For the Love of Mike: More of the Best of Mike Royko - Book Review,
by Mike Royko

From Publishers Weekly This is a substantial second collection (after One More Time) by the quintessential urban columnist as he witnessed the 1960s through the 1990s, preserving with a keen eye his obsessions, rages and lonely ethical crusades. Royko (author of Boss, an infamous critique of Chicago's late Mayor Richard Daley) embodies a journalistic archetype once synonymous with Chicago (cf. The Front Page), but now nearly extinct: chauvinistic and old-fashioned, yet fiercely imbued with a sense of time and place, and with courage enough, as Roger Ebert recalls in his warm foreword, to denounce the newspapers of Rupert Murdoch the new owner of Royko's own paper as "not fit to wrap fish in." While Royko's subjects range widely, his moral stance and his well-honed rhetorical feints are rock-solid. Humorous columns like those featuring Slats Grobnik, Everyman of Royko's hardscrabble, white-ethnic neighborhood territory, or his legendary 1980 piece on pigeon eaters in Grant Park feel like grittier versions of folksy writers like Garrison Keillor. His serious, angrier pieces edge closer than most postwar writers dared in addressing the nihilistic darkness enveloping the cities, as in "Nero Would Love Chicago," a 1975 piece acidly questioning police priorities during an arson epidemic. His pieces regarding the civil rights struggle where he examines Northern racial hypocrisy alongside Southern brutality remain sharp and poignant, and remind how groundless are charges of intolerance leveled against Royko late in life. Finally, his wry critiques of the Chicago "machine" and its time-honored traditions ("when you buy somebody, they stay bought") make one miss his gadfly presence on the political scene, particularly his unerring eye for hypocrisy. Fans will treasure this collection. (Apr.) Forecast: Need we even say this will be a bestseller in Chicago?Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal Royko entertained and educated Chicago newspaper readers with his nationally syndicated daily columns for more than 30 years. After his death in 1997, One More Time, a collection of his best columns, was published. The result of reader requests, this second volume brings together more than 100 additional selections chosen from over 7000 pieces. The collection is organized around some of Royko's favorite themes, ranging from the affliction of being a Cubs fan to his passionate concern for civil rights. His columns cover all types of issues, from the distress of short-legged male dogs in a Chicago winter to the need for stricter handgun regulations. Also included are letters, calls, complaints, and thoughts from readers, as well as a foreword by Roger Ebert. Old friends of Slat Grobnick, Royko's a beloved Chicago character, will welcome this highly readable collection, and new readers will want to know more. It is also of interest to journalism students. Judy Solberg, George Washington Univ. Lib., Washington, DC Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist Collected newspaper columns can be a dust gatherer; most daily commentary is too ephemeral to justify hardcover publication. This publisher took a chance that the late Mike Royko--the curmudgeonly lead columnist of the Chicago Daily News and, when that paper shut down, the Chicago Tribune--might be an exception when it published One More Time (1999). Response was positive enough to encourage a second collection. Roger Ebert supplies a foreword (Studs Terkel did the honors for the previous volume). Where One More Time's 110 selections were organized chronologically, these 100-plus columns are grouped thematically, around such subjects as politics, the Chicago Cubs, the media, injustice, Chicago, and "Everywhere Else." The editors (Royko's wife, Judy, and Lois Wille and Wayne Wille) have added a feature omitted from the first collection: the "Letters, Calls, Complaints, and Great Thoughts from Readers" Royko sometimes printed when a particular column drew an unusually vitriolic response. If One More Time circulated, so will For the Love of Mike. Mary Carroll Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Book Description In 1999, the University of Chicago Press published a collection of Mike Royko's columns, entitled One More Time: The Best of Mike Royko. The response was immediate and overwhelming--readers almost instantly began asking when the second volume of Royko columns would appear. With more than a hundred vintage Royko columns and a foreword by Roger Ebert, For the Love of Mike was the answer.
From the Inside Flap "You'll laugh. You'll cry. Royko's genius is pure Chicago."-Ann Landers
In 1999, the University of Chicago Press published a collection of Mike Royko's columns entitled One More Time: The Best of Mike Royko. The response was immediate and overwhelming-readers almost instantly began asking when a second volume of Royko's columns would appear. With more than a hundred vintage Royko columns and a foreword by Roger Ebert, this book is the answer.
About the Author Mike Royko (1932-1997) worked as a daily columnist for the Chicago Daily News, the Chicago Sun-Times, and the Chicago Tribune. His Pulitzer Prize-winning columns were syndicated in more than 600 newspapers across the country.
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