Backwards in High Heels: The Impossible Art of Being Female - Tania Kindersley & Sarah Vine
From Amazon: "This smart and frank collection distills the trials and triumphs of being a woman, all in a gifty volume filled with whimsical fullcolor illustrations. In 15 subject-driven chapters relevant to women of all ages, authors Tania Kindersley and Sarah Vine’s essays cover topics ranging from feminism to face cream, motherhood to money, and politics to perfection. Titles like “The Danger of Romantic Love,” “Why There is No Such Thing as a Guilt-Free Working Mother,” “How Not to Go Mad,” parts 1 and 2, and “Why There is No Excuse for Bad Sex” develop into a tuned and sophisticated voice that is at once a mother, best friend, and shrink, revising expectations, bashing stereotypes, and illuminating the experience of life."
I thought this book would be more along the lines of Camilla Morton's How to Walk in High Heels - which was pretty funny. This book had it's moments too, but it wasn't really that interesting to me. Some of the things were things that I wouldn't have thought about, like having a chapter on grief.. but really, the whole point of that chapter was to say that everyone deals with it differently.. which I already knew.
Overall, not my favourite book, and it took me a really long time to read. By the way, it's not impossible to be female. We're all doing it without the "help" of books like this.
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Monday, July 25, 2011
Red Velvet Cupcakes
Today I made red velvet cupcakes for the first time..
I've only had them once, and they weren't my favourite cupcake ever, but a friend requested them for her birthday cupcakes.
I tried one, but I'm not sure how I feel about it. I think the cream cheese icing needs to sit for a while and get a bit of a better flavour. We'll see what they think when they try them though.
I've only had them once, and they weren't my favourite cupcake ever, but a friend requested them for her birthday cupcakes.
Red Velvet Cupcakes.. |
They do look red.. sort of. |
Thursday, July 14, 2011
Sons and Other Flammable Objects
Sons and Other Flammable Objects - Porochista Khakpour
From Amazon: "Khakpour builds her luminously intelligent debut around the travails of an Iranian-American family caught in the feverish and paranoid currents immediately after 9/11. Darius Adam and his wife, Laleh (who, much to Darius's disgust, Americanizes her name to Lala), flee revolutionary Iran for the alien territory of Southern California, settling in an apartment complex with the allegorically enticing name of Eden Gardens. Son Xerxes grows up with psychological dual citizenship: regular American outside of Eden Gardens, but the son of bitter Darius and clueless Lala inside. Xerxes finds true paradise in watching Barbara Eden, the star of I Dream of Jeannie. For the brilliantly rendered Lala, America is not so bad—it's a good place to ''lose your mind, which is how Lala translates into English her forgetting her unhappy Tehran childhood. Against this background of a parody paradise, Khakpour plays out the events following 9/11, which will, grotesquely, unite the Adam family. By then Xerxes, 26, is an unemployed college grad in a New York airshaft-view apartment, as far from Eden Gardens as possible."
This was a random pick off a shelf at the library.. although I have a feeling it's on my list, just because of the strange title. I did actually enjoy the book, although it took a while for me to get into it. Once the story got going, I did find it hard to put down. I read this while in Toba, and ended up reading almost half of it in one evening. I'd recommend it to someone who wants something a bit different, with some more cultural influences.
From Amazon: "Khakpour builds her luminously intelligent debut around the travails of an Iranian-American family caught in the feverish and paranoid currents immediately after 9/11. Darius Adam and his wife, Laleh (who, much to Darius's disgust, Americanizes her name to Lala), flee revolutionary Iran for the alien territory of Southern California, settling in an apartment complex with the allegorically enticing name of Eden Gardens. Son Xerxes grows up with psychological dual citizenship: regular American outside of Eden Gardens, but the son of bitter Darius and clueless Lala inside. Xerxes finds true paradise in watching Barbara Eden, the star of I Dream of Jeannie. For the brilliantly rendered Lala, America is not so bad—it's a good place to ''lose your mind, which is how Lala translates into English her forgetting her unhappy Tehran childhood. Against this background of a parody paradise, Khakpour plays out the events following 9/11, which will, grotesquely, unite the Adam family. By then Xerxes, 26, is an unemployed college grad in a New York airshaft-view apartment, as far from Eden Gardens as possible."
This was a random pick off a shelf at the library.. although I have a feeling it's on my list, just because of the strange title. I did actually enjoy the book, although it took a while for me to get into it. Once the story got going, I did find it hard to put down. I read this while in Toba, and ended up reading almost half of it in one evening. I'd recommend it to someone who wants something a bit different, with some more cultural influences.
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Eco-chic Weddings
Eco-chic Weddings: Simple Tips to Plan an Earth-Friendly, Socially Responsible, Affordable Green Wedding - Emily Elizabeth Anderson
From Amazon: "Planning your wedding can be the best time to be eco-friendly. The wedding industry has a huge impact on the global economy and the environment, as wedding parties spend over $125 billion a year in the U.S. alone. Eco-Chic Weddings presents the quick, simple, and easy-to-follow tips you need to make your wedding socially responsible. This indispensable guide gives you the choice, comfort, and chance to share your own unique style for a truly memorable wedding."
Blah. Just another boring book, telling you how to be socially responsible and green. Basically.. telling you how to use common sense. Pretty sure none of her tips were really that useful...
From Amazon: "Planning your wedding can be the best time to be eco-friendly. The wedding industry has a huge impact on the global economy and the environment, as wedding parties spend over $125 billion a year in the U.S. alone. Eco-Chic Weddings presents the quick, simple, and easy-to-follow tips you need to make your wedding socially responsible. This indispensable guide gives you the choice, comfort, and chance to share your own unique style for a truly memorable wedding."
Blah. Just another boring book, telling you how to be socially responsible and green. Basically.. telling you how to use common sense. Pretty sure none of her tips were really that useful...
Monday, July 11, 2011
#15
I can finally take #15 off the list. I am not able to become an RPBio before I turn 25, however, last week my mom sent me an email that said that I am now a BIT, or biologist in training.
Go me.
I think that's 3 down, 22 to go!
Go me.
I think that's 3 down, 22 to go!
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