I spent 22 days inside my Manhattan apartment when I contracted coronavirus earlier this year. 22 days in under 2,000 square feet, and a subset of those days within the four walls of my bedroom. 22 days without sunshine or fresh air or the damp smell of the onset of rain or the feel of my sixty-pound airedale straining against her leash in pursuit of a phantom rodent that routinely haunts her on a particular stretch of W 84th street. I remember plastering my forehead to the window of our kitchen, angling my neck to take in the skyline, to watch the stray Manhattanites enjoying sun and afternoon reading or candlelight and al fresco dinners from the lovely balconies of the brownstones our building overlooks. To be honest, I was too sick or too worried to give much thought to the sensation of captivity at the time. The confinement was ancillary to much graver anxieties. But I think back now and wonder how we did it–“we” being Mr. Magpie and myself, as he carried more than half of the emotional burden of that period of my life, and nearly all of the responsibilities of parenting and running a household, and he did it while maintaining a full-time job and a sense of humor and the laidback way he flips a cap off a beer bottle in the evening, marking the end of the work day and the start of a more relaxing string of hours.

Oh, to have him–his sturdiness, his confidence, his extremely even keel–

I cannot think how I would have fared without him.

This, of course, was half the strain of that time (write it, Jen): the haunting vision I angrily brushed away as I fought the virus of me absent from my own life, or he absent from whatever shape my life might take in the world beyond.

To be clear, I had what I think would be considered a mild to moderate case. I did not receive treatment and did not go to the hospital. My doctor advised rest and fluids. But I was the sickest I have ever been in my life, and we knew so little about the virus in late March that I had no idea whether I was improving or not. Even though I was no longer wracked with body aches that made me feel as though I was being passed through a pasta machine, I lost my sense of smell and taste about a week into my symptoms–what was this? When would it end?! A well-meaning friend of ours, in a conversation after I had recovered, said: “I’ve heard it’s not too bad for most people. Like a mild flu or something.” He said it optimistically, I think — hoping that I would concur. I think that Mr. Magpie could see that I was having trouble finding words, my mouth partway open, groping for the right ones, because he said, affably, lightly:

“She was pretty banged up.”

And then changed the conversation.

It was around Easter that Mr. Magpie turned on the movie 1917. Until that point, I had avoided anything remotely emotional or intense in the entertainment category. I don’t even remember what scene we were watching, but I suddenly felt waves of unexpected and violent emotion washing over me, and I near-shouted —

“I can’t watch this!”

Mr. Magpie looked bewildered at first, and then turned off the TV and tilted his head and pleaded, quietly, for me to tell him what was wrong.

And it came out like a long cry.

And then, just as urgently, I had to say all the things I had felt when I was sick and that I had been scared to admit out loud, and that even now I cannot commit to paper (write it, Jen, I tell myself, but I have written them and then woken up in a cold sweat and deleted them — I cannot put them out yet, cannot commit to them, cannot relive them in published form). I told him even the foolish things, like my single-minded fixation on the nightmarish logistics of going to the hospital by myself if I needed to. (Would I take a cab? How would I make it through filling out the admission paperwork without dissolving into a puddle all by myself?)

He sat with me, and let me cry into his shirt, and I don’t think I will ever be able to finish the movie 1917 because it is positively riddled with all the feelings that tumbled out that night in our apartment.

For many weeks after I had recovered, treading the trim perimeter of my nightly walk with Tilly, I was lit up with gratitude. For the fresh air, for the sights of the city, even for Tilly’s irritating strain against the leash in search of those phantom (or not phantom, come to think of it…) rodents. Just before my first walk after confinement, Mr. Magpie sat me down and made me promise to look both ways before crossing the street. “Take it slow, Jennifer,” he said, the formality of my full name on his tongue jarring. And I knew what he meant: that I would be overwhelmed that first walk. And I was. The city felt enormous, and the same and not the same, and loud, and I was ecstatic and farklempt to be on the errand.

Time has softened the crispness of those emotions and I now need to remind myself to be grateful for my nightly stroll from time to time. And so it caught me off guard when my father said, just the other day: “I don’t know how you did it in that small apartment. I don’t know how you’re still doing it in that small apartment.” As we are still, for all intents and purposes, living in quarantine: ordering all groceries and wine and — well, everything — in, staying inside most of the time, not interacting with anyone outside the immediate family except for our nanny, my brother-in-law, and my sister. Mr. Magpie and I went out for a glass of wine once two or three weeks ago, and even that was a tedious and possibly-not-worth-it exercise in risk mitigation: we stopped by five or six potential watering holes before finding one with suitably spaced tables. While not ideal, like all of you, we’ve adapted to these conditions. We know, having both fought the virus in our own apartment, and having lived in New York in March and April of 2020, just what is at stake, and it is worth the inconvenience and slender grief we carry with us. But when my father said: “I don’t know how you did it,” I thought back to those 22 days of confinement, and I shuddered.

But I do know how we did it, and it begins with a prayer and ends with Mr. Magpie’s casual toss of a bottle cap at five o’clock in the evening.

It is faith and love and the putting of one foot in front of another and the steely insistence on celebrating the most diminutive of joys with the man I love the most because they are always worth the fanfare.

***

This post is written specifically for a reader who was just diagnosed with coronavirus. M.O., I am thinking of you today.

***

Post Scripts.

+More on living through coronavirus and the two things that brought me the most comfort during that time.

+The gorgeous colored glassware from Estelle is now sold individually! Two coupes would be such a sweet gift for a newly engaged friend.

+The message of this children’s book sounds wonderful.

+An absolutely adorable $60 dress, and an equally adorable and far more expensive heart-print dress, too.

+This cashmere top is on sale — and so cute for fall!

+I also adore this striped sweater (on sale, too) with white jeans in early fall.

+Darling white nightgown for a little one. Like Clara from the Nutcracker!

+Currently, you can get 25% off your first order at Olivela, meaning you can score these Mansur Gavriel flats at a rare discount.

+Only two sizes left in this sweet fall floral dress for a little one (ordered it already for mini). More adorable little girl finds here.

+In case you are running dry with toddler activities/distractions at this point and are heading into a year of distance learning / homeschooling, people rave about indoor trampolines as a way to help children burn off their energy and this one can be stowed with relative ease.

+Clever tool for children learning the upper case / lower case letters.

+This stomp rocket was a smash hit with mini (who is 3.5).

+This is a great bowl for, well, everything. I have a bunch of these and I find I reach for them constantly. Perfect size for soup, cereal, ice cream, or just mixing up the small portions of peas or pasta or rice that I prepare for the children at dinner time.

+Vans are not my style, but OMG these itty bitty ones on micro might have to happen.

+Chic fall finds.

+Delicious drama for $29.

+Grateful to Marlien Rentmeester for introducing me to the incredible Etsy vintage shop Fenix Vintage, full of fun finds like this embroidered floral midi and this outrageously fun blouse and this blue caftan, which reminds me a bit of my beloved Frances Valentine maxi.

+I do not need another white dress but ohhh mannnn I keep coming back to this perfect style from La Ligne.

+High end looks for less.

+Home finds from Target.

From now through this weekend, an extra 50% off sale items at Anthropologie. (The discount is automatically applied in cart.) This includes a select number of rugs (!!!), like this blue statement, which is very similar to the one I have in my master bedroom that many of you ask about, this swiss cross style (fun for a Scandi-style playroom), and this blush pink round (perfect for a little girl’s room or a feminine office — I mean, for ~$200?!) It’s so hard to find a good price on a statement rug!

There are also great fashion scores, and I’m ordering the first dress listed below:

RIDICULOUSLY STUNNING SHOSHANNA (ORIG $460, NOW $124)

FEMININE ONE-PIECE SWIMSUIT FROM FAITHFULL FOR AROUND $50

LOEFFLER RANDALL SANDALS FOR $74 (OMG IN THE GOLD – SUCH A GREAT AND VERSATILE HEEL)

THIS FROTHY WHITE MINI (REMINDS ME OF A LOVESHACKFANCY I EYED ALL SUMMER)

THIS CHINOISERIE-ESQUE MAXI

P.S. Still some items available from this outrageous sale on CPC Kids.

I have been loving all of the vintage-inspired florals I have been seeing all over the place — the kinds of prints you might have expected to find at a textile trading post in your covered buggy back in 1846, while en route West in search of gold, but re-interpreted in modern shapes. (Did anyone else play Oregon Trail?) Below, my top picks for nailing the Laura Ingalls Wilder-chic vibe:

THE GORGEOUS AGUA BENDITA DRESS SEEN ABOVE

THIS PLEATED MASK

THIS PRETTY DOEN-ESQUE TOP IN THE FLORAL PRINT ($25!!!)

THIS DRESS IN THE ROQUEFORT PRINT

THIS $20 HEADBAND, OR THIS RIBBON-WRAPPED ONE

SARAH BRAY SUNHATS (YOU CAN BUY VINTAGE RIBBON TO SWAP OUT THE TIES!)

EVERYTHING FROM LOVESHACKFANCY

THE LOVESHACKFANCY LOOK FOR $64

THIS ADORABLE $70 TOP — PERFECT WITH HIGH-RISE BLACK SKINNIES

AS OF THE TIME OF WRITING THIS POST, THIS TOP IS ONLY $15…! LOVE LOVE LOVE

THE SEA DRESS I’VE BEEN OBSESSING OVER FOR THANKSGIVING

THIS DARLING TUNIC DRESS, OR THIS STRAPLESS SMOCKED NUMBER BY THE SAME BRAND — BOTH SO EASY BREEZY FOR THE BEACH

THIS SWEET (DISCOUNTED!) REFORMATION FLORAL TOP

THESE FLORAL SANDALS

THIS DRAMATIC MIDI

THIS STUNNING HORROR VACUI BLOUSE

P.S. This vibe is very grandmillennial-friendly.

P.P.S. Speaking of grands — a little recipe from my grandmother that you must try, and several remembrances of my grandfather.

P.P.P.S. Unrelated to this trend at all: this $83 dress is perfect with a black suede boot for fall (some other thoughts on fall boots and dresses here).

Saks just discounted a suite of children’s items, possibly by mistake, including these current-season Roller Rabbit pajamas for only $24 (so difficult to find on sale and tend to sale out quickly even at full price) as well as these darling chick-print ones (only $20 for the baby footie!). I bought Hill the jungle set. I have mentioned this countless times before, but Roller Rabbit pajamas are so incredibly soft and I like the slim fit and whimsical prints, too. I find that they run TTS in the infant sizes but once you get up to size 2, they start running really small.

Also of note: $40 for a classic blue blazer for a little boy, Footmates saddle shoes (rarely go on sale), and a darling Luli & Me floral dress.

While you’re there, you might as well check out the designer sale section, where shoes seem to be the main attraction: gorgeous everyday flat sandals from LR, my treasured Nicholas Kirkwood pearl sandals (I own and adore these), and on-trend snakeskin tall boots.

Finally, this Faithfull dress is only $85 and this fun Ganni $73.

P.S. My beloved Revlon one-step is also on sale today, marked down to $41 plus an extra $5.60 off if you tick the coupon box on the product page.

P.P.S. I often post sale finds/scores throughout the day in my LikeToKnowIt account, and then aggregate them in blog posts here, but if you want to follow along in real-time, I’d love to see you there, too! (LikeToKnowIt is a shopping app where bloggers can visually curate beautiful finds in one place.)

A MILLE DRESS // Seen above. Everything about this voluminous, floral print dress is up my alley. Nightgown dressing at its finest. (H&M has a similarly cut dress for less here, and this &OtherStories style — also available in a similarly patterned blouse — projects a similar cottage chic vibe.)

NEW STATIONERY // I am eyeing this and this for correspondence and these as a notepad for my desk. I am forever making lists.

ARTIS BRUSHES // I already have and love the Oval 6 — perfect size for concealer, though I have also been using it for foundation/tinted moisturizer. I now want the Oval 8, which I think is even better suited for foundation application. Have I raved enough about these brushes?! I’m obsessed! Full review here. (And their even larger size, the Oval 10, is on sale for almost 50% off here.)

NO. 6 CLOG BOOTS // I managed to kill three pairs of boots last winter. This year, I already purchased these snakeskin Paris Texas tall boots but I intend to buy a pair of these clog boots for everyday schlepping (look for less with these).

SEA DRESS // For Thanksgiving day!

NARCISCO RODRIGUEZ PERFUME // My longtime favorite. I have been dappling in Jo Malone and Carven for the past year or two but I always come back to NR. It’s a softly spiced, musky floral scent. So feminine. I love it.

FLEECE FOR THE CHILDREN // Eyeing this for mini and this for micro. I just know that if I don’t buy it now, we’ll wake up one morning in September and it will have turned cold over night and all the good colors will be sold out.

CYGNET LIVING SWEATERS FOR THE CHILDREN // I have been eyeing these sweet personalized sweaters forever; think I will take the plunge for their fall wardrobes.

DAILY MULTIVITAMINS // I have gotten sick too many times this year — the flu, a stomach virus, and of course coronavirus. Yuck. My immune system must be so weak right now. I am trying to improve my health by getting more sleep, drinking more water, and taking vitamins. I’ve always been skeptical of vitamins but they can’t hurt. Mary Ruth’s products gets really good reviews, as do Ritual’s. Currently debating between the two.

GEECHIE BOY GRITS // We have always only used Anson Mill grits (so delicious — also you must try their outrageously satisfying toasted oats!), but a reader wrote in about Geechie Boy and I’m intrigued.

AGUA BENDITA SWIMSUIT // To tuck away for next summer. I don’t usually fit well into this brand’s sizing (cut for tall women, I think!), but this suit is haunting me…

TORY BURCH TIE DYE LEGGINGS // These continuously sell out when restocked! These inexpensive scallop-trim ones are also darling, and people go wild over these $27 ones, which come in great colors.

ARTWORK FOR OUR MASTER BEDROOM // I have been loosely looking for some artwork to hang above the dresser in our master bedroom. I think Mr. Magpie would kill me if I suggested this hand-painted triptych, as he already complains that we have too much chinoiserie and too much blue in our house. I have long loved these textiles by Paule Marrot…perhaps I can convince him to go with one of those. They are stunning. And speaking of artwork, I am also considering this set of vintage white Majolica oyster plates. Wouldn’t they be unbelievable mounted on a wall in our dining room?!

What are you eyeing at the moment?

P.S. In the middle of things.

P.P.S. Recent Etsy finds.

P.P.P.S. Getting to know you.

Three posts in one day is a Magpie record but I literally HAD to let you know about the insane sale happening on one of my favorite high-end childrenswear brands, CPCKids, over at Zulily, a flash sale site similar to Rue La La for which you have to create an account to shop.

I just bought several pairs of these classic corduroy overalls for Hill for only $19 as well as these embroidered ones with mallards for $29 (love). I literally cannot believe the price — my heart is weirdly racing as I type this because just yesterday I had added several full-price pairs to my cart! So glad I waited for this insane sale to fall into my lap.

They also have gorgeous fair-isle sweaters (originally $98, now under $30) and darling plaid dresses ($19!!!!) as well as embroidered ones (like the one seen above) for fall.

I’ve also talked about this countless times, but these are the only shorts I buy for mini and they are INSANELY discounted right now — only $13.99 a pair! They are beautifully made and I love the traditional prints, slim fit, and short length. Just stocked up for next summer.

Finally, mini has owned this exact dress style in several prints, but I think I may need a second order to buy her this orange and blue check dress and Hill the coordinating jon jons — WAHOOWA!

Happy fall shopping!

P.S. More great fall outfits for toddler girls here.

P.P.S. Update post-publication per some questions: I find that CPC Kids runs a little bit small. If in doubt, size up.

I know from direct message, comment, and email that there are a lot of expecting mothers reading this blog. I thought I’d share some of my latest maternity finds here, although if you are new in these parts, I will repeat that my absolute favorite maternity finds were these David Lerner leggings (100% worth the investment — far superior to any other pair of maternity leggings on the market; I owned two pairs over the course of my two pregnancies and they still look good as new), Gap’s maternity tees, and Cosabella’s maternity pajamas (<<currently on sale! RUN!). I can’t recommend the pajamas enough. They are so soft and comfortable and I love the way the robe can be cinched above the bump to give you a little shape when you’re feeling like a big ball. They are also dreamy for post-partum and nursing-friendly. I owned several pairs and they were worth every last cent!

At any rate, other finds, and how I would wear them, in part inspired by the ultra chic Giovanna Battaglia Engelbert, who made pregnancy dressing as chic as can be…

AN ABSOLUTE ESSENTIAL — I HAD A BLACK DRESS NEARLY IDENTICAL TO THIS THAT I WORE SO MUCH MY SISTER OFFERED TO BURN IT FOR ME AFTER I DELIVERED HILL…I LIKE TO DRESS IT UP WITH AN HERMES SCARF OR SOME FLASHY MULES

ANOTHER STAPLE — THINKING BACK, I REALIZE I ALMOST ALWAYS GRAVITATED TOWARDS BLACK/WHITE/GRAY AND THEN WOULD DOLL MYSELF UP WITH TRENDY ACCESSORIES…THIS WOULD LOOK ADORABLE WITH JEANS (<<THESE WERE MY FAVORITE) AND LOAFERS (ALSO ALWAYS LOVE TODS AND THESE ARE ON SALE) FOR FALL

NON-MATERNITY, BUT NAILS THE GIOVANNA LOOK ABOVE, ESPECIALLY WITH A PAIR OF ROGER VIVIER FLATS OR MULES (WHICH I BELIEVE SHE IS WEARING)

THIS ADORABLE EMBROIDERED SWEATSHIRT FOR HOME

THIS SIMPLE LINEN EVERYDAY DRESS — VERY CHARLOTTE YORK IMHO

ANOTHER VERSATILE PIECE

DARLING STRIPED LINEN DRESS

THESE STRIPED COTTON NIGHTGOWNS GET AMAZING REVIEWS…I WANT ONE AND I’M NOT EVEN EXPECTING

THIS STRIPED PUFF-SLEEVED TEE

I WORE A DENIM SHIRT LIKE THIS FROM ASOS A LOT WITH BLACK LEGGINGS AND FUN STATEMENT SHOES

THIS IN THE NAVY STRIPE WITH CHANEL BALLET FLATS

THIS IS A NO BRAINER — LOOKS SO SOFT

POTENTIAL CONTENDER FOR A SHOWER DRESS (EVEN IF VIRTUAL / SOCIALLY-DISTANCED) — LOVE THAT THIS NAILS THE CURRENT TRENDS WITH ITS PUFF SLEEVES AND EYELET

Let me know if you’re looking for anything else in particular! Thinking of all my Magpie Mamas-To-Be today. You got this.

P.S. 9 things that surprised me about having a c-section.

P.P.S. On going from 0-1 vs 1-2 children (comments are a gold mine).

P.P.P.S. Building a layette for a new baby.

*Image above via Mara Hoffmann. You can buy the stunning architectural dress seen above here — a dreamy COVID-19 wedding option.

At 5 P.M. on the 14th of August, I sat on the couch of my living room wearing a navy lace evening dress and 4″ high Christian Louboutin mules and I watched my youngest sister — “my first baby,” as I would address her in a toast over Google Hangout an hour later — marry her partner on a 15″ Macbook screen.

For the entirety of the preceding day, my sisters and I had been texting one another in agita. There were many exclamation points, illogical GIFs, and all-caps HAHAHAs. We were a flurry of excitement. An hour before my sister’s digital ceremony, I FaceTimed one of my sisters. She and I were both fully dressed, hair blown out, eye makeup on, and we laughed at one another for our prematurity.

“So…do you want to just go to the Church early and sit in the pews?” she joked.

And me: “I don’t know what I should be doing right now, but I feel like it should be something besides ordering groceries on Amazon Prime.”

We were side-eyeing the meat of the matter, which was that we both felt strange and sad being apart from one another and especially from our beloved littlest sister on this most important of days. I had taken my daughter to the zoo earlier that morning, and as we watched sea lions sun themselves on boulders in a little pool on the East side of Central Park, bathing our hands in sanitizer, wearing masks, having purchased timed tickets from an atrocious online ticketing system that involved waiting in a virtual queue (!?), I had the distinct sense that I was living in an alternate universe. Mini had been exclaiming to no one and everyone as we walked around the near-empty zoo: “This is SO fun! This is SO fun!” Her voice was a good octave higher than its normal register, and I could tell from the funny, clipped wiggle of her movements that she was just barely containing her excitement at being alone with both of her parents, outside somewhere other than the greensward we’ve claimed for ourselves just off Central Park West, for the first time since early March. Meanwhile, my stomach churned with both excitement and the odd thought that maybe I shouldn’t be doing something so frivolous as visiting a zoo on the day of my sister’s wedding? I should have been fluffing a veil, or tracking down gluten-free crackers for somebody, or finding a safety pin, or weighing in on the color of somebody’s lipstick, or at the very least eating hotel room service on a plush arm chair while other people attended to my baby sister. The only strand of normalcy was the presence of butterflies in my stomach every time I thought about the toast my sisters and I would be delivering later that evening. I had rehearsed it to the point of rote memorization, repeating it while brushing my teeth, while cleaning the dishes, while selecting a dress from my closet, and still I felt a lightening bolt as I contemplated my words while idling in front of the grizzly bear at the Central Park Zoo. I am horrible at delivering toasts. I cry 100% of the time. I gave dozens of polished public talks in my past professional life, on occasion in front of audiences as large as 200!–but ask me to speak from my heart about somebody I love and I will weep through my words. So in a strange way I was reassured by those butterflies: they reminded me that still, in this strange time, under these remote circumstances, I was about to watch my sister get married, and I was about to experience all of the tenderness and love and excitement it would entail in even the best of conditions.

At the beginning of the ceremony, my father read the Exhortation Before Marriage, a relic of the pre-Vatican II Catholic Church. The rite is no longer a part of contemporary Catholic marriages, but it is poignant and beautiful and rich with truths that I am only now fully understanding, ten years into my own union with Mr. Magpie. It is written in surprisingly down-to-earth language despite its now-ancient-seeming origins, and its message is this: marriage is something serious, not to be undertaken lightly. My father has read it at some point in the wedding celebrations of each of his five children, and he and my mother had taken care to edit the address this last and final time he would deliver it to honor the fact that my sister was marrying a woman. I cried for most of it, for reasons both legible and illegible to me even now, nearly two weeks after. I was moved by the consistency of faith, these words having been read across generations within my family and at some of the happiest moments in my own life; by the constancy of love, as reflected so beautifully in the words of the exhortation; and by one particular section:

“This union, then, is most serious, because it will bind you together for life in a relationship so close and so intimate, that it will profoundly influence your whole future.

That future, with its hopes and disappointments, its successes and its failures, its pleasures and its pains, its joys and its sorrows, is hidden from your eyes.

…And so not knowing what is before you, you take each other for better or for worse, for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health, until death.

Truly, then, these words are most serious.”

To the COVID-era brides and grooms preparing for the wedding days,

To the COVID-era parents and siblings preparing to watch their loved ones marry one another through an iPad:

I once wrote that there was nothing that COVID has not touched. But sitting on my couch with my children and my husband at my side, listening to my father’s words and then to the most serious words my sister and her partner would in turn say to one another, I realized that neither COVID nor the isolation it has mandated we endure has touched the solemnity and beauty of the saying of vows.

Post-Scripts.

+Love in the time of corona.

+More airy white end-of-summer dresses to consider here and (!!) here. The latter is so Victorian chic. I’m so into this vibe!

+The Louboutins I referred to above are this exact pair (available in one size on eBay). They are one my most treasured possessions. I couldn’t even remember the last time I’d worn heels when I slipped them on, but it led me down a path to stare open-mouthed at these, which…I think I would break my ankles trying to wear but WOW.

+What to wear to a celebration in the era of COVID.

+Beautiful bridal finds here.

+Do I need this flounced knit sweater?! I’m so into the sleeve.

+Beyond darling jumper for a little girl.

+My nephew just celebrated his fifth birthday and we had a virtual Lego-building party in his honor. A few of the gifts we considered sending him (but we ended up buying him some on-theme cool new Legos):

THESE DOMINOES

THIS CASTLE

THIS PLAYMOBIL SET

MATCHBOX CARS AND PLAYTAPE

THIS COLOR-IN CAPE

+This bag is adorable and on sale.

+I had to buy these fall camping pajamas for micro (in the “sightseeing” pattern).

+Are we all ready for fall now? Good, because I’ve been collecting some favorite finds for autumn here.

+I can’t believe the price on this darling bed with built-in storage. So cute for a boy’s room.

+More nursery finds here.

+I have been seeing lock and key necklaces all over the place — this J. Crew submission is adorable and well-priced!

+Fall 2020 dresses and boots I love.

+High end looks for less.

What is your favorite snack, BTW? I saw the picture above of crostini with slabs of brie, blueberries, and a drizzle of honey and haven’t been able to unsee it since. Need.

While were’ hungry, a smattering of really good deals worth your consideration today…

+New markdowns at The Beaufort Bonnet Company. If you’ve been delaying the purchase of a back to school look, you may be rewarded by this sweet dress or this jon jon, both newly discounted. And if you are pregnant and expecting a boy, please snag a pair of these in the 0-3mo. They were so darling — Hill wore them in the hospital. I can barely look at the print without wanting to weep. FYI: these run really small and narrow, so he fit into the 0-3mo just after birth!

+Tory Burch’s private sale ends tonight. I can’t tell you how many messages I got raving about how flattering their Lipsi swimsuit is (now 50% off). More of my picks from this sale here.

+Shopbop just started early access to a new crop of sale items if you are a loyalty customer. Use code EARLY for 30% off this sweet Faithfull dress and this lovely everyday cross necklace, and 40% off this five-pack of Hanky Panky underwear and this ultra-chic, ultra-versatile LBD.

+These snowsuits (also available in gray) are the absolute best for little ones. They usually retail for over $100, but are curiously discounted to $39. They are so soft (fleece-lined) and so warm, and this brand is built to last. I had these in two sizes for Hill this past winter because I loved them so much. Note that Polarn O Pyret runs really big. I can’t endorse this brand more for snow gear in particular, but absolutely everything they make is top-notch and will last for multiple children’s worth of hand-me-downs.

+These Supergas for little ones are 50% off! So sweet.

+Not explicitly a sale item, but these wicker pumpkins from Target are selling quickly. (As are all children’s Halloween jammies!)

+Many of you (and your children) are Osmo fans — they are part of an Amazon deal of the day today!

It took me a long time to get through Isabel Wilkerson’s The Warmth of Other Suns, a historical account of the Great Migration (I started in June and did not finish until last week), but it was worth it. The book dislodges everything I thought I knew about the movement of Black Americans from the South to urban centers in the North and West in the 20th century by anchoring the phenomenon in the real, lived experience of three brave migrants who chose to leave their homes in Florida, Mississippi, and Louisiana in search of better and more equitable futures. The book is astonishingly beautiful — lyrical, balladic! — in tenor, and Wilkerson’s retelling of the biographies of these three individuals treats them with the dignity they deserved but did not receive during their lifetimes. I’ve never read anything quite like this book. For the most part, it felt in texture more like a novel, or a memoir. And it deftly acknowledges the complexity of this historical movement — accommodating its messiness and the fact that it cannot be reduced to a simple thesis because it was driven by the complex inner workings of complex human beings in complex socio-economic times — while also drawing broader conclusions that in fact thwart many of the commonly-received interpretations of the migration. I came to the book believing that the Great Migration was about cotton, economics, and the end of the final vestiges of slavery in the American South, and Wilkerson demonstrates just how over-simplistic that reading is.

The book also felt like the transcription of an oral history project. You could tell from the way it was written — from the hyper focus on minutiae like the specific foods they packed in shoeboxes on the trains North — that Wilkerson spent years and years listening to dozens and dozens of individual stories, and how lucky we are that she did. For one thing, by the time of the book’s publication, all three of its protagonists had passed away, as have — presumably — nearly all of the pioneers in the Great Migration that could “set the record straight” on how things actually felt at the time. Had they passed away without Wilkerson’s project, we would have lost an entire generation’s worth of firsthand stories about the Great Migration, which has proven to be one of the most powerful forces in shaping modern urban America.

The book is sprawling in a way that befits the scope of the movement and the complexity of the lives of its three protagonists. The only minor quibble I have is with its editor, as I found many redundant passages, especially in the second half of the book. (For example, we hear about Dr. Robert Foster’s grandson getting into Ivy league schools about three times within the span of ten pages, and each time, the information is presented as if new.) This made for occasionally over-dense and mildly frustrating reading.

All in, the book was a reminder — as I wrote a few weeks ago — that history is non-monolithic. History is messy because people are messy. We are driven by myriad seen and unseen forces. This book acknowledges and celebrates that truth.

Interestingly, I read this book while also listening to Andre Leon Talley’s memoir, The Chiffon Trenches, and I couldn’t have picked a better companion audiobook if I tried. Talley is himself a product of the Great Migration, having been raised in Jim Crow-era North Carolina before moving to New York City as a young man in pursuit of a better future for himself. He speaks candidly about the racism he endured throughout his career, and expresses a kind of emotional duality that Wilkerson describes as common among many migrants: he is both endeared to and repelled by his Southern roots. Talley’s memoir is fascinating, full of juicy intel on some of the fashion world’s biggest names (read: Anna Wintour, Anna Wintour, Anna Wintour) and what can only be described as a full-on, intense love affair with the craft of clothing. His writing is at its best when lingering over what people are wearing: these passages read like poetry, and in a startlingly non-trivial way. He is easy to love: principled but pragmatic. I left the book profoundly inspired by his example. (It was also a joy to hear him narrate his own memoir in the audiobook — his voice is so distinctive, dramatic, playful, self-aware.)

Have you read or listened to either of these books? What did you think?

Discussion Questions for the Warmth of Other Suns.

+Did you come into the book with an interpretation of what The Great Migration was? Did the book change that interpretation?

+Why do you think Wilkerson chose to follow the lives of Ida Mae, George, and Robert? Why them? Why three instead of two or five?

+Did you like the structure of the book? Why or why not? Why do you think Wilkerson chose to write it in this way?

+What do you think were the key motivators that led Ida Mae, George, and Robert to leave their homes in the South?

+There are many horrific sections of the book that demonstrate the violence and scope of racism in America. Did any of those sections surprise you or stick with you in a way that bears comment?

+Why do you think Wilkerson positioned Ida Mae, George, and Robert as “immigrants”?

+What portion of the book was most compelling to you?

Post-Scripts.

+I am currently enjoying The Heir Affair on my Kindle (a sequel to The Royal We — essentially, royal family fan fiction) and Bess Kalb’s Nobody Will Tell You This But Me on audiobook. The latter is absolutely charming thus far. In it, Kalb creatively splices voice messages and narration from the imagined perspective of her deceased grandmother to piece together a love story between grandmother and granddaughter.

+What I plan to read next: The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett (one of the few remaining unread books on my What to Read This Summer list) and, for fun, Lucy Foley’s newest thriller, The Guest List, which has been described as “Agatha-Christie-like.” Yes.

+What I plan to listen to next on audiobook: Save Me the Plums by Ruth Reichl.

+This pretty floral maxi gives me LSF vibes. Love the green!

+Such a good price for such darling quilted cosmetic kits in on-trend block print!

+Dying over Roller Rabbit’s latest print for children’s pajamas! Hill needs these.

+These gold bangles are so fun. I actually just ordered mini one of their children sized bangles as a gift for going back to school. Last year, I bought her this personalized cloud bracelet inscribed with a nickname we have for her. I don’t intend to make this a yearly thing, but I do think she’ll get a kick out of wearing a gold bangle as I wear a gold bangle daily now, too! (A 10 year anniversary gift from Mr. Magpie to add to my everyday jewelry stack.)

+Have I been living under a rock? I didn’t even know crib rail covers were a thing until I found these. I wish I’d known about them months ago because Hill is part beaver — he has gnawed the heck out of his crib rail! You can also find precious monogrammed styles here and here.

+More great Etsy finds here.

+Who is in your personal canon?

+A really good price on adorable swim trunks for a little boy (buy now, wear next summer), a precious $34 blue and white dress for a little lass, and $13 polos!!!

+ICYMI: this $65 top is a dead ringer for this Ulla Johnson statement.

+More high-end looks for less.

+This $200 wicker mirror is MAJOR.

+And this embellished sweater is also MAJOR.

+These sconces can be plugged into the wall, versus hard wired — amazing for achieving a custom look without the expense of tearing up your wall, hiring an electrician, etc.

+Some of my favorite passages ever.

+Adore this scalloped sheet set.

+$88 for these beyond adorable bow heels.

+Just ordered this concealer after so many rave reviews!

What are your favorite lipstick colors? Most days, I wear Bobbi Brown’s Extra Lip Tint (currently two for the price of one! — these sold out earlier in the Nordstrom sale but have been restocked!) in “Bare Pink,” which glides on like a balm but leaves the prettiest flush behind. It can be applied sans mirror. Love.

When I want a little more definition, I like Chantacaille’s Lip Chic in Bourbon Rose, which is similarly moisturizing in formula but imparts a bit more pigment (and the slightest hint of sheen), or Maybelline’s Color Sensational in Romantic Rose. Both of these look very natural on — sort of like a “turned up” or “more polished” version of my natural lip color.

And when I’m being playful, I love Nars in Roman Holiday or Sisley’s Lip Twist in Baby, both of which are semi-sheer and BRIGHT, Barbie pink.

When I’m doing a red lip (haven’t done this in literally a year, I think — sigh) for an evening out, I love Mac’s Lady Danger, which is more of an orange-y red and SO dramatic and fun. When I’m going for a dramatic color in a matte formula like this, I always start the night by applying this scrub, moisturizing with 8 Hour Cream, and then applying this lip primer, which a makeup artist once described as “velcro for lipstick.” It’s truly amazing!

I also have to say I am very impressed with Nars’ Liquid Lipstick for big events where you really want the lip color to stay and you don’t have the opportunity to constantly be checking your lip color in the mirror / reapplying. I recommended this for a friend’s wedding day and she said it was amazing — she barely had to reapply.

One color I’d love to try is Charlotte Tilbury’s best-selling Pillow Talk, which people rave about as the perfect nude lip color.

What about you?!

P.S. My favorite affordable beauty products.

My Latest Snag: Westman Atelier’s Vital Skin Foundation Stick.

I’ve been dying to try Westman Atelier’s heavily-touted line of cosmetics, and I finally snagged their well-reviewed Vital Skin Foundation stick. I’d never purchased any cosmetics from Credo Beauty, an online boutique featuring clean beauty products, but after hunting around, it was the only online store I could find that offered both a welcome discount (10% off with code CLEAN10) and a generous return policy, which was important to me as I’m not totally sure what color I am in the foundation. (Credo Beauty accepts returns within 30 days, even if the product has been opened and tested.) Anyhow, stay tuned — I’m excited to see whether it lives up to the hype!

P.S. More honest reviews of hyped beauty products here.

You’re Sooooo Popular: Frame’s Le Sylvie Crop Denim.

The most popular items on le blog this week:

+Frame’s Le Sylvie cropped denim, available on sale here and here. (More fresh denim for fall here.)

+This SEA-esque dress from J. Crew! OBSESSED.

+My favorite bra.

+An EPIC LBD for a formal occasion.

+My favorite running shoes.

+Ultra cute rain jacket for $30 for a toddler. (Comes in such good colors!)

+Really good floss. (No really – worth the upcharge.)

+Cheery block-print quilt.

+Well-priced block-print caftan.

Weekend Musings: Music That Overwhelms Me.

In his 20s, Mr. Magpie worked for a government consultancy that routinely raffled off tickets to various cultural events to its employees. We were gobsmacked by the fact that very few employees seemed to enter these lotteries, as Mr. Magpie and I won several times. The jackpot was two tickets to the Kennedy Center to hear Wynton Marsalis perform with the National Symphony Orchestra. We were young and frivolous and did not fully understand the rarified experience we were in for — but we relished the opportunity to get dressed up, hold hands on the broad terrace of the Kennedy Center, and enjoy lukewarm white wine out of plastic cups on the red carpeted corridor between the theatres. At the time, in order to dress the part at work, Mr. Magpie had acquired several new Zegna suits and a pair of Ferragamo dress shoes; I wore a strapless Milly dress and 4-inch Jimmy Choo sandals, my biggest fashion splurge and my deepest fashion pride to date–and I felt like a million bucks. Do you remember what that feels like, as a 23-year-old? The soaring and stirring sensation of being on the cusp of everything? The Potomac River spread out in front of us, and the sunset glowed orange for us, and we turned heads, and we thought: “We are something to see.”

That night, there was a performance of Duke Ellington’s “Single Petal of a Rose” and you could have heard a pin drop in the concert hall. No inopportune cough, no throat clearing, not a single shuffling in a single seat. I watched Mr. Magpie swallow and swallow and swallow and I knew he felt what I did, and what every last person in that audience must have, too: as though the very inside of my heart was outside of my body, floating around the room on every haunting note of that saxophone.

I felt small, in a good way–the way only a sweeping piece of music can make you feel: overwhelmed by the broad sweep of the world outside that had made such beauty possible; overcome with emotion.

Every now and then, the piece materializes in my headphones while I am walking Tilly or writing at my desk, and I am arrested. I feel the same smallness: the grateful feeling that there is so much left to experience in this life.

What music overwhelms you in this way?

P.S. Another song that makes me feel all the feels.

Post-Scripts.

+How are you doing?

+This magnatab toy is such a cool gift for a three year old — mini received one for her birthday and loves it. So does Hill, actually!

+Agua Bendita’s recent trunk show for Moda Operandi is breathtaking. I actually have purchased two of their dresses and neither fit me well proportionally (and would have cost a fortune to re-tailor to my dimensions). I think they are cut for taller folks. But my goodness is this gorgeous. I predict we will see everyone wearing this swimsuit next summer. I love that suit but I am dangerously close to buying this Tory Burch at 50% off and do I NEED multiple new bathing suits. (Yes.)

+Get the Agua Bendita look for less with this, this, or this!

+Things that mattered to me at 18.

+These personalized hats are in stock!!

+Adore this striped sweatshirt. I’d wear with white jeans and Chanel ballet flats.

+Love a classic pair of heels like these. Perfect heel height, versatile color, elegant pointed toe. But do I need to be a broken record and remind you that my absolute favorite workhorse heel is J. Crew’s Elsie, on sale in black here?!

+Adore this striped tee dress. So cute with some Supergas! A reader asked on a separate post if I recommended any striped tees besides Kule, and I wanted to also flag that I own a fleet of striped tees from J. Crew! Lesser quality than Kule but usually come in good colors and cuts, like this and this.

+Speaking of stripes, love joggers like these for Hill with a little white polo on top for post-bath lounging.

+Just a reminder that Sephora’s sale is still running through tomorrow! Perfect time to stock up on pricey essentials like my beloved facial cleanser.

+Amanda Lindroth’s near-iconic wrapped tumblers are 20% off! Just add to cart and discount will appear. Cute gift!

+This remains one of my favorite dresses for this summer!

+My latest roundup of Amazon finds.

+Just ordered Hill this cool little spoon/fork set, which I think will encourage him to start using utensils.

+The Petite Plume look for less!

+The best scented hand soaps.

+Only $149 for this designer polka dot dress.