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Chicago

door Studs Terkel

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Chicago was home to the Pulitzer Prize winning Studs Terkel, who moved there in 1922 and made it his home until his death in 2008 at the age of 96. A tribute to the 'Second City' that is part history, part memoir and 100% Studs Terkel, the book is infused with anecdotes, memories and reflections that celebrate the great city of Chicago. Illustrated throughout with black-and-white photographs that perfectly capture Chicago's unique beauty; here is a splendid evocation of Studs' hometown in all of its glory and imperfection.… (meer)
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Toon 3 van 3
I read this to learn more about Chicago, and mostly what I learned is that Studs Terkel really loved Chicago. His highbrow/lowbrow style and the cast of characters he knew makes it engaging. ( )
  erikostrom | Mar 6, 2021 |
The book is a compilation of paragraphs and photos on people and places of Chicago. Public and private. Perfect. ( )
  SCRH | Jul 24, 2009 |
Chicago

Studs Terkel (1986)

On City Streets: Chicago, 1964-2004

Gary Stochl

Every Chicagoan knows of the dual Chicago Terkel has chronicled throughout his lifetime—a city of history, progress and beauty but also brutality, corruption, and oppression, the city of the '68 convention, the city that inspired Richard Wright's Native Son. Mere meters away from the sun-drenched liveliness of Lake Shore Drive, downtown Chicago grows quickly gray and drab just a few blocks west of Michigan Avenue, the sun shielded by an army of skyscrapers that creates a cavern of concrete and steal.

After nearly forty years of snapping photos around town, Gary Stochl was discovered when he showed up, unannounced, at the office door of a Columbia College photography professor, a paper bag full of black and white prints in hand. Stochl's work dwells in that darkside of downtown Chicago, observing the people who trudge along its shadowy streets, their heads down and glances averted--some look at the camera but none make eye contact with other people. Stochl sensitively manages to preserve their individuality and humanity while providing a glimpse at their alienation and fear.

The complicated city both celebrated and mourned by Terkel and Stochl is vanishing, its culture, architecture, and life obscured behind the bland, generic face of gentrification. Terkel's prose, as always, drips with love for the city's vanishing history, the roller rinks, the union halls, the gin joints, the neighborhoods, many of which were dead or dying when Chicago was published . . . a few more have died off since. Chicago drips of both the love and hate the 95-year old Terkel has expressed for the city since his seminal work Division Street America back in the 1960s. Chicago is, by Terkel's admission, merely an afterword to Nelson Algren's Chicago: City on the Make. Algren is not merely imitated, he's channeled, and no one both hated and loved Chicago like Nelson Algren.

Chicago's stark photography also leaves a blistering impression, providing both history and commentary. The pictures of photojournalists Arthur Shay, Mark PoKempner, Archie Lieberman, and Steven Deutch, which are plentiful, rival those of Stochl's in terms honesty and sincerity.
  MMoonbeam | Dec 14, 2007 |
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Chicago was home to the Pulitzer Prize winning Studs Terkel, who moved there in 1922 and made it his home until his death in 2008 at the age of 96. A tribute to the 'Second City' that is part history, part memoir and 100% Studs Terkel, the book is infused with anecdotes, memories and reflections that celebrate the great city of Chicago. Illustrated throughout with black-and-white photographs that perfectly capture Chicago's unique beauty; here is a splendid evocation of Studs' hometown in all of its glory and imperfection.

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