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Norbert
Blei |
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| Adventures
in an American’s Literature |
Blei’s novel,
set in the high ‘60s, chronicles the adventures of one Miroslav
Blazen, a Chicago hoodlum reclaimed by his English teacher and parish
priest, as he passes through Illinois State University and begins a marriage
and teaching career first at blue-collar Campbell City High, then in North
Highland, in the Chicago ’burbs. Teacher, poet and lover, “Hassock”
falls victim to intellectually constipated educationists and uptight students.
Blei’s novel resembles, and may be the origin of some elements of
Dead Poets Society.
“A satirical, comical look at
the high school English class. . . . [It] should prove particularly entertaining
to anyone involved in teaching high school English. It would certainly
help the general public understand what really goes on in the American
high school. This book will provide valuable perspective to any undergraduate
considering teaching as a career [and] help prospective teachers realize
that the high school classroom is not all lesson plans and behavioral
objectives.”—Choice
“It is the scenes in the classroom
and the environs of the school that put this book in a class with that
special poignant sense of Salinger, or Updike’s Other Stories.
There are marvelous characters and scenes here. . . . As Wendell Berry
notes eloquently in ‘Discipline and Hope,’ the loss of dedicated,
inspired teachers capable of giving a lifetime of compassionate teaching
remains a tragedy for this nation. One feels this on the pulse after reading
Blei’s novel.”—Gargoyle Magazine
“Received and Recommended”—American
Book Review
“Very Highly Recommended”—Wormwood
182 pages
$5.95 paper
0-933180-41-1
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| Door
Steps |
In five seasonal essays
and a daybook of 365 entries, Blei records the passing of days and seasons
in Door County, in his life, in our lives. A delicate balance between
the rugged Door terrain and the author’s inner landscape, Door
Steps is the most private and most public of Blei’s books.
The seasonal essays, especially “Christmas Eve in Door,” have
long been recognized as Door County classics. Illustrations from the sketchbooks
of Door County artist Charles Peterson make a nice complement to Blei’s
prose.
“Blei writes in a poignant and
intimate way that captures all the delicate quiet notes of the struggle
to hear, sense and feel all the important textures around us . . . yet
another important book from a writer who has certainly ‘been there
before.’”—John Nichols
“A peninsular song of the open
road, Door Steps is an intense, sensitive celebration of Blei’s
home turf through an entire cycle of seasons. Its poetic prose style presents
a rewarding ‘inside narrative’ of meditation and expansive
humor. It is replete with the particular and laced with the universal,
a fine sequel and natural extension to the earlier Door Way.”—Richard
Boudreau
“Blei’s feelings about
the place he has chosen to live are mixed; he recognizes drawbacks along
with advantages. But he makes the county seem like an interesting place,
and not just during those warm months when tourists are underfoot.”—Robert
Wells, Milwaukee Journal
“A pleasant, vicarious journey
through the seasons that conveys some of the intensity and immediacy of
weather, and the natural world that are so much a part of that life.”—Chicago
magazine
230 pages
illustrated
$14.95 cloth
0-933180-44-6
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Door
Way

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Weaving a tapestry
of lives and landscapes, past and present, earth and water, nature and
man, Blei celebrates the unique heritage of Door County, Wisconsin, and
suggests the precariousness of this balance, in Door County and wherever
the natural environment is threatened by forces without and within. At
a time of concern over endangered species, Door Way expressed
concern for endangered spaces. A decade after publication, this book remains
a testimony to lives lived in the true spirit of very special tale.
“A fascinating assemblage of
profiles that adds up to a vivid, feeling portrait of a region.”
–Studs Terkel
“Blei has a fine ear and a genuine,
searching, feeling humanity evident in dozens and dozens of observations.”—Chicago
Tribune
“Blei’s friends and neighbors
have not escaped the world; they are very much a part of it, involved
in the vital issues of our times.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Norbert Blei is a writer the
way people used to be troubadours and minstrels, celebrating what he has
seen and heart and felt in a deceptively simple style reminiscent of the
early Sherwood Anderson. . . . Like Anderson, he is a lover, and his affection
invests his writing with a singular charm.”—Sydney J. Harris
“I predict that, someday, his
Door Country will join the great mythical-real landscapes that
include Salinas, Spoon River, and Yoknapatawpha.”—Harry Mark
Petrakis
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308 pages
illustrated
third printing
$19.95 cloth
0-933180-22-5
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| The
Ghost of Sandburg’s Phizzog |
Blei’s stories
well up from the secret places of the writer’s psyche . . . and
the reader’s. His characters are people we have met every day, but
in his hands they touch magically and mysteriously the dark realms of
legend; the World War II vet introducing his long-haired son, just returned
from Vietnam, to buddies at the VFW; the mad Irishman defying his own
mortality with his “chair trick”; the mother, dying of cancer,
stuffing herself with smoked fish, roast lamb, salami, cheese, and bakery.
This book was a 1986 Pushcart Foundation
“Writer’s Choice” selection and was selected for the
NEA Literature Program’s 1987 Buenos Aires Book Fair exhibit of
New American Writing.
“Blei’s powerful, uneven,
brooding interest dwells two streets down from Nelson Algren, a block
away from Harry Mark Petrakis, and along the busy line from Ernest Hemingway
to Carl Sandburg, a few versts from Chekov.”—Chicago Sun-Times
“Blei may be expected to make
a significant contribution to the American short-story heritage. This
is a good book.”—Choice
“The man is very, very good,
a true son of the Middle West who descends from the brawny (and brainy)
line of Sandburg and Hemingway . . . he is a grand story-teller.”—Frederick
Busch
“Overall, these stories in a
traditional mold, often containing subtle, experimental variations on
language, present a refreshing alternative to much of the autobiographical
fiction written today.”—New York Times Book Review
“Each of Blei’s stories
is different, each breathes life into characters whose flesh and voice
and spirit fill your room, your home, your heart.”—Andre Dubus
196 pages
$11.95 cloth 0-933180-87-X
$8.95 paper 0-944024-01-7
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Neighborhood

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They’re all
here, exactly as you remember them. A butcher named Polacek, a baker named
Vesecky. Doc Cermak, General Practitioner. Tony the Shoemaker, Shorty
the Locksmith, Joey the Peddler. The ice cream man. The softball diamond
and the roller rink. The neighborhood pub. The neighborhood theater. The
old Sokol Slavsky gym, where you do gymnastics. St. Joseph’s, where
the mass is still chanted in Latin. The Savings and Loan. The Bohemians.
The Italians. The mushroom hunters, the wine makers.
Norbert Blei’s neighborhood
is specifically Cicero-Berwyn, Illinois, 1940’s through 1970’s.
It is a neighborhood now disintegrating, passing into a neighborhood of
the author’s mind, a neighborhood of nostalgia. In a more general
sense, it is every ethnic and urban neighborhood, in neighborhoods of
our youths. We know Joey. We’ve met Shorty. We’ve been a hundred
times in Vesecky’s, and we can smell that houska as sure as if it
were on this table. Blei’s neighborhood is our neighborhood.
In the largest sense, Blei’s
neighborhood is a universal community, that sense of belonging that got
lost in the rush to suburban bedroom developments and has not been recovered
in condo villages, urban or rural. Blei’s requiem for the urban
neighborhood is a cry for the lost heart of America, that hole in the
soul where community used to be.
“Wonderful, nostalgic pieces,
partly autobiographical, party historical, and party fictional . . . highly
recommended.”—Choice
“A poignant tribute to Chicago.”—Chicago
Sun-Times
“’Our Town’ Blei
style, and in the sense of a boyhood exquisitely remembered, it is Every
Town a few decades ago. You don’t have to be Bohemian to love this
neighborhood.”—Chicago Tribune
272 pages
illustrated
third printing
$14.95 paper
0-944024-35-1
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| Paint
Me a Picture/Make Me a Poem |
A selection of concrete
poems, arranged chronologically from the 1960s through the 1980s, Paint
Me a Picture traces Blei’s movement from cut-out and pictograph
to collage to fully realized painting-poem. Work in this collection reflects
and extends the traditions of Henry Miller and Kenneth Patchen, among
others, while prefiguring Blei’s 46-painting series “Die Mauer”
(exhibited Santa Fe, April 1993). The originals of most picture-poems
contained in this book are now, like the paintings of “Die Mauer,”
in private collections. Or they are lost.
Includes three short essays by Blei
and a foreword (with bibliography) by Paul Schroeder, Librarian at the
Folger Library, University of Maine.
“The book. . . must be experienced.”—Door
County Advocate
108 pages
$5.95 paper
0-933180-97-7
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Winter Book

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Winter Book is
a mature performance with a satisfying sense of completion. The season is
winter; the dominant theme is the acceptance of small wonders, including
decay and obscurity. Like Blei himself, Winter Book is alternately
nostalgic, angry, and amusing. It is in some respects a very public book,
in others a very personal collection. The journalistic profiles are Blei’s
own experiences and friends, including public figures like Chan Harris and
Al Johnson, and Door County natives, poets, musicians, and artists. Blei’s
fictions explore the Door landscape on a deeper level. Blei is an astute
observer whose attitudes are shared by readers inside and outside the County.
Once again the personal becomes the public, and Winter Book, like
Door Way, records communal experience. |
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