Chicago (Ill.)See also what's at Wikipedia, your library, or elsewhere.
Broader term:Narrower terms:- Chicago (Ill.) -- Biography
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Charters
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Commerce
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Description and travel
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Economic conditions
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Fiction
- Chicago (Ill.) -- History
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Imprints
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Intellectual life
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Juvenile fiction
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Literary collections
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Newspapers
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Poetry
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Politics and government
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Race relations
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Religious life and customs
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Social conditions
- Chicago (Ill.) -- Social life and customs
- Fort Dearborn Massacre, Chicago, Ill., 1812
- Haymarket Square Riot, Chicago, Ill., 1886
- Riots -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Central Howard Association (Chicago, Ill.)
- Farm Foundation (Chicago, Ill.)
- Hull-House (Chicago, Ill.)
- Little review (Chicago, Ill.)
- Oakwoods Cemetery (Chicago, Ill.)
- African American labor union members -- Illinois -- Chicago
- African American women -- Race identity -- Illinois -- Chicago
- African Americans -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Air quality management -- Illinois -- Chicago
- American periodicals -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Anarchists -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Apartment houses -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Arbitration, Industrial -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Architects -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Architecture -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Art, Municipal -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Authors and publishers -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Automobiles -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Baseball programs -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Businesspeople -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Catholic Church -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Catholics -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Charities -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Church and social problems -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Church work with prostitutes -- Illinois -- Chicago
- City missions -- Illinois -- Chicago
- City planning -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Clothing workers -- Illinois -- Chicago
- College student newspapers and periodicals -- Illinois -- Chicago
- College teachers -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Crime -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Criminal statistics -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Criminals -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Dance -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Day care centers -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Early printed books -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Elections -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Elementary schools -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Gangsters -- Illinois -- Chicago
- German Americans -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Germans -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Governmental investigations -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Hecht, Ben, 1894-1964 -- Homes and haunts -- Illinois -- Chicago
- High schools -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Holiness churches -- Missions -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Homeless persons -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Immigrants -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Imprisonment -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Italian Americans -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Jews -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Juvenile delinquency -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Juvenile delinquents -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Labor -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Labor movement -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Labor unions -- Organizing -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Landlord and tenant -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Local transit -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Manual training -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Meat industry and trade -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Multiracial people -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Music-halls (Variety-theaters, cabarets, etc.) -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Newspaper publishing -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Organized crime -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Palestinian Arabs -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Police -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Polish Americans -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Political conventions -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Poor -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Press -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Price regulation -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Pricing -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Printing -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Private investigators -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Probation -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Prostitution -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Public works -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Publishers and publishing -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Race riots -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Racketeering -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Radio broadcasting -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Real property -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Rental housing -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Secret societies -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Social ethics -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Social reformers -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Social service -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Social settlements -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Socialists -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Stockyards -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Suburbs -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Sweatshops -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Traffic engineering -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Transportation and state -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Trials (Heresy) -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Trials (Murder) -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Unemployed -- Illinois -- Chicago
- Working class -- Illinois -- Chicago
Example: |
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.)
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.) -- Biography
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.) -- Charters
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.) -- Commerce
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.) -- Description and travel
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.) -- Fiction Artie: A Story of the Streets and Town (second edition; Chicago: H. S. Stone and Co., 1896), by George Ade, illust. by John T. McCutcheon (illustrated HTML and page images at Indiana) Doc' Horne: A Story of the Streets and Town (New York: Duffield and Co., 1906), by George Ade (illustrated HTML and page images at Indiana) Erik Dorn, by Ben Hecht Gullible's Travels, Etc., by Ring Lardner, illust. by May Wilson Preston (Gutenberg text and illustrated HTML) In Babel: Stories of Chicago (New York: McClure, Phillips and Co., 1903), by George Ade (HTML and page images at Indiana) Pink Marsh: A Story of the Streets and Town (Chicago and New York: H. S. Stone and Co., 1897), by George Ade, illust. by John T. McCutcheon (illustrated HTML and page images at Indiana) Sweet Clover: A Romance of the White City (Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1894), by Clara Louise Burnham (Gutenberg multiple formats) Tales of Chicago Streets (Little Blue Book #698; Girard, KS: Haldeman-Julius Co., c1924), by Ben Hecht (page images at HathiTrust) Sister Carrie (restored text; Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1981), by Theodore Dreiser, ed. by John C. Berkey, Alice M. Winters, James L. W. West, and Neda M. Westlake (PDF at Wayback Machine) Chikago: Nykyajan Romaani ("The Jungle" in Finnish; Porvoo: WSOY, 1906), by Upton Sinclair, trans. by O. A. Joutsen (Gutenberg text) The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair (Gutenberg text) Pyramid Scheme, by Dave Freer and Eric Flint (multiple formats at freedoors.org) Raistas (The Jungle) (Lithuanian translation; Chicago: Spauda "Lietuvos", c1908), by Upton Sinclair, trans. by Jonas Naujokas With the Procession, by Henry Blake Fuller (Gutenberg text) The Bomb (London: J. Long, c1908), by Frank Harris (page images at HathiTrust) The Bomb (first American edition; New York: M. Kennerley, 1909), by Frank Harris The Bomb (illustrated and definitive edition, with a new afterword; New York: The author, 1920), by Frank Harris The Bomb (with a 1963 introduction by Dos Passos), by Frank Harris, contrib. by John Dos Passos (HTML at theanarchistlibrary.org) The Efficiency Expert, by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Gutenberg text) The Efficiency Expert (original magazine version), by Edgar Rice Burroughs (illustrated HTML at erblist.com) The Pit: A Story of Chicago, by Frank Norris (Gutenberg text) So Big (Garden City, NY: Doubleday and Co., c1924), by Edna Ferber (page images at HathiTrust) So Big (New York: Grosset and Dunlap, c1924), by Edna Ferber (Gutenberg text and illustrated HTML) A Tame Surrender: A Story of the Chicago Strike (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Co., 1896), by Charles King (Gutenberg text and illustrated HTML) Wilby's Dan (New York: Dodd, Mead and Co., 1904), by William Wallace Cook, illust. by C. B. Falls (page images at HathiTrust) Windy McPherson's Son, by Sherwood Anderson (Gutenberg text) The Fabulous Clipjoint, by Fredric Brown (HTML at Wayback Machine) Marching Men, by Sherwood Anderson (Gutenberg text) Sister Carrie, by Theodore Dreiser (Gutenberg text) Sister Carrie (New York: Doubleday, Page, and Co., 1900), by Theodore Dreiser Sister Carrie (New York: B. W. Dodge and Co., 1907), by Theodore Dreiser (multiple formats at Indiana) The Song of the Lark (1915), by Willa Cather (Gutenberg text)
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.) -- History Chicago: Past, Present, Future, by John Stephen Wright (page images at MOA) The Story of Chicago and National Development, 1534-1910 (Chicago: Little Chronicle Co., c1909), by Eleanor Atkinson, ed. by Little Chronicle Company (page images at HathiTrust) History of the Great Fires in Chicago and the West, by E. J. Goodspeed (page images at MOA) Sketches of Childhood and Girlhood: Chicago, 1847-1864 (c1925), by Cornelia Gray Lunt
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.) -- Imprints A Bibliography of Chicago Imprints, 1835-1850 (Chicago: W. Howes, 1944), by Douglas C. McMurtrie Check List of Chicago Ante-Fire Imprints, 1851-1871 (American Imprints Inventory #4; 1938), by Historical Records Survey (U.S.) Notes in Supplement to "The First Printers of Chicago" (Chicago: Privately printed, 1931), by Douglas C. McMurtrie The First Printers of Chicago; With a Bibliography of the Issues of the Chicago Press, 1836-1850 (Chicago: P. Covici, 1927), by Douglas C. McMurtrie
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.) -- Juvenile fiction
Filed under: Chicago (Ill.) -- Literary collections
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