Reviews

Growing Up Chicago by Dave Schaafsma, Lauren DeJulio Bell, Roxanne Pilat

heyitsmeg777's review

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5.0

I had the privilege to read this book since the early drafts. Being able to see a book evolve from the beginning traits to the book I get to now hold in my hands... it's a magical experience unlike any other.

Let me say... THIS is the anthology collection we need to best capture the changing nature of Chicago. Being born and raised here, I have been able to know the experience of growing up here. I am still not used to the unpredictable weather, but I love the bustling, chaotic nature of our city and while we see many books on the history of Chicago, you won't find many books on the various experiences of living her in Chicago and that's what I love about this book.

From seeing the narrative of the Lithuanian writer Daiva Markelis to the perspective of being a catholic boy in church school with James McManus (one of my favorite pieces!) to even what it's like to grow up on the Hungarian side of Chicago (Which was a brand new experience for me!) from Rebecca Makkai, each story is set to be relatable in one way or another, with each essay leaving at least one burning question that you wish you could ask the authors. This book is one that will stick with you long after you finish and even if you aren't from Chicago, but you want to know what it's like to grow up here... you get to enter a cultural walk down memory lane while experiencing all the diverse experiences of growing up in Chicago.

I highly recommend you all to get your copies now!!

jheinemann287's review

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4.0

I didn't grow up in Chicago, but I did choose it as my home and create a whole life within it. Basically, I'm a stan. And this collection of essays and vignettes indulges Chicago stans in the best ways. You've seen and remember the neighborhoods and architecture these characters move through. As an English teacher, I found myself thinking about Nick's longing for the midwest at the end of Gatsby while reading the introduction:
Growing up in Chicago offers chance after chance to come to terms with questions of identity, beginning with the city's sheer size and geographic complexity, which could easily make a person feel small, unnoticed, irrelevant. From afar, its muscular skyline -- much of it rebuilt after the Great Chicago Fire, and later expanded on landfill that pushed the original shoreline out into the lake -- conveys a certain Midwest practicality, coupled with a seeming determination to conquer the impossible. This is a city that had the fortitude to rebuild after the fire, the imagination to reverse the flow of the Chicago River. The reach of its skyline today frames the expanse of Lake Michigan, stretching north to south, with tall and taller buildings rising into the clouds, like arms of concrete and steel, limestone and granite, as if to say "We are here!" (xvi)
I mean, right? What an absolute celebration.

I read this collection with the hope that I could use it as a text for my high school freshman English classes since the thematic focus of the year centers on identity and "coming-of-age." Unfortunately, I wanted this to work for my classes more than it actually would. Our first semester curriculum teaches narrative elements: characterization, conflict, plot, theme, etc. The pieces collected here are beautiful and evocative, but many of them are challenging reads, and most are slice-of-life vignettes rather than fully developed narratives with turning points and resolutions. They 100% could be used to teach setting (sensory details), though. I mean, that's what they're all about: a place and a time. Here and now. I could also see this collection being a compelling core or supplemental text in a Chicago literature/history course, in a creative writing course, or in a unit about memoir or personal narratives/statements.

My favorites were "Vigil" by Stuart Dybek, "Planet Rock" by Dhana-Marie Branton, "Dillinger" by Jessie Ann Foley, the excerpt from I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter by Erika Sanchez, "Discovering My Femininity in Menswear" by M Shelley Conner, "The Power and Limitations of Victim-Impact Statements" by Rebecca Makkai (CW: sexual assault), and (of course) "The View from the South Side, 1970" by George Saunders.

And just because I read with this framing in mind, I'll also note that the pieces that work best as complete narratives are "Vigil" by Stuart Dybek, "Dillinger" by Jessie Ann Foley, "Running Girl" by Nnedi Okorafor (CW: racism), and "Detention" by James McManus (CW: sexism).

Oh, and don't let the digital image of the cover fool you. It's actually very cool. The museum looks sketched on notebook paper and it has a matte finish.
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