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Michael Ruhlman in Chicago to Promote "Ruhlman's 20"

Michael Ruhlman in Chicago to Promote "Ruhlman's 20"

The entire city has been abuzz with the news that famed food writer Michael Ruhlman is coming to town this week to promote his new book, Ruhlman's 20. Several events have already sold out (including one that sold out the day it was announced) but there are a few great ways you can still meet up with him. more ›

Interview: Nami Mun

Interview: Nami Mun

To say writer Nami Mun has led an interesting life would be a gross understatement. Mun was born in Seoul, South Korea and moved to the states with her family when she was young, growing up in the Bronx. A teen runaway, her jobs have included being a bartender, a photojournalist, a street vendor, an Avon Lady, and a criminal investigator. After getting her bachelors from UC Berkeley, she got her MFA form the University of Michigan, where she won a Hopwood Award for fiction and the Farrar Prize for Drama (she's also won a Pushcart Prize and earned several fellowships). Her work has appeared in The Iowa Review, Tin House, and the Evergreen Review. more ›

Interview: Lily Koppel, Author of <i>The Red Leather Diary</i>

Interview: Lily Koppel, Author of The Red Leather Diary

Lily Koppel, 22 and fresh out of Barnard, was already late for work when she rushed out of her New York apartment in 2003. She stopped when she saw several vintage steamer trunks piled on top of the building’s red dumpster. So, like any good reporter, she and her ballet flats dove in, literally, pulling out a beaded flapper dress, an old coat from Bergdorf's, saddle shoes that fit her like Cinderella's shoes, and at the bottom, a cracked red leather diary with gold edged pages and an open brass lock. more ›

Interview: Nathaniel Rich Gives Us Some Tongue

Interview: Nathaniel Rich Gives Us Some Tongue

the fiction bug was already in his head. While he was busy collecting information on the city and its legendary films, he was scratching ideas about languages and the idea of colossal writers on the back of his notebook, ideas aching to be explored. But he didn't tell anyone about them for five years. more ›

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