Another excerpt of a longer fictional piece I am working on — more here and here.

*********

Companion music for this segment: Celeste’s heart-rending “Strange.”

*********

I did catch a glimpse Powell once in the four years we were “on a break,” and it was the day I graduated from the University of Virginia. Grounds were flooded with students, my parents were in town, and Buck — by some stroke of good fortune returned from his first deployment to Iraq — arrived at my door at 8:45 in the morning in full military regalia with a bouquet of white roses. My friends and I took pictures on the south side of Mad Bowl, a band of girls in caps and gowns, bare ankles and white smiles, arms threaded around one another, while throngs of classmates I had never seen before and families from parts unknown roamed around my hometown of four years. Buck stood a few feet from our pearl-dotted menagerie, holding my camera at the ready, smiling politely in anticipation. I clutched Charlotte’s hand and she smiled and squeezed back, misinterpreting the gesture as overblown excitement. But it was the dizzying crowd, the sickly pomp, the sudden apparition of Buck after nearly three months of not seeing him and the way he ducked beneath door frames and sprawled out on sofas and gestured to me with a half-energetic open hand: “C’mere, Linie.” I had cried into his uniform at the door that morning, and he had laughed when I’d pulled away and said, “Is this a funeral or a graduation?” I’d hated his glib invocation of death, whose specter already materialized too frequently in the habitual clenching of his jaw and the way he instinctually performed a scan of any room he entered, alert to danger. Even standing on the south side of Mad Bowl, erect and polished, with that decorous and dimpled smile on his face, I watched as clouds would gather and dissipate in momentary returns to Fallujah, his neck stiffening against the jostling of a rowdy group of boys, his eyes involuntarily tracking the figure sprinting across the field.

And so his casual dies irae at my doorstep sent my world further askance.

I was crossing Emmet with the plan of cutting up the outer flank of the academic village rather than plowing through the clusters of stagnant bystanders on the Lawn, but just as I was about to turn onto the brick-paved fork that would lead me past the Chapel,

it was him —

He was leaning against a lamp post, as unperturbed as ever, and just by the drape of his body, the confidence of his arc, I knew it was him before I even took in the low-slung khaki pants and immaculate white oxford and the sandy hair still as boyish as it had been two years prior. A flash, a lightening bolt, a prickly feeling of hot and cold spiraling from my stomach outward. I stopped in my tracks with the plan of reversing to the opposite side of the Lawn. But he turned and, rather than registering surprise or hurt or embarrassment, he just stared straight at me, and I could see the muscles in his jaw moving, and the steely set of his eyes was illegible. I was electrified by the constancy of his gaze. Was it longing, or anger, or malice? I blinked, and there he was, knee deep in water froth in his brown waders, the curve of his line over his head, and everything — the trickle-trackle of the stream, the still of the air, the galloop! sound his boots made in the water — reduced to the exquisite joy of his hand at my waist when he’d arrived, freshly showered, his still-wet hair combed out of his eyes, at my sorority formal that evening when I hadn’t expected him. I blinked again and a tangle of long limbs and a flash of blond hair interrupted my view, and it was Sumner with her arms around his neck, and though I had the split-second thought that it might be better if I could hang there — let him see me see them together, as if to prove some point I’d been meticulously constructing in my silence for the last few years — I turned and sprinted in the other direction, losing Buck, and the cloudy promise — or was it peril? — of Powell, in my wake.

How could I have known that he was there, that morning, to quietly accept the belated conferral of a second degree in an obscure form of engineering management he had earned alongside his B.S. in Business? That he had no relationship with Sumner? That he had crossed paths with her the night prior at The Biltmore, shrugging politically when she had asked for a pour from the $2 pitcher of beer of Nattie Lite he and his friend George were sharing? That he had peeled her long arms from around his neck and politely shifted away, scanning the crowd for my now-ghosted form, just seconds after her unsolicited hug?

I sprinted through the day, tugging my wrist out of Buck’s straining reach three, four, five times, before he sat back on his heels. I’d not realized I needed the contrepoids of his outstretched hand to remain standing, and so that damned dinner at Farmington Country Club, generously arranged by my parents, loomed ill-starred ahead. Buck was out of his mind with booze before the entrees had been served, his voice too-loud, liquored legato. I had steered him out of the dining room and hissed something exasperated his way, and the words he said after —

The spite, the anguish. I could see I had been a thin wraith of promise against forces enormous and eternal, and I felt sick with guilt.

I don’t know how we maneuvered our way through the rest of that evening or the stand-off that followed, but later that night, I crept out of my bed and laid next to him on the floor, where he had stubbornly insisted on sleeping, and I pressed my forehead against the slab of his back. He did nothing to register me, but I had sensed his eyes open in alarm at the shift of my sheets and the pad of my toes on the floor.

“Look, Linie,” he whispered. And on the underside of his arm, the same arm branded with the insignia of his family ranch, was a small black tattoo:

CAROLINE

I gasped at its permanence and desecration. Only the way he looked at me — as if he was proud — reformed my chastising thoughts, and I instead put my arms around his neck.

“I love you,” I whispered, and it was the only possible thing I could have said, as it was true, but it was also a diversion, and also what he desperately needed to hear–not so much as my boyfriend but as the boy who fought in Fallujah against the wishes of his Daddy and Pop Pop and, I knew, just wanted to belong to someone, to something.

It was the mark of my name on his body that would sit unwell with me for the rest of my life: the unwanted inscription of myself on a boy who needed me far more than I needed him. We would separate, our silhouettes gradually winnowing down to the slenderest mirages of our former selves. I would forget that he sang Aerosmith at top decibel in the shower, and preferred Pepsi to Coke, and could not stand the show “Friends.” That he was unfazed by spiders, critters, and rodents, but cagey around snakes — and there were a lot of them on his family’s ranch. That he wore the same pair of unwashed Levis for months on end, that he wrote in small capital letters, that he didn’t really hold me so much as throw his arm loosely around my neck when we were sitting together on the couch. But I would wake in torturous realization that somewhere, in some part of Texas, there was a man who bore not only the scars of war but the permanent black of my name.

P.S. Memoir-style essays on falling in love at UVA here and here and here.

P.P.S. And a love letter to Mr. Magpie on our ten year wedding anniversary.

*Image above via Rebecca de Ravenel featuring her gorgeous shell earrings, on sale and an ascot bag from The Row (you can get the look for less with the knot bag mentioned here or one of the Roop Furoshiki bags — under $100! — of which I am a proud owner!)

In addition to stockpiling Pringles, you might be interested to add a couple of amazing recent finds to your next Target cart!…

ADORABLE POM BASKET FOR TOYS

ON-TREND BLOCK PRINT NAPKINS

$8 EYELET TODDLER SWEATSHIRT

GIVEN MICRO’S INTEREST IN TRUCKS, THE IDEA FOR HIS SECOND BIRTHDAY (NOT UNTIL MAY…) MATERIALIZED WHEN I SAW THESE PAPER PLATES, STRAWS, AND BALLOONS

GORGEOUS UPHOLSTERED STOOL (NO ONE WILL EVER GUESS IT’S FROM TARGET)

CHIC EVERYDAY DRESS FOR $28

PRETTY MARBLE MELAMINE TRAY (I ALWAYS LIKE TO KEEP SOME OF THESE ON HAND FOR GIVING CUPCAKES/COOKIES TO FRIENDS)

LOVE THESE STOOLS IN THE WHITE (LOOKS LIKE S&L)

SWEET FLOATING SHELF FOR A NURSERY

LARGE QUILTED BIN — GOOD FOR A LAUNDRY BIN IN A BABY’S ROOM OR STUFFED ANIMALS STORAGE; ALSO LOVE THIS COLORFUL STYLE, DEPENDING ON YOUR ROOM’S PALETTE

SWEET NURSERY LAMP

SWAN BOOK ENDS — THE PERFECT ACCOMPANIMENT TO MINI’S SWAN BEDDING

AND SPEAKING OF SWANS — ADDED THESE BALLOONS TO CART WITH NO IDEA WHEN I’LL USE THEM, BUT THEY ARE ADORABLE!

MINI HAS THESE $5 STRIPED TEES!

THESE CLEAR PENCIL BOXES ARE AMAZING FOR ORGANIZATION – I USE THEM FOR STOWING BATTERIES, SEWING SUPPLIES, MISCELLANEOUS OFFICE SUPPLIES LIKE PAPERCLIPS AND STAPLES, CRAFT MATERIALS, ETC

PIGGY BANK (CUTE EASTER GIFT!)

Just because we endured a nor’easter, Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, and the pandemic continues to keep us indoors does not mean I am not anxiously awaiting opportunities to dress up in florals and pastels for upcoming (virtual, indoor, isolated) events. At the bare minimum, we have Easter on the horizon, meriting a fresh cause for a fresh dress. Below, my favorite spring dresses…

TAFFETA. FLORAL. MAXI.

JUST THE PRETTIEST $30 YOU’LL SPEND THIS SPRING (ALSO AVAILABLE IN A MIDI LENGTH — I OWN THIS IN THREE COLORS)

DEAD OVER THIS MI GOLONDRINA

RAY OF SUNSHINE

YELLOW GINGHAM (THIS IS ALSO PRETTY, AND ONLY $40!)

I JUST CAN’T WITH MARKARIAN (SEEN ABOVE)

TIERED FLORAL DRESS (UNDER $200)

DREAMY PINK GINGHAM — OR GET THE OTS LOOK FOR LESS WITH THIS $59 STEAL IN THE PRETTIEST COLORS

J’ADORE THIS AJE DRESS

THIS J. CREW X LIBERTY LONDON DRESS IS DARLING

UNDER $30 AND SO GORGEOUS

SWEET BLUE AND WHITE FLORAL

MAJOR CRUSH ON THIS LSF

STUNNING, ZIMMERMAN-ESQUE FLORAL FOR $120

ELEGANT FIND FROM MAJE (ON SALE!)

ONE OF MY FAVORITE DRESSES OF ALL TIME

BROCK ON SERIOUS SALE

CECILIE BAHNSEN (ALSO ON SALE, BUT LOOK FOR WAYYY LESS — $44! — HERE)

Accent any of these beauties with a pretty spring bag or some of these chic spring accessories:

DROOLWORTHY MANOLO FLORAL SLIDES

DARLING YELLOW GINGHAM FLATS

JUST THE PRETTIEST FLORAL HEELS — PAIR THESE WITH AN INEXPENSIVE LWD AND YOU’RE OFF TO THE RACES

HAND-PAINTED MULES

ELEGANT + VERSATILE PASTEL SLIDES FROM MANSUR GAVRIEL (ON SALE!)

P.S. As we head towards Lent, I’m reminded of this post on Ash Wednesday.

P.P.S. Creating a buffer between work Jen and mom Jen has been one of the most helpful and healthy changes to my recent life.

P.P.P.S. A chic and unexpected color combo.

One of the silver linings of spending so much time at home this past year has been a nudge to be more creative and proactive in promoting indoor play for my children. (Necessity is the mother of invention and all that.) Keeping art supplies (specifically watercolors and crayons, i.e., the two least-likely-to-stain media I could find) easy for my children to access has always been a priority of mine. We keep pads of paper, coloring books, and watercolor sets in a Hinza bin under the play table and a little cosmetics organizer with a small selection of crayons and other drawing tools like Ooly paint sticks out on top of the table at all times. But it wasn’t until the dawn of the pandemic that I started testing the sensory play waters. I was always intimidated by the likelihood of messes and wasn’t sure how to even model playing with the materials!

On the first point: yep, it is messy. Let me just be clear about that. I am always finding stray pinto beans and granules of dyed rice under the radiator or rug! But I have had to let go of those fears and, in the end, I’d say the tradeoff is worth it. The kids love (!) and never tire of (!!) playing with sand, water, beans, etc! There are therapeutic and educational benefits to sensory play that we can cite (Myriam says that sensory play helped her daughter overcome food texture sensitivities, too!), and I am impressed with micro’s fine motor skills after a lot of this kind of play over the last year, but the bottom line is that my children are engaged and happy when presented with sensory materials, and is there anything more satisfying than two quiet, absorbed, peaceful little faces sitting still together at a table? Depending on the activity, I will lay out towels, a sheet, or a Gathre mat beneath the play area, and sometimes I will move them and their trays into the bath tub entirely, to prevent too much chaos. If we are using anything with liquid or dye, we also put on these smocks, which I love (!) because you can wipe them clean and also toss them in the washing machine if a total mess.

Beyond that, I am always perched right next to micro to intervene if things get too hairy and then I just have to remind myself that rice can be swept up off the floor and water is just water.

On the second point: my children don’t need me to model play! I give them a tray of ice cubes, some animal figurines from the North Pole, and a couple implements and they are off and running in no time. I am consistently astonished at the little vignettes and conversations mini creates on her own, and micro is obsessed with pouring one thing into another thing and can do that for an impressive amount of time.

One suggestion I have is to reuse and rotate the medium/bases. I will stow the dried pinto bins/rice/pasta/cotton balls/figurines in pouches in my closet and pull them out in new combinations on the weekends. It’s startling how “new” figurines can seem if they haven’t been accessible for a few weeks, or if they are presented with play-doh versus water or beans.

For sensory play bases, we have used…

KINETIC SAND

PLAY DOH (OF COURSE YOU CAN ALSO MAKE YOUR OWN)

DYED RICE

DRIED BEANS

COTTON BALLS AND/OR POM POMS

JELLO OR JELLO SLIME*

WATER/ICE

DYED SPAGHETTI

DRIED PASTA

PANTRY STAPLES (SOMETIMES I’LL ORGANIZE LITTLE MOUNDS OF FLOUR, COCOA POWDER, POWDERED SUGAR, OATS, SPRINKLES, AND OTHER GRAINS)

COLORED FOAM (MIX A FEW DROPS OF DISH SOAP WITH WARM WATER AND A LITTLE FOOD COLORING IN BLENDER AND BLEND UNTIL IT TURNS INTO FOAM)

SHAVING CREAM

WATERBEADS**

BAKING SODA (FOR USING WITH VINEGAR)

*I thought this would be great for little hands since it’s taste-safe, but it is very messy and kind of pain to clean since it hardens quickly and then you have to scrub. Mini loved it. But just a full disclosure here.

**This kit is nice since it comes with utensils! But, a caveat: mini has always been VERY into “growing” the waterbeads — she loves to check in on them as they expand in size — and then has fun playing with them, too, but I find she tires of these much more quickly than other materials and that they are a pain to clean since they roll away, off tables, under furniture, etc so easily and then can be smashed underfoot (or with tiny hands). If using, I strongly suggest this for inside the bath tub!

Here are a few of my favorite tools and supplies for our sensory play cabinet. Many of these items you probably already own, or own substitutes for, which is great if you’re just starting out and want to get going ASAP:

PLASTIC TRAYS (EASY TO WIPE DOWN, NOT TOO SHALLOW OR TOO DEEP, AND A GREAT SIZE) — ALSO LIKE THESE WHITE ONES IF YOU’RE NOT INTO THE COLORS OF THE FORMER

MINI MELAMINE BOWLS

RESIN LETTERS (ALSO THESE — GREAT FOR LETTER RECOGNITION ACTIVITIES WITH LITTLE ONES, I.E. BURY THEM IN SAND/GRAINS/FOAM — WE HAVE ALSO USED THE LETTERS FROM THIS PUZZLE AND THIS SEE AND SPELL SET TO SIMILAR EFFECT)

ICE CUBE MOLDS — USE TO CREATE MYRIAM’S FIZZY CUBES OR JUST TO DYE AND FREEZE WATER DIFFERENT COLORS

SILICON TRAY FOR KEEPING INGREDIENTS OR WATER/VINEGAR DYED DIFFERENT COLORS SEPARATE (ESPECIALLY FUN WHEN USING ICE CUBES OR BAKING SODA AS BASE)

LIQUID DROPPERS

SENSORY PLAY UTENSILS (THIS WATERBEADS KIT COMES WITH SOME, TOO!)

COOKIE CUTTERS (GOOD FOR PLAY DOH, MAKING SHAPES IN SAND, OR JUST FOR USE AS FIGURINES)

FIGURINES: MINI TRUCKS, CONSTRUCTION SITE SET, FAIRY FIGURINES, SAFARI ANIMALS, FARM ANIMALS

WOODEN SCOOP SET (WE ALSO USE A LOT OF THE PLATES/BOWLS/CUPS/SPOONS FROM THE PLAY FOOD SETS WE HAVE, LIKE THIS TEA SET)

PLASTIC MIXING BOWLS

MINI STAINLESS STEEL CUPS

MINI ROLLING PINS

MEASURING SPOONS AND CUPS

THESE REUSABLE PLASTIC BAGS FOR STOWING DRIED BEANS, DYED RICE, FIGURINES, SCOOPS, ETC WHEN NOT IN USE

MELISSA AND DOUG POTS AND PANS (EMORY LOVED USING THESE WITH THE DYED PASTA, AND HILL LOVES POURING ITEMS INTO THESE BOWLS — PLUS, THE WOODEN UTENSILS ARE GREAT FOR STIRRING)

METAL PIE PLATES

BEACH TOYS ARE GREAT (!) FOR A LOT OF SENSORY ACTIVITIES – WE USE THE TOOLS THAT CAME WITH THIS SET ALL THE TIME AND IT’S GREAT THAT THEY CAN BE REPURPOSED!

HAVEN’T BOUGHT, BUT EYEING THIS OVERSIZED CHIP AND DIP AFTER MYRIAM RECOMMENDED AS A FANTASTIC SENSORY PLAY BIN, WITH REMOVABLE COMPARTMENTS FOR DIFFERENT ELEMENTS!

Pre-Assembled Sensory Play Kits.

If you want to just dip your toe in the water, there are several great brands that sell pre-fabbed sensory play kits. I’ve personally gifted or used sets from these three vendors and have only the best things to say about them:

KNEAD TO PLAY

HOME WITH ELIZABETH (A GIRLFRIEND OF MINE FROM MY CHICAGO DAYS!)

YOUNG, WILD, AND FRIEDMAN

P.S. A roundup of more great indoor activities for toddlers here.

P.P.S. Musings on grappling with mom guilt and a letter to the new mom nursing her baby at 3:11 a.m.

P.P.P.S. 15 must-have newborn items AND the Brock Collection x Minnow capsule is now live!!!

There are a lot of new faces around here (welcome! wish we could be sharing a pour of champagne together in my favorite coupes!) and I thought it might be fun to introduce yourself to the Magpie community via another installment of my asynchronous icebreaker series. And if you’re a tenured Magpie, please also jump right on in, because your responses to these prompts never disappoint and even, often, in the strangest way, surprise me, as I feel I know many of you personally already!

Today, let’s run with some fun fill-in-the-blanks — feel free to answer all or skip ones you don’t like! No rules, just right…

Favorite airport snack. (Remember the days of airport terminals?)

My most overused word is _____.

Childhood crush.

Title of your autobiography.

Best item you bought in 2020.

If I was going to sail around the world, I would name my boat _____.

The wallpaper on my locked cell phone.

Best scar story?

What I tell myself when I need a pep talk.

I’ll go first:

Favorite airport snack. (Remember the days of airport terminals?) Cheez-its or Haribo Sour Spaghetti.

My most overused word is nontrivial. I can’t stop using it. Now that I’ve diagnosed the addiction, you’ll notice it appear far too often in my writing.

Childhood crush. Val Kilmer. I was obsessed with “The Saint” for some reason. I also had posters of Devon Sawa and JTT.

Title of your autobiography. This changes daily. I would have tremendous anxiety selecting one.

Best item you bought in 2020. Revlon One Step. I actually feel like a proper adult, with my hair always done, because of this $40 tool, which has revolutionized the way I do my hair. (Shower, air dry hair for 30-60 minutes, then it takes like five minutes for a perfect blow out. Full review here.)

If I was going to sail around the world, I would name my boat: Circe or Anne Eliot (from Persuasion).

The wallpaper on my locked cell phone. Mr. Magpie’s handsome profile.

Best scar story? The c-section scars that brought my two babies safely into the world. (I am still waiting for the day when I can talk about the long and recently-earned scar on my forehead in an enthusiastic tone.)

What I tell myself when I need a pep talk. Straight-forward, but I actually repeat this to myself most days on the final leg of my most frequent running route through Central Park, which ends in a steep incline up East Drive: “You got it, girl! You got it, girl! You got it, girl!” For matters of the heart, the “pep talks” I lean on the most come in the form of prayer (“focus on me, not on the storm”) or the phrase: “if you understood how often people cope by projecting, you would learn to take almost nothing personally.” (An offshoot of this recent post on self-blame.)

Your turn!

Post-Scripts.

+If you are new here, this is a formal introduction to the blog and a brief background of the squiggly path that brought me here.

+Two favorite posts of mine: “She Was How She Kept Time” and “The Thrill of the Chase.”

+European pharmacy favorites.

+I own this dress in two colors in the midi length…do I need it in the blue in this shorter style?!

+These insulated slipper boots look amazing for cold, rainy days. (Love in that lilac-gray color!)

+I love striped tees on little ones — recently snagged this $13 style for micro and this $5.50 one for mini!

+A perfect, inexpensive party shoe for a little one. (Mini owns in the gold!)

+One of you must snag this gorgeous navy blue sweater — adore those buttons on the shoulder and wish it weren’t sold in my size!

+This floral smocked dress is too precious for a little one! (Sibling match with this!)

+Parenting advice I love.

+Lusting after this floral sandal. So chic with a white dress like this.

+This cabinet!!!!!

+I must own this dress.

+Hill has been into trucks lately. Bought these for sensory play (perfect with kinetic sand or dried beans or rice, kept in a tray) and found some great new books for our library: “Trucks Go,” “Trucks,” and “Let’s Go, Rescue Trucks.”

+This Liberty pillow!!!

+I think mini needs some Super Smalls for her birthday.

+Still not over this scalloped side table.

+Truly, then, these words are most serious.

+On saying the right thing at the right time.

+Bedtime routines.

+Brock Collection x Minnow Swim!!!

Can’t tell you how long I’ve been raving about this windbreaker, which my father bought for me when we were on a trip in Colorado five or six years ago, and is now on sale for 50% off in select colors. It is fantastic for hiking and outdoor activities when weather is fickle, as it is waterproof and wind-resistant, but very lightweight. It’s a good insulating layer, but it also has vents that you can open to cool off. It’s also a great travel companion since it weighs nothing and can be compressed into a tiny square. But more recently, it’s been clutch in city life, as well! I wear this on rainy days with athletic leggings (or, if facing a colossal downpour, I pair with their rain pants) for the commute to/from mini’s school. I also wear it while running in rain or against the wind and have even found it to be a fantastic top layer in super cold weather, layered over a merino base and my insulated running jacket (on sale in more colors here and here; I own in the white). It provides just enough insulation (and protection from wind) to keep me warm into the teens! I say this from experience, as I ran yesterday in this getup when the news told me it “felt like 12 degrees” but I remained warm.

Other things I love about it: amply sized pockets, a lean fit (not as bulky/boxy as many other windbreaker styles), toggles that enable you to cinch the hood to fit around your face perfectly, velcro at the wrists for a tailored closure, and did I mention it’s machine-washable?!

This jacket is just a slam-dunk. 10/10 would recommend.

Every single member of my family (parents, siblings, siblings-in-law) owns this coat. A great gift for a sporty/outdoorsy loved one!

ALSO REALLY IMPORTANT: My current favorite skincare product, Clarins Double Serum, is on sale for $59 (the cheapest I’ve ever seen it; regularly $89). This is a holy grail product for me. I prefer it to any other serum I’ve tried. It leaves skin hydrated, gleaming, and radiant; smells like heaven; and I’m hooked.

P.S. Just added a new SPORT category to my shop with other outdoor/athletic/fitness finds.

P.P.S. Some great rainy weather finds here.

I find SUCH great things on Etsy. The owner of the lovely shop Perry & Bleecker recently sent the sweetest gold bangle for me and a matching one for mini. A precious gift idea for Mother’s Day, or even in anticipation of next school year — I have given mini a little piece of jewelry the last two years she’s headed off to school as a sort of physical manifestation of the concept in The Kissing Hand (sweetest book if you’re anticipating any separation issues).

A few other favorite recent finds on Etsy…

(01.) PERSONALIZED STRAW BAG

(02.) GORGEOUS BLOCKPRINT QUILT (OR USE AS PICNIC BLANKET!)

(03.) FESTIVE CHILDREN’S STATIONERY (ALSO LOVE THE SHOP’S CUTE NOTEPADS)

(04.) SCALLOPED PLACEMATS

(05.) BAG STRAP

(06.) PERSONALIZED LINEN JEWELRY CUBE — I LOVE THIS BOUTIQUE! I’VE PURCHASED MONOGRAMMED LINEN TISSUE BOX COVERS FROM THEM IN THE PAST AND THE QUALITY IS AMAZING!)

(07.) IS IT TOO EARLY TO BE THINKING ABOUT BUNNY EARS FOR EASTER?

(08.) HYDRANGEA PAJAMAS FOR LITTLES (THESE WERE A HOT ITEM ON MY BLOG LAST WEEK!)

And a few other finds I must add…

TIE-DYE HAIR BOWS FOR A LITTLE LADY (WOULD BE ADORABLE WITH THE JAMMIES FROM THE RECENT RR X SCL COLLAB)

THE VALENTINES I ORDERED FOR EMORY ARRIVED AND THEY ARE DARLING! I BELIEVE YOU CAN STILL ORDER FROM ERIN UNTIL TOMORROW FOR GUARANTEED DELIVERY BY 2/14

SWEET EMBROIDERED TOP

THESE JEWELRY ROUNDS CAN BE CUTE FOR SPECIAL TINY TOYS FOR YOUR LITTLE ONES — JUST PERSONALIZE THE TOP WITH THE WORD “CARS” OR “ANIMALS”

SWEET NURSERY PILLOW

RIDGED TAPER CANDLES

SCHUMACHER PRINT PILLOW

PERSONALIZED CUPS

P.S. More amazing everyday jewelry finds.

P.P.S. The best home gear and recent home finds.

P.P.P.S. What’s got you excited these days?

There is an interesting colloquialism in Douglas Stuart’s novel Shuggie Bain: when someone is wallowing in self-pity, or even vaguely referencing the difficulties he bears, the characters refer to it, disparagingly, as “the poor mes.” The subtext being — Well, everyone has it bad. Suck it up! And within the depressed context of the 1980s Glaswegian public housing in which the novel takes place, and among the battered and penurious characters that populate it, everyone really does have it bad. There were moments in the book in which I felt there were no depths to the gritty and unrelenting darkness in which these characters lived. At one point, we learn that there are even people worse off, financially, than impoverished Shuggie Bain, when he befriends a girl who lives in a trailer on the outskirts of the public housing complex he calls home. I will admit to misgivings about this aspect of the book: at times, I would set it aside, rub my eyes, and think, “And why am I reading this mercilessly bleak book? To what end?”

I listened to an interesting interview with Stuart in which he explains, while discussing why he chose to write fiction versus memoir (as he also lost his mother to alcoholism at a young age and grew up in a context similar to that of Shuggie):

“Men from the West Coast of Scotland are never encouraged to speak about how they feel. And we’re never encouraged to think of ourselves exceptionally, whether exceptionally great at something, or exceptionally hard done-to. And so throughout my entire childhood, when something horrible would happen, the refrain was always: ‘Aye, there’s bad things for everybody. Everybody’s got it hard.’ And you internalize that and just keep it to yourself. And it’s super damaging to men, which means it’s super-damaging to — well, if men have the power in the world, it makes it damaging to everybody.”

An element of my readership of the novel that had previously escaped me clicked into place: I suddenly saw the novel in a different discursive context, one not only pertaining to trauma but also to gender norms. All at once, I saw the book as both determined to realize — to see — the horrific experiences that many children (including the author) raised in such difficult circumstances have had to face and to renegotiate cultural expectations for men who have endured such cruelties. The book centers, exceptionalizes, the trauma of Shuggie Bain. It even takes Shuggie’s name as its title! “These are horrible things that happened to this specific boy,” the book says, as it overwhelms us with a sequence of unthinkably horrible incidents. “Don’t look away; don’t shrug this off; don’t dismiss this as ‘the poor mes.’ See this! See him! See me!” It is a heart-rending rebuke to the “men should be tough” culture in which he was raised. It is also, by virtue of being a published work and generating the deserved acclaim it has, an assertion of Stuart’s exceptionalism as an author. That is, the fact that Shuggie Bain exists as a title available for purchase reifies the novel’s ethics: Stuart demonstrates that he is both “exceptionally great at something” and “exceptionally hard done-to.”

Unpacking this element of the novel some three weeks after finishing it has elevated its status in my own personal canon, and I encourage you to add it to your tsundoku pile if you’ve not already.

2021 is off to a hot start in the good book category — between this and Hamnet, I am electric! I’m currently on the last few pages of Alafair Burke’s The Wife, a suspense I would liken in some ways to HBO’s “The Undoing” series in that there are allegations against a high-profile, Manhattanite man and we are constantly shifting our opinion of what happened, who is culpable, etc. It has been an engaging, compelling read, though a bit heavy-handed on the legal and procedural aspects of the narrative for my taste. (This level of detail impressed me and elevated the book within its own genre as particularly sharp and well-researched, but had the unfortunate effect of decelerating the pace of an otherwise gripping story.) I am then reading re-reading Bram Stoker’s Dracula before picking up Didion’s just-released collection of essays, Let Me Tell You What I Mean. The collection is mainly a re-printing of early pieces, but if Didion publishes something (anything!)…my head turns. I am also still excited about several of the books on this suggested reading list, to which I would now add Anna North’s just-released and much-touted Outlawed, which has been compellingly described elsewhere as “a feminist Western set in an alternative nineteenth-century America…True Grit meets The Crucible.” Um, yes.

What about you? I love hearing what you’re reading and how you’re thinking about what you’re reading and welcome thoughts on Shuggie Bain in particular!

Post-Scripts.

+Swooning over the cardigans from recently-launched brand Kilte.

+Adore Minnow’s latest collection — especially this terry cloth dress (great cover-up / pool-to-lunch look) and these swim trunks for my little man.

+Digging on some of the new J. Crew arrivals — especially these fun pastel striped tees, these cheerful gingham flats, this Liberty dress for littles, and these Liberty London headbands.

+More Liberty florals here!

+PSA: Bellabliss just re-released their pima cotton footies for babies, which make the most adorable baby gift when monogrammed on the rear end. I’ve given this as gifts to multiple friends with newborns (and also gifted it to myself after Hill was born). So special to have something monogrammed, and I love the classic white with either a navy, light blue, or “rose champagne” monogram.

+This throwback LL Bean sweatshirt! Vintage vibes in the best way.

+Theory now has an outlet with some insanely good buys, including this chic ice blue puffer, everyone’s favorite cashmere joggers (!!), and this absolutely stunning pleated midi dress. Wish it weren’t sold out in my size in that gorgeous blue!

+Whimsical blockprint stationery. Fun for quick pick-me-up notes in the mail to friends. More great (affordable!) stationery options here.

+Mini literally outgrew her Sperry snowboots after one snow. One snow, and then we couldn’t even squeeze the boot on her foot! And so when the weatherman forecasted 7-10 inches of snow last week, I bought this less pair that arrived the next day but still has that classic snowbird styling, as this could well be the final snow of the season.

+Sweet $8 eyelet sweatshirt for a little!

+Love this mock neck sweater in the robin’s egg blue.

+Some good Molton Brown buys on sale at Off Fifth! (You know MB is among my favorite brands for hand soap!)

+My favorite hairspray, on sale!

+Just the most darling dress. Could be another good option for a birthday dress for your little one!

+Love this gingham top for spring.

+Sounds like a lot of us have struggled with self-blame. (The comments are great – thanks to so many of you, on that post and across countless others, for being so vulnerable with me.)

+Everyone loves toile.

I’m on a pastel kick — what can I say? Below, sharing some of my favorite pastel fitness finds, many of which I already own…

(01.) TULIP HEM HOODIE (UNDER $30!)

(02.) PASTEL BASEBALL CAP

(03.) MY FAVORITE TUBE SOCKS — OWN IN MULTIPLE COLORS!

(04.) ICE BLUE RUNNING SHOES (CURRENTLY OWN, ALONG WITH THE PINK RUNNING SHOES SEEN AT TOP OF POST)

(05.) BALA WRIST WEIGHTS

(06.) $6 JUMP ROPE

(07.) THIS VERY POPULAR YOGA MAT WAS JUST RESTOCKED — IF TOO PRICEY, THIS $26 YOGA MAT GETS REALLY GOOD REVIEWS

(08.) NIKE BELT BAG (THIS MESH ONE IS ALSO SO GOOD)

And a few other pastel workout finds worth considering…

MY FAVORITE WINDBREAKER COMES IN FANTASTIC SPRING COLORS (AND OTHERS ARE 50% OFF R.N.!!) — I LAYER THIS OVER A MERINO BASE LAYER AND MY NB RUNNING JACKET WHEN IT IS COLD/WINDY AND AM WARM EVEN IF ONLY IN THE TEENS!)

YETI WATER BOTTLE

TENNIS SKIRT

THIS LOOSE FIT TANK IS CURRENTLY ON SALE FOR $7

PERFECT ICE BLUE LEGGINGS AND OF COURSE COLORFULKOALA LEGGINGS — THE BEST INEXPENSIVE LEGGINGS I’VE FOUND TO DATE, AND THEY COME IN GREAT COLORS

BACK IN ACTION LS TEES (LIKE THE SLIGHTLY LONGER HEM IN THE REAR) — LOOK FOR LESS WITH THESE, WHICH I OWN, THOUGH I FIND THE MATERIAL FAR INFERIOR TO THE LULULEMON

INEXPENSIVE PINK APPLE WATCH BAND

ALIGNS IN THE PRETTIEST SPRING SHADES — I’M NOW ALSO EYEING THEIR NEW ALIGN TANK!

RUNNING VEST

MERINO BASE LAYER (AS MENTIONED ABOVE, I OWN! THEY WORK GREAT (!) AND I LIKE THE COLORS – IN SPIRIT OF TRANSPARENCY, THOUGH, I SLIGHTLY PREFER MY ONES FROM TRACKSMITH BECAUSE I FIND THEM A TINY BIT LESS ITCHY AND MORE BREATHABLE)

SHELL PINK JACQUARD HOODIE

OWN AND LOVE THIS NIKE HEADBAND

PALE BLUE RUNNING TOP (UNDER $30)

MY FAVORITE RUNNING JACKET IN THE PRETTIEST PINK SHADE

UNDER ARMOUR BEANIE

DAGNE DOVER DUFFEL

OLD NAVY SPORTS BRA IN SHELL PINK

UNDER $30 JOGGERS (IN MY CART IN THE “DENIM BLUE”)

RIBBON SWEATSHIRT (!)

THROWBACK GYM SHORTS

PASTEL HAIR TIES OR PALE PINK TELETIES

P.S. Recent musings on running here and here. And from now on, I will be saving all of my favorite athletic finds in my new Sport shop.

P.P.S. These books changed my life.

P.P.P.S. Shopping for something specific? I might have it covered here. (Feel free to email me if you can’t find it!)

Wow. Wow! So many exceptional (borderline ridiculous) sale finds at Neiman’s right now, including the Staud dress above, marked down to only $88 and ready to celebrate your birthday with you. A few other must-sees:

THIS $44 STAUD TOP (!!!) — DARLING WITH WHITE JEANS FOR SUMMER, AND LESS THAN THE COST OF SOMETHING FROM J. CREW

THE TIERED RHODE DRESS I WORE TO MR. MAGPIE’S BIRTHDAY (IN A DIFFERENT PRINT) IS NOW UNDER $100

BROCK COLLECTION MAGIC FOR UNDER $200

MARYSIA BIKINI TOP FOR ONLY $40 (BOTTOMS ARE STRANGELY FULL-PRICE AT NEIMAN’S, BUT YOU CAN FIND ON SALE HERE AND GET A SERIOUSLY HIGH END SWIMWEAR SET FOR UNDER $150)

SOME LUCKY LADY WILL MAKE OUT LIKE A BANDIT WITH THESE TIMELESS MANOLOS FOR UNDER $300

Finally, a bride to be will be overjoyed to learn that this stunning Johanna Ortiz dress, originally almost $2,000, is on sale for under $300. What. What! Perfect rehearsal dinner dress! (More bridal finds here.)

Happy weekend!

P.S. Ugh, this Markarian is on sale!!!! Major drool.

P.P.P.S. The CPC sale ends tomorrow! Such great scores!

*I think my post featuring the founders of Golden Edit really put me in a “follow the sun” mood…note that their promotion code is still valid! 20% off entire site! Take me away

My Latest Snag: Michael’s Haul.

I just bought some super cute activities and supplies from Michael’s for our craft cabinet at great prices — just a little note to self to remember to compare prices between Amazon and Michael’s, as I can almost always find things for cheaper at the latter. I specifically bought a bunch of Valentines Day card materials on sale (!), including this set, these doilies, stickers, etc — as well as some washable paint and play-doh, which are 20% off with code 20MADEBYYOU through today (1/30). I also picked up this little flamingo craft kit and this ladybug one, both under $2 and sure to be big hits at home this weekend with mini. (Also note that Michael’s now carries the very popular activity kits by Kid Made Modern and they are all 20% off today with code above! People love their craft libraries, and I am eyeing this paper doll kit and this papier mache unicorn set.

I don’t know about my fellow Magpie mamas, but I am at a stage of this pandemic and this winter where I have had to designate Tuesdays as my “Weekend Activity Planning Day” and I actually map out the activities, crafts, excursions, baking projects, etc we’ll be undertaking the upcoming weekend so I can make sure I get all the materials in time. If not, the weekends are extremely long given that it’s not really realistic for us to spend more than an hour in the park / at the playground (especially not today, as it’s supposed to feel like -5 degrees outside) and there just aren’t that many socially distanced activities to be had in Manhattan. And beyond that — I honestly need the stimulation and excitement myself, as the parent! Having activities lined up gives the weekend some structure. Anyhow, I’ve been revisiting all the activities on this list (many of which we’ve now done countless times) and am very grateful for the Kiwi crate subscription my mother bought for Emory for Christmas. She loves these sets! I’m actually eyeing one for Hill, too — hadn’t realize they carried kits for such a young age! Strongly recommend.

P.S. If you’re in dire straits, consider overnighting one of the great, “slow-burn” toys on this list.

You’re Sooooo Popular: The White Blouse.

The most popular items on le blog this week:

+This ultra-chic white blouse from ALC, marked down to under $120 (orig almost $300!)

+My pretty heart earrings. I’ve set them aside to wear on Valentine’s Day with this top!

+Much-touted face mask.

+Quilted pocket fleece pullover.

+Best concealer ever.

+My new sneakers! I absolutely love this style for running. My third pair!

+Chic toile face mask.

+Chic woven bowl for citrus, or just for decor on a shelf.

+Darling and inexpensive blockprint quilt!

+Hydrangea jammies for littles at a great price!

+Cutest sensory kits.

+Sweet ballet book for little ones — whether they are tiny ballerinas or you are looking for a last-minute Valentine’s Day gift.

+Well-priced leotard/ballet skirt combo for a little one in really good colors.

+Sweet $15 floral top for a little (pair with white or pink leggings for an easy spring look).

+Cute jammies for little ones for under $20.

Weekend Musings: Terms of Endearment.

Which are your favorite terms of endearment? Which make you shudder? Or do you universally spurn them as too saccharine? Tell me in the comments section!

For some reason, Mr. Magpie and I have always hated the term “babe” for one another. We only ever use it ironically, with a surfer dude intonation: “Uh, hey, babe [pronounced “beb”], can you pass me the wine?” It’s odd because we’ve probably used every other term of endearment on the planet, plus weird and sickening variations of them, at some point in our long relationship with one another. One of the few I can’t claim to have tried: “pet.” When I was growing up, my best friend was Australian and her parents used to call one another “pet” in their thick Aussie accents. I remember peering at them from the corner of the kitchen in mild confusion. I can’t say I could ever pull that one off…

My favorite? When we were first dating, Mr. Magpie called me “baby” and — ! Let’s just say I drew from personal experience when I wrote about how that term made Caroline feel when Powell used it for her.

What about you?

P.S. If you’re new here, my M Series of blog posts are among my most popular, and the chronicle my love story with my husband.

Post-Scripts: Jayson Home Sale.

+Over the years, we have invested in a number of pieces of furniture and decor at Jayson Home. Their annual sale ends tomorrow, and it is a fantastic time to score some exceptionally well-made and unique pieces for your home. We have and love this deep and stately couch (in a different colorway); this vintage coffee table is amazing; and I love this runner for an entryway.

+People rave about these washable silk pajamas. I love them in the navy!

+Musings on the uses of sorrow, provoked by a poem.

+Meanwhile, I wore this Rhode dress (in a different print) for Mr. Magpie’s birthday and it is now marked down to under $100 (orig $495!)

+My favorite Etsy shop for throw pillows. Love these.

+Intrigued by this fancy smoked albacore tuna as an upgrade to my next batch of tuna salad.

+I have an addiction to Kule striped tees — this rugby striped style is on sale for 30% off and I’m eyeing this turtleneck dress style to pair with vejas/GGs (also on sale!)

+Speaking of striped dresses, I keep coming back to this Lacoste style. It has a great vintage vibe to it — I imagine pairing it with my Hermes Orans or Supergas this summer…

+This sweatshirt is just so chic.

+If you’re still loving the exaggerated collar (I am!), get in on this denim action before it sells out!

+The sacrosanct and the silly.

+Super pretty swimsuit in a great shade of blue for under $60.

+These sunglasses are so cool. If you’ve been a follower for awhile, you know I am obsessed with this brand for sunglasses — they have the greatest styles that look luxury designer but cost under $100.

+Ugh. I keep wanting to buy warmer weather items, but it is cold around here. Maybe a fun new knit like this ($25 and a great shade of gray/blue) will perk me up.

+These personalizable sweaters from Le Lion are still at the top of my lust list.

+My best discoveries of 2020.

Is anyone else really feeling spring these days? I already gave mini a pack of spring-themed face masks and sent her off to school in a lighter-weight pastel blue floral puffer last week when the thermometer traveled above 40 degrees. A few pretty pastel-hued finds for home, organization, and kitchen…

DOCUMENT STORAGE (LOVE THIS LINE — I HAVE THEIR FILE BOXES)

CAN OPENER IN PISTACHIO GREEN

ETCHED TUMBLERS IN PRETTY PASTEL HUES

GORGEOUS ENCLOSURE CARDS

PRETTY LONG SPOONS

FLORAL PILLOW COVER

I HAVE THIS SET OF UNBREAKABLE, MICRO-AND-DISHWASHER-SAFE BOWLS FOR THE LITTLE ONES — PERFECT SIZE!

HARD-SIDED CHINA STORAGE BOXES

SPILL-PROOF BOWL AND SPOON FOR A BABY

ENAMEL FLATWARE (ALSO LOVE THE SPRING-LIKE GINGHAM SETS FROM SABRE)

AN ELECTRIC TEA KETTLE AS PRETTY AS IT IS WELL-REVIEWED

POT HOLDERS IN MUTED GREEN

MATTE PASTEL SPATULA SET WITH 2,500 FIVE-STAR REVIEWS (OR THIS SIMILARLY WELL-REVIEWED IMPLEMENT SET)

DOVE GRAY DOG BOWLS ($13 FOR SET!)

BABY FOOD FREEZER TRAY (I ACTUALLY NOW USE THIS FOR ARTS AND CRAFTS WITH THE LITTLES – GREAT FOR KEEPING LITTLE INGREDIENTS/DYED WATER/ETC SEPARATE)

BABY SPOONS

OUR COFFEE MAKER, WHICH COMES IN THE BEST COLORS!

1-GAL WATERING CAN

GORGEOUS SET OF PASTEL CANDLES

PISTACHIO GREEN GOBLETS

GLASS FOOD STORAGE CONTAINERS

NESTING MIXING BOWLS

OWN AND LOVE THESE CHIP CLIPS

JADEITE CAKESTAND

ROLLING CART

LOVE THIS HAMPER

P.S. More muted green finds.