Tuesday, November 2, 2010

A Review: 'Unbearable Lightness,' by Portia de Rossi

"Some remarks, like radioactive elements, have a lingering half-life that allows them to poison one generation after another. One that still contaminates our body-obsessed popular culture is the Duchess of Windsor's notorious admonition that no woman can ever be 'too rich or too thin.'

"As the age of anorexia has succeeded the age of anxiety — or perhaps simply compounded it — we've learned just how wrong the duchess really was...."

(Please read the rest of my review of de Rossi's book -- a meditation on the pressures of Hollywood and working out one's identity in the glare of celebrity -- in the LA Times today!)



(Photo by Lori Shepler.)

Monday, November 1, 2010

American Dior

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"With the introduction of the New Look, Dior quickly became American fashion’s ultimate agent provocateur, playing on the country’s appetite for newness and for French savoir-faire," according to a new book debuting this week from Assouline.

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"Christian Dior lived the American dream. From the first time he set foot in New York, the legendary designer had a special relationship with the United States, and he may even be more important in America than in France."

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"In one gesture, he had given women a whole new shape. Dior’s long, voluminous skirts were more extravagant and feminine than anything seen in fashion for decades."
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Compared to the upcoming Taschen tomes, this one is a relative bargain at $70.

*

American Dior
By Kate Betts
Hardcover, Jacket / 11.5 x 14.5"

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Meal Reading

Happy Monday!

Samantha Bee, comedian and correspondent for the "Daily Show," divulged in a New York Times Magazine article on Sunday that one of her life's joys is "Meal Reading." "I like to read cookbooks while I eat and fantasize about other meals," she told reporter Edward Lewine. "I am a cookbook fanatic."

And eating? She added: "I go to sleep at night thinking about what will be my breakfast. It is just a really big part of my day."

I love reading with breakfast too. I usually read the morning papers and magazines. But I'll read anything, even the backs of cereal boxes.

In celebration of this simple pleasure, I pulled together a small selection of photos taken by Jennifer Causey for her crisply elegant blog,
Simply Breakfast:






Have a lovely day. See you back here later this afternoon!

Friday, October 29, 2010

Happy Weekend & Links

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Happy weekend, everyone! I hope you're liking the new focus on books and media here at the English Muse!

Here's a little roundup of some of my favorite links this week:

Margaret Atwood creates superhero outfits for Twitter avatars.

The ultimate reading divan.

Lady Chatterley's Legacy.

Will you buy an E-Reader this holiday season?
(The answer receiving the most votes might surprise you!)

What political attack ads would have looked like if Thomas Jefferson had final cut.
(US darlings, don't forget to vote Tuesday!)

The London Underground: The Pleasure Seekers

Amanda Hesser's trio of favorite books.

and...

Two wonderful new works by Michael Cunningham and Ian Frazier.

xoxo

PS: How could I forget? Happy Halloween.

(Photo above from a Banana Republic ad.)

A Look Inside Cecil Beaton's Scrapbooks

Yes, the legendary photographer kept scrapbooks, like the rest of us...
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Cecil Beaton ScrapBook 4
Cecil Beaton ScrapBook 2
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Cecil Beaton ScrapBook 3
Only Beaton's multiple scrapbooks are packed with snapshots and magazine clippings of society figures, royals, dancers, actors and statesmen taken during his long career as a photographer for publications like Vogue and Vanity Fair.

Assouline on Nov. 22 is coming out with a 400-page coffee table book -- called Beaton, the Art of the Scrapbook -- that replicates some of the pages.

The blurb: "Composed of his own prints and clippings from magazines, newspapers, and playbills, the pages are an instructive record of his creative process....To flip through the pages is to enter a fabulous and surreal party where Tallulah Bankhead rubs shoulders with a bust of Voltaire and a portrait of Stravinsky; where Beaton's first trip on the Queen Mary coincides with Queen Elizabeth's coronation. Beaton's scrapbooks allowed the artist to play with pictures he had taken (and perhaps those he wished he had) in the dreamspace of artifice that was always his favorite setting."

Something to add to the Xmas list!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Anatomy of Style: Vintage

I positively devoured this Guardian story by the paper's weekend Space editor, Hannah Booth. In this piece, Miss Booth pokes through the home of vintage maven Jo Kornstein, owner of the posh London boutique,
Howie & Belle.

Have a look:

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Anatomy-of-style-bedroom-001

Turquoise paint and vintage satin pillows. Outstanding!