Fun Places to Gay
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| | | Red Tape Theatre
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| | | | Donny's Skybox Studio Theatre
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| | | | Theater Oobleck at Victory Gardens Theater
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| | | | The Courtyard Theater at Chicago Shakespeare Theatre
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| | | | Royal George Theatre
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| | | | Broadway Playhouse at Water Tower Place
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| | | | Someplace Else II (Oh Zone)
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| | | | Seahorse II Cabaret
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| | | | Mussetter-Struble Theater at Northwestern Univiversity
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| | | | Estelle's
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| | | | Ruth Page Theatre
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| | | | Progress Bar
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| | | | La Cueva
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| | | | DanceWorks Chicago at Harris Theater for Music and Dance
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| | | | Office Niteclub
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| | | | Rascal's Bar & Grille
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| | | | The Neo-Futurist Theater
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| | | | A Red Orchid Theatre
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| | | | The Second City
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| | | | Lifeline Theatre
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| Friday August 18th
Book Launch Party: EAT ONLY WHEN YOU'RE HUNGRY by Lindsay Hunter 7:30pm
In Lindsay Hunter's achingly funny, fiercely honest second novel, Eat Only When You re Hungry, we meet Greg an overweight fifty-eight-year-old and the father of Greg Junior, GJ, who has been missing for three weeks. GJ's been an addict his whole adult life, disappearing for days at a time, but for some reason this absence feels different, and Greg has convinced himself that he's the only one who can find his son. So he rents an RV and drives from his home in West Virginia to the outskirts of Orlando, Florida, the last place GJ was seen. As we travel down the streets of the bizarroland that is Florida, the urgency to find GJ slowly recedes into the background, and the truths about Greg's mistakes as a father, a husband, a man are uncovered.
In Eat Only When You're Hungry, Hunter elicits complex sympathy for her characters, asking the reader to take a closer look at the way we think about addiction why we demonize the junkie but turn a blind eye to drinking a little too much or eating too much and the fallout of failing ourselves.
This event is not only a celebration for Lindsay's new book, it is also a fundraiser for an organization dear to Lindsay's heart, the Chicago Childcare Collective. The Chicago Childcare Collective (ChiChiCo) is a group of volunteers who support the participation of parents, especially mothers, in racial and economic justice work. The collective matches volunteers with community organizations across the city to have fun with kids while their parents participate in and lead organizing efforts to defend their rights and build a better Chicago. For this event, representatives from ChiChiCo will be on-hand to discuss their actions and how you can help.
Lindsay Hunter is the author of the story collections Don't Kiss Me and Daddy's and the novel Ugly Girls. Originally from Florida, she now lives in Chicago with her husband, sons, and dogs.
Event Website
Women & Children First Bookstore 5233 N Clark St Chicago, IL 60640 (773) 769-9299 Location Website
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