Illinois Books
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Chicago's Nurse ParadeReview Date: 2006-01-16
Good old Chicago - Nurses, find out about this!Review Date: 2005-08-16
Chicago's Nurse ParadeReview Date: 2005-05-03
Hats off to the authors for showing the historical and interesting journey this profession has!
D. Emerick R.N.
Chicago's Nurse ParadeReview Date: 2005-04-04
Imaginative solution to a serious problemReview Date: 2005-04-02

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Delightful and movingReview Date: 2006-11-16
This book would make a great movie!Review Date: 2006-07-16
I feel the book is so important in Americana culture and Jewish-Americana cultural archives, that the book should eventually be entered onto an online Internet site, free of charge, so that readers in the future, and I mean the FUTURE, like 500 years from now, can also read this moving memoir! Also, this would make a great movie in the Barry Levinson vein of Hollywoodiana. The murder of the little girl and the arrest of the murderer would make a fantastic 1950s Chicago movie story, with Soloway's memoir bookending the movie on both sides.
UNVARNISHED, WARM. AND LOVING!Review Date: 2006-05-15
The author remembers/reconstructs every detail--how her parents, aunts, uncles, cousins, and neighbors spoke, dressed, worried, loved, and argued--as the world of their Jewish enclave was dissolved by the drip, drip, drip of postwar mobility. She notes, "Television, suburban backyards, and supermarkets were draining our close-knit block of its friendliness, its familiarity."
Soloway's excellently written account will bring back the past for those of us who shared the same time and place. For those who did not, it will serve as a valued lesson on how we got from Chicago in the 'forties to the Chicago of today and what we gained and at what cost.
--Lowell Streiker
author of The Old Neighborhood: Memories of a Chicago Childhood--1942 to 1952.
A Great ReadReview Date: 2006-05-15
Timeless--A TreasureReview Date: 2006-06-11

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Finding Your Chicago IrishReview Date: 2008-09-13
My New Guide to ChicagoReview Date: 2008-09-04
Looking for fun in Chi-townReview Date: 2008-09-02
This is a very complete guide to anything you would want to do from connecting with your Irish heritage and genealogy to hearing some authentic Irish music while enjoying a Guinness or Harp.
This was written by a local author and you can tell. The detail captured in this book shows a real love of the Irish and of course Chicago. I would highly recommend this to anyone of Irish decent or anyone who just likes to find a good time in the Chicago area.
Great Guide!Review Date: 2008-09-01
Can I please meet Sharon for a Guinness?Review Date: 2008-08-31
The guide is organized in a very useful manner. If you want to find something to do for St. Patrick's day, there is a section for that. If you want to find an Irish festival in September, there is a section for that. Just about anything you can think of is in the book and easy to locate.
The fun extras are great as well -such as the Irish dog breeds and Irish recipes, several of which include Guinness as a main ingredient!
Shea Bossard gives great commentary on all the things she has experienced in the city of Chicago, related to her Irish heritage. Her enthusiasm and descriptions will make you want to meet her at a local Irish Pub and share a pint or two of Guinness!
Finding Your Chicago Irish is a must have book- great for anyone who appreciates and celebrates Irish heritage, which is so strongly present in the city of Chicago.


Superman is still fighting the bad guysReview Date: 2008-02-12
This evening, however, it appears Clark Kent's bosom buddy may have murdered one of the town's citizens, now draped (headless) across his arm.
An original idea, well plotted, with great characters.
review of Murder in MetropolisReview Date: 2003-10-02
Life, love and murder in a small townReview Date: 2005-08-18
MURDER IN METROPOLIS is the first in a series featuring Sheriff Joe Dalton, a likeable guy and good country sheriff. Cruse knows the rhythms of small-town life, and her characters ring true. In this traditional mystery we get to know the victim through comments and action of friends and family after his death.
The victim is a popular businessman and the sheriff's longtime friend. Was there a witness to the murder? Maybe, if you count Big Ed, the town drunk, who was sleeping (or not) in a nearby doorway. How about the traveling salesman who may have been the last person to see the victim alive? Too bad the statue can't talk.
As the investigation proceeds, an old crime surfaces and carefully hidden secrets are brought to light. In a small town nothing is ever quite what it seems. There's a bit of a twist at the end. Cruse drops a clue early on, but I only realized it after the fact. No matter. I like surprises.
MURDER IN METROPOLIS reviewed by Jan ChristensenReview Date: 2003-10-16
Why would anyone want to murder Jack Hatfield, an old friend of Joe's, and a man everyone in town liked? By the way the body and head were positioned, it seems someone has a real hatred for the victim.
Many interesting suspects keep the sheriff hopping and the reader in suspense. Ms. Cruse handles the police procedural and the cozy part of this novel with ease and skill.
Despite the rather grisly opening, this really could be called a cozy police procedural and should please readers of both. Violence takes place off-scene, but nonetheless the reader gets the full impact of the horror of violent death. Ms. Cruse is a skillful writer who's characters come alive on the pages.
A very enjoyable read!
EXCELLENT!Review Date: 2004-02-15
Things like this don't happen in his town and certainly not to one of his old schoolmates. This case was personal and if it took him his entire life he would find out who did it; the quest beings.
I have read a lot of murder mysteries, some have been grisly, some have kept me sitting on
the edge of my seat, some have bored me to tears, but this one was different.
The author weaves the storyline around
in a way that you very quickly feel you are a member of Sheriff Dalton's town. He does this by bringing in personal aspects
of different town members lives, their hopes, dreams, fears and shortcomings. They no longer are just story characters in
your minds eye, but through the author's words they are alive. The murder victim Jack, his sister and brother, the Mayor
and even Dalton's wife become your neighbors and friends and you find yourself just as determined as the Sheriff is to find
the culprit of this crime.
The only problem is that it is your very friends and neighbors who become the prime suspects
as two more bodies turn up, a newborn baby and Big Ed, the town drunk and possible witness, who may have been able to shed
some light on the crime.
How does the baby figure in all of this? You have to know.
Murder In Metropolis is not a fast paced read, but one that draws you into the lives of the suspects, allowing you to search them for motives and making you part of the crime investigation. I enjoyed that, it was a lot of fun trying to figure out, "Who done it!" The motives for the murders and the ending I promise will surprise you. Very well done. Who would have ever thought! A delightful reading experience.
Final analysis: A well thought out mystery drawing the reader into the very lives of the townspeople, the suspects and the victims themselves. Written in a way that allows you to participate in the investigation, but let me warn you, no matter how much you think you have it all figured out, the ending to this one will surprise you. Excellent read, highly recommended.
Shirley Johnson
Senior Reviewer
MidWest Book Review

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The Narrow Bridge by Isaac NeumanReview Date: 2003-06-16
The Narrow Bridge by Isaac NeumanReview Date: 2003-06-16
The Narrow Bridge by Isaac NeumanReview Date: 2003-06-16
Fortunate to have had such a bright, strong-willed rabbiReview Date: 2007-07-11
A Silent Song of My Vanished PeopleReview Date: 2001-07-20
He succeeds so well in invoking the presence of those who are absent that this reader feels as if he had sat at the study table of Reb Mendel as he taught a page of Talmud and told ancient stories that echo again and again the most contemporary of wisdom. The memoir is passionate and deep, religious in its intensity, and yet so very compassionate in its understanding.
Isaac Neuman makes the characters of his past come alive. We gain an insight into the world that ways and is no longer. We learn the streets of his beloved cities and its courtyards, more importantly we are privileged to enter the inner lives of its inhabitants. Unlike most Holocaust memoirs, which are most intense in their portrayal of the evil the survivors experienced, Neuman is most passionate about the past that has vanished and most successful at calling it forth.
Religious Jews will hear the echoes of Jewish legends in the last moments of minyan of martyrs who accepted their decree with dignity and had more faith in the divine that a God present in the Holocaust could ever possibly merit. Secular readers will read of Passover in the camps and glimpse the power of tradition to speak forth even in the most atrocious of circumstances. They will experience the consolation of the invocation of a miraculous, redemptive past in a world without miracles, without hope.
This lyrical work will touch the soul. One laughs, one cries, one mourns and indeed one even celebrates. Restrained prose glisten with insight. The work is deep, passionate, charming -- and ever so welcome.
Michael Berenbaum
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My First Contact with Dirty Jokes as LiteratureReview Date: 2005-07-21
I Laughed So Hard!Review Date: 2000-02-22
THE "DIRTY JOKE" AS ART - I LOVE THIS WORK!Review Date: 2006-07-23
Filthy ,fall'in down funny.Review Date: 2001-11-07
When Grandpa tells jokesReview Date: 2008-08-09
All regionalisms aside, I truly did enjoy this book. It starts a bit slow, but once the old-fashioned nature is understood and appreciated, the country boy jokes about bodily functions and not-so-veiled references to intercourse keep the laughs coming. Replete with colloquialisms such as "twitchet" for female sexual anatomy and "tallywhacker" for the male organ, the stories should elicit a sense of nostalgia from anyone who's heard a good campfire joke told by someone from The Great Generation.
Most of the time the stories revolve around a preacher, a traveling salesman, clever country folks tricking dumb city folks, or the ubiquitous farmer with a young naïve daughter about to be deflowered. The language used throughout is interesting to say the least, with improper verb conjugation and pronoun usage sentences like, "That's just what Bobby Ray done, too!" are not uncommon.
My favorite part of each story was the ending. Each ending is supposed to confirm the veracity of the story, but only adds doubt. It's like hearing someone end every story with, "For real!" They come across like a story from your Grandpa, creating a positive, enjoyable vibe that amplifies the innocence past. Without what would be considered vulgarity by today's standards, "Pissing in the Snow" proves there is more than one way to skin a cat when it comes to humor. There may be times when readers from the big city will dismiss this as boring or unintelligent, but I reckon if you-uns read this here collection of stories you'll think differently, because Amazon readers is smarter than that, anyhow.

Used price: $10.91

A thoroughly enjoyable readReview Date: 2007-05-03
I really enjoyed this book.Review Date: 2007-04-06
-jameshowlett
A great read!Review Date: 2007-02-22
A great book, and I highly reccommend it! I will be looking forward to more from this author!
Great job, Mr. Teague Bohlen! You've got yourself another loyal fan!
Gripping from start to finish.Review Date: 2007-01-30
The novel spans events over a fifty year time period effortlessly. It makes one wonder what kind of skeletons are lurking in the closet of the person sitting across from you at any given time. Even the most benign type of folks have a few, as this book so eloquently points out.
Do yourself a favor and give this book a read. And Mr. Bohlen, if you are reading, keep writing fiction, I will keep reading.
What a fantastic novel!Review Date: 2007-01-29

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Thank you very much!Review Date: 2006-08-31
beautifulReview Date: 2005-09-08
A very classy souvenir. Buy It!Review Date: 2006-06-27
Just the Best!!!Review Date: 2001-09-12
Soaring ChicagoReview Date: 2005-05-17

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Al Capone and His GangReview Date: 2008-01-11
Capone was born in New York, then moved to Chicago, where he completed a lot of his mischief. Most of Capone's life experiences, as covered in this book, took place near his Chicago and Miami homes. Later, Capone was considered the most famous gangster that served time in Alcatraz Federal Prison. This was reinforced as I read about his life of gambling, betting on fixed games, murder, hiring hitmen, and bootlegging. Capone was so powerful that even the police were scared of him!
Al Capone was the main character in this biography about him. Other gangsters (enemies), police (enemies), and important people (sometimes helpful) were also mentioned in the book. Capone was my favorite character in this biography that covered his life history. I was amazed at what Capone got away with, as described throughout the book. He could have been caught many times but police didn't gather much evidence on him. I was more amazed that Capone looked out for less fortunate people, as described on page 161. He handed out $100 bills to the needy and opened a soup pantry. Capone had a nice side for those on his good side!
Reading this book went pretty quick, though it covered Capone's entire life as a gangster. I would recommend this book to any male middle school student. This was a pretty straightforward book, since MacDonald was presenting Capone's life history, and nothing was questionable. There are no other books directly related to this book.
Capone was a gangster who rose from nowhere, achieved financial success, and will never be forgotten!
Best Way To Learn About Al CaponeReview Date: 2005-09-25
.....Review Date: 2003-12-08
the reviewReview Date: 2003-01-08
from beginning to end. The author describes the man, Chicago, and organized
crime in the 1920's perfectly. It's almost like your with Al Capone on his daily
routs, on the streets and in jail. Money, booze, and women are what gangsters
desire and this is what the book is about.
The book was very written, and is very easy to read. The book seams like it
is at a sixth grade reading level with cartoons and hand written notes said to be
written by Al himself. It was in perfect order so you the reader could under
stand where the story was heading.
This book is a good read for anyone who likes old gangsters, prohibition, and
Organized crime. I liked this book because it wasn't strenuous to read and had
great info. about Al Capone and his gang. I give this book a four star rating.
It's not a five star rating due to the lack of information on his wife and kid.
Al Capone and his gangReview Date: 2003-03-18

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I couldnt put it down!Review Date: 2007-12-06
Beth Finke was a personal inspiration in my lifeReview Date: 2006-04-21
As a young teenager, to meet a woman as bright, witty, and brave as Beth was a life lesson that stays with me to this day. I was so struck by Beth's outlook on life that I decided to make my High School final project a video documentary of her daily life (sorry, it is not available outside of the local TV station's archives). Now, over a decade later, Beth continues to be an inspiration to me and my wife (who also knew Beth), and I am so very glad that others have seen the same in her memoirs.
If you want to be inspired by a life that may have been struck by disabilities, but not dampened by them, you will not be disappointed. While perhaps an odd suggestion to most, I especially suggest this book to those who have sensitive teenagers in their homes - it will put them on the right track towards respect, humor, and a positive outlook on life.
I read it in three hoursReview Date: 2003-07-04
Reality check!Review Date: 2003-06-18
The Story of Beth Finke , A Person You Would Love To KnowReview Date: 2003-05-18
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