Showing posts with label Kurt Vonnegut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kurt Vonnegut. Show all posts

Monday, April 06, 2026

Publishing Portal--April 6, 2025








The latest news from Eckhartz Press, and a chance to peek into some of the great previous offerings from our humble little publishing company.


Beyond the Glass 

=Our latest book is Randy Merkin's follow up to his well-regarded Behind the Glass. This one is called Beyond the Glass. It features a who's who in the sports world. 


=Consider a few of the blurbs from the back cover of the book...

  • My relationship with Randy goes back over 20 years. I have always admired his professionalism and attention to detail each time we’ve worked together. What truly stands out about Randy, though, is the human side. A simple congratulatory message or birthday wish from him is always appreciated and goes a long way. Randy is a true pro’s pro!

    Andy Reid, Head Coach, Kansas City Chiefs
  • Throughout my tenure in sports media, there have been few people who have been more gracious and professional than “Merk.” He was an outstanding executive producer, but more importantly, a trusted and respected colleague, plus an exceptional storyteller. Much like his first book, this is a must read from one of the industry’s best.

    Field Yates, NFL Analyst & Host, ESPN
  • If I hadn’t witnessed some of these moments myself, I might not have believed them!  Very few people have experienced what Merk has over the years; he’s dealt with every player, coach, executive, and media personality in the business, both local and national. Whether it is booking a big guest, breaking big news, or putting out a big fire, he always knows how to handle the situation. And like any good consigliere, he knows when and how to give it to you straight. Go along for the ride with a great raconteur!

    Carmen DeFalco, Talk Show Host, ESPN AM1000
  • Merk is the single best radio pro I’ve ever worked with. He builds genuine relationships and earns the trust of the people around him. There’s a reason why the biggest names in sports still answer the phone when his name pops up!  What sets him apart from his peers is his ability to cultivate lasting personal connections with the people who he has covered over the years. That trust is the foundation of his work, and his track record speaks for itself.   Randy Merkin has been great at what he does for decades because he never stops putting in the work. He invests his own time to build up the people around him. In a relationship-driven business, there’s no greater compliment than knowing people trust you to be there whenever they need you. Merk has earned that trust time and again. That’s why his Rolodex isn’t just extensive — it’s one of the strongest in the business.

    Nick Friedell, Senior Writer covering Golden State Warriors & the NBA, The Athletic

(Beyond The Glass is available for pre-order now!)


Slivers

=This eerie novel is next on our agenda. It's getting very close. By next week we may even have it available for pre-order (fingers crossed). Here's how former Pioneer Press writer Melanie McGauran describes it...

Disembodied voices. Moving objects. Mind-reading. We jump right into Vicki Atkinson’s Slivers with her characters besieged by supernatural forces they don’t understand. The slivers are getting bolder; a terrible tension is building. With Atkinson’s “in-the-moment” storytelling, I felt it almost immediately.

Over one week in the summer of 1973, we see the three protagonists struggle against not only the slivers, but the emotional exposure of a terrible family secret shattering everything they once knew.

Slivers gave me Anne Rice vibes. Humans and entities finding a fragile peace and work to share a common ancient history. Love that! I enjoyed so many details of this highly creative storyline. I hope Atkinson continues on this track.

As a fan of supernatural stories, Slivers delivers.


The Write City Review, Volume 5

=Here's another upcoming book. It will be done in time for the Chicago Writers Association annual "Let's Just Write" conference on June 20. Cover photo by Randy Richardson. Edited by Maggie Smith.



Two chances to meet Eckhartz Press authors this week...


40 Years, 40 Films

=This Wednesday, April 8, Nick Digilio (40 Years, 40 Films) will be at the Lake Theater in Oak Park showing the funniest film ever made, "The Producers". The movie starts at 7:00, and Nick normally does a pre and post game show about the films. This week Rick Kaempfer will be stopping in as well...



 Sirens in the Loop

=This coming Sunday, April 12, Jim Elsener (Sirens in the Loop) will also be in Oak Park. He is doing a book signing at the Book Loft (1047 Lake Street) from 12:30--1:30.


=Two of the most famous City News Bureau alums featured in Sirens in the Loop were born this week. The great actor Melvyn Douglas (April 5, 1901) and the intrepid news reporter Seymour Hersh (April 8, 1937).

   


Six More Opportunities to meet Eckhartz Press authors coming before the end of the month...


The Best of Words on Birds

=Your chance to meet Jeff Reiter will be at Wheaton Public Library for their Local Authors Fest on April 25th.  Register here.

=There was an incredible review of Jeff Reiter's book last week by the ABA (American Birding Association). Check it out here. 

=A small taste of the review (by Joel Greenberg)...

Reiter considers his first encounter with a Hooded Warbler, observing the striking bird and then going through the process of identifying it, as “a sighting experience that launched [him] into this wonderfully addictive hobby.” But of greater importance were his parents, not birders themselves but aware of avian presence. They maintained feeders, kept a Peterson guide handy, and engaged in bird-oriented activities like listening for woodcocks while volunteering at an environmental learning center near their home in Canton, Ohio. Books like this one might well inspire someone to take that first step into the world of birding and natural history, a move fulfilling for the person and potentially valuable for the larger world of which they are a part.

=This week in 1990 (April 7), famous bird illustrator Arthur B. Singer passed away. Jeff Reiter included one of Singer's illustrations in his book. It was a Sports Illustrated cover from 1955, the magazine’s “Bird Watchers’ Guide” cover story. 





=When we posted the pictures from the movie premiere of My Father Dick Allen (produced by the authors of Chili Dog MVP Dr. David Fletcher and John Owens) in Pennsylvania and Arizona, we got a lot of comments like "Hey, what about us in Chicago?". Well guess what? It's finally happening next week, April 18th. Mark your calendars. It will be at the Chicago Public Library in Bridgeport (3400 S. Halsted) at 1pm. Doc Fletcher and John Owens will be there, and so will a few celebrity guests, including Dick Allen's son (Richard Jr.) and the director of the docu-series Andy Billman. Come join us.



Doin the Cruise

=This year for Record Store Day (April 18) Mitch Michaels is making a return appearance to Blue Village Vinyl in Westmont. He'll be signing and selling copies of his book Doin the Cruise, and has also agreed to bring along copies of The Loop Files as well. If you don't have either book yet, and you were a big fan of the radio station, you are missing out! We've been told it's going to be a star-studded day at the record store. There will be live music (Michael McInerney) as well.


To Nudge The World

=Last week Jim Slusher was in Texas spreading the word. Here is he is at the Lyndon B. Johnson presidential library (which is awesome by the way--highly recommend visiting there). 

=This month Jim has a few appearances/presentations/book signings on his calendar. Come on out...

*Monarch Landing in Naperville on April 21

*Aurora Public Library on April 23.


South Side Memories

=Another Gloria Golec appearance is coming later this month. April 25, Gloria Golec (South Side Memories) will be at Wheaton Public Library Local Authors Fest. (Photo: Gloria with EP publishers Rick and Dave)



Everything I Know I Learned from Rock Stars

=On April 11, 2007, famed author Kurt Vonnegut died. One of Bill Paige's prize possessions is a letter Vonnegut once sent to him. Note the date mentioned in the letter--Palm Sunday 1981. Bill published it in Everything I Know I Learned from Rock Stars. Turns out, Bill also learned something from a famous author. Here's the letter...(click on it to enlarge it)

The Kiss of Night

=We met The Kiss of Night author Mark Wukas at a Bill Paige (above) event a few years ago. Mark mentioned that he was working on a novel, and we encouraged him to send it to us when he finished. He did, and we were blown away. This week in 2025, we were at the is/was Brewery for the book launch party for The Kiss of Night. We sold out of books! Thanks to everyone who came out to help Mark Wukas celebrate the release of his book.





Last Comiskey

=This week in 2024, we released one of our best selling books of the year, Last Comiskey. The goal of Last Comiskey is to serve as a permanent companion to the documentary that will provide a physical and tangible reminder of the final surprising season at “Sox Park.” The book blends both Ken Smoller’s photographs along with the content from the “Last Comiskey” documentary film, supplemented by new material to provide greater context. The book is intended to capture the spirit of the documentary and the reflections of the many participants in the interviews Matt conducted for the film.  

=One of the players featured in Last Comiskey is Dave Gallagher. He is celebrating a birthday this week (April 12)


EveryCubEver

=This week in 2025, Rick Kaempfer was on WGN television  (Opening Day) talking about the 7th Edition of EveryCubEver. He was also on WGN Radio with Bob Sirott. 


=This week in 2019, he was making the rounds promoting the first edition of EveryCubEver The first two stops were WCIU-TV and the Steve Cochran Show on WGN Radio




The Flip Side

=Reading The Flip Side is like a taking a journey through the Rock and Roll adventures of Chicagoland. This week in 1978 (April 6), REO Speedwagon released their multi-platinum album You Can Tune a Piana, But You Can't Tuna Fish. Naturally their promotional tour included a visit to Flip Side records.



To the Men I've Loved

=On April 10, 1966, the song "Sweet Talkin’ Guy" was released by the Chiffons. One of the fun things about Pat Motto's book To the Men I Loved is that she suggests musical accompanient to each of her chapters. Chapter 7 suggests "Sweet Talking Guy". 



The Loop Files

=Two contributors to The Loop Files are celebrating birthdays this week. Happy birthday to Bob Stroud (April 13) and Dorothy Humphrey (April 7). Both played a significant role in the success of Chicago's all-time favorite radio station. (Top Photo: L-R, Looper Tricia Mladic, author Rick Kaempfer, Bob Stroud)


=This week in 2018, the second edition of Kipper McGee's broadcasting book Brandwidth was released. Kipper appeared on the Sound Off podcast to discuss it.


 Best Seat in the House: Diary of a Wrigley Field Usher

=This week in 1982, Harry Caray broadcast his first game for the Cubs. Eckhartz Press author Bruce Bohrer met him shortly thereafter.


Cubsessions

=Yet another Cubs book in the Eckhartz Press library is Cubsessions. One of the contributors to that book, best-selling author Scott Turow, is celebrating a birthday this week (April 12).


We Have Company

 =A few of the rock stars interviewed by Bobby Skafish in We Have company: Four Decades of Rock & Roll Encounters are celebrating birthdays this week, Julian Lennon (April 8) and Amy Ray (April 12) from the Indigo Girls.



The Daly News

=This week in 2014, the Beverly Arts Center hosted An Afternoon with Joel Daly. Penny Golden interviewed Joel in front of a large BAC audience.



Records Truly Is My Middle Name

=Just weeks after Landecker's book came out in 2013, his childhood crush Annette Funicello passed away. You can listen to John's interview with Annette here or you can read the free excerpt from his book (about Annette).


In Small Boxes

 =Ann Wilson's memoir came out in 2016, and acclaimed author Tim Bascomb (who is celebrating a birthday this week) had this to say about Ann's book...

  • Here, in an honest sensitive voice, Ann Wilson recalls being yanked out of her 1970’s teenage life in Western Springs, Illinois, when her dynamic architect father is assigned to a two-year project in Hong Kong, transplanting the family. ‘You’re afraid,’ he tells her on their first night in the new vertical city with its teetering apartment buildings and rickety bamboo scaffolding. ‘Of what?’ she asks, and he mumbles, ‘Of the unknown.’ Little does this American teenager know how much her father will become that ‘unknown.’ Wilson looks back and chronicles it all in brave, vivid prose—not just the strange flavors and sounds, but the unanticipated changes in herself and the impact Hong Kong ultimately has on her family.

    — Tim Bascom, author of the prize-winning memoir, Chameleon Days and Running to the Fire, about coming of age as the son of missionaries in revolutionary Ethiopia.


An Off-White Christmas

=It's not often an Eckhartz Press book gets a recommendation from the likes of Chicago author Stuart Dybek (celebrating a birthday this week/April 10), but Don Evans' collection of short stories managed to do just that when it came out in 2018...

  • Don Evans can get the streets to talk as if they’re telling their own stories. One hears in his work an immediately recognizable offhand tone that rings true, empathetic, street smart, and very funny.

    Stuart Dybek, author of A Neighborhood and Other Stories, The Coast of Chicago, I Sailed with Magellan, Streets in Their Own Ink, Paper Lanterns, and Ecstatic Cahoots

Always a Pleasure

=This week in 2023, Chuck Swirsky appeared on the podcast of old colleague Garry Meier to discuss his book Always a Pleasure. This is what Chuck looked like when he and Garry worked together at the Loop in 1980 (photo by Paul Natkin/from The Loop Files)



=This week in 2012, Kim Strickland was featured in this Chicago Tribune story about her new novel Down at the Golden Coin. It was only the 2nd release by Eckhartz Press.


Cameo

=This week in 2018, Beth Jacobellis appeared on WGN Radio to talk about her novel Cameo. 


Hugh Hefner's First Funeral

 =This week would have been Hugh Hefner's birthday (April 9). Pat Colander used Hef's name in her book's title because one of the most powerful tales in her book is the one about Hefner's secretary, and her tragic end (a true story). Illustrator David Mosele contributed this sketch (below) of Hef and his secretary Bobbi to the book. Hugh Hefner's First Funeral: And Other Tales of Love and Death in Chicago will always be a special book for us. It's the first book that won an award for us (CWA Book of the Year), and Pat Colander was one of the most caring and encouraging people we've ever met. She passed away in 2018 and we still think about her all the time.



Monday, January 12, 2026

Publishing Portal--January 12, 2026

 









The latest news from Eckhartz Press, and a chance to peek into some of the great previous offerings from our humble little publishing company.


ANNOUNCING OUR NEWEST BOOK: Sirens in the Loop: A History of the City News Bureau of Chicago. (Available for Pre-order Now)

=What's it about? 

Sirens in the Loop: A History of the City News Bureau of Chicago, authored by Paul Zimbrakos and James Elsener, provides a definitive chronicle of the legendary news agency.

Operating for over a century, the bureau served as the ultimate “journalism boot camp,” training thousands of reporters under the demanding mantra: “If your mother says she loves you—check it out!”

The book captures the bureau’s evolution from its 1890 founding as a cooperative news-gathering source for Chicago newspapers, and later for broadcast outlets, to its final closure in 2005. It explores the unique “Chicago style” of journalism, characterized by speed, accuracy, and a relentless 24/7 pursuit of the story.

Readers are taken behind the scenes of major historical events, including the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre, the disastrous fire at Our Lady of the Angels Church in which 92 children perished, and the still unsolved Tylenol Murders.

Beyond the headlines, the narrative is driven by hundreds of anecdotes from alumni—including luminaries like Mike Royko, Kurt Vonnegut and Seymour Hersh, who survived the “unspoken wrath” and guiding hand of veteran editors.

The book details the bureau’s inner workings, from the clattering manual typewriters, the underground pneumatic tube news delivery system to the frantic “bulletins” of “Sirens in the Loop!” which signaled immediate breaking news.

It stands as a testament to a bygone era of street-smart reporting that shaped the landscape of American journalism.


The Sun at the End of the Road

=An event hosted by The Chicago Literary Hall of Fame on February 6th...Great Chicago Books Club: Tony Fitzpatrick’s The Sun at the End of the Road: Dispatches from an American Life

=From the CLHOF Website: Tony Fitzpatrick published his essay collection, The Sun at the End of the Road, just weeks before his death. Tony was celebrated as a visual artist, radio personality, boxer, and actor, but too often his accomplishments as a writer were overlooked. He was a fantastic writer--this last book is proof of that. It's a kind of memoir told in a series of small reflective prose pieces. His publisher, Eckhartz Press, expedited the release date, and because of that Tony was able to experience a small bit of the book's success. The founders and owners of Eckhartz, Rick Kaempfer and Dave Stern, will moderate a discussion about The Sun at the End of the Road. Special guests include Thomas Dyja and Dave Hoekstra.The event is free, but registration is required. You'll get the registrat release the Zoom link shortly before the event start time.  Registration is now open
=Tony debuted one of those essays this week last year, January 14, 2025. “Motor Gypsy” was the name of the essay, and it had an accompanying work of art (below). At the time Tony and Eckhartz Press didn't yet know we would be working together on this project.
=January 13, 1950, director John McNaughton was born. The famous Chicago film director (Mad Dog & Glory) was a friend of Tony's and is also featured in The Sun at the End of the Road. Happy birthday to John.


To Nudge The World

=It's next week--mark your calendars for our big night. Jim Slusher will be appearing at the Book Cellar on January 23, accepting his Book of the Year award from the Chicago Writers Association. Can't wait to see another Eckhartz Press author bring home the hardware.



40 Years, 40 Films

=You don't have to wait until next week to see Nick Digilio. Nick is hosting his "Nick's Pick" on Wednesday night at the Lake Theater in Oak Park. This month's film is the Warren Beatty classic Heaven Can Wait.

=That film doesn't appear in Nick's book because it came out before he became a film critic. On the other hand, two of the films he did pick came out this week in history. His best film pick of 1991 (Barton Fink), and his best film pick of 2000 (Magnolia).

=In case you missed it, Nick Digilio (40 Years 40 Films) was on WCPT with John St. Augustine on January 2. You can listen to it here.


The Best of Words on Birds

=You'll also have a chance this week to meet Eckhartz Press author Jeff Reiter (The Best of Words on Birds). He will be hosting a talk at Mayslake Peabody Estate in Dupage County on January 15.

=If you missed it over the holidays, The Daily Herald gave a big spread to Jeff as he recapped the year in birds. You can read that here. It includes some beautiful color photographs, including this one of Snowy Owl by Elizabeth Schissler.

=And here's one to mark on your calendar. Jeff will be appearing at the great birder event, Gull Frolic in Lake County, on February 15.


Happy Birthday!

=Eckhartz Press author John Martucci (When the Beast Comes for You) is celebrating a birthday this week (January 18). Happy birthday to the good doctor.



Chili Dog MVP

=Dick Allen will be given the Lou Boudreau Hall of Fame award on January 18. Dick Allen Jr. and Chili Dog MVP authors Dr. David Fletcher and John Owens will be there at the Tinley Park Convention Center at 3:30pm. Check out the news about the five-part docu-series based on the book and Dick Allen's life...

=FYI...before the year is done, we will have a new updated Hall of Fame edition of the book. Stay tuned!


Joe Jackson vs. Chicago American League Baseball Club

=Another one of our Sox books was in the news. Great article in 2024 (January 14) in The Daily Herald about our recent book. The book is the long-lost transcript of the Shoeless Joe Jackson trial from 100 years ago. Thanks so much to writer Steve Zalusky for highlighting it. 


=This week in 2025, Book of the Year finalist author Ken Smoller was making the rounds discussing our third White Sox book. He was featured in this piece in the Medium about what makes him a successful author. 
=Also, a happy birthday is in order for one of the big supporters (and featured Sox players) in the book. Jack McDowell (January 16) is not only in the book, he appeared at the big launch party at the Chicago Historical Museum...


Ron Kittle

=Speaking of White Sox, former Sox slugger Ron Kittle had a birthday last week (January 5) as well. He has been a part of three different Eckhartz Press books, the aforementioned Last Comiskey (at the book launch--shown here with Eckhartz Publishers Rick and Dave), Your Dime My Dance Floor by Chet Coppock, and Ike & Me by Rich King.
 





=Don't worry. We haven't forgotten the Cubs. In fact, this year Rick Kaempfer will be posting free excerpts of all the Hall of Fame Cubs (from the book EveryCubEver) around their birthdates. This week you can find Bruce Sutter (January 8, 1953) and Dizzy Dean (January 16, 1910). Just click here.

   


 Cubsessions

 =That's not our only Cubs book. Cubsesessions is a book about celebrity and die-hard Cub fans, and what Cubdom means to them. One of the featured fans was the Bleacher Preacher Jerry Pritikin, seen below at the book launch party with Eckhartz Press publisher David Stern. His birthday is this week (January 18).

=Another contributor to the book was Pat Brickhouse, widow of Hall of Fame broadcaster Jack. She not only contributed to the book, she contributed to our website justonebadcentury.com. Unfortunately Pat passed away this week in 2022.


Additional upcoming Eckhartz Press author events. Mark your calenders...

=Mark Wukas (The Kiss of Night) will be appearing at Welcome to the Show at the Getaway (4530 N. Lincoln Avenue) on February 16.

=Vicki Atkinson (Surviving Sue) will be appearing at Wauconda Library (11am-12:30pm) on February 20. Vicki's debut novel is coming out later this year on Eckhartz Press.

=Robert Conlon (Celtic Knot) will be appearing at the Gman (on Clark in Chicago) on March 15.


The Loop Files

=Over the holidays, The Loop Files author Rick Kaempfer had a chance to bring his entire family to the Museum of Broadcast Communications to see the Loop exhibit there. Yes, the exhibit features a signed giant poster of The Loop Files. They are also selling the book on site, and have special Loop t-shirts to commemorate the exhibit. 

=This week in 2024, Rick Kaempfer appeared on WLS Radio with Pete McMurray and Steve Cochran.

=The Chicago Writes podcast also featured The Loop Files

=There were some truly great reviews of The Loop Files, and perhaps none better than this one by Christopher Sutter. 


The Daly News

 =Martin Luther King Jr. was born this week (January 15) in history. One of our authors not only knew King, he got the opportunity to interview him on television. Joel Daly tells that story in the pages of The Daly News.



1001 Train Rides in Chicago

=Rarely has an interviewer and interviewee hit it off as quickly as Eckhartz Press author Richard Reeder and TV personality Rabbi Doug. This interview is from this week in 2019.

=Richard has turned in the manuscript for his follow up novel. It will be coming out around Opening Day in 2026.

=To give you an idea of what the topic of that novel is, maybe you'll want to check out Richard's next live interview at Max & Benny's. On February 3 he'll be interviewing baseball radio reporter Bruce Levine. Details are here.


 Behind The Glass

=The manuscript of Randy Merkin's follow up book was also turned in this week. Look for that to come out in the coming months.

=This week in 2022. Randy Merkin appeared on ABC-7 in Chicago to talk about his first book Behind the Glass.



=Another great interview with Take Me Back to Chicago author Doug E. Jones.


 =This week in 2012 the authors of our first book The Living Wills made an appearance on the WGN-TV Midday News. It was the first of many TV appearances by Eckhartz Press authors. 

=Also, 14 years ago this week, Rick and Brendan discussed the tricky collaboration that led to the first Eckhartz Press book, The Living Wills.



=Thanks to everyone who came out to see Dan McNeil in Morton Grove this week last year. A fun time was had by all. Eckhartz Press publishers Rick and Dave might have accidentally spent a little cash on some baseball card goodies as well.


=This week is also Julius Peppers birthday (January 18). The recently inducted Hall of Famer rates a big write up in Dan's book.


Close Encounters of a Chicago Kind

=Vicki Quade is famous in Chicago for her theater work, but she also penned a witty Eckhartz Press book Close Encounters of a Chicago Kind about her everyday encounters with Chicagoans. We love the way she organized the stories by location. For instance, an entire chapter is about her experiences in the post office. This might be good week to read that chapter. The first U.S Postmaster, Benjamin Franklin, was born on January 17.



=The coming of age novel was hot off the presses when the news about David Crosby's death hit the wires in 2023. Because Crosby was one of the people referred to in the book, we published an excerpt of the book (about Crosby) that year.

=This week in 2023, Rick Kaempfer made his first book club appearance for his novel Back in the DDR. 


The Flip Side

=On January 18, 1974—Black Oak Arkansas appeared at the Auditorium in Chicago. The Flip Side brothers (Carl & Larry) were there, presenting the show...


=This week last year there was a nice write up in the Cook County Chronicle about Larry Rosenbaum's appearance at the Arcada Theater. Also attending the symposium were fellow Eckhartz Press authors Rick Kaempfer from the Loop Files and Mitch Michaels from Doin the Cruise, and Jim Summaria and Mark Plotnick. (Click on the article to enlarge it)


Truffle Hunt

=In 2025, for the 10th anniversary of Truffle Hunt, author Brent Petersen featured a series of articles on substack explaining the process of how it came to be. Here's the first one: How the International Criminal Tribunal Influenced the Creation of one of my Characters.

=Brent Petersen (Truffle Hunt) was featured in Illinois Entertainer this month in 2024, talking about his podcast Destination Eat Drink.


=That podcast features another Eckhartz Press author this week...

Broken bones, getting kicked out of hotels, and suspiciously disappearing credit cards with Rick Kaempfer. It's vacation mishaps.

Doin the Cruise

 =This week in 2018, West Suburban Living reviewed Mitch Michael's book.

=Rod Stewart is celebrating a birthday this week. You may not realize that Doin The Cruise author Mitch Michaels played a key role in Rod's song "Maggie Mae" becoming a big hit. He tells that story in the book. (That's Mitch in the middle of the pic below)


We Have Company

 =Bobby Skafish's 2016 Eckhartz Press book We Have Company: Four Decades of Rock and Roll Encounters is a rock and roll lover's dream. Bobby has met and interviewed them all. Two of them had birthdays last week; the late David Bowie and Dave Matthews. Their stories (and these photos) are in the book. Matthews was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame last year.


Monkey in the Middle

 =Dobie Maxwell's gripping personal story about a bank robbery was reviewed this week in 2017. Dobie's book remains one of our best sellers. 


 Records Truly Is My Middle Name

 =John Records Landecker's book was a finalist for CWA Book of the Year in 2013. When John was inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame in 2017, we re-released the book with additional stories and photos. Among the new photos...this one of John and his daughter Amy with the richest man in the world (at the time), who happens to be celebrating a birthday this week (January 12).


Sepsis

=The former Chicago Daily News arts reporter (and Northwestern University professor) Jack Hafferkamp released his novel Sepsis via Eckhartz Press this week in 2017.


Always a Pleasure

=In 2022, Eckhartz Press released Chuck Swirsky's memoir Always a Pleasure. It features some great stories about his life as a sportscaster, and some memorable photos as well. Here he is with this week's birthday boy Lou Holtz. 

=This week in 2023 (January 14), Chuck Swirsky also made an appearance at The Windy City Bulls, and signed copies of his book Always a Pleasure. Two of the many basketball legends who appear in the book are celebrating birthdays this week, former Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau and former Bulls player Dwyane Wade


The Balding Handbook

 =We sold out of the book, but before it went out of print, The Balding Handbook helped countless balding souls. 13 years ago this week author David Stern was on Mancow's television show talking about it.


Transatlantic Passage

 =We have two books about soccer in the Eckhartz Press library. One is called Grun Weiss Vor! and the other is Transatlantic Passage. That second book is about the Premier League in England. Author Paul Banks was lucky enough to get to speak to some legends, including this week's birthday boy (January 18) Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola.

=Here's what this week's birthday boy Dave Kerner had to say about the book...

  • “You’ll love reading about what it’s like to be a soccer (always going to be football to me!) fan from multiple perspectives. Thanks to Paul and this in depth look at the evolution of international soccer in the United States, in some ways negative for the men’s game, and in some ways positive for the women’s game.”

    Dave Kerner, Sports Anchor, WBBM Radio