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
"Big Fiction: How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature" by Dan Sinykin 31.10.2023 24:20
The publishing industry has undergone change since 1960, notes Dan Sinykin, the Emory University English professor whose new book is "Big Fiction: How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature." If you're familiar with names like Ballantine, Bantam, Berkley, Dell, Doubleday, Knopf, Putnam and Viking, these once-independent publishing houses are among the...
"Picasso's Lovers" by Jeanne Mackin 28.10.2023 16:12
Fifty years after his death, Pablo Picasso remains a central figure in the art world. Along with his famous periods--blue, rose and African, for example--there were the many women that shared his life. Picasso's love life was almost as colorful as his art, critics have noted. That triggered Jeanne Mackin into writing "Picasso's Lovers," a work of historical fiction. "I wan...
"Betty Friedan: Magnificent Disrupter" by Rachel Shteir 27.10.2023 22:53
When Betty Friedan returned to her home town of Peoria in 1978 for a high school reunion (Peoria High School, class of 1938), she'd already covered a lot of territory. Rachel Shteir (pronounced sh-tire) outlines much of that activity in the book, "Betty Friedan: Magnificent Disrupter." Friedan, of course, wrote "The Feminine Mystique," a book that one can say with some con...
"Will Rogers and His America" by Gary Clayton Anderson 27.10.2023 29:11
Born on a farm in Oklahoma's Cherokee Nation in 1879, Will Rogers went on to become one of the most celebrated people of the 20th century, hobnobbing with the rich and famous while entertaining millions in movies, on radio and through his newspaper column. Gary Clayton Anderson, an accomplished author (previous books focus on Sitting Bull and the Indian Southwest), offers a portrait of Rogers...
"The Night Stalker Companion" by Mark Dawidziak 08.10.2023 22:52
Dawidziak, a former TV critic for the Cleveland Plain Dealer and Akron Beacon Journal , has written books about three prominent TV shows: Columbo, Twilight Zone and Kolchak the Night Stalker. Columbo ran for 10 seasons while Twilight Zone ran for five and been repeated endlessly over the years. Kolchak, on the other hand , lasted for only the 1974-75 season and 20 episodes. Dawidziak told Steve Ta...
"The Injustice of Place" by Kathryn J. Edin, H. Luke Shaefer and Timothy J. Nelson 24.09.2023 24:49
In turning their attention from the country’s poorest people to its poorest places, the authors of "The Injustice of Place" discovered that America’s most disadvantaged communities are not the big cities that get the most notice but rural areas that are often ignored. Kathryn Edin and Tim Nelson, both of Princeton University, noted that, along with Luke Shaefer, who co-authored a previou...
"The Things We Make" by Bill Hammack 17.09.2023 22:30
Bill Hammack follows in the illustrious footsteps of Don Herbert ("Mr. Wizard"), Carl Sagan and Bill Nye the Science Guy (and, to some extent, Alton Brown of the Food Network) as one of the explainers of the universe. While the aforementioned individuals developed a following on television, Hammack, an engineering professor at the University of Illinois, has reached millions via public r...
"Beyond Piggly Wiggly" by Lisa Tolbert 17.09.2023 35:01
The Piggly Wiggly supermarket chain remains with us today but when Piggly Wiggly first appeared on the scene in 1916 it was part of a whole new concept in retailing: the self-service store. Lisa Tolbert, a professor at the University of North Carolina in Greensboro, explores the Piggly Wiggly phenomenon through 1940 at which time the self-service approach had become commonly accepted, she noted. T...
"From Rails to Trails: The Making of America's Active Transportation Network" by Peter Harnik 30.08.2023 23:53
As co-founder of the Rails to Trails Confederacy, Peter Harnik has visited 207 rail trails across the United States as part of his work on a fascinating chronology of rail corridors that have become trails for bikers, joggers as well as folks just out for a walk. But Harnik also supplies the background on how these trails came to be, a rail history that salutes the train era. "The rail-trail...
"Baseball: The Turbulent Midcentury Years" by Steven Gietschier 26.08.2023 25:02
There are a lot of baseball books out there but few delve into the kind of detail that Steve Gietschier (rhymes with "itchier") delivers in "Baseball: The Turbulent Midcentury Years." His book covers the sport from the depths of the Great Depression to the uncertainties of World War II right through the 1950s. Gietschier draws his title from the quote, "I prefer turbulent...
"Agriculture in the Midwest 1815-1900" by R. Douglas Hurt 24.07.2023 23:41
America was a nation of farmers in the 19th century. As R. Douglas Hurt notes in his book, "Agriculture in the Midwest 1815-1900," someone in 1900 born after the War of 1812 would have seen dramatic changes in farming practices. "They would be able to recount harvesting wheat with a sickle. They could discuss threshing a crop with a machine. They would have observed the power of a s...
“The First Atomic Bomb—The Trinity Site in New Mexico” by Janet Farrell Brodie 18.07.2023 19:22
Come with us now to a stretch of lonely desert in New Mexico during the latter days of World War II. Under extreme secrecy, there’s activity here that involves the country’s top military officials and some of the best minds in the world, scientists steeped in cutting-edge physics at work harnessing a nuclear chain reaction that will result in the first atomic bomb. That’s the story that Janet Farr...
"Back From the Collapse" by Curtis Freese 18.07.2023 20:24
As the co-founder of American Prairie, Curtis Freese is an ecologist working to help restore the wildlife in the grasslands of the Great Plains. His book, "Back From the Collapse," is a study in what's happened over the years in the Great Plains and what's being done to establish a large refuge that will let bison, wolves, beaver, prairie dogs and grassland birds thrive once ag...
"Ballists, Dead Beats and Muffins" by Robert Sampson 03.07.2023 24:37
“It attacks old and young alike,” declared the Pike County Democrat in 1866. The Illinois newspaper wasn’t talking about a cholera epidemic but baseball fever. Robert Sampson details the game’s early popularity in Illinois in his new book, “Ballists, Dead Beats and Muffins: Inside Early Baseball in Illinois.” In the aftermath of the Civil War, papers up and down the state were singing the praises...
"The First Ladies" by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray 03.07.2023 22:42
The battle for civil rights in the United States has always involved people willing to stand up and be passionate about what they believe. Two of those people were Mary McLeod Bethune and Eleanor Roosevelt. The alliance between the two women forms the basis for “The First Ladies” by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray, a work of historical fiction that allows the reader to better unders...
"Shadow of the New Deal: The Victory of Public Broadcasting" by Josh Shepperd 26.06.2023 21:28
Public broadcasting wasn’t some grand plan that just happened. Josh Shepperd traces the setbacks, minor victories and hard work that had to take place before the experiment that is public broadcasting took shape. His book, “Shadow of the New Deal: The Victory of Public Broadcasting,” identifies the universities that built the first educational program networks in the 1930s. You learn, for example,...
"A Mystery of Mysteries: The Death and Life of Edgar Allan Poe" by Mark Dawidziak 17.06.2023 33:52
Mark Dawidziak has a new book out, this one on Edgar Allan Poe. It takes its place on the bookshelf alongside other volumes Dawidziak has written. It’s a varied lot with subjects such as Mark Twain (who he has portrayed on stage for 44 years), Theodore Roosevelt, Richard Matheson and classic TV shows like “Twilight Zone,” “Columbo,” and “Kolchak: the Night Stalker.” In the new book, Dawidziak make...
“Television Finales—‘Howdy Doody’ to ‘Girls’” by Doug Howard and David Bianculli 26.05.2023 34:08
Doug Howard and David Bianculli produced an entire book about endings, specifically television finales. The book, “Television Finales—from ‘Howdy Doody’ to ‘Girls’” (2018), is a collection of essays edited by Howard and Bianculli that catalog the last show in a series where an effort is made to provide closure, answer lingering questions or send characters off to different spin-offs. The most fam...
"The Influencer Industry" by Emily Hund 24.05.2023 19:48
In writing "The Influencer Industry," Emily Hund, a University of Pennsylvania researcher, had a challenge: to explore the "increasingly-commercialized, social media-focused and sprawling internet environment" to find the influencers, the people that we go to to find truth or at least what we believe to be the truth. "Amid the immense noise of social media content, who sho...
"The West: A New History in 14 Lives" by Naoise Mac Sweeney 22.05.2023 18:27
If you believe western civilization is the result of a single cultural inheritance extending from ancient Greece to modern times, historian Naoise (pronounced Knee-sha) Mac Sweeney suggests you think again. That concept is a powerful figment of our collective imagination, she says, delivering some of her evidence in the form of a new book, "The West: A New History in 14 lives." How did s...
“The First Taste of Freedom” by Robert Turpin 17.05.2023 28:45
The bicycle has had anything but a smooth ride in the United States. As Robert Turpin tells it in “The First Taste of Freedom,” a history of how the bicycle has been marketed over the years in this country, the bicycle reached its height of popularity in the 1890s. Bicycling was a phenomenon with adults riding both individually and in clubs. Women found cycling brought new freedom. Production boom...
"The Future is Analog" by David Sax 15.05.2023 24:27
"A funny thing happened on the way to the digital utopia. We've begun to fall back in love with the very analog goods and ideas the tech gurus insisted that we no longer needed." That's the way David Sax's "The Revenge of Analog" starts off but that was 2016--light years ago since the intervening pandemic seemed to stretch time, itself. Sax's most recent eff...
"The Magazine Century" by David Sumner and Samir Husni 11.05.2023 21:48
Samir Husni has the distinction of being known as "Mr. Magazine," a title bestowed on him by a grateful student in 1986. Having made magazines his focus as a professor at the University of Mississippi for 37 years before retiring last year, Husni is now the founder and director of the Magazine Media Center. Husni told Steve Tarter that he picked up his love for magazines in his native Le...
"The American Way" by Helene Stapinski and Bonnie Siegler 02.05.2023 19:44
When Bonnie Siegler found the movie film that her grandfather Jules Schulback, a successful Manhattan furrier and amateur filmmaker, had taken of Marilyn Monroe while in New York doing the famous blown skirt scene from "The Seven Year Itch," she knew she had something. It turned out to be more than just a fascinating piece of cinema history (the only surviving footage of that legendary n...
"1876: Year of the Gun" by Steve Wiegand 28.04.2023 30:48
Sometimes it's hard knowing just how wild the Wild West was in this country. Cutting through the mythology that surround western heroes like Wyatt Earp and Buffalo Bill Cody is something that Steve Wiegand endeavors to do with "1876: Year of the Gun." A longtime journalist for three California papers, Wiegand has devoted himself to writing books since 2010. With "1876," he...
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