Monday, June 15, 2026

Publishing Portal--June 15, 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.


COMING SOON

Our next two books...The 12 Steps and Tales of Fellowship and Sarasota.


The 12 Steps and Tales of Fellowship

This inspiring book will be available for pre-order very soon. You can guess what it's about, but who is this man who wrote the book...

Thomas Serritella knows a thing or two about starting over. A proud Detroit sports fan living in the Chicago suburbs — a situation that requires both thick skin and a great sense of humor — Thomas has been on an incredible journey of recovery for over 14 years. Along the way, he has made lifelong friends, helped countless people in need, and turned his life around a full 180 degrees.

His connection to the fellowship of AA runs deep, and it is that connection, combined with a heartfelt desire to reach those still struggling with alcoholism, that compelled him to write this book. Thomas witnessed firsthand how many people search desperately for a way out — and he wanted to give them something real, something honest, and something that might even make them smile along the way.

Thomas believes that laughter, honesty, and a genuine love for life are just as important to recovery as any step in the process. His warm humor, hard-won wisdom, and deeply personal stories make him not just an author, but a voice for everyone who has ever felt lost and found their way back. When he’s not rooting for Detroit teams in enemy territory, he’s doing his best to enjoy and love every single moment — and inspiring others to do the same.


Sarasota

=How good is Richard Reeder's novel Sarasota (which is available for pre-order next week)? The blurb on the back cover is provided by one of Chicago's most prestigious authors, Stuart Dybek. Here's what he says...

"Richard Reeder in his historical novel, Sarasota, writes with an energy, passion, and immersive sense of place that brings an American era back to life. This is not a novel about nostalgia. There’s a freshness to the account and an “I was there” sense of moral clarity that makes it real. Discrimination against Black professional baseball players in the American South did not end when Jackie Robinson broke the Major League Baseball color barrier in 1947. Reeder relates the story of some of those who stepped up to the plate and put an end to those lingering Jim Crow practices."  

=Stuart Dybek, author of The Coast of Chicago and I Sailed with Magellan, winner of the PEN/Malamud Award. 


Records Truly Is My Middle Name & Always a Pleasure

=Sad week for the authors John Records Landecker (Records Truly Is My Middle Name) and Chuck Swirsky (Always a Pleasure). Both men lost dear friends. Landecker's newsman at WJMK, Richard Cantu (second from right in top photo), passed away unexpectedly in Milwaukee. And Swirsky's television counterpart, Bulls TV analyst Stacey King (furthest right in bottom photo), died after a fall in his home. We send our deepest condolences to both authors, and to the families of the dearly departed.

    

=Records Truly is My Middle Name co-author Rick Kaempfer posted his tribute to Richard Cantu on Facebook this past week...


The Best of Words on Birds

=You have an opportunity this week to see Jeff Reiter in action in the wild. He will be presenting a bird talk at the Elmhurst library (125 S. Prospect Avenue) tomorrow night (June 16) at 7pm.

=Jeff Reiter's latest Words on Birds column came out in the Daily Herald last week. You can read it here. Jeff's comments about the piece...

My latest "Words on Birds" column salutes our state's most prolific birders. Their membership in the "400 Club"--so named for witnessing 400 or more species in Illinois--is a remarkable achievement! The column is based on a story called "Rare Birders" that I wrote for the spring issue of Illinois Audubon magazine. Since that piece, several mega-rarities have visited the Chicago region, photos of which are included in the newspaper. Many thanks to Stephen Hurst (Lazuli Bunting, photo below), Marky Mutchler (Bewick's Wren) and Matt Zuro of Zurotography (Roseate Tern) for sharing their excellent images. Rare bird photos by Jackie Lentz Bowman (Ivory Gull) and Leroy Harrison (Lewis's Woodpecker) also appear. Thank you all!


Slivers & Surviving Sue

=You also have a chance to see Vicki Atkinson this week. She will be reciting poetry she has written at an event called Poetry in the Park on Wednesday night (June 17) at the Barrington White House (145 W. Main Street, Barrington). The event is at 6:30pm. It's free. Click here to register. Naturally she will be selling and signing copies of her two Eckhartz Press books, Slivers and Surviving Sue.


=The excellent reviews for Slivers keep pouring in. Here's one from Edward Ortiz...

“This is a great supernatural novel where three characters—Jane, Katie, and Eric—find themselves dealing with inexplicable phenomena that have actually been occurring for generations. The author does an excellent job of connecting the past with the present, developing the mystery of the Slivers and the Hiraeth (a portal of sorts that provides a thin space between worlds where the impossible happens). The story really picks up the pace once you reach the chapter titled ‘The Accident – 1965,’ and I couldn’t put it down after that. Watching Jane, Katie, and Eric unravel the truth behind these encounters, with the help of a character from the past, kept me hooked until the very end.”

The Sun at the End of the Road

=Tony Fitzpatrick would have been beyond honored by what happened last week at Guaranteed Rate Field. His beloved Chicago White Sox paid tribute to him...

=Tony appears to be more popular than ever. What a headline in Block Club Chicago last week: Tony Fitzpatrick's Art Fetched More Than Expected--Even More Than One's Labeled Picasso. Here's the lead paragraph...

An auction featuring dozens of works by the late Chicago artist Tony Fitzpatrick saw his major pieces sell for far more than their estimated value — including some pieces that went for three or four times more than expected.

=This week in history (June 20, 1974), the great film Chinatown was released. Tony Fitzpatrick pays tribute to that classic in his book The Sun at the End of the Road. Here's a little taste...

The scenes between Huston and Nicholson are a master class in mutual contempt. Huston didn't care for Nicholson, as he was banging Huston’s daughter, the remarkable Angelica Huston. Only upon seeing the finished film does Huston grudgingly admit Nicholson's performance is, indeed, a gem of American film acting. Every element of this film works: Robert Towne’s complex, multilayered script and storytelling; Polanski's noir, rendered in blinding daylight; the California landscape, a mixture of bounty and privation, brought by drought; and letter-perfect performances from top to bottom—Faye Dunaway has never been more luminous or unhinged, even as Joan Crawford; Huston in the nadir of his career, reminding us that, like Sydney Pollack, he is every bit as good in front of the camera as behind it; Polanski, himself, as the nasty little man with the switchblade. It is one of those American stories, writ large in moral shades of gray and California sunlight, all brilliantly captured by cinematographer John A. Alonzo. Never has an American film been so beautifully rendered—an absolute masterpiece.

=It inspired this accompanying piece of art. Tony called it "Portrait of J.J. Gittes."


=Just a reminder for Tony Fitzpatrick fans. We have another book written by Tony coming out later this fall. It's a collection of his Haikus and artwork. Tony completed it just weeks before his death.


Sirens in the Loop

=The article we mentioned last week is now available on-line. It's really an incredible write up in NewCity by Mary Wisniewski. Mary is such a good writer. She does more than review Sirens in the Loop, she includes some memorable stories from her own time at City News Bureau, and really makes the old news shop come to life. Highly recommended.


Beyond the Glass

=Some photos from Randy Merkin's appearance this past weekend in Glenview. Thanks to everyone who came out...








Chasing the Lost City

=Eckhartz Press author (and Silver Circle television legend) Tom Weinberg (Chasing the Lost City) is celebrating a birthday this week (June 17). Tom's book came out during the holiday season of 2017. It's the fascinating true story of his quest to find the ruins of a lost city in Honduras. Great story, great pictures. Happy birthday Tom!




The Eckhartz Wives
=The Eckhartz Press publisher's wives, Bridget Kaempfer and Michelle Halle Stern, are also celebrating birthdays this week (June 17, June 20). We would be remiss if we didn't pay tribute to the actual brains of the operation. (Photo: L-R...Bridget and Michelle singing along to a 1970s pop hit)


Transatlantic Passage 

=The World Cup is currently the top draw in the entire world, and it's taking place right here in America (plus Mexico & Canada). We have a book in the Eckhartz Press library that is a perfect primer for soccer fans. It's about how this US National team developed in Europe, and how the European game has made its way over to America, first with exhibition games, and now with the Cup. Paul Banks wrote it. It's called Transatlantic Passage. 

=One of the people featured in that book is the former coach of Liverpool, Jurgen Klopp. He's celebrating a birthday this week (June 16)




=Don't forget that Eckhartz Press publisher Rick Kaempfer co-hosts a podcast about soccer. This is the third World Cup he and co-host Adam Howarth are covering. New episodes drop on Fridays.



Signature Shoes

 =Most people don't even realize that Chuck Taylor, the man they named the shoes after, was a real life basketball star. His shoe remains perhaps the most famous Signature Shoe, and gets the appropriate attention from author Ryan Trembath in his book about the celebrity shoe craze. Taylor was born this week in 1901 (June 21).


=Another famous signature shoe wearer featured in Ryan's book got quite a bit of airtime lately during the NBA Finals. Congrats to the Knicks. Walt Frazier is no longer a part of the "most recent" Knicks championship team.




=Thanks for the big turnout on Wednesday night for Nick Digilio's screening of South Park. He has already announced the next one..


Ken Korber 

=Great piece in Medical Daily this week about Ken Korber and children's books.

=Two of Ken's books were released this week in history. June 20, 2020 was the release date for Grace's Musical Haiku Adventures, and June 21, 2019 was the day the second book of his four seasons of musical tales was released, Grace and the Musical Willow Tree, A Summer Adventure. That book is also still available at Eckhartz Press



Celtic Knot

=If you missed Robert Conlon on Irishradio this weekend, you missed some great Irish story-telling. Thanks so much to Siobhann O'Connor for inviting him on the show.



Last Comiskey & Chili Dog MVP

=Where was My Father, Dick Allen over the weekend? Would you believe The Pocono Raceway?

=This picture below was taken two years ago, the day of Ken Smoller's Last Comiskey book launch party at the Chicago History Museum. The same group of people in the photo (minus Ken) will be returning to the scene of the crime, so to speak, on June 25th for the debut of the Dick Allen movie (My Father, Dick Allen) at the same museum. (Photo: EP Publisher Rick Kaempfer, Ken Smoller/author of Last Comiskey/contributor to the film, EP Publisher David Stern, Dr. David Fletcher/co-author of Chili Dog MVP and co-writer and executive producer of the film). Both Chili Dog MVP and Last Comiskey will be available there. This must be the year of the White Sox--because the event is completely sold out.



EveryCubEver

=On the other hand, looks like Rick picked a good year NOT to do a revised edition of EveryCubEver. Instead, he is featuring the entries of Cubs Hall of Famers on their birthdays. There are two this week: June 15, 1938 is Billy Williams birthday. June 18, 1939 is Lou Brock's. Two free excerpts from the book...

Billy Williams 1938-- (Cubs 1959-1974)

Billy Williams got his nickname (“Sweet Swingin’ Billy from Whistler”) because of his nearly perfect swing and his hometown: Whistler, Alabama. He played for the Cubs from 1959-1974 and is simply one of the greatest players to ever wear a Cubs uniform. Sweet Swingin’ Billy was a six-time All-Star (and hit a homer in the ’64 game), a batting champion, was named the MLB player of the year, finished second in the MVP balloting in two different years, hit more than 400 career home runs, led the Cubs in homers for the entire decade of the 1970s (143), and was inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame in 1987. Ernie Banks may have been Mr. Cub, but during the years he shared the field with Billy Williams, he was often the second best player on the team. Billy Williams manned left field for the Cubs for twelve years (other than a few years in the mid- 60s when they switched him over to right). Near the end of the 1973 season, however, manager Whitey Lockman had the brilliant idea of moving the life-long outfielder to first base. After setting a NL record for most consecutive games played (1117), and establishing a reputation as an iron man outfielder, it only took a few games at first base for Billy to get spiked. He missed twice as many games in 1974 as he missed the previous twelve seasons combined. He finished his career with the Oakland A’s, where Billy finally got a chance to play in the postseason.

Historical note: On the day the hotline was installed between the Kremlin and the White House (1963), Billy hit two homers against his former teammate Dick Drott in a 5-0 win over Houston in Wrigley Field.

Lou Brock 1939-2020 (Cubs 1961-1964)

It’s not that the Cubs didn’t realize they had a good potential player on their hands. It’s just that they didn’t know how to develop him. Brock came up through the Cubs system during their ill-fated College of Coaches era. When they traded him in 1964 for a former 20-game winner, there wasn’t much of an uproar in Chicago, but the Cubs players knew their team was making a big mistake. Lou Brock became a six-time All-Star for the Cardinals, led the league in runs scored (twice), doubles, triples, and stolen bases (eight times). He hit over .300 eight times. He retired as the all-time career leader in stolen bases. He had more than 3000 hits—and his 3000th hit came against the Cubs in St. Louis in 1979. Most importantly, he retired as a two-time World Series champion. In his first year of eligibility, Lou Brock was elected into baseball’s Hall of Fame. His #20 is one of only four numbers retired by the Cardinals (Stan Musial, Bob Gibson, Dizzy Dean).

Historical Note: On the day Jack Nicholas won his first major golf tournament (the 1962 US Open), Lou Brock became one of only three players (and the only Cub) in Polo Grounds history to hit a homer into the centerfield bleachers. The other two were Babe Ruth and Joe Adcock.


Take Me Back to Chicago

=This week in history (June 20, 1980), the Chicago classic, The Blue Brothers was released. Take Me Back to Chicago author Doug E. Jones pays homage to the movie by including this classic clip...


Ann Wilson

=The lead singer of Heart (June 18 birthday)  is featured in three different Eckhartz Press books. John Landecker has a great story about her in Records Truly Is My Middle Name. Bobby Skafish devotes an entire chapter to her in his interview book We Have Company, and can you guess which book about a radio station also features the lovely Ms. Wilson?


The Loop Files

=That's the one. Johnny B tells a great story about Ann Wilson pranking him in the pages of The Loop Files.

= Another memorable story in The Loop Files comes from legendary disc jockey Bob Stroud. He tells the tale of the day he met his idol, Paul McCartney. There's even a photo from that day. Paul turns 84 years old this week (June 18). His new album, by the way, just hit #1 on the UK charts. Rock on, Sir Paul.


To the Men I've Loved (God Help Them)

=Two years ago this week, we released To the Men I've Loved, by Patricia Motto. She wrote her love-life memoir with great humor and skill. This is the book synopsis...

    The course of true love may never run smooth, but seldom has it hit quite as many bumps, potholes and land mines as it does in Patricia Motto’s journey to find the meaning of that all important four letter word. Love. Beginning with the beautiful eyes of a kindergarten boy at nap time and continuing to the man for whom she did not get off the plane, there are stops along the way for, among others, a first kiss boyfriend, the American League’s Most Valuable Player and a twice convicted armed robber. Sometimes hilarious, sometimes heartbreaking, the trip is never dull.



Back in the DDR

=This week in 1995, Frankfurt American Junior High School officially closed (June 16) in Germany. That school is featured in the pages of Rick Kaempfer's novel Back in the DDR.



Wicker Park Wishes

 =This week in 2021 (June 16), Margaret Larkin appeared on the John Landecker show on WGN to discuss her debut novel Wicker Park Wishes.  You can still hear that interview here.



=Former ABC-7 news reporter Andy Shaw is celebrating a birthday this week (June 18). Andy is a big fan of the Eckhartz Press novel $everance. Here's what he said about it when it originally came out in 2007...

  • “$everance is a black comedy that would be funnier if its darkness weren’t so true. And it crackles with the insights and cynicism that made Network and Broadcast News the seminal cinematic treatments of today’s dumbed-down news business. Move over Christopher Buckley—-Rick Kaempfer is in town!”

    Andy Shaw, ABC-TV


The Balding Handbook

=Talk about an exciting day. Twelve years ago (June 18, 2014) Balding Handbook author David Stern got the unofficial endorsement of his book from fellow famous Bald, Mr. Peanut.



Everything I Know I Learned From Rock Stars

 =Bill Paige interviewed hundreds of rock stars during his Illinois Entertainer days, and one of them now plays lead guitar in Bruce Springsteen's band. This week's birthday boy (June 21) Nils Lofgren is featured in Paige's excellent book.



The Living Wills

=Author Mark Leepson is celebrating a birthday this week as well (June 20). Leepson is a Vietnam veteran, so Eckhartz Press authors Brendan Sullivan and Rick Kaempfer sent their novel The Living Wills to him to see what he thought of it. The Living Wills features a main character who is a Vietnam Vet. Here's what he said...

  • You have to give credit to Rick Kaempfer and Brendan Sullivan, the two authors of “The Living Wills”. The authors have come up with a cast of realistic, non-sensationalized Vietnam veterans living out their lives in the early 21st century–no Nam vet stereotypes here. That in itself is worth the price of admission.

    Marc Leepsen, Vietnam Veterans of America Magazine


Recalled to Life

=This week in 2013, Dan Burns held a book release party for his debut novel, Recalled to Life. The party was held at a fancy boutique in LaGrange, Illinois.






Keep an eye out for two and possibly three more Eckhartz Press book launch parties coming in the  next month!

Tuesday, June 09, 2026

RIP Richard Cantu


Got some incredibly sad news yesterday. My old friend Richard Cantu passed away in Milwaukee. Cause of death hasn't been identified yet, but it looks like he died in his sleep. His obituary hasn't been published yet, but when it does, it will be at this funeral home.


Richard and I met in the early 1990s when I joined the John Records Landecker show a few weeks after it signed on the air at WJMK. The photo of the morning show was taken the day I met him.  (Photo L-R: Richard Cantu, technical producer Lonnie Martin, John Landecker, me, and Vicki Truax)


Richard was our newsman, and he was a newsman in the old meaning of the word. He took his craft seriously. He wrote his copy crisply. He delivered his reports with authority. He made follow up calls to check sources and stories. He was an actual journalist.


His finest day on the air during the ten years I worked with him was on September 11, 2001. We were on the air when the planes hit the towers. Richard helped transform our wacky morning show into an actual news outlet that morning, along with John Landecker, Leslie Keiling, and Brant Miller. I don't think I've ever been prouder of a show than I was that morning. And Richard played no small part in it. Of course, in a sign of the times, he was let go a few weeks later. Budget cuts. He later worked at WBBM-AM, and then moved to New York to work at the ABC Radio Network.


After he moved to New York (actually New Jersey--he would correct me every time), we stayed in touch, and spoke a few times a year.  The last time we chatted at length was when our old boss John Landecker was inducted into the National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame. We were all planning on surprising John at the ceremony--which never took place because of COVID. The rest of our conversations were about trying to get him back to Chicago so we could have another garage poker night at my house. 


I've never met anyone else quite like Richard. He was a complicated guy. A brilliant curmudgeon. A walking set of contradictions. He wore a tie to work every day, but he worked in radio. He was a serious man living in a serious world, but he had one of the greatest laughs you'll ever hear. When you got him to crack up, you knew you had earned it. He refused to have direct deposit on his paychecks because he didn't trust "the man" having access to his account. He grew up in Wisconsin, but thought that cheese was an abomination. He could joke around with you, but when it was time for the newscast to begin, it needed to begin at *exactly* the correct time. His musical tastes were incredibly eclectic ranging from punk to new wave to disco to R&B. When Kurt Cobain died, he led the newcast with that news on the Oldies station. Most listeners had no idea who he was talking about. He loved to dance, which didn't seem to fit his personality at all. He was a regular at my garage poker table, sipping some good whiskey (his e-mail address was dickwhiskey), and exhorting whoever had just lost the hand, "F-you. Pay me." He was a White Sox fan. When I told him I had taken my son Tommy to a Sox game, and an entire section of Sox fans booed the five year old because he was wearing a Cubs hat, Richard said, "Serves him right."


I found Richard so fascinating I based one of the lead characters of my novel $everance on him. I sent him a free copy of the book, telling him that I was dying to hear his opinion, to find out if I captured him correctly. He didn't bother reading it for years. That cracked me up.


Richard Cantu marched to the beat of his own drummer. He was one of a kind. Irreplaceable.


So sad he's not with us anymore. We are really going to miss him.

Monday, June 08, 2026

Publishing Portal--June 8, 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.


COMING SOON!

Sarasota

 =Richard Reeder's novel will be available for pre-order very soon! What's it about?

Although Jackie Robinson broke the Major League Baseball color barrier in 1947, Black players were still dealing with racial segregation during spring training in the South in the early 1960s. It was then that the Chicago White Sox became a significant player in the civil rights movement. In a bold and courageous move, the team ownership bought a hotel in Sarasota, Florida, and integrated it immediately. Soon the other teams followed suit and integrated their housing accommodations as well. It was a major victory over the prevailing Jim Crow culture.

Sarasota, the novel, is a work of historical fictional leading up to the purchase of the hotel, told from the perspective of William Pennington, a crusading white journalist, who we first meet working on the Kennedy presidential campaign in Florida. After the campaign, Pennington lands a position in the White Sox public relations office where he comes to  grips with painful truths about racism, both societal and personal, during that turbulent time in American history.  

=It could be available for pre-order as early as next week. Stay tuned. Richard already has the first copy of the novel in his hands.


The Loop Files

=Ever since The Loop Files came out, we have been asked the same question over and over again. What happened to the biggest star in Loop history, Jonathon Brandmeier? The author knew because he had interviewed Brandmeier for the book, but wasn't at liberty to share personal medical news. Johnny finally spoke out last week...

=Something just feels better about the media world in Chicago when Brandmeier is a part of it. Naturally he is featured prominently in the Loop exhibit at the Museum of Broadcast Communications. This poster is wall-sized. (L-R: Johnny, Kevin, Garry, Steve)


Chili Dog MVP

=The Chicago premiere of My Father, Dick Allen on June 25th is sold out (over 330 seats at the Chicago History Museum).

=Eckhartz Press publishers Rick and Dave will be there selling copies of Chili Dog MVP and Last Comiskey.


40 Years, 40 Films

=Nick's Pix returns this Wednesday (June 10) to Classic Cinema's Lake Theater in Oak Park at 7pm. This month Nick Digilio has chosen the South Park movie. Come see it on the big screen (and buy a copy of Nick's great book about the movies), followed by discussion, trivia, and prizes. You do not want to miss this one. Grab your tickets now at classiccinemas.com/nick!

=When the movie South Park: Bigger, Longer, Uncut came out in 1999, it was considered an outlandish musical comedy. The main song from the film had the presposterous title "Blame Canada". Somehow it doesn't seem so preposterous now, does it...

 

Beyond the Glass

=Randy Merkin was on WGN radio this past weekend with Wendy Snyder, discussing his new book, Beyond the Glass. Thanks so much to Wendy for having him on the air. (Listen here. It starts at around the 40:00 mark.)

=You have another chance to meet Randy Merkin this coming Saturday (June 13) at Dino's Sports Fan Shop in the Glen (1875 Tower Road in Glenview) from 2-4pm. He'll be signing and selling his latest book. Good weekend to hit the sports fan shop, with Father's Day approaching.


The Best of Words on Birds

=Two opportunities coming in the next few weeks to see Jeff Reiter giving a talk about birding. He'll also obviously be signing and selling copies of his book. 

*The Elmhurst library (June 16, 7 pm) 

*The Schaumburg library (June 25, 7 pm)

=Maybe he'll talk about this bird featured in the book.* No, it's not called Mike Cuellar or Jim Palmer, but those are two giant hints.

Slivers

=It's only been out a week or two, but Slivers has been getting great reviews. Read this one from blogger, author and journalist Elizabeth Wickham

=Slivers author Vicki Atkinson has a few appearances coming up, and Slivers will be available for purchase at each one. All are free and open to the public, but registration is required...

*Poetry in the Park - June 17, 2026 - 6:30 pm

Poetry in the Park: Poet's Choice | Barrington's White House

*Navigating Elder Care - June 25, 2026 - 6:00 pm 

Carol Stream Public Library

Navigating Elder Care with Grace & Humor (In-Person) | Carol Stream Public Library

 *Writing for Wellness - July 23, 2026 - 6:00 pm

Round Lake Public Library

Writing for Wellness - Round Lake Area Public Library


Write City Review

=The Write City Review, Volume 5 is also getting good notices only a week after its release. Randy Richardson is the president of the CWA and is a big part of the project. He explains more...


EveryCubEver

=It's true that Rick Kaempfer didn't update EveryCubEver this year. He is now waiting until a World Series win to do it again. That might be a long wait.

=In the meantime, he is posting EveryCubEver book entries for Cubs Hall of Famers on their birthdays. Here's one from this week. Born on June 11, 1879, the all-time catching great, Roger Bresnahan.

Roger Bresnahan 1879–1944 (Cubs 1913-1915)

Roger Bresnahan was a proud Irishman. So proud, in fact, that he told everyone that he was actually born in the Irish city of Tralee. That led to the nickname, the Duke of Tralee. Turns out, he wasn’t from Ireland at all. He was born and raised in Toledo, Ohio. But Bresnahan was one of the all-time great catchers. He was Christy Mathewson’s catcher with the New York Giants, and was involved in that infamous Merkle Boner game in 1908. It wasn’t until his last three years in the big leagues that he came to Chicago. He wasn’t the same player by then, but was still revered for his smarts and moxie. So much so, the Cubs eventually hired him to manage the team. He was their player/manager for the 1915 season and led them to a fourth place finish. That was the final season in West Side Grounds. The next year the Cubs moved into what is now known as Wrigley Field. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1945, just a few months after his death.

=This week in 2019 (June 11), EveryCubEver debuted this video ad...

=Former Cubs reliever Pedro Strop is in the book (born 6/13). Author Rick Kaempfer met Pedro that year and was able to give him a copy of the book. 



=The number of upcoming appearances by Robert Conlon are adding up. He'll be...

*On the radio this coming Saturday with Siobhan O’ConnorThe show streams around the world  @www.1490.am
*At the My Father, Dick Allen premiere on June 25th selling his book (more info above)
*And he's got a big appearance for the West Suburban Irish Mission coming up in Naperville on July 21, 6:30pm at the VFW in Naperville (908 Jackson Avenue)

=Great to see Bob still going strong. The launch party for the book was exactly a year ago this week... 


Face Your MonsterEmbrace Retirement & Chicago: The Great Retirement Resource

=The author of three Eckhartz Press books, Russ Fahrner, has a birthday today (June 8). We hope that Russ is in a boat somewhere on his birthday. If you read his books, you know that's his passion.

=The newest one, Face Your Monster, is about Russ's struggle with leukemia. It's available for pre-order now at Eckhartz Press.

=The launch party for Embrace Retirement was this week in 2019 (June 9) in the Northwest suburbs. A great time was had by all...



The Flip Side  Doin' the Cruise 

=Ken Churilla is also celebrating a birthday this week (June 12). He has co-written two books for us. Most recently The Flip Side with Carl & Larry Rosenbaum.

=He co-wrote Doin' the Cruise with Mitch Michaels as well. This week in 2017, Eckhartz Press publishers Rick Kaempfer and Dave Stern met at the London House in downtown Chicago to finalize the publishing agreement with Mitch Michaels and Ken Churilla. Luckily esteemed Chicago photographer Barry Butler was there to photograph the moment.


Grun Weiss Vor and Inside Melania

=Boy, it really is birthday week for Eckhartz Press authors. In addition to Ken & Russ (above), Todd "Fritz" Schneider (June 9) and Lauren LoGuidice (June 14) are both celebrating birthdays this week as well. Todd co-wrote Grun Weiss Vor and Lauren wrote Inside Melania.  (Photos: Todd with co-author Rick Kaempfer, Lauren with her book.) 



Sirens in the Loop

=A great new article about Sirens in the Loop came out last week in NewCity, written by Mary Wisniewski. It comes out next week on-line, but the hard copy is already out there. Highly recommended.

=Here's a related anniversary. On June 10, 1847, the Chicago Tribune was founded. The Tribune was later one of the main funders of City News Bureau, the subject of Sirens in the Loop.

=Don't forget about the upcoming appearance of author Jim Elsener. He'll be co-hosting the "City News Book Gala" on Saturday, July 11 from 5-7 pm at the Edgewater Historical Society Museum - 5358 N. Ashland, Chicago. 


Mob Adjacent

=Mob Adjacent the Audio Book is now available! 

It's been getting great reviews...

To Nudge the World

=2025 was a big year for Jim Slusher (To Nudge the World). His book was named Book of the Year by the Chicago Writers Association. Jim also received this award...


The Kiss of Night

=Don't forget, author Mark Wukas is co-hosting "City News Book Gala" on Saturday, July 11 from 5-7 pm at the Edgewater Historical Society Museum - 5358 N. Ashland, Chicago. 

=How about another Five Star Review of the book? This one comes from Literary Titan. A short excerpt...

What struck me immediately was the writing. It’s clean, stylish, and unpretentious. Mark Wukas writes like someone who has seen things—journalism that feels lived-in, dialogue that crackles, characters who breathe. The voice is witty but vulnerable. I loved how the narrator doesn’t pretend to be a hero. He fumbles, he overreaches, he regrets. And I could relate to that. Wukas builds the suspense slowly, not with cheap thrills, but with memory, conscience, and the weight of choices. That’s what hooked me: not the mystery, but the man trying to live with it.


I Bear Witness

=Two football legends are celebrating birthdays this week, and both of them are featured in Dan McNeil's book I Bear Witness. Happy birthday to former Bears great Gary Fencik (June 11) and former Green Bay Packers coach Mike Holmgren (June 15) 

=Also, this week in 2016 (June 11), former Bear Bryan Robinson died. In the last chapter of I Bear Witness, Dan eulogizes all of the Bears who have left us in the last few decades. Robinson is no exception.


Father Knows Nothing and Back in the DDR 

=This week in 2023, author Rick Kaempfer attended a book club in Rolling Meadows that was reading his book Father Knows Nothing. Here is a photo from that night...

=The same week in 2023 he appeared at a book club in Inverness to talk about and promote his coming-of-age novel, Back in the DDR.


Best Seat in the House 

=This week in 2014, Bruce Bohrer's book was released by Eckhartz Press. This diary of a Wrigley Field usher was the first book by Eckhartz Press to be sold at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, but not the last (Chili Dog MVP, EveryCubEver)

 

Vintage Confidential

=This week in 2022 (June 10), Duane Scott Cerny released his second book, Vintage Confidential. He told the story of what inspired this memorable book on this podcast. 


Printer's Row Lit Fest

=Before the pandemic, the Printer's Row Lit Fest was held every year in June (it's now in September). Here are a few photos from 2014, featuring Eckhartz Press authors Joel Daly, Chuck Quinzio, and Dan Burns.


 The Balding Handbook

 =June 9 is International Stripper Appreciation Day. You'll find this appropriate photo of The Balding Handbook author David Stern in his self help book. The book takes you through the five stages of grieving for your hair loss. We believe this photo helps define the Depression stage.



Hugh Hefner's First Funeral

=Bruce Elliott is a local treasure celebrating a birthday this week (June 10). He's a writer and artist, a saloon owner, and a big fan of Pat Colander's book. Here's what he said it about it...

  • Pat is a very talented writer. Unfortunately she cut back on her serious writing to run magazines. She was a girl-wonder when she worked at the Chicago Tribune in the late seventies. The veteran male reporters hated her because she could out-write and out produce them with one hand tied behind her back and her eyes closed. She did feature articles, reviews and celebrity interviews. Now she has put together a collection of her very best work from the 1970s and early 1980s. The stories age well.

    Bruce Elliott Geriatric Genius blogger and author of Last Night at the Old Town Ale House

Close Encounters of a Chicago Kind

=This week in 2011, The Chicago Reader wrote a review of Vicki Quade's play Late Night Catechism that helped vault her play into the spotlight again ( Review of Late Nite Catechism by The Reader ). She has done many more plays since then, and also penned a book for Eckhartz Press about her everyday encounters with her fellow Chicagoans. It's called Close Encounters of a Chicago Kind. 

 


Records Truly Is My Middle Name

=This week in 2013 (June 12), Bill Bailey, one of the WLS colleagues John Landecker writes about in his memoir, passed away. John's old friend appeared on the air after Landecker most nights in the early 70s. This is a free excerpt from the book about Bill. 


Your Dime My Dance Floor

=This week in 1992, the Chicago Bulls won the NBA Championship. Chet Coppock was there and told a few great stories about it in his book Your Dime My Dance Floor.


Always a Pleasure

=Hall of Fame basketball announcer Marv Albert is celebrating a birthday this week (June 12). Marv appears in Chuck Swirsky's book, Always a Pleasure.


$everance

=This week in 2007 (June 12), Rick Kaempfer's first novel, $everance, received an incredible array of reviews from people in the broadcasting industry. You can read all of them here, or just glance at these examples below...

  • “I thought this novel was just going to be an amusing story about radio. But the way Kaempfer has woven in elements of all media and politics is masterful, to say nothing of insightful, and frequently laugh-out-loud funny!”

    Broadcasting legend Bob Dearborn
  • “Rick Kaempfer’s “$everance” is whiplash-fast, choke-on-your-coffee funny, and ultimately frightening. Kaempfer has seen it all in the radio business, and has some dire predictions for the rest of the media, too. It’s the summer’s must-discuss beach read – and probably a sign of the apocalypse.”

    Paige Wiser, Chicago Sun Times


Surviving Sue

=Another great review of Surviving Sue. This one refers to the book's Women Power!


Nose Over Toes

 =This week in 2020 (June 15), the Daily Herald wrote a feature story about Nose Over Toes author Janet Sutherland.  You can read it here. 

=Janet is working on a new book for us called "Great Dames". She has been interviewing some of Chicago's most prominent female media professionals. Look for that book in the coming year. Here's a list of some of the women who will be featured in it...

Dorothy Tucker
Candace Jordan
Felicia Middlebrook 
Leslie Keiling
Andrea Darlas
Carol Marin
Ida B Wells
Catherine Johns
Kai El Zabar
Melissa Forman
Mary Sandburg
Linda Yu


*Of course, the bird picture above is a Baltimore Oriole.