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Following in Lincoln’s steps

Rarely in publishing is there such a perfect collaboration of writer, photographer and publisher as in the new book, Abraham Lincoln Traveled This Way. The lovely landscape photographs by Illinois photographer Robert Shaw are complemented by the narrative of preeminent Lincoln scholar Michael Burlingame. Shaw used his own company, Firelight Publishing, to assure quality control […]

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Putting the story in history

The Beloit University Press has just released Volume One of Springfield writer Jacqueline Dougan Jackson’s planned three-volume opus The Round Barn – The Biography of an American Farm. It is the first step toward realizing Jackson’s original vision of the work after Northwestern University press excerpted from this “big book” Stories from the Round Barn […]

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Baseball’s perfect warrior

Stan Musial: An American Life, by George Vecsey. Ballantine Books, 2011. 397 pages. $26. If you are disturbed by multimillion-dollar athletes who seem less than grateful for their status, listen to this: In 1959, Stan Musial asked for a pay cut because he’d had a less-than-Musial type season. After a scorching doubleheader in St. Louis […]

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Finely crafted verse

I first met Hugh Moore in Allen Ginsberg’s living room, which often served as an auxiliary classroom for Naropa Institute, home to The Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics. We spent a solid three hours discussing Ezra Pound’s poetics before going to the weekly poetry reading. At the time (1981), I was astounded (and very […]

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Fiction recalls terrible Springfield crash

But For the Crash, George A. M. Heroux. Connecticut: Eloquent Books, 2010.  Paperback $13.95, Kindle Ed. $9.99. ISBN 978-1-60911-453-4. George Heroux lives in Springfield and is an attorney and the executive director/attorney for Victim Impact Speakers, a nonprofit organization that assists families and victims of drunk driving crashes. He has worked for Mothers Against Drunk […]

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It’s OK in my book

A friend laughed when I said I was reading a book about OK. “I can see a paragraph,” he said, “but a whole book?” Well, yes, that is exactly what Allan Metcalf, professor of English at MacMurray College in Jacksonville, has done – written a 200-page book called OK: The Improbable Story of America’s Greatest […]

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The enchanting story of Christmas in Illinois

Sleigh rides in Springfield. Christmas at Mormon founder Joseph Smith’s house in Nauvoo. Recipes from Collinsville’s “Queen of Cookies.” A Greenville Civil War soldier’s Christmas letter to his wife. The nation’s oldest Santa Claus parade in Peoria. Chicago carol singalongs with Studs Terkel. A Great Depression Christmas in Marion. And ethnic Christmas traditions statewide. Christmas […]

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