Much notable Chicago writing focuses on the city itself, with social criticism keeping exultation in check. Here is a selection of Chicago's most famous works about itself:
Fiction, drama, and poetry •
Nelson Algren's
Chicago: City on the Make (1951) is a prose poem about the alleys and the El tracks, the neon and the dive bars, the beauty and cruelty of Chicago. •
David Auburn's play
Proof (2000 New York debut) is set on the porch of a house in
Hyde Park. The play focuses on the emotional turmoil experienced by Catherine, a young woman who recently lost her father, a prominent
University of Chicago mathematician who suffered from an unspecified mental illness. •
Saul Bellow's
The Adventures of Augie March (1953) charts the long, drifting life of a Jewish Chicagoan and his myriad eccentric acquaintances throughout the early 20th century: growing up in the then Eastern European neighborhood of
Humboldt Park, cavorting with heiresses on
Chicago's Gold Coast, studying at the University of Chicago, fleeing union thugs in the
Loop, and taking the odd detour to hang out with Trotsky in
Mexico while eagle-hunting giant iguanas on horseback. Novelist
Martin Amis describes the book as "An epic about the so-called ordinary", a remark that indicates the text's sprawling, episodic structure. Amis also goes so far as to claim that "
The Adventures of Augie March is the Great American Novel." •
Gwendolyn Brooks'
A Street in Bronzeville (1945) is the collection of poems that launched the career of the famous Chicago poet, focusing on the aspirations, disappointments, and daily life of African-Americans living in 1940s
Bronzeville. •
Frank London Brown's powerful debut novel,
Trumbull Park (1959) fictionalizes the real-life ordeals of the first black families to integrate
South Side Chicago's Trumbull Park public housing project in the 1950s. First published 1959. Henry Regnery Company, Chicago. Re-published 2004, 2005 by Northeastern University Press (Northeastern Library of Black Literature). •
Sandra Cisneros's
The House on Mango Street (1983) is a Mexican-American
coming-of-age novel, dealing with a young Latina girl, Esperanza Cordero, growing up in a neighborhood modeled on Chicago's Humboldt Park. It commonly appears in American high school reading lists. •
Theodore Dreiser's
Sister Carrie (1900) tells the tale of a country girl who leaves home to seek her fortune, first in Chicago and later in New York. Its descriptions of Chicago include a portrait of Loop department stores at the end of the nineteenth century. According to the
Dictionary of Literary Biography, Dreiser was an important figure in American naturalism. •
Stuart Dybek's
The Coast of Chicago (2004), written in a style blending the gritty with the dreamlike, is a collection of fourteen short stories about growing up in Chicago, largely in neighborhoods such as
Pilsen and
Little Village populated by Eastern European and Latino immigrant communities. •
Eve Ewing's poetry collection
1919 (2019), a follow-up to her 2017 volume
Electric Arches, uses poetry to depict the
Chicago race riot of 1919 and grapple with its legacy a century after the
Red Summer of 1919. •
James T. Farrell's
Studs Lonigan: A Trilogy (1935) focuses on the often bitter lives of Chicago's South Side Irish-Americans during the 1920s and 30s, tying their fates to larger cultural narratives like the American Dream and to historical events like
Prohibition and the
Great Depression. •
Lorraine Hansberry's play
A Raisin in the Sun (1959 Broadway debut) depicts the struggles faced by a working-class family of black Chicagoans who attempt to purchase a home in a segregated white neighborhood. The play echoes a real event: in 1938, Hansberry's father challenged the
restrictive covenant that enforced racial segregation in Chicago's
Washington Park Subdivision. •
Audrey Niffenegger's science fiction love story ''
The Time Traveler's Wife'' (2003) takes place largely in North Side Chicago settings, including the
Newberry Library. •
Frank Norris's
The Pit (1903) is a naturalistic novel about greed and speculation at the early 20th-century
Chicago Board of Trade. It is the second installment in
The Epic of Wheat, a never-finished trilogy in which Norris planned to depict the economic life cycle of this crucial commodity from production to consumption. •
Carl Sandburg's
Chicago Poems (1916) depicts scenes from early-twentieth-century Chicago, often focusing on working-class characters and commenting on the class divide. With this early volume, Sandburg established his reputation as the poet of the common American. •
Upton Sinclair's
The Jungle (1906) belongs to the canons of both Chicago literature and US labor history for its muckraking depiction of the desolation experienced by Lithuanian immigrants working in the
Union Stock Yards on
Chicago's Southwest Side. •
Richard Wright's
Native Son (1940), set in Depression-era
Bronzeville and
Hyde Park, is about a doomed, young, black man warped by the racism and poverty that define his surroundings.
Nonfiction •
Karen Abbott's
Sin in the Second City (2007) provides a history of Chicago's vice district, the Levee, and some of the early twentieth-century personalities involved: gangsters, corrupt politicians, crusading reformers, and two sisters who ran the most elite brothel in town. •
Jane Addams'
Twenty Years at Hull-House (1910), written by a social reformer who won the 1931 Nobel Peace prize, is an autobiography combined with firsthand investigation of poverty, immigrant communities, and political activism in turn-of-the-20th-century Chicago. •
Erik Larson's
Devil in the White City (2003) is a best-selling popular history about the
1893 Colombian Exposition; it's also about the serial killer who was stalking the city at the same time. Straight history of the Exposition and also the workers' paradise in Pullman is found in James Gilbert's ''Perfect Cities: Chicago's Utopias of 1893''. •
Mike Royko's
Boss (1971), written by a
Chicago Daily News columnist, is a biography of the powerful mayor
Richard J. Daley. The book provides a critical look at Daley's rise to power and at Chicago's political culture of "clout".
American Pharaoh (Cohen and Taylor) is a scholarly treatment of the same subject. •
Studs Terkel's
Working (1974) is a series of interviews with American workers. Although Terkel interviewed people in other cities, most of his material comes from Chicago, and the book uses interviews to paint a composite portrait of Chicago as a laboring town.
Alternate Chicagos Alternative versions of Chicago sometimes appear in fantasy and science fiction novels. •
Rena Barron's
Maya and the Rising Dark (2020) is the start of a middle-grade fantasy series set in contemporary Chicago. •
Jim Butcher's
The Dresden Files (begun 2000) is a series set in Chicago about Harry Dresden, Chicago's first (and only) Wizard PI, who protects the city from supernatural attack. •
C. L. Polk's
Even Though I Knew the End (2022), which won the
Nebula Award for Best Novella, is set in a fantasy version of 1940s Chicago. •
Veronica Roth's
Divergent trilogy (2011–2013) is a young-adult series set in a dystopian future Chicago.
Other Other noted writers, who were from Chicago or who spent a significant amount of their careers in Chicago include,
David Mamet,
Ernest Hemingway,
Ben Hecht,
John Dos Passos,
Edgar Rice Burroughs,
Edgar Lee Masters,
Sherwood Anderson,
Eugene Field, and
Hamlin Garland. == See also ==