Posts Tagged ‘reading’

Launch Party for the Paramanu Pentaquark, Issue #2.

Posted by Connor | August 27th, 2009 at 2:40 pm

Granted, I come to this subject with a slight bias.  I am the editor-in-chief of the magazine in question, and I helped put this event together.  But what can I say: it’s a launch party on the lake, in the summer time, with tiki torches and live music and hot dogs!  You should come out!  Really!

Gothic Funk: Not just for funky goths.

Gothic Funk: Not just for funky goths.

As it turns out this isn’t just a literature-only journal.  Submissions are entered in three categories: Images, Sounds, and Words, so not only do you have a collection of (in this case seven) brilliant poems, short stories, and creative non-fiction, but you’ll also find paintings, photographs, songs, and, in this issue, a costume.

Presenting artists are: Elisabeth Blair, Katrina Blasingame, Elizabeth Bowman, Spencer Dew, Dion Mindykowski, Cecilia Pinto and Megan Williamson, Luka Vardiashvili, and Richard Whaling.

The complete list of artists published in issue #2 is: Elisabeth Blair, Katrina Blasingame, Elizabeth Bowman, Brian Chih-Chiang Lo, Spencer Dew, Meridith Halsey, Sally Hartzell, Alex Lippard and Roger Sprau, Sean Mahoney, Dion Mindykowski, Nova Moturba, Cecilia Pinto and Megan Williamson, Jasmine Robinson, Kamila Rymajdo, and Sonette Steyn, Richard Whaling, and Susan Widdicombe.

$10 gets you in, a meal (pop, hot dog (meat or veggie), and chips, and a copy of the issue #2 CD-ROM.  For an additional $5 there’ll be copies of issue #1 while supplies last, and, well, more details and RSVP at gothicfunk.org.


Reading in Chicago: North Side Edition

Posted by Connor | June 1st, 2009 at 2:25 pm

Our homes and our apartments help fulfill the basic human needs of food, clothing, and shelter. We can also read there, and we often do. But sometimes we want to get out, even if we’re only turning pages. Reading in public offers problems and opportunities. There’s nothing quite like reading Sandburg in Ravenswood or Sinclair’s The Jungle under the shadow of the Stockyards Arch on Exchange Ave. Still, too much noise can kill your concentration, and too little is a bit creepy. Distraction is dangerous and obtrusiveness is obnoxious. Waiters and baristas may tap their watches, and the last thing you want to do is get in a scuffle between Sox and Cubs fans resulting in bootprints on your Nelson Algren.

Here’s a short and subjective list of some fine places to read in public on the North Side of Chicago.


Photo taken by Fritz Geller-Grimm.

Photo by Fritz Geller-Grimm.

1. LINCOLN PARK. Obviously you’ve got to pay attention to the weather, but this seemingly obvious choice is often under-utilized by readers, especially further north.

The zoo is noisy, but, if you can tolerate the kids and squawking geese, the picnic tables are great places for reading interspersed with people (and animal) watching.

Generally, the more remote locations will be more stimulating and less distracting. The dunes and breakwalls surrounding the Magic Hedge (just south of the Montrose Street beach) are often human-free. In warm weather you’ll hear the waves and the songs of hundreds of birds en route through the hedge (one of the most important migratory sites in the area). In the winter, the sound of cracking ice is haunting. Out on the pier, you’re about as far from humanity as you can get in the city.

Finally, Contemplation Point, located between the Foster Street and Hollywood beaches, is a circle of stones in a grove of trees. Alternate horizons are made by the lake and Edgewater Beach. Despite the lovely setting and convenience from Bryn Mawr Ave., this area is often undisturbed.

Photo taken by Tammy Green.

Photo by Tammy Green.

2. THE CTA. If you commute to work you’re probably CTA’d out by the time you have some free time… but give the L a casual try. For light reading (where occasional distractions will not undermine your plans) grab a seat at an off time and watch the city fly by irritation free. On the north side, the Brown Line takes in the most of the city; you’ll pass the best of the Loop and River North, then cruise through Old Town and the last remnants of Cabrini Green before heading on into Ravenswood and the dynamic neighborhood of Albany Park. If you start at Kimball and ride the ride until it returns, the whole thing takes a bit over an hour. Of course, if you take advantage of free transfers in the Loop you can travel all over the city for as long as you like. Recommended for journals, newspapers, magazines, and maybe the classifieds ads.

Photo by Connor Coyne.

Photo by Connor Coyne.

3. CEMETERIES. Does this suggestion sound morbid? It shouldn’t, especially in the summertime. Chicago has some beautiful and historic cemeteries, and while many have become quite crowded, it’s unlikely that the residents are going to complain. Head over to Rosehill or Graceland, St. Boniface or the Montrose Cemetery, find a shady tree and sit down. Listen to the ghosts wind in the branches overhead and keep your eyes open for ravens.

My particular recommendation is the lagoon in Graceland Cemetery. Daniel Burnham is buried here on his own private island, while the Getty tomb stands nearby in opulent filagree splendor. The autumn colors are glorious if you can catch them on a warm day in October, and if the stillness starts to get to you, every so often you’ll hear the rumble of the Red Line plowing through in the distance.

4. BARS. These may be some of the hardest settings for a productive read. People go to bars first and foremost to drink and socilialize. Watching sports, eating, and avoiding SOs are also high on the list. Reading probably falls in between #27 (handing out Chick tracts) and #29 (posing as the Blues Brothers). As a result, few bars are suitable for reading. You have to find the perfect bar. Odds are, there’s one and only one in your neighborhood.

What to avoid: loud speakers (because they correspond to kids out clubbing), large TVs (because they correspond to noisy sports fans), and expensive bars (because they address some significant social function not related to reading). Here’s what to look for: well-lit, emptyish (without being creepy empty), homey, and spacious. Think a low-key Cheers and you’re on the right track. On the North Side, the bar that best fits this description is the St. Andrew’s Inn on Broadway. But there must be others!

5. COFFEE SHOPS. Obviously, the North Side has no shortage of coffee shops. A much higher percentage of them will be suitable for reading than bars. I’ve never been, but I hear good things about New Wave Cafe and Lula Cafe in Logan Swaure (at Milwaukee and Kedzie). Further west there are a number of little Polish and Mexican joints where you can grab a cup of coffee or Sanka and read unmolested (though further west you’ll have to settle for Dunkin Donuts, which don’t always have public bathrooms — a crippling liability for any coffee dispensary).

A lot of people like the Uncommon Ground, the Bourgeois Pig, the Melrose, and Pick Me Up… here’s the problem. While Pick Me Up and the Melrose each have a great vibe and Uncommon Ground is great for musical acts and the like, they’re chronically busy and are, as restaurants, more attentive to their feeding customers. If you choose to read there for any length of time, you might be too distracted to get much accomplished. If you do get your read on, it will probably be at the expense of some waiter hoping for a tip on an entree or some other poor patron waiting for a table. Intelligentsia on Broadway is an attractive alternative.

Further north, options multiply. The Metropolis on Granville, Ennui on Sheridan, The Heartland Cafe on Glenwood, Flourish on Bryn Mawr, and The Coffee Studio are all great finds; you can stumble in any old time, buy a drink, and sit for as long as you like without annoying anyone. A hidden (and very cheap) treasure is Luck’s Bakery on Argyle Street. You can sit all day if you like and spend under $8 on food and coffee.

My favorite cafe for reading in Chicago, however, has to be Kopi, at 5317 N. Clark. There’s an art and a science to reading in this cafe and vegetarian restaurant. The place isn’t large, and tends to get quite busy (see above)… they won’t kick you out, but it wrings the heart to steal a table in such demand. The strategy is to show up at an off hour and to tip generously (I’ll leave a couple dollars at least, even if I only get a coffee). The reward for all this effort is the perfect cathartic reading experience. Kopi — the name taken from the Indonesian word for “coffee” — is a true traveler’s cafe, with a shop full of imported goods at the back, a shelf of travelogues, and clocks giving the times of day from around the world. The kitchen is exposed and feet from the dining area, so the scent of freshly sliced onions and garlic gives the air a refreshing kick, while music in kaleidoscopic varieties pushes and turns your brain’s gears for as long as you stay. Engaged correctly, Kopi is the place to read In Chicago.

Photo by Arthur Sehn.

Photo by Arthur Sehn.


Obviously this list is very limited and subjective. Feel free to comment with your own ideas for where you like to read on the North Side of Chicago. Down the line, look out for a West and South Side edition of this list.


Some Lady Thinks Men Should Just Read Re-Branded Chick Lit

Posted by Joe | March 27th, 2009 at 10:19 am

My friend Tom just sent me an article from The Guardian’s book blog; “Turning men into Page Turners” by Jean Hannah Edelstein is just an abomination of thought. It’s as though the most dastardly advertisers in the world coalesced into a Voltron-sized bad-idea-machine and presented a thesis of the most evil proportions at the World Summit of Terribly Awful Things. Ms. Edelstein presents some recently uncovered statistics from the University of the Obvious, basically summing up to “women read more than men.” All right, fine. Nothing too shocking here but also nothing too offensive. But the worst idea Ms. Edelstein ever had comes gurgling to the surface when the crux of her argument is revealed, and I quote:

Real change won’t occur until publishers band together and make a concentrated effort to re-masculate reading. One option, I suppose, would be to publish special gentlemen’s editions of books that are currently targeted at women, but might actually have male appeal. Female protagonists could be given male names, and romantic plots could be tweaked slightly to be more about football.

She might have said we could re-masculate reading by giving male authors who are more in line with Hemingway, books about guns and fishing and fighting, a fair chance instead of focusing on so-called “chick lit” about shopping and studs. Do you really think it’s even remotely plausible to re-brand a “chick lit” book and just put in male characters and male situations? I mean, this is the kind of thing Hollywood might dream up; it’s just awful, spurious even, and a slap in the face to literature. It’s a bastard of an idea, the kind of thing one thinks about and then quickly dismisses out of the fear that Satan might rise from Hell and offer you the world if only you’ll act on it. Wow, this lady is thick.

I don’t have an answer for getting men up to the reading levels of women; I think it would probably start with a child’s parents encouraging reading, and that encouragement being made consistent by teachers over the course of said child’s education. That’s probably all there is to it. Show both men and women alike that reading is enjoyable and show men specifically that reading isn’t just for chicks. I think the mental prowess that reading instills is pretty damn masculine. But ultimately you’re not going to turn a lifetime non-reader into a voracious reader; it’s just not possible. You gotta sow that seed from the moment of birth.


One final announcement for tonight's reading…

Posted by Joe | March 3rd, 2009 at 12:46 pm

Please come! I’m reading tonight at the Tuesday Funk reading series. The reading is at the Flourish Bakery Cafe (1138 W. Bryn Mawr Ave in Edgewater Beach, Chicago) and begins at 7pm and should go for an hour or so. Maybe we get a drink after? Also reading are Krystee Wilder and Connor Coyne.

For more information, check out the Tuesday Funk blog.


Tuesday Funk… tomorrow!

Posted by Joe | March 2nd, 2009 at 6:32 pm

This is just a reminder that I’m reading tomorrow evening, March 3rd, at the Tuesday Funk reading series. The reading is at the Flourish Bakery Cafe (1138 W. Bryn Mawr Ave in Edgewater Beach, Chicago) and begins at 7pm. I believe the reading only lasts an hour but who knows where we’ll go from there. Also reading are Krystee Wilder and Connor Coyne.

For more information, check out the Tuesday Funk blog.