"We will Rock you!" with Meno, Carswell, Hess, Moore & Mason + PAL

Jun ’05
17
12:00 am

“We will Rock you”Saturday, June 18th, 8:00 PMFREE
 
“We will Rock you” will be Chicago’s first ever celebration of the mixtape–audience members will each bring a mix cd to swap with someone at the reading.
 
Featuring readings and music by:
 
Joe Meno, Punk Planet contributing editor and author of Hairstyles of the Damned
 
Sean Carswell, Razorcake editor and author of Barney’s Crew
 
Mickey Hess, 2nd Hand contributor and author of Big Wheel at the Cracker Factory
 
Anne E. Moore, Punk Planet editor and author of Hey Kidz, buy this book!
 
Liz Mason editor Caboose zine
 
plus music from PAL, the greatest band in Chicago
 

Sam Brumbaugh reads GOODBYE, GOODNESS

May ’05
28
12:00 am

Sam Brumbaugh reads from
GOODBYE, GOODNESS
Wednesday, April 27th, 7PM
FREE
 
Hayward Theiss is on the lam, hiding out in a Malibu beach house that is not his, and trying to understand how he got there. A car crash, a bag of dope, a sinister producer, and his best friend?s strange escape from rehab all figure into the story. To further complicate matters, Hayward is the great-grandson of a massively ambitious robber baron named Finn Theiss, who had a long-ago affair with the sharpshooter Annie Oakley. Hayward begins to untangle the convoluted estrangement between these two, and confronts the possibility that Annie Oakley is in fact his great-grandmother. The novel includes beautifully interwoven excerpts from Oakley?s autobiography that have never appeared in book form. Goodbye, Goodness is a simultaneously hopeful and bleakly realistic, hilarious, and devastatingly sad book about the American dream coming to the end of the line.
 
Brumbaugh writes with the exquisite, nonchalant precision of a master chef preparing an early dinner for friends. Readers will be thrilled at the arrival of this new voice?and this new take on coming of age while fervently reckoning with the past.
 
Sam Brumbaugh has worked in the music industry for two decades, touring with bands such as Pavement, Cat Power, and Mogwai, producing music specials for PBS, and, most recently, a documentary on the great Texas musician Townes Van Zandt. His fiction has been published in Open City magazine and The Southwest Review. A relative of Annie Oakley himself, he lives in New York City.
 
For the event Sam Brumbaugh will read and sign copies of his book.

Dan Gleason and Dancers?

May ’05
21
12:00 am

DAN GLEASON LIVE or LIVING
MARK THE CALENDARIOS- MAY 28, 2005, IT’S A SATURDAY,
AT 6PM- READING AT QUIMby’S.
 
AND THIS TIME, I’VE GOT DANCERS.-D.G.?
 
In this his third Quimby’s Reading, Dan Gleason will talk of the scintillating lifestyle he leads, discuss his cult usa-esque with an
extra dollop of liberty. He promises to, sport the latest fashions, read pages of smut, whine about the man, and kiss any portly infant placed before him.

Amy Krouse Rosenthal Live

May ’05
14
12:00 am

Amy Krouse Rosenthal reads & signs
Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life Tuesday, February 1st, 7:00 PM
FREE
 
Amy Krouse Rosenthal is, alphabetically, an author of adult and children?s books; contributor to magazines and NPR; host of the literary and music variety show Writers? Block Party on WBEZ radio; and mother of some kids. She lives in Chicago.
 
How do you conjure a life? Give the truest account of what you saw, felt, learned, loved, strived for? For Amy Krouse Rosenthal, the surprising answer came in the form of an encyclopedia. In Encyclopedia of an Ordinary Life she has ingeniously adapted this centuries-old format for conveying knowledge into a poignant, wise, often funny, fully realized memoir. Using mostly short entries organized from A to Z, many of which are cross-referenced, Rosenthal captures in wonderful and episodic detail the moments, observations, and emotions that comprise a contemporary life. Start anywhere?preferably at the beginning?and see how one young woman?s alphabetized existence can open up and define the world in new and unexpected ways.
 
Amy Krouse Rosenthal will read from and sign copies of her book
 
Visit www.encyclopediaofanordinarylife.com
 

Charles Blackstone reads from THE WEEK YOU WEREN’T HERE

May ’05
7
12:00 am

Charles Blackstone reads from
THE WEEK YOU WEREN’T HERE
Saturday April 30th, 7PM
FREE
 
With a Proustian knack for recalling the smallest detail–from a superficial conversation to the exquisite pain of the perfect kiss–Hunter Flanagan deftly navigates past and present, simultaneously analyzing, deconstructing and torturing himself with memories of every girl he’s lost or loved. For Hunter, writing is easy; it’s love that comes hard. Even as he prepares to leave family, friends and Chicago–the city that made him–he never gives up on his pursuit of love and meaning. The Week You Weren’t Here is a poignant and wry portrait of a young writer closing in on the last of his undergraduate days. Charles Blackstone’s prose is a seamless match for Hunter’s fragmented stream-of-consciousness. From encounters with the persistent “stalker” Kate, to the elusive Dewey, and the surprisingly independent sorority girl, Lila, Hunter exemplifies our longing for the defining moment–as fragile and quixotic a dream as life itself.
 
Charles Blackstone lives in Chicago and teaches the subtleties of limited omniscience in short and long form prose at the University of Chicago’s Graham School of General Studies. Blackstone’s short fiction has appeared in BlazeVox 2K4, Rio, Wazee Journal (featured fiction selection), M.A.G, Whet Magazine (a serialized story), and others. He has a BA in English from the University of Illinois at Chicago and an MA in Creative Writing from the University of Colorado, where, in 2001, he received the Barker Award. Currently, he is completing another novel and a collection of stories.