Literary Chicago, a Topic That Should Be of Interest to Many of the 20,000 Librarians Who Will Be Here Next Month to Attend ALA’S Annual Conference

Literary Chicago, a Topic That Should Be of Interest to Many of the 20,000 Librarians Who Will Be Here Next Month to Attend ALA’S Annual Conference

time—one’s rummaging options are limited. (Yes, I know, you can google anything, but too often my googling leaves me with only half a fact when I need the thing entire.) So, Joyce, I’m sorry, but quizzes are too demanding for a weary editor like me to produce with anything like the frequency you crave. Still, you did write that introduction, and a favor deserves acknowledgment. o here, at long last, is a quiz—not just any quiz but one that Scelebrates literary Chicago, a topic that should be of interest to many of the 20,000 librarians who will be here next month to attend ALA’s Annual Conference. Chicagoans, of course, enjoy a long and illustrious literary tradition, one that reaches from Theodore Dreiser and Frank Norris through Richard Wright and Ernest Hemingway and on to Saul Bellow and Nelson Algren and on still further to Sandra Cisneros, Sara Paretsky, and many, many others. It’s hardly a challenge to match these authors with their titles set in Chicago, but it may prove just a bit harder to combine those pairings with a neighborhood, a landmark, or an event in Chicago history that plays a significant role in each book. Along with the literary lights above, we’ve included works set in the Chicago area by writers not usually associated with our Literary Chicago city and its suburbs (Philip Roth and Somerset Maugham), books by Booklist staffers (Ilene Cooper and Keir Graff), and a oyce Saricks, who was kind enough to write the introduction to real curiosity: a novel whose setting is ALA’s publishing depart- ALA Editions’ recently released compilation of my Back Page ment. Thankfully, Booklist plays no role in this roman à clef, but Jcolumns, has been encouraging me for years to do more quizzes at least one of our staffers does appear in the book. Extra credit in this space. (What, she doesn’t like my prose?) Joyce just doesn’t goes to anyone who can identify the character in the novel who realize that quizzes are too damn hard to do. Yes, you don’t have to was based on Books for Youth Editorial Director Laura Tillotson write as many words, but you do need to do research, something (before she worked here, that is). A note on strategy: be care- I can never seem to manage. Opinions are easy, but facts are hard, ful, many of these locations overlap, but there is only one right and quizzes, regrettably, need to be based on facts. Verifying those answer for each question. A perfect score earns a beer on me at persnickety facts requires rummaging around for authentication, Billy Goat Tavern, a location that would have appeared in this and on the night before a column is due—my preferred writing quiz if Saturday Night Live skits counted as literature. Authors Titles Locations 1. Philip Roth a. See No Evil A. South Chicago 2. Nelson Algren b. Sexual Perversity in Chicago B. Cook County Jail 3. Adam Langer c. The House on Mango Street C. University of Chicago Lab School 4. Blue Balliet d. Days of Awe D. Lake Forest 5. Saul Bellow e. The Front Page E. Uptown 6. Leslie Stella f. The Fabulous Clipjoint F. South Side 7. Richard Peck g. The Man with the Golden Arm G. Pilsen 8. Kris Nelscott h. Crossing California H. Rush Street 9. Eleanor Taylor Bland i. Eight Men Out I. ALA Publishing Department 10. Sara Paretsky j. The Adventures of Augie March J. Bucktown 11. Aleksandar Hemon k. The Chicago Way K. Division Street 12. Sandra Cisneros l. Letting Go L. Washington Park 13. Meyer Levin m. A Raisin in the Sun M. Humboldt Park 14. Keir Graff n. Fat Bald Jeff N. Waukegan 15. Ilene Cooper o. Chasing Vermeer O. Evanston 16. Eliott Asinof p. My Fellow Americans P. Hyde Park 17. Frank Norris q. Fire Sale Q. West Rogers Park 18. Fredric Brown r. Smoke-Filled Rooms R. Chicago Black Sox scandal 19. Stuart Dybek s. Sam I Am S. 1968 Democratic Convention 20. Michael Harvey t. The Razor’s Edge T. Chicago World’s Fair 21. Richard Wright u. The Lazarus Project U. Chicago Board of Trade 22. Achy Obejas v. The Pit V. Near North Side 23. Lorraine Hansberry w. Compulsion W. West Side 24. David Mamet x. The Coast of Chicago X. University of Chicago 25. Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur y. Native Son Y. Lincoln Park Somerset Maugham z. Fair Weather Z. East Rogers Park 26. 14–p–E; 15–s–O; 16–i–R; 17–v–U; 18–f–V; 19–x–G; 20–k–Y; 21–y–F; 22–d–Z; 23–m–L; 24–b–H; 25–e–B; 26–t–D 25–e–B; 24–b–H; 23–m–L; 22–d–Z; 21–y–F; 20–k–Y; 19–x–G; 18–f–V; 17–v–U; 16–i–R; 15–s–O; 14–p–E; 3–h–Q; 4–o–C; 5–j–M; 6–n–I; 7–z–T; 8–r–S; 9–a–N; 10–q–A; 11–u–W; 12–c–J; 13–w–P; 13–w–P; 12–c–J; 11–u–W; 10–q–A; 9–a–N; 8–r–S; 7–z–T; 6–n–I; 5–j–M; 4–o–C; 3–h–Q; 2–g–K; 1–l–X; Answers: .

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