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WILLIAM HAZELGROVE
The End
of the
GANGSTER ERA
in Chicago
Tuesday, October
17, 2017
5:30 - 8:30 pm
The Lounge at Iwan Ries
19 South Wabash Ave
Cocktails at 5:30, with the
presentation at 6:00 for about thirty
minutes, followed by Q&A and general
cocktail conversation.
Reservations
are required.
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From the publisher:
Al Capone and the 1933 World’s Fair: The End of
the Gangster Era in Chicago is a historical
look at Chicago during the darkest days of the Great
Depression. The story of Chicago fighting the hold
that organized crime had on the city to be able to
put on The 1933 World's Fair.
William Hazelgrove provides the exciting and
sprawling history behind the 1933 World's Fair, the
last of the golden age. He reveals the story of the
six millionaire businessmen, dubbed The Secret Six,
who beat Al Capone at his own game, ending the
gangster era as prohibition was repealed. The story
of an intriguing woman, Sally Rand, who embodied the
World's Fair with her own rags to riches story and
brought sex into the open. The story of Rufus and
Charles Dawes who gave the fair a theme and then
found financing in the worst economic times the
country had ever experienced. The story of the most
corrupt mayor of Chicago, William Thompson, who owed
his election to Al Capone; and the mayor who
followed him, Anton Cermak, who was murdered months
before the fair opened by an assassin many said was
hired by Al Capone.
But most of all it’s the story about a city fighting
for survival in the darkest of times; and a shining
light of hope called A Century of Progress.
William Elliott Hazelgrove is the
best-selling author of ten novels and four works of
nonfiction. Ripples, Tobacco Sticks,
Mica Highways, Rocket Man, The
Pitcher, Real Santa, Jackpine, My Best Year, The
Bad Author and The Pitcher 2, Hemingways Attic,
Madam President The Secret Presidency of Edith
Wilson, Forging a President, How the Wild West
Created Teddy Roosevelt, and Gangsters and
Nymphs. His books have received starred
reviews in Publisher Weekly and Booklist, Book of
the Month Selections, Literary Guild Selections,
History Book Club Selections, Junior Library Guild
Selections, ALA Editors Choice Awards and optioned
for the movies. He was the Ernest Hemingway Writer
in Residence where he wrote in the attic of Ernest
Hemingway's birthplace. He has written articles and
reviews for USA Today and other publications. He has
been the subject of interviews in NPR's All Things
Considered along with features in The New York
Times, LA Times, Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun Times,
Richmond Times Dispatch, USA Today, People, Channel
11, NBC, WBEZ, WGN. The Pitcher is a Junior Library
Guild Selection and was chosen Book of the Year by
Books and Authors. net. Madam President The
Secret Presidency of Edith Wilson was
published in Fall 2016. Storyline optioned the movie
rights. Forging a President How the West Created
Teddy Roosevelt was just out in May 2017. (Quoted
from Amazon.)
William Hazelgrove writes:
"Born in Richmond, Virginia, and carted back and
forth between Virginia and Baltimore, I blame my
rootless, restless personality on my father. He was
and is a traveling salesman with a keen gift of gab,
great wit, a ready joke, and could sell white tennis
shoes to coal miners.
"It was during these sojourns up and down the east
coast I soaked up the stories that would later be Tobacco
Sticks and Mica Highways. I think
authors should exploit their family history before
raping the rest of the culture for material.
"Dad finally got tired of the east and moved to the
Midwest when I was fourteen. We settled outside of
Chicago. It is here I came of age and went off to
college for seven years -- two degrees and one novel
later I returned to Chicago and lived in many
different apartments, trying to get a little two
hundred page manuscript called Ripples published.
"When a local printer said he would take a chance on
my book, I jumped and had my first novel published
by a man who had never published anything. Great
reviews and moderate sales put me back to my jobs as
a janitor, baker, waiter, construction worker,
teacher, real estate tycoon, mortgage broker,
professor, security guard, salesman -- anything to
make a buck and keep writing. The printer lost his
mind and published my second novel, too. That landed
me with Bantam after some rave reviews and a
paperback auction for my second novel, Tobacco
Sticks."
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About the Cigar
Society of Chicago
ONE OF THE
OLDEST AND greatest traditions of the city clubs of
Chicago is the discussion of intellectual, social,
legal, artistic, historical, scientific, musical,
theatrical, and philosophical issues in the company of
educated, bright, and appropriately provocative
individuals, all under the beneficent influence of
substantial amounts of tobacco and spirits. The
Cigar Society of Chicago embraces
this tradition and extends it with its Informal
Smokers, University Series lectures,
and Cigar Society Dinners, in which cigars,
and from time to time pipes and cigarettes, appear as
an important component of our version of the classical
symposium. To be included in the Cigar Society's
mailing list, write to the secretary at
curtis.tuckey@logicophilosophicus.org.
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