New library for West Town (maybe…probably…)

Bulletins by Kelly on Thursday 15 May 2008 at 10:52 pm

Last night I picked up a useful piece of information from my across-the-hall neighbor, a 20-year building resident who’s proven to be a boundless source of neighborhood gossip and history.  The landmark Goldblatt building, located at the southwest corner of Chicago & Ashland, is most likely going to house a new Chicago Public Library branch serving Ukrainian Village & East Village.  If it does indeed come to pass, the new library will replace the existing smaller Eckhart Park & Midwest branches. I love the idea of a library in this good-looking former department store building, which I learned from my landlord was slated for demolition in the 1990s but saved at the insistence of neighborhood residents.  Hooray for adaptive reuse! I’m willing to take Burl’s word for it, since she seems to know what’s what, but there has been some official publicity.

Eat it, Harvard

Bulletins by Eugenia on Monday 12 May 2008 at 7:18 am

This morning, the Tribune reports that while other big-name institutions like Harvard and Yale are storing their books off-campus, the U of C plans to build an underground library capped by a glorious glass dome. I kind of like the article’s opener in spite of myself:

At the University of Chicago, where the student hangout is the library and a prize is awarded annually for undergraduate book collecting, officials are expected to announce Monday plans to build another tribute to the university’s bookish character.

Almost as cool as the future existence of an underground library made of glass is that its major donor is the CEO of Morningstar, Inc., maker of the world’s greatest veggie corn dog.

Frey To Skip Chicago

Bulletins by Eugenia on Wednesday 30 April 2008 at 10:58 am

 

Don’t ask me why I was looking at James Frey’s MySpace page, but I was, and I found out he’s flying right over Chicago on the tour for his latest book. I’d like to think he’s avoiding us because he knows we’re too discerning for him, but I know it’s really because he’s scared of Oprah.

 

She-Bushes Use Literature to Indoctrinate Whitebread Youth

Bulletins by Eugenia on Tuesday 29 April 2008 at 9:02 am

From today’s Tribune:

When First Lady Laura Bush and daughter Jenna read to Naperville 2nd graders Monday for a national tour promoting their new children’s book, it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience…”I see right now in the country there is so much competition for children: television, computers, video games. Children are not sitting down with a good book like I used to do. Reading is a wonderful way to improve yourself,” Laura Bush said.

I hate that I agree with Lar about anything.  Shudder.

Writers vs Editors: The battle rages on

Bulletins by Gretchen on Thursday 10 April 2008 at 7:44 pm

Time magazine just published an article about that internal battle between (”sensitive” “paranoid”) writers and (”cloddish”) editors. It’s written from the point of view of a freelance writer who was an editor for many years. Truth on both ends, I’m afraid. But I’m an editor–what do I know?

Separated at Birth!

Bulletins by Eugenia on Tuesday 8 April 2008 at 3:38 pm

I was watching a video of a David Foster Wallace lecture from 2006 (please don’t hate me) when I realized something deeply disturbing. Draw your own conclusions:

DFW.bmp
Mac Arthur-Sanctioned Genius David Foster Wallace (b. 2/21/1962)

BM.bmp
Poison Frontman/Rock of Love Star Bret Michaels (b. 3/15/1963)

Whether it’s objectively disturbing or one in a series of signs of my decaying mental state is not for me to judge. I would like to say that Rock of Love takes irony to dizzying new lows, and I would like to take us back to this 1993 interview with DFW, where he says something that should serve as a warning to all we sneering Rock of Love fans:

Postmodern irony and cynicism’s become an end in itself, a measure of hip sophistication and literary savvy. Few artists dare to try to talk about ways of working toward redeeming what’s wrong, because they’ll look sentimental and naive to all the weary ironists. Irony’s gone from liberating to enslaving. There’s some great essay somewhere that has a line about irony being the song of the prisoner who’s come to love his cage.

In other news, Daisy is TOTALLY going to win.

Library Goofballs Make Videos

Bulletins by Gretchen on Sunday 6 April 2008 at 3:41 pm

Chicagoist already posted about locally-based American Library Association’s goofball videos for National Library Week, but I’d like to add the links to a few of the individual ones that have been making me giggle over the past week. I’d also like to note that some of my favorite people are quirky ALA‘ers. Long live libraries!

Eugenides story in New Yorker

Bulletins by Gretchen on Friday 4 April 2008 at 12:31 pm

Read the recent New Yorker with the Jeffrey Eugenides story set in Chicago? Opinions I’ve heard thus far have been mixed, but I like that it evokes Chicago’s class issues and deal-making traditions in a classic storytelling-tradition kind of way. And the Tocqueville stuff is pretty cool. (It’s a long one; print it out at work.) And thanks for the tipoff, Jeb!

Monday Afternoon Puke Fest

Bulletins by Eugenia on Monday 31 March 2008 at 4:23 pm

I just read this article in the Times about “literary deal-breakers.” At least one of the interviewees made me sick in my mouth:

James Collins, whose new novel, “Beginner’s Greek,” is about a man who falls for a woman he sees reading “The Magic Mountain” on a plane, recalled that after college, he was “infatuated” with a woman who had a copy of “The Unbearable Lightness of Being” on her bedside table. “I basically knew nothing about Kundera, but I remember thinking, ‘Uh-oh; trendy, bogus metaphysics, sex involving a bowler hat,’ and I never did think about the person the same way (and nothing ever happened),” he wrote in an e-mail message. “I know there were occasions when I just wrote people off completely because of what they were reading long before it ever got near the point of falling in or out of love: Baudrillard (way too pretentious), John Irving (way too middlebrow), Virginia Woolf (way too Virginia Woolf).” Come to think of it, Collins added, “I do know people who almost broke up” over “The Corrections” by Jonathan Franzen: “‘Overrated!’ ‘Brilliant!’ ‘Overrated!’ ‘Brilliant!’”

I will say this on public record: James Collins, you are a dickweed, and anyone who likes you deserves you. If we were seven and we were on the playground together, I would throw sand in your face and give you a wedgie. You and your ilk are the reason nobody cares about literary fiction. That’s right, it’s all your fault.

Anyone this judgmental about literature is intellectually incurious, by far too preoccupied with the way others see their class standing to genuinely care about something as banal as literature itself. Guess what? The more you use taste as a wedge to position yourself above others, the more people will hate you. Well, people meaning me, because you couldn’t be more obvious. That’s right, I said dickweed.

Oh, and I’m so sure you totally didn’t sleep with that girl in college because she liked Kundera! Yeah! You’re that discerning! I believe you!

Time Out Makes Joke, Crain’s Takes it Serously

Bulletins by Eugenia on Thursday 27 March 2008 at 8:59 am

We’re really not paid to link back to the Time Out blog, we swear, but this post is really hilarious. So hilarious, in fact, that Crain’s took this article (from the April Fool’s issue) at face value and reported that Donald Trump had bought TOC and was using it as a mouthpiece for his toupeeims (get it? toupee + aims = “toupeeims”). Via the Phil Rosenthal.

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