chicago

Type: 
Topical Term
Subfield: 
z
Alias: 
chicago

Black picket fences

privilege and peril among the Black middle class
1999
Describes the neighborhood-based social life of the African-American middle class, based on a study of Chicago's Groveland community, looking at how racial segregation, changing economic structures, and poverty affect the residential experience of African-American middle class families, and especially youth.

Impressionism and post-impressionism in the Art Institute of Chicago

2000
Profiles 147 paintings, sculptures, prints, and drawings that demonstrate the history and impact of Impressionism from its origins in the early nineteenth century to its transformation in the early twentieth century.

Passing by Samaria

2000
Eighteen-year-old African-American Alena's sheltered life on her parent's Mississippi farm has not prepared her for the truth about racism, but a shocking discovery leads her to leave her home in 1919 and travel to Chicago in search of answers and justice.

Once a king, always a king

the unmaking of a Latin king
2003

The good girl

The daughter of a prominent Chicago judge and his socialite wife, inner-city art teacher Mia Dennett is taken hostage by her one-night stand, Colin Thatcher, who, instead of delivering her to his employers, hides her in a secluded cabin in rural Minnesota to keep her safe from harm.

Sarge

the life and times of Sargent Shriver
2004
This is a superbly researched, immensely readable political biography by Stossel, a senior editor at the Atlantic Monthly. Although Sargent Shriver (b. 1915) was never victorious in electoral politics, he emerges here as one of the more adept and dedicated public servants of the 20th century. His early professional direction was determined less by his own ambition than by his relationship to the Kennedys through his marriage to John and Robert Kennedy's sister Eunice. Suspending his own political aspirations to devote his efforts to John's 1960 presidential campaign, he went on to serve as the first director of the Peace Corps. Worried about charges of nepotism, Shriver agreed to serve only if Kennedy put his nomination before the Senate for review. In the minds of many, he would never emerge from his connection to the Kennedys, but his legacy, as Stossel argues convincingly, is impressive in its own right. Shriver headed the War on Poverty for President Johnson, which led to the eventual creations of VISTA and Head Start, and other services for the poor. He later served as ambassador to France, created the Special Olympics, ran for vice-president with George McGovern in 1972, and was a candidate for the presidential nomination in 1976. While some may find Stossel's view of Shriver hagiographic, that may have less to do with Stossel than with his subject, an inspiring figure whose life reaffirms the power of politics and government to effect positive, creative change. Set against a century of totalitarianism, war and gross inhumanity, Shriver's devotion to the "empowerment of impoverished groups" is a model of integrity and idealism.

My angel's name is Fred

tales of growing up Catholic
1987
This affectionate memoir of family, teachers, neighbors, and friends, of growing up Catholic in the Chicago of the '30s and '40s, is spirited and tender, funny and warm - and hard to put down.

The bishop and the Three Kings

a Blackie Ryan mystery
1998
It's a chilly October morning in Cologne, Germany, when a major relic of the Catholic Church, the remains of the Three Kings, is stolen from the cathedral!.

Irish eyes

2000

Superstars of the Chicago Bears

2014
A brief history of famous Chicago Bears football players.

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