Hoekstra book gets All-Star treatment on MiLB.com!

MiLB.com, the official site of Minor League Baseball, calls Hoekstra's Cougars and Snappers and Loons, Oh My!, A Midwest League Field Guide an "irreverent travelogue" of league and its characters. Read the full article, Hoekstra takes the field in the Midwest, here!

Cubbie Blues Podcast

Cubbie Blues editor Donald Evans was interviewed by WGN 720 radio's Don Digilio on the eve of the Chicago Tribune Printers Row Lit Fest. Download and listen to the uncut MP3 podcast of that interview.

Sign the Petition!

Holy Cow! Can't Miss Press is a proud sponsor of The Common Fan Sings, a grassroots effort launched by Dave Cihla (co-creator of the Shawon-O-Meter) to let a regular Cubs fan sing "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" during the 7th inning stretch at Wrigley Field. Sign the petition to let Dave and other deserving Cubs fans carry on the tradition started by Harry Caray. Then view the video of Dave and some of his supporters singing "Happy Birthday" to Shawon at the Shawon-O-MeetUp at Murphy's Bleachers

Wednesday
Nov262008

Randy Richardson

Five Minutes With Randy Richardson

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MY BRUSH WITH THE CUBS: It was during the 1974 baseball season, when I was 12. My mom's boyfriend was friends with umpire Tom Gorman and he used his clout to get me into the Cubs dugout before a game. I have faded pictures to prove it. There's me, braces glistening in the sunlight and long, stringy hair spilling out of a well-worn Cubs hat, on the dugout steps and next to me is manager Jim Marshall. In another faded picture it is third baseman Bill Madlock with his arm resting on my shoulder. And in another it is utility infielder Billy Grabarkewitz. I also got a baseball signed by all of them as well as by many other Cubs, including Oscar Zamora, Steve Stone, Carmen Fanzone, Andy Thornton, Rick Monday and Billy Williams. That was an abysmal year for the Cubs; they went 66-96 and finished dead last in the N.L. East. But that day in the dugout was – and still is – my favorite Cubs memory.

 

WHO WERE YOU?: Between 1970-1976, I was, in my backyard, any player who wore a Cubs uniform. Unlike the Cubs players that played at Wrigley Field, the ones that played in my backyard always won. I'd twitch my fingers like Ernie at the plate. Or take a practice swing at my spit like Billy. The one that I most liked being was Jose Cardenal. He had a style all his own, both at the plate and on the field, and I always fooled the other team with that swinging bunt.

 

WORKING ON: The same thing I've been working on for the last three years, which is my second novel and a departure from my first, Lost in the Ivy, a murder mystery set around Wrigley Field. The work-in-progress is a tragicomic coming-of-age road story set in Wisconsin about two teen boys who are trying to come to grips with the suicide of a friend.

 

DAY JOBS: I'm an attorney with the Social Security Administration's disability appeals branch. I also serve as president of the Chicago Writers Association, a nonprofit group that assists writers in achieving their goals while also promoting Chicago as a place of literary distinction.

 

LITERARY FIGURE I’D HIRE TO MANAGE THE CUBS: If he were still alive, it would be Mike Royko. He'd jokingly written about buying the Cubs but I would have liked to have seen him managing them. I see him as a cross between Leo Durocher and Billy Martin. He would have kicked up some dirt out there.

 

THE CUB I’D MOST WANT TO LIVE INDEFINITELY IN MY BASEMENT: Andre Dawson. He'd be polite and quiet. You probably wouldn't even know he was down there.

 

MOST CHERISHED CUBS MEMORIES: Well, there was the one I wrote of above, about being in the Cubs dugout. There was also the memory from Game 6 of the 2003 NLCS. I was at the game with three friends and we had someone snap a picture of us after the seventh inning when it looked like the Cubs were going to go to the World Series for the first time since 1945. I'm not sure if I've ever looked more happy in any picture. Of course that cherished memory turned into my most painful Cubs memory just a few minutes later.

 

BEST PIECE OF CUBS MEMORABILIA: It's still that baseball signed by many of the 1974 Cubs players.

 

THE CUBS WILL WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE: The pressure of 100 years will be off of them. We have to believe in next year, don't we? That's what makes us Cubs fans.

 

THE CUBS WON’T WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE: The pressure of 101 years will be on them and inevitably Derrek Lee will eat out at a tapas restaurant the night before the deciding Game 7 and get sick on goat cheese and then on the way to the ballpark Carlos Zambrano will trip over a black cat.

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Want more Randy?

Read "Can Miss," Donald Evans' profile on him

Visit his Web site

Wednesday
Nov262008

Robert Goldsborough

Five Minutes With Robert Goldsborough

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MY BRUSH WITH A CUB:In 1947 or ’48, catcher Clyde McCullough signed my autograph book before a game and got several other playerss to sign it, too.

WHO WERE YOU?: I was Phil Cavarretta when I came to the plate in sandlot games. I loved his hustle, and we were both left-handed batters and fielders.

WORKING ON: Wrapping up my fourth “Snap Malek” book, A President in Peril, which is set against the backdrop of the 1948 Truman-Dewey presidential campaign.

DAY JOB: Free-lance writing and editing.

LITERARY FIGURE I’D HIRE TO MANAGE THE CUBS: Napoleon. The players would produce or be gone.

THE CUB I’D MOST WANT TO LIVE INDEFINITELY IN MY BASEMENT: Frankie Baumholtz, a Cub outfielder in the early 1950s. He was a class guy—college graduate and also a professional basketball player. He finished second to Stan Musial in batting average in 1952.

MOST CHERISHED CUBS MEMORY:Being in the stands in 1998 when Sammy Sosa hit his 60th home run.

BEST PIECE OF CUBS MEMORABILIA: A handsome reprint of the 1938 Cubs-Yankees World Series program.

THE CUBS WILL WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE:Miracle-worker Jim Hendry will pull one more rabbit out of his hat and get a super-star (SOON TO BE NAMED) to push the team over the top.

THE CUBS WON’T WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE: They fade in the home stretch.
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Want more Robert?

Read "The Not So Golden Age of Cubs Baseball," Donald Evans' profile of him

Visit his Web site

Wednesday
Nov262008

Bill Hillman

Five Minutes With Bill Hillman

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MY BRUSH WITH A CUB: I can’t remember the guy’s name. It was after one of my fights at the Park West. I took it on short notice and took a bad beating, but didn’t get stopped, then we’re walking out and there’s this guy and Irvine’s like, “Hey, that’s so and so,” and he’s walking this little poodle. Afterward, we all were a bit shaky about his taste in dogs but he was a nice guy.

 

WHO WERE YOU?: Ryne Sandburg, but the whole ‘89 roster got a nod now and then.

 

WORKING ON: Edgewater, or The Last White Hood, a novel. Has completed a draft and plans to bring it into the advanced workshop at Columbia College this spring term, and finish it as a thesis under the advisement of Don De Grazia.

 

DAY JOB: Union Laborer Local 2, mainly concrete, but I can shoot grades, too, if anybody’s hiring.

 

LITERARY FIGURE I’D HIRE TO MANAGE THE CUBS: Don De Grazia, he loves ‘em more than me.

 

THE CUB I’D MOST WANT TO LIVE INDEFINITELY IN MY BASEMENT: Rick Sutcliffe, in case I ever needed any back up. I live in Pilsen now--and not the nice side.

 

MOST CHERISHED CUBS MEMORY: That Grace home run in the ‘89 division playoff opener.

 

BEST PIECE OF CUBS MEMORABILIA: A warm-up jacket I got when I was a little kid. It wasn’t official, but it looked official, and it was official to me.

 

THE CUBS WILL WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE: Pitching. I know not everybody likes him, but Zambrano, that guy plays with the kind of passion that wins championships.

 

THE CUBS WON’T WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE: ‘Cause they’re the Cubs.

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Want more Bill?

 

Read "How It Sounds," Don Evans' profile of Bill

Visit Windy City Story Slam

 

Wednesday
Nov262008

Mary Beth Hoerner

FIVE MINUTES WITH MARY BETH HOERNER

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MY BRUSH WITH A CUB: Most recently, it was with Ron Santo at his restaurant. It was one of those pleasant surprises when someone turns out to be as nice in person as you had imagined.

 

FAVORITE ALL-TIME CUB: Over the years, I have really grown to admire Ron Santo. I really can’t get enough of him on the radio now. He doesn’t hide his disgust. I like that in a person. Kerry Wood is also very unselfish with his time aside from being a great player. I’m sick that he’s gone.

 

WORKING ON: Second installment of a theatrical trilogy set in the Southwest in the 1950s. The first was Atomic Honeymoon, which was produced at the Cornservatory on Lincoln Avenue in 2007. The second uses the Roswell Incident as a springboard for a greater exploration of UFOs. “The UFO play was supposed to be funny, the lightest of the three,” Mary Beth says, “but my research has left me pretty much afraid of my own shadow.”

 

DAY JOB: Aide to a local politician (who has to remain nameless as the political farce is forthcoming).

 

LITERARY FIGURE I’D HIRE TO MANAGE THE CUBS: Samuel Beckett. Godot never comes, you know, so I think Beckett would have the temperament.

 

THE CUB I’D MOST WANT TO LIVE INDEFINITELY IN MY BASEMENT: No brainer—Joe Pepitone.

 

MOST CHERISHED CUBS MEMORY: 1979. Cubs v. Phillies. Bleachers. This time, with Katie and her boyfriend. I brought a hotel bell, the kind that requires a light tap on the top, and I dinged the life out of it every time the Cubs got so much as a ball. So by the time the game was over and the Cubs had scored 22 runs, the Phillies fans around me had plotted my death. BTW, the Cubs lost, 23-22.

 

BEST PIECE OF CUBS MEMORABILIA: It’s my sister’s. An I-HOP place mat with the faces of the ’69 Cubs in little baseballs.

 

THE CUBS WILL WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE: The Leprechaun told me they will.

 

THE CUBS WON’T WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE: Take your meds, Man.

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Want more Mary Beth?

Read "Atta Girl," Don Evans' profile of her

Monday
Nov242008

James Finn Garner: Author & Poet

FIVE MINUTES WITH JAMES FINN GARNER

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MY BRUSH WITH A CUB: Sorry, I got nothing.

 

WHO WERE YOU?: The Tigers’ Willie Horton, who held his bat straight up in the air with his big butt sticking out.

 

WORKING ON: A stage musical about Viagra.

 

DAY JOB: Basement dweller

 

LITERARY FIGURE I’D HIRE TO MANAGE THE CUBS: Captain Ahab. Win or lose, they’re still doomed, right?

 

THE CUB I’D MOST WANT TO LIVE INDEFINITELY IN MY BASEMENT: Ryan Dempster—I’m a sucker for magic tricks.

 

MOST CHERISHED CUBS MEMORY: Meeting Bill Veeck in the bleachers, with his shirt off and a cigarette in his leg’s ashtray.

 

BEST PIECE OF CUBS MEMORABILIA: A yellow “No Lights In Wrigley Field” T-shirt.

 

THE CUBS WILL WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE: This might be their century.

 

THE CUBS WON’T WIN IT ALL IN 2009 BECAUSE: It requires hitting the ball in October, something we haven’t seen them do in many years.

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Want more James?