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Successful storytelling – the kind that makes you laugh, cry, feel empathy, and, most importantly, inspires you to get involved in making change – is difficult to pull off in any medium. Despite this, advocate, content creator, and now New York Times No. 1 bestselling author Isabel Klee has somehow managed to do it in several ways: through social media, writing, and now live and in person.

Organized by one of Chicago’s most beloved independent bookstores, The Book Cellar, and hosted offsite at Everybody’s Coffee, Klee stopped by on her book tour for her new memoir, Dogs, Boys, and Other Things I’ve Cried About. The evening felt less like a formal author talk and more like the world’s most wholesome and energizing girls’ night… hosted by an independent bookstore! What could be better?

The event – moderated by Klee’s longtime friend and fellow New York-based (and Chicago-native!) activist and content creator Maddie Guy – was designed for both longtime followers of hers on social media and those new to Klee’s work. Attendees received a signed copy of the book upon arrival, and the discussion largely avoided spoiler-heavy deep dives in favor of broader conversations about the themes behind the book. That choice made the evening feel especially accessible, creating the rare book-tour stop that worked equally well for devoted fans and curious first-timers.

What makes Klee such a compelling speaker is the same quality that has made her social media presence so successful: radical candor. Throughout the discussion, she spoke openly about removing shame and stigma from animal welfare conversations, particularly around pet surrender and irresponsible ownership. Rather than encouraging online pile-ons or moral superiority, Klee advocated for education, transparency, and compassion – arguing that, once a mistake is made, fear of judgment often prevents people from making better decisions for the animals involved.

Some of the evening’s most fascinating moments came from unexpected discussions about the memoir-writing process itself. Klee spoke about everything from balancing honesty with privacy to the surprisingly complex legal realities of writing nonfiction about real people. It was a reminder that the event was not simply promotional, but genuinely conversational – the kind of discussion where tangents often became the most memorable parts.

The audience Q&A only reinforced the warmth of the evening. Questions ranged wildly from ethical fostering advice to designing a Bravo-themed Mount Rushmore to naming beagles recently rescued from research labs, but somehow every tangent perfectly contributed to the messy, funny, compassionate humanity of the evening.

One of the audience questions Klee was asked, and said that she often receives, is what advice she would give to people considering fostering, and her answer was refreshingly simple: stop saying “I could never” before you’ve tried just once. Klee discussed the joys of watching a dog learn to be a dog – watching a senior dog play with toys for the first time or seeing a shutdown puppy go from terrified to begging for cheese. There is so much joy to gain from helping not one, but many animals find their forever homes, and, although saying goodbye can hurt, as Klee says, “fostering dogs is the most positive, fun addiction. You won’t want to stop!”

Though Klee’s appearance was a one-night event, Dogs, Boys, and Other Things I’ve Cried About is out now and available for purchase at The Book Cellar in Lincoln Square.

The Book Cellar continues to host the kind of thoughtful, community-driven programming that reminds audiences why independent bookstores matter. Whether through author discussions, book clubs, or writing events, spaces like this create something increasingly rare: genuine connection between strangers who showed up simply wanting to hear a good story.

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