MAKE GOOD CHOICES: STORIES BY EILEEN T. LYNCH (DEBUT LITERARY COLLECTION, PRE-ORDER)

$19.95

Make Good Choices is a deeply-rendered love note to Chicago in four story sections. “Larkins” follows Gabriel Larkin’s family’s move from a South Side Irish-American neighborhood to the suburbs. “Old Chicago” centers on unlikely reunions and alliances from the 1960s to present day, highlighting cultural institutions of the Loop threatened by street violence. In “Difficult Kids,” a foster child’s deepest desire to belong finds him falling in love with the girl next door, a budding pianist. “Larkin Redux” returns Gabriel to his origins in Rogers Park, where he must reconcile a long life of difficult choices.

In Make Good Choices, Eileen Lynch delivers a moving and deeply human collection of linked stories, each one filled with characters as flawed as they are relatable. Following the Larkin family across generations, these stories trace lives shaped by quiet decisions made in kitchens, hospital rooms, prairie fields, and Chicago streets. With compassion and restraint, Lynch captures the tension between responsibility and desire, allowing her characters to make mistakes as they search for meaning, connection, and a sense of home and family. From June’s childhood fascination with flowers and science on the edge of an Illinois prairie, to Joe’s reckoning with memory, mortality, and an unfinished play, to the adult divide between brothers Frank and Gabriel as they navigate work, caregiving, and family obligation, the collection moves fluidly through time while remaining grounded in vividly observed moments. With her sharp eye for place and strong character work, Lynch’s newest work offers an intimate portrait of Chicago life. These words and situations will resonate with readers as they helplessly watch the characters meditate on legacy, love, and the hope that even imperfect choices might still lead us somewhere meaningful. Lynch is becoming one of my favorite writers with each and every page she shares.  Readers will not be disappointed.

Jeff Hill, author of Dead Socials

Reading Make Good Choices feels like listening to a friend tell you stories at a kitchen table over coffee. Stories about people you instantly recognize--they're just like you, or people you know, with the same internal woes and conflicts and joys. It begins with stories of the Larkin family, following them through generations, then swerves to tales about other people, surprising you with connections. Family dynamics, siblings that don't quite get along, feel realisticlike what you'd chat about over coffee! Time periods range from Prohibition memories to the 1970s to current post-COVID times, all with wonderful setting detail.

I love the variety of charactersa gifted singer with stage fright, a teen drawn to set fires, a suburban mom petrified of her son becoming a city social worker, an older woman revisiting a lost love. Her characters mourn dreams not fulfilled, but threads of hope and resilience run throughout.

As a Chicagoan, I love the authentic detailscity landmarks, public transit delays, the Cubs-Sox rivalry, living by el trains that rattle past at all hours. Eileen skillfully depicts the landscapes of downtown Chicago and the Rogers Park neighborhood, plus north suburbs and small-town Illinois. But you don't have to be a Chicagoan or Illinois resident to love these realistic stories about characters on life journeys, struggling to "make good choices."

Diane O’Neill, author of Please Be OK

Eileen T. Lynch is a writer, editor, and educator. Her debut novel, Splenditude was published by High Frequency Press in June 2025. After managing an ethics program for a Chicago non-profit, she shifted gears to supervise a behavioral resource room at a local high school. Her stories, essays and poems appear in numerous publications. Learn more at eileenlynch.com.

ISBN: 978-1-962931-72-4 , EPUB ISBN: 978-1-962931-73-1, LCCN: 2026902469. 192 pages, $19.95. Forthcoming August 11, 2026.

Make Good Choices is a deeply-rendered love note to Chicago in four story sections. “Larkins” follows Gabriel Larkin’s family’s move from a South Side Irish-American neighborhood to the suburbs. “Old Chicago” centers on unlikely reunions and alliances from the 1960s to present day, highlighting cultural institutions of the Loop threatened by street violence. In “Difficult Kids,” a foster child’s deepest desire to belong finds him falling in love with the girl next door, a budding pianist. “Larkin Redux” returns Gabriel to his origins in Rogers Park, where he must reconcile a long life of difficult choices.

In Make Good Choices, Eileen Lynch delivers a moving and deeply human collection of linked stories, each one filled with characters as flawed as they are relatable. Following the Larkin family across generations, these stories trace lives shaped by quiet decisions made in kitchens, hospital rooms, prairie fields, and Chicago streets. With compassion and restraint, Lynch captures the tension between responsibility and desire, allowing her characters to make mistakes as they search for meaning, connection, and a sense of home and family. From June’s childhood fascination with flowers and science on the edge of an Illinois prairie, to Joe’s reckoning with memory, mortality, and an unfinished play, to the adult divide between brothers Frank and Gabriel as they navigate work, caregiving, and family obligation, the collection moves fluidly through time while remaining grounded in vividly observed moments. With her sharp eye for place and strong character work, Lynch’s newest work offers an intimate portrait of Chicago life. These words and situations will resonate with readers as they helplessly watch the characters meditate on legacy, love, and the hope that even imperfect choices might still lead us somewhere meaningful. Lynch is becoming one of my favorite writers with each and every page she shares.  Readers will not be disappointed.

Jeff Hill, author of Dead Socials

Reading Make Good Choices feels like listening to a friend tell you stories at a kitchen table over coffee. Stories about people you instantly recognize--they're just like you, or people you know, with the same internal woes and conflicts and joys. It begins with stories of the Larkin family, following them through generations, then swerves to tales about other people, surprising you with connections. Family dynamics, siblings that don't quite get along, feel realisticlike what you'd chat about over coffee! Time periods range from Prohibition memories to the 1970s to current post-COVID times, all with wonderful setting detail.

I love the variety of charactersa gifted singer with stage fright, a teen drawn to set fires, a suburban mom petrified of her son becoming a city social worker, an older woman revisiting a lost love. Her characters mourn dreams not fulfilled, but threads of hope and resilience run throughout.

As a Chicagoan, I love the authentic detailscity landmarks, public transit delays, the Cubs-Sox rivalry, living by el trains that rattle past at all hours. Eileen skillfully depicts the landscapes of downtown Chicago and the Rogers Park neighborhood, plus north suburbs and small-town Illinois. But you don't have to be a Chicagoan or Illinois resident to love these realistic stories about characters on life journeys, struggling to "make good choices."

Diane O’Neill, author of Please Be OK

Eileen T. Lynch is a writer, editor, and educator. Her debut novel, Splenditude was published by High Frequency Press in June 2025. After managing an ethics program for a Chicago non-profit, she shifted gears to supervise a behavioral resource room at a local high school. Her stories, essays and poems appear in numerous publications. Learn more at eileenlynch.com.

ISBN: 978-1-962931-72-4 , EPUB ISBN: 978-1-962931-73-1, LCCN: 2026902469. 192 pages, $19.95. Forthcoming August 11, 2026.