Columbia College’s 15th Anniversary Story Week

Columbia College has been celebrating 15 years of its annual Story Week!

After I graduated from the School of the Art Institute with my MFA in Writing in 1998, I taught a few classes at Columbia College and remember the roots of this festival of writers. It has grown into a remarkable event, and this year I’m honored to be a part of it.

Story Week 2011 closes with the Chicago Classics, hosted by the Chicago Tribune’s Rick Kogan (whom you may recall was the emcee for the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony last year).

As a representative for the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame, I will be among 20 guests from Chicago’s literary community who will read from stories and poems by our favorite Chicago authors.

Readers include:
Danielle Chapman, Director of Publishing Industry Programs for Chicago Dept. of Cultural Affairs
Don De Grazia, author, professor at Columbia College Chicago
Brian Hieggelke, Editor, Newcity
Rick Kogan, Senior Editor, Chicago Tribune and Host of WGN’s Sunday Papers with Rick Kogan
Alex Kotlowitz, author, journalist
Jonathan Messinger, author, Books Editor, TimeOut Chicago
Audrey Niffenegger, author-professor-visual artist
Bayo Ojikutu, author, professor at DePaul University
Donna Seaman, Booklist Associate Editor, Chicago Public Radio Book Critic
Sam Weller, author, professor at Columbia College Chicago
and others.

The first fifty guests through the door will be entered in a raffle to win prizes and gift packs from these friends of Story Week: Akashic Books, featherproof Books, Goodman Theatre, Hair Trigger, Lincoln Hall, MAKE Magazine, Myopic Books, POETRY, Quimby’s Bookstore, and Time Out Chicago.

The event takes place Friday, March 18, 2011, at Lincoln Hall (2424 N. Lincoln Ave.), from 6-8pm. I hope to see some of you there!

Here’s a video with highlights from past Story Weeks:

Big Shoulders

Along with literature, I have always had a passion for history. I think it comes from my parents and grandparents trying to impress upon me at a young age the importance of my roots.  They always taught us that we build upon the foundation of those who came before us.

When I learned about the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame, I saw it as an opportunity to honor my literary ancestors: historic Chicago writers like Gwendolyn Brooks, Studs Terkel, and Saul Bellow; as well as important living writers, such as Ray Bradbury, Stuart Dybek, and Gene Wolfe. Stuart, in particular, is near and dear to my heart, not only because he is an excellent writer, storyteller, and craftsman, but also because he indirectly set me on the path I follow today.

Back in 1996, I was a student at the School of the Art Institute in the inaugural class of their MFA in Writing Program. I had just decided to switch from Law School to Writing, and art school seemed the perfect place for me.

I had been mostly writing nonfiction and some poetry, and the themes that kept emerging in my work were ideas of identity, mythology, roots, and displacement. Then one day in the Fall, I was sitting in a guest lecture by Stuart Dybek. He read from The Coast of Chicago and talked about his process, and something inside me of me clicked and came alive.

As I listened to him, I realized that I had been trying to intellectualize what I really needed to tell as a story. I went home and wrote the first three chapters of what became The Silence of Trees. Stuart’s writing and his talk that day, reinforced the idea that fiction doesn’t have to be about lofty ideas and monumental characters–it could be about ethnic, familiar characters found in the neighborhoods of Chicago, it could combine realism with the fantastic, it could put two seemingly opposite things together to show something in a new light.

After that, I thought a lot about Chicago writers–the stories they choose to tell, the characters they capture and bring to life. When I first read about Donald Evans’ idea to start a Chicago Literary Hall of Fame, I felt a similar kind of click inside, not unlike Mircea Eliade’s hierophany. It was a moment of destiny and purpose–I wanted to be a part of this.

I was (and continue to be) inspired by the thought of creating a lasting tribute to great Chicago writers. I agree very much with Isaac Newton when he wrote, “If I have seen a little further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants.” In Chicago, we have some fantastic literary Giants to honor.

So the event is now three days away, and it has evolved into something special:

LITERARY EVENT OF THE SEASON
INAUGURAL INDUCTION CEREMONY
CHICAGO LITERARY HALL OF FAME

Saturday, November 20, 2010
6 p.m.-10:00p.m.
Northeastern University
3701 W. Bryn Mawr Avenue, Chicago, IL
Parking Lot F

Emcee: Rick Kogan

Complimentary appetizers, desserts and drinks, including beer and wine
Ticket Price: $45
Chicago Writers Association Members/Students $35
Tickets Available at http://clhofinduction.eventbrite.com
or call 773.414.2603

Honoring:
Nelson Algren
Saul Bellow
Gwendolyn Brooks
Lorraine Hansberry
Studs Terkel
Richard Wright

At 7 p.m., the ceremony begins with Chicago journalist and radio legend Rick Kogan taking the stage to emcee an evening artfully orchestrated by Marc Smith, founder of the poetry slam movement. Among those accepting the posthumous honors of their famous writer relatives are Greg Bellow, Nora Brooks Blakely, Dan Terkell, Dana Smith (grandniece of Richard Wright) and Taye Hansberry (grandniece of Lorraine). Photographer Art Shay will accept for Algren. Complementing those most honored guests are a diverse collection of Chicago’s artistic community, all of whom have come together to join in this celebration. Representatives of the artistic community will be authors Audrey Niffenegger, Stuart Dybek, Haki Madhubuti, and Sara Paretsky; actors Gary Houston and Jackie Taylor; and the Nelson Algren Committee. Attendees will be entertained with vocal performances, as well as by local literary and theatrical groups.
·        6-7 p.m. Pre-ceremony reception (drinks and hors d’oeuvres)
·        7-9 p.m. Ceremony
·        9-10 p.m. Post-ceremony reception (drinks and desserts)
Parking:    Free         Dress:     Business Casual

I can’t believe that the Induction Ceremony is this coming weekend. It’s been a long road, and now it’s nearly here.

Along the way, I have learned a great deal and met amazing people. Truth be told, that’s my favorite part of this process—the people I’ve met from all areas of Chicago’s Arts communities: writers, musicians, sculptors, performers, journalists. I’m a firm believer in the magic that can happen when people from different perspectives and disciplines collaborate. The Chicago Literary Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony is an example of that collaboration.

I hope that you can join us this Saturday, November 20, at Northeastern Illinois University, to experience some of that magic for yourself.

http://www.chicagoliteraryhof.org/

Storytelling in Clay and Metal

Margot McMahon

I mentioned meeting the amazing sculptor Margot MacMahon at a Chicago Literary Hall of Fame event earlier this year. She impressed me with her insight into raising children and making time for Art. I have to admit that I didn’t know how incredibly talented she was, and the extent of her work that is collected internationally. I believe that as artists we encourage and challenge one another: our peers, our contemporaries, and those who come after us. Margot McMahon has definitely inspired me.

Executive Director Donald G. Evans is highlighting some of the whos and whats of the upcoming ceremony on the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame blog.

The first person to be featured is sculptor Margot McMahon, and it’s well worth your time to check out the blog and learn about this Chicago artist. I sincerely believe that McMahon is one of the artistic giants upon which the future will build their own inspired creations.

Here’s a taste:

My first impression of Margot McMahon’s sculptures was life. Like all great art, her three-dimensional representations give more than illusion—they allow the viewer to enter into the world of the subject,

suspending the knowledge that this is plaster or clay or bronze and seeing not only what’s there but what’s not. Her sculptures suggest motion.

Boy Gardener, by Margot McMahon

There’s hardly an artist better suited to creating our statue, and the fact that Margot has taken on this project will help make that moment special.

“I’m treating this award as a sculpture,” says Margot. “I want this to have a contemporary look, an active look. The gesture of the hand captured in the sculpture is in a thoughtful pause, the most active part of writing that gets us to the idea. The idea is what the writer is about, and the idea is what the reader is about.”

Read more on the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame Blog.