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.

Monday, June 01, 2026

Publishing Portal--June 1, 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.


Write City Review, Volume 5

=This product of the Chicago Writers Association is going to be sold at their Chicago Writes writers conference later this month, but it's actually available right now at Eckhartz Press. The list of people who contributed to it is pretty amazing. Contributors include: Abdulkareem Abdulkareem, Damiana Andonova, Caitlin C. Baker, Jason Battle, Jim Bellanca, Autumn Bettinger, Dom Blanco, Melvin Brown, Dan Burns, Daniel Carbaugh, Jennifer Chapman, Tim Chapman, Albert DeGenova, James Drummond, Doreen Duffy, Dorothy Garcia, Aruna Gurumurthy, Elizabeth Hereford, Antonia Hildebrand, Stephanie Iancu, Anastasia Jill, Melissa Jornd, Laurinda Lind, Richard Luftig, Alison McBain, Tom Meyer, Debasish Mishra, Ann Mumaw, Lana Orndoff, Peter Pawinski, Amy Rains, David Rogers, Purbasha Roy, Heather Sager, Mary Salisbury, Nnadi Samuel, Samuel Samba, Kay Severinsen, Jack Silberberg, Paul Smith, Hillary Steinberg, Kelly J. Sullivan, Sam Szanto, PJ Temple, Jeffery Allen Tobin, Cesar Toscano, Jennifer Vasicek and Lee Clark Zumpe. Congrats to editor Maggie Smith for putting it all together. Cover photo by Randy Richardson.

=Speaking of the Chicago Writers Association, last year this week New City named the people who run the CWA in their Lit 50 list, Randy Richardson (a 3-time, soon-to-be 4-time Eckhartz Press author) and Samantha Hoffman. Congrats to those two. They definitely deserve the attention and praise.



=A big week for Russ Fahrner and his 3rd Eckhartz Press book, Face Your Monster. It's now available for pre-sale at Eckhartz Press. Russ has the very first copy, hot off the press. The rest are being printed as you read this. Pre-order your copy today.

=Face Your Monster chronicles Russ Fahrner’s eight-phase journey through treatment for leukemia, including a grueling five-week hospitalization for a stem cell transplant.



=Some photos from a memorable launch party of Vicki Atkinson's debut novel Slivers. Big, happy crowd came out to support Vicki. (Photos by Frank Muci)









The Sun at the End of the Road

=Tony Fitzpatrick may be gone, but his books like The Sun at the End of the Road and his artwork will live on forever. The Sun Times had a nice piece last week about the auction of his "uniquely Chicago" artwork.  Read about it here. 


Bubble Boy

=It's hard to describe what makes Bubble Boy author Bob "Wilbur" Williams so unique, although this new interview does a pretty good job of showing the many different sides of this talented author.



The Loop Files

=The Loop exhibit at the Museum of Broadcast Communications will have a new neighbor soon. The Museum acquired the entire set from Stephen Colbert's The Late Show, and it will be displayed very soon as part of their Evolution of Late Night exhibit. Honored to be in the same neighborhood. Read the full story here.

=This week in 1980 (June 2), this commercial for the Loop debuted. It starred the face of the Loop, the stunning actress/model Lorelei Shark. Lorelei naturally appears in the book The Loop Files. A framed poster of her is also part of the Loop exhibit at the Museum of Broadcast Communications.

=This week in 1986 (June 6), three of the biggest stars in Loop history (Johnny B & Steve & Garry) appeared on stage together at Poplar Creek. The concert was a sell-out. This photo of Brandmeier and Dahl was taken backstage, and is featured in the book.

=One of the people featured in The Loop Files is Mike Veeck who was instrumental in the creation of Disco Demolition. ABC-7 spoke to Mike, along with his son Night Train, because they are back in baseball. Watch it here.


Chili Dog MVP

=The movie is coming to Chicago later this month.

=This is a momentous week in Chili Dog MVP history. It was this week in 1972 (June 4) that Dick Allen was on the bench for the second game of a double header, and was in the clubhouse having a chili-dog, when his manager went looking for him to pinch hit in the bottom of the ninth. Allen got dressed, walked up to home plate, and slugged the game winning homer. That's the reason the book is titled the way it is. One of the co-authors, David Fletcher, appeared on this podcast to describe the story. 

=On the 50th anniversary of that moment (2022), the White Sox pre-game show talked about it as well...


Records Truly Is My Middle Name 

=Speaking of 50th anniversaries, the latest issue of Illinois Entertainer came out today, and features a write up about the 50th anniversary of John Records Landecker's momentous day at Woodfield Mall with John Travolta. Read it here.

=This week in 2010 (June 3), the creator of the Trivial Pursuit game, Chris Haney, passed away in Canada. John Landecker was a big star in Canada during the early days of the game, and turned it into a radio masterpiece. He writes about it Records Truly Is My Middle Name, but you can hear an example of that radio feature here. 

=Records Truly Is My Middle Name contributor Al Rosen is celebrating a birthday this week (June 7). Al was Landecker's engineer at WLS during his early years in Chicago and tells some incredible stories about the way the Radio Hall of Famer approached his craft. Here's one of them...

    I started working with John that first night, and as he's speaking on the air he looks at me and points to his headphones, something's not right. 

    Now before working at WLS I had been an engineer board operator at WABC in New York working with Cousin Bruce Morrow and Dan Ingram, so I was used to working with DJ's and the biggest problem was always "I can't hear myself" 

    So I tried to increase the level in John's headphones, and then brought the music level down a little so he could hear himself better. After the first break he told me it still wasn't right, so in the next stop set I tried again, lowering the music level even more.  John had this frustrated look on his face and told me the level was still wrong.  I had John's mic going way into the red on the meter and the music level down around 40 percent so I didn't see how I could make him any louder. 

    I will never forget what John told me next.  He said, "No no, I want the MUSIC louder and my mic brought down!  I want to be INSIDE the record!!"

    My mind started reeling.  For one thing, No DJ had ever told me to bring his voice DOWN, and second it DID sound amazing. When John did an introduction over the intro of a Chicago record, his voice was actually just a little lower than Peter Cetera's!  it DID put him inside the music and I think was a subliminal part of the "sound" of the Landecker show. 


Sirens in the Loop and The Kiss of Night

 =How about this for an anniversary. On June 1, 1890, City News Bureau was founded. That's such a momentous occasion we have two books about that esteemed organization, one non-fiction (Sirens in the Loop) and one fiction (The Kiss of Night).

=Next month we'll feature both of them in a double event. Mark Wukas (The Kiss of Night) and Jim Elsener (Sirens in the Loop) are co-hosting a "City News Book Gala" on Saturday, July 11 from 5-7 pm at the Edgewater Historical Society Museum - 5358 N. Ashland, Chicago.  

=What makes Mark Wukas tick? He sent us this note shortly after his book was released...

    I paid a debt of gratitude this weekend and left a copy of The Kiss of Night on James T. Farrell’s grave in Calvary Catholic Cemetery. If you’ve read any of the Studs Lonigan trilogy, you recognized how much he influenced my vision of Chicago.



Take Me Back to Chicago

=On June 3, 1987, the film The Untouchables was released. Doug E. Jones features a quote from that movie to describe some of the actions in his novel Take Me Back to Chicago:

“They pull a knife, you pull a gun. He sends one of yours to the hospital, you send one of his to the morgue. That’s the Chicago way.”


Celtic Knot

=A chance to hear Bob Conlon is coming soon. He'll be on Chicago Irish Radio on June 13th with Siobhan O'Connor. The show streams around the world on Saturday mornings @www.1490.am

 =A year ago Bob Conlon was just getting started selling his novel Celtic Knot. We had no way of knowing it would be one of our top sellers for the year. Bob is a selling-machine. It helps when the book itself is excellent. This week last year he conducted his very first interview about the book. Read the entire interview here.

=In August Bob has a very big event coming. More details in the next few weeks. A tease of it below...
  


=Imagine being at home watching your favorite show (in this case Svengoolie), when suddenly you see yourself on the screen. That happened to Nick Digilio this weekend...

=By the way, rumor has it that Rich Koz (Svengoolie) will be writing the Foreword to Nick's next book, which will be about Nick's favorite horror films. Stay tuned for more information.

The Flip Side

=A few incredibly important moments in Flip Side history occurred this week over the years. On June 7, 1976, Carl and Larry Rosenbaum opened their biggest Flip Side Records location in Chicagoland, at 2348 W. Higgins Road in Hoffman Estates. Most of the big in-store record events in the next decade took place at this location, including this one with Styx guitarist Tommy Shaw...

=Just one year later (June 4, 1977), the biggest concert in Flip Side's history of concert promotion was staged at Soldier Field. It was called, The Super Bowl of Rock. Look at the sea of humanity.

=Both of these events, of course, are thoroughly reported in the book The Flip Side.


Last Comiskey

=We had the launch party for Last Comiskey in 2024. In case you missed it, author Ken Smoller has posted a bunch of great pictures and written a blog post about the event. Check that out here. Or, if you prefer to watch the video of the panel discussion from that launch party...

=Or, you can listen to this podcast interview...


Joe Jackson Plaintiff v Chicago American Baseball Club

=Baseball recently lifted the lifetime ban on Shoeless Joe Jackson. Authors David Fletcher and Jacob Pomrenke appeared on Ed Lynch's podcast to talk about their book, a trial transcript of the Shoeless Joe Jackson trial from 100 years ago. 


Grammar Moses

=This week the whole world celebrates International Cheese Day (June 4). What does that have to do with the great Eckhartz Press book Grammar Moses? The book includes the single best cheese joke ever told by humankind. Author Jim Baumann was forced to tell it during this podcast interview.


Safe Inside

=Lee Kingsmill's book Safe Inside was an honorable mention winner for the CWA Book of the Year in 2018. This week in 2018, it debuted as an e-book.


We Have Company

=Bobby Skafish's book We Have Company chronicles the many interviews he did with rock and roll luminaries during his career. One of them who gets the full chapter treatment is celebrating a birthday this week (June 5), the lead singer of the Psychedelic Furs, Richard Butler.



Signature Shoes

=These were the Signature Shoes of tennis player Bjorn Borg, an early adopter of the celebrity shoe craze. Naturally, they are featured in Ryan Trembath's book Signature Shoes. Borg is celebrating a birthday this week (June 6)


$everance

=Rick Kaempfer's first novel, Severance, is now available at Eckhartz Press. When the book debuted in 2007 (on another press, ENC Press), the reviews from broadcasting professionals were incredibly enthusiastic. Here's an example...


"Brilliant satire! I got a paper cut from the sarcasm. I wish I could say it was great fiction, but having worked in radio, I think it’s just really funny non-fiction. The reality in between the laughs will scare the hell out of you."

--Longtime radio personality and playwright Spike Manton



Wicker Park Wishes

=This week in 2021 (June 7), author Margaret Larkin got her first copy of her debut novel Wicker Park Wishes. Eckhartz Press publisher David Stern was on hand to snap a photo of that moment...


The Unplanned Life

=This week in 2020, author Roger Badesch appeared on WGN Radio with Rick Kogan to discuss his new memoir, The Unplanned Life. This is a photo of Roger with the two Ricks. Eckhartz Press publisher Kaempfer on the left, and the legendary Kogan on the right.


Protecting Children

=This week in 2014, Judge Michael Ian Bender appeared on this podcast to discuss the information that would form the basis of his Eckhartz Press book, Protecting Children. It would go on to become a top ten book in its Amazon category.


Recalled to Life

=This week in 2013 (June 3), the first novel from author Dan Burns was released via Eckhartz Press. The book was called Recalled to Life. Dan has gone on to write several more books, and has even written and produced a short film, but it all started here at Eckhartz Press. He is also one of the featured writers in the new Write City Review, Volume 5. (Available now!)


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

=One of the endearing features of Pat Motto's memoir To the Men I've Loved (God Help Them!) is the musicial accompanient suggestion at the beginning of each chapter. This week in history (June 4, 1965), the suggested musical accompanient of Chapter Three—(I can’t get no) Satisfaction--was released by The Rolling Stones. 


Printers Row Lit-Fest

=For years the Printer's Row Litfest was held in June (It's now in September). One year (June 6, 2015), three Eckhartz Press authors were the headliners (L-R: Rick Kaempfer, Joel Daly, John Records Landecker)


The Hidden Shamrock

=This week in 2012 was the first-ever multiple author appearance by Eckhartz Press authors. At the time, there were only three books available via Eckhartz Press. The four authors in this photo (along with moderator Mary Beth Horner) appeared on stage in Lincoln Park at the Hidden Shamrock. Left to right: Horner, Brendan Sullivan, Rick Kaempfer, Kim Strickland, Randy Richardson.) The three books available at Eckhartz Press at that time were The Living Wills, Down at the Golden Coin, and Cheeseland. All three are still available on our website.



The Radio Producer's Handbook
=The Radio Producer's Handbook is actually now owned by Simon & Schuster, but it was written in 2004 by Eckhartz Press publisher Rick Kaempfer and long-time producer John "Swany" Swanson. Swany recently left the radio business after a 35-year career, and Rick profiled him in his media column at Illinois Entertainer.