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重口味SM will host the presentation of the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame鈥檚 Fuller Award to acclaimed author Harriette Gillem Robinet. 

The ceremony will take place on Tuesday, March 14 in the Performing Arts Center, beginning at 6 p.m. It is free, but tickets are required. They can be reserved . 

The Fuller Award is the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame鈥檚 highest honor. Robinet is the 14th recipient of the award, which recognizes a Chicago writer who has made an outstanding lifetime contribution to literature. 

A resident of Oak Park since 1965, Harriette Gillem Robinet is the author of 12 young adult historical novels. She is the recipient of a Carl Sandburg Award and a Scott O鈥橠ell Award, and was a finalist for an Edgar Award, a William Allen White Award, a Texas Bluebonnet Award, and a Rebecca Caudill Young Readers' Book Award. Walking to the Bus Rider Blues was recognized as a Jane Addams Award Honor book in 2001. 

The majority of Robinet鈥檚 books are historical fiction centered around significant moments in American history and featuring children of color and children with physical disabilities. Chicago is the setting for some of these novels, including Children of the Fire, in which two children witness the Great Chicago Fire, and Missing from Haymarket Square, which tells the story of 12-year-old Dinah and her friends who try to find Dinah鈥檚 father, a union organizer taken prisoner just prior to the Haymarket riot of 1886. 

The granddaughter of enslaved people, Harriette Gillem Robinet, with her husband, McLouis Robinet, has a history of civic involvement and activism in the Oak Park area. As one of the first Black families to purchase a home in Oak Park, the couple participated in fair housing marches in the 1960s and lobbied the village board to pass a fair housing ordinance in 1968, one of the first in the country.  

Just inside the entrance to the Oak Park Public Library鈥檚 main branch, set in the terrazzo floor, is a line from Robinet鈥檚 book If You Please, President Lincoln: 鈥淚 believe that any people鈥檚 story is every people鈥檚 story, and that from stories we can all learn something to enrich our lives.鈥  

In addition to hosting the ceremony, 重口味SM will feature displays dedicated to Robinet in Crown Library and outside Martin Recital Hall. 

Jennifer Clemons, curator of the Butler's Children Literature Center, is loaning some of Robinet's books from the Center to University Librarian Estevan Monta帽o and Learning Commons Librarian Beronica Avila, who will create the displays.

Last year鈥檚 Fuller Award recipient was Ana Castillo, former Lund-Gill chair at 重口味SM.