Archive for the ‘Buy Me This!’ Category

Tracking Shit Down, Like I Do

December 7, 2012

Years ago, when I was waiting for the autistic child I was taking care of to come out of his occupational therapy session, I read a little blurb of sorts about cool books (there was more focus than this) in the L Magazine.  One of the books written about was a meta-fiction by an Irish writer in which a student is writing a book about a writer who is writing a book and whose characters –– stay with me here –– play tricks on the writer in order to gain control of the plot.  This was all the detail I could remember, and while I mostly have spent the past five years not obsessing over this work of literature, it does crop up in my mind from time to time.  Anyway, I decided on a whim to Google it this slow Friday afternoon and even though I’ve done so in the past with no success, I believe I have found the book I have always remembered, which is titled At Swim-Two-Birds by Flann O’Brien (pseudonym.)

Synopsis, from the Dalkey Archives Press: A wildly comic send-up of Irish literature and culture, At Swim-Two-Birds is the story of a young, lazy, and frequently drunk Irish college student who lives with his curmudgeonly uncle in Dublin. When not in bed (where he seems to spend most of his time) or reading he is composing a mischief-filled novel about Dermot Trellis, a second-rate author whose characters ultimately rebel against him and seek vengeance. From drugging him as he sleeps to dropping the ceiling on his head, these figures of Irish myth make Trellis pay dearly for his bad writing. Hilariously funny and inventive, At Swim-Two-Birds has influenced generations of writers, opening up new possibilities for what can be done in fiction. It is a true masterpiece of Irish literature.

Saul Steinberg does Meta.

Saul Steinberg does Meta.

This book sounds just freaking awesome.  I want in.

 

144th Street and Convent Avenue

December 4, 2012
House porn.  Big time.

House porn. Big time.

I wasn’t the first, I’m sure, to make a pilgrimage to the house at 144th and Convent, which has become famous as the house of the fictional Tenenbaum family.  During my freshman orientation at college, I decided to take a little journey deep into Harlem, where I subsequently got stranded and had to call a friend to meet me back at the corner of 115th and Broadway to pay for my taxi.  (There were ten million better ways I could have handled this, but I was a stupid eighteen-year-old, so cut me some slack!)

I’ve been contemplating buying the below print from the People’s Print Shop in order to be able to be with the house always, but honestly, the movie itself doesn’t hold so much of the same romantic draw it once did, as Anderson I feel is a rather twee filmmaker –– the house, however does, so if someone would like to arrange for me to take a private tour of it or to live in a spire bedroom for two weeks, I’d prefer that as a gift.  Merci!

111 Archer Avenue

111 Archer Avenue

CHRISTMAS IS COMING

November 12, 2012

So I will post one thing each day on this blog that I would like YOU to buy for me!  (Kidding –– unless I am really hard-pressed for material between now and December 25th.)

Doll head planters!? H/T Miss Moss.

Three Random Things

November 6, 2012

1. I hate this category the most of all my blog categories, but please please please buy me this for Christmas:

PLEASE IT’S ONLY $6,000!

2. My beloved is working at the voting centers in Virginia, and when I asked him how it was going, here is what he said:

“nutso super busy these people are crazy talk later”

Seems about right.

3. My blog is getting WAY more hits the past few days than normal, and I’m pretty sure it’s because I mentioned MM Schneerson.  So!

SCHNEERSON

SCHNEERSON

SCHNEERSON

SCHNEERSON

Keep ’em coming, folks.

Carl Aubock

October 28, 2012

A few days ago, the Times Magazine ran a little piece about a book forthcoming on Carl Aubock, the Viennese designer.  Shamefully, this was the first I had ever heard of Aubock, but now I am coveting all the wee oddities he’s fashioned over the years.  Below, a selection of random pieces of his you can snap up online.

Paperweights, on 1stdibs.

Foot keychain, on Ebay.

Feather tray, via Original Berlin.

Pity Flowers UPDATED!

October 18, 2012

My boss sometimes buys me what I like to call “pity flowers” because he feels bad for being such an incompetent person and for me having to babysit a grown-ass man.  Today, he decided to buy me these flowers that are ball sac-shaped, light green, and covered in small hair-like things.  He told me he got them because they’re weird and I’m weird.  He also told me I was never allowed to ask him what they were called.  From Googling, though, it would appear that they are a type of flower known as a “swan flower.”  Here is a picture:

WEIRD

According to Wikipedia, here are some fun facts about the swan plant:

*Also called a balloon plant or balloon cotton-bush

*It is a milkweed native to southeast Africa

*The sacs are described by the Wikipedia writer as “bladder-like”

*They are a food source for caterpillars and monarch butterflies

 

UPDATE: Apparently at bodegas these are often labeled as “hairy balls.”  This, I’m guessing, is why my boss told me I was never allowed to find out what they’re called.

Sad Girls Zine

October 16, 2012

A ‘zine I wish I had edited, and that I will hopefully contribute to in the future?

Artist is Grace Lee.

Oh, that reminds me that I’m working on an epic post about the 90s and girl-dom, but it involves as lot of cutting and pasting, which is obviously really labor intensive and will take me approximately 3-4 weeks.

DEAD TO ME –– UPDATED!

October 8, 2012


My brother IS sent me the most hilarious article in the Times the other day entitled “Unfriending Someone, Before Facebook.”  Below is an excerpt:

Nor were your choices in those days only friend or unfriend. There were levels of unfriending culminating in that magnificent big gun, “dead to me,” a phrase my family wrapped their mouths around with a relish other people saved for steak.

Dead to me was not achieved with a cowardly little click on the keyboard under cover of night. Dead to me took nerve, it took strength. It also wasn’t for children. You had to be an adult with a house and a job. You cleared a space in the conversation when a certain name came up – let’s use Marvin; waited three beats to make sure you had the attention of the house, and then, and only then, did you say, “He is dead to me.”

I have no choice here but to return to the master of the form, my mother. There came a time when she and her younger brother came to a fork in the road regarding religion, hers being our ancestral one, which eschews pork and enables us to write television comedy, my uncle’s newly adopted religion involving ringing doorbells and giving people pamphlets on Sundays. As he had moved to Los Angeles, this switch might have gone unnoticed but regrettably, one of his converts, returning home after visiting, was 13-year-old me.

My mother’s screams on the phone after she made this discovery are still remembered in Greene County. It remains one of the most powerful denunciations I have heard in my life.

“Aaron,” my mother said, “I never want to hear another word from you. You are dead to me.”

He remained dead to my mother for the rest of life, about 40 years, and from what I could see, she took great satisfaction from it. This was another reason unfriending someone before Facebook was so much better. You didn’t dispatch someone once and move on; you had a lifetime of satisfying moments in which you could unfriend them over and over again.

“So, Milli, what do you hear from your brother Aaron?”

“Dead to me.”

“Your brother still married to that nice woman?”

“Dead to me.”

“I was going out to L.A. and I thought maybe I would look up Aaron, you know we were in the Army together –”

“Dead to me.”

I enjoyed it so heartily that I began to imagine what weird, profile-less hermits like IS and I could do in lieu of “unfriending” and my mind turned to a company called Set Editions, which makes the beloved “Stop Talking” business cards, among other funny things.

I hand out at least once a day.

So I’ve written to Set Editions to ask them to consider making a DEAD TO ME card.  Here is my email pitch:

To Whomever Receives This Email:

I’m an enormous fan of your merchandise –– at the moment, I’m coveting just about everything on the site –– and a proud owner of the “Stop Talking” cards, which it seems are quite popular.  I have a small idea for you based on the below article, which is hilarious and short and should go down easy:

(I put the link here but I’m not going to do it again because that just seems excessive.)

I think it would be great to create a little card that says “YOU ARE DEAD TO ME” or, more succinctly, “DEAD TO ME.”  There also could be something in the idea of unfriending –– i.e. THIS IS ME UNFRIENDING YOU –– but I myself am partial to the “dead to me.”

Anyway, if this idea appeals to you at all, what I’d ask for in return is just one set of cards!

Again, big props.  You guys are hilarious.

Best,

Itinerant Daughter

Oh my, oh my, I DO hope they like the idea!

UPDATE:  They did!  The woman behind Set Editions wrote me the below:

ID,

Thank you so much for taking the time to write with your idea. I get to hear many ideas in the course of doing business, most of which are categorically not hilarious, but “Dead to me” is right up my alley. I will work on it and I promise to let you know if it comes to pass. I suspect it might. You’ll be the first to effectively kill off your friends if it does.

Thanks again. Set Editions is really just me at the end if the day and it still gives me huge pleasure that other people even notice.

Best,

AR

Yay!  I’m off now to inform Joyce Wadler of the Times.  While you’re waiting for these cards to come out, everybody support Set Editions and buy me these good grief glasses!

Get it?

Buy Me This Ridiculous Thing

October 6, 2012

I would given Lagerfeld even more credit if somehow the bag portion detached into a (somewhat misshapen) clutch and you could use it as an ACTUAL HULA-HOOP!

Shameless

August 16, 2012

Bunny chair.  Best thing ever.  $3,100.  Some day!

by Merve Kahraman