Friday, October 12, 2012

Myrtle Beach Condo


By Donald G. Evans

            I’ve never been to Myrtle Beach, but know plenty of people who have. In fact, for some friends the Myrtle Beach trip is a ritual, an annual excursion built around sun, water and golf. They revere Myrtle Beach and all it encompasses, like some people revere favorite sports teams or whiskeys.
            At the silent auction Saturday, you’ll have a chance to bid on a stay in a Myrtle Beach condo, donated by Rob Jackson.
            Rob is a writer and most recently the dedicated founder of The Great Lakes Cultural Review, of which I’m the Chicago editor. We had a five-city launch of the inaugural issue yesterday—Cleveland, Toronto, Buffalo, Milwaukee and at Open Books in Chicago. By all accounts, the simultaneous launch was a big success and the infant journal is alive and kicking.
            It’s a great idea and a beautiful first issue, filled with a lot of great writing, including some of our local luminaries like Stuart Dybek, Don DeGrazia, Bayo Ojikutu, Brendan Short and Jessie Morrison. Rob’s told me that he wants to bring Chicago’s great literature to other Great Lakes cities and vice-versa. I love the concept. It’s a mutual benefit for writers and readers to discover some of these great talents, and I think building content around the Great Lakes has meaning, and legs.
           
            Do yourself two favors this weekend: secure a trip to Myrtle Beach and get a copy of this new great literary journal.

Donald G. Evans is the founder and executive director of the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. He is the author of the novel Good Money After Bad and editor of the anthology Cubbie Blues: 100 Years of Waiting Till Next Year. His short story collection An Off-White Christmas will be published by Simon & Schuster later this year. He is the current Senior Artist-in-Residence at Chicago's Cliff Dwellers Club and the Chicago editor of the upstart journal Great Lakes Cultural Review. He serves on the committee that selects the annual Harold Washington Literary Award recipient, as well as the Chicago Literary Advisory Council of the American Writers Museum.
 

Zantho to be Served at Party


By Donald G. Evans

Wine, in its best, most precious incarnation, elevates not only dining but socialization to an art. Wine encourages fraternization, and the quality of the wine sets the tone for the quality of camaraderie.

Zantho is a very good wine. It looks, smells and tastes fantastic, and is a perfect complement to an intimate cultural gathering.

Thanks to Andy Taylor and Vin Divino, it will be the perfect complement to OUR intimate gathering tomorrow night.

“Wine has a cultural element,” said Andy, Vin Divino’s director of marketing. “There is obviously a huge food association; wine is the best beverage accompaniment.”

Zantho comes from the Burgenland region of Austria, southeast of Vienna near the Austria-Hungary border. The name and logo refer to a small lizard that lives in the vineyards in this area. Zantho produces three red wines from three different red grapes: Saint Laurent, Blaufrankisch and Zweigelt, a hybrid. It also produces a couple of whites—a sauvignon blanc, Gruner Veltliner and muskat.

The winery is a cooperative, meaning it does not own its own vineyards but sources grapes from area growers, with whom it has long-standing relationships and contracts. This allows Zantho to dictate farming methods, including a sophisticated tracking method from vine to winery, that ensure high quality. The wine is made under the watchful eye of renowned vintner Josef Umathum.

That standard of perfection is Vin Divino’s standard, period. Vin Divino has been importing wines for 19 years and in the process has established a reputation for absolute top shelf quality. Vin Divino represents about 25 wines from several countries, most prominently Italy but also Austria, Spain and Chile. It consistently turns down solicitations to represent other wines in order to maintain such a peerless selection.

“It’s critically important to select suppliers that have quality levels that are acceptable to us and more importantly the market in general,” Andy said.

Vin Divino got into the Austrian market about a decade ago. After attending Vie Vinum in Vienna, Vin Divino researched the market, forged relationships and began investigating the best of the best wine available in that region.


We’ll all get to taste the results for ourselves Saturday night. Zantho is the perfect complement to what I’m sure will be a night of generosity and fellowship. 



Donald G. Evans is the founder and executive director of the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. He is the author of the novel Good Money After Bad and editor of the anthology Cubbie Blues: 100 Years of Waiting Till Next Year. His short story collection An Off-White Christmas will be published by Simon & Schuster later this year. He is the current Senior Artist-in-Residence at Chicago's Cliff Dwellers Club and the Chicago editor of the upstart journal Great Lakes Cultural Review. He serves on the committee that selects the annual Harold Washington Literary Award recipient, as well as the Chicago Literary Advisory Council of the American Writers Museum.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Audentia Catering Cooking Classes!

By Hazel Afroilan

I met Joseph Bonavita about three months ago, in 
the summer and I was instantly aware of his generosity and charm.    Interestingly enough, he shared with me his passion in the culinary arts and Audentia LLC Catering and Restaurant Group, which he started with Chef Aaron Lahmon.  I was refreshed by how passionate he speaks of his work and how much dedication and time he puts into his business.

With a team of seven, Joe lives out his dream of making people happy through his food.  He says, "I believe dinner should be more than just feeding yourself; it should be a performance of mother nature's work."

Audentia, which is Latin for boldness or courage, fits right in with the kind of personality Joe gives off.  His passion for his work and the people he serves results in one-of-a-kind dishes.  

Audentia's Progressive American farm to table cuisine, coupled with driven team members are exactly what anyone needs from a simple, romantic dinner, to a grand celebration.  

Joseph Bonavita and Audentia LLC  has decided to donate cooking classes for two to the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame Silent Auction.  Valuing up to $800, this donation reflects just how generous and how willing they are to help. Anyone who wins this amazing treat, will be in for a memorable experience!


For more information about Audentia Catering, check out the link below:

Audentia Catering





Hazel Afroilan is a junior at DePaul University majoring in English and minoring in art history. She is currently interning at the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame and is leading the organization of this upcoming event. Afroilan is interested in creative writing, literature and the arts. Writing is something she humbly appreciates and learns from everyday and is taking advantage of the opportunity CLHOF has given her. Originally from a small suburb in Maryland, Afroilan has fallen in love with the city of Chicago and its expansive literary traditions.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Auction Catalogue


Auction Catalogue Available

The nearly complete auction listings can now be viewed at:


Several great items were donated after the program went to press, and we will post information about those later today or tomorrow.

If you plan to be at the auction, look at the catalogue now so you’re ready when bidding begins. If you do not plan to be there, find somebody who is going and ask him or her to do your bidding.








Monday, October 8, 2012

An Artist's Artist

By Donald G Evans




          Let me tell you what kind of woman Elysabeth Alfano is: she battered her wrist, then threw out her back, and during the midst of these horrible setbacks to her life and livelihood, she called to ask what she could do. For me.


          My first live introduction to Elysabeth was passing. She had agreed to bring out her film crew to our first induction ceremony at Northeastern Illinois University to shoot an episode of her show Fear No Art Chicago. She was all bustle and business, nabbing Audrey Niffenegger and Sara Paretsky and Bill Savage for interviews, searching for the late-arriving Stuart Dybek, fiddling with more perfect backdrops—essentially trying to take full advantage of every single opportunity presented in this brief time before the ceremony began.


          The episode turned out absolutely fabulous. It was filled with smart, piercing commentary and weaved into and out of Chicago literature past and present. It captured the spirit of what we were trying to do, on that our first big night as a literary organization. It occurred to me then that among Elysabeth’s many, many gifts, her chief talent was an ability to realize potential. She treats every moment and especially every relationship as precious, and if occasionally she seems quick it’s a decisiveness built on the desire to create.


          Elysabeth, whether consciously or not, has spent her career redefining the word art. She started out, years ago, owning a glass art gallery in River North, then moved into textiles and fashion design, and has shown, in her many projects and collaborations since, a grand appreciation of creative endeavors of all stripes. Her writing on the Huffington Post, as well as her interviews on Fear No Art Chicago and the joyous The Dinner Party, celebrate and probe musicians, painters, actors, directors, writers, chefs, and on an on. The enormity of Elysabeth’s curiosity shows in her selection of guests that, in music, say, run the gambit from classical to folk to pop.


          Elysabeth knows a lot of people. People she’s interviewed; people she’s written about; people with whom she’s collaborated; people who know people she knows; people involved with her other projects, like the Beethoven Festival.


          When I asked Elysabeth if she might help with the silent auction, I hoped it would interest her. But I also knew that she had plenty of her own projects to tend to, and getting involved with the CLHOF was a thankless undertaking.


          She listened: another thing at which Elysabeth is especially good. In the place of a pause, you could almost hear her sleeves being rolled up.


          Elysabeth helped make contacts and put into place much of what will ensure Saturday night is special. From reaching out to Nora Dunn to calling in a favor with a wine distributor to tweeting out invitations to securing donations to making her own donations to recommending upgrades to the party details, Elysabeth’s whatever-it-takes approach got results.


          I’m in awe of Elysabeth’s combination of ability, tenaciousness and talent, and grateful for all she’s done in advance of Saturday’s event.


          At first opportunity, go find Elysabeth’s columns on Huffington Post. Google her past Fear No Art Chicago episodes. Then get yourself tickets to one of the next Dinner Parties, either Oct. 29 or Nov. 26.


          The chef on Oct. 29 is Brown Trout’s Sean Sanders, and the guests are Michelle Boone (Chicago Commissioner of Cultural Affairs), David Manilow (Executive Director of Check Please!), and Susanna Negovan (Editor of the Sun-Times’ Daily Splash).


          FEAR NO ART CHICAGO


          I’ll be there on Nov. 26, as I don’t want to miss Wait, Wait…Don’t Tell Me! host Peter Segal SNL alum Tim Kazurinsky, violinist Rachel Barton Pine, or the food from Nellcote’s Jared Van Camp.


          Click Here for Tickets



          Elysabeth has donated a pair of tickets to an upcoming event, but you’ll have to outbid me for those. If you fail, and you might, go anyway. 




Donald G. Evans is the founder and executive director of the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. He is the author of the novel Good Money After Bad and editor of the anthology Cubbie Blues: 100 Years of Waiting Till Next Year. His short story collection An Off-White Christmas will be published by Simon & Schuster later this year. He is the current Senior Artist-in-Residence at Chicago's Cliff Dwellers Club and the Chicago editor of the upstart journal Great Lakes Cultural Review. He serves on the committee that selects the annual Harold Washington Literary Award recipient, as well as the Chicago Literary Advisory Council of the American Writers Museum.




Sunday, October 7, 2012

Does She Juggle, too?

By Donald G Evans

You might know Delphine Pontvieux as the author of the thriller ETA and the publisher of Miss Nyet Publishing. Or you might know her as a tri-athlete, scuba instructor, waterboarder or rock climber. Maybe you’re aware of her work as an actress in LOL, where she played Joan of Arc’s mother. You could have bumped into her in her travels as an international saleswoman and promoter in the music and entertainment industries. Perhaps you just know her as the really tall and attractive French woman.
Now, in a kick to the face to all of us trying to get one thing right, she designs jewelry.
Delphine has been kind enough to donate the CONCHO bracelet to our silent auction. It is a wraparound-style bracelet made with Latigo leather, designed to go around one’s wrist four times. The concho is an intricately-designed decorative metal piece. I’m no fashion consultant, but this is a beautiful piece and will make a nice gift. If you want to order more jewelry from Delphine, send an email to: anchorbracelets@gmail.com
This is the second straight year Delphine has made a nice donation to the event. Delphine is a very good writer, terrific friend, and tireless supporter of our literary community. I see her at a lot of the major events, and when CWA or the CLHOF puts out the call for participation, she usually answers. That kind of commitment takes time and energy, but ultimately it makes our community so much stronger.

Donald G. Evans is the founder and executive director of the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. He is the author of the novel Good Money After Bad and editor of the anthology Cubbie Blues: 100 Years of Waiting Till Next Year. His short story collection An Off-White Christmas will be published by Simon & Schuster later this year. He is the current Senior Artist-in-Residence at Chicago's Cliff Dwellers Club and the Chicago editor of the upstart journal Great Lakes Cultural Review. He serves on the committee that selects the annual Harold Washington Literary Award recipient, as well as the Chicago Literary Advisory Council of the American Writers Museum.



8 Eyes to Shoot Auction


By Donald G Evans

8 Eyes Photography, comprised of the husband-wife tandem of Pat and Ellen Prather, will be on hand to capture all the fun at Hilton/Asmus Contemporary. Ellen and Pat are supremely talented photographers and boundlessly kind people. They’ve shot our first two induction ceremonies (and will do so at the third), our first Fuller Award and Carl A. Kroc Award luncheon, as well as other special events at the Cliff Dwellers Club and Sanfilippo Estate. I see them here and there clicking away in support of one good cultural cause or another.
One of my favorite things to do after an event finishes is scroll through the index of 8 Eyes pictures. There, always, are the posed shots you want and need, but there, too, are surprising candid and still shots that capture the essence of the event.
I love the photos 8 Eyes took of Gene Wolfe riding the carousel, and the Robin Fisher Dancers performing their routine, and the Young Chicago Authors enacting a scene, and Marc Smith scrunching his face during a Carl Sandburg poetry recitation.
I could go on and on.
Ellen and Pat have the eyes of artists and the acumen of business people, and in the end the combination leads them to places both imagined and not.
We’re lucky to have them at Saturday night’s event.

Donald G. Evans is the founder and executive director of the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. He is the author of the novel Good Money After Bad and editor of the anthology Cubbie Blues: 100 Years of Waiting Till Next Year. His short story collection An Off-White Christmas will be published by Simon & Schuster later this year. He is the current Senior Artist-in-Residence at Chicago's Cliff Dwellers Club and the Chicago editor of the upstart journal Great Lakes Cultural Review. He serves on the committee that selects the annual Harold Washington Literary Award recipient, as well as the Chicago Literary Advisory Council of the American Writers Museum.