd like to go for your summer vacation. Second, finding the perfect travel guide to accompany you. I've been known to stand in a bookstore aisle for long agonizing stretches, reading...

    Tags: Industrial Accidents, Arts and Culture, History (tv network), International Travel, Iraq

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