No Stars in Jefferson Park

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A01=Maggie Andersen
actors
adjustment
adversity
artists
Author_Maggie Andersen
caretaking
Category=DNB
Category=DNBF
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Catholic school
Chicago
Chicago theater
coming of age
commitment
creative writing
crisis
difficult choices
disability
disabled actors
disappointment
ensemble
ensemble theater
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faith
family
female artists
feminist
finding yourself
friendship
healing
heartbreak
Ireland
Jefferson Park
kindness
Lakeview
Lou Malnati's
love
loyalty
medical emergency
Midwest
Northwest side
overcoming
PhD
playwright
poetry
Prague
prayer
Ravenswood
resilience
Second City
selflessness
St. Patrick's Day
Steppenwolf Theater
storefront theater
strokes
studying
television
the Gift Theatre
Theater
theater company
tragedy
UIC
University of Iowa
wheelchair
women
women artists
women's stories
working class
writing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780810149519
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2025
  • Publisher: Northwestern University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A Chicagoan’s coming-of-age memoir finds courage in the face of immense loss

In her early twenties, Maggie Andersen was a founding ensemble member of Chicago’s storied Gift Theatre with her then-boyfriend, Michael Patrick Thornton. But after a series of spinal strokes left Thornton paralyzed, Andersen made the heart-wrenching decision to leave him, along with their growing company and, later, her beloved city. No Stars in Jefferson Park alternates between two narratives: the energy and excitement of making art in Chicago’s thriving storefront theater scene and the devastating day-to-day realities of rehabilitation and rebuilding—and somewhere in the middle finding the courage to choose yourself.

Over the past twenty-plus years, the Gift—now performing in the working-class neighborhood of Portage Park—has become one of the most vital storefront theaters in Chicago, with Thornton’s career taking him to Hollywood and Broadway. But Andersen’s story has brought her back home. No Stars in Jefferson Park is a testament to lifelong friendship, a love letter to Chicago, and a profound coming-of-age story about the pain and necessity of putting yourself first.

Maggie Andersen is an associate professor of English at Dominican University and a founding ensemble member of the Gift Theatre. Her work has appeared in DIAGRAM, The Los Angeles Review, and Salt Hill, among others. Andersen has also worked on stages and microphones across Chicago, where she lives with her husband and son. This is her first book.

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