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Thursday, June 30, 2011

4 books that changed the way I look at things.

So what does one do when it is unbearably hot?

Here in Austin, temperatures are quickly reaching clothing-optional levels.  Our outfits are shrinking.  Our robust Texas constitutions are fainting.  Bars don't have enough Mexican Martinis in the world to quench our thirst, and it is now acceptable to take your lunch break at Barton Springs, a watery 68 degree respite from the Hades-like conditions.

I'll tell you what I do.

I read like a fiend.

See, to me -- both a hot (literally) Austinite, and a manic-doer of tasks -- summer is the one time of the year where I feel it's ok to get a little bit lazy.  To loosen the grip on that unhealthy Puritan work ethic.  So I indulge on books, and read morning and night.  I take books to lunch and don't feel a bit ashamed for being antisocial, reading them while fellow patrons mill about.  It's so hot we can barely form sentences, and I must rely on those more eloquent to do the job for me.

So, inspired by a blog I randomly happened upon last weekend, I decided to make a list of the four books that altered my worldview or perspective in some way.

(Speaking of which, did you know that at one time, I wanted to be an English professor?   Oh yes.  I, Blogger of Incessant Typos, used to teach composition while student-teaching in grad school.  Once, I made the class write a compare-and-contrast essay on Will & Grace and The L-Word, which I thought was spectacular lesson, until I got the papers back.  Did you know that it's difficult for young men to stare at beautiful lesbians and simultaneously write a coherent paper?  Shocking I know!  Our next paper was on rhetoric and Martin Luther King, Jr.).

Anyhoo, enough rambling.  Here are the four books that shaped Tolly indelibly.  I'd love to hear what yours are, too.

1. Catcher in the Rye (J.D. Salinger)

Yawn.  I know.  It's on everybody's top four.  Or three.  Or one.

But in the ninth grade, Catcher in the Rye changed the way I viewed literature.  I couldn't believe it was a classic.  I mean, it had ... cussing!  Not old-timey British cussing either, "bloody hell!" and all that, but the f-word.  To my sheltered, 14 year-old eyes, this just boggled the mind (and was secretly, deliciously, delightful).

Also, here was a book whose narrator seemed like a real person, and not an idealized hero or heroine who, despite subtle flaws, were obviously noble.  Not Holden Caulfield.  He could be an asshole.  Even though you end up loving him:  "Where do the ducks go?" he asks, wandering around Central Park.  Oh, Holden!  Of course you would think about that, or your little sister's knees when she's roller-skating, you sensitive soul you.

I adored this book, because of the way it tore down precious notions of fine literaure.  And of the neurotic narrator at its center.  One gets the sense Holden is too disturbed my modern life to dwell on large issues for very long -- teenage prostitution, for example -- so he distracts himself with questions of ducks and knees.  If you love this book as much as I do, I recommend Jessica Shattuck's excellent article that she wrote last year for NPR about Holden.

2. Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life (Anne Lammott) 

On the surface, this book is a writing guide.  But deep inside its warm, funny heart,  Bird by Bird is oh so much more than a writing guide.  More like a spiritual guide.

I pick up and read this book whenever I can, just to stretch out my writerly muscles.  While Anne has enjoyed commercial success in her long novel-writing career, I think her real gift is making visible what the writing process is like, and also, making you feel like YOU CAN DO IT too.  Write, I mean.

The first time I read this book was in the early days of the Internet, like, dial-up/running yellow man on AOL/"you've got mail!" Internet, and I remember taking up her now old-fashioned advice.  Like, carrying a notepad with you to write down interesting bits of dialogue you hear on the street.  Taking Polaroids (or in my case, a FunSaver).  That kind of thing.

Anne is just so darn generous with her writing, too.  She spoonfeeds you vivid descriptions and witty asides that you want to steal.  A few weeks ago, I read a passage of hers that said something like: "When I sit down to write, at first, I am very quiet.  I stare into space, look around, and then, I start rocking back and forth.  And humming.  Like a giant, autistic child."

Heh.  Me too, Anne.

3. Garlic and Sapphires: The Secret Life of a Critic in Disguise (by Ruth Reichl)

When I moved back to Austin in 2007 after graduate school, one of my first freelance writing gigs was doing restaurant reviews for The Onion: AV Club Austin.  It paid a tiny amount, and I was just one of several local reviewers, but I was SO proud of this accomplishment.  Look!!!! I said to Ross, when my new editor wrote me with my first assignment.  I am a PAID WRITER.

Ross told one of his teacher friends about it, and to indulge me, that friend lent me a copy of Garlic and Sapphires, Ruth Reichl's memoir about reviewing restaurants for The New York Times.  Every time she visited a restaurant, she went both in normal, everyday clothing, as "Ruth," and then again in a costume. Not, like, a bear costume: She dressed up as other people.  Early in her tenure at The Times, she caused a scandal when she awarded Le Cirque one star.  She wrote two side-by-side reviews, comparing the service and food she received as Ruth Reichl, and the service and food she received as "Molly," a plain, frumpy character she invented from the Midwest.  Ruth got seated before the King of Spain did.  Molly got seated by the bathroom.

Garlic and Sapphires was the book that showed me that restaurant reviews, and food writing in general, could be written in a literary way -- like little short stories, as Ruth puts it in her other memoir, Comfort Me With Apples.  This spoke to me, since even though I was no culinary expert (see: Tuesday's ruined pancakes for proof), I was a story-teller.  Like Ruth.

But I have yet to visit any restaurant here in Austin or elsewhere in disguise.  That's some ballsiness.

4. Special Topics in Calamity Physics (by Marisha Pessl)

I read this book just last year, as a result of this post.  My friend Katherine recommended it to me in the comments section, and like her, I stayed up until all hours of the night finishing it.

Oh my God.  Where to start with Special Topics?  First of all -- this is Pessl's debut novel.  Which might make you hate her, if you are also a writer.  Some people do, and insist that the prose is terrible, because it's so densely layered with the narrator's incessant scientific, historical, and literary references.

But I didn't feel that way.  Once I got past the narrator's "thinking" style, and also past my latent feelings of inadequacy, I dove headlong into Pessl's creepy, dark world of secret societies, murder mystery and anarchist networks.  And then realized how singularly brilliant this young writer is.

Anyway, those are all big, superlative brush strokes; here's the plot: A teenage prodigy named Blue, the book's narrator, begins the story by staring up at the bloated face of her dead teacher, who hangs from a cord in a tree.  This woman's name is Hannah Schneider, and for the duration of this book, while Blue rewinds back and gets you up to this point, you'll be asking yourself: "Who killed Hannah Schneider?"  In fact, chances are, you will ask yourself this nagging, burning question for the rest of your life and join online discussion boards and Amazon groups the moment you turn the last page to get everyone else's consensus ... or at least if you will if you are like (i.e. oddly and selectively obsessive).

Since she was a young girl, Blue has been entirely raised -- some would say isolated -- by her academic father.  He is her best friend, her confidante, and despite his egotistical posturing, can't help but being a ladies' man.  They travel all over the country together on his guest lectures, leaving when his teaching post is up, or when some poor, besotted woman starts stalking him.

On their last stop, in Stockton, North Carolina, Blue enters her senior year in high school.  Never cool and always a social outcast, because she is simply so damn smart, Blue is surprised -- and excited -- when she's immediately inducted into what appears to be a small secret society.  It's comprised of five students, all who seem to have a very interesting relationship with their film teacher ... Hannah Schneider.

If you read any book this summer, please, please read this one (especially so I can bug you to death about who killed Hannah Schneider).  This is the book that, more than any other I've read recently, reminded what a good, immaculately-spun yarn looks like.  How to lay out clues.  How to store away hints.  How to paint larger-than-life characters, and how to move those characters in such a chess-like way through the plot.  And the end!  I'm still recovering from the end!  I'm just dying for you to read it.

***
So, those are my four gems.  Now it is your turn, because I'd like to hear which books shaped you.  I think people's favorites say so much about them.

which four changed things for you?

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Shabby Apple Giveaway Winner!

Drumroll, please!  

Announcing the winner of our Shabby Apple dress giveaway, recipient of this dee-lightful vintage-inspired garment ...


Is none other than: 

Lani was the very first entry for this dress, which just goes to show that sometimes, being "Number One" is a self-fulfilling prophecy.

I happen to know beautiful Lani in real life, as well as her funny husband, Ben.  This dress is called "Spanish Steps," so I'll gently suggest that Ben take Lani to the site of this dress's namesake.  I mean it's only appropriate.

Whaddaya say, Ben?  Just a quick jaunt to Rome!  No biggie!

Thank you to the 301 of you who entered!  And thank you to Shabby Apple for helping me sponsor this giveaway, in celebration of Austin Eavesdropper's new Facebook page.

Speaking of Facebook, we're doing an art giveaway next month with one of my favorite artists, Brandi Strickland.  I'll be announcing details on the Austin Eavesdropper FB soon, so go "like" it if you want to be the first to know.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Foreign Flavors, Domestic Policy.

There's something oddly familiar about Foreign & Domestic.

One year ago, the Austin eatery carved out a small, 42-capacity dining room and kitchen in an old skate shop on North Loop (otherwise known as E. 53rd St.), the perplexingly-named street that does not, in fact, loop.  Rather, it moves in a straight line, connecting the colorful bungalows of Hyde Park to North Lamar -- still the Wild West of north-central Austin, where one is equally likely to encounter an independent feminist book store as they are a Long John Silvers.

But Chef Ned Elliott and his wife Jodi, herself an accomplished pastry chef, enjoy contradictions.  When they broke ground for Foreign & Domestic, they envisioned a neighborhood-friendly atmosphere, with a menu that pushed beyond familiar favorites. Oh, the Brownie Sundae is there.  But it's served with Shoestring French Fries.  A side you could also pair with your main dinner meat, such as Foreign & Domestic's Beef Heart.  (That's Beef Heart Tartare, darlings.) 

Perhaps that's why Foreign & Domestic feels like someplace you've been before, only more interesting.  Its interior evokes that of a chic diner, or a sophisticated greasy spoon.







I stopped by last Thursday to talk to Chef Elliott about the restaurant's participation in Tribeza's Chef's Table Series, going on today through Wednesday.  

Foreign & Domestic in particular will be unveiling their Long Island-inspired multi-course meal -- think oysters, lobster, and cool-in-the-mouth desserts -- on Tuesday evening, and serving on Wednesday night as well.

Chef Ned Elliott and Chef de Cuisine, Nathan Lemley

While Chef Elliott and I were talking, Foreign & Domestic's Chef de Cuisine Nathan Lemley prepared me a hearty Flank Steak Wagyu: Their take on Korean Bim Bim Bap, with more proteins in one bowl than I probably consume in a whole day.  



Chef Elliott told me that as a child, he was raised by two mothers, both with a fondness for gardening, cooking, and an Appalachian-fostered sense of culinary resourcefulness.  Meaning, cow tongue for dinner was no big deal.  

So naturally, the flank steak in my bowl was carted in from Yoakum, Texas, roughly two hours away.  It was layered with salty bacon, soy beans, and poached egg (see what I mean about proteins?), along with shiitake mushrooms, fried orzo, basil, chives, and a savory, tart broth -- a welcome surprise, underneath all that rich, mouth-coating meat.  

The smeared streak of red on the side of the bowl is a fermented red pepper paste, which I scraped off with my steak-laden fork.  Its taste reminded me of hot chilis that had been doused with citrusy white wine.


Foreign & Domestic has always been one of those restaurants teetering at the very top of our Date Night list.  I don't know why it's taken me so long to visit.  

But now that I have, I suspect it will become a restaurant for me like Second, or even Uchiko.  One that I evangelize every chance I get, a restaurant that has me praising the Food Gods and speaking in high-falutin' culinary tongues.

Or in this case, cow tongues.

(You can get more details on Foreign & Domestic here, and Tribeza's Chef's Table Series here.)

Friday, June 24, 2011

Art teacher.


Remember when I said I was going to work on my photography this summer?  Well guess what.  I'M TOTALLY DOING IT.

However.  As you can see, I still have a lot to learn.  

What you have just witnessed are the five very best pictures of approximately 5,000 I took yesterday.  I don't know how fashion bloggers do it!  Photography is exhausting.  But I liked my outfit, so I thought: What the heck?  I'm gonna go have some fun with Danger Kate.  (That's what I've decided to name my new camera.  We're a good team, she and I.)

Now I seldom wear glasses, but when I do, friends tend to freak out.  I guess because they change my face so much.  But I have to admit, I think it's a nice effect!  Combined with the smock-like top, I felt very art teacher in this outfit.  Like, good morning class!  Today we are making earthenware.

Those two necklaces are a gift from my mom.  For my 28th birthday, she gave me a jewelry box filled with vintage necklaces, rings, and earrings that she picked out from thrift and consignment stores in San Antonio.  Talk about freaking out.  If memory serves, I immediately put 3-4 pieces on, then proceeded to model them for my parents, my husband, our waiter at the restaurant where we were eating, neighboring tables, the hostess, and eventually, strangers in the parking lot.  Which is about the kind of behavior you can expect on an only child's birthday.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

To do the math and at the same time, dream.


Some photos my camera has collected in the past few days, paired with the poetry of one of my favorites: Austin Kleon.

A blurry me (top).

My sleepy cat (middle).

A beautiful friend (Kim) and her grandma, whom we went to go visit in San Antonio on Saturday (bottom).

Austin and I met during a food trailer adventure, and we became friends.  The next week, we chatted here.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Sun in the sky, you know how I feel.


Aesthetically-speaking, I'm going through a certain something right now.

Maybe it's the new place.  The books I've been reading.  Or the simple fact that it's summer, a time when our busy brains give in a little, and trade our Very Important Ideas for swimming holes and superhero movies.  I'm open to new ideas.

Whatever it is, I'm craving crazy visuals.  In the house department, the clothing department; I'm day-dreaming of trading my current red hair for slightly trashy bleach blonde.  

But until I rush out the door to the nearest punk salon or tattoo parlor, I think I'll just show you some art I've been eyeing lately.

Our poor blank walls are begging for decoration -- "Help us!  We are naked!" -- so I am hurriedly dressing them up.  The pieces below are high on my list of purchase possibilities.













Bow down to the majesty of mixed media artist, Brandi Strickland.

I've blogged Brandi''s art before, and Tweeted her yesterday.  Which presented Reason #503234 why I love Twitter: Austin artist (and one of my past interviews) Erin Hanson immediately Tweeted right back, also a fan of Brandi!  

Yay supportive artist community! Yay Internet!  

(Just for kicks, let's appreciate some of Erin's art.)


Yay Popsicles.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Love, Your Biggest Fan.


Dear Dad,

Hi Daddy!  It is Sunday morning, and if I know you, you've been up for hours already.  You've made your coffee, read the newspaper, took a shower.

You've also talked to the cats, maybe talked to one of your brothers, and are probably thinking about going next door to Catherine and Julian's, and talking to their two tiny girls. 

Christmas, 1986.

Maybe it comes from growing up in a family of eight children, but you've always been a big kid.  Which is one of the many, many things I love about you.  The way that toddlers and tiny people are instantly drawn to your presence.  I think you never stopped feeling grateful for having a baby yourself, and kids pick up on that: That you believe they are genuinely so special. 

One of our many Olan Mills portraits, circa 1990.

Now, you were always handsome Daddy, and Mom has been gorgeous from the start.  But man, did I go through an awkward period.  One that didn't truly wrap up until college.  Still, you always remarked in public about your "gorgeous daughter," showing off your wallet-sized Olan Mills portraits of us, and placing a huge frame of me on your office desk.  Your lawyer buddies would come by and politely ask, "oh, is that your child?" and you would answer, "YES!  That is MY DAUGHTER!  She got STRAIGHT A'S her very first year in MIDDLE SCHOOL!!!"  

Because you were the proudest dad that ever lived. 
I have no idea where this is!  But I think the year is 1992.  Your Year of Hats.

But in addition to being proud, I think you and Mom both are still dumbfounded / grateful every day that you both made it.  That you went back to school later in life, got professional jobs, and were able to afford raising a child.  

You both came from modest means, and you wanted so very badly for me to succeed.  To have good teachers, and to be able to go to college.  Lessons that were hard-won for you both.
You visiting me at camp in Wimberley, 1995.

A long time ago, I remember you coming to one of my basketball games.  I was in the fourth grade, and I was just horrible.  I shot at the wrong basket, I air-balled when I shot at the right basket, and I constantly let the ball get stolen from me.

I cried after that game, but instead of letting me feel like a failure, you came up with a plan.

"Next time those mean girls start swarming you, just stand still and SWING YOUR ELBOWS INTO THEIR FACES!  That'll teach 'em."

Because in basketball, as in life, you knew that if I fought just a little bit harder, I'd get what I wanted.  One of the most amazing things about you, and specifically your marriage with Mom, is that you are among the rare few who married, got divorced, and married each other again.  And the second time, it stuck.

Normally this happens because the wife drags the husband to counseling.  But not you.  You went to counseling totally on your own, because you wanted desperately to understand how you could be a better husband.  How to get back that woman you fell in love with, the one with the pretty legs and traffic-stopping smile.

At Uchiko for my birthday, 2011.

And not only did you eventually get her back, you decided to have a baby together.  No matter that you were stuck at a managerial job you didn't like, and Mom was waiting tables.  You two have always been big dreamers.

That reminds me of my second-favorite story about you, Dad.  When everyone was going around the circle at lamaze class and introducing themselves, you and Mom decided to lie, and make up new jobs.  The jobs you really wanted.

  So, Mom looked around the room, and announced to everyone that she was an artist.  You smiled and said, "I'm a writer."

(And I love how a few years later, you went back to school at UT, got your degree in journalism, and started copy-editing for The Daily Texan.  Because you did it!  You actually became that writer.)

Deep-sea fishing in Corpus Christi, 2003.  I think this is at your favorite restaurant, CrawDaddy's.
Christmas 2010, you holding the homemade jalapenos Ross and I made.

You have always encouraged me to dream big too, Dad.  You and I share a common resentment of sleep, because we want to be up all the time, experiencing everything.  You've always, always, got a conspiratorial sparkle in your eye, like you know something the rest of the world doesn't.  And I think your secret is your child-like fascination with it all.   

I love you so enormously much, Daddy!  And I'm thankful every single day, but especially this one, that you are my father. 

happy father's day!

Love,
Tolly