Monday, April 20, 2026

Publishing Portal--April 20, 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.


Meet Three Eckhartz Press authors this week!


*Jim Slusher

The author of the 2026 CWA Book of the Year award To Nudge The World will be out and about for two different appearances. One this week, and one next week. He will be at Monarch Landing in Naperville on April 21 (tomorrow), and at Aurora Public Library (Santori Branch) on  Thursday April 30, 7-8pm.


*Jeff Reiter

=We've seen the shirt Jeff Reiter just purchased for his upcoming appearances, and let's just say that you won't be able to miss the author of The Best of Words on Birds. If you don't immediately see his table at the Wheaton Public Library Local Authors Fest this Saturday (April 25) from 1-4pm, look for a man wearing a bird shirt. That's almost certainly your man.

=Jeff has a few more appearances coming in May, by the way. At Washington and Lee University May 2, and back to the Wheaton Public Library on May 19 (he will be doing a birding presentation that day as well).


*Gloria Golec

=Jeff won't be the only Eckhartz Press author at the Wheaton Public Library Local Authors Fest this Saturday (April 25) from 1-4pm. He'll be joined by Gloria Golec. Gloria will be signing and selling her well-regarded memoir about growing up in Chicago during the 1940s & 1950s. It's called South Side Memories.


From the pre-sale shelves

=That sound you hear is the printing press grinding out copies of our two upcoming books. They are available now for pre-sale (Beyond the Glass, Slivers). They ship in a few weeks.

=We're looking at launch parties in May for both books. Randy's is tentatively set for May 14. Vicki's for May 28. More details as we get closer to those dates.

=Vicki got her first copy of Slivers this weekend.



Bubble Boy

=Bubble Boy author Bob "Wilbur" Williams was featured this week in the Subtack of The Profitable Author, Sharon Woodhouse. You can read it here. 

=Happy 127th birthday this week to Western Illinois University (April 24). The university is certainly featured in Bubble Boy. Some of the most memorable stories of the book take place there, including the answer to the question...what on earth is going on in these photos?



Sirens in the Loop

=Thanks to everyone who came out to see Jim Elsener again this past week at the Admiral. He sold out of books for the second appearance in a row.

=Another stellar review was posted this week about Sirens in the Loop...Written by Ray Jones. Ray Jones studied journalism at the University of Illinois, benefiting from the stories and “lessons learned” of professors who themselves were distinguished alumni of the City News Bureau. 

    Sirens in the Loop tells the history of the “City News Bureau,” an agency that was originally set up and financed by Chicago’s newspapers, over 100 years ago, to provide group coverage of breaking news events.

    The city had a large number of high-circulation newspapers at that time. And their editors realized that it was inefficient for each and every one of them to dispatch a reporter to the same scene when something newsworthy happened.

    That “newsworthy something” might be something relatively tame, like a political rally or a press conference. The Bureau’s specialty, however, was big city mayhem. Murders, robberies, fires, kidnappings, mass casualty events or civil disturbances of any kind were CNB’s stock in trade. This dependence on crime and/or turmoil inspired the title “Sirens in the Loop,” the Loop being a nickname for center city Chicago.

    The reporters who went to work there were mostly young. Some were recent journalism graduates or rookie reporters moving on from other news outlets. Others, however, came simply as a way to explore career options. What they all had in common, after joining CNB, was an experience that many called “journalism bootcamp.” The assignments tested their stamina, their curiosity, and their ability to gather information under often extreme or violent circumstances.

    They had to cultivate the skill of drawing out information from ordinary people who’d just been traumatized or tight-lipped first responders whose regard for reporters was not typically exalted.

    The book explains how all of these fresh recruits learned how to cover “hard news,” not the “soft news” that involves in-depth features or human-interest stories. Hard news, however, could also be so-named because it is indeed hard to cover. Gathering facts accurately, when the chaos may still be in progress, is a challenging assignment, even for experienced reporters.

    Many aspiring reporters ended up leaving the bureau after only a few weeks or only a few days. In some cases, they left after just a few hours, perhaps after encountering their first dead body.

    While its stories are centered in Chicago, the book offers useful insights for anyone interested in the skills and instincts that journalists anywhere need to be successful. One of the CNB’s distinctions was the number of alums who went on to achieve success, not only in journalism but in other career paths as well. The doggedness and discipline they developed at CNB seem to have served all of them well.

    The book is loaded with brief, first person narratives reflecting the highlights of time spent at CNB. These alumni stories are interesting, insightful and in some cases even a bit jarring. After all, the “boot camp” aspect of the CNB experience was not easy to endure. And not everyone enjoys being an ambulance chaser.

    In the words of one CNB alum: “When you were putting together a professional resume, the CNB was a nice place to have been from. But it was not necessarily a nice place to be.”




=What a day it was for John Owens and David Fletcher this past weekend. They got to show off the first episode of their docuseries about Dick Allen at the Chicago Public Library in Bridgeport. Dick Allen's son Richard Jr. was there, along with a host of other luminaries. Here are a few pictures from the event...

=The gang all reconvenes in Denver (May 9) for SeriesFest 2026. That's where they pitch the series to distributors. Based on the reaction this thing has been getting, it bodes well for a successful weekend.



=Eric Litt participated in the Book Fair at Dovetail Brewery on Sunday. 


Doin the Cruise

=Mitch Michaels was out there helping celebrate Record Store Day on Saturday at Blue Village Vinyl in Westmont. Is there anywhere in the world Mitch feels more comfortable than a record store? Thanks to everyone who came out to say hello, including fellow radio pro Jimmy Mac McInerney.

=Last week this year the legendary disc jockey was chosen for induction into the Illinois Rock and Roll Hall of Fame! Mitch was invited to the Hall of Fame to do a book signing and book chat along with fellow Eckhartz Press author Larry Rosenbaum (The Flip Side). Ken Churilla (middle in the photo below) co-wrote both books.


The Flip Side

=Speaking of The Flip Side. From the Flip Side archives. April 21, 1978—Bedlam ensues at Leif Garrett live appearance at Flip Side Records in Hoffman Estates. Fans crashed through the plate glass window to get at their hero.


=Your chance to meet Carl and Larry Rosenbaum (The Flip Side) is coming May 8 at North Shore Senior Center. More details coming next week.


EveryCubEver

=Thank you to everyone who has bought the 7th edition of EveryCubEver. We've sold quite a few of them. In fact, we just had to go back to the printer for another printing. Of course, two of the busiest sales days for this book are coming up soon: May 10 (Mother's Day) and June 21 (Father's Day). If Mom and/or Dad are Cub fans, they'll love the 7th edition of this book!

=Three significant birthdays this week are featured in the book, Hall of Famers Hack Wilson (April 26)Rogers Hornsby (April 27) and Joe McCarthy (April 21). They were all part of the highly dsyfunctional Cubs teams of the early 1930s.  Rick Kaempfer excerpts EveryCubEver on his blog this week to celebrate their birthdays.(That boy in the photo with Joe McCarthy is a young Bill Veeck Jr.)

 
=This week in 2019, Rick Kaempfer appeared at the Orland Park Sports Card show to sign and sell the book. Randy Richardson was also there signing and selling his book CubsessionsThat's former Cubs catching great Randy Hundley in the photo with him below.


=This week in 2023, Rick Kaempfer appeared on the Andrea Darlas podcast to talk about it.

=This week's birthday boy (April 25), former Chicago Bull Dave Corzine, has a copy of the book.




=This week last year Tony Fitzpatrick published two items that later found their way into The Sun at the End of the Road. He paid tribute to Cooper Cooperson who passed away (April 22, 2025), and he debuted Collared Lizard 1974. Read his Instagram posting to learn more. Of course, the essay and artwork are in The Sun at the End of the Road.

I Bear Witness

=This week in 2025 (April 23), we lost the great Steve McMichael. Dan McNeil wrote two incredibly entertaining and heartfelt chapters in the book I Bear Witness about his old friend and collaborator.

=Ten years ago this week (April 20), Bears great Doug Buffone passed away. In the final chapter of Dan McNeil's book he pays tribute to the Bears we've lost in the last few years. Because Dan and Doug worked together in sports radio, his tribute to Buffone was especially poignant. (Photo: Ed O'Bradovic and Doug Buffone)


The Kiss of Night

=Happy birthday (April 27) to Mark Wukas

=The Kiss of Night author Mark Wukas was featured on Rick Kogan's radio show on WGN this week last year. 


*420, man

=We got you covered.


Life Behind the Camera

=One of the many celebrity fans of Chuck Quinzio's book Life Behind the Camera is this fellow who spent many years in front of the camera, the great George Takei. George is celebrating a birthday this week (April 20).



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

=One of the features in Pat Motto's book about her hilarious pre-marriage love life is naming a song  for each chapter as a potential musical accompanient while you read. This week is the anniversary of one of those songs. April 20, 1959—"Puppy Love" by Paul Anka was released. It is Pat's suggested musical accompaniment for chapter 1 of her book.


Last Comiskey

=This week in 2024, Ken Smoller was making the rounds promoting his book Last ComiskeyHe was in the Chicago Sun Times. Thanks to Jeff Agrest for this mention...First-time author Ken Smoller’s “Last Comiskey,” an adaptation of Matt Flesch’s 2023 documentary, will be released in May. It serves as a companion piece, combining Smoller’s photographs from the 1990 Sox season, content from the film and new material.

=And he appeared on WCIU, The U, with Kenny McReynolds.


Monkey in the Middle

=Dobie Maxell was in the news this week in 2016. The Milwaukee Journal reviewed his book Monkey in the Middle and had this to say...

    The book opens with Maxwell sharing his rough start in life, which included having a drug addict mother who abandoned him and his siblings, and a father who was in a motorcycle gang. Maxwell was separated from his siblings — they have since reunited — and raised from age 5 months by his grandparents near 20th and Hampton.
    Maxwell calls himself a dented can and, sarcastically, Mr. Lucky. But he has made a life working on the radio in Milwaukee, Chicago, Reno and Los Angeles, and in stand-up comedy, now mostly as a regular at Zanies clubs in the Chicago area. He also teaches comedy.
    Maxwell's humorous approach to life comes through often in the book, even in his exchanges with federal agents and prosecutors. "I realize you're a comedian, but this is damn serious," one of them warns him.

=Just a year later, this week in 2017, Dobie threw out the first pitch at a Brewers game in Milwaukee.


 The Loop Files

=Two of the contributors to the Loop Files are celebrating birthdays this week. Happy birthday to Vince Argento (April 21) and Kathy Voltmer (April 27). Both contributed stories to the oral history. In the first picture, that's Vince on the far right. He and his wife Liz are among the couples who met at the Loop and later got married, just like Rick and Bridget Kaempfer (also in the photo)


=A frequent guest on the Loop, Mayor Richard M. Daley, is also celebrating a birthday this week (April 24). That's Hizzoner in a photo with Loopers Carol Harmon, Catherine Beckman, Colleen Colleton, and Sandy Stahl.
=One last Looper this week. Former Loop program director Bill Klaproth's birthday is April 27. That's Bill in a photo with fellow Loopers Matt Bisbee and Rick Kaempfer.


Records Truly Is My Middle Name

=This week in 1954, Joseph Nye Welch appeared at the McCarthy hearings and famously declared, "At long last, have you left no sense of decency?" That wasn't just a crucial moment in American history, it was a crucial moment in John Landecker's life. Joseph Nye Welch is the grandfather of his first wife and the great-grandfather of his two daughters. He tells that story in this free excerpt from Records Truly Is My Middle Name.


Cameo

=This week in 2018, while Rick Kaempfer was down in New Orleans making Cameo available in jewelry stores that sell cameos, author Beth Jacobellis was on the Patti Vasquez show on WGN Radio talking about the book.



=Beth has recently finished her second book. It should be coming out on Eckhartz Press in the near future.

Always a Pleasure

=Three of the people featured in Chuck Swirsky's book were born this week in history. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver (April 25), the late Blackhawks great Tony Esposito (April 25), and Chuck's partner on Bulls broadcasts, Bill Wenningon (April 26)




Brandwidth

=This week in 2018, Kipper McGee appeared on the Brandstorm podcast to talk about his book Brandwidth. 



 Inside Melania

=This week is the real Melania Trump's birthday (April 26). The fake one, Melania impersonator Lauren LoGiudice does the world's best Melania impersonation, and wrote a whole book about it for Eckhartz Press.



 Best Seat in the House

=This week in 2015, Bruce Bohrer made the trek into enemy territory to promote his Cubs book about his years as a Wrigley Field usher. Penny Golden interviewed him on-stage at the Beverly Arts Center.

 



=Bob Shannon's great book about radio personalities features an entire chapter about this week's birthday boy, the late Casey Kasem. Casey also makes an appearance in the Rick Kaempfer spy thriller set in 1976, Back in the DDR.



We Have Company

=Peter Frampton (born April 22) gets the full-chapter treatment in Bobby Skafish's great memoir about his rock and roll interviews...


The Balding Handbook

=This week in 2013, David Stern appeared on the Mancow television show on WPWR-TV. Who did he meet there? Chicago sportscaster Mike North, shown here taunting Dave with his full head of hair.



Hospital, Heal Thyself!

=When we sign our authors they maintain the copyright to their work, and we agree in advance that we won't hold them back if they get a better opportunity. That's what happened this week in 2024 with Mark Taylor. He was very grateful for all we did for him...

“I was feeling pretty destitute when a friend referred me to Chicago’s Eckhartz Press in 2023. My first and only book, “Hospital, Heal Thyself,” had been rejected for several years by scores of publishers and book agents. They said it didn’t neatly fit into a marketing niche. Admittedly, it was a tough sell: part biography of Eugene Litvak, a math genius and Soviet émigré-turned- healthcare innovator, part jeremiad railing against a broken healthcare delivery system. But the very qualities that other publishers shied away from, Eckhartz Publisher David Stern embraced. He and his talented professional staff helped me to get my book into better shape and published it in early 2024.  

By mutual agreement, I maintained ownership of the copyright to my book. So when a large international publisher expressed interest in producing “Hospital, Heal Thyself” for a wider national audience, Eckhartz and Stern could not have been more supportive. He was kind, generous and totally helpful, a writer’s dream!  A few weeks later John Wiley & Sons, a publisher with deep contacts in business, academia and foreign language markets, agreed to publish my book. That never would have happened without Eckhartz’ help. I’m so grateful to David Stern and the Eckhartz staff for their support and assistance.”   =Mark Taylor, April 2024

=His book went on to win Chicago Writers Association "Book of the Year".   



Publishing Portal will be a day late next week. Look for it on Tuesday, April 28. 

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Minutia Men

EveryCubEver--Hall of Famers

  


Yes, it's true, I'm not doing an update of EveryCubEver this season. On the other hand, I do plan on featuring every Hall of Fame Cub on or around their birthdays this year right here on this blog. And those entries will be from EveryCub Ever. 

Three Cubs Hall of Famers were born this week. Joe McCarthy (April 21, 1887), Hack Wilson (April 26, 1900), and Rogers Hornsby (April 27, 1896). All of them were on the Cubs at the same time.



Joe McCarthy 1887–1978
(Cubs manager 1926-1930)
Joe McCarthy was given the nickname of “Marse Joe” by
sportswriters. “Marse” is a Southern English rendition of the
word “master,” and from the moment he took over the Cubs
in 1926, Marse Joe let it be known that he was in charge. He
led them to the National League pennant in 1929, and never
had a losing season as Cubs manager, but they fired him
after the 1930 season because they didn’t think he had what
it took to get to the next level. Unfortunately for the Cubs,
they never got to that next level without him, but Joe got to
the next level with the Yankees seven times. Two of those
times he beat the Cubs in the World Series. Marse Joe is in
baseball’s Hall of Fame.
    Historical note: Joe signed the contract to become Cubs
manager, on the day Lenny Bruce was born in New York
(1925).



Hack Wilson 1900–1948 (Cubs 1926-1931)
Hack is still remembered for his record 1930 season when he
drove in 191 runs, but during his Cubs days he was known
for more than just slugging the baseball. He was known as
a notorious hellraiser. Wilson had several run-ins with the
law, his teammates, opposing players, and even fans. He
was arrested for violating the Prohibition Act in 1926, but
he was just getting started. Hack and his drinking buddy/
teammate Pat Malone got into a fistfight in a hotel because
they thought somebody was laughing at them. In 1928,
he was fined after charging into the stands to fight with
a heckler. Gabby Hartnett and Joe Kelly had to physically
remove him off the fan — and thousands of fans swarmed
the field. Hack once charged into the opposing dugout to
punch a Reds pitcher…after Hack hit the ball. He was tagged
out in the dugout. That same night he punched another
Reds pitcher in the team train. A famous story, which
may or may not be a legend, involved Cubs manager Joe
McCarthy and Hack. To show Hack the dangers of drinking,
Joe took a worm and dropped it in a glass of whiskey. The
worm quickly died. “Now what does that prove?” asked Joe.
Wilson thought about it for a while and replied, “It proves
that if you drink whiskey, you won’t get worms!” Through
it all, Hack was the most feared hitter in the National
League. Hack still holds Cubs career records for best onbase
percentage (.492), slugging percentage (.590), and OPS
(1.002). He led the Cubs in homers for the entire decade of
the 1920s (121), led the league in homers four years in a
row, in walks and RBI twice, and led the Cubs to the World
Series in 1929. For many years he held the single season
home run record (56), and he still has the single season RBI
record (191). But in 1931, things started to go south. Hack
and player/manager Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby didn’t
get along and were constantly at odds. It got so bad that the
Cubs traded Hack to the Dodgers for Burleigh Grimes. Hack
had one more good year with the Dodgers, but the end was
near. He retired after the 1934 season. Near the end of his
Wilson’s life he appeared on a network radio show where
he spoke about the effects of “Demon Rum.” This was just
a few months before his death on November 23, 1948. He
was only 48. His body was unclaimed for three days before
National League president Ford Frick paid for the funeral.
The veterans committee named Hack to baseball’s Hall of
Fame in 1979.


Rogers Hornsby 1897–1963 (Cubs 1929-1932)
It’s hard to imagine that one of the greatest players in history
was not popular in Chicago – but Hornsby clearly was not.
Hornsby had one great season for the Cubs, their World
Series year of 1929, and he became the manager at the very
end of the following year. Despite managing a notoriously
rowdy team, he ruled with an iron fist. He didn’t just ban
drinking (which, of course, was illegal at the time), he
banned reading, movies, soda pop, smoking, and eating in
the clubhouse. He was so hated by his players that when the
1932 team won the pennant (after he was fired), the players
voted to give him zero cents of a playoff share, even though
he had been with the team for 4 months.
    Their hatred of him went much deeper than his strict
rules. He was in deep debt to many of the players on the
team. The Commissioner of Baseball, Judge Kennesaw
Mountain Landis, became so alarmed by the reports he
was getting about Hornsby, that he sent letters warning the
team and the players about him. He also sent one to the NL
President demanding any and all information he had about
Hornsby’s gambling. Hornsby was defiant about it until the
very end: “Gambling’s legal,” he would say. He never bet on
baseball, only the horses. Probably influenced by Hornsby’s
star power, Landis chose not to punish him. But his letters
to the club led to an internal Cubs investigation. Team
owner William Wrigley and team president William Veeck
discovered that Hornsby had borrowed $11,000 from his
own players. That’s when they fired him and replaced him
with Charlie Grimm. Grimm led the 1932 team to the World
Series. Hornsby never experienced the playoffs again.
    Later in life he was hired by Wrigley’s son Phillip to
become the team’s first minor league batting instructor.
The same prickly personality and inability to understand
why people couldn’t naturally hit as well as he did, however,
made him as lousy at that job as he was as a manager. As
a player Rogers Hornsby had very few peers. His lifetime
batting average is .358. He hit .400 three different times. He
narrowly missed it a fourth time (.397). He won two MVP
awards, two triple crowns, and seven batting titles. And
he did all that while gambling away nearly every dime he
earned.