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Titles Matter/Names Don’t

I am not a big believer in the maxim that you can’t tell a book by its cover. That idea is a kind of Cartesian split which says that the inner and outer are separate and distinct, but they aren’t. The cover is part of the book and it tells me something about the book, at least it better. I know that publishing houses have teams of experts who decide on the best colors, fonts, foregrounds and backgrounds that will sell the story inside.  The graphics and the author’s photographs are all analyzed and scrutinized to create a book that is sellable and appealing and consistent with the message that lives inside the cover.

Titles are especially telling. As of late I have become a bit obsessed with book titles. It started with a fish out of water memoir that I am hesitant to name, not because I didn’t like the book—I did like the book. It is just that the title of the book was wrong and I feel disinclined to openly take the book to task for its bad name and it really is bad. Not that isn’t true, it is a fine title. It just shouldn’t be the title for this book. The problem with the title was that I believed the title and I believed that I was going to get a story that reflected what the title implied. Some may say, “it’s just a title. For goodness sakes, Belette, you said you enjoyed the book. Isn’t that enough? Why are you so hung up on the  gosh darn title?” I’ll tell you why. If I go to the store and buy a jar of mayonnaise and bring it home to add a heaping tablespoon of it to my tuna salad and it turns out it was Cool Whip or horseradish I am not going to enjoy my tuna salad. Not that there is anything wrong with horseradish (I refuse to say nice things about Cool Whip) it just wasn’t what was on the label.

Whomever chose the title of the aforementioned book had wanted this book to attract women who like Audrey Hepburn and/or books with Prada in the title. I feel sure it wasn’t the author as the title wasn’t consistent with her voice. I hope that she made an impassioned argument against the title and that she ultimately relented out of promises that if she would agree to their suggested title that she would be the biggest thing since Elizabeth Gilbert, one is liable to make all kinds of concessions with such a promise.

I am not sure if you know this, I don’t think I have ever told you, but I love the title “Thursdays with Igor”. I am pretty attached to it. The title, for me, is part of what gives the book its spirit and its structure and I dread (and highly anticipate) someday find myself in a meeting with powerful people who have paid me money for my book telling me that they want me to call the book “Dr. Freud 90210″ or “The Prada Patient” or worse “Psychoanalysis in a little black dress”. I like to tell myself that this wouldn’t happen and if it did that I wouldn’t cave and yet if someone is telling me that such a title could persuade Sandra Bullock to buy the film rights, I cannot be sure of what I would do ( actually, I am pretty sure what I would do and yet I want to appear to you as if I would struggle with the decision). That said, I know that there is so much about the title that I love. “Thursdays” tells you that this is a ritual. “Thursdays” says that this is something that is scheduled for, planned for and anticipated. “With” tells you that Igor and I are in this together and he isn’t the expert—we both are. And “Igor”, to my mind, tells you a little about him being foreign and how every word he says to me has an accent.

Okay so back to the Prada/Audrey Hepburn inspired fish out of water memoir, the whole time I was reading this ill-named memoir I kept thinking “but where is the girl that they were talking about on the cover? That is not THIS girl.” What I am saying is that for me this title ruined my read. If the book had no title I would have enjoyed this book 100% more than I did.

In opposition to this unnamed/ill-named memoir there are two books whose titles got me through some really hard places in their prose. The first book is my friend’s, Laura Munson’s, This is Not the Story You Think It Is. This is one of my favorite titles ever, it is right up there next to Dave Egger’s A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (so many of my favorite titles come from authors in Lake Forest. Coincidence? I think not. ). What I LOVE about Laura’s title is that each and every time I made a decision about how her story was going to go or making any assumptions at all, her title would come to me and gently remind me “This is not the story you think it is.” This title changed the way I read her book and for that I am grateful to the title.

I just finished reading Abigail Thomas’ A Three Dog Life. Let me tell you that without the title and without the cover of Abigail sitting on a comfy couch, the kind you can imagine sitting on for hours and drinking tea and eating shortbread, with her three dogs, I could have not gotten past the second chapter and that isn’t because this isn’t a wonderful book—it is—it is just a hard place that Abigail finds herself. As I read Abigail’s painfully beautiful prose describing her life after her husband’s traumatic brain injury that required him to leave their home and live in an institution it was the dogs I would hold onto. Even when they weren’t there, in the early chapters, I would tell myself, “She’s not alone. The dogs are there. She has the dogs.” It took a while for the dogs to find their home in the memoir, Abigail had other stories to tell about her husband’s hallucinations, psychotic episodes and his highly poetic manor of speech. If by page 78 there had not been the dogs I wouldn’t have been able to go on—the pain would have been to much. As a reader I needed those dogs to sit by my feet as I read about the grief, the loss and despair that I felt as I imagined myself in her shoes. That said, I can imagine Abigail’s book without the dogs and I feel sure Abigail would have found a way to go on without Rosie, Harry and Carolina—but there would HAVE to have been another title.  If there were just teases of dogs with that title and no real interactions with her pack, I, as a reader, couldn’t have taken it.

***

My father gave me a first name that he considered lacking in gravitas, he told me so. And when he would talk about this he would always remind me of his largess in giving me a middle name that he thought was more serious, “So just in case you ever do anything serious with your life you can go by your middle name.” I would bristle each time he would bring this up. I always hated my first name. In middle school I started threatening to change my name to Blaire-Hamilton. I wanted two first names, names that sounded like I might be the first female President of the United States. I didn’t want a name that made people think of cheerleaders or porn stars. It wasn’t until the summer of my freshmen year of  high school when I saw a journalist with my exact name (different spelling) in Vogue magazine that I decided my father was wrong. I could do important things with the name he gave me, even though I would prefer to have a name that immediately makes one think of great literature and not of an archetypal cheerleader.

***

When and if I publish “Thursdays with Igor” I hope that the title will remain. And, I can tell you, that I will not be going by my middle name when and if I publish, so take that Daddy-O. I will be going by my first name that lacks gravitas and my married name that makes me sound like a Greek shipping heiress.

Find Belette

Editor, the author and creator of Up and Down Town which is one of my favorite fashion blogs, was kind enough to do a piece starring the two of us. So, are you up to Editor’s challenge to “Find Belette“? Once you have found me please go over to Editor’s blog and find her.

This is not a francophile blog

For most of my life I was not really sure what I liked and what I disliked. Upon that realization I worked hard to discover my authentic preferences and where they came from. Was it me that hated okra or was it my best friend from fourth grade, Mira Jane, who made a face each time the “o” word was said and, so, in an act of solidarity I eschewed the slimy southern vegetable? Did I like jazz because it was the soundtrack to my parents life or did I really love Ella and Billy? Was my love of mythology born out of my own interest or was it because of a certain adolescent Adonis that Eros was ignited for Olympus?

It was during my “Do I really like this?” phase when I first saw the film Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain. I loved the film for many reasons but what I loved most about it was its unapologetic celebration of idiosyncrasies and specificity. We learn who the characters are via their likes and dislikes:”Raphael Poulain likes peeling large strips of wallpaper;lining up and shining his shoes; emptying his toolbox, cleaning it out and putting everything back.” “Amandine Poulain is a school mistress who has always had shaky nerves. She dislikes puckered fingers in the bath, having her hand touched by strangers, pillow marks on her cheek in the morning. She likes figure skaters’ costumes on TV, polishing the parquet, emptying her hand bag, cleaning it out and putting everything back in.

The literary device of “turn-ons and turn-offs” as a means of knowing characters became one that impacted not only my writing but also my philosophy. I started to seek out specificity (, i.e. what makes you, you and what makes me, me and what those specific preferences say about us). I found that people who would have previously frightened me with their passionate love of LEGOS, Star Trek, and Civil War reenactment to have become newly interesting. “So, what is it that makes you love Dungeons and Dragons?”, I would ask rapt with interest.

I had lectured on the film “Amelie” just days before I began my blog. In doing research on “Amelie”, I found a short film by Jean Pierre Jeunet, which he made years before, entitled Foutaises: catalogue nostalgique des plaisirs de la vie . I loved this film. It was a short film about nothing but preferences and it was a major motivating factor for me starting my blog. I decided that my blog would be a catalogue of the pleasures and displeasures of my life.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDnVcLdu1C8]
Another inspiration for my blog came from, of all people, Gore Vidal. I remembered seeing an interview with him years ago on the Charlie Rose show. I don’t know if Gore was on to talk about one of his books, his life or to give insight into his distant cousin. What I do remember is him talking about how in language and writing we have a tendency to modify. We use modifiers in language as a means of not owning our thoughts, feelings and arguments. Gore’s point stuck with me over the years as I had been a big time modifier. I modified my likes, dislikes, thoughts and feelings so if you disagreed with me I could say, “well, I only sort of like it” and that way there wouldn’t be an unbridgeable chasm created between the two of us.

I wanted my blog to be a place where I could have the courage to say what I love and what I detest without modifiers or qualifiers. I didn’t want to have to apologize for my preferences and I assumed I would never have to as I was sure no one would ever show up to read my blog.

For some reason, I decided that I would keep the focus of my blog to French things I love and loathe. I thought I could keep myself secret, hidden and a distant “vous” and never slip into the familiar “tu” form. It worked at first as I do love Paris and am most certainly a francophile. I thought by writing about the French things I loved and detested I could keep a safe distance and never reveal too much about myself. What I didn’t realize was that in revealing what I love and what I detest I was revealing everything about me.

In January 2008 this became a blog about me even though I never-ever intended it to. I had failed to become pregnant after years of infertility treatment and I couldn’t get myself to write about anything but my pain. The loss was so large that it demanded my full focus and it eclipsed my interest in writing about Paris or things French. As the grief subsided my life remained the focus of my writing and the francophile focus fell further and further away.

I am sorry if you came here looking for a francophile blog. I have a whole list of wonderful francophile blogs on the left hand column of my blog, if that is what you are looking for click on over and visit them. It’s not that I don’t love Paris, I do. It’s just that there are other things I love and detest and there are other things I want to write about. I may or may not ever write about Paris again. It is likely I will but I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting for it. It could be a long time.

My writing and I may not be your cup of cafe creme. I can be bitter, viscous, strong and on occasion leave a bad taste in your mouth. If my blog isn’t for you that’s fine. I will not modify. I will not pretend to like what I don’t and I will not modify my feelings about what I detest. I am going to keep writing about my life, loves, and hates and part of that is my grief, depression, loss, whining and whinging. I do try to make the whinging funny and entertaining, but it if you don’t find it so isn’t then there are many other blogs to read. My feelings won’t be hurt if you’d rather read about Paris than me prattling on about my life. I get it. Really, if I had a choice between Paris and me I would choose Paris every time. As I don’t have that choice I will stay here and keep writing about the specificity of my life. If this is au revoir for us I thank you for stopping by. It is my sincere hope that you be true to your likes and dislikes; I will continue to attempt to be true to mine.

What movies to watch to get yourself to write when you are blocked

1. Henry and June
It was reading Anaïs Nin‘s diaries in my teenage years that gave me hope that my self-absorbed scribblings might one day be magically transformed into literature. Nin elevated narcissism to an art form.

2. Wonder Boys
My favorite movie about writing, ever. For two hours I get to imagine what it would have been like if I had gone to some fancy-shmancy east coast liberal arts college. This movie also cures me of my dream to teach writing when I get hit with the “Wouldn’t it be great to teach writing at Sarah Lawrence” fantasy. The soundtrack is also really good.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sveK_fhIqhs]

3. Manhattan
Yes, Woody Allen, for all his psychoanalysis is still a messed up and very talented guy. I like movies best when he plays a writer who goes to a psychoanalyst and there are a lot of them: “Manhattan”, “Deconstructing Harry”, “Annie Hall”, and “Everyone Says I Love You” to name a few.
From “Everyone Says I Love You”:
Stefi:You couldn’t figure out whether you wanted to be a psychoanalyst or a writer!
Joe: So I compromised, I became a writer and a patient.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0o6QKpNK9Cc]

4. Spalding Grey’s Monster in a Box
I love all of Spalding’s monologues but there is something about this one that feels the most poignant, personal, and bittersweet of all of them. In this long monologue Grey tells of the trials and tribulations of writing his novel,”Impossible Vacation”, which was based on his mother, her suicide and his resulting depression. This piece was funnier when he was alive and now, after his suicide, it seems unsurprisingly sadder.

This film is the one I relate to most to in the difficulties I am encountering in writing about my relationship with my mother. It isn’t easy to tell the truth. And, my monster lives in my MacBook and not in a box.

5. Adaptation
I LOVE the beginning of this film in which we get to hear Charlie Kaufman’s inner voice. LOVE-LOVE-LOVE it. I totally relate to his inner monologue only mine sounds more upbeat and more confidently masochistic.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCl387HTVGk]

6. The Philadelphia Story
There are so many great things to love about this movie: Cary Grant, Cary Grant and Cary Grant. But, once gets past the magic of Cary there is Jimmy Stewart who plays a writer who wrote a book that sits unread in libraries and is forced to work as a journalist at a US weekly/People magazine of the 1940′s. It is a cautionary side story in this otherwise romantic comedy that warns that literary greatness does not necessarily keep body and soul together and it certainly doesn’t bring in the kind of dough that allows one to build boats for one’s wife.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8b39gIMMqr8]

7. Capote
When I think of Truman Capote I think of my year living in Gothenberg, Sweden when I read everything by Capote and Maugham. The tenderness and honesty of Capote’s literary voice is so very much at odds with his elfin, slurred and drug induced drawl of later years. I do wish that someone would turn the story of his writing “Answered Prayers” into a film. But, as Truman was fond of saying, “More tears are shed over answered prayers than unanswered ones” and since there isn’t such a film I recommend Phillip Seymour Hoffman’s portrayal of a slightly less self destructive Capote.

8. The World According to Garp.
This was a wonderful book and a great movie about a writer desperate to get out of the large shadow of his famous mother. Robin Williams in this film is the most quiet, contained and restrained I have ever seen him. He is so convincingly preppy in the film that it is hard to imagine that is the same guy who years later would be an extremely hairy and hyper comedian.

9. Stranger than Fiction
I love this film for how it takes the ordinary and document it in a way that it made the mundane seem magical. I feel sure it is the only movie with Will Ferrell I may ever own.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLPUmYiVgbw]

10. Sylvia Plath and Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle
I put these two movies in the #10 position as they are both half a good movie and together they make one decent film about two of my favorite writers. Both women where great writers who had a serious depressive streak, a knack for picking the wrong man and serious suicidal tendencies. Dorothy Parker made four unsuccessful suicide attempts and Sylvia Plath sadly succeeded.

I have put all of these films on my Netflix list as I haven’t been able to write a word of my novel for the last two weeks. Here is a joke to explain why: Three Jewish mothers are talking about their sons. First one says: “my son, oh, he loves me so much, he bought me this car.” Second one scoffs and says:”you don’t know what a son’s love really is. My son is the best son a mother can have. He loves me so much, he bought me a house!”

The third one, grinning: “That’s nothing. You think you know what a son’s love is? You don’t know what a son’s love is. My son, he’s such a good son. He loves me so much that every week, he pays a psychoanalyst $200. And what does he talk about? Me.” I am spending $200 an hour to talk to Igor about my mother and then for a 1000 words a day I write about what we have talked about which is usually my mother and I have to be honest that I would rather not love my mother quite so much.

Four play

I got tagged by the very chic, fab, gorgeous and altogether brilliant Couture Carrie for this meme back when leaves were falling from the trees and Obama hadn’t been elected President and I didn’t know I’d lost my shoes, i.e. a long time ago.

4 Things I Did Today( Yesterday):

1. I drove on Rodeo Drive to get to Igor. I sat at a stop light between two mid-life crisis’, on my right a Ferrari and on my left there was an equally obnoxious sports car.

As I walked Brighton Blvd. I developed an even stronger desire for tall black leather boots with low heels and buckled detailing. I must have these boots. But where to find them? Ideas, ladies?

2. I literally ran into some super model Milano Italiano guy who got out of the elevator at Igor’s building and I was totally gobsmacked by this guys beauty. I am not a gal who usually loves extreme physical perfection in men. I usually find that kind of unattractive and almost bordering on the feminine. But, this kid, maybe 20, who looks like he swallowed the moon, the stars and an aurora borealis or two, I couldn’t stop looking at him and I got flustered and tongue tied when he said excuse me. He looked totally unsurprised by my reaction to him. It must happen to him all the time.

3. I saw Larry David and Eric Stoltz walking the streets of Beverly Hills( not together). It is not the first time I have run into Eric. Eric Stoltz and I looked at each other’s hair admiringly.

4. I had the most amazing dinner I have had since Paris: Seared Sonoma Foie Gras with organic blueberry sauce over Parmigiano-Reggiano crusted puff pastry and then I had the Crispy Duck Risotto with duck confit and risotto sauteed crispy with an herb salad and tomato and truffle oil. Words fail me in describing this bit of culinary heaven, suffice it to say that it was better than my brownie I ate for lunch.

4 Things On My To-Do List:

1. Find my inner athlete who longs to run, lift weights and do Pilates. I wonder if she is with my shoes that I lost.

2. Get everything done that I have been putting off for over a year and make a dent into my plan for making 2009 a year that does not suck.

3. Complete the outline, sample chapter and marketing plan for my book after I take out the trash. Before I empty the dishwasher come up with the catchy title that will make my book an international bestseller. “The Joy of Dawn” or perhaps “Electrasol nights and Cascade dreams.”*

4. Set reasonable goals and stop feeling overwhelmed.

4 Guilty Pleasures:

1. Botox. I feel mildly guilty for doing it. But, aaaah, the pleasure!!

2. Not cooking. I don’t really feel guilty for not doing this thing that should and on occasion brings me pleasure.

3. Peets French roast coffee, half and half, and sugar. I will not drink lesser coffee and I will not do non-fat dairy creamer and keep the pink stuff and blue stuff away from me.

4. An excessive amount of lipsticks. I will never reveal numbers.

4 Random Facts about Me:

1. I wiggle my nose like a bunny when I am thinking hard.

2. I am a good listener.

3. I have JCrew’s 1-800# on my speed dial

4. I have to have smooshy pillows and there must be three of them and the temperature must be no higher than 70 degrees and I have to have my disapproving bunny and one foot must be out from under the covers in order for me to sleep—and even with all that I still may need Ambien.

4 Bloggers that I’m Tagging:

1. Hidden in France

2. Yes and yes

3. Motherhood in NYC

4. Charmed Silver Shoes

Even if I didn’t tag you would you please tell me four things about you? I’d love to be infourmed. Get it, infourmed!

*Joy, Dawn, Electresol and Cascade are all dish washing detergents.

The tale of two shoes in the city

Collages1 There had been a plan. The alarm went off at 7:00 a.m. I showered, did full game day hair and makeup and was ready to leave the hotel by 9 a.m.There had been coffee and no food to slow us down (an amateur would make the rookie mistake of ordering a carb laden treat with their cappuccino and hence have their impulses slowed by a sugar rush).

I had worn my most comfortable Delman flats, my Chanel jacket, a few weighty gold chains and my favorite jeans with enough Lycra in them that make me feel skinny( i.e. magic jeans)—-the perfect outfit for shopping at Neiman’s on Black Friday. We entered the side door so as to sneak up on Neiman’s and not get overwhelmed by a crush of shoppers.

He-weasel was psychologically prepared for a full day of shopping. He stood back as I did a few laps around the jewelry counter. Then we made our way to the handbag department where there were tables loaded with more goodies than had been our Thanksgiving table the day before. I began to peruse the sale bags and found a bag that I thought I could love. For a moment or two I was tempted to buy a bag that had once cost over $4000 and was marked down to $1560—but I asked myself the important question “would you die if you didn’t get that bag?” No,I would not die. Actually, there were no bags that I would die without. I left the bag department feeling a moral victory had been won by not surrendering to a bag that had gone up in my esteem merely because of what it used to cost. It was a Tod’s handbag that was made of a black fur. I thought it was made of calf hair. He-weasel tried to convince me it was made of badgers which made me drop the bag gently on the table next to the scratched up and picked over purple suede YSL bag.

Our next stop was the shoe department. We didn’t go there immediately as I felt somehow that by showing some restraint and by not being too hungry to find a shoe I might actually find one. Yes, I was aware that I was engaged in magical thinking—but where shoes are involved magical thinking follows. I went straight to the sale rack and picked up every shoe that caught me eye. He-weasel found an area near the size 9-11 rack that allowed for easy access. I tried on more shoes than the entire cast of Sex and the City wore in all seasons of the show and the movie( only a slight exaggeration). I even put on shoes that I would never consider. I tried on shoes that made He-weasel gasp in horror and others that he feared for my sanity and my stability, i.e. he thought I was going to fall on my tail. But, it was the first shoe I tried on that I knew for sure was going home with me.

Prada Shoe Meet my new shoe, her name is Calzaturee Donna by Prada. She is a gorgeous Black Crocodile pump. I love her. I love her heel. I love how she makes my foot look. I love how she matches my favorite and most frequently worn Banana Republic bag. And, I am ridiculously happy at how comfortable she makes a four inch heel feel. The price was also lovely. Originally $440 and then marked down to $294 and then 30% off that. Bringing the shoe down to $205. This was my first purchase in the rebuilding the shoe collection after the Great Shoe loss of ‘08 and it was a great start. While I was waiting for our lovely salesman to ring up my shoes I saw another shoe.

Valentino This shoe was so lovely I was sure she was meant for someone else. A red suede Valentino pump with black laser cut leather trim and a red suede bow. I tried them on and I instantly fell in love. I stood in front of the mirror oohing and awing and all the while knowing that I had no where to wear them and that they were totally impractical.

We celebrated my Prada pumps by lunching at the very romantic Rotunda restaurant . Both He-weasel and I had a glass of champagne and a bowl of an incredibly delicious seafood chowder. During the entire lunch I talked about one thing and one thing only and that was the Valentino shoe. From another table someone might have thought I was extrapolating about the popover and the strawberry butter but even as I savored the sweetness of the treat it was the shoe I was thinking of.

As I went on and on I made it clear that I would not be buying the shoes, I was merely appreciating their beauty. The more champagne I had the more my love for the shoes became a symbol of something more. I told my weasel that if I had just finished the book, or had sold my book or had some other achievement to mark then I would buy them but then it would be too late as these shoes would be gone. I assured myself there would be other shoes when those days arrived and I resigned myself.

As it was time to leave Neiman’s I decided that I would just stop by and say goodbye to my shoes. I started to say goodbye by trying on the shoe again. My salesman came by and saw the shoe on me and I told him what I was doing and then he told me a few things:

  1. The lace is not lace but laser cut leather.( I am not sure why that is such a great thing, but he seemed really excited about it).
  2. Valentino shoes are much better and more comfortable than Christian Louboutin’s at half the price (This really excited me).
  3. “You have to have them.”

That was all he had to say and I was sold. I looked to my weasel and he said, “If you are going to kick yourself for not getting them you have to have them.” I would have done.

Valentino red suede pump originally $695 and then marked down to $465 and then marked down 30% off. I think that brought them down to about $375. I haven’t looked at the sales receipt yet. But I cannot quit looking at my shoes. Can you?

Weasel loves red Valentino pumps

The rye may be dry but my eyes are not

Many moon pies ago Randal of L’ennui mélodieux and I entered into an arrangement. Here was the deal, I would write a sports piece if Randal would write about shoes. I kept my end of the bargain here, here and here. Randal was not as quick to put his shoes where his mouth was. I gently reminded him whenever an opportunity arose that he owed me a shoe or two.

Yesterday, as I wrote a post about what I wanted from Santa, Randal wrote a post entitled, “How will I ever weasel out of this one?” in which he gave me more than I could have ever asked from Santa and more than is possible to achieve in a single shoe post. Randal describes his post: ‘Though this isn’t The Shoe Post®, as I’ve yet to replace my nearly falling apart sneakers, this is far more creative in its own twisted way than that post could ever hope to be. Pardonnes-moi, ton amie, mais ton histoire, postscript. “

Randal has gone and written a story inspired by this weasel’s love of Holden Caufield in the Catcher in the Rye that made this weasel cry. This gorgeous literary offering is now and will forever more be in the file of “things I most treasure.” I am absolutely sure you will love it as much as I do. Thank you Randal for letting me post it here. Et merci beaucoup mon ami por votre histoire tres belle.

This rye is dry

She sipped le café the way a nurse, through years and years of training for weaving through mountainous student loan debt thrown at her by irate patients and the occasional, arrogant doctor, would nurse hers. Yet she wasn’t a sipper but a dreamer roaming fields of rye and playing catch with Josh Gibson and Johnny Bench and Roy Campanella and Phoebe — no, no, no, that’s all wrong. Hold on a moment. Hold on. Holden.

Everywhere her eyes, framed by hair the color of a crackling match, glanced, she saw him. Why he should deign to be in this slate-grey, nondescript, yet overpriced, brasserie at 24, boulevard des Italiens, especially when he was once upon a time, and has remained so, a work of fiction, her heart refused to answer.

Everything was grey. The tables, the light fixtures, the marble counter and the glasses of varying width and height seated upon it, the beer tap, the wallpaper of wine bottles, the wood paneling, the patrons. Oh sure, your eyes would have told you that you saw waves of brown tinted with blue and red and green, perhaps a dash of gold, black leather or a sliver of silver, but they would be lying, obfuscating. Grey was all her eyes, framed by hair the color of a child’s red Crayola, saw.

“Monsieur, monsieur, je n’ai pas demandé le pain de seigle.” The waiter turned to look at her, but his grey eyes and his grey smile spoke as if she had uttered something in Tocharian A. She was sure that she had spoken proper, if with an American accent, French. After disappearing and reappearing from the back within mere moments as if he were a figment of the camera’s imagination — she hadn’t noticed any doors — le garçon had brought her another plate of dry, rye bread. Grey, dry, rye bread.

Valencia, with its veil of shining smog, was a lifetime away. She pushed the grey, dry, rye bread away towards a Paris, its mirror image, its evil twin, lying in wait, hiding in the dark flagstones and darker pavement. She cupped her chin in her hand and sighed, her elbow nearly slipping on the slick, Orange Glo-ed surface. She knew that scent, every Yankee did, and stifled a laugh at the notion of such a faux fancy place, ha ha ha HA ha, stooping to use a low-class product, blissfully unaware of those that were, after all, aware.

The walls of wine bottles were lit by the flat rays of a dying sun shooting off the passing parade of chaussures éteintes traipsing their elegantly bourgeois way towards l’Opéra Garnier; she wondered what was playing. Such a patent leather sheen, if there had indeed been a sheen instead of slabs of rain-saturated clouds masquerading as shoes, could be dangerous to caribous and barbies, she thought. A brainstorm of nonsequiturism rooted in nothing but grey particulars was rudely interrupted by the stark sequitur of a single red shoe and a ray, not of weak light, but of passionate fire blasting off that rich patch of scarlet to shatter the windows, sending shards 360° in brazen defiance of the laws of physics, except for those really colossal explosions you see in the best action movies and random episodes of CSI.

The flame disappearing within the superheat and a sparkle of blowback feeding upon itself, streaks of charcoal air drew themselves over her eyes, the wan electric lights outside immediately painted the soft glow of a gaslit century long gone save in the history books and those of bad fiction. Waxing heartbroken over her unfulfilled dreams would have to wait as the shrapnel continued on its path, deadly to any mortal foolish enough to be on that road and not another, quality of soul and of sole be damned. A solid heel might come in handy when sprinting away from — just dive already!

Only the unnursed but sipped cup catching the rocketing shards saved her ducking brain from being split into the halves swimming in formaldehyde situated on a black bed of that waxy goo segmented worms were cruelly pinned down to during high school biology by a maniacal instructor always decked out in ugly black hornrims and a hideous tie. This way and that the patrons scattered, les garçons, les femmes, les chiens, les belettes.

“Phonies, all of ‘em. Are you alright?”

Still shaken and unsure if she had heard a voice or merely the reverberations of that hellish conflagration, she was aware enough to realize she was prone. And uninjured. Fiercely closing her eyes in order to wash the fine detritus from them with manufactured tears, she opened them just as quickly to see a being with one red shoe. r />
Looking up at a hand seemingly suspended in midair, she directed her gaze further into the hot, swirling dust to see not a ghost, but a flesh and blood man.

“Here, let me help you. I’m Holden.”

Reasons to be happy

1. I saw my Hair Angel again yesterday and not only did she take care of the pesky reminders of my aging, decay and slow decline into old age and AARP membership—but she also put in some lovely coppery red highlights that add both light and depth to my already gorgeous colour. As I watched her do things to my hair with a round brush that only a direct representative of the divine could do, I thought that, in the right light, I looked not altogether horrible and that my hair looked fantastic. Please forgive my hubris. It is a natural compensation for how I have been hating on my hair before the Celestial Coiffure took over the care and maintenance of my crowning glory.

The bad news for me is that my Hair Angel may be going on a reality show which I am sure she will win and as she is so pretty she will probably be discovered and give up the bleach and the blow dryer for a big paying show biz job. Yep, I live in L.A. I am happy that my Hair Angel is on her way to fame and fortune but, Hair devil that I am, I just don’t want to give up the good hair.

2. This weekend I am going to meet Miss Janey of Miss Janey’s Place. This weasel feels like she is going to meet a movie star. Ms. Weasel is extremely happy to meet Miss Janey.

3. The Vitamin W seems to be working.

4. Eddie Izzard is going to be in London from November 17-December 12th and I so want to go. If you are in London will you please go for me? He is at the Lyric Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue. I can send you directions if you need them. If you were so inclined, pre-theater I wouldn’t mind if you stopped in at Harvey Nichols and found a little something for me to wear. And, perhaps after the theater you could pop into Gordon Ramsay’s at the London and grab a bite to eat for me. Champagne might be nice.

5. Obama’s numbers make me happy–very,very,very happy.

6. I feel loved.
My friend Danute is visiting me from Chicago on Sunday. She is my first Chicago friend to leave lovely fall in order to spend time with me in the 95 degree fall of L.A; the land where leaves do not fall, stars do( i.e., Britney, Lindsey and the like). And, no, there are no pumpkins for carving or apples for bobbing; watermelon carving contests and dunk your body in the swimming pool contests are what goes on in L.A. this time of year.

7. I feel more loved.
The very lovely K.line has kindly awarded me with the “I love your blog award.” The feeling is mutual K.line. I only wish I had found your blog sooner!

Lucky me, I get to pass on the love to seven other blogs. I love all of them all for so many reasons—but today I am celebrating what they can do that I cannot.

The Storialist who writes poems that make me wish I could, but I can’t–so, I won’t.

Miss Cavendish who is more stylish than I could ever dream of being—and, she makes bunny ears seem super chic.

Adventures, Ink who has an amazing way with pen and ink—and a story. I do okay with colouring books. This talented woman makes imagery that ought to be in books.

Freida Bee who lives in Austin and seems to be happy there ( something I was not able to do). And, she makes politics and pathos funny.

My Wardrobe Today who can manage to look so good every single day that she is willing to photograph her ensemble and share it with her grateful readers.

Della Street Dreaming who can mix prints and patterns in a way I would never have the courage to dare. Della’s Leggo people soap opera on her side margin is also quite impressive.

Zen Chef who can cook things like Seared Sea Scallops with sweet corn cream, quail egg and black truffle. While I had a handful of Cheez-its and a pear cider for dinner last night.

Please share some of your reasons to be happy today. I always LOVE hearing them; they make me happy.

“She had multiple identies and each one of them had a credit card”

Once upon a time, many, many, many years ago—back when I subscribed to Interview Magazine and wow that was back when Andy Warhol was the editor and I thought I was going to move to New York and marry my first love and work in an art gallery and I hadn’t even started therapy or moved from highlights into all over hair colour and didn’t use eye cream or sunblock—I fell in love with someone and I didn’t even know his name.

It was his work that got me. I saw his paintings with humorous prose and witty one-liners written to describe the doings of distinctively painted models with elongated forms and minimalist faces. I had never before seen anything like it when flipping through my five pounds of Vogue ads. The perfume scented ads usually featured beautiful airbrushed and anorexic models in preposterous poses and ludicrous locations.

The very first one I saw I immediately tore from the magazine and tacked onto my bedroom wall with a push pin that had once held up a Parker Stevenson poster. At the time I had no idea who did these unusual ads but I didn’t care and as I didn’t have the internet to Google to find out who was responsible for this wonderful work I enjoyed the authorless illustrations. Yes, I did have an Apple IIe computer a dot matrix printer and a slot for 5 1/2 inch floppy disks—but I did not have the fancy internet that everyone was talking about. It would be years before I dared to subscribe to AOL and hear those three magic words,”You’ve got mail.”

I started to collect these ads for their wicked wit and enormous whimsy—each one had a punch line as powerful as the picture. I imagined that one day I would have a penthouse on Park Avenue and some overpriced decorator would indulge my desire to have a wall filled with Barneys New York ads matted with linen from Milan and gold frames made for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The art found in $5 magazines with thousand dollar frames would hang on the hallway that led to my enormous walk in closet. This, please remember, was the era of Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous and thanks to Robin Leach I knew a little about Champagne wishes and caviar dreams.

After a few moves into a series of non-Park Avenue and non-penthousey apartments I somehow lost the folder full of ads. I was sadder than if I had lost the Robert Doisneau framed prints of puckering paramours in Paris that I had bought at Z Gallery. I was so desperate to replace my beloved ads that I called Barneys New York and asked them if they could tell me who did the illustrations and whether or not there was a book of all these ads or a way for me to get copies of them. A cliche’ of a New York sales associate took my message with as much disdain as she could muster. Barneys did not call me back. I called again and left another message and suffered yet another sales associate and yet again there was no call. Exacerbated, I wrote to Barney’s and I waited for them to write me back and they never did.

When I first saw Badaude’s and Editorialist’s Up and Down Town blogs which both feature beautiful illustrations paired with witty text I immediately thought of my love affair with Barneys New York ads and the nameless illustrator who made them. But, it was yesterday when I was reading one of my favorite blogs The Storialist, who uses the Sartorialist’s images as a source of inspiration for her poetry, and I left a comment in which I told her that her words gave me a whole new appreciation for the Sartorialist’s fashion photographs.

It was that very comment to the Storialist that got me to Googling for the Barneys New York ads that I have long loved. In just moments I found the ads and the name of their creator, Jean-Phillipe Delhomme. It was not a big surprise to learn that Delhomme was French and born in Paris. Mais, bien sûr!

Thanks to Google I discovered Jean-Phillipe Delhomme’s gorgeous web page that has illustrations from many of his projects including Barneys New York, The Mark Hopkins, Le Bon Marche—as well as a video cartoon created by Delhomme. He now illustrates for French Architectural Digest and GQ’s “Style Guy” column.

His paintings and illustrations are sold in New York at the James Danziger Gallery and at Colette in Paris. Phillipe’s work is also available from FIG: Fashion Illustration Gallery in London. I want one of his paintings. I want one bad. Jean-Phillipe, m’entendez-vous ?

As a writer, Delhomme published a novel entitled “Memoires d’un pitbull“, several cartoon books including: Scènes de la vie parentale, &sr=8-2"> Art contemporain , Jean Philippe Delhomme’s World , Design Addicts and a children’s book Visit to Another Planet. A new book, “The Cultivated Life” by Delhomme will be released in the U.S. in February 2009 and can now be pre-ordered on Amazon.com.

I might have to buy two copies of each of Delhomme’s books;
I will get one for the coffee table and one to take the pictures from his book, frame with pine frames bought at Ikea and hang them on my one- bedroom condo’s white and empty walls. But, I will not get two copies of Delhomme’s novel, “Memoirs of a Pit Bull” even though one reviewer said of the book: “un roman drôle, qui laisse réfélchir sur la vie dans les banlieux, ainsi que tous ces “faux méchants.” Ecrit avec beaucoup d’humour.” I do enjoy un roman drôle.

Oh, and there is also a Delhomme candle available at Collette and developed by Les Nez de Givaudan so my home can smell chic, witty, whimsical and French.

I am not sure if any of Delhomme’s books contain the ads from the Barneys New York ad campaign—but I really hope so. As much as I love Jean-Phillipes’ images on their own, the ones I really love are the images with the text. And, it turns out that it was Glenn O’Brien, then one of the creative directors at Barney’s New York and now the author of GQ’s “Style Guy” column, and not Delhomme, that was responsible for the witty words on the illustrations. According to Delhomme’s website, O’Brien’s humorous words were intended to describe the goings on of Barneys’ self-conscious customer. Oh, and the title from todays post comes from one of my favorite Barneys ads, “She had multiple identities and each one of them had a credit card.” I think I like it so much as one of my identities has an American Express Centurion Card and the other one is more of a Costco card kind of gal.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ut-8NHdWLSg]

“Talking about art is like dancing about architecture”

I only wish I could dance about architecture but as I cannot I will write about architecture instead. I went to the Los Angeles Broad Museum on Sunday. I had been looking forward to it for months. I am a huge fan of contemporary art and I was giddy at the idea of L.A. having a museum built by Renzo Piano that would be a home to an important permanent collection. Sure, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art has had some important contemporary art shows—but there was something about the buildings that would not allow for enormous works by Richard Serra or large installations by Mike Kelly.

I had seen a few pictures of the Renzo Piano addition to LACMA while I was in Austin but I tried to avoid reading too much about it. I didn’t want someone with more architectural insight and with paid opinions to tell me how I should feel about the Broad.

I had gone to the Menil in Houston where two of the buildings had been designed by Piano and the architecture and art work were a spiritual experience I will never forget. The light and numinousity of the Cy Twombly gallery are not unlike the spacious canvases created by Cy himself. The space that Piano created in Houston is one that sets a mood of reverence and introspection. It is a museum thats space stayed with me long after we left.

When we drove down Miracle Mile I was expecting an architectural miracle what I saw instead was a large building that displayed huge banners. A pair of fabric scrims four stories high seemed to my eye a bit of a distracting dress put on a very large pig. I tried to reserve judgment and still had hopes of being dazzled. I have since learned that the banners were projects by an artist I love, John Baldessari. I, however, did not like the Christo like foo-foo that covered the facade.

Before I go on, let me say, I am no expert on architecture. I have no education or training. What I have is a strong felt sense about buildings. To me, architecture is a little like falling in love. You know it when you feel it. And, you also know when you don’t. I love beautiful buildings and how I feel when I see them and enter them. So, as I am not an expert—and even if I was, I advise you to feel free to absolutely ignore me and listen to experts and what they think of these buildings—or you could listen to yourself.

All that said, my feelings about LACMA are strong.. I have long loathed the architecture of LACMA. As much as I love the Getty and Disney Concert Hall is how much I do not feel it for the multi-building campus of LACMA. My antipathy is enormous for the Ahmanson Building. Yes, it is a building that is aware of the light of L.A. and it certainly does not outshine the art. But, the structure is somehow institutionally dreary and drab. And, there are the columns that try to communicate some kind of mythic gravitas while looking beachy and contemporary. They look, to my eye, like bars painted the colour of hospitals and institutions; the tall and imposing columns seem to keep the art in and the people out. The squares of light stone and stripes of blue-green seem an unsuccessful homage to a Diebenkorn painting or to the David Hockney palette of turquoise blue pools and beige blocks of concrete—only seriously subdued. All that is missing in the homage to Hockney is a beautiful Californian boy about to dive off a diving board into a unmoving pool with a background of sprinklers sparkling on green grass— only I would much rather look at a Hockney painting than the bland architectural equivalent.

Then there is the Art of the Americas building which is an art deco meets Lego-like structure. The surfaces of this building shine as bright as a celebrity’s capped smile. Large shiny blocks of white are the antithesis of the organic blocks of white stone at Meier’s amazing Getty on the hill or the subtle stone of the Menil or even the Broad. Then there are the postmodern columns of green and the whimsical art deco like patio that makes me wish I was playing SimCity( when I play SimCity, I love knocking down parts of town that dare to go brown. This is a museum that I would knock down—but I would first carefully remove all the artwork).

The worst element of this building, in my mind, is an angled wall off the Art of Americas Building that is like an ornamental and incongruent glass wall that jets off the back of the building like a last minute addition. This wall looks like it was intended for backdrops for fashion shoots. Truly, glass blocks give me hives. Every Realtor I have ever worked with will tell you that I feel about glass blocks the way Joan Crawford felt about wire hangers. And, I do not even know what to say about the Pavilion for Japanese Art except that it looks like an Epcot-ian like satellite of the LACMA campus.

We passed through the courtyard that sits between the Ahmanson and the Broad and I started to feel an unexpected anxiety. First, I saw a large structure that looked like an enormous service station that could house several semi-trucks. I have since learned that this is called the “entrance pavilion”. It was a nice place to escape from the L.A. light as ducked under the facade and purchased our tickets to enter the museum.

I looked up to the Broad, as there is no way that this building can be looked at without tilting your head, and what I saw in front of me was an escalator that took patrons up four flights in an Ikea like escalator. I do not want my architecture to remind me of Ikea.

Now, let me say before I go any further, I love the color red. Red is my favorite color. I love it so much that my hair is red, my lips are red and I have dozens and dozens of red shoes. Even my nom de blog has the word “rouge” in it. However the red accents of steel and stairwells, that Piano used to outline the white-whale sized sound-stage of the Broad, seemed disturbingly
commercial. And, when I say commercial I mean “McDonald’s” or “In and Out Burger’s” and not a Museum of Contemporary Art. The exterior steps, the escalator and the red lines feels like a nod to the more ebullient and energetic Centre de Pompidou which is also a Piano structure.

I have another issue with the Broad, there is no entrance to it from Wilshire Boulevard which seems like an outright rejection of its environment. What comes to my mind as I see the doorways absence is the image of a child covering its eyes and expecting that no one can see them just because they cannot see. Piano did create some windows that overlook Wilshire. And one of my favorite sitting places was at a Wilshire window on the first floor that sits in a walkway between two Serra’s. Sitting on a bench in the light of the Wilshire window made me feel like I was in an Ed Ruscha painting.”Women sitting in window, No.1.”

Once off of the Ikea like escalator we arrived on the top floor and were met with a myriad of amazing views and a patio that was cantilevered and hence without foundation. He-weasel bravely walked out onto the protruding patio. I was more cautious and asked to take his arm to go to the edge. As He-weasel bravely bent over the edge of the patio so he could take pictures for my blog, I came to realize that the Broad’s exterior spaces are about small vistas and vignettes and is free of a grand entrance and/or a grand space to commune( other than the gas station like open space without a place to sit). There is no major city center in L.A., it is huge and spread out and there is not just one L.A. but multiple L.A.’s and in that in that way the Broad is representational of its context and in that way it might have succeeded. In the outer spaces of the Broad, like in L.A., I feel a sense of isolation and separation, but that could just be my issue.

The door into the Broad opened with some kind of high tech cantilever thingymajoo that was strangely impressive and still quietly elegant—I would expect nothing else from Piano. The first thing I noticed upon entry was a glass elevator that was walled by a Barbara Kruger elevator that was not working. Now, I am not going to address the incredible art inside the Broad—I will save that post for another day.

After walking away from the Kruger elevator I turned to the ceiling. I was shocked by the somewhat dim and diffuse light that came through Piano’s signature skylight. I saw that the skylights were muddied and dirty from a recent bit of L.A. rain. I was also struck by how few people were there. The place was empty. Really I saw no more than a dozen people in the entire museum. Why is that? It was a Sunday. Isn’t the day that people go to museums? Where are the people? Are they at the mall or the movies? I remember going to museums in Sundays in NYC and there would be crowds. L.A., there is a museum here!

That was the very last thought I had about the museum while I was there. The art took over. I think I did have thoughts about how fabulous it is to have a museum that can hold not one but two Richard Serra masterpieces. I think it is obvious that I prefer Piano’s Menil museum to his Broad approach. Oh, and the Menil is free and it was a $12 for adult admission to LACMA. However, admission is whatever you want to to pay if you visit after 5 p.m. And, on the second Tuesday of each month, general admission to the permanent galleries and non-ticketed exhibitions is free. Please, dear reader, do not let my feelings about the architecture stop you from visiting. This is an amazing museum with a fantastic and breathtaking collection of contemporary art which I will write about later this week.

Pictures:
1. Photo of the facade of the Broad taken by Me-weasel.
2. Photo of the Menil Cy Twombly Gallery in Houston, Texas taken by He-weasel.
3. Photo of the front of the Broad Museum comes from Bloomberg.com
4. Photo of a Hockney painting comes from here.
5. Photo of the dreadful glass brick wall was taken by Me-weasel.
6. Photo of the Entry Pavilion comes from here.
7. Long shot of the Broad taken by Me-weasel.
8. Photo of the bench and window on the first floor taken by Me-weasel.
9. Photo of the escalator of the Broad taken by Me-weasel.
10. Photo of the entryway to the Broad comes from here.

And, the title of today’s post is a quote by Steve Martin. I love a man who is funny, writes well and who ha
s a passion for modern art
.

About Me

My name is Tracey, aka La Belette Rouge. I am a psychotherapist and the author of Freudian Sip @ Psychology Today. I blog about psychology, my therapy, dreams, writing, meaning making, home, longing, loss, infertility and other things that delight or inspire me. I try to make deep and elusive psychodynamic concepts accessible and funny. For more information, click here .

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