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One Day I’ll Be a Clevelander
I was born in northeast Ohio, on the awkward border between green and brown farmland and the gray highways crisscrossing Ohio’s suburbia. It wasn’t exactly Amish country, but buggies did clip-clop down the road every so often.
Intrigue of the Midwest’s Industrial Ruin
The intrigue of historical Midwest industry ... and the isolated beauty of Marktown in East Chicago, Indiana.
LeBron James, Dan Gilbert and “Owning” Professional Sports
On superstar athletes, team owners, and the economics of sports in the community.
The Second Edition of The Cleveland Anthology
Next month we publish our second edition (and third print run) of Rust Belt Chic: The Cleveland Anthology, with essays by Connie Schultz, Michael Ruhlman, David Giffels, and others. This excerpt is the book’s new introduction.
Friday Link Roundup
Ferguson and #blacktwitter, the Cleveland Browns do something right, buying a house with cash, the blues and a Wisconsin chair factory, climate change and the Midwest, and that potato salad Kickstarter guy.
Car Bombs to Cookie Tables: The Youngstown Anthology
The Youngstown Anthology: A call for submissions and proposals -- nonfiction contributions, including essays, profiles and reported works.
Midwest Lit: the new nostalgia
Midwestern novels used to bring some news from the territory -- today midwest lit is a nostalgic thing.
Summer Girl … and Other Duties as Assigned
Chicago’s Greyhound terminal in late Aug. 1966 certainly lacked cheer and charm, and perhaps safety. But to me, holding a one-way ticket back to Calumet County, WI, it was a suitable escape platform from my job as a “Summer Girl”
Adventures in Urban Angling on the Cleveland Lakefront
On a sunny summer afternoon, the City of Cleveland buzzes with a frenetic energy you can only observe from the waterfront, where the Cuyahoga meets the Great Lake.
The politics of local fish: why your walleye entree was shipped in from Canada
Lake Erie fishing -- commercial, sport, and charter boats -- and the politics of the catch.
Ferguson: The black iron fences of St. Louis
Asher Kohn, recent St. Louis resident, writes about the meaning of the 7-foot black metal fences in the now-famous photo of a man with his hands up before county police in Ferguson, Missouri.

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