It's not that these are terrible books. The characters are interesting and the story is really engaging at times. The biggest downfall is that the author tends to write in excruciating detail, and you have to slog through all of that before you get to the parts where the story really picks up. I could have done without the pages and pages that describe the history of the Swedish secret police. And for that matter, I really don't need a clothing description for every single character that passes across the page, especially when they're all in fairly generic "black trousers and light sweaters". These are okay books that could potentially be really, really good if they were edited down a little.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
The End
It's not that these are terrible books. The characters are interesting and the story is really engaging at times. The biggest downfall is that the author tends to write in excruciating detail, and you have to slog through all of that before you get to the parts where the story really picks up. I could have done without the pages and pages that describe the history of the Swedish secret police. And for that matter, I really don't need a clothing description for every single character that passes across the page, especially when they're all in fairly generic "black trousers and light sweaters". These are okay books that could potentially be really, really good if they were edited down a little.
Monday, July 26, 2010
Lime Obsession
I've also tried out this really cool pitcher. It has a hollow tube on one side that you fill with fresh limes so they infuse the water with flavor. (Lemons and, surprisingly, strawberries, also work well.) It's a healthy, refreshing, and yummy treat.
Equally good, but less healthy, was the delicious mojito that I had recently at La Boca Chica, my new favorite Mexican restaurant on the Lower East Side. It was packed with limes and mint leaves- so good! It only increased my lime obsession and inspired me to indulge in a different kind of lime treat- Jo Malone's Lime, Basil, and Mandarin cologne.
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
More Funny Essays
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Jess LC Jewelry
Or this one with two roughly cut crystals.
The site also has some cool pieces that combine a round disc stamped with Braille with a small crystal bead.
Monday, July 19, 2010
How Did You Get This Number
Anyway, Sloane Crosley writes short, humorous, slice-of-life essays, kind of like David Sedaris, if David Sedaris was a thirty-something, female book publicist and was just a bit less funny than he actually is. I really liked her first book, so I was a little disappointed to find that this one was just ok. The essays are perfectly fine and funny at times, but it's the kind of humor that made me think "ha ha" in my head rather actually laugh out loud.
I'm about to start another book of humor essays, so expect a full comparison soon.
Friday, July 16, 2010
Exit Through the Gift Shop
Thursday, July 15, 2010
Treats from Sweet
Remember when I was musing about how a blind taste test would be a good excuse to eat two cupcakes? Well, I retract that. I don't need an excuse to eat two cupcakes. The ones from Sweet are slightly smaller than most. I tried a vanilla one which was only so-so, and a red velvet one which was delicious. Probably the best red velvet cupcake I've ever had. Now I know which to focus on the next time I go back.
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
The Solitude of Prime Numbers
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Build Me Up, Buttercup
Overall verdict: The taste was very similar to Magnolia, especially the frosting. I enjoyed the sugar sprinkles that Buttercup put on top, but generally like Magnolia's light pastel frosting colors better. Maybe I should set up a blind taste test. (And, yes, that would just be an excuse to justify eating two cupcakes at once.)
Sunday, July 11, 2010
Stories
The stories are all really different, but what they do have in common is the way that Eisenberg captures the voices of a variety of characters, typically kind of quirky, and focuses on in small but pivotal moments in their lives. The massive 900 pages of this book are comprised of three or four of the short story collections that she's written over the years. I like her earliest and most recent stories the best, but I admit that I skipped over a few in the middle. Going from one story right into the next made it a little hard to fully digest some of them. I'd likely go back and reread some of these, one at a time, and at a slower pace.
Final random fact: Deborah Eisenberg is married to Wallace Shawn, from Clueless and, more recently, Gossip Girl.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Another Bronte Down
The title character's middle class family loses their money. Too well-bred to be part of the lower classes but too poor to be grouped with the upper classes, she goes out and finds work as a governess. The story deals with the struggles she faces dealing with the two different families she works for. Things I've read about this book have all mentioned the fact that it brought to light the extreme hardships faced by a governesses at that time in England, but I didn't think the conditions depicted here seemed all that harsh or terrible- mostly just annoying. Agnes Grey herself seemed kind of one-dimensional, and the eventual romantic culmination that's found in all of the Brontes' novels was only moderately engaging. Not a bad book, but probably not something I'll feel the need to reread over and over.
Friday, July 9, 2010
Whipped Up Leftovers
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
A Slice of Homemade Life
My one initial disappointment with this book was the fact that only a few recipes grabbed me as something that I wanted to try. I had imagined that every recipe was going to spark a desire to run into the kitchen, but that wasn't quite the case. However, this minor complaint flew out the window once I actually tried baking one of the three recipes that caught my eye- the "Winning Hearts and Minds Chocolate Cake".
The long-winded name for this cake has to do with the fact that the author always made it for people she wanted to impress and eventually ended up making twenty-five of these to use as her wedding cakes. It comes out looking like a flat, round brownie but, Oh. My. The plain appearance hides the most delicious chocolate cake I've ever had. It's rich like a brownie, but lighter in texture, and very chocolaty but not cloyingly sweet at all. Best of all, it's quite simple to make. It does call for real baking chocolate to be chopped up, which I usually shy away from in favor of easily pourable chocolate chips. I went by the book this time, though, and was pleasantly surprised. The chocolate was soft and easier to chop than I expected. I think it really made a difference in the cake. Best of all, the bars are stamped with a cute picture of an old-fashioned lady:
I followed the author's suggestion of serving the cake with homemade whipped creamed. I even took it up a notch by adding some almond extract to the cream.
Yum!
Brooklyn
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Happy Belated Fourth!
Summer reading has kicked in full force. There's just something about summer that makes me want to race through book after book. I think it might carry over from those summer reading programs I did at the library. I always tried to sign up to read 100 books, and the librarian always tried to discourage me and talk me down to twenty-five. I must still feel the need to show her up because last week I went through four books in five days. That's a lot, even for me!
Needless to say, I'm a bit backlogged with books to post about. On top of that, since a good portion of my weekend was spent baking and eating, I'm backlogged on my food posts too. Here's a little taste to start things off.
Fresh corn on the cob.
Grilled chicken sandwich with bacon, avocado, and tomato. Much, much better than a burger.
Homemade blueberry crisp. Note: this and all of the above taste best when eaten outside on the deck.
And on a unrelated note, my mom has a butterfly bush in the yard that lives up to its name:
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Glover's Mistake
Glover's Mistake by Nick Laird (a.k.a. Mr. Zadie Smith) has been on my To Read list since it came out last year. I had read and enjoyed his first novel, and this one was no different. Laird seems to write really well about friendships between young, or young-ish, men in London. In this novel, David, a thirty-something, vaguely pathetic failed artist and current high school teacher reunites with a former art professor of his, a forty-something American artist. Just as he thinks a relationship with her is about to develop, he unwittingly sets her up with his roommate ("Glover" of the title), a twenty-something bartender. Attempts to sabotage their relationship ensue, as David is hurt not only by his own thwarted romance, but by the fading friendship between him and Glover. The characters here are nicely complex. I found myself alternating loving and hating them all in turn.