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Barbara Brotman

Highlights
Barbara Brotman

Barbara Brotman is a writer for the metropolitan news section's special projects team and the paper's Outdoors Adviser columnist.

Her 2006 stories chronicling the finals months of hospice care for a retired Chicago insurance executive won a distinguished writing award from the American Society of Newspaper Editors, honorable mention in the National Press Club Awards and a Best Feature award from the Chicago Journalists Association.

She was a columnist and staff writer for the weekly Woman News section from February 1994 to August 2003. From September 2003 to June 2004, she held a John S. Knight Fellowship at Stanford University.

She joined the Tribune in February 1...
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Barbara Brotman is a writer for the metropolitan news section's special projects team and the paper's Outdoors Adviser columnist.

Her 2006 stories chronicling the finals months of hospice care for a retired Chicago insurance executive won a distinguished writing award from the American Society of Newspaper Editors, honorable mention in the National Press Club Awards and a Best Feature award from the Chicago Journalists Association.

She was a columnist and staff writer for the weekly Woman News section from February 1994 to August 2003. From September 2003 to June 2004, she held a John S. Knight Fellowship at Stanford University.

She joined the Tribune in February 1978, writing for features sections and the Tempo section. After moving to the metropolitan news section as a general assignment reporter in 1982, she wrote the "About the Town" column for the Tribune from January 1984 until August 1989, for which she won a UPI International Award for Illinois Newspapers for Column Writing and a Peter Lisagor Award for column writing, given by Sigma Delta Chi, the Society of Professional Journalists. She then covered the abortion issue from both a local and national perspective. In April 1990 she rejoined the Tempo staff as a feature writer.

She received honorable mention in 2002 from the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors, and is also a past recipient of the Chicago Tribune's award for Outstanding Professional Performance, for her evocative writing style and ability to capture the mood and feel of Chicago life and people.

Brotman was born in New York and graduated from Queens College. Brotman, her husband, Chicago Tribune photographer Chuck Berman, and their two daughters live in Oak Park, Ill.
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    Jan 28, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. Nov 29, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  2. Finding something new in a well-reported story

    Covering a well-covered story like Maggie Daley’s death is particularly challenging. When I went to the funeral Monday and started talking to mourners, I found that many of them had lovely things to say about Mrs. Daley,  but they were things that had been said before in our paper.
    Covering a well-covered story like Maggie Daley’s death is particularly challenging. When I went to the funeral Monday and started talking to mourners, I found that many of them had lovely things to say about Mrs. Daley,  but they were things that...

    Tags: Facebook, Maggie Daley

  3. Nov 29, 2011 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  4. |Column
  5. Jul 15, 2010 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  6. Nature: Find it along the city's riverwalk

    Sure, it's a nice place for outdoor dining. But is the still-evolving pedestrian walkway along the Chicago River also a legitimate outdoors nature experience?
    Sure, it's a nice place for outdoor dining. But is the still-evolving pedestrian walkway along the Chicago River also a legitimate outdoors nature experience? In a way. It's not a hiking trail, unless your hiking trails feature a spa offering chair and...

    Tags: Illinois, Richard M. Daley, Wetlands, Personal Service, Trump International Hotel and Tower Chicago

  7. Feb 25, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  8. Ethical carnivores: An urbanite aims for dinner

    For me, it was all about ethical meat.
    For me, it was all about ethical meat. For years I'd been searching for meat I could feel OK about — in terms of the environment, health and animal welfare. But I never imagined my quest for the most politically correct meat could end with what...

    Tags: Heavy Engineering, Recipes, Hunting, Illinois, Ethics

  9. Feb 15, 2011 | Chicago Tribune
  10. Thin Mint business calls for a thick skin

    Change of Subject
    From the archives, an April 3, 2002 column by Barbara Brotman. Well, it's all over except for the eating, although judging by the crumbs on my colleagues' desks, that's over, too. But after a particularly grueling experience of helping my......
  11. Dec 15, 2010 | Chicago Tribune
  12. Ya Gotta...

    Change of Subject
    Here are the Ya Gottas from today’s Prickly Pair Podcast. Phil Rosenthal -- MediaBurn.org --- "a collection of over 6,000 independent, non-corporate tapes that reflect cultural, political and social reality as seen by independent producers, from 1969 to...
  13. Jun 11, 2009 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  14. White water, knuckles in Illinois

    Tribune staff reporter
    My adventurous group of women friends paddled our raft down the river as swallows swooped low across the water. We heard frogs croak at remarkably high volumes. Then we heard something else: Wildcat Rapids, dead ahead.We watched as another raft went...

    Tags: Backpacks, Tourism and Leisure, Avalanches and Landslides, Gardens and Parks, Trips and Vacations

  15. Aug 13, 2009 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  16. Best of Palos: Locals will moan, but our maps point the way to 3 great hikes

    Tribune staff reporter
    Are you flummoxed by the Palos region? Maybe you have driven south on Mannheim Road and wondered who stole a piece of Minnesota and its lakes and plunked it down around the Calumet-Sag Channel.Maybe you have wanted to try hiking or biking in the...

    Tags: Rivers, John Elliott, Wetlands, Road Transportation, Bodies of Water

  17. Jun 25, 2009 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  18. Rare plants thrive in North Shore ravines

    Tribune staff reporter
    Searching for a beautiful and fragile natural habitat for a nice eco-tourism jaunt? If you can't make it to a rain forest, consider the ravines of the North Shore. A defining geological feature of the north suburban lakefront, the ravines do far more...

    Tags: Hennepin County, Forests, Lake County (Michigan), Natural Resources, Ecosystems

  19. Nov 5, 2009 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  20. Fallout from Great Depression: 2 prairies

    Tribune staff reporter
    You have to love the sidewalks. They are neatly laid out in right angles, a conventional concrete grid that would fit in perfectly in the most cookie cutter of suburban subdivisions.Except that there is no subdivision. The sidewalks stretch out into...

    Tags: Wildlife, Endangered Species, Hennepin County, Lake County (Michigan), Westchester (Cook, Illinois)

  21. Jun 4, 2009 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  22. Top 5 hikes in the Chicago area

    Tribune staff reporter
    What better way to celebrate National Trails Day on Saturday, the American Hiking Society's annual celebration of the country's trails, than to go out on one? Here are my top picks for a nice hike, by category: Solitude Beverly Lake/Spring Creek...

    Tags: Rivers, Oakbrook Terrace, Cross Country Skiing, Bodies of Water, Road Transportation

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