Steve Tarter

Read Beat (...and repeat)

If you're like me, you like to know things but how much time to invest? That's the question. Here's the answer: Read Beat--Interviews with authors of new releases. These aren't book reviews but short (about 25-30 minutes on the average) chats with folks that usually have taken a lot of time to research a topic, enough to write a book about it. Hopefully, there's a topic or two that interests you. I try to come up with subjects that fascinate me or I need to know more about. Hopefully, listeners will agree. I'm Steve Tarter, former reporter for the Peoria Journal Star and a contributor to WCBU-...

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Autor

Steve Tarter

Kategoria

History

Strona podcastu

www.buzzsprout.com

Ostatni odcinek

9 lip 2026

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"The Westerners" by Megan Kate Nelson 09.07.2026

The old west came at us in a rush on 50s TV: So many shows; so many cowboys; so much history; and so much left out. Megan Kate Nelson attempts to fill some of the gaps in our frontier history in The Westerners , a book that chronicles the lives of seven remarkable individuals never depicted on TV or a lunchbox. You learn more about Sacajawea, the Native American woman who helped guide the Lewis &a...

America’s Downtowns—A conversation with Erik Reader 27.06.2026

If you have passed through small-town America in recent years, you may have noticed that, for the vast majority of towns, to use the phrase, “they ain’t what they used to be.”  The downtown buildings may still be in place, but are now empty or boarded up. That’s if you even make it to the downtown area to see for yourself now that some businesses have migrated to the highway to serve the traveling...

“Stealing America” by Linford Fisher 26.06.2026

With the story of the American Revolution being retold as we approach this country’s 250th anniversary, we hear a lot about George Washington, Paul Revere, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Paine, among the many individuals who played a part in the formation of the United States of America. What we don’t hear much about is that, concurrent with the war that ousted the British, was wh...

"Born Sick in the USA" by Stephen Bezruchka 20.06.2026

Stephen Bezruchka has worked in the healthcare field for over 50 years. A graduate of Stanford Medical School, with a public health degree from Johns Hopkins University, Bezruchka began his career by setting up a community health project in the Himalayas. He spent over 30 years practicing as an emergency physician in the United States before joining the faculty of the School of Public Health at th...

“America’s Hometown Movie Houses: Please Remain Standing” by Benita VanWinkle 12.06.2026

Benita VanWinkle likes going to the movies. She’s gone to theaters in every state of the union. But she doesn’t always stay for the main feature. Instead, VanWinkle, an art professor at High Point University in North Carolina, pursues a picture show of her own. Over the years, she’s photographed some 1,200 theaters across the country. Almost 400 of those pictures make up her new book , America’s H...

"A High Price for Freedom" by Clyde W. Ford 06.06.2026

Don’t expect a big celebration on Juneteenth (June 19) from author Clyde W. Ford, who explains in A High Price for Freedom . “What a wonderful day that first Juneteenth must have been. Fetters gone. Shackles removed. Whips silenced. Uninformed formerly enslaved men and women reveling in their newly-found freedom. But there’s a problem with this idyllic picture of Juneteenth—most of the above event...

“Disposing of Modernity” by Rebecca Graff 03.06.2026

If time travel ever becomes a thing, the Chicago World’s Fair held in 1893 might be one of the leading attractions for time travelers. Here was an exposition, spread across almost 700 acres in Jackson Park, some seven miles from Chicago’s Loop, that sold 27 million tickets in its six-month run. Some 200 buildings were erected that included displays from nations across the world, public comfort sta...

“The Courtyard” by Alexa Morris and Benjamin Parket 30.05.2026

The Nazi occupation of Paris during World War II brought hardship to many, especially if they were Jewish. As German rule tightened, Jewish families were at risk of being rounded up and sent to concentration camps like Auschwitz. The Courtyard is an account of one Jewish family that survived the war thanks to the assistance of brave neighbors and a miracle or two along the way, said Morris, whose...

“The Devil’s Castle” by Susanne Paola Antonetta 29.05.2026

The horrors of the Holocaust were preceded in Nazi Germany by the conversion of five asylums and an abandoned jail, which were transformed into gas chambers, killing tens of thousands of patients.  That’s a story that Susanne Paola Antonetta tells in The Devil’s Castle , a book that started with the Nazi massacre of the disabled, she said. “The subtitle, Nazi Eugenics, Euthanasia, and How Psychiat...

“Why Q Needs U” by Danny Bate 22.05.2026

So where did we get all these letters that children learn as their ABC’s? Danny Bate has the answer in his book, “Why Q Needs U.” Born and raised in England and now living in Prague, Bate is a linguist, writer, broadcaster, and podcaster ( A Language I Love is… ), Bate admits to being obsessed by language and its history. “Nowadays, the alphabet has become so successful that we rarely recognize it...

“A Little Piece of Cuba” by Barbara Caver 22.05.2026

At a time when U.S.-Cuban relations have probably never been worse, there’s Barbara Caver’s “A Little Piece of Cuba,” a book that explores her own journey “to become Cubana-Americana.” Caver’s mother was born in Cuba before leaving for the United States with her family at the age of seven in 1959. While the author, who lives in New York, doesn’t speak Spanish and only visited Cuba for five days in...

"Heartland" by Keith O'Brien 11.05.2026

The saga of basketball star Larry Bird invariably culminates in the Bird-Magic Johnson story, two players who met in the most-watched basketball game of all time, the 1979 NCAA championship game between Indiana State and Michigan State, and then went on to "save" the NBA, each winning titles for their respective teams, the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers. But Keith O'Brien...

“The Navigator’s Letter” by Jan Cress Dondi 10.05.2026

A true story, The Navigator’s Letter is a tale of uncanny coincidences: two friends from the same small town in Illinois join the Army Air Corps in World War II.  Both become navigators. Both were assigned to B-24 Liberators. Both flew missions over Europe. Both of their planes were forced down over Ploesti in Romania, a target for Allied bombers that wanted to knock out Nazi Germany’s primary fue...

"Tigers Between Empires" by Jonathan Slaght 01.05.2026

It’s a familiar story: the animals we’ve all known since we were children, the lions, tigers, and elephants, all disappearing from the wilds due to loss of habitat, hunters, or a changing environment. So how gratifying is it to learn that in one part of the world, a wintry forest area between Russia and China, that the Siberian tiger is actually making a comeback? That’s what Jonathan Slaght write...

"Boss Lincoln" by Matthew Pinsker 30.04.2026

Abraham Lincoln has been characterized in many ways: as a father, statesman, lawyer, writer, speechmaker, and military leader. He served as U.S. President during this country’s Civil War, grappling under the intense pressure that could have split the nation in two permanently. There are probably more books written about Lincoln than about any other individual in U.S. history. Add one more. Matthew...

“Ms. Mebel Goes Back to the Chopping Block” by Jesse Sutanto 22.04.2026

Jesse Sutanto has found a unique writing formula. The author of over a dozen books including the Aunties and Vera Wong (the previous interview with Sutanto came after the publication of Vera Wong’s Guide to Snooping (on a Dead Man) treats her writing like it’s a day job.  After writing an outline, she walks about her Indonesian home, which she shares with a husband, two children, and a nanny “talk...

“The 100 Greatest Literary Characters” by James Plath, Gail Sinclair, and Kirk Curnutt 10.04.2026

The first thing that makes a reader read a book is the characters. That was John Gardner. If the characters come alive, the novel comes alive. That’s Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Given the importance of characters, James Plath, an English professor at Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington, Gail Sinclair, the executive director of the Winter Park Institute at Rollins College in Winter Park, Fla.,...

“Last of the Titans” by Richard Vinen 03.04.2026

The date of June 18, 1940 proved to be the most important day in the lives of two of the best-known world leaders of the 20th century: Winston Churchill and Charles de Gaulle. World War II had taken an ugly turn in Europe with the fall of France, and both men took to BBC radio on that day to rally their respective sides, England and France, said Richard Vinen, author of The Last Titans: How Church...

"CrimeReads" articles by Keith Roysdon 27.03.2026

An upcoming story on the CrimeReads website (https://crimereads.com/) will look at the performances of movie/TV good guys who later took on bad-guy roles and vice versa. It can only be another story by Keith Roysdon, whose previous stories on CrimeReads include looks at writers Richard Matheson and Robert Bloch, a historic scan of Universal monsters, and a review of 1970s disaster movies. Having s...

"Making Democracy Count" by Ismar Volic 19.03.2026

 "Making Democracy Count" by Ismar Volic Ismar Volic  is one math professor who wants to use mathematics to improve our democratic process. His book, Making Democracy Count: How Mathematics Improves Voting, Electoral Maps, and Representation , examines the mathematics that govern how our election systems work or, surprise, don’t work. Volic may be director of the Institute for Mathematic...

“Winning the Earthquake” by Lorissa Rinehart 17.03.2026

The first woman to serve in the U.S. congress didn’t come from New York or Boston but from Montana. Jeannette Rankin served two terms in Congress—not in succession but terms separated by more than 20 years. Among her many distinctions is that she was the only legislator to cast votes against two world wars, once in 1917 and again in 1941. Lorissa Rinehart brings Rankin to life in her book, Winning...

"Show Trial" by Thomas Doherty 07.03.2026

Groundhog Day, Ed Wood, The Big Lebowski, Dark City , and 12 Monkeys . What do these movies have in common? They were all made in the 1990s and represented a middle-level film—neither franchise nor family fare. “That’s what we’re missing at the theater nowadays,” said Thomas Doherty, the Brandeis University professor and author whose work frequently appears in the Hollywood Reporter . “The middle-...

"Road to Nowhere" by Emily Lieb 02.03.2026

In the mid-1950s, Baltimore’s Rosemont neighborhood was alive and vibrant with smart rowhouses, a sprawling park, corner grocery stores, and doctors’ offices. By 1957, a proposed expressway threatened to gut this Black, middle-class community from stem to stern. That highway was never built, but it didn’t matter—even the failure to build it destroyed Rosemont economically, if not physically. In Ro...

"Vote with Your Phone" by Bradley Tusk 28.02.2026

We think nothing of ordering dinner, shopping for clothes, or banking on our phones anymore. So why not vote? That’s what Bradley Tusk has been working on. In his book, Vote with Your Phone: Why Mobile Voting Is Our Final Shot at Saving Democracy , the New York venture capitalist spells out the details and the benefits of making it easier for people to vote. Along with the general public, Tusk wan...

"Everybody Loses: The Tumultuous Rise of American Sports Gambling" by Danny Funt 13.02.2026

An exploration into the perilous world of American sports gambling, journalist Danny Funt interviews the power players of the betting boom at FanDuel, DraftKings, and beyond.  He relates the story of ESPN Bet, a failed attempt by the sports giant to compete with the major sports gambling operation.  As the first major investigation into America’s sports gambling industry, Everybody Loses describes...

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