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Where the girls aren't
During an appearance in late December on CNN's "Piers Morgan Tonight," Jane Fonda was asked which man from her past she would choose to accompany her to a desert island.
Would she select a famous ex-spouse like Ted Turner or Tom Hayden? Or would this...Tags: Jane Fonda, Tomatoes, CNN (tv network), Sex and the City (movie), Oprah Winfrey
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Winter books preview: Radiant heat of words fights chill
Chicago will loosen winter's gloomy grip by exerting some powerful literary muscle. In the next three months, award-winning Chicago-based writers such as Don De Grazia, Nami Mun and Stuart Dybek will give readings. And don't miss a local mystery author...Tags: Islam, Pakistan, Delorean (music group), Fringe Festival, Michigan Avenue
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Are you sitting down for this?
It was time. The chair had begun to sag in multiple places, its stamina and flexibility fatally compromised by the repeated sittings and risings, and sittings and risings, of its most frequent (and, as the French so delicately put it, "well-seated")...Tags: Book, Flannery O'Connor, Harry Potter (fictional character), Holidays, Apple iPad
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See the billionaire – then be the billionaire
How'd they do it?
That is often thought to be the primary motivation behind our fascination with the life stories of business behemoths: a curiosity about the means – both noble and scurrilous – by which mammoth fortunes are made. "Steve...Tags: Behavioral Conditions, University of Chicago, Apple iPhone, Biography (genre), Pixar Animation
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Celebrating 12 in 2012
In an anecdote that sticks to the memory like an overdone cookie on an undergreased cookie sheet — those 2011 holiday baking mishaps still rankle — an American visiting the Sorbonne is accosted by a French student. "You Americans!" the...Tags: Ernest Hemingway, World War I (1914-1918), F. Scott Fitzgerald, University of Paris, Fiction
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Sherlock Holmes in a skirt
When Tasha Alexander strolls the streets of Chicago, she doesn't much see Wrigley Field or the Chicago River or Logan Square. Or Honda Civics.
She sees St. Paul's Cathedral and the River Thames and Belgrave Square and hansom cabs.
Alexander's...Tags: England, Blackmail and Extortion, London (England), Wrigley Field, French Literature
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Fitzgerald, in his own words
Popcorn. Check. Diet Coke. Check. Twizzlers. Check. A copy of "F. Scott Fitzgerald: A Short Autobiography" (Scribner), edited by James L. West III. Check. If you're on your way to see — or see again — "Midnight in Paris," the latest film...
Tags: Ernest Hemingway, Woody Allen, Gertrude Stein, Midnight in Paris (movie), F. Scott Fitzgerald
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The long road home after 9/11
"Grief," writes Thomas Lynch, "is the tax we pay on our attachments."
It is a beautiful line. It is simple and lovely and true. If you don't feel love, then you don't feel sorrow; to live without a close connection to another person is to avoid all the...Tags: Politics, Iraq War (2003-2011), Dick Cheney, Joan Didion, Defense
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At summer's end, adventure
Nothing in life is certain anymore — not even death and taxes, thanks to cryonics and a Republican Congress. Thus I can't give you an absolute, ironclad, airtight guarantee that if you hold "The Magician King" (Viking) at just the right angle at...Tags: Entertainment, Apple iPhone, Arthur C. Clarke, Harry Potter (fictional character), Lily Tomlin
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Books move us — and we move books
Ideas are immortal, but the handy carrying cases in which they're toted around — i.e., books — are not. As proof, I offer my paperback edition of “Mrs. Dalloway” (1925) by Virginia Woolf. Published by Harcourt, Brace & World in...
Tags: Book, French Literature, Apple iPad
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How flower books grow on you
Two books — one old, one new — changed my mind about flowers.
Before reading them, my attitude toward flowers could perhaps best be described as "indifferent." I did not hate them, but I certainly wouldn't go out of my way to include them...Tags: Cambridge (Middlesex, Massachusetts), Human Interest
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Bam! Pow! Crunch! Michael Chabon builds a new superhero
Repeat after me:
Sklurp.
Skreeech.
Ska-runch.
There. Feels good, doesn't it? Some words are just plain fun to say. And those are the words, according to Michael Chabon, that belong in any honorable, self-respecting bedtime story for children, the kind...Tags: Movies, Pulitzer Prize Awards, Superman (fictional character), Spider-Man (fictional character), Michael Chabon
Jan 6, 2012
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Dec 29, 2011
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Dec 16, 2011
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Dec 21, 2011
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Dec 30, 2011
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Dec 3, 2011
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Aug 6, 2011
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Aug 20, 2011
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Aug 12, 2011
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Aug 26, 2011
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Sep 3, 2011
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Sep 5, 2011
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Original site for Julia Keller topic gallery.