John Linehan

John Linehan grew up in the West Englewood community on Chicago's southside. During his childhood Chicago was known as the "Most Racially Segregated City in America". This was because Chicago has always been a city of immigrants. People from around the world would settle there to escape the oppression and poverty of their homeland. These people worked in the stockyards and steel mills of the city. They settled in ethnic enclaves and brought many of their own suspicions and prejudices with them. Open housing laws were passed by the federal goverment and the period of time from the mid sixties thru the late seventies marked rapid racial change as neighborhoods on the west and southsides of the city change literally overnight.

Linehan's neighborhood was changing just as he turned sixteen. He bought an old car and joined a city wide ushering service that gave him acess to the stadiums, ballparks, and arenas of the city. He met a lot of characters in the bars and ballparks of Chicago. Corruption was an accepted part of life in Chicago. He had an inside look at how the "City that Works" actually worked.

Linehan grew up reading Chicago authors: John Powers, James Farrell, Saul Bellow, Nelson Algren, Mike Royko and Stuart Dybek. He saw similarities between the life experiences they wrote about and the characters he met growing up in the city. This inspired his first novel: City Life, Coming of Age in Chicago.

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