Showing posts with label The Baby-Sitters Club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Baby-Sitters Club. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Outer Banks Thanks: Sparky Spark and the Funny Bunch


The husband and I don't take many vacations.  Partly because most of our disposable income goes toward ice cream and stickers.  Partly because it's a hassle.  Whoever said, "You know what would be relaxing?  Packing up all your stuff, driving to another state, and then unpacking it and setting it up again in a tiny room with a bed that may or may not make it impossible for you to move your neck the next morning," clearly did not think things through.  Add the beach element and you've got a whole new mess of stress in relaxation's clothing.

"Hang on there, Tote Trove Lady," you may be thinking.  "Are you saying that you don't like the beach?"  Not exactly.  Sure, it's lovely and tranquil and sometimes enchanted.  But still, it requires vigilance.  You know those pictures of people napping on the surf that are supposed to be restful?  When I see them, all I can think is, OMG, wake up, the sun is roasting your flesh like a rotisserie chicken!  Look alive and reapply your SPF 80!  This is also, by the way, how I feel about those pictures of babies all curled up with dogs.  Not that the babies need sunscreen.  But that their mamas better scoop them up before they become Lassie's dinner.  Never underestimate the power of vigilance.  Or vigilantes. 

But I digress.  

Despite my misgivings, when my parents invited the husband and me to join them and my sister, brother-in-law, and adorable two-year-old nephew (because I'm one of those aunties who thinks he hung the moon) in the Outer Banks for a week, we packed our arsenal of UV protection.  The husband had been there once to go fishing and warned me, "It's different, not like our beaches."  On our first day there, I knew he was right.  The coast was covered with coarse, orange sand, whereas Jersey sand is sugary fine.  Also, the air didn't smell like salt, and there wasn't a seagull in sight.  Yet even more of a culture shock was that the shops -- because yes, the appeal of any place to me and mine ultimately comes down to the availability of retail outlets -- were few and far between.  There were no neon-lit boardwalks or quaint downtown streets like at home, and you had to drive to get anywhere.  Still, we were excited.  We had the sun and each other.  And all the shrimp we could eat.

And I, of course, had my outfits.

Remember when your grandparents would make you look at their vacation slides on a projector?  Well, the rest of this is like that minus the popcorn.  Unless you want to make it yourself; far be it from me to get between you and your Orville Redenbacher.  Or, for that matter, you and your Orville Wright.


Kitty Hawk may be the birthplace of aviation, but New Bern is the birthplace of Allie and Noah.  No, I didn't go to New Bern, North Carolina, the setting of The Notebook and many other beloved Nicholas Sparks novels.  But I did go to Kill Devil Hills, which just happened to have a street named New Bern.


What's more, on the way to the Hatteras lighthouse, the husband stopped by this structure.  If it looks familiar, then that's because it's the house from the movie version of Nights in Rodanthe.  If it doesn't look familiar, then that's because it's been cleaned up and moved from its original, super-remote location.  Talk about a labor of love.  Who says that romance is dead?  


Certainly not me and my hat.  



Speaking of hats . . . this is the Hatteras lighthouse.  The guide made it sound like it would be impossible to climb, and for a millisecond I worried that my exercise-averse self might have a heart attack if I tried.  But then I remembered that the guide was just a public servant on a power trip and that he had to make it sound scary as a disclaimer in case of lawsuits.  So up I went, and it was fine.  A couple of other people freaked out once we got inside, though.  I think they were afraid of heights.


The husband suggested that one day we get up to see the sun rise.  Now, like Mindy Kaling (as she says in one of her books), I was pretty sure that I could live my entire life without ever seeing such a phenomenon.  I worship sleep; on weekends, I don't stir until noon.  Still . . . I was curious.  And I figured it was the least I could do for the husband after making him take all these pictures.  So I set an alarm, then set out for the docks.  And I have to admit that the sun bursting through the darkness was nothing short of amazing, all orange and purple and like a Disney cartoon, only better (I was wearing a Little Mermaid tee at the time).  And it was all the more awesome because I got to go back to bed once it was over.


 A lot of the shops and restaurants in the Outer Banks have horse sculptures out front.  This picture was taken outside an art gallery.


When we went inside, the woman behind the counter saw my shirt and exclaimed, "Who doesn't love the Jetsons?"  I guess I wasn't responsive enough because she went on to say, "If you come to North Carolina, you have to talk to people."  I nodded and said that the husband had shown me a YouTube video about introverting in the South.  There was some poor woman trying to read on a park bench, and total strangers kept plunking themselves down next to her to talk about the weather.  I'm always that woman, even on my own turf in New Jersey.  But I didn't say this to the gallery lady.  When she asked where we were from, the husband gave his stock reply: outside Atlantic City.  This inspired her to launch into a story about how she once helped her daughter move to New York and how she could never live there.  You heard it here first; in the South, New Jerseyans = New Yorkers.  Even Southern New Jerseyans.  (Somehow, I don't think New Yorkers would agree.)  Not that it's news that people in different parts of the country have ideas about each other.  Myself included.  For all I know, the gallery lady's loquaciousness might have not been a southern thing; she might have been just as chatty had she hailed from Wisconsin.  But in the end it didn't matter.  Because either way she was nice and, like the rest of us, just doing her best.  That said, I ended up buying this framed fabric flamingo:


And admiring (but not buying) this house:


Meanwhile, back at the ranch . . . this horse was parked outside a breakfast joint called Stack 'Em High Pancakes.  I didn't see it at first, but he's holding down a pile of flapjacks!


And these fish were swimming upstream while we enjoyed breakfast.


It was fins, fins, and more fins during our rainy day at the aquarium.  Even if this pic is just plants, plants, and more plants.


This room was like an underwater disco.  How cool are these black-lit jellyfish?


Once the rain cleared, it was back into the oven to surf a wave,


sit on a tree,


 and zoom in on my zany barrettes.  Because, like cheddar, they make everything better!

   

But wait.  There's more.  Highlights, that is:

- My nephew 1) singing "People are Strange" (by The Doors, Aunt Tracy!), "Zombie," and his ABCs and 2) saying that my watermelon sandals were "so juicy" and that his new Mrs. Potato Head was "so cute."

- Going to The Bird Store with the husband.  He picked out a duck decoy and I got this tile:


- Browsing Belk department store.  At the height of "Sex and the City" mania, they had a Kristin Davis line because she's from North Carolina.

- I said it before, but I'll say it again: the shrimp!

Surprise, surprise, the beach didn't make the cut-off.  I spent most of my time there under a canopy, wearing a hat, swaddled in a towel, and dousing myself hourly with Neutrogena dry-touch sun block.  I couldn't help but feel like Mary Anne in Baby Sitters Club book #8, Boy-Crazy Stacey, except I didn't wear zinc oxide on my nose.  (Stacey, of course, had no such anxieties and got as tan as a turkey.)  The few times I ventured out, my sister quipped, "You're out of your tent, and you don't look happy about it."

Word.  We're not the funny bunch for nothing.  

Which leads me to the number one best thing about this trip: family togetherness.  Because beneath my aloof exterior beats a heart that loves to be with my loved ones. They're my favorite people, my only people, and I couldn't imagine being without them.  So thanks to them all for such a good time.  

There's no one I'd rather roast with.  

Sunday, January 27, 2019

Pastel Rainbows and White Tornadoes: Telling Tween Tales from the Tripped




Top: Wild Fable, Target
Skirt: Wild Fable, Target
Coat: Wild Fable, Target
Boots: Style & Co., Macy's
Bag: Sugar Thrillz, Dolls Kill
Pouch: H&M
Belt: Candie's, Kohl's
White and black bangles: Mixit, JCPenney
Mint bangle: Decree, JCPenney
Barrettes: The Tote Trove


 Right as Rainbow Unicorn Necklace

Top: Freshman 1996, Macy's
Jeans: Allen B., JCPenney
Shoes: Penny Loves Kenny, DSW
Bag: Betsey Johnson, Macy's
Pink and mint pompom purse charm: Michaels
Blue pompom purse charm: A.C. Moore
Sunglasses: Target


Lucky Charm Farm Necklace

Top: Rebellious One, Macy's
Skirt: So, Kohl's
Coat: She Said, JCPenney
Shoes: Worthington, JCPenney
Bag: Betsey Johnson, Macy's
Bracelets: So, Kohl's

When I started planning this post, I had visions of a pastel goth theme.  You know.  Graphic black spiderwebs spun against candy pink skirts and dresses, biker boots riding alongside ribbons and ruffles, and skulls creeping out of Barbie doll silhouettes.  Although there's the, ahem, ghost of some of that aesthetic going on here, I never achieved the netherworld wardrobe heights of my nightmares.  Turns out that I'm just not that spooky  -- despite persisting with a title that incorporates an (admittedly lazy) Tales from the Crypt pun.  But that's okay.  I'm not into horror movies, just like as a kid, I never read the works of illustrious fear mongers R.L. Stine and Christopher Pike.  I was happy inhabiting the unicorn and rainbowed orbits of The Baby-Sitters Club, Sweet Valley Twins, and Girl Talk (in the case of Sweet Valley Twins, literally.  Unicorn Club membership, anyone?)  In other words, chick lit minus the sheet twisting.       
Such is my clumsy segue into this post's real topic, which is young adult (YA) novels of the '80s and '90s as seen though the lens of Gabrielle Moss's Paperback Crush.  And, of course, as always, me.


In addition to being nostalgic, Paperback Crush is funny.  Moss, who is not just a book fair relic hoarder but a journalist, pokes fun at herself and her favorite heroines in this totally rad retrospective.  Back then, fictional girl world was, after all, sprinkled with so much Wet n' Wild-pureed fairy dust that it's no wonder it wasn't hazardous to young women's emotional health.  Also, maybe their lungs.

My favorite YA series was the Baby-Sitters Club.  To be clear, the babysitting didn't interest me and instead kind of got in the way.  But these books had the most relatable characters.  They had their spats but were generally kind and level-headed, unlike the drama queens of Sweet Valley (more on these Cali girls later).  Also, artist babysitter Claudia Kishi had the best duds in the biz, often featuring way cool accessories she made herself.

Girl Talk was the weakest link in terms of content, but its covers were the most colorful (see below), and I liked the descriptions of the outfits.  I don't think anyone could expect much more from a series that started life as a board game involving prank calls and zit stickers.


Sweet Valley might not have been the most comforting of make-believe neighborhoods.  But there was still something appealing about it.  Like Moss, I was impressed by Elizabeth and Jessica Wakefields' hairdos on the covers of the Sweet Valley High books.  But the sophisticated storylines were too much for me, so I stayed safely in the lane of Sweet Valley Twins, which starred a middle school-aged Elizabeth and Jessica.  The raciest thing to happen there was their friend Sandra Ferris wearing a red bra under her white blouse.  Although I was a bookish Elizabeth who fancied herself a glamorous Jessica (I had similar angst about The Baby-Sittters Club's Mary Anne and Stacey), even I found their one-dimensional characterizations to be a little limiting.  For example, in one book, the girls pop into a drugstore where Elizabeth buys a paperback, and Jessica goes for makeup and candy.  And I remember thinking, I'm a bookworm, sure, but I also love lip gloss and Twizzlers.  Why doesn't Francine Pascal get that?!

Apparently, it wasn't to Pascal that I should've directed my preteen frustration.  Moss reveals that Pascal didn't actually write the series.  That's why she's credited with being the creator of instead of the writer of Sweet Valley.  So, faceless ghostwriter lady (or gentleman), next time maybe think about writing about a girl genius who chucks it all for clown school or something.  And who is also obsessed with mascara.

Stereotypes aside, the thing that made all YA books so much fun was the sense of escape they provided.  Their mean girls were never as diabolical as the ones in real life, and fictional falling-outs always came to a head instead of festering, with the main character resolving them by the final chapter.  Still, as I thumbed through Paperback's pages, I couldn't help but be glad that all of it, real or imaginary, was behind me.  Because even when prettied up in novels, the inner workings of middle school social structure remained front and center in girls' lives.  It was there from the time Kelly or Amanda or Jennifer arrived at the bus stop, her bursting-at-the-seams Jansport giving her scoliosis, following her to gym class before reaching its summit at that horrid epicenter of the day known as recess.  Then it wound down during social studies and resurfaced for a lackadaisical but no-less-pernicious attack on the bus ride home, slinking away just in time for an after-school snack of ants on a log.

Huh.  Maybe this post is about horror after all.

And maybe we're not supposed to identify with only Jessica or Mary Anne or even Claudia, but with facets of each one until we're older and can better understand who we are.  Because although adulthood isn't always as fab as we dream when we're kids, it has its perks.  Like, in the face of awkward social situations, being able to hide out in your Honda to read or drive to the mall.

Someone should write a grown-up lady series about that.  But not you, Francine Pascal.

Monday, October 29, 2018

Black and White and Dead All Over: The Flavor of Fare Far from Simple



Top: POPSUGAR, Kohl's
Skirt: Xhilaration, Target
Shoes: Delicious, Zulily
Bag: J. C. Penney's
Belt: B Fabulous
Barrettes: The Tote Trove

Hi, bloggers!

I called upon this corny old joke to talk an itty bitty bit about newspapers and a lot about a book-turned-movie even though I saw the movie first.  Of all the old-timey, misogynistic sayings about women, I think the one about how real ladies appear in the newspaper only twice in their lives, once in their wedding announcement and once in their obituary, is the weirdest and most insulting.  Insert eye roll for anyone who believes that a woman's purpose in existing is snagging a husband -- until she stops existing at all and is shoved six feet under.  It's like saying that women who speak up are shameful, that women's stories don't deserve to be told.  Which is, of course, utter nonsense.  Making our presence known in the world -- whether it be through a tabloid or Twitter feed -- is essential to women's well-being.  Which is something I thought a great deal about while watching/reading A Simple Favor.    


A Simple Favor (by Darcy Bell) is not a feel-good book.  It's kind of a feel-bad book, and I wouldn't have read it at all if I hadn't seen and liked the movie (directed by Paul Feig).  This is the premise:  Uber sophisticated and cool Emily (Blake Lively) befriends quirky cute people-pleaser Stephanie (Anna Kendrick) through their five-year-old sons in their sleepy Connecticut suburb.  Emily is married to a gorgeous British dude (Henry Golding) and does PR for a fashion designer.  She's a seasoned rule-breaker, a Hitchcock blonde who's easily bored and refuses to have her picture taken.  Stephanie is a widow who blogs.  She's a do-gooder supermom who bakes gluten-free cookies and apologizes for everything, a habit that alpha dog Emily insists she break.  If they were characters from The Baby-Sitters Club, then Emily would be Stacey and Stephanie would be Mary Anne.  Their friendship deepens quickly, with each revealing secrets.  Then, one day, Emily doesn't pick up her son from Stephanie's house, and what started as a tongue-in-cheek Peyton Place-type tale veers off into "48 Hours" territory.

Stephanie's blog (vlog in the movie) is, in many ways, the core of the story.  Being a blogger, I found this interesting.  I always like to know why people blog and whom they blog for.  For Stephanie, her blog is her identity, a way for her to showcase her stay-at-home-mommy brand and combat her loneliness.  She shares parenting tips, healthy recipes, and handmade friendship bracelets, beginning every post with a cheery Hi, moms! and signing off with a Love, Stephanie, suggesting that she and her fellow moms are all in this parenting thing together.  Yet despite Stephanie's efforts, she has few followers.  It isn't until Emily vanishes and Stephanie begins investigating Emily's disappearance that her blog becomes popular.  Solidarity, it seems, isn't as intriguing as sordidness.  Stephanie crafts posts that let Emily know that she knows she's out there.  She does so through subtext disguised as earnest grief and soul-searching, her posts becoming an echo of that old Mark Twain chestnut about fiction being the truth inside the lie.  As a result, her blog becomes more honest.  In exposing Emily, she stops apologizing, transforming this story from one of a runaway friend to one about the things we say vs. the things we don't, about the lies we tell each other and the lies we tell ourselves.

As I said, the movie and book are different.  The movie is funny.  It has a ring of mean-girl (and in one case guy) moms who serve as a sort of Greek chorus of Stephanie's torment, providing the all-too-real elements of competitive parents and PTA cliques.  The dialogue is spiked with dark humor that slices the tension, which is handy once things escalate.  The book, although a page turner, is umitigated by mirth of any kind and settles, stone-like, in the psyche.  Sometimes it's a little too creepy.  Also, in the movie Stephanie is likable.  Sure, (SPOILER ALERT!) she has a questionable, Flowers in the Attic past.  But she's kind and vulnerable and well meaning, and I wanted her to come out of this mess okay.  So, when she starts getting wise to Emily's ways and plans to break free, it's satisfying.  In the book she's a lapdog who never gets a clue, an unwitting (albeit willing) pawn in a game beyond her comprehension.  To this end, the most dramatic  difference between the movie and the book is that the movie ends one way and the book ends another.  And as everyone knows, the ending is the most important part of any story because it delivers the message.  In this case, the message is mighty confusing, a kind of Choose Your Own Adventure vortex of forks in the road.  One ending tells us that good triumphs over evil and also that life is pretty hilarious, so why not laugh at it already?  The other says that evil can never be caught, that's there's no escape from -- and no laughing at -- someone who's a sociopath.  I think that the ending you like says a lot about how you see the world.  Or, more to the point, if you see it through the eyes of an Emily or a Stephanie.   

But that's enough heavy stuff for one post.  Thankfully, this Woven Wisdom Charm Necklace lightens even the most somber of moods.  My favorite thing about it is how eclectic it is, the bold striped gumball beads contrasting with the bright tapestry charms and baby owls.  With so much going on, it was tough to find a top that would be a good backdrop, but this red POPSUGAR tee made it, well, pop.  That said, maybe Woven Wisdom isn't as far removed from this post as it seems, being complex and contradictory. 

'Cause what a tangled web we weave, when we practice to deceive.

Sorry not sorry.

Love,
Tracy

Monday, June 20, 2011

Courtesy of Cosmo: 50 Things You Should Have Never Stopped Doing




I found this sweet and nostalgic list of beloved tween and teen activities in the July issue of Cosmopolitan and couldn't resist posting a few of my favorites here. (For the entire 50, you'll have to swing by the newsstand, or maybe log on to Cosmo.com.)

"Making Saturday-night plans on Saturday night.

Dressing festively for the Fourth of July (and Valentine's Day, St. Patty's Day, etc.)

Shopping with Mom . . . she's like a living 50-percent-off coupon.

Playing makeup artist on a friend - a turquoise, neon yellow, and hot pink palette is encouraged.

Picking out your outfit - accessories and all - the night before work as if it were the first day of school.

Writing mushy, where-are-you-now? letters to your future self and stowing them away for another 10 or so years . . . just think how much fun the ones from sixth grade are to read.

Having a planned, well-thought-out afternoon snack, like celery with peanut butter and raisins, that you look forward to all day long.

Making the mall your night-out destination. Bonus: There are fewer rage-inducing lines and slow walkers at 7 p.m. than there are in the afternoon.

Storing makeup in your offensively large, bright purple Caboodle - ugly as heck, but man, was it convenient.

Stealing style inspiration from Stacey and Claudia of The Baby-Sitters Club . . . Mary Anne's short'n'sassy makeover do is an option too."