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NFL Overreaction Wednesday: Week 4, Rams Super Bowl hangover lasts the season, Lions worst defense in NFL history, Eagles win the NFC

Overreaction: The Rams Super Bowl hangover will last the entire season

The reigning NFL Super Bowl champions, Los Angeles Ram, are off to a rocky start to this season. The 2-2 Rams have had close wins against the Atlanta Falcons  (31-27) and Arizona Cardinals (20-12) but the Rams’ losses have been horrendous. The Rams have yet to return to championship contender form in any game this season, getting blown out by the Buffalo Bills 31-10 to start the season and last night’s embarrassing finish against the San Francisco 49ers (24-9).

Matthew Stafford has to be better if the Rams want to have a chance at repeating. He has now tied Joe Namath for third most of any player since 1950. Last night was Stafford’s 28th career pick 6, Dan Marino (29) and Brett Favre (32) are the only players who have more in the NFL. Stafford now has 6 interceptions to 4 touchdowns on the year and led the NFL in interceptions a year ago.

Stafford has also had issues getting the newest Ram Allen Robinson. On the season Robinson has 9 catches on 18 targets for 95 yards and a single touchdown. In 2020 with the Chicago Bears Robinson had his best season with 102 catches for 1,250 yards and 6 TDs. The Rams have to find a way to get Robinson more involved and Stafford must play better if they want to see the postseason again this year.

Not an overreaction: The Eagles win the NFC

Philadelphia is the only unbeaten team in the NFL sitting at 4-0, the Eagles overcame a 14-0 deficit in the first quarter Sunday against Jacksonville and had an explosive second quarter where they outscored the Jaguars 20-0. The Eagles edged out the Jags 29-21. The Eagles have looked dominant on both sides of the ball with Jalen Hurts looking like an MVP candidate and the defense is leading the NFL in sacks per game.

The Eagles made major acquisitions that are the reason for this team’s success. Bringing in linebackers Haasan Reddick and Kyzir White bolstered the front seven while the biggest difference for the team has been wide receiver A.J. Brown that has helped transform this offense into one of the best in the NFL. Philly has a real chance to go 17-0 this year barring any major injuries. The Eagles have the second easiest schedule in the NFL, only the giants have an easier schedule going forward.

Overreaction: The Cardinals are on the right track after their 26-16 win over the panthers

The Arizona Cardinals were one of the NFL’s hottest teams in 2021, starting an impressive 7-0 and having quarterback Kyler Murray in talks of winning the NFL MVP. The current Cardinal team, however, is not near as hot to start the season. The Cardinal’s struggling offense ranks near the bottom in the NFL in yards per play(28th) and 3rd down conversion sitting at 31%(29th).

Missing NFL Pro Bowl wide receiver Deandre Hopkins for 6 games to start the season, on suspension for performance-enhancing drugs, has left the Cardinals offense sputtering at times and asking Kyler Murray to create with his feet more and more.

Some of Murray’s struggles can be attributed to less time to throw. Murray’s current is hurried and blitzed the second most in the NFL and has an average time to throw of 2.2 seconds. This has left Murray to create with his feet and improvise more and more this season.

Murray has been the story of distraction this season, where a clause was put into his contract where he was required to watch the film, as “homework.” Once the clause was found it was removed from his contract, but who can say that the pressures from the front office are not affecting the play on the field for the Cardinals?

Not overreactions: The Lions have the worst defense in the NFL and maybe of all time.

It has been a tale of two teams for the hard knocks featured Detroit Lions. The offense has looked stellar and ranks the best in the NFL in points per game(35), yards per game, points per play, and yards per play. They even lead the NFL in touchdowns per game a 4.5 an incredible turnaround for the worst team in the NFL year.

So how is the number one offense in the NFL 1-3? Everything the offense has been the best at the defense has been the worst at. Detroit has the worst defense in the NFL, they are last in every major team category for defense. As many yards per play that they lead the league in offense, they give it right back on defense (6.5 yards per play).

Four games into the season the Detroit Lions have allowed 35.3 points per game. The worst defense in NFL history was the 1966 New York Giants which allowed 35.8 points per game, according to MCubed.net. Time will tell if the Lions will make NFL history this season in the worst way possible, or if they can overcome their defensive shortcomings and rise to the same level of excellence as their offense.

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NFL Overreaction Wednesday: Week 4, Rams Super Bowl hangover lasts the season, Lions worst defense in NFL history, Eagles win the NFC Read More »

NFL Overreaction Wednesday: Week 4, Rams Super Bowl hangover lasts the season, Lions worst defense in NFL history, Eagles win the NFC

Overreaction: The Rams Super Bowl hangover will last the entire season

The reigning NFL Super Bowl champions, Los Angeles Ram, are off to a rocky start to this season. The 2-2 Rams have had close wins against the Atlanta Falcons  (31-27) and Arizona Cardinals (20-12) but the Rams’ losses have been horrendous. The Rams have yet to return to championship contender form in any game this season, getting blown out by the Buffalo Bills 31-10 to start the season and last night’s embarrassing finish against the San Francisco 49ers (24-9).

Matthew Stafford has to be better if the Rams want to have a chance at repeating. He has now tied Joe Namath for third most of any player since 1950. Last night was Stafford’s 28th career pick 6, Dan Marino (29) and Brett Favre (32) are the only players who have more in the NFL. Stafford now has 6 interceptions to 4 touchdowns on the year and led the NFL in interceptions a year ago.

Stafford has also had issues getting the newest Ram Allen Robinson. On the season Robinson has 9 catches on 18 targets for 95 yards and a single touchdown. In 2020 with the Chicago Bears Robinson had his best season with 102 catches for 1,250 yards and 6 TDs. The Rams have to find a way to get Robinson more involved and Stafford must play better if they want to see the postseason again this year.

Not an overreaction: The Eagles win the NFC

Philadelphia is the only unbeaten team in the NFL sitting at 4-0, the Eagles overcame a 14-0 deficit in the first quarter Sunday against Jacksonville and had an explosive second quarter where they outscored the Jaguars 20-0. The Eagles edged out the Jags 29-21. The Eagles have looked dominant on both sides of the ball with Jalen Hurts looking like an MVP candidate and the defense is leading the NFL in sacks per game.

The Eagles made major acquisitions that are the reason for this team’s success. Bringing in linebackers Haasan Reddick and Kyzir White bolstered the front seven while the biggest difference for the team has been wide receiver A.J. Brown that has helped transform this offense into one of the best in the NFL. Philly has a real chance to go 17-0 this year barring any major injuries. The Eagles have the second easiest schedule in the NFL, only the giants have an easier schedule going forward.

Overreaction: The Cardinals are on the right track after their 26-16 win over the panthers

The Arizona Cardinals were one of the NFL’s hottest teams in 2021, starting an impressive 7-0 and having quarterback Kyler Murray in talks of winning the NFL MVP. The current Cardinal team, however, is not near as hot to start the season. The Cardinal’s struggling offense ranks near the bottom in the NFL in yards per play(28th) and 3rd down conversion sitting at 31%(29th).

Missing NFL Pro Bowl wide receiver Deandre Hopkins for 6 games to start the season, on suspension for performance-enhancing drugs, has left the Cardinals offense sputtering at times and asking Kyler Murray to create with his feet more and more.

Some of Murray’s struggles can be attributed to less time to throw. Murray’s current is hurried and blitzed the second most in the NFL and has an average time to throw of 2.2 seconds. This has left Murray to create with his feet and improvise more and more this season.

Murray has been the story of distraction this season, where a clause was put into his contract where he was required to watch the film, as “homework.” Once the clause was found it was removed from his contract, but who can say that the pressures from the front office are not affecting the play on the field for the Cardinals?

Not overreactions: The Lions have the worst defense in the NFL and maybe of all time.

It has been a tale of two teams for the hard knocks featured Detroit Lions. The offense has looked stellar and ranks the best in the NFL in points per game(35), yards per game, points per play, and yards per play. They even lead the NFL in touchdowns per game a 4.5 an incredible turnaround for the worst team in the NFL year.

So how is the number one offense in the NFL 1-3? Everything the offense has been the best at the defense has been the worst at. Detroit has the worst defense in the NFL, they are last in every major team category for defense. As many yards per play that they lead the league in offense, they give it right back on defense (6.5 yards per play).

Four games into the season the Detroit Lions have allowed 35.3 points per game. The worst defense in NFL history was the 1966 New York Giants which allowed 35.8 points per game, according to MCubed.net. Time will tell if the Lions will make NFL history this season in the worst way possible, or if they can overcome their defensive shortcomings and rise to the same level of excellence as their offense.

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NFL Overreaction Wednesday: Week 4, Rams Super Bowl hangover lasts the season, Lions worst defense in NFL history, Eagles win the NFC Read More »

BREAKDOWN: A modest defense of Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields

Justin Fields is in a bad situation.

Justin Fields constitutes very little of the Chicago Bears’ problems. But the Chicago Bears are becoming a considerable hurdle for Fields. The second-year quarterback hasn’t thrown for over 200 yards in a game this season. The Bears passing attack ranks 32nd in the NFL. Fields has said the passing stats don’t matter, but those numbers are causing Bears fans and local media to flip on him.

One has to wonder what the local media and fanbase were supposed to expect this season. Before August, the national media was prescient that the Bears’ talent surrounding Fields was insufficient for his progress. Bears fans and media cried out about some bias against Chicago.

Four weeks in and after seeing the results, they turn their venom onto the man who’s been put in the worst situation in the NFL. That statement is not hyperbole; as Brad Spielberger with Pro Football Focus documented, the Bears’ pass blocking and wide receivers are an anomaly of terrible. (PFF ranked the Bears’ offensive line 31st and their wide receivers 32nd before the season.)

Has Justin Fields struggled? Yes
Does he have quite comfortably the toughest situation in the NFL? Also yes https://t.co/gwWTvNxmD3

The Giants game in Week 4 was Justin Fields’ best game of 2022

Justin Fields had his best game of the season in Week 4 against the Giants. He did incredibly well, given the pressure he was under. Former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer broke down Fields’ performance against the Giants on Parker & Spiegel. Dilfer thought Fields did exceptionally well with what the Bears needed him to do. Fields finished with 226 combined yards through the air and ground. When given time in the pocket, he made nice throws. Here’s one where Fields gets Darnell Mooney involved early in the passing game.

Fields has time, a pocket and a semi open receiver. Look what happens https://t.co/zOCKx3b2gv

Notice the separation Mooney doesn’t give Fields, but Fields is able to tight rope a ball into the hands of the third-year receiver. This wasn’t the only tight window Fields was asked to throw into Sunday. Fortunately, his accuracy was on in this play. But in many plays this season, Fields doesn’t have the luxury of being perfectly accurate as he’s under duress.

The offensive line is struggling to pass protect for Justin Fields

Justin Fields was sacked six times in Week 4. The offensive line that has been put out for the Bears this season is a league embarrassment. Fields didn’t have much chance to make plays happen as he’s playing behind a line where the center, Sam Mustipher, doesn’t understand how to defend against a blitz.

Watch #Bears Center Mustipher go for the double team with Jenkins instead of blocking the blitzed https://t.co/uD3bZdoZzo

Rookie Braxton Jones looks like a fifth-rounder.

Bears lineman Sam Mustipher and Braxton Jones give up Fields quickly https://t.co/7nbwqVW0lM

Lucas Patrick, who general manager Ryan Poles picked, plays the guard spot worse than the player his staff seems to pick on since OTAs, Teven Jenkins. Patrick just stands up and gets bull-rushed into giving up a sack.

Can you guess which one of these guards is a favorite of this coaching staff and which one they hate? https://t.co/jCFphdnOuN

Mustipher again.

Another bad pass block against the blitz for the #Bears Sunday https://t.co/5lAX5KdFay

Justin Fields didn’t have much help from his wide receivers

So Justin Fields saw a lot of of pressure. However, there were plenty of times Fields saw pressure, and ran out of the pocket to keep a play alive that his receivers dropped it.

Fields has two plays that dropped in succession on a critical drive in the third quarter. The first is by tight end Trevon Wesco.

Here Fields tries to keep the drive alive. Only to be dropped https://t.co/E4vKnzOsaF

In the next play, on third down, Fields, targets Dante Pettis. Once again, no luck getting a completion.

Then there are times when his three downfield targets aren’t open.

Good clean pocket. But where can Fields throw the ball? https://t.co/NLGTqw1BGU

This isn’t the last time we’ll see no one open downfield. Because that happened in one of the few times Fields threw in the red zone against the Giants.

But Justin Fields missed Mooney because he can’t read a defense!

There was a lot of talk about this picture following the Giants game.

He has to start hitting these. Clean pocket. This likely would have been 6. https://t.co/fRPh88QzMs

The complaint from passersby looking at the still image is that Justin Fields should have seen Mooney in the top middle of the picture for an easy touchdown. Let’s remember the context of this play. It’s third-and-ten. The last play ended with a tipped pass.

Fox television footage of the game shows Fields reading the defense before this play. It’s a point/traffic defense bunch. (Hybrid play with man to man on the outside, 1st inside, and 1st outside zone for the middle defenders on this play.)

Fields taps his helmet and gives a command. Typically this can mean an audible in many NFL offenses. Eberflus admitted on that play Fields was coached to hit the check-down or run in that defense. Fields head doesn’t turn left to read progressions on that play. Remember, the offense the Bears are running is an offshoot of the Kyle Shanahan playbook.

As documented in the 2019 San Francisco 49ers Complete Offensive Manual, by author Bobby Peters, Shanahan’s offense runs a “dual” read. In that read, the quarterback would decide pre-snap or after the safety rotation post-snap what side the offensive play is going to. Here, Fields stuck with the right side of the field, he saw he had the room to get the first down, and he did. (Per the section below, Fields scrambling was the Bears’ best third-down offense.)

Not a bad play at all. Very few quarterbacks in the league could make that play. And Bears fans who have mastered Madden with an All 22 camera angle complain Fields is not the guy because he doesn’t hit Mooney there.

Justin Fields doesn’t control the critical coaching decisions, like, say, the red zone

Justin Fields was criticized for not doing enough to win. Fair enough, I guess. However, I’d be more critical about his performance in Week 2 in Green Bay than against the Giants. Most of the reasons the Bears lost Sunday were outside of his control. His roster, from the general manager seat, is one important one. On the field, his coaches didn’t help. Let’s look at the offense first. Fields drove the team down the field with his arm and legs, but the team ran the ball in the red zone with no success.

Running Back Khalil Herbert had five rushes in the red zone. According to Stats Info Solutions, Herbert averaged an EPA of -.34 yards per rushing attempt in the red zone against the Giants. On third down, the Bears just got stuffed. (In general, third-down runs by a Bears running back were stuffed by the Giant’s defense. According to SIS, Herbert had two busted plays on third down, with an average EPA of -1.40. Passing on third also had an even worse overall negative EPA in Week 4. The Bears’ best play on third down was Fields scrambling, where they had an average EPA of 1.44 with two “boom” plays.

Getsy goes for a run the next drive in the red-zone on third down. Gets stuffed https://t.co/qqcV3tZecz

Here’s one drive that I think is critical of the problems of Getsy’s offense. The Giants appear to know what’s coming on every play. No motion is utilized to throw the giants off with 7 in the box. Three pass catchers on the right side,, and the Giants aren’t worried about a pass play coming.

Getsy’s red zone offense has been awful. His runs aren’t netting much. He calls two failures before passing https://t.co/LICTF8RbSQ

The next play moves the tight end to the right side as the Bears run weak side. Again, no hole for Herbert.

Here’s the second run that fails to do anything https://t.co/TK9awvj2gJ

Third down, the Bears attempt to pass. Justin Fields has no one to throw to once again and no lane for his feet to take off.

No one’s open. Is it play design or lack of talent? https://t.co/GQz73EhTj3

Getsy has been reliant on the run in other critical situations. Take the third-down-and-two on the Bears’ penultimate drive. The Bears’ skinny line of gutless wonders can’t get a push, much like in Green Bay.

Not that Larry Borom was of much help there.

So after that play, the Bears punt the ball. A punt that was described as “cowardly” by the surrender index, even after the game, the trumpet of the H.I.T.S. philosophy bragged to the media that the loser mentally was a victory in his eyes. And it worked until Velus Jones Jr., the 25-year-old rookie drafted in the third round to help Fields, who still hasn’t seen a snap on offense this season, muffed the punt return.

But yeah, Bears fans expected Justin Fields to overcome that to beat the Giants. This city might not have the patience to find a franchise quarterback in the draft. Poles might need to find a mid-level quarterback the Bears can overpay for.

Justin Fields can’t fix the offense this year

By now, it’s pretty clear what’s going on with the passing offense. The Bears don’t trust Justin Fields to throw more because Fields doesn’t trust his offense to keep a clean pocket or catch the ball. For all of the reasons shown above. It’s hard not to have happy feet when you envision a career like David Carr. Now national analysts are parroting what I had said before the season about Fields and the roster, that it would be impossible to give Fields a fair evaluation this season. This puts the Bears behind in knowing if he’s their guy or not.

The roster cannot be improved this season enough to help Fields. There are too many issues on the offensive line and at wide receiver. It’s not going to quiet the meatheads who don’t care about talent, but this should have been expected before the season by looking at the roster. Desmond Ridder might be a more talented quarterback than Stetson Bennett, but he’s not going to score more than six points on Alabama in playoffs with the talent deficiency between the Bearcats and the Crimson Tide.

When Poles took defense with his first two picks and a special team’s wide receiver in the third, he was giving up on the offense for this season. The Bears didn’t have enough cap space to patch the offense to an acceptable level for an NFL quarterback. Justin Fields may not be the “guy” for the Bears. But there’s no way of knowing that this season.

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BREAKDOWN: A modest defense of Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields Read More »

BREAKDOWN: A modest defense of Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields

Justin Fields is in a bad situation.

Justin Fields constitutes very little of the Chicago Bears’ problems. But the Chicago Bears are becoming a considerable hurdle for Fields. The second-year quarterback hasn’t thrown for over 200 yards in a game this season. The Bears passing attack ranks 32nd in the NFL. Fields has said the passing stats don’t matter, but those numbers are causing Bears fans and local media to flip on him.

One has to wonder what the local media and fanbase were supposed to expect this season. Before August, the national media was prescient that the Bears’ talent surrounding Fields was insufficient for his progress. Bears fans and media cried out about some bias against Chicago.

Four weeks in and after seeing the results, they turn their venom onto the man who’s been put in the worst situation in the NFL. That statement is not hyperbole; as Brad Spielberger with Pro Football Focus documented, the Bears’ pass blocking and wide receivers are an anomaly of terrible. (PFF ranked the Bears’ offensive line 31st and their wide receivers 32nd before the season.)

Has Justin Fields struggled? Yes
Does he have quite comfortably the toughest situation in the NFL? Also yes https://t.co/gwWTvNxmD3

The Giants game in Week 4 was Justin Fields’ best game of 2022

Justin Fields had his best game of the season in Week 4 against the Giants. He did incredibly well, given the pressure he was under. Former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer broke down Fields’ performance against the Giants on Parker & Spiegel. Dilfer thought Fields did exceptionally well with what the Bears needed him to do. Fields finished with 226 combined yards through the air and ground. When given time in the pocket, he made nice throws. Here’s one where Fields gets Darnell Mooney involved early in the passing game.

Fields has time, a pocket and a semi open receiver. Look what happens https://t.co/zOCKx3b2gv

Notice the separation Mooney doesn’t give Fields, but Fields is able to tight rope a ball into the hands of the third-year receiver. This wasn’t the only tight window Fields was asked to throw into Sunday. Fortunately, his accuracy was on in this play. But in many plays this season, Fields doesn’t have the luxury of being perfectly accurate as he’s under duress.

The offensive line is struggling to pass protect for Justin Fields

Justin Fields was sacked six times in Week 4. The offensive line that has been put out for the Bears this season is a league embarrassment. Fields didn’t have much chance to make plays happen as he’s playing behind a line where the center, Sam Mustipher, doesn’t understand how to defend against a blitz.

Watch #Bears Center Mustipher go for the double team with Jenkins instead of blocking the blitzed https://t.co/uD3bZdoZzo

Rookie Braxton Jones looks like a fifth-rounder.

Bears lineman Sam Mustipher and Braxton Jones give up Fields quickly https://t.co/7nbwqVW0lM

Lucas Patrick, who general manager Ryan Poles picked, plays the guard spot worse than the player his staff seems to pick on since OTAs, Teven Jenkins. Patrick just stands up and gets bull-rushed into giving up a sack.

Can you guess which one of these guards is a favorite of this coaching staff and which one they hate? https://t.co/jCFphdnOuN

Mustipher again.

Another bad pass block against the blitz for the #Bears Sunday https://t.co/5lAX5KdFay

Justin Fields didn’t have much help from his wide receivers

So Justin Fields saw a lot of of pressure. However, there were plenty of times Fields saw pressure, and ran out of the pocket to keep a play alive that his receivers dropped it.

Fields has two plays that dropped in succession on a critical drive in the third quarter. The first is by tight end Trevon Wesco.

Here Fields tries to keep the drive alive. Only to be dropped https://t.co/E4vKnzOsaF

In the next play, on third down, Fields, targets Dante Pettis. Once again, no luck getting a completion.

Then there are times when his three downfield targets aren’t open.

Good clean pocket. But where can Fields throw the ball? https://t.co/NLGTqw1BGU

This isn’t the last time we’ll see no one open downfield. Because that happened in one of the few times Fields threw in the red zone against the Giants.

But Justin Fields missed Mooney because he can’t read a defense!

There was a lot of talk about this picture following the Giants game.

He has to start hitting these. Clean pocket. This likely would have been 6. https://t.co/fRPh88QzMs

The complaint from passersby looking at the still image is that Justin Fields should have seen Mooney in the top middle of the picture for an easy touchdown. Let’s remember the context of this play. It’s third-and-ten. The last play ended with a tipped pass.

Fox television footage of the game shows Fields reading the defense before this play. It’s a point/traffic defense bunch. (Hybrid play with man to man on the outside, 1st inside, and 1st outside zone for the middle defenders on this play.)

Fields taps his helmet and gives a command. Typically this can mean an audible in many NFL offenses. Eberflus admitted on that play Fields was coached to hit the check-down or run in that defense. Fields head doesn’t turn left to read progressions on that play. Remember, the offense the Bears are running is an offshoot of the Kyle Shanahan playbook.

As documented in the 2019 San Francisco 49ers Complete Offensive Manual, by author Bobby Peters, Shanahan’s offense runs a “dual” read. In that read, the quarterback would decide pre-snap or after the safety rotation post-snap what side the offensive play is going to. Here, Fields stuck with the right side of the field, he saw he had the room to get the first down, and he did. (Per the section below, Fields scrambling was the Bears’ best third-down offense.)

Not a bad play at all. Very few quarterbacks in the league could make that play. And Bears fans who have mastered Madden with an All 22 camera angle complain Fields is not the guy because he doesn’t hit Mooney there.

Justin Fields doesn’t control the critical coaching decisions, like, say, the red zone

Justin Fields was criticized for not doing enough to win. Fair enough, I guess. However, I’d be more critical about his performance in Week 2 in Green Bay than against the Giants. Most of the reasons the Bears lost Sunday were outside of his control. His roster, from the general manager seat, is one important one. On the field, his coaches didn’t help. Let’s look at the offense first. Fields drove the team down the field with his arm and legs, but the team ran the ball in the red zone with no success.

Running Back Khalil Herbert had five rushes in the red zone. According to Stats Info Solutions, Herbert averaged an EPA of -.34 yards per rushing attempt in the red zone against the Giants. On third down, the Bears just got stuffed. (In general, third-down runs by a Bears running back were stuffed by the Giant’s defense. According to SIS, Herbert had two busted plays on third down, with an average EPA of -1.40. Passing on third also had an even worse overall negative EPA in Week 4. The Bears’ best play on third down was Fields scrambling, where they had an average EPA of 1.44 with two “boom” plays.

Getsy goes for a run the next drive in the red-zone on third down. Gets stuffed https://t.co/qqcV3tZecz

Here’s one drive that I think is critical of the problems of Getsy’s offense. The Giants appear to know what’s coming on every play. No motion is utilized to throw the giants off with 7 in the box. Three pass catchers on the right side,, and the Giants aren’t worried about a pass play coming.

Getsy’s red zone offense has been awful. His runs aren’t netting much. He calls two failures before passing https://t.co/LICTF8RbSQ

The next play moves the tight end to the right side as the Bears run weak side. Again, no hole for Herbert.

Here’s the second run that fails to do anything https://t.co/TK9awvj2gJ

Third down, the Bears attempt to pass. Justin Fields has no one to throw to once again and no lane for his feet to take off.

No one’s open. Is it play design or lack of talent? https://t.co/GQz73EhTj3

Getsy has been reliant on the run in other critical situations. Take the third-down-and-two on the Bears’ penultimate drive. The Bears’ skinny line of gutless wonders can’t get a push, much like in Green Bay.

Not that Larry Borom was of much help there.

So after that play, the Bears punt the ball. A punt that was described as “cowardly” by the surrender index, even after the game, the trumpet of the H.I.T.S. philosophy bragged to the media that the loser mentally was a victory in his eyes. And it worked until Velus Jones Jr., the 25-year-old rookie drafted in the third round to help Fields, who still hasn’t seen a snap on offense this season, muffed the punt return.

But yeah, Bears fans expected Justin Fields to overcome that to beat the Giants. This city might not have the patience to find a franchise quarterback in the draft. Poles might need to find a mid-level quarterback the Bears can overpay for.

Justin Fields can’t fix the offense this year

By now, it’s pretty clear what’s going on with the passing offense. The Bears don’t trust Justin Fields to throw more because Fields doesn’t trust his offense to keep a clean pocket or catch the ball. For all of the reasons shown above. It’s hard not to have happy feet when you envision a career like David Carr. Now national analysts are parroting what I had said before the season about Fields and the roster, that it would be impossible to give Fields a fair evaluation this season. This puts the Bears behind in knowing if he’s their guy or not.

The roster cannot be improved this season enough to help Fields. There are too many issues on the offensive line and at wide receiver. It’s not going to quiet the meatheads who don’t care about talent, but this should have been expected before the season by looking at the roster. Desmond Ridder might be a more talented quarterback than Stetson Bennett, but he’s not going to score more than six points on Alabama in playoffs with the talent deficiency between the Bearcats and the Crimson Tide.

When Poles took defense with his first two picks and a special team’s wide receiver in the third, he was giving up on the offense for this season. The Bears didn’t have enough cap space to patch the offense to an acceptable level for an NFL quarterback. Justin Fields may not be the “guy” for the Bears. But there’s no way of knowing that this season.

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BREAKDOWN: A modest defense of Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields Read More »

A literary mission

Vicki White remembers a letter she once received from an incarcerated woman asking for help. 

“She needed glasses, but she had to pay for them herself and couldn’t afford them,” White said. 

The woman was asking for large-print books so she could still continue to read, even though the prison she was at wouldn’t provide her with the seeing aids she needed. 

These are the types of stories that drive the mission of White and her organization, Chicago Books to Women in Prison.

As the name indicates, the nonprofit focuses on providing books to incarcerated women, transgender, and nonbinary people across the country. 

What began in 2002 as a local effort to bring literature behind bars in Illinois has since expanded to send books to women, transgender, and nonbinary people in prison in Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Ohio, as well as all federal prisons. The organization also hand-delivers books to Cook County Jail. 

“We all, I think, would prefer not to have this mission,” White said. 

White feels strongly that books and literature should be readily available to all people in prison. But that’s not always the case. 

Some prisons have libraries but many don’t. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many prisons closed their libraries to decrease high-touch spaces. 

A woman held at Folsom Women’s Facility, a prison in California, wrote to Chicago Books to Women in Prison that the library in her prison had closed during the pandemic and access to books was impossible. Another woman held at a federal prison in Aliceville, Alabama, said she and other prisoners were only allowed out of their cells for one hour a day to shower and use phones during the pandemic, and she needed books to read. 

In February 2022, the Illinois Department of Corrections relaxed some COVID-19 restrictions and began allowing those incarcerated to access prison libraries again, according to the department. Even still, with the initial wave of the pandemic shifting to the back of many people’s minds, access to books behind bars remains a challenge for many. Most prisons require books to be new. No hardcover books are allowed. Many individual titles and genres remain banned. 

White and her organization are working to fill that gap. 

When someone in prison sends a letter to the organization requesting a certain type of book, a volunteer workforce of about 30 will then gather a selection of three books related to the prisoner’s interests, package them, and ship the books to the prison. 

“A few months ago a woman in a California prison asked for books in Vietnamese and we put out a call on social media and found some we were able to send to her,” White said. “And we got a nice thank-you note from her last week.”

Some genres or types of books are more popular than others.

“Education books are big,” White said. “We send a lot of GED books and language learning books.” 

The books people ask for often hold a mirror to the prison industrial complex. 

Between 1993 and 2013, the number of people in state prisons over the age of 55 increased by 400 percent, according to data from the National Institute of Corrections. 

“The prison population is aging and we get orders from people well advanced in age,” White said, noting the growing number of requests for large-print books. “It reflects the typical poor state of health in prisons.”

Another important need to many in prison is queer literature. The partnership between Chicago Books to Women in Prison and Women and Children First helps fill that niche. 

LGBTQ+ people are overrepresented in all stages of the legal and criminal system, and prisons are no exception. According to data from Prison Policy Initiative, a national nonprofit criminal justice think tank based in Easthampton, Massachusetts, a third of all women in prison identify as lesbian or bisexual. This statistic doesn’t accommodate for transgender and nonbinary people in prison. 

It’s important to White to make sure incarcerated women, trans, and nonbinary people know there are queer books available to them. 

Lynn Mooney has been a co-owner of Women and Children First, with business partner Sarah Hollenbeck, since 2014, but the partnership between the bookstore and White’s organization dates back “years and years,” Mooney said with pride. 

“They decided to center incarcerated people and what they wanted and needed and were asking for, and then put the work on all of us to come up with those books,” she said. “And I just think that is so smart, and so right.”

It’s not only the bookstore itself that is helping out. Customers can purchase gift cards to donate to the organization or buy new books off of the organization’s running wishlist. The list varies in nature, and includes popular titles like The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel van der Kolk, as well as crochet and calligraphy books, Mooney said. 

The numbers show the level of community support. 

In 2020, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the nonprofit mailed 1,964 orders of books and notebooks to women and trans people in prisons across the country. Another 1,600 sets of composition books, crayon packs, and folders went to the women and trans prisoners at Logan Correctional Center in Illinois. The organization also delivered three individual orders of 600 books and 700 composition books to the women’s division of Cook County Jail. 

These days, White estimates that the organization fills about 80 orders every weekend. 

Sending and receiving mail in the corrections system in any state is a slow and convoluted process. Sending books to prisons often adds extra complications. On average, an order is received, filled, and returned in about a three-month time period, White said.

But having books and shipments rejected by prisons is a common issue.

“Some states are harder to deal with than others, some prisons are harder to deal with than others,” White adds. “There’s one federal prison that does not allow any organization to get books inside. There is a state prison we have to deal with that continually rejects books that every other prison accepts. It’s a constant challenge.”

It’s easy to feel powerless when so much of the system works to keep people out, Mooney notes. Doing this work helps her and her customers feel like they are achieving meaningful change.

“It’s not my destiny to, you know, solve the problem of the prison industrial complex,” Mooney said. “But a lot of us working around the edges can make real differences.”


Chicago-born, Los Angeles-based rapper Open Mike Eagle is a seemingly inexhaustible font of laugh-out-loud one-liners, and he delivers as always on his latest album, Component System With the Auto Reverse (on his own Auto Reverse label). You need to be careful drinking anything while listening to it, lest uncomfortable snorking ensue when the rapper gets…


It’s the first Tuesday of the month, which means that Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky and former Reader staffer Maya Dukmasova host their monthly live interview show at the Hideout (1354 W. Wabansia). First Tuesdays tonight takes on the politics of the Pretrial Fairness Act (“It’s not a ‘purge law,’” they tell us). Join Maya…


Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls.

Read More

A literary mission Read More »

A literary mission

Vicki White remembers a letter she once received from an incarcerated woman asking for help. 

“She needed glasses, but she had to pay for them herself and couldn’t afford them,” White said. 

The woman was asking for large-print books so she could still continue to read, even though the prison she was at wouldn’t provide her with the seeing aids she needed. 

These are the types of stories that drive the mission of White and her organization, Chicago Books to Women in Prison.

As the name indicates, the nonprofit focuses on providing books to incarcerated women, transgender, and nonbinary people across the country. 

What began in 2002 as a local effort to bring literature behind bars in Illinois has since expanded to send books to women, transgender, and nonbinary people in prison in Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Ohio, as well as all federal prisons. The organization also hand-delivers books to Cook County Jail. 

“We all, I think, would prefer not to have this mission,” White said. 

White feels strongly that books and literature should be readily available to all people in prison. But that’s not always the case. 

Some prisons have libraries but many don’t. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many prisons closed their libraries to decrease high-touch spaces. 

A woman held at Folsom Women’s Facility, a prison in California, wrote to Chicago Books to Women in Prison that the library in her prison had closed during the pandemic and access to books was impossible. Another woman held at a federal prison in Aliceville, Alabama, said she and other prisoners were only allowed out of their cells for one hour a day to shower and use phones during the pandemic, and she needed books to read. 

In February 2022, the Illinois Department of Corrections relaxed some COVID-19 restrictions and began allowing those incarcerated to access prison libraries again, according to the department. Even still, with the initial wave of the pandemic shifting to the back of many people’s minds, access to books behind bars remains a challenge for many. Most prisons require books to be new. No hardcover books are allowed. Many individual titles and genres remain banned. 

White and her organization are working to fill that gap. 

When someone in prison sends a letter to the organization requesting a certain type of book, a volunteer workforce of about 30 will then gather a selection of three books related to the prisoner’s interests, package them, and ship the books to the prison. 

“A few months ago a woman in a California prison asked for books in Vietnamese and we put out a call on social media and found some we were able to send to her,” White said. “And we got a nice thank-you note from her last week.”

Some genres or types of books are more popular than others.

“Education books are big,” White said. “We send a lot of GED books and language learning books.” 

The books people ask for often hold a mirror to the prison industrial complex. 

Between 1993 and 2013, the number of people in state prisons over the age of 55 increased by 400 percent, according to data from the National Institute of Corrections. 

“The prison population is aging and we get orders from people well advanced in age,” White said, noting the growing number of requests for large-print books. “It reflects the typical poor state of health in prisons.”

Another important need to many in prison is queer literature. The partnership between Chicago Books to Women in Prison and Women and Children First helps fill that niche. 

LGBTQ+ people are overrepresented in all stages of the legal and criminal system, and prisons are no exception. According to data from Prison Policy Initiative, a national nonprofit criminal justice think tank based in Easthampton, Massachusetts, a third of all women in prison identify as lesbian or bisexual. This statistic doesn’t accommodate for transgender and nonbinary people in prison. 

It’s important to White to make sure incarcerated women, trans, and nonbinary people know there are queer books available to them. 

Lynn Mooney has been a co-owner of Women and Children First, with business partner Sarah Hollenbeck, since 2014, but the partnership between the bookstore and White’s organization dates back “years and years,” Mooney said with pride. 

“They decided to center incarcerated people and what they wanted and needed and were asking for, and then put the work on all of us to come up with those books,” she said. “And I just think that is so smart, and so right.”

It’s not only the bookstore itself that is helping out. Customers can purchase gift cards to donate to the organization or buy new books off of the organization’s running wishlist. The list varies in nature, and includes popular titles like The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel van der Kolk, as well as crochet and calligraphy books, Mooney said. 

The numbers show the level of community support. 

In 2020, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the nonprofit mailed 1,964 orders of books and notebooks to women and trans people in prisons across the country. Another 1,600 sets of composition books, crayon packs, and folders went to the women and trans prisoners at Logan Correctional Center in Illinois. The organization also delivered three individual orders of 600 books and 700 composition books to the women’s division of Cook County Jail. 

These days, White estimates that the organization fills about 80 orders every weekend. 

Sending and receiving mail in the corrections system in any state is a slow and convoluted process. Sending books to prisons often adds extra complications. On average, an order is received, filled, and returned in about a three-month time period, White said.

But having books and shipments rejected by prisons is a common issue.

“Some states are harder to deal with than others, some prisons are harder to deal with than others,” White adds. “There’s one federal prison that does not allow any organization to get books inside. There is a state prison we have to deal with that continually rejects books that every other prison accepts. It’s a constant challenge.”

It’s easy to feel powerless when so much of the system works to keep people out, Mooney notes. Doing this work helps her and her customers feel like they are achieving meaningful change.

“It’s not my destiny to, you know, solve the problem of the prison industrial complex,” Mooney said. “But a lot of us working around the edges can make real differences.”


Chicago-born, Los Angeles-based rapper Open Mike Eagle is a seemingly inexhaustible font of laugh-out-loud one-liners, and he delivers as always on his latest album, Component System With the Auto Reverse (on his own Auto Reverse label). You need to be careful drinking anything while listening to it, lest uncomfortable snorking ensue when the rapper gets…


It’s the first Tuesday of the month, which means that Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky and former Reader staffer Maya Dukmasova host their monthly live interview show at the Hideout (1354 W. Wabansia). First Tuesdays tonight takes on the politics of the Pretrial Fairness Act (“It’s not a ‘purge law,’” they tell us). Join Maya…


Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls.

Read More

A literary mission Read More »

Comic art rapper Open Mike Eagle keeps on fightingNoah Berlatskyon October 5, 2022 at 11:00 am

Chicago-born, Los Angeles-based rapper Open Mike Eagle is a seemingly inexhaustible font of laugh-out-loud one-liners, and he delivers as always on his latest album, Component System With the Auto Reverse (on his own Auto Reverse label). You need to be careful drinking anything while listening to it, lest uncomfortable snorking ensue when the rapper gets to the best lines in “Peak Lockdown Raps”: “I got a discount code for therapy / I hit go and got Rickrolled, apparently / It was a big blow.” But funny as he is, fans don’t just tune in for the laffs. Inspired by the likes De La Soul and They Might Be Giants, Mike writes loopy gags that float and bob and tie themselves together into surprisingly thoughtful reveries on aging, mental illness, disappointment, and hope. His flow feels laid-back even as he chews up syllables at a rapid clip—as if he’s a stoned nerd who almost apologetically has to get out everything on his mind. On “79th and Stony Island,” he starts musing on watching the Kanye West documentary Jeen-Yuhs, goes on to cheerfully explain he’s got “memories like flesh wounds,” and finishes up by listening to his son laughing. Throughout the album, Mike weaves his thoughts on COVID, racism, and our bleak political landscape in and out of pop-culture references and goofball nonsense—which he uses less as distractions than as ways to hold firm to his humanity under threat. “It’ll be endless, I will fight you every day,” Mike croons on the hook of “I’ll Fight You.” It’s a joke, but he also means it.

Open Mike Eagle’s A Tape Called Component System With the Auto Reverse is available through Bandcamp.

Read More

Comic art rapper Open Mike Eagle keeps on fightingNoah Berlatskyon October 5, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

Comic art rapper Open Mike Eagle keeps on fightingNoah Berlatskyon October 5, 2022 at 11:00 am

Chicago-born, Los Angeles-based rapper Open Mike Eagle is a seemingly inexhaustible font of laugh-out-loud one-liners, and he delivers as always on his latest album, Component System With the Auto Reverse (on his own Auto Reverse label). You need to be careful drinking anything while listening to it, lest uncomfortable snorking ensue when the rapper gets to the best lines in “Peak Lockdown Raps”: “I got a discount code for therapy / I hit go and got Rickrolled, apparently / It was a big blow.” But funny as he is, fans don’t just tune in for the laffs. Inspired by the likes De La Soul and They Might Be Giants, Mike writes loopy gags that float and bob and tie themselves together into surprisingly thoughtful reveries on aging, mental illness, disappointment, and hope. His flow feels laid-back even as he chews up syllables at a rapid clip—as if he’s a stoned nerd who almost apologetically has to get out everything on his mind. On “79th and Stony Island,” he starts musing on watching the Kanye West documentary Jeen-Yuhs, goes on to cheerfully explain he’s got “memories like flesh wounds,” and finishes up by listening to his son laughing. Throughout the album, Mike weaves his thoughts on COVID, racism, and our bleak political landscape in and out of pop-culture references and goofball nonsense—which he uses less as distractions than as ways to hold firm to his humanity under threat. “It’ll be endless, I will fight you every day,” Mike croons on the hook of “I’ll Fight You.” It’s a joke, but he also means it.

Open Mike Eagle’s A Tape Called Component System With the Auto Reverse is available through Bandcamp.

Read More

Comic art rapper Open Mike Eagle keeps on fightingNoah Berlatskyon October 5, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

A literary missionErin McGroartyon October 5, 2022 at 12:04 pm

Vicki White remembers a letter she once received from an incarcerated woman asking for help. 

“She needed glasses, but she had to pay for them herself and couldn’t afford them,” White said. 

The woman was asking for large-print books so she could still continue to read, even though the prison she was at wouldn’t provide her with the seeing aids she needed. 

These are the types of stories that drive the mission of White and her organization, Chicago Books to Women in Prison.

As the name indicates, the nonprofit focuses on providing books to incarcerated women, transgender, and nonbinary people across the country. 

What began in 2002 as a local effort to bring literature behind bars in Illinois has since expanded to send books to women, transgender, and nonbinary people in prison in Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Ohio, as well as all federal prisons. The organization also hand-delivers books to Cook County Jail. 

“We all, I think, would prefer not to have this mission,” White said. 

White feels strongly that books and literature should be readily available to all people in prison. But that’s not always the case. 

Some prisons have libraries but many don’t. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many prisons closed their libraries to decrease high-touch spaces. 

A woman held at Folsom Women’s Facility, a prison in California, wrote to Chicago Books to Women in Prison that the library in her prison had closed during the pandemic and access to books was impossible. Another woman held at a federal prison in Aliceville, Alabama, said she and other prisoners were only allowed out of their cells for one hour a day to shower and use phones during the pandemic, and she needed books to read. 

In February 2022, the Illinois Department of Corrections relaxed some COVID-19 restrictions and began allowing those incarcerated to access prison libraries again, according to the department. Even still, with the initial wave of the pandemic shifting to the back of many people’s minds, access to books behind bars remains a challenge for many. Most prisons require books to be new. No hardcover books are allowed. Many individual titles and genres remain banned. 

White and her organization are working to fill that gap. 

When someone in prison sends a letter to the organization requesting a certain type of book, a volunteer workforce of about 30 will then gather a selection of three books related to the prisoner’s interests, package them, and ship the books to the prison. 

“A few months ago a woman in a California prison asked for books in Vietnamese and we put out a call on social media and found some we were able to send to her,” White said. “And we got a nice thank-you note from her last week.”

Some genres or types of books are more popular than others.

“Education books are big,” White said. “We send a lot of GED books and language learning books.” 

The books people ask for often hold a mirror to the prison industrial complex. 

Between 1993 and 2013, the number of people in state prisons over the age of 55 increased by 400 percent, according to data from the National Institute of Corrections. 

“The prison population is aging and we get orders from people well advanced in age,” White said, noting the growing number of requests for large-print books. “It reflects the typical poor state of health in prisons.”

Another important need to many in prison is queer literature. The partnership between Chicago Books to Women in Prison and Women and Children First helps fill that niche. 

LGBTQ+ people are overrepresented in all stages of the legal and criminal system, and prisons are no exception. According to data from Prison Policy Initiative, a national nonprofit criminal justice think tank based in Easthampton, Massachusetts, a third of all women in prison identify as lesbian or bisexual. This statistic doesn’t accommodate for transgender and nonbinary people in prison. 

It’s important to White to make sure incarcerated women, trans, and nonbinary people know there are queer books available to them. 

Lynn Mooney has been a co-owner of Women and Children First, with business partner Sarah Hollenbeck, since 2014, but the partnership between the bookstore and White’s organization dates back “years and years,” Mooney said with pride. 

“They decided to center incarcerated people and what they wanted and needed and were asking for, and then put the work on all of us to come up with those books,” she said. “And I just think that is so smart, and so right.”

It’s not only the bookstore itself that is helping out. Customers can purchase gift cards to donate to the organization or buy new books off of the organization’s running wishlist. The list varies in nature, and includes popular titles like The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel van der Kolk, as well as crochet and calligraphy books, Mooney said. 

The numbers show the level of community support. 

In 2020, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the nonprofit mailed 1,964 orders of books and notebooks to women and trans people in prisons across the country. Another 1,600 sets of composition books, crayon packs, and folders went to the women and trans prisoners at Logan Correctional Center in Illinois. The organization also delivered three individual orders of 600 books and 700 composition books to the women’s division of Cook County Jail. 

These days, White estimates that the organization fills about 80 orders every weekend. 

Sending and receiving mail in the corrections system in any state is a slow and convoluted process. Sending books to prisons often adds extra complications. On average, an order is received, filled, and returned in about a three-month time period, White said.

But having books and shipments rejected by prisons is a common issue.

“Some states are harder to deal with than others, some prisons are harder to deal with than others,” White adds. “There’s one federal prison that does not allow any organization to get books inside. There is a state prison we have to deal with that continually rejects books that every other prison accepts. It’s a constant challenge.”

It’s easy to feel powerless when so much of the system works to keep people out, Mooney notes. Doing this work helps her and her customers feel like they are achieving meaningful change.

“It’s not my destiny to, you know, solve the problem of the prison industrial complex,” Mooney said. “But a lot of us working around the edges can make real differences.”


Chicago-born, Los Angeles-based rapper Open Mike Eagle is a seemingly inexhaustible font of laugh-out-loud one-liners, and he delivers as always on his latest album, Component System With the Auto Reverse (on his own Auto Reverse label). You need to be careful drinking anything while listening to it, lest uncomfortable snorking ensue when the rapper gets…


It’s the first Tuesday of the month, which means that Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky and former Reader staffer Maya Dukmasova host their monthly live interview show at the Hideout (1354 W. Wabansia). First Tuesdays tonight takes on the politics of the Pretrial Fairness Act (“It’s not a ‘purge law,’” they tell us). Join Maya…


Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls.

Read More

A literary missionErin McGroartyon October 5, 2022 at 12:04 pm Read More »

A literary missionErin McGroartyon October 5, 2022 at 12:04 pm

Vicki White remembers a letter she once received from an incarcerated woman asking for help. 

“She needed glasses, but she had to pay for them herself and couldn’t afford them,” White said. 

The woman was asking for large-print books so she could still continue to read, even though the prison she was at wouldn’t provide her with the seeing aids she needed. 

These are the types of stories that drive the mission of White and her organization, Chicago Books to Women in Prison.

As the name indicates, the nonprofit focuses on providing books to incarcerated women, transgender, and nonbinary people across the country. 

What began in 2002 as a local effort to bring literature behind bars in Illinois has since expanded to send books to women, transgender, and nonbinary people in prison in Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Ohio, as well as all federal prisons. The organization also hand-delivers books to Cook County Jail. 

“We all, I think, would prefer not to have this mission,” White said. 

White feels strongly that books and literature should be readily available to all people in prison. But that’s not always the case. 

Some prisons have libraries but many don’t. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many prisons closed their libraries to decrease high-touch spaces. 

A woman held at Folsom Women’s Facility, a prison in California, wrote to Chicago Books to Women in Prison that the library in her prison had closed during the pandemic and access to books was impossible. Another woman held at a federal prison in Aliceville, Alabama, said she and other prisoners were only allowed out of their cells for one hour a day to shower and use phones during the pandemic, and she needed books to read. 

In February 2022, the Illinois Department of Corrections relaxed some COVID-19 restrictions and began allowing those incarcerated to access prison libraries again, according to the department. Even still, with the initial wave of the pandemic shifting to the back of many people’s minds, access to books behind bars remains a challenge for many. Most prisons require books to be new. No hardcover books are allowed. Many individual titles and genres remain banned. 

White and her organization are working to fill that gap. 

When someone in prison sends a letter to the organization requesting a certain type of book, a volunteer workforce of about 30 will then gather a selection of three books related to the prisoner’s interests, package them, and ship the books to the prison. 

“A few months ago a woman in a California prison asked for books in Vietnamese and we put out a call on social media and found some we were able to send to her,” White said. “And we got a nice thank-you note from her last week.”

Some genres or types of books are more popular than others.

“Education books are big,” White said. “We send a lot of GED books and language learning books.” 

The books people ask for often hold a mirror to the prison industrial complex. 

Between 1993 and 2013, the number of people in state prisons over the age of 55 increased by 400 percent, according to data from the National Institute of Corrections. 

“The prison population is aging and we get orders from people well advanced in age,” White said, noting the growing number of requests for large-print books. “It reflects the typical poor state of health in prisons.”

Another important need to many in prison is queer literature. The partnership between Chicago Books to Women in Prison and Women and Children First helps fill that niche. 

LGBTQ+ people are overrepresented in all stages of the legal and criminal system, and prisons are no exception. According to data from Prison Policy Initiative, a national nonprofit criminal justice think tank based in Easthampton, Massachusetts, a third of all women in prison identify as lesbian or bisexual. This statistic doesn’t accommodate for transgender and nonbinary people in prison. 

It’s important to White to make sure incarcerated women, trans, and nonbinary people know there are queer books available to them. 

Lynn Mooney has been a co-owner of Women and Children First, with business partner Sarah Hollenbeck, since 2014, but the partnership between the bookstore and White’s organization dates back “years and years,” Mooney said with pride. 

“They decided to center incarcerated people and what they wanted and needed and were asking for, and then put the work on all of us to come up with those books,” she said. “And I just think that is so smart, and so right.”

It’s not only the bookstore itself that is helping out. Customers can purchase gift cards to donate to the organization or buy new books off of the organization’s running wishlist. The list varies in nature, and includes popular titles like The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel van der Kolk, as well as crochet and calligraphy books, Mooney said. 

The numbers show the level of community support. 

In 2020, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the nonprofit mailed 1,964 orders of books and notebooks to women and trans people in prisons across the country. Another 1,600 sets of composition books, crayon packs, and folders went to the women and trans prisoners at Logan Correctional Center in Illinois. The organization also delivered three individual orders of 600 books and 700 composition books to the women’s division of Cook County Jail. 

These days, White estimates that the organization fills about 80 orders every weekend. 

Sending and receiving mail in the corrections system in any state is a slow and convoluted process. Sending books to prisons often adds extra complications. On average, an order is received, filled, and returned in about a three-month time period, White said.

But having books and shipments rejected by prisons is a common issue.

“Some states are harder to deal with than others, some prisons are harder to deal with than others,” White adds. “There’s one federal prison that does not allow any organization to get books inside. There is a state prison we have to deal with that continually rejects books that every other prison accepts. It’s a constant challenge.”

It’s easy to feel powerless when so much of the system works to keep people out, Mooney notes. Doing this work helps her and her customers feel like they are achieving meaningful change.

“It’s not my destiny to, you know, solve the problem of the prison industrial complex,” Mooney said. “But a lot of us working around the edges can make real differences.”


Chicago-born, Los Angeles-based rapper Open Mike Eagle is a seemingly inexhaustible font of laugh-out-loud one-liners, and he delivers as always on his latest album, Component System With the Auto Reverse (on his own Auto Reverse label). You need to be careful drinking anything while listening to it, lest uncomfortable snorking ensue when the rapper gets…


It’s the first Tuesday of the month, which means that Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky and former Reader staffer Maya Dukmasova host their monthly live interview show at the Hideout (1354 W. Wabansia). First Tuesdays tonight takes on the politics of the Pretrial Fairness Act (“It’s not a ‘purge law,’” they tell us). Join Maya…


Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls.

Read More

A literary missionErin McGroartyon October 5, 2022 at 12:04 pm Read More »