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Larry Doyle wins Thurber Prize

Posted by: Kit Donahue on 2008-10-08 09:03:57

Larry Doyle, a former TV writer-producer for "The Simpsons," was named the winner Monday of this year's Thurber Prize for American Humor. He was cited for the novel "I Love You, Beth Cooper." Read More >>

Tribute to Ponz in Gil Thorp comic strip

Posted by: Kit Donahue on 2008-09-04 12:09:21

Jeff Ponczak was a fan of the Gil Thorp comic strip and he was recently added into the strip as a new character.
Here is the link:
Click here to see Gil Thorp comic strip
Read More >>

Emma Johnson MSN Money column launches

Posted by: Emma Johnson on 2008-07-18 15:35:49

Emma Johnson's multimedia personal finance column recently launched on MSN Money. The series focuses on people in their 20s and 30s, and includes video, audio, graphic and text elements. Read More >>

proudly introducing... jean lachat photography

Posted by: Jean Lachat on 2008-07-17 22:48:52

I happily launched my own home-based photo studio this summer, specializing in documentary portraiture and pretty much anything that is not immoral or illegal! (or at least not that much!) Read More >>

Reporting Contest for College Students and Professionals!

Posted by: Adriana Colindres on 2008-07-17 22:13:52

Journalism organization Capitolbeat has separate reporting contests for college students and for professionals, as well as a conference open to all. Contest deadline is Aug. 1 for professionals and Sept. 10 for college students. Read More >>

Most recent new members:

Mike Bass, Chris Benson, Ty Bekiares, Nolan Larson, Alan Mutter, Ryan Ricker, Andrew Mason, Susan Rosenbaum, jay shatz, Natalie Rende,

Most recent donors:

Mike Bushman, Dana Dejanovich Maragos, Mary VanDeVelde Unseth, Kenneth and Kathleen Graesser, John David Reed, Channing Brown, Jean M. Franczyk, Cathy Martin Hall, Bill Choslovsky, Paul E. Veith,

Illini Media Hall of Fame - 2007

Dave Eggers

Daily Illini: 1988-92. Features editor, 1989-90; Directory editor, 1990-91; Inprint editor, 1991-92.

University of Illinios: University of Illinois: Bachelor of Science in journalism, 2002.

Inducted: 2007


Pulitzer Prize-finalist, best-selling author and upcoming screenwriter, Dave Eggers has spent his career dedicated to cultivating a greater community of independent-minded writers and thinkers.
Eggers founded Might magazine in 1993, and he also wrote a comic strip called Smarter Feller for San Francisco Weekly. In 1998, Eggers founded McSweeney's as a literary journal. Since then, the journal has continued, and the brand has expanded to encompass McSweeney's Books; the monthly magazine, The Believer; a quarterly DVD magazine, Wolphin; and a Web site.

In 2000, Eggers penned his best-selling memoir, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, to rave reviews. A year later in his home base of San Francisco, Eggers founded 826 Valencia, a writing lab for young people located in the Mission District. This was the first of seven such nonprofit centers Eggers established in largely underserved urban communities throughout the country. Eggers' first novel, You Shall Know Our Velocity! was published that same year.

Eggers published a short story collection, How We Are Hungry, in 2004 and in 2006 What Is The What: An Autobiography of Valentino Achak Deng, a novel about a refugee from the Sudanese civil war. Eggers also co-authored the nonfiction book, Teachers Have it Easy: The Big Sacrifices and Small Salaries of America's Teachers and Surviving Justice: America's Wrongly Convicted and Exonerated. And with the help of his workshop students, Eggers edits a collection of fiction, essays and journalism called The Best American Nonrequired Reading.

Eggers' other accomplishments include co-editing the Voice of Witness series of oral histories, and writing regularly for Frieze, Blind Spot, Parkett and Spin. In 2003, his designs for McSweeny's were featured in the National Design Triennial at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum and in the California Design Biennial.