Showing posts with label Oprah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oprah. Show all posts

Sunday, July 18, 2021

Life's a Beach: Bucket List Dis


Flipflops: Katy Perry, Amazon

Top: So, Kohl's

Bracelets clockwise: Iris Apfel for INC, Macy's; B Fabulous; Mixit, JCPenney; Cloud Nine, Ocean City; Sunglasses: Wild Fable, Target

Skirt: So, Kohl's

They (and Morgan Freeman) say that most of us have a bucket list.  Or, in other words, things we want to do before we die.  Items may include seeing the Great Barrier Reef, meeting Oprah, and skydiving.  The point is, must-dos are usually lofty, even over-the-top to the point of being unachievable.  Maybe that's why, to me, a bucket list simply spells pressure.  And pressure's the very last thing that I want while thinking about The Grim Reaper.  

Speaking of buckets, I was delighted to find a bucket bag shaped like an actual (beach) bucket.  I almost missed out on it because it sold out the first time I saw it.  I guess others, ahem, dig sandcastle style too.  

Bag: LC Lauren Conrad, Kohl's

Thankfully, no shovel -- or cyberstalking -- was required to make this Sunset Trip Necklace. 


Ablaze with red and orange, it reminds me of the spectacular skies you seem to see only while on vacation.  And that makes me happy because no one should have to endure jetlag to experience beauty. 

That said, I guess that scooping up this bucket bag -- and all purses shaped like unlikely things -- means that I've got a bucket list after all.

Friday, July 31, 2020

Life Imitates Heart: Putting the Moves on Movies


Not Like the Movies is like the movies because it's a novel that's rom com gold.  Kerry Winfrey's (and no, she's not related to Oprah) sequel to Waiting for Tom Hanks has it all: romance, snappy dialogue, and baked goods for days, and it picks up right where Tom Hanks left off.  Big things are happening for Annie Cassidy.  Her first screenwriting coup, Coffee Girl, is about to debut, and she's tying the knot with her very own Tom Hanks, actor Drew Danforth.  But in Not Like the Movies, the spotlight is turned on her bestie, Chloe Sanderson.  Wise-cracking, colorful inside and out, and with a life that's in shambles, Chloe is every inch the quirky, chick flick sidekick.  She struggles to look after and financially support her father, who has early-onset Alzheimer's, while slogging away at a coffee shop and finishing her degree online.  Her only bright spots are the unusual pies she bakes (whiskey apple, anyone?) and the rainbow-rific clothes she wears, both of which help her avoid the mini breakdowns that she refers to as "Five-Minute Cries."  (There's a whole sequence where she mocks marketing her time-limited tears strategy in an infomerical.  Hilarious.)  But as it turns out, Chloe's troubles are only beginning.  Because Annie's movie is all about her and the will-they-won't-they thing she's got going with her boss, Nick.  Chloe doesn't want anything to do with Nick.  He's crotchety and set in his ways, a reluctant coffee shop owner who's thirty going on sixty.  He likes his broody indie rock, thank you very much, a passion he gamely defends to yacht rock-loving Chloe on a daily basis.  He's like Ray from "Girls."  Only cute and not a sad sack.

Unlike Annie, Chloe isn't a disciple of rom coms.  Actually, she hates them (true crime is her thing) and is intent on avoiding love -- making her, as Annie is quick to point out, just the sort of woman-who-has-no-time-for-love about and for whom rom coms are made.  But the thing is, Chloe's likable.  And it's fun -- if sometimes sad -- to join her on her journey of getting knocked down and back up again.  Even when she tries to distract herself from Nick by glomming on to a dense but affable stoner named Mickey Danger.   

Sounds like everything else you've read, right?  Some of it is -- which is what makes it comfy.  But some of it's not, which is what makes it clever.  The real beauty of Winfrey's writing is that she (lovingly, reverently) lampoons rom coms even as she celebrates them.  She's a smart, funny woman who owns her adoration for all things girly -- so, a goddess.  She doesn't take herself too seriously and in doing so (not doing so?), shows us that rom coms are -- wait for it -- not always the stuff of fantasies but sometimes the stuff of real life.  And there's no better heroine to deliver this message than Chloe.  She's believable because she's so against it.  Kind of like someone who hates marshmallows (not that I imagine such a freak of nature exists) but then is force-fed a bunch and admits they're delicious.  

Which brings us to the point in the book report post where I share my favorite parts.  Or, as I like to call them, passages, because it makes them sound like secret passageways.  Only they're not so secret because I'm telling you.  

On Chloe walking down the lackluster hallways of her dad's assisted living facility:

"But that's why I'm dressed in one of my favorite outfits.  A red skirt that flares out to my knees, and a shirt with red and purple flowers, topped with a bright yellow cardigan.  Some may call it "kindergarten teacher chic," but I know what it is to me: a slight pop of color in a world full of beige." (96)

On the outfit Chloe wears to Annie's premiere:

"I chose a sexy/funky dress, one that shows off my body while still mixing patterns, with stripes on top and a green-and-purple floral pattern on the bottom.  It says, Yes, I'm quirky, but also, boobs.  It's kind of like if ModCloth and some skanky store at the mall had a baby." (214)

Yes, both of these "passages" are about clothes.  So no, ahem, secret there.  But they're also about so much more.  Because clothes make the woman.  And this woman's a winner.    

That said, Not Like the Movies is as magical as an outfit montage.  Buoyed by a supporting cast of returning characters such as trips-over-his-own-feet barista Tobin, Wookie-suit-wearing Uncle Don, and ferret-obsessed shop regular Gary, it's weird in the most warm-hearted way.  Will Chloe sail toward true love or end up alone like that classic yacht rock heroine Brandy?  I'd say you have to read the book to find out, but let's be honest: rom coms aren't about the world's Brandys.  They're about happy endings, life's pie a la mode. 

And that, of course, is why we love them.

Sunday, May 20, 2018

Who Lives in a Pineapple Amidst the Twee?



Painted Desert Necklace

Top: Jennifer Lopez Collection, Kohl's
Skirt: Candie's, Kohl's
Shoes: Christian Siriano for Payless
Bag: H&M
Sunglasses: Relic, Kohl's

Tote.  Trove.  Lad-y!  Or, maybe I should have asked, who lives in a Dutch colonial amidst the pineapples?  (SpongeBob and Patrick would understand; Squidward not so much).  Have I moved to Hawaii?  Or to an alternate universe with a tropical farm market run by cartoons?  If only.  No, I'm talking about plain old pedestrian knickknacks.  The husband and I decided to put one of the pineapple persuasion in every room of our house.  Out of all of them (and there are many), only these two are photogenic.  The other pineapples already hate them and are starving themselves with the hope that they'll be picked next time.



The door knocker was originally brass, but the husband painted it in vibrant shades of green, brown, and yellow.  He spent a lot of time getting the brown just right.  It turned out great, really popping against the red door.

Speaking of home decor, I recently saw a pillow (IRL or on Pinterest; I can't tell the difference anymore) that said "I'd rather have a passport full of stamps than a house full of stuff."  And I thought . . . nah, I'll take the stuff.  Partly because I hate packing and hotel duvets and tour buses with guides named Eugene.  Partly because I love stuff.  Buying stuff, collecting stuff, finding places to put stuff, wearing stuff, photographing stuff, pinning stuff, writing about stuff, looking at stuff.  You know how Oprah says, "I love bread!"?  Well, that's how I feel about stuff.  So, when I sat down this week to make some new stuff (and by stuff I of course mean necklaces), it made sense that it would involve pineapples (albeit tiny ones).  And also a cactus.

Good old P & P.  A pair of prickly pals, to be sure -- but more than that, friends to the end.  Kind of like SpongeBob and Patrick.

But not Squidward.  No one likes that dude.

Monday, December 25, 2017

We Three Rings of Orient Are and Santa Claus is Coming to Clown


Dress: Target
Shoes: Ami Clubwear
Bag: Macy's
Belt: Apt. 9, Kohl's
Ring: PinkBopp, Etsy
Necklaces, pins, brooches: The Tote Trove
White bangle: Mixit, JCPenney
Red and lime bangles: B Fabulous
Burgundy bangle: Iris Apfel for INC, Macy's
Slender red bangle: Candie's, Kohl's
Lime stretch bracelet: Cloud Nine

Christmas can be a real three-ring circus.  More than three, really, considering all the references to rings in Christmas songs.  There are the five golden rings in "The Twelve Days of Christmas" and "I'll give you my present, a wedding ring, hear me sing!" in Andy Williams's "Christmas Holiday."  Then there are the ring onomatopoeia shout-outs, that is, the sound of ringing in "Silver Bells," "Jingle Bells," and the sophisticated yet haunting "Carol of the Bells."  But the ring I want to sing about now is the one I just bought from fellow blogger and Etsian Samantha over at PinkBopp.  It's so sweet, a little Candyland right on my hand!  Santa, a gingerbread woman, and a mitten spread cheer from a retro-style red plastic cameo in a super adorable collage of Christmas cuteness.  I've been wearing it with red and green outfits all week, and every time I look at it, I feel the magic of the season -- and also, the need to eat gingerbread.  Is that wrong?  If so, my apologies to Hansel and Gretel. 


Speaking of things that ring and sing, I made a fresh batch of lady brooches, this time, like the city in the aforementioned "Silver Bells," all dressed in holiday style.  Then again, their sunglasses say mai tais in Miami.  Mary may have already had one too many, as her hat -- and, indeed, head -- are askew.




Finally, although I'm no Oprah or Maria von Trapp, here are a few of my favorite Christmas things:

1) The husband's hand-carved duck decoys decking the halls (okay, our mantle) in festive felt scarves.  Also, Kermit.  To be clear, Kermit was not hand-carved.


2) Norman Rockwell's Christmas Book, which has Christmas music and classic stories accompanied by Norman's iconic art.  I grew up with this book, and my favorite thing in it was always Ogden Nash's "The Boy Who Laughed at Santa Claus," a wonderfully weird poem about a kid named Jabez Dawes.  He, like me, did not believe in Santa Claus.  Unlike me, he got turned into a jack-in-the-box.  By Santa Claus.  Guess the jolly old elf got the last laugh.


3) And, finally, Christmas shopping.  Here I am at Kohl's on Black Friday with the Abominable Snow Monster from the claymation Rudolph.  It's a rare shot of me and an even rarer shot of the Yeti, but then big bargains call for big guns.


Merry Christmas!  Party hearty and avoid figgy pudding.

Sunday, January 24, 2016

What Up, Oiseau? And the Power of O




Dress: Takeout, Macy's
Shoes: Madden Girl, Macy's
Bag: Apt. 9, Kohl's
Belt: Wet Seal
Sunglasses: Mudd, Kohl's




Dress: Kohl's
Shoes: Ami Clubwear
Bag: Xhilaration, Target
Hat: Modcloth
Sunglasses: Michaels




Dress: Xhilaration, Target
Cami: Worthington, JCPenney
Shoes: a.n.a, JCPenney
Bag: Princess Vera, Kohl's
Belt: Kohl's
Sunglasses: Michaels



Yellow Feathered Friend Heart Barrette

Dress: JCPenney
Top: Liz Claiborne, Marshalls
Shoes: Ami Clubwear
Bag: Xhilaration, Target
Scarf (belt): Wet Seal
Sunglasses: Mudd, Kohl's




Dress: Material Girl, Macy's
Shoes: Ami Clubwear
Bag: Princess Vera, Kohl's
Belt: Kohl's
Sunglasses: Mudd, Kohl's

Oiseau is French for "bird," which is elegant and just a little bit silly, not unlike the winged one itself and especially these winged ones here.  I made one of these barrettes for myself years ago and, after finding more of the same bird ornaments, got inspired to make a whole flock.  To me, each is a kitschy, colorful Valentine's Day-meets-Easter accoutrement -- certainly better than a one-day bouquet or a bee in your bonnet!

If "oiseau" is a funny, foreign "o" word, then "Oprah" is one of sense and strength.  Now, I've never been an Oprah viewer, have never really thought about her much at all except as the talk show host who started a book club and gave people cars.  And so I didn't come upon her book, What I Know for Sure, on my own, but through someone who thought I needed it.  It's a collection of Oprah's reflections organized under the headings Joy, Resilience, Connection, Gratitude, Possibility, Awe, Clarity, and Power.  Although I was tempted to read it all in one sitting, I limited myself to one passage a day so that each one would resonate.  For Oprah, in all of her experience and plainspoken wisdom, conveys the simplicity and enormity of the human journey in a way that makes everyday problems seem silly.  Hearing life's lessons from an icon sometimes gives them more meaning -- at the same time making that icon sound like the guru next door.  (A guru, it turns out, who is sort of an introverted homebody.  Who knew?)  As you know, I'm often struck by books that are sassy, streetwise, and clever.  What I Know for Sure is none of those things -- it isn't even fiction.  In fact, it's exactly the kind of book that I would have once laughed at.  But as I get older, I realize that a good read isn't always one that sucks you into a fantasy world, that sometimes it's important to read something relevant to the world you're actually in.  It taught me to be more optimistic (there's another "o" word for you), no small feat for this chronic over-thinker.  

Because sometimes (scratch that, most times) thinking is overrated.  And that's what I know for sure. 

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Movie Moment: The Guilt Trip


About this picture:

gold = gilt = guilt

luggage = trip

It's not every blogger who will go to the trouble of unearthing her luggage just to make a bad pun.  But then, this blogger makes bad puns her business.

So, Barbara Streisand and Seth Rogen.  On a cross-country road trip.  As mother and son.  Need I say more?  Not only does The Guilt Trip hit both the stoner and baby boomer demographics, it's funny and heart warming without being mawkish, infusing new life into the aphorisms "mother knows best," and "it's not the destination, but the journey."

Andy (Rogen) is a thirtyish, Los Angeles-based chemist-turned-salesman trying to peddle his home-grown, organic wonder cleaner to legions of unfeeling superstores.  His endeavor is heartbreaking, and Rogen is perfect in his go-to role of the put-upon everyman, even if minus his raunchy edge.  Joyce (Streisand) is a sixtyish coupon-clipping, frog collecting, Weight Watchers member of a widow from New Jersey.  Her husband has been dead for decades, and Andy is her only child - as well as her favorite project.  A well-meaning but unrelenting nag from the school of passive-aggressive mothering, she has always driven Andy crazy, a dynamic that reaches its zenith when he guilt-riddenly invites her on his coast-to-coast, door-to-door sales odyssey.  Clad in her signature track suit, she obliviously and hilariously spit cleans his face, criticizes his sales pitch, tracks down his high school girlfriend, and plays tourist - all while listening to the Oprah's Book Club-approved Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides.  (Brief detour: Although I'd heard of Middlesex before seeing this movie, I'd assumed it was about the underbelly of a quaint New England town, not the misadventures of a hermaphrodite.  Imagine my surprise.)  But she does it all in the name of love, a truth that Andy cannot help but accept by the time their story makes its bittersweet landing in a San Francisco airport.  

As I left the theater I felt hopeful and happy and a little bit sad.  Which was just the right cocktail of emotion with which to greet 2013.  

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Book Report: Marcus of Umbria: What an Italian Dog Taught an American Girl about Love by Justine van der Leun


I'm fast becoming a fan of the memoir.  The slice-of-life insights, descriptions, and inevitable personal revelations are sometimes more compelling than those found in fiction.  I became especially engrossed in Justine van der Leun's Marcus of Umbria: What an Italian Dog Taught an American Girl about Love.  Twentysomething Justine relays how she parlayed a lifelong love of words into a magazine career - only to discover that it wasn't what it seemed.  Soured out by the office politics and incessant corporate climbing of her coworkers, Justine remains quietly at the bottom of the ladder, screening the often incoherent and disturbing email submissions from end-of-their-rope readers looking for sympathy:

"The people who wrote me - or rather, who wrote the nameless, faceless entity behind the magazine's general email address - were, at least from their viewpoints, being smashed around in lives that had spun out of control.  They were not equipped to deal with everything thrown at them, the pointless cruelties and little inequities.  Well, me neither, I thought.  The office environment was for someone with a thicker skin, a more healthily diminished ego, and either a more respectful attitude toward fellow human beings or the ambition of a presidential candidate." (29)

In an attempt to avoid becoming similarly lost, Justine quits her job and finds a much lower-paying one writing a memoir (oh irony of ironies) for a businessman.  Then she goes to Italy.  She was there just six weeks before on vacation and returns not only to "find herself," but to continue the romance she started with gardener Emanuele by boldly and uncharacteristically approaching him in a bar.

You know how sometimes you're reading a book, and a character seems so much like yourself that you're surprised and a little put out when he or she does something that you would never do?  Well, that's how I felt when Justine realized that she had packed only one dress for Italy, a misstep that forced her to borrow one from a near-stranger to wear on her date with Emanuele (who proves to be less than dashing, by the way, causing said dress to become mud bespattered).  I couldn't help but think that if I took such a trip, then I'd probably bring every dress I owned.  It made me wonder if supposed kindred spirit Justine would think me shallow should we ever chance to meet.  Probably, as I'm not big on travel either.  Or dogs.  (But I liked this book!)

Mud or no mud, Justine moves in with Emanuele, and by extension, his big, boisterous family.  Far from the glossy urban centers of Milan and Venice, their Umbrian village presents Justine with all kinds of culture shock.  As an educated city girl raised by a single mother, Justine is unprepared for a close-knit family life in which everyone eats bruised produce and organ meat, and women are expected to dance attendance on men:

"Be a good wife.  Be a good, proud wife, who cooks and cleans and can darn a sock . . . who makes the house nice - but not too nice, not show-off nice, just nice enough, and so spotless that you can eat a pork dinner directly off the floor.  Don't want more.  Don't hope to leave one day or to find a wealthy husband, or to make a pile of cash on your own. . . . Like it like the men soldering iron like it.  Like it like the men chopping wood like it.  Like it like the factory workers like it.  It's your job, so like it" (103)

Justine's (or, Guistina's, according to her adopted family) social and culinary calamities are compounded by her and Emanuele's crumbling courtship.  A man's man if ever there was one, Emanuele abandons Justine for days on end to hang with the boys.  Things look bleak indeed until Justine finds Marcus.  Far from being some handsome stranger one village over, Marcus is a dog (and a female one at that, as Justine later discovers.)  Half-starved and filthy, the English pointer has been subsisting on moldy water in a barn on Emanuele's family farm for the past year.  Justine immediately claims the unfortunate creature as her own, taking her to the vet and eventually into her and Emanuele's apartment, much to the horror of Emanuele's family.  A local dog lover tells Justine that Italians don't think of dogs as pets, but as hunters and beasts of burden, an attitude dating back to World War II when Italian families didn't have enough food to feed their families let alone animals.  But to Justine, Marcus is even more than a pet - she's a lifeline.  As a fellow outsider, she represents Justine's gateway to freedom and the culmination of her journey.  Justine says as much herself when she finally decides to unpen Marcus and let her run free:

"The neighbors told me to chain Marcus or to cage her again, but I couldn't.  Marcus was too happy; she seemed healthier and in better spirits than when she had spent twenty-two hours a day cooped up, and I liked to find her snoozing in a sun spot by the rosebushes.  Better free and in danger than jailed and safe." (144)

Eventually, Justine heeds her own words.  She ends things with Emanuele by pleading homesickness (not that he cares, having already hooked up with their roughhewn horse trainer).  At first she tries to find Marcus a good Italian home, reasoning that the high-strung pup would never last a day in Brooklyn.  But in the end she packs her up in a cargo crate (but of course; what other end could be fitting?), crowning her as her copilot for even bigger adventures.

Justine doesn't tell us where life takes her after her return to the States.  But the author bio says that she has written for "various publications, including O, The Oprah Magazine, the New York Observer, Marie Claire, and The Bark."  So I can only imagine that things picked up for her professionally.  Still, I couldn't help but wonder if one of those esteemed institutions was the one that drove her out of her cubicle and on her quest in the first place.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Book Report: The Ungarnished Truth by Ellie Mathews


The Ungarnished Truth
is a self-described cooking contest memoir about a retired Seattle software developer who wins one million dollars for her Salsa Couscous Chicken recipe in the famed Pillsbury Bake-Off. Ellie Mathews is that winner and tells us what happened in a no-nonsense first-person account.

My sister bought me this book as one of my Christmas presents, and I probably wouldn't have stumbled upon it otherwise. I'd never even been aware of the existence of high-profile cooking contests and was fascinated to find out more, if only because I always like a good character-driven story brimming with self-discovery and all that other Oprah-type stuff. (Incidentally, Oprah herself figures into this particular tale. But I'll get to that later.)

Like any cook worth her salt (ha ha), Ellie doesn't start at the top. Before she sets foot into the Pillsbury's posh event room at a glam Orlando hotel, she, her mother, and her daughter find themselves in the Recreational Equipment Company's basement to determine which Seattle cook can rustle up the tastiest meal from a packet of freeze-dried camping food. It's a skill at which camping veteran Ellie happens to be adept, and all three generations of women end up going home with a prize. Her appetite whetted, Ellie decides to play for higher stakes by competing in the Washington state Beef Cook-Off. Ellie's dish is Siberian Beef, a tasty-sounding pot roast seasoned with tomatoes, apple cider vinegar, and sour cream. To her great surprise, she wins second place and learns that she missed first only because her sour cream curdled. Ellie, and in one case, her husband, also a retired software developer, keep the momentum going by entering a series of beef cook-off extravaganza-type events involving field trips to feed lots, rodeos, performances by cowboy poets, and - of course - steak dinners. And the pair of them not even self-professed carnivores!

All of these experiences prepare Ellie for the big enchilada of cooking contests, the hallowed Pillsbury Bake-Off, where - she'd heard - they treat you "like a queen." So, she knocks herself out experimenting with recipes before settling on a dozen to enter. The rules mandate that she use a certain amount of Pillsbury products. As a last thought, Ellie throws together something she calls Salsa Couscous Chicken. A variation on a recipe she clipped from the newspaper, it uses Old El Paso salsa (Old El Paso is a Pillsbury brand), has Eastern flavor, and is easy to prepare. Still, she doesn't have much faith in it. It seems ordinary to her, and she berates herself for not being able to come up with a snazzier name. In the book, the recipe isn't revealed until the last page. But I feel like revealing it now:

Ingredients:

1 cup uncooked couscous or rice
Water
1 tbs olive or vegetable oil
1/4 cup coarsely chopped almonds
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
8 chicken thighs, skin removed
1 cup Old El Paso Homestyle Garden Pepper or Thick n' Chunky Salsa
1/4 cup water
2 tbs dried currants or raisins
1 tbs honey
3/4 tsp ground cumin
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon

Directions:

1. Cook couscous in water as directed on package. Cover to keep warm.

2. Meanwhile, in a 10-inch skillet, heat olive oil over medium-high heat until hot. Cook almonds in oil 1 to 2 minutes, stirring frequently, until golden brown. With slotted spoon, remove almonds from skillet; set aside.

3. Add garlic to skillet; cook and stir 30 seconds. Add chicken; cook 4 to 5 minutes or until browned, turning once.

4. In a medium bowl, mix remaining ingredients. Add to the chicken; mix well. Reduce heat to medium; cover and cook about 20 minutes, stirring occasionally, until chicken is fork-tender and juices run clear. Stir in almonds. Serve chicken mixture with couscous.

I'm not going to go into a ton of detail about the Bake-Off. Ellie is chosen as a finalist. She travels to the competition, hosted by Alex Trebek, and enjoys all of the lavish parties and dinners promised by the Pillsbury people. And she wins. We know that; it's on the cover of the book. What I'm more interested in was the way she felt about it all.

Ellie goes to Orlando without her husband. Both of them are worried he may be bored, and they also don't want to spend the money. Being solo puts Ellie in an awkward position as the Pillsbury's myriad social events unravel. She doesn't know who to sit with at dinner, and the free day at Epcot presents problems all its own. Here's what she tells us:

"I didn't feel compelled to wring every last ounce out of what Epcot had to offer. My goal for the day was to have plenty of what I call "float time," when I don't have to answer to anyone, respond to anyone. I wanted to relax into my own thoughts and daydreams, accomplishing nothing tangible but everything grounding. I wanted the afternoon off, to excuse myself from the Bake-Off and all the social electricity that went with it. Epcot and the passivity of being its audience was the answer. So easy to slip into. So wonderfully anonymous." (Mathews 108)

Then, just a page or so later:

"Boarding the bus solo took me back to my grade-school days, that all too familiar schoolgirl awkwardness of choosing a place to sit while others chattered in pairs. I filed to the back. A few people put their hands palm down on empty seats, indicating that those were being saved for someone else. No matter. It had been my choice to go it alone." (Mathews 109-110)

I found this part of the book to be particularly striking. Ellie's decision to tour the park alone instead of finding a group to shoehorn herself into presents its own rewards and challenges, much like the contest she is destined to win. I don't have a whole lot in common with Ellie (she makes a point of mentioning that she and her husband rarely eat in restaurants and that she hates shopping and dressing up), but I felt like I understood her mindset at Epcot.

Of course, it isn't until Ellie wins that her challenges really begin. Whisked off for appearances on "The Rosie O'Donnell Show" and "Oprah" as well as for interviews with countless newspapers and magazines, she quickly realizes that few of the media giants are interested in her or even her recipe. For example, she doesn't want to talk about the prize money or what she's doing with it, but everyone asks anyway. (Human nature being what it is, I'm sure you want to know too. As Ellie finally started telling people, "I spent some, I saved some, I gave some away." The most notable of her purchases was a used truck.) Outfitted in Pillsbury-approved khakis, it's Ellie's duty to represent the company, and, in another sense, to provide the media circus with something new to chew on. Ellie says it best herself:

"What a relief to realize that article wasn't about me and how I actually look or dress. "Oprah" wasn't about me or my chicken either. It was about Oprah. And "Rosie" was about Rosie. The media needs material to fill its space and time slots. They need to borrow the rest of us and put us on their daily plates. Borrow our names, our accomplishments, our fifteen minutes of fame. We can choose to go along for the ride or not." (Mathews 268)

Ah, the old fame monster. Ellie is remarkably clear-headed in recognizing it for what it is. And she never turns on Pillsbury, who makes good on its word by awarding her her million-dollar prize in $50,000 a year increments as promised. She maintains that "It had been a fair exchange, and it was time for me to let go. And the best way to accomplish that was to think about the big, juicy prize the company had given me." (Mathews 238).

Ellie entered (and won) a few more cooking contests after her big victory. But these days she seems to be concentrating on her freelance writing career, as evidenced by this memoir created without the guiding hand of the ever ubiquitous "co-writer." According to the back cover, she won the Milkweed Prize for Children's Literature for The Linden Tree and wrote a tribute to her grandfather's 1913 scientific expedition to the Antarctic entitled Ambassador to the Penguins. Pretty impressive. Who knows what creative triumphs she'll cook up next?