Monday, August 20, 2012
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Wednesday Walking Tour: GUTHRIES & A WALK DOWN MEMORY LANE
Guthries
is a neighborhood tavern located at Lakewood and Addison on the western edge of
Wrigleyville. If you know anything about Chicago you know that corner bars are
a dime a dozen, but you won’t find any crusty patrons that you suspect have
been saddled up along the bar since first call at Guthries. The local establishment served as a grocery store during prohibition but
has been a bar since 1933. Gutheries is named for J.B. Guthrie, a prominent
developer in Lakeview in the late 1800’s. The two-story, gabled building
features a beige-painted brick and wooden façade with "Tavern" tastefully
stenciled in red on both of its large picture windows overlooking the sidewalk.
There are free pretzels, beers that range from Chimay to the blue collared Old
Style and a bookcase of board games to play in the relaxed atmosphere.
I lived about two blocks from
Guthries when I lived in Wrigleyville, so I’ve been there more than a few
times. I picked it as the place where Libby and Aidan have their initial
showdown in BINDING ARBITRATION, one, because of the location near the ballpark;
two, because it’s a place where people “play games” and three, because it holds a
special place in my heart. It’s not a fancy place but it holds a certain kind
of rustic charm. I lived with my boyfriend and on the afternoon of the day I
got engaged he called me and told me to meet him at 5 p.m. at Guthries. I had a
feeling that we were going to get engaged and I didn’t think he’d do it in
Guthries, but it was one of the first places we’d ever gone to together so I
was like, “okay”.
I got to the bar to find it fairly empty on an early Saturday
evening the week before Christmas. My boyfriend told me to wear something nice,
so I was way overdressed, sitting at the bar alone. Of course a guy approached
me. Let me say that I think this was the first and only time I’d ever walked
into a bar alone. Bar guy sat down next to me and kept trying to have a
conversation with me. I was giving him one syllable answers and watching the
door.
Finally
he said, “What’s your problem?”“I’m not interested,” I retorted.
He was good looking and I’m sure he wasn’t used to rejection. “Why not?”
“Because my boyfriend’s coming and I’m going to get engaged tonight!”
“Sure you are.” He grinned.
Next thing I know, my boyfriend, all six-foot-five inches of him, walks through the door. I smiled at him and then I looked back at bar guy. He chuckled and slinked away as my boyfriend approached. Then I patted-down my boyfriend and his trench coat. No ring!
My boyfriend raised an eyebrow and nodded toward bar guy. “What did he want?”
I giggled demurely and said, “Your fiancée.”
My boyfriend sat down, ordered a beer, looked me in the eye and said, “I don’t have a fiancée.”
I clinked my highball glass into his bottle and said, “The night's still young!”
So the next time you go to a Cubs game, stop by Guthries for a beer, a game of Life and maybe a memory or two.
Happy
Hump Day,
Elizabeth
MarxGuthries 1300 West Addison, Chicago, Illlinois was voted Top 10 Chicago, Neighborhood Bars, Eyewitness Top 10 Travel Guides!
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
TUESDAY TIP #2--GO INTERNATIONAL BABY
Have you listed your titles in all the available Amazon
markets in France, UK, Germany, Spain and Italy? This seems like a complicated
process if you don’t read the language, but Amazon sets up every site
identically so if you’re familiar with Amazon.com you should be able to
navigate this. To list your titles on the foreign sites all you have to find is
the login information, which is in the upper right hand corner, before the
shopping cart symbol. When the drop down login appears, put in your Amazon.com
email & password, the same login you use to login to your Amazon.com account.
THAT’S ALL YOU HAVE TO DO. Shortly (mine showed up by the next day) all of your
titles that are on Amazon.com will be displayed on the foreign site. The links
for the international sites are listed below. Now some of the international
sites won’t sell your eBook but anyone who clicks through to the purchase page
is directed to Amazon.com where they can make their purchase, and you’ve opened
up your books potential readership to people across the globe.
UK : http://www.amazon.co.uk/
GERMANY: http://www.amazon.de/
SPAIN: http://www.amazon.es/
ITALY: http://www.amazon.it/
Happy Marketing,
Elizabeth Marx
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