The Barn House
 New American Library; $22.95
 One man’s trash is another man’s treasure, an idea that Ed Zotti explores in his urban rehab tell-all The Barn House. "The house was the kind of place that the neighborhood kids probably held their breath and crossed their fingers when walking past," writes Zotti about the dilapidated property—threatened by a foundation of sand—that he remodeled in Ravenswood. 
Everyday Survival
 W. W. Norton; $25.95
 With his seventh book, Everyday    Survival: Why Smart People Do    Stupid Things, Evanston writer    Laurence Gonzales examines how    today’s society has weakened our most basic of instincts: survival.
The Galloping Ghost
 Houghton Mifflin; $25
 Football wasn’t truly football until    the coming of Red Grange, one of    the most influential Bears players    of all time. In The Galloping Ghost, first-time biographer Gary Poole  describes the life of Wheaton-raised Grange and his impact on the game, the business, and the popularity of football in our country.
Dream City
 MacAdam/Cage; $22
 Oak Park resident Brendan Short has written a powerful first novel, Dream City, about a six-year-old whose comic-obsessed, carefree innocence is broken after his mother’s death. The book is set in a faithfully re-created Depression-era Chicago.
 
                
