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Wednesday
Nov292017

Chronicles of a Little League coach: A story told in 6 innings

Introduction

The six essays that follow are for my son, Tyler. Not for the 14-year-old high school freshman he is today. But for who he will be someday in the future. Maybe for the day he becomes a father, if that day should ever come. But for someday when he might appreciate them. When he might understand why I wrote them for him.

Why six? Because that’s the length of an intermediate Little League game: six innings. And most of these stories are inspired by that level of youth baseball.

Tyler started playing baseball at the T-ball level in 2008, when he was still in preschool. I was an assistant coach for that team and coached him, as either head or assistant coach, for all but one of the 10 years of youth baseball that followed.  

Why then do the essays not start until 2013? Why leapfrog over those first five years? Because the story that I’m telling begins when Tyler turned 10, after he graduated from T-ball and coach pitch, and began more competitive baseball. It is then that the true lessons learned from playing and coaching Little League baseball begin to take their shape and form. The six innings come together to tell the story of a complete game, spread out over five years, and how the son, and the coach, both grew over that time.

With that by way of introduction, all that’s left to say is, “Play ball!”

1st inning: Making adjustments

May 1, 2013

Baseball is not meant to be played in hail. That’s what my fourth grader said as he stood on third base, shivering. The third base coach couldn’t disagree. “Just keep moving,” I said with little trace of enthusiasm. “And blow into your hands.” 

The pros wouldn’t have played in conditions like this and they make piles of cash. We do it for, what, the fun? For three long innings, my son and his teammates endured the pelting, the soggy cold, the mud, and the losing side of a 10-1 score. Until lightning struck and ended the game a half inning before it became official. Two excruciating hours that counted for nothing. Nada. All washed away as if it never happened.

If only it were as easy to erase the memory of it as it was the record of it.

“I don’t think I can do this another year,” I sigh on the drive home.

My wife nods judiciously. No words are needed. It’s not like she hasn’t heard this lament from me before.

It is just two weeks into the spring season and I’m already counting the days till it’s over.

There are countless times in coaching Little League that make you question why you’re doing it. Enduring not just the inhospitable weather but the parental politics and the difficult kids, the ones you just can’t seem to reach no matter how hard you try.

After coaching for five years, I've come to learn that for those countless times that you question why you’re doing it, there are always moments that answer your question.

Like last night, on a rare summer-like April evening, in the second inning, when my son is up to bat, and he looks at the first pitch in his eyes. He thinks it's a ball, and it is. But the umpire calls it a strike.

I've been preaching to him not to get frustrated and instead to make adjustments. When the second pitch comes in high, he swings. And misses.

I yell from 70 feet away, where I stand as the first base coach, "Protect the plate." I know he hears me.

The ball comes in high again, so he adjusts his swing, just like I coached him. The ball flies. Over the left fielder's head.

"Keep running," I call out as he turns the corner at first. He knows what that means.

When he crosses home plate, his teammates swarm him with hugs and pats on the back. He sheepishly smiles.

From where I stand, it’s the best view on the diamond. I wipe a tear that has welled in my eye. Must be the darned dirt that kicked up in the wind.

 

 2nd inning: One for the books

April 24, 2014

Tyler and JulianMy son’s best friend Julian is supposed to be on the DL. He’s not medically cleared to play any kind of sports. It’s amazing he’s here at all, dressed in uniform, sitting on the bench with his teammates.

The boy’s father Rich and I have coached our sons together through T-ball and coach pitch and now kid pitch. Julian was just learning how to pitch. His mechanics are a little funky but sometimes that makes him more effective as his jerky motion throws the batters off their game. Control was his biggest problem.

Until six months ago when he was diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia. Ten years old and the world as he knows it has been turned completely upside down.

Three months ago, after an unsuccessful round of chemotherapy, Julian underwent a bone marrow transplant after a worldwide search for a donor came up with a match in Germany. He was confined to a hospital room for more than a month without any visitors besides his parents.

And miraculously, he’s here for the opening game of the spring season. He wanted to be there for his team. He wanted to be a kid again. A kid like other kids.

As fate would have it, we’re short one player. We have seven. If we can’t come up with eight, we forfeit the first game of the season. No one wants to start the season this way. We’d waited 10 months for this game. Julian had battled too much over the last six months just to be here.

Rich pulls me aside and tells me his plan. As I look down at the end of the bench, I say, “It’s your call.”

After he huddles with his son, Rich gives me the nod. Nothing in coaching prepares you for something like this. I walk over to the opposing team’s coach and explain the situation to him. He’s a little uncertain but he goes along with it. Then I explained to the umpire how we would field eight players but bat only seven.

And for two innings, Julian stood in right field. He wore his glove. But because he couldn’t run or throw, balls hit to him were handled by the center fielder. He literally just stood there. But it was a thing of beauty. And it saved us from forfeiting the game.

Worn down by all that he’d gone through over the last six months, and the reality check that he was still in the early stages of recovery and all the emotions of the day, Julian didn’t go out for the third inning. For the rest of the game, he sat on the bench.   

The record book and the game stats don’t tell the story. In the record book, it will show that we lost the game. Because Julian didn’t bat or make any plays in the field, he won’t have any official game stats. Only a handful of parents were there to see it. It’s almost like Julian wasn’t there at all. But I can tell you that he was, and what he displayed on that baseball diamond beat anything I’ve ever seen at any level of baseball. When I think of the most courageous performances in the sport’s history Kirk Gibson hobbling around the bases and Curt Schilling pitching in bloody socks come to mind. But in my book, what I saw a Little Leaguer do today tops anything I’ve seen done by any Big Leaguer. 

 

3rd inning: 2nd chances

September 13, 2014

It is the top of the fourth of what would be a five-inning game. Our team is up 4-3, when my son, Tyler, walks to the plate with two outs and the bases loaded. This is his third trip to the plate this morning. The first two didn’t go so well. He took a called third strike on a ball that was a little low and outside in the first inning. In the third, he went down swinging. This looks to be his last chance. On a two ball and one strike count, he swings. The umpire calls him out. He looks to him, confused, and then lowers his head and starts walking away dejectedly.

Tyler is half-way to the dugout, thinking his day has ended with three strike outs, when the scorekeeper approaches the ump. “Wasn't that strike two?” she asks.

The ump looks at his counter and realizes: she’s right. He’s mistakenly called him out.

The teams are sent back out onto the field. My son is sent back to home plate.

The ump leans over to Tyler as he stands in the batter’s box. “You better get a hit,” he says, “or I owe you a cookie.”

On the next pitch, Tyler swings again. Only this time he makes contact. The ball sails over the center fielder’s head.

When he touches first, I yell, “Keep running!”

Tyler ends up standing safely on second. Two runners cross home. The team takes a 6-3 lead. The inning is over because we’ve scored the maximum of five runs.

As it turns out, we needed those two extra runs. We held on over the next inning and a half to win 6-5. That second chance at the plate proved to be the game-winning hit.

The lesson learned: When life gives you a second chance, make the most of it. Swing for the fences. Even if it means giving up a cookie.

 4th inning: Game balls

May 22, 2016

In Little League, coaches traditionally give the game ball to the game's standout player. Tyler's coach goes the extra mile by writing on the ball what it is the kid is being recognized for. On the other side of the ball he throws in the game date and final score. You have to wait an extra game to get it but it's worth the wait. It's a personal touch that makes it more than just a baseball and gives the kid something to remember about the game.

This season, my son has gotten two game balls. The first came as a surprise. He got it the first game after he went down with an injury to his right index finger, sustained in a pre-game warmup to the season's second game. He was not suited up but be came to the game to support his team. After the team won, the coach called the team together in the dugout and asked Tyler to join them. He said that they were giving the game ball to Tyler, noting that he'd be out for a while and that they'd miss all that he brings to the game. He ended by wishing him a speedy recovery back onto the field. It was a touching moment.

Jump ahead three and a half weeks later. I take Tyler out of school for his follow-up visit to the orthopedist. The x-ray shows the fractured bone at the tip of his finger has healed. Being cautious, the doctor says: "No baseball." I ask how long. He says another week. A week doesn't seem like a long time but it meant he would miss four more games, including a game that evening, in just a couple of hours.

On the drive back home, I ask him if he thinks he could play wearing the splint on the finger. We come home and try it, tossing around the baseball and taking some cuts with the bat. He says it feels good. It affects his throws a little but not so much that he couldn't play. He's not a pitcher anyway. So I tell him, "It's your call." He chooses to play.

So he suits up. At the field a few of his teammates do double-takes when they see him suited up. "Is that Tyler?" one asks. "Yeah, that's Tyler," another responds. He gets some pats on the back.

The coach puts him in centerfield for the game, figuring there's less chance of re-injuring his finger if he keeps him out of his usual position at shortstop. Two innings in, he makes a nice catch on a deep fly ball. The next inning, he hits a sharp line drive single up the middle. Then the next inning he makes an acrobatic diving catch on a liner to the outfield. "Wow!" his coach says to me in the dugout. "Wow!" No other kids make catches like that at this level.

I've watched and coached Tyler long enough to know that he has an endless supply of wows. The following game he made an equally acrobatic diving catch in center. He's that kind of player.

His team wins that first game back 13-5. In the dugout at the end of the game, the coached called the team together. He said there were a lot of players deserving of the game ball but he ultimately had to go with the sentimental choice. It was Tyler.

He now has two game balls and I won't be surprised if he's got another in him before the season ends in a couple of weeks. But the two he has serve as nice bookends to his season, representing the day he went out with an injury and the day he came back from the injury. I asked him which one meant more to him. He said the second, because that was the one he earned.

5th inning: Never a ‘Shadow’ of a doubt

June 9, 2016

Shadow the dogLast night was my son's last game of the spring baseball season, and my first and only game as his team's head coach. I'd been an assistant coach all season long, even after my son went on the DL for three weeks with a fractured finger. Because the head coach had been called away on business travel, I was called in to replace him as head coach for the night.

My son's team is headed to the playoffs and could even go as the top seed in its division if it can pull off a win in its last regular-season game on Friday. My son and I won't be there for that game. We will instead be following it on my Game Changer app from the airport as we wait for a flight to London. We'll be touring the British Isles with my family and will miss the rest of the season. Even the championship game, if our team advances that far.

That made last night our championship game. I even brought my world-famous chocolate chip cookies to celebrate with the team at game’s end.

Through the first six innings it didn't look like we'd be celebrating. Our team had been shut down offensively, managing just one run, on a steal of home base, through the first six innings. We were down 4-1 going into the bottom of the sixth. We looked beaten.

Then something most unexpected happened as our team was warming up in the field before the bottom half of the inning. The head coach's wife had brought the family dog, Shadow, to the game. After sitting on the sidelines for five innings, I guess Shadow decided the team needed his help. Spotting a dropped ball in the outfield, he ran for it, scooped it up in his mouth and then ran with it. All over the field. It was a thing of beauty watching him having the time of his life as our players' valiant efforts to grab his leash all failed.

The start of the bottom half of the inning was delayed five minutes while Shadow played his own game of catch-me-if-you-can. He won that game and took a victory seat in centerfield, guarding the ball in front of him.

When the coach's wife walked him off the field, both teams erupted in applause. I've seen a lot of baseball in my years, and it was one of the greatest moments I've witnessed.

I didn't call for a fourth outfielder. I'm not that good of a coach. But Shadow's unexpected entrance into the game changed the trajectory it seemed to be on.

Our team followed Shadow's lead by shutting down the opponent in the bottom half of the inning and then rallying for four runs in the top of the seventh, keyed by a clutch hit by my son on a nail-biting 3-and-2 count. They then held them scoreless in the bottom half of the inning for a most improbable 5-4 comeback win.

I ended my season with a perfect 1-0 record as head coach. My chocolate chip cookies never tasted so good. Of course, there was never a Shadow of a doubt as to the outcome.

 

6th inning: Growing into the uniform

June 20, 2017

My son’s baseball season came to an end around 10:30 last night. I don’t think any of us – the players, the coaches, or the parents – saw it coming. It was the first round of a 32-team tournament featuring the North Suburban Youth Baseball league’s best – and we were heavy favorites. We’d gone 13-3 in the regular season, earning a No. 3 seed in the tournament. We were pitted against a 30-seed that had gone 5-6 in the regular season but had also won four of their last five. Even as we took infield before the game a worrisome knot grew in my stomach. You never want to face that team, the one that has gotten hot at just the right time.

But this is not really about that game. It’s about my son.

My son has been playing youth baseball for 10 years now, from T-ball to coach pitch to regular old baseball. He’s had his ups and downs over those years. He was an All-Star in 2015 only to lose most of his 2016 season before it even started due to a broken finger. After watching him all these years, I sensed that he’d comeback in a big way.

He did just that. As the season unfolded, he slowly grew into the role as the team’s Dexter Fowler – the “You go, we go” sparkplug. He became the team’s leadoff hitter and led the team in runs scored with 31, averaging almost two runs scored a game.  What he lacked in power, he made up for with speed and a keen eye. His 20 walks almost doubled that of any other player. He also led the team in stolen bases with 24.

He sparkled with the glove as well. Oftentimes making even the toughest plays look routine, he became the team’s starting shortstop – a position he never felt truly comfortable in because his arm was not all that strong. He felt he was better suited for second base, a position he rarely got to play because he was always needed somewhere else – usually at short but sometimes at third or center.

Twelve games into the season, he was asked to go even farther out of his comfort zone. The team was down four of its best players and needed someone to step up and pitch. He hadn’t pitched in a game in three years and he was being asked to pitch two innings against a strong team. We knew it was not likely to go well, and it didn’t. He gave up eight runs over two innings, for an earned-run average of 36.00 – though in his defense, he had no defense and probably most of those runs were unearned. But he did it. He took the ball for two innings and even struck out four batters.

At the next practice, the head coach teasingly asked him if he was retiring from pitching. He grinned and nodded.

In the last game of the regular season the team found itself in trouble. We were losing to one of the league’s strongest teams and again short-handed. We needed someone to close the game. The head coach’s eyes looked down the bench and they settled on my son.

Retirement was short-lived. My son doesn’t like surprises. He likes to see the lineup in advance of every game so that he knows what he’s got to do. This is one he never saw coming. When the coach put his arm on his shoulder and explained the situation to him, he just nodded. He warmed up his arm and took to the mound. I could barely watch. Not surprisingly, he struggled with his control. He walked the first batter. Just throw strikes, we told him. As if he didn’t know that. He did throw strikes. Unfortunately, his defense failed him. A couple of errors and a run followed. The best hitter walked up to the plate with two runners on base. If this were the stuff of poetry, the Mighty Casey would have struck out. But it was reality and the ball sailed over the fence. Four runs. Just like that. It was painful. The head coach asked me if he should go out to the mound and settle him down. “It won’t help,” I said. “He’s just not a strong enough pitcher to face the top of their lineup.”

The game was already basically over but we still needed three outs to get out of the inning. A lot of good pitchers would have unraveled after giving up a home run like that. My son is not even a good pitcher. He’s not even a pitcher. I could see that he wanted nothing more than to walk off that mound but he stood there and kept pitching, striking out the next two batters and then coaxing a lazy grounder to first for the third out. The head coach rushed out to him to pat him on the back. We lost the game 14-3. But, for me, it didn’t really feel like a loss.   

That brings me back to last night. He led off with a sharp line drive to center just as we’d drawn it up. Only the center fielder ruined it by making a diving catch, robbing him of a single. The night went downhill from that point on. He went 0-for-3 with a walk and an RBI and scored two runs (one as a pinch-hitter where he stole home on a wild pitch). He struggled with his throws from short and asked the coach to move him to the outfield. 

That’s the tough part about being the “You go, we go” guy. It’s a heavy burden to carry. Last night, he never really got going. Neither did the rest of his team. The result: a 13-9 upset.

Heads all hung low in the dugout at the end. A few tears were even shed. The kids on this team became really close. I’ve coached for nine of the 10 years that my son has been playing baseball, and this was the best team I’ve coached. For the season, they outscored their opponents 209-76. They won nine of their 13 games by the 12-run slaughter rule.

What I’ll remember from this season is not the loss at the end or any of the wins but that one game where my son got called out of retirement to pitch one last inning. Most would see it as mop-up duty. But, to me, it was a thing of beauty. Because it is where I saw my son really grow into that baseball uniform.

Saturday
Feb062016

The Rainbow Connection: My Interview with Ex-Cub Pitcher Steve Trout

Ex-Cub Steve Trout’s New Book Makes Pitch for Fun in Youth Baseball

By Randy Richardson

Steve Trout, nicknamed “Rainbow,” can’t seem to leave behind his first love: baseball.

photo-372Following in the footsteps of his father, Dizzy Trout, a major league pitcher for 14 years and two-time All-Star who led the league in wins in 1943 and in ERA in 1944, Steve became a big league pitcher himself, hurling for four teams – the Chicago White Sox, the Chicago Cubs, the New York Yankees, and the Seattle Mariners – over the course of his 12-year career. His best year came with the Cubs, in 1984, when he went 13-7 in 31 starts, posting a 3.41 ERA, helping the North Siders to their first postseason berth since 1945, when they lost against a Tigers team anchored by Steve’s father. Steve pitched the Cubs to victory in game 2 in the 1984 National League Championship Series against the San Diego Padres, going 8.1 strong innings. That put the Cubs one victory away from their first World Series since 1945. But that one victory never came, as the Padres swept the next three games, stealing from Steve the chance to go to the World Series and face the American League champion Tigers, the team on which his father had pitched 39 years earlier against the Cubs.

Now 27 years after he pitched his last game in the majors, Steve shares his passion for baseball with youngsters by teaching instructional baseball clinics for youths at Oz Park in Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborhood. He’s been leading Trout Baseball Academy since 2011, and this summer he’ll be leading some of the camps at the beautiful new Kerry Wood Cubs Field.

Loosey-Goosey-by-Steve-Trout-and-Marlene-MatthiasSteve has also recently brought his love of the game into print, with the publication of a children’s book, Loosey-Goosey Baseball, co-authored by Marlene Matthias and illustrated by Steve Feldman. In it, “Coach Rainbow” teaches lessons about youth baseball not just for young ballplayers but for their parents as well.

“Steve feels that his father helped him make it to Major League Baseball because his dad attended his games in a supportive role and not a critical role,” reads the introduction to the book, which follows the base path of a youth ballplayer whose dad puts too much pressure on him.

It’s a touching story that will appeal to both Little Leaguers and their parents, teaching them that baseball is just a game that’s meant to be fun. Coaches of elementary school-age kids will also benefit, as Coach Rainbow demonstrates  some fun ways to get the most out of young players. To order the book, visit Trout’s website.

In a recent phone interview with Wrigleyville Nation, the former Cubs pitcher-turned-author fielded questions about his new book and his life in baseball. 

WN: What inspired you to write a children’s book about baseball?

Steve: First of all, my love for the game and the children that play it, and sometimes the lost meaning of what the game should be about, which is having fun.

The book is about a son and a father, and how they reconnect and change, especially how the father changes after the coach – Coach Rainbow – asks him to come back and play and also to show the kids how to play. By doing this…he comes to learn that Little League baseball can be a lot more fun than sometimes we (the parents) make it.

WN: So this is almost an instructional book for the parents more than it is for the kids?

Steve: I totally believe that, yes. There are some great tips in the book that are done in a fun way…It’s a good read. I think it’s fun. It’s a beautiful, colorful book. It’s got good meaning to it.

WN: You teach instructional baseball clinics for youths here in Chicago. What is your No. 1 piece of advice for young players?

Steve: The camp is about teaching the right fundamentals: the right way to throw; the right way to hit; the right way to catch. Because when you’re doing those things the right way you’re going to stay in the game longer and you’re going to have more fun doing it. The second part of that is making sure that the kids have fun at the camp. I’ve seen more kids smile when they finally catch a ball that they didn’t catch two days before. That’s a good feeling.

WN: You grew up in South Holland, a south suburb of Chicago. Did you grow up a Sox fan?

Steve: Oh, yeah, my dad was working for the White Sox at the time.

WN: You played for both the Cubs and the Sox. A lot of baseball fans in Chicago will tell you that you can’t be both a Cubs fan and a Sox fan. Do you agree with that sentiment?

No, of course not. I do think of course that it’s better to be a Cubs fan, especially now. But I truly believe that as citizens of Chicago we should all stick together and be one.

WN: Your father, Dizzy, was a major league pitcher as well, and, in fact, pitched for the Detroit Tigers in the 1945 World Series, which of course was the last World Series the Cubs played in. You weren’t born until 12 years later and your father passed away when you were just 12 years old. He must have told you some stories about that Series. Do you remember any of them?

Steve: He didn’t share a lot of baseball stories with me. I found those out on my own. I had a very lucky childhood. Ted Williams was his really good friend. Joe Dimaggio came to the house and told me what a great guy my dad was. Another was Billy Pierce, who died just recently. I always attended his golf outing, which was a fundraiser, and he told me that my dad took him under his wing when he was a rookie and he never forgot how nice he was to him. So those things make me feel good, and make me realize what a great man my dad was.

WN: You came so close to going to the World Series as a Cub in 1984. That would have made for nice symmetry since the Tigers were the American League champions that year. Had you thought about that at all at the time, having the chance to do what your father did 39 years earlier with the team he played against?

Steve: (Laughs). Thought about it. My mom and I were going to go on Good Morning America. We had everyone calling us. It was one of the greatest baseball stories to be told in a long, long time. It was one of the great, great stories…the Cubs back in the World Series playing against the Detroit Tigers, the last team to play them in the World Series – and the son of the guy who beat them would be playing for the other team. It was this incredible story that unfortunately never got to be told.

WN: That 1984 LCS still leaves a bitter taste in the mouths of Cubs fans from that era. The Cubs are up 2-0 and only need to win one more game to go to the World Series for the first time in 39 years, and then the Padres shockingly sweep them in the next three straight games. As a player, how long did it take you to recover from that? Did you recover?

Steve: I think everyone has gotten over it. But there are some residual thoughts of how nice it would have been. I think everyone has a feeling of regret, to some degree, that we didn’t go to the World Series.

WN: What was your greatest memory as a Cub?

Steve: It was the fan celebration after we clinched in Pittsburgh in ’84 and came home and we all went on the field and celebrated with all the fans. That was big. That was a great feeling. I just loved that particular moment. I felt invincible at that time. I think everybody did.

WN: What do you think of the current Cubs team that Theo Epstein has put together?

Steve: It really was the Ricketts’ family that put the team together, first and foremost. Without the ownership of the Rickettses, the leadership of Tom and the family, it never would have taken place. Then his decision to get a good GM such as Theo Epstein was a smart move. He’s a good evaluator of talent, and that’s what it takes. I think for a long time Wrigley Field is going to be a happy place to watch baseball where fans are going to be leaving the park and see that W flying in centerfield.

WN: What will it feel like for you personally if and when the Cubs win the World Series?

Steve: I’m going to be so happy for the Rickettses, for the people who work there, for the fans, for the players. I just hope to be in town for it…because there might not be any town left after that (chuckles).

Monday
Jun222015

Bobble-heading

The essay Bobble-heading, about how the creative process for writers can sometimes make them a bit unbalanced, which just published in the Chicago Writers Association’s The Write City, took me nearly ten years to write. Its evolution is a story in itself, and during its development, I did, at moments, resemble the essay’s narrator. In its first life, it was 628 words and carried the title, Putting a Cork in the Whine. I first published it on my Lost in the Ivy blog on April 24, 2006, and then, as the editor of the earliest editions of the Chicago Writers Association’s The Write City, republished it there. Absolute Write, a national website for writers, picked it up. That was its first life. It could have been its only life. But then in 2013, it came back, though in a new form, as a performance piece for the Chicago Writers Conference (CWC). The show’s curator, the multitalented author and editor, Samantha Hoffman (What More Could You Wish For), worked with me to shape it into something completely new and original. Something that I never envisioned it being before. After I read it live, it kept gnawing at me, as my writings tend to do. I kept playing around with it. The credit for its new title goes to something that CWC’s founder Mare Swallow told me after she saw me read it: bobble-heading was the new euphemism for writerly procrastination. I nodded, like one of those bobbleheads from the essay, and made that the new thematic center-point. Two years later, I sent it to The Write City’s current editor, Kristin Oakley, who tightened it a bit more. The same essay, now in its third incarnation, is 1240 words, double the length of its original form. It bears almost no resemblance to that first essay that was born nearly a decade ago. Which, I suppose, is in some ways, a reflection of its author as well. Read the essay here.

Saturday
Sep062014

End of Summer Sale!

Looking for a good reason to celebrate the end of summer? Get Lost in the Ivy for your Kindle for only $3.99! Visit Amazon.com.

Wednesday
Jul162014

Author Randy Richardson on the CCLaP Podcast!

I recently had the pleasure of chatting with Jason Pettus for his Chicago Center for Literature and Photography (CCLaP) Podcast. We talked about the re-release of my Wrigleyville murder mystery, "Lost in the Ivy," at the Gingerman Tavern, where the novel begins. Listen in, and then check out the rest of Jason's website to see all the cool things he's doing for Chicago's literary scene.