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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Episodes
Pink Cars & Pocketbooks: How American Women Bought Their Way into the Driver's Seat" by Jessica Brockmole 20.03.2025 31:52
Chrysler released a special edition of the Dodge Royal Lancer that Chrysler in 1955 called LaFemme. Marketed as “a car for the modern woman,” the model offered a pink-and-white color scheme along with matching accessories. There was only one problem: women didn’t buy it. Chrysler soon dropped the concept due to low sales. That’s just one of the examples that Jessica Brockmole details in her book,...
"Maya Wisdom and the Survival of Our Planet" by Lisa Lucero 14.03.2025 27:59
Much is made of the temples and striking artwork of the ancient Maya. Justifiably. Ever since U.S. travel writer John Stephens and British artist Frederick Catherwood explored the ruins of Copan in Honduras, publishing Incidents of Travel in Central America in 1841, the world has been aware of the “lost world” of the Maya. Stephens’ dramatic accounts and keen insight at what he found along with Ca...
"What's Up With Women and Money?" by Alison Kosik 07.03.2025 20:34
Before Alison Kosik wrote What's Up With Women and Money?: How To Do All the Financial Stuff You’ve Been Avoiding she’d been a business correspondent for CNN, often filing stories from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Kosik interviewed heads of business and corporate experts regularly but relegated financial decisions to her husband. Although dealing with business on a daily basis on...
"One Death at a Time" by Abbi Waxman 07.03.2025 22:19
Abbi Waxman, a British-born Californian, is the author of eight books including I Was Told It Would Get Easier, The Bookish Life of Nina Hill , and The Garden of Small Beginnings . Her latest, One Death at a Time , is promoted as a “feel-good mystery,” a categorization that Waxman seems relatively happy with. But then Waxman confesses to be a relatively happy person. “ One Death at a Time is funn...
"Becoming Madam Secretary" by Stephanie Dray 05.03.2025 25:01
Frances Perkins is one of those figures in history that you need to know more about. Helping in that regard is the latest book from Stephanie Dray, a historical novel called Becoming Madam President . Published in March 2024, Becoming is the 10th work of historical fiction for Dray who likes to write about revolutionary women, both those involved in the American Revolution and, as in Perkins'...
"Vera Wong's Guide to Snooping (on a Dead Man)" by Jesse Sutanto 05.03.2025 18:58
Jesse Sutanto is a successful writer educated at Oxford and California, lives in Jakarta, and has found her niche: the cozy mystery. I didn’t know what a cozy mystery was until Jesse explained it. “Nothing truly bad happens to the primary characters. For example, I couldn’t kill off Vera Wong,” she said. “Cozy mysteries have a lot of standard features,” said Richelle Braswell, a writer who explain...
"Maya Blue: Unlocking the Mysteries of the Ancient Pigment" by Dean Arnold 01.03.2025 36:37
The ancient Maya civilization is known for many things: pyramids, stone sculptures, complex astronomical calculations, a writing system, a rubber-ball game and the subject of anthropologist Dean Arnold's latest book, Maya Blue (University Press of Colorado). Arnold, an adjunct curator of anthropology at Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History and professor emeritus of anthropology at W...
"Unveiling the Color Line" by Lisa McLeod 27.02.2025 26:22
W.E. B. DuBois went on record in 1896 saying that white supremacy significantly warps whites' perceptions and behaviors. Even earlier--in 1890--as a 22-year-old Harvard College student--he called out Jefferson Davis, the leader of the Confederacy during the Civil War. He outlined the Davis career in a 10-minute speech as one who "advanced civilization by murdering Indians" and parti...
"Ida Lupino: Forgotten Auteur" by Alexandra Seros 27.02.2025 24:55
Ida Lupino's "problem" was that she constantly found herself the smartest person in the room, noted biographer Alexandra Seros, a Hollywood screenwriter and the author of Ida Lupino: Forgotten Auteur (University of Texas Press). Lupino was more than a great actress but also a successful director. The Hitch-Hiker , a film made in 1953, is now considered a film noir classic. The fact...
"Et Cetera: An Illustrated Guide to Latin Phrases" by Maia Lee-Chin 14.02.2025 25:35
Maia Lee-Chin, whose book, Et Cetera: An Illustrated Guide to Latin Phrases (Andrews McMeel), was published last year, got more out of Latin class than I did. But she admits it didn't just happen. "I was forced to enroll in Latin. I considered dropping the course several times, especially while translating Julius Caesar's De Bello Gallico . I couldn't understand his long-winded...
"Midnight Black" by Mark Greaney 11.02.2025 29:05
The Washington Post calls Mark Greaney the Tom Cruise of thriller writers. Like the Mission Impossible star, Greaney is on a roll, following in the footsteps of Tom Clancy, the thriller writer whose books have sold over 100 million copies. Greaney, who said he became obsessed with Clancy’s work as a teenager, co-wrote several books with Clancy before the author died in 2013. While carrying on the...
"Spiderweb Capitalism: How Global Elites Exploit Frontier Markets" by Kimberly Kay Hoang 18.01.2025 30:11
Kimberly Kay Hoang, a professor of sociology at the University of Chicago, traveled over 300,000 miles, conducting hundreds of interviews to trace the flow of capital from offshore funds in the Cayman Islands, Samoa or Panama to holding companies in Singapore and Hong Kong. Her book, Spiderweb Capitalism , reveals how some of this money finds its way into risky markets in Vietnam and Myanmar. &quo...
“The Organization of Journalism” by Patrick Ferrucci 16.01.2025 26:24
“It’s a new world when it comes to journalism. That prompted Patrick Ferrucci, the head of the journalism department at the University of Colorado at Boulder, to go out and see how that world has changed. The Organization of Journalism offers a profile of six different business models that now bring folks the news or sports, as the case may be. There’s the St. Louis Beacon , a digital nonprofit, ...
"What Works in Community News" by Dan Kennedy and Ellen Clegg 21.12.2024 23:07
You already know about the local news crisis. The proof is probably not in your hands with the demise of so many newspapers. The terms “ghost paper” (a publication with an old masthead and little else) and “news deserts” (areas without local news coverage of any kind) are part of the vernacular these days. Communities have had to be inventive to replace the local news they once took for granted, s...
“Jeep Show: A Trouper at the Battle of the Bulge” by Robert B. O’Connor 19.12.2024 24:24
It’s been 80 years since the bloodiest battle of World War II, the Battle of the Bulge, a five-week struggle that started during the Christmas season of 1944 that took 19,000 American lives in fighting in the densely wooded Ardennes region of Germany. It was Germany’s last stand, said O’Connor, who drew on considerable research of that battle in Jeep Show , a novel that focuses on the U.S. Army’s...
"The Purpose Code" by Jordan Grumet MD 17.12.2024 22:35
Dr. Jordan Grumet is a hospice doctor as well as a podcaster at The Earn & Invest Podcast . He’s also an author whose new book is The Purpose Code , a follow-up Taking Stock: A Hospice Doctor’s Advice on Financial Independence, Building Wealth, and Living a Regret-Free Life , published in 2022. Grumet describes his own battle to find purpose in life, relinquishing a job as a full-time medical...
“The Uncomfortable Truth About Money” by Paul Podolsky 25.11.2024 28:59
Books that seek to help you understand the world of finance probably aren’t viewed as the most engaging of literary categories. Consumers, after all, hold that book in their hands for a specific reason: to understand policy rates better or inflation-linked bonds not for a ripsnorting reading adventure. Paul Podolsky, a former equity partner at Bridgewater Associates and the founder and CIO of Kate...
"Most Honorable Son" by Gregg Jones 22.11.2024 37:21
You’re a Japanese American living in Nebraska in 1941. The Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, sending the United States into war. What do you do? At 24 when war broke out, Nebraskan Ben Kuroki enlisted to fight for his country. Ben joined the Army Air Force along with his brother. In Most Honorable Son by Gregg Jones, Kuroki’s unique wartime experience is related. Ben Kuroki not only flew a staggering...
"Carl Barks' Duck" by Peter Schilling Jr. 22.11.2024 33:21
So many images represent Walt Disney. There’s that mouse, of course, and all those movies. There’s so much music, countless cartoons, and aisles of toys Once there were even comic books. Characters like Donald Duck operated across many different media. We know about the cartoons starring an exasperated duck with a funny voice. But there was also an adventure series with Donald, his nephews, and a...
"Pickleballers" by Ilana Long 21.11.2024 19:27
Pickleball has become the fastest-growing sport in America. Ilana Long, author of Pickleballers , a debut romantic comedy set in Seattle, noted that as many as 50 million individuals are expected to play the sport in 2024. The game, which Long calls multigenerational, serves as the backdrop for a story about a young woman who, on the rebound of a breakup, finds solace and redemption on the pickleb...
"Uncovering Dinosaur Behavior" by David Hone 06.11.2024 21:26
Whenever the Jurassic Park/World franchise launches another movie entry, the national media runs to quote “a dinosaur guy” for a professional analysis. One of the guys they call is David Hone, a zoologist at Queen Mary University in London and the author of How Fast Did T.rex Run? and the Tyrannosaur Chronicles. Hone’s latest book, Uncovering Dinosaur Behavior (Princeton University Press), seeks t...
"In the Shadow of the Big Top" by Maureen Brunsdale 27.10.2024 28:19
A plaque standing in downtown Bloomington, Ill. pays tribute to that city’s circus heritage: “In the era before movies, television, and the internet, it was the circus that entertained us…For more than 80 years, spanning the 1870s until the 1950s, countless numbers of brave Bloomington men and women risked their lives to entertain massive crowds by performing aerial tricks high up on the flying tr...
"Onward to Chicago" by Larry M. McClellan 22.10.2024 27:49
Decades before the Civil War, Illinois meant freedom for those seeking to escape slavery. Larry McClellan’s Onward to Chicago: Freedom Seekers and the Underground Railroad in Northeastern Illinois is his third book exploring the phenomenon known as the Underground Railroad. McClellan, a resident of Crete, Illinois, some 35 miles south of Chicago, served as a professor of sociology at Governors St...
Petrochemical Fantasies: The Art and Fantasy of American Comics" by Daniel Worden 09.10.2024 28:39
The comics page has long been a place for cars and energy. Comic strips like Otto Auto, Toonerville Folks , and Gasoline Alley related a nation that happily motored about in a car-centric world. Daniel Worden, an art professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology, relates that history in Petrochemical Fantasies: The Art and Energy of American Comics . “This book analyzes how comics represented...
"The Golden Age of Red" by Doug Villhard 08.10.2024 29:33
Doug Villhard knew that Red Grange might have been the greatest running back in the history of college football. He was also singularly responsible for helping make the National Football League an established professional league. But Villhard said what drew him to write the historical novel, The Golden Age of Red , was Grange’s alliance with C.C. Pyle, the man who became America’s first sports age...
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