I had a number of requests for Easter attire for kiddos!  I’ll start with what mini will be wearing: this darling Luli + Me dress.  I loved the delicate stitching!  I’ll pair it with Condor knee socks and Elephantito Mary Janes.

The Fashion Magpie Easter Baby Dress

The Fashion Magpie Baby Knee Socks The Fashion Magpie Baby Pram Shoes 1 The Fashion Magpie Baby Pram Shoes 2

Minimagpie Easter Bonnet Picks.

I’m debating whether or not she needs a bonnet — I’m so partial to big bows right now!  She has a sweet TBBC bonnet (you can get the look for less with this), but I also like this striped Mebi ($27), this delicate ruffled style ($22), and this uber-traditional white style ($21).

The Fashion Magpie Pink Baby Bonnet

The Fashion Magpie White Baby Bonnet

The Fashion Magpie Lace Baby Bonnet

You could always make things simple on yourself and buy this darling robin’s egg blue dress with coordinating bonnet ($47).  You’d have the chic-est babe in the pew, as ice blue is LA COULEUR du jour (more proof here).

The Fashion Magpie Mayoral Bonnet Outfit

Minimagpie Boy Easter Outfit Picks.

For boys, I like this darling set from Foque or this precious style from Luli + Me.  As you can see, I’m more on the traditional side of things, but if those are too frou-frou for your tastes (or your husband’s — I find a lot of men have strong opinions on baby clothes for boys!), this head-to-toe Polo look (seersucker!!!!) is too much!

The Fashion Magpie Baby Boy Easter Outfit

The Fashion Magpie Baby Boy Easter Outfit 2

Minimagpie Easter Dress Picks.

I also love this petal-collared dress, this sweet blue frock with its hand-stitched bunnies,  and this gingham bubble (<<$10!!!)

 

The Fashion Magpie Baby Girl Easter Dress Scalloped The Fashion Magpie Baby Girl Easter Bunny Dress The Fashion Magpie Baby Gingham Bubble

And how about these bunny shoes ($18)?!  (Get the look for even less with these.)

Finally, this bunny-print set ($34) is a no-brainer if you’re looking for something not overly fussy but Easter-appropriate.
The Fashion Magpie Bunny Print Dress

And, if you’re not a pastel person at all, this platinum-and-white situation is so chic, especially with those enormous bows on the shoulders!

The Fashion Magpie Baby Bubble

It’s meant to go hand in hand with this elegant personalized Easter basket!

Finally, for twins or close-in-age siblings, how about this bubble for him and this one for her?

Minimagpie Easter Basket Picks.

I also like this personalizable gingham style and this elegant hand-stitched style.  And if personalization ain’t in the cards/isn’t your thing, how adorable is this lamb basket or this chick one?

However, my personal top pick for Easter basket is this monogrammed style — not as pricey as some of the other options and — important for those of us tight on space — fabric/collapsible.

Minimagpie Easter Jammies Picks.

If you want to recreate the precious pic at the top of this post, snag this pair of jammies and pair with this stuffy!

I of course always love the prints TBBC puts out, especially these floral beauties, but I’m a little leery of them because I find their sizing runs SO small and narrow and mini is already outgrowing 12-18M clothes in NORMAL SIZES.  So does that mean she’d be an 18/24M?  I mean, I’ve purchased her several pairs of jammies from TBBC and the legs are SO skinny/tight on her!  And she’s not particularly chunky either.  I’m burned because I ordered her a pair of gorgeous monogrammed ones and by the time they arrived a few weeks later, she could barely fit into them.

I also love the Easter styles from Old Navy ($12!) — all three prints are adorable! — and, of course, Kissy Kissy always has sweet prints, like this for boys or this for girls.

Finally, this bunny-print pair is adorable (shown below)!

The Fashion Magpie Easter Baby PJs

 

The Fashion Magpie Easter Baby PJs Bunnies

 

Minimagpie Easter Basket Gift Picks.

+These bunny slippers. MEEP.

+Plastic easter eggs — maybe I’ll fill mine with puffs?  Mini actually has a few plastic eggs like these that came from a gift set and she LOVES when I open them up and then she helps me snap them closed.  (Taking things a step further, this egg toy would probably be well-loved by mini!)

+Peter Rabbit stuffy, maybe paired with this carrot teething toy.

+Books: not particularly Easter-y except for the bunny on the cover, but this has been one of mini’s favorite books since she was itty bitty.  She’s recently gotten very into Llama Llama, Red Pajama (she’ll turn the pages and sort of sing/mumble to herself — I think she’s emulating the rhythm of the words when I read it aloud to her!), so this Llama Llama Easter book seems right up her alley.  Karen Katz’s Lift the Flap books also tend to go over very well with her — something about the illustrations and colors grab her attention — so this one could be a winner.  Finally, for older kids, nothing beats a classic Peter Rabbit box set!

+Mini adores her Haba frog toy (it sort of rattles, and she likes to hold the rope arms), so this chick style would be a darling Easter gift.

+Finally, this bunny stuffy was the first toy mini ever received — my bestie bought it for her before she was born.  It is the softest, cuddliest thing.

+These darling bunny-shaped plates!!!!

P.S.  More warm weather mini picks.

P.P.S.  Whenever I re-read this post, I weep.  I can remember that tender anticipatory time before mini arrived so well and it is the sweetest.

P.P.P.S.  I love the classic styling of this rain slicker, and you can get the Minnow Swim look for less with this darling bathing suit!

P.P.P.P.S.  For parents short on space: this petite crib is stylish/modern and could fit a number of awkward spaces (since it’s round, it wouldn’t need to rest up flush against a wall, for example).

Do you have a song that belongs to you and your significant other?

I was reminded, while blissfully marching down memory lane last week, that “our song” was “I Like the Way You Move” by Outkast, from their Speakerboxxx album, which both Mr. Magpie and I loved.  [Ed. note: I am required to here run a correction to the fake news I published in this post that shares one of the all-time most cringe-worthy moments of my life, where I stated that Mr. Magpie’s “all-time favorite album” was Lauryn Hill’s Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.  Mr. Magpie came home from work that evening defiant: “That was NOT my favorite album,” he said flatly.  For this reason, I won’t state on the record that Speakerboxxx or Aquemini or ATLiens are among Mr. Magpie’s favorite albums, but…I’m pretty sure all three would rank highly.]

The lyrics of this song are FILTHY (<<I just re-read them and my face contorted semi-permanently into the shocked face emoji), but the beat is incredible and it transports me to warm-weather drives in Mr. Magpie’s boxy Jeep (nicknamed “Party Girl“), which he’d — improbably enough, given his Very Preppy sartorial preferences — had outfitted with a subwoofer and high-end speakers.  You could hear him coming from down the block:

But I know y’all wanted that 808
Can you feel that b-a-s-s, bass
But I know y’all wanted that 808
Can you feel that b-a-s-s, bass

I especially remember an evening not long after we started dating, when he took me to a house party back in Arlington, VA hosted by some of his high school friends.  I felt like a fish out of water, not knowing anyone and still so young, tender, halting in my relationship with Mr. Magpie — and then the song came on.  We had joked about it being our favorite song for some reason or another just a few days prior.  He looked at me from across the room, and it was one of the first moments in our relationship where I felt a thrilling sense of ownership, of intimacy with him: he was mine and I was his, anointed alongside the crass lyrics of Outkast.

So you can imagine that we were back to square one when invited to select a song for our first dance many years later.  Seven years later, to be exact.  Though who’s counting?  [Ed. note: I was.  I had wanted to marry Mr. Magpie since my fourth year of college — two years into dating — and would have married him right out of school, had he proposed.  But all things happen for a reason: our lengthy courtship meant that I had the opportunity to live with my best girlfriend, playing at adulthood while we were still babies, learning to care for our own apartment and deal with issues like mice and spiders all on our own.  It also meant that when we got married, we knew deep down in our souls that we were meant to be together.  Seven years of dating, interspersed with long distance, meant that we were playing for keeps.]

“What will be your first dance?” asked the manager representing the soul band we’d selected for our reception.  We laughed at the thought of ourselves shocking and disgusting all of our loved ones as we paraded out onto the elegant dancefloor of the crown-molding-heavy fanciness of my family’s country club.

“We’ll have to think on that.”

It didn’t take us long, though: we narrowed it down to Aretha Franklin’s “Baby, Baby, Baby,” which is what Mr. Magpie used to call me back then (nowadays, the peculiar and evolving array of nicknames we have for one another is both nauseating and illogical), and Otis Redding’s “Ton of Joy.”  At the end of the day, Otis won, because Mr. Magpie rightly pointed out that it would be easier to dance to its slightly more up-tempo rhythm, and Mr. Magpie was suuuurrrrrious about putting on a performance; we even took lessons.  And, in general, if there’s ever a question, just say yes to Otis Redding.  (How is it even possible for someone to have that amount of soul in his voice?  And he died at age 25!?  His voice has a lifetime and a half of heartache and experience in it.)

“Ton of Joy” is saved on my iPhone and it came on while I was shuffling through a playlist the other day, walking Tilly.  (FWIW, a recipe for feeling all the feels: turn on a nostalgic-leaning playlist and stroll through Central Park while it rains, as I did last Saturday.  As I made the familiar loop around Heckscher Ballfields, rain tapping my parka, the pathway clear ahead of me, and Otis bringing me back to my wedding night, I briefly assumed the emotionality of a pubescent teenager: I was a big heart, teetering around on stick figure legs.)  But I thought to myself: OK, setting lyrics aside, which is more “us”: Outkast or Otis?  Or, rather, how is it that this unlikely pair of performers form two of the tent-poles holding up the canopy of our story together?  The one all quick witted beat, the other slow, balladic soul-wrenching?  There’s something symmetric about it, honestly: it’s funny how the (in my opinion) cinematic story of our getting-together now has an appropriate soundtrack coming together…

What’s the story behind your song?

Cc: Mackenzie, who has a v. funny story about a v. unlikely song they played at her v. gorgeous wedding.

Post-Script

+GUYS, THIS FIELD JACKET IN THE BLUE!!!!  (Am I over-doing it on the ice blue?)

+This looks like a much-more-expensive SEA blouse I’ve been eyeing…but is less than $60!!

+Do I need a wine fridge?  [She asked to everyone and no one in particular.]  Hear me out: I had assumed that a wine fridge would be a major appliance and bear with it a major appliance pricetag, but was surprised to find several well-reviewed ones around $100.  Somehow, despite the fact that my family consists of 2.5 humans, our fridge is always stocked to capacity.  (We cook A LOT.  And there’s always a case or two of LaCroix stored in these, a few six-packs of beer, and an assortment of sparkling and white wine cluttering the shelves.)  I feel like removing the wine from the equation would be a huge space-saver…

+Another chic option if you’re on the white footwear trend.

+This is almost so perfect I can’t look directly at it.

+A SUPER affordable version of the Caroline Constas skirt I’ve been ogling.  (More items in my shopping cart in this post.)

+DYING OVER THIS TOP!

+One of my favorite pairs of sneakers ever, in some cool new colorways.

P.S.  ICYMI, how I met and fell in love with Mr. Magpie.  I’m now realizing I should have titled the post: “How I Met Your Father.”  HA.

P.P.S.  I v. much enjoyed your reactions to my country mouse / city mouse provocation.

P.P.P.S.  Another reflection on a couple’s chosen song — this time, one of my parents’.

SPRING!  IT’S COMING!  IT’S HAPPENING!

And at the verrrrry verrrrrry top of my lust list?  A pair of robin’s egg blue Ferragamo flats.  These and other cheerful spring picks below…(it’s been awhile since I did a 10 picks, hasn’t it?)

Pick No. 1: The Ferragamo Flats

My grandmother used to wear Ferragamo Flats and I always felt like they were the province of the over-60-set (ahem, women of a certain age).  I’ve since revised that misdirected observation, influenced by chic peas like LSD (shown above in her own pair!), and am absolutely in love with this particular pair, in part owing to that perfect of-the-moment ice-blue color, and in part owing to the styling below, with those raw-edged hem jeans from equally of-the-moment denim label Re/Done.  (I just snagged these in a similar light wash, with a similar hem situation, but in a skinny leg.  They fit like a dream and feel like leggings.  So comfortable!)

The Fashion Magpie Ferragamo Flats Blue

The Fashion Magpie Ferragamo Flats with Jeans

Pick No. 2: The Springtime Plates

I am dying over these floral/botanical/animal printed plates ($59 for set of 4).  How chic would they be on your springtime tabletop?

The Fashion Magpie Floral Plates

 

Pick No. 3: The Athena Procopiou Dress

Have you heard about the label Athena Procopiou?  I love all the ladylike whimsies — the sweet color palette, the bows, the flounces — and especially love this splashy maxi, and this darling mini!

The Fashion Magpie Athena Procopiou Dress

Pick No. 4: The Barbie Girl Shades

How can you resist?!  (And under $60!)

The Fashion Magpie Pink Sunglasses

Pick No. 5: The Frill-Sleeved Tunic

I love the drama of the sleeves on this sweet tunic!  This is the kind of thing I love to wear to Church on Sunday; I’d pair it with my Tory Burch pearl slides!  In a similar vein, how about this dramatically-sleeved tunic?

The Fashion Magpie White Dress

Pick No. 6: The Personalized Backpack

How sweet is this robin’s egg blue personalized backpack?  It’s for kids but…hmmmmmmm….I might need it.  And if the #soextra faux-Goyard iPhone case that I sport isn’t your style, but you’re looking for a personalized style, check out all of these by the same company!  I especially love the shadow text lettering options.

miniback-st-skb-go-1-gza-01_1

Pick No. 7: The Ladylike Swimsuit

J. Crew’s latest swimwear collection is…beyond.  I’m especially smitten with this asymmetrical bow-shouldered beauty in that pale blue!  I also like this in timeless white.  They remind me in ethos of the Marysia one-piece I wore in Naples recently!

The Fashion Magpie Blue Swimsuit 1

The Fashion Magpie Blue Swimsuit 2

Pick No. 8: The Open-Weave Knit

Taking some notes from Ganni, this sweater screams for warmer weather!

The Fashion Magpie Pink Sweater 1

Pick No. 9: The Dramatic Earring Situation

How epically romantic are these oversized floral tangly drops (under $30!!!)  I’m daydreaming of wearing them with this.

The Fashion Magpie Floral Earring 1

The Fashion Magpie Floral Earring 2

Pick No. 10: The Elephant Laundry Basket

How darling would this wicker basket be for mini’s nursery?

The Fashion Magpie Wicker Laundry Basket WhiteThe Fashion Magpie Wicker Laundry Basket

P.S. How fun are these sandals?  Love them in the blue.

P.P.S.  I found so many AMAZING party supplies on Amazon for mini’s upcoming birthday, but I’m most excited about these, which I’m going to use to box up a fancy cupcake for all of my guests!

When I was a third year in college nearly 15 years ago now (blblblb — where does the time go?), I splurged on a brand new Lilly Pulitzer dress and a coordinating straw clutch for Foxfields, a horse race that takes place every spring just outside Charlottesville, VA.  In actuality, the event has absolutely nothing to do with horses and absolutely everything to do with dressing to the nines, sipping mimosas, and living That Southern Life.  As an undergrad, the in-field tailgating set-ups sponsored by frats and sororities were, frankly, a depressing affair: heaps of Bodo’s bagels in crinkly brown paper bags, strong drinks poured out of plastic handles into tacky plastic tumblers emblazoned with Greek letters, aluminum pans of fried chicken.  On the outside of the track, however, families and alumni pulled out all the stops, setting out folding tables with tablecloths, floral arrangements, and even china (can you imagine?) to serve crabcakes and the like.  Even as undergraduates, Mr. Magpie and I would talk about “one day coming back and doing it up right,” like real adults.  And maybe one day we will, if we fulfill our sometime fantasy of living a rural life in Albemarle County.

If I did, I know exactly what I would wear, and it centers around one or several of these elegant accessories from Pamela Munson: I’m dying in particular over the clutch and the hat!

The Fashion Magpie Pamela Munson Straw Hat

The Fashion Magpie Pamela Munson Straw Clutch

The Fashion Magpie Pamela Munson Straw Bag

I had the good fortune of catching up with the founder of the eponymous line, Pam Munson, who launched her business last May, after more than a decade in the fashion industry.  I’m certain that many magpie moms like myself can relate to the transitional state in which she found herself when she launched her lovely line of accessories:

“Like many mothers, I found it challenging managing the demands of a corporate position with raising a young child,” Pam explained.  “I had the opportunity to transition from my role as head of sales at Oscar de la Renta to a part time, consultant position that afforded me more time with my daughter and provided the perspective and balance to pursue my true passion — straw accessories.”  I love that the challenge of balancing motherhood with career spurred the birth of something new that she had been passionate about for some time.  (I find myself in a similar situation right now!)

Pam grew up on Long Island but traveled frequently to visit her grandparents in Florida and the Bahamas.  Straw bags were something of a fashion staple for both her mother and grandmother in those tropical destinations, and she felt, these many years later, that there was an opportunity to create a straw collection that was classic with a dash of nostalgia.  The colors in her current collection are inspired by the East Coast (#love) and the hats are made here in New York by Lola Hats — be still my heart.

This post is not sponsored in any way; I just love these accessories and found the story of their lovely co-founder inspiring.  Check out her full collection here.

And FYI, I would pair my accessories with this Alice McCall eyelet jumpsuit and these Zimmermann sandals (heels are impractical at the muddy/grassy races).  TO DIE.

The Fashion Magpie Pamel Munson Straw Hat

The Fashion Magpie White Jumpsuit The Fashion Magpie Zimmermann Sandal 1 The Fashion Magpie Zimmermann Sandal 2

A couple of other chic options for spring races:

+This ladylike Lover dress.

+This very trendy floral lovely (puffed sleeves! off-the-shoulder! midi-length! floral print! yes yes yes yes yes yes yes!)

+This flounced seersucker (under $100!)

+This white midi dress (on sale for $107!) << I would dress this down with flat sandals and casual jewelry.

+This pretty Apiece Apart dress (on ridic sale for $128!)

+This bow-shouldered Rebecca Taylor. (<<would look epic against the pale pink Pamela Munson accessories).

+This striped skirt, with a white eyelet blouse of some kind!

P.S.  Lessons I’ve learned from being a part-time stay-at-home mom.

P.P.S.  A true love story.

P.P.P.S.  Micro-trends I’m loving.

Assuage your Monday doldrums with the gorgeous new arrivals at J. Crew — including the lovely striped halter-neck jumpsuit above.  (And, everything is 40% off with code 24HOURS!) I already ordered this petal pink raincoat (shown below), though I debated for a long time between the pink and the yellow, both of which are so fresh right now.  I love the idea of pairing it with olive green pants, or maybe petal pink pants for a monochrome look?

The Fashion Magpie JCrew Pink Parka

The Fashion Magpie JCrew Yellow Parka

I also love these mules in pink, paired with these ultra-covetable jeans and the $30 perfect white t-shirt I mentioned last week.

The Fashion Magpie Jcrew Pink Mules 1

The Fashion Magpie Jcrew Pink Mules 2

I am also contemplating this cabana striped blouse (love it in both the blue and pink stripe!) and this crewneck in the ice blue (color du jour); I’m having a hard time deciding whether to go with the J. Crew steal (with code, it’s under $50!) or this more expensive button-shouldered lovely from Petit Bateau.  And on that point — Shopbop is about to launch its “buy more, save more” event where you save 15% off orders over $200, 20% off over $500, etc, but you can access the promo early with code GOBIG18.  So now I’m wondering…do I need to buy the Petit Bateau sweater along with a couple of other items I’ve been eyeing to get the discount?  I’m also eyeing:

+this sweater — I LOVE lilac, and the sleeves are up my alley!;

+these hoop earrings in the white;

+this Caroline Constas skirt (<<epic; are we seeing a microtrend in the cabana stripes?!  I mean, we already tracked the vertical stripe trend, but these wide stripes are KILLING ME, SMALLS);

+this easy, ladylike midi dress;

+this darling striped OTS statement blouse.

Every Sunday, a small tornado tears through our apartment as I attempt to feed mini breakfast, clothe and preen the two of us, and hustle out the door before 8:15 a.m. to make 8:30 a.m. Mass.  It doesn’t sound hard on the surface of it, as mini wakes up around 7 — we have a whole hour and change to kill!  And yet, every Sunday at 8:11 a.m., I’m holding a hairbow in my mouth, pouring puffs into her snack catcher (<<possibly mini’s favorite belonging of all time), zipping up a boot, and keeping an eye on a very mobile mini.

Then we scoot up Columbus to 71st; Mr. Magpie and Tilly keep us company on the walk to Church because there is no ramp (!), and I need him to help lift the stroller up the four steps of the approach.  (The return trip is always the luck of the draw: is there a kind soul who might help me down the stairs?  If not, I unbuckle mini, place her on my hip, and drag our Bugaboo down the steps in ungainly new-mom pose.)

The past few Sundays, I’ve lingered in front of the Sandro shop en route to Mass.  There’s a bold red striped dress I can’t get over that they have proudly displayed in the front window.  I gravitate towards its unfussy, sophisticated womanliness and the brave cut of the sleeve; I love a dramatic line.  It reads WWII working woman, but with a distinctly 2018 twist owing to the shape.  (Also, who doesn’t look wonderful in a shirtdress?)  I ogle at it coming and going from Church and every time we head up that way to our wine store (67 St Wine).  Is it time to pull the trigger?

The Fashion Magpie Sandro Striped Dress 2

Just yesterday, as I was thumbing through the latest Bazaar, I lingered over Ralph Lauren’s latest campaign, which featured this similar “wide wale” stripe:

The Fashion Magpie Ralph Lauren Striped Suit 1

The Fashion Magpie Ralph Lauren Striped Suit 2

The Fashion Magpie Ralph Lauren Striped Suit 3

I’m v. into this vertical stripe situation.

Get the look for less with:

+This elegant striped shirtdress, currently 50% off!  Would be so chic for work!

+This vacation-ready Tracy Reese.

+This chic blouse ($60!)

+This $55 work-appropriate shirtdress, which looks a LOT like a style by Veronica Beard…

+This uber-dramatic, billowy blouse ($69).

+This off-the-shoulder number, perfect for summer BBQs and date nights (under $60!)

+This bow-cuffed button-down (under $50!)

+This flounced and striped beauty ($25!)

Finally, a couple of stripe-accented accessories to complete the look:

+This is very Gucci, but without the Gucci pricetag.

+This splurge-worthy Miu Miu.  (Shown below.)

+This darling mini straw bag.

The Fashion Magpie Miu Miu Striped Bag

P.S.  NOT vertically striped, but this darling minidress reminds me of a blouse I wanted v. badly from Self-Portrait.  Adorbs.  If you got great gams — show ’em off!

P.P.S.  If you want that Cult Gaia ark bag that everyone and her mom has been wearing the last season or two, but without the price tag, check out this!

P.P.P.S.  If you’re a monogramaholic, you might want to check this out.  And, unrelated, what are your thoughts on the polarizing book/tv show I mentioned last week?  It’s elicited a lot of interesting reactions…

My Latest Score: The $20 Face Lotion.

After raiding my mom’s cosmetics cabinet in Naples last week, I was inspired to test drive some new beauty products, and facial lotion was a natural opportunity since I was literally scraping the bottom of the barrel of my L’Occitane face cream.  Though I’ve been partial to L’Occitane for daily facial moisturization for the past several months (more on that and other skincare and cosmetic staples right herrrr), I thought I’d test drive a well-reviewed, less expensive moisturizer: Weleda’s Wild Rose Renewing Day Cream.  I’ll keep you posted on results, but I’m highly partial to rose as an ingredient given its anti-aging powers!

The Fashion Magpie Weleda Wild Rose Lotion

 

You’re Sooooo Popular: The Perfect Gift for a 1-Year-Old.

The most popular items on Le Blog this week:

+One of mini’s gifts for her upcoming birthday!

+Possibly the chicest flat of all time.

+Adorable, Marysia-like swimsuit for a fraction of the price.

+Convenient pantry organizer.

+One of the most convenient additions to my list of items I never travel without.

+Discounted cashmere WUT WUT.

+A super chic sneaker for spring.

#Turbothot: The Heuristics of Homer.

OK, the title of this turbothot is a touch on the pedantic side, but I can’t resist an opportunity for alliteration.  I promise I won’t be as stuffy in the meat of it here:

I’m halfway through An Odyssey, and I’m stuck.  It has all the hallmarks for being a Mapgie Must Read, as it’s written by an English professor, in memoir form, about his relationship with his father.  (Check, check, check.) And the writing is superb.  But I’m ensnared by a nagging technical detail I can’t unsee:

I did not know or recollect this, but Homer’s widely-studied epics (The Iliad, The Odyssey) were not actually authored by a single person; rather, the versions we read today are a pastiche of oral traditions and interpretations and re-interpretations by multiple translators, students, and professors that handed down and edited and translated the stories over time.  For this reason, it feels illogical and in fact rather absurdist to approach the text as a textualist would — that is to say, as a scholar solely concerned with the structure, diction, figurative techniques of the text itself, completely tuning out any of the historical context for the work, because it was not written by a single author with a focused stylistic intent.  And Mendelsohn is a huge textualist.  Almost nihilistic, to be honest — he picks away at every single element of any given line until there’s nothing left on the bone: “this line mirrors that line, and the word choice here is reflective of this literary lineage, and the description of the mother here parallels the use of this word there.”  It feels futile, to be honest, to exert so much energy on stylistic matters that were unlikely to have been crafted with such care; rather, the style is the result of hand-me-downs and edits and this person’s intuition and that person’s word preferences.  So, in a way, Homer’s magnum opus asserts its own heuristics — it’s own method for being read.  And to me, that method is not a textualist one.  It’s formalist, maybe: look at the broad plot points and the overall patterns that take shape in the narrative.

But then.

As I was explaining this to Mr. Magpie over dinner, I glanced up above our sideboard and noticed my Prada Marfa canvas print (similar one available here).  (And if you don’t know the story of the Prada Marfa installation, check it out here.)  And it occurred to me that so much of recent literary study has completely abolished the idea that the author controls the intention of the work itself; in the case of Prada Marfa, for example, most interpreted the artistic intent to be anti-consumerist, but there were those who viewed the installation as just the opposite: a celebration of capitalist values.  It was a reminder to me that the prevailing sentiment nowadays is that the reader/viewer is just as involved in the construction of meaning as the author/artist.  So far be it for me to criticize a gifted scholar like Mendelsohn, engaged as he is in constructing meaning from the organization of the Odyssey, a text that we have inherited from so many contributors and that he has ever right to interpret as he wishes.

Thoughts?  Reactions?  Should I go back to eating my dinner in silence as Mr. Magpie undoubtedly would have preferred?

 

#Shopaholic: The Straw Bucket Bag.

+For some reason this Muun bag is way less expensive than the rest…not a sermon, just a thought.

+Another contender for the floral hoop trend we chatted about yesterday!  (Under $60.)

+OK, these pants are ADORABLE.  I love the way they’re styled here, too — but they’d also look great with blush!

+I’m sorry for the deluge of shades in the past week or two (can you tell I’m ready for warm weather?), but these are SO FUN.

+I like the distressing on this affordable denim jacket.

+These crewneck sweaters are marked down to $41 and come in the greatest rainbow of colors — I like the blush pink and the heather gray, and imagine wearing them with distressed denim (<<these are my all-time favorites) and ladylike flats (<<at the top of my lust list).

+I already write a lot…like, a lot a lot…but I’m curious about this.  Does anyone use one of these??

P.S.  A true love story.

P.P.S.  Did y’all meet my dear friend Erin?

When Mr. Magpie and I are feeling especially world-weary, we wax poetic on a shared vision of bucolic bliss in rural Virginia.  We imagine ourselves living in a squat farmhouse on a verdant, undulating plot in Appalachia, surviving off of cottage industries and the fat of the land.  (Incidentally, I’ll take this one pls and thank you — love those built-in bookshelves!)  Mr. Magpie enjoys the meditative labor associated with yardwork and gardening, and I’m drawn to the quietude and simplicity of an existence devoid of throngs of people and especially the coddled, rehearsed self-importance we find so distastefully prevalent across so many of the people we’ve met in so many of the industries that crowd the large cities in which we’ve been blessed and cursed to live.  My foibles are many, and I am not absolved of this particular sin either, but I aspire to live a life free of haughtiness and pretension.  Is there anything worse than being made to feel a rube?  An outsider?  An idiot for not knowing the patois, or conforming to certain practices, or recognizing the arbitrary order of operations that everyone else seems to know?  (FWIW, this is why I’m skeptical of the success of start-ups like Class Pass, promising and enticing though they may seem: I think they underestimate that many of us find it daunting to assimilate the idiosyncracies of a new gym/studio every other day of the week, casting quiet glances around the locker room to observe whether the classmates wear socks or bare feet; whether phones are permitted in the room; which mats to use; what to wear; where to sit; how to clip in; how to turn on; where the towels and water are.  Then we return a few days later with the put-upon airs of a veteran: blank eyes calmly stowing our belongings as we pretend not to see a fellow newbie cast her own furtive, unknowing glances around the room.)  One of my longest-running, deepest-seated bugaboos is the casual use of acronyms and argot in a mixed audience: “Oh, we just ran the CPDs and it’s all good.”  “What are the KPIs that matter?  What are your CACs?” “I just joined the PLS, and two guys from JDD told me…”

…You know.

The insular jargon that leaves you feeling three bricks shy of a full load.

I’ve written about this in the past — how language can fence people in and out — and could easily bang on about the topic ad nauseum, but the point here is that there are days and weeks and even months where Mr. Magpie and I cotton to a vision of a retiring, quiet country lifestyle free of the rarified pretense of big city life.

A friend recently asked how I felt after we dissolved our business.  “Mixed emotions,” I said.  “Bitter, excited, nostalgic, relieved, sad, ready for something new, happy for the opportunity to write and stay at home.”  The non-sequiturs poured out, litany-like, before I concluded: “I don’t know.  Sometimes we just want to wipe our hands and move to the country.  Do something completely different.  Buy some land, start a farmstand or something.”

“Could you really do that?” she asked.  “My brother lives on a farm and it is lonely out there.  I’m there for only an hour and I start to get itchy.  And it puts pressure on the relationships with the people you live with.”

I chewed on this.

There’s no question that Mr. Magpie and I would be fine — in fact, we’d probably thrive in isolation.  We just lived through the pressure cooker of starting, running, and dissolving a business together while getting pregnant and having a baby together and all of the emotional, financial, and intellectual friction that those endeavors entail — and we came out on the other end stronger.  In fact, at the risk of sounding cloying, I’ll admit that one of the hardest parts of this transition has been going from spending close to all of our time together to only a few hours a day together.  But it dawned on me that, of all of the places I have lived thus far, New York is easily my favorite.  There’s no two ways about it.  So how would I fare, moving from the magical hustle and bustle of one of the most densely populated cities in the world, with all of its cultural amenities and clashes, to a sparsely populated rurality?

I’m undecided on this front.  Could I do it?  In some ways, I find myself well-suited to a slower paced, more contemplative lifestyle, with lots of time and space to sit and write, uninterrupted.  But in other ways, I think I’d drive myself crazy, given my predisposition to overstuffing my days and keeping myself busy, flitting around from errand to errand, bakery to grocery, Gymboree to Central Park.

What about you?  Are you a country mouse or a city mouse?  Can you be both?

Post-Script.

+On the country mouse side of things: channeling Rosie the Riveter, I recently wore this headband in an Instastory (P.S. – I have updated my Insta profile to include links to some of the products I feature in my Instastories and other recent discoveries!) and had lots of questions about it.  I love the headband trend!

+On the city mouse side of things: I stopped by the J. Crew in the Time Warner building a week or two ago and these mules are SO chic in person!  Then I saw a very chic lady of a certain age wearing them in the airport en route to Naples with dark-wash denim and a simple white button-down and was SOLD.  So chic!

+Does anyone have experience with the skincare brand Dr. Jart?  This is in my cart RN after reading rave reviews.

+Someone recently told me that this is the secret to the perfect blowout.  I’m going to test it out…

+I love the lightweightness of this transition-to-summer sweater, and the textures/colors are so fun!

+I saw my new friend, the gorgeous Grace of The Stripe, looking like a SMOKESHOW wearing this dress in an Instastory and immediately added it to my shopping cart for a future date night or evening out.  (Under $130!)

+I just wrote about white footwear yesterday and needed to add this as a contender: I LOVE HOW THESE JEANS ARE STYLED, WITH THESE STARK WHITE HEELS ($120).  SO GOOD.

+How stunning is this calligraphy?!?

P.S.  I hate these words.

P.P.S.  A recipe for a rainy day.

I’ve received a number of requests for posts on warm weather wardrobes for our minis, so I thought I’d share a roundup of items on mini’s wishlist/a couple of sources for amazing kids’ finds, including the darling pajamas from Petite Plume, shown above.

Mini Footwear.

+My strategy is usually to buy two pairs of dress shoes in neutral colors like white or beige/taupe/ivory.  Don’t discount beige/taupe situation!  It might sound “old” or “mature” for a baby but it looks super classy, and you can always snag a coordinating bow and add the shoes and bow to a solid-colored dress to make it work.  Last year, mini wore this pair of pram shoes from La Coqueta quite a bit.  This year, I bought her a pair of Elephantitos in white, and I’m torn between these in ivory or these in red.  (These would work for little boys, too — Prince George wore them recently with knee socks!)

+Speaking of socks, my go-to brands for mini’s hosiery are Condor for knee socks (love the ones with bows and pom poms! << thanks to a reader for recommending this brand a few months back!) and Jefferies for turn cuff and eyelet-trimmed styles.  I also like Jefferies’ cable knit tights — mini has a number of pairs in white.

+I bought mini a pair of Saltwater sandals for the trip to Naples, but never actually ended up putting them on her; it was hot and she didn’t need anything on her feet since we were mainly at home/at the pool.

+Mini also owns a pair of Freshly Picked mocs and Tom’s crib shoes in pink that I throw on for more casual dates — I assume she’ll wear these more often now that it’s getting too warm for her Donsje lamb booties, which I DIE OVER.

Mini Swimwear.

+I have a couple of Sal E Pimenta swimsuits for mini — their prints and cuts are TOO MUCH.  I just die. D.I.E. I mean…THIS! To get the look for less, check out some of these prints/patterns from Carter’s, like the two-tone pink one with ruffles or the flamingo one.  Adorable!

+I would also love one of these Minnow Swim suits for mini — so classic and darling!  Or how about this coordinating swimsuit + towel situation?!

+For boys, I like these, these, or these.

+For coverups, I have my eye on this spendy bow-bedecked style and this classic striped variation (love that it has a hood!).  OR one of these fun printed kurtas from RRR.  I also love this gender-neutral shark printed one!

Mini Outerwear.

+During these transition-to-summer months, I find mini’s Petit Bateau raincoat coming in handy.  It’s the perfect weight for a cooler evening, with the added bonus of doubling for inclement weather.  I also love this darling cherry-print style!  Get the look for less with this classic yellow slicker or this printed Patagonia.

+In general, my strategy for buying clothes for mini is to stock up at the end of each season for the following year.  I mean, how cute is this Patagonia coat, now on sale?!

Mini Everyday Wear.

+Every baby needs a PixieLily sunsuit!  I love the retro styling of this brand.  (A couple of their cherry-print pieces from last season are on sale here!)

+One-pieces can simplify life: consider this bubble or this romper or this floral-print bubble — too much.  LOVE.  And for boys: THIS.

+Overalls or jumpers (<<on super sale!) layered over pima cotton bodysuits (<<I own this in multiples!)

Mini Special Occasion Wear.

+I love sailor-inspired dresses — this one is on my list, with an oversized white bow.

+This country club-ready collared dress (<< on sale!)

+This petal-trim dress (to die!) from one of my favorite baby brands — or this one by the same brand for boys.

+I’ve purchased a handful of pieces from La Coqueta over the past year and they’re stunning.  I love these sets in particular.

 

Mini Sleepwear.

+A fresh summer print like these berries or these lemons!

+RRR’s prints can’t be beat.

+I got mini a pair of these in stark white and am obsessed.  Nothing cuter than a Gerber baby in all white!

+Petite Plume does traditional suiting pajamas THE BEST  (shown at top!)

P.S.  Eurobaby inspo and Dixie baby inspo!  Some of the links may be outdated, but there are some additional online boutiques/brands for babies that may be up your alley!

I’ve had fun showcasing some of the micro-trends I’ve been tracking lately (also, this; if you follow me on Instastory, you know I wore this exact style yesterday + kinda loved it) — do you like these features?  (She asked, blindly, out into the ether. << Please tell me your thoughts!  I love your reactions, especially to posts like this one.  It seems I have a little tribe of private pollies just like me reading this bloglet!  Are y’all also sometime-rule-followers like me?)  I used to dress with a greater emphasis on tradition (think pearls and shirtdresses), but the last few years, I’ve evolved to embrace a lot of trendier looks, too.  I’ve become more confident and risk-tolerant in all aspects of my life, I suppose.

At any rate, a few trendy items on le radar maintenant:

Trend No. 1: The Perfect White Tee

In my quest for the perfect white tee, I apparently totally missed the boat on the t-shirt du jour: Hanes x Karla’s crewneck.  Designed by celebrity stylist Karla Welsh in a capsule collection of t-shirts that include a style inspired by none other than Justin Bieber, and modeled by the stunning Kaia Gerber (Cindy Crawford’s daughter!), this tee-shirt boasts more than just celebrity provenance: “I wanted a shirt that I saw on all the heroines in movies from Grace Kelly to Winona Ryder. Tight neck, fitted through body, and a sleeve that’s just right.”  Um, yes pls.

The Fashion Magpie Hanes Tshirt x Karla

Trend No. 2: The Golden Goose Sneaks

Sorry/not sorry if I’ve beaten you over the head with this one, but I loved this featurette on the versatile coolness of my Golden Goose sneakers (<<this is the exact pair I own, and I like them because they aren’t quite as distressed as some of the other models), and especially the top snap below, where they’re featured with this epic The Row satin clutch.  The juxtaposition of high-end silk refinement with urban distressing = molto bene.

The Fashion Magpie Golden Goose Sneakers 1

The Fashion Magpie Golden Goose Sneakers 2

I have gotten a TON of emails and DMs asking whether these shoes are “worth it.”  My truthful response is if you’re living a life parallel to my own, they are — but it all depends on lifestyle and life stage.  Five years ago, I would have said that a pair of Manolo Blahnik BBs  (that pink tho…!) were “worth it” because I was dressing up for work, attending work functions, and delivering presentations, and heels were not only appropriate but often the center-point of an otherwise conservative look.  A year ago, I would have said that a pair of mules were “worth it” because I was massively pregnant and couldn’t be bothered with laces or bending over, period.  Nowadays, when I work from home/coffee shops or chase and stroll my daughter around Manhattan, chic sneakers are LE TICKET.  They make feel cooler and more put-together than I would wearing any other “athletic” shoe, but they’re more practical than a flat.  I wear them constantly, and intend to continue to do so with my spring wardrobe.  I have a hunch I’ll like them just as much with the jeans and sweaters I’m wearing now (I like wearing this pearl-studded sweater with my GGs because of the juxtaposition; uptown on the top, downtown at the feet!) as I will with throw-n-go tunics and striped t-shirt dresses (<<I need this, like, yesterday) in the early days of spring.  (I also was BIG into joveralls last season…and may need to add this pair to the collezione, to be sported with my GGs.)

Also — you can find select colors/sizes on sale here, here, and here (<<a good girlfriend of mine just bought these!).

And — if GGs are out of budget, consider a pair of Vejas; they have a similar “street cred” vibe going.

Trend No. 3: Hoops?!

I almost can’t write this section with a straight face because:

“If only you knew how mean she really is?  You know that I’m not allowed to wear hoop earrings, right?  Two years ago she told me hoops earrings were her thing and I wasn’t allowed to wear them anymore. And then for Hanukkah, my parents got me this pair of really expensive white gold hoops and I had to pretend like I didn’t even like them and…it was so sad.”

Mean Girls, eternal source of wonderful quotes reflecting the inanity of teendom

But surrrriously: the 90s have been back in a big way, and you don’t think we’d enjoy this throwback without HOOPS, right?

The Fashion Magpie Hoop Trend 1

My top picks are these pearl ones, these lucite ones, these glitzy ones, and these simple gold ones.

Floral earrings are also maj this season — cue Rebecca de Ravenel’s enormous floral studs, which have been everywhere!  Get the look for less with these or these.

Or, combine the hoop and floral trends with these (<<budget buy!), these (reasonably priced), or these (<<splurge OMG OMG).

Trend No. 4: White Leather Footwear

I remember scrunching up my nose at the white boot trend from last season — I’m too practical after multiple years of Chicago winters.  White boots in a foot of snow or a few inches of sludge?  No and no.  However, now that I’m in a slightly more temperate climate with longer seasons, I am more into it — but less in the boot category and more in the loafer section.  See below from NYFW just a few weeks ago:

The Fashion Magpie White Leather

LOVE.  I snagged this affordable J. Crew pair and intend to wear with light-wash denim, although I weighed the pros and cons of splurging on a pair of white Tod’s instead (<<I love my orange pebbled leather Tod’s!).  These look SUPER similar to the Tod’s, but at a fraction of the price — but at the end of the day, I liked the slightly masculine feel of the J. Crew puppies.  I also love these fashion-forward modestly heeled beauties and these timeless Guccis.

Trend No. 5: The Staud Bag.

I’ve featured this brand in the past, but I feel like Staud is having a MAJ moment this season.  A lot of fashionistas are flocking to this macrame and leather bag, but it’s just not my steez.  I prefer the simple, clean lines of their Bissett bucket bag ($350), shown during NYFW below.  It’s like the new Simon Miller bag (from last season).

The Fashion Magpie Staud Bucket Bag

The Fashion Magpie Staud Bissett Bag

Personally, though, I’m going to have a very hard time convincing myself not to buy a Muun bag if I buy another bucket bag in the near future — I’m obsessed with this style and this style.  But, let’s be clear: I need another straw bucket bag like I need a hole in my head; Amanda Lindroth generously sent me one of these bags last year and I wore it constantly!

P.S. This cashmere hoodie is marked way down in select colors.  I like the idea of layering it under a denim jacket.

P.P.S.  Thanks for all of your sweet reactions to my misty-eyed recollection on meeting Mr. Magpie.  If you liked that, you might also like my post on our wedding or that time I almost lost my wedding band and engagement ring…!

We’re back from vacation — our first since mini was born nearly a year ago! Ay ay ay!  We visited my parents, who have a beautiful winter home in Naples, Florida, and it was balmy and sunny and we ate so well (stone crab claws!  fennel-flecked italian sausage on the grill!  big eye tuna in a basil marinade!  juicy shrimp in butter and garlic! mint chip gelato!  wedges of melon!  flakey pompano cooked until crispy in butter on the stovetop, capped off with fresh lemon!) and drank so well (my mother has excellent taste in Sauvignon Blanc, or “S.B.,” as they call it) and did not sleep so well, as mini had trouble adjusting to sleep in her portable crib and woke up every two hours or so at night.  On the final morning, as we scurried about, rounding up toys and packing snacks for the flight while keeping an eye on a very mobile mini, my  father observed: “Vacation’s not really vacation anymore with a baby, is it?” I had been trying not to see things in that light, but the dynamic certainly has changed: we’re in a whole new season of life.  Still, the trip offered a number of delicious luxuries, like an hour-long pilates class, a trip to the grocery sans baby, an afternoon in a cabana at the pool, and a four-mile walk around my parents’ palm-tree-lined development while mini snoozed in her stroller, during which Mr. Magpie and I talked about nothing and everything.

At any rate, a couple of discoveries from this trip:

+My mother let me raid her department-store-like cosmetics cabinet, and I came across a few new obsessions, and at the top of that list is the Belif True Tincture Cleansing Stick.  It’s like a ginormous stick of chapstick that you glide over damp skin; it lathers up nicely and then you rinse it off with warm water.  I couldn’t believe how clean my skin felt afterward — it left a feeling of squeaky clean tightness that I rather like in a cleanser.  A great travel pick, since it’s not a liquid and therefore not a part of the old TSA 3 oz or less category of concern.  (The price is also enticing!)  I also very much enjoyed her Laura Mercier rose oil, a more affordable but no less effective variation on the Chantecaille original that I have splurged on from time to time.  Finally, I found a sample of Davines’ Love conditioner (smaller sized sample here) in the shower and my hair has never felt softer — this, despite multiple trips into chlorine-treated poolwater!

+This tennis-inspired contrast-edged t-shirt brought to mind a Royal Tenenbaums vibe had to be mine.  I snagged that, along with this simple henley tee in the heather gray.  I have found myself living in these shirts with distressed jeans the past few weeks.

+I mentioned that Outnet has a number of chic Dodo Bar Or finds recently, and then I came across this lookalike style on sale for $87 for those of you still struggling to pony up over $300 for a dress (on sale!)

+Florida-inspired, I suppose — these heels are EPIC.  Pair with a simple LBD and huge statement shades.

+OK, these espadrilles are too good.  They remind me of Christina Bryant’s global chic aesthetic!

+I nearly always travel in an olive green anorak — the perfect traveling companion, as it’s lightweight enough to throw on over a sundress after the sun sets in a warm-weather location, versatile enough to weather rain or wind, and compact/easy to fold and stash when not in use.  Mine is an old J. Crew style, but I really like the length and color of this $88 Everlane find (hood FTW!).  I particularly appreciated the easy-to-access, sizable pockets on this trip — I stashed sanitizing wipes (<< the best; a passerby commented: “woah, this part of the plane smells like a spa!”), boarding passes, and my phone in them.  I wore this, a frilly white blouse similar to this, jeans, and my go-to mules on both travel days and felt pulled-together but practically-dressed.  I swapped out my usual diaper bag for my zipper-top Cuyana because it’s bigger and the zipper top is CLUTCH so you can zip it closed and toss it under the seat or throw it over your shoulder without worrying about things flying out.  I also like the little pocket on the inside of the Cuyana — the right size for my phone and other must-have-close-by items.

+I saw a kid with one of these ride-on suitcases in the airport — genius and super cute.

+The most random thing ever, but I’m contemplating getting one of these for our shower, as it has no cut-out or ledge to assist with shaving.  Just read the reviews!!!  I also feel like it’s chic in a spa kind of way…

+Currently devouring this.

P.S.  8 things I never travel without.

P.P.S.  What I want to wear RN.

P.P.P.S.  That time I bowed to Caroline Kennedy

 

It’s not often I’m asked how I met Mr. Magpie; we’ve been together for almost half my life and we are old news.  But I recently had occasion to walk down memory lane when a new friend asked after our story, which always begins with this: I met my would-be father-in-law the same day I met my would-be husband, at a high school graduation party for my best friend at the time, M.

It’s funny to think back on this — something Shakespearean about it, really — because in spite of the fact that I spent close to every weekend with M., I’d never met or even really heard anything about Mr. Magpie.  M. had grown up with him; their parents had been tight-knit when they were young, and they trick-or-treated together and attended parties together and dined out together and were offered pizza and a movie together in one or the other family’s basements while the parents shucked blue crabs or downed gin and tonics or talked into the the slurry-sticky-thick air of a Washington summer night.  In short, they spent a lot of their youths together.  Their families imagined that one day M. would marry Mr. Magpie — only, back then, of course, he wasn’t Mr. Magpie; he was Landon, the deeply tanned, athletic-looking tall-drink-of-water I couldn’t stop staring at.  And I was about to become the interloper in what might have been a romantic story of two childhood friends ending up together.

Landon was, by all accounts, A Babe with a capital B.  This is a fact.  (The picture at the top of this post was actually taken a few years after we graduated from college, and by the incredible photojournalist Andrew Harnik, whose courtly invitation to an awards ceremony in D.C. changed my life, but it captures my young Landon so well.)  I would later discover that he had a high school fan club — a group of sophomores who swooned over his every word and smile — and that even girls at the rival public high school in Arlington knew about him and his movie star good looks.  On that particular day, he wore an olive-green Ralph Lauren button-down with a navy polo player embroidered on the chest, the sleeves rolled up casually to reveal his tanned forearms, and I remember noticing — when M. scuttled me over to make introductions — that it brought out the hazel in his eyes.

I was ecstatic to learn that he was a rising junior at UVA; I was preparing for my first year there and my imagination immediately got to work envisioning what life might be like with an older, more mature (HAHA) fellow Wahoo to parade me around Grounds and take me out to dinner on The Corner and show me the ropes when it came to tailgating for football games.  I can’t for the life of me remember what we talked about, though I know we were engaged in conversation for at least 10 or 20 minutes — I principally recall the misty hazel of his eyes and the swatting away of mosquitoes while his father tapped on the glass from the inside of the kitchen and made a kissy face intended to embarrass him.

“Oh, that’s my Dad,” he said, turning red in spite of himself.  “We should probably get back inside.”  He gestured at the mosquitoes around us.

And that was that.  I didn’t see him the rest of the night and I tried — with difficulty — to play it cool when the girlfriends with whom I’d carpooled to the party peppered me with questions on the ride back home.

Landon, I thought that night as I put in my retainer and curled up under the floral comforter of my childhood bedroom.  I am in love.

We didn’t get together for two years.

We ran into one another once very early into my first year at a football game, and he was polite but short — “good to see you,” tossed over his shoulder as he trailed after his friends.  We would IM one another every now and then — he used a hideously thick blue italicized font and left bro-y away messages like “gym” or “class” or the oh-so-descriptive “away” — and one evening I worked up the courage to ask him to buy me a six-pack of hard lemonades for an upcoming football game tailgate.  (Sorry, Mom, if you’re reading this.)  He obliged, and I still remember him careening up the drive to my un-cool “new dorm” like it was yesterday (at UVA, the cool kids stay in “old dorms” closer to the center of Grounds and they know to request “old dorms” when they register because…well, how do cool kids know these things?  Older brothers?  Word of mouth?  I, of course, lived in the dorky “new dorms,” as I had been oblivious to the social implications for said decision — though, in my defense, I was forced to live there because I was an Echols Scholar, part of a special program that waived area requirements in order to enable high performing high school students to chart their own courses of study — which, incidentally, I rather regret because I wish I had been required to take college-level mathematics!).  At any rate, he was in his boxy black Jeep Cherokee, music blasting and UVA hat low over his eyes, and he came up to my dorm to deliver my bounty.  I couldn’t figure out how to get him to stick around; we chatted briefly and he mentioned how embarrassing it had been to buy hard lemonade, and that he’d needed to barricade it with a few cases of Bud Heavy to compensate.  We laughed.

We didn’t see one another for several more months — until I rushed sororities that spring.  Part of the pledging process involved filling out a form listing all of your favorite foods, drinks, colors, and any crushes you had.  Then, your “big sister” would use that information to arrange all kinds of elaborate shenanigans for you — special baskets full of your favorite foods and drinks, surprise lunches with said crushes, wine tastings, balloons, special t-shirts, etc, etc. On my form, next to the “crushes” line, I wrote: “I’m going to marry Landon Shoop, third year e-schooler.”  (Droopy hearts everywhere.)

I was floored when he showed up to take me out to a surprise lunch and was so nervous I didn’t eat more than a spoonful of the soup I’d ordered from Take It Away.  (Who orders soup from Take It Away anyway?)  I remember rushing back to my dorm room and pecking out an email to M.: “You won’t believe it, but LANDON just took me to lunch.  But he was kinda forced to because it’s all part of big sis week.  BUT STILL.”  A few days later, I opened a card from M.: she’d cut out a picture of Landon’s face and pasted it into a picture with me.  Underneath, she wrote: “MR. AND MRS. SHOOP.”

And then, on bid night, Landon showed up at the house party with a smile.  “Your big sis invited me,” he said, casually.  He was wearing a dark brown leather bomber jacket and a navy blue baseball hat and I could hardly believe that this third year god was spending a part of his evening with me.

Things quickly unraveled, though — he was uninterested in dancing (“you do your thing!” he said, shooing me away) and more engaged in chatting with the buddy he’d arrived with.  Within an hour, he let me know he was peeling off.

I remember sending M. an email that evening: “He’s just not into me.”

Now, Landon routinely tells the story as follows: “I wanted to let her do her thing.  I liked her a lot, but she was a first year — she needed to experience college before we could start dating.”

I do not believe this.  Because the minute I started dating a different boy a few weeks later — a fratty mcfratterson whom I won’t say much about except for that he was funny and awkward and wore outlandishly preppy outfits — Landon started coming around.  It began with casual lunches: “Hey, do you wanna try that new place on the Mall?”  And then we started to pal around in the evenings, too — meeting up at house parties and tailgates and the chaotically bad idea known as dollar pitcher nights.  (Mom, for the record, I did not drink beer.)  We carpooled to and from D.C. together.  We were both dating different people at that time and we pretended as though we were “just really good friends,” with no romantic feelings towards one another.

And then one night, we were walking home from a party together on 14th street.  We were with friends, but we hung back, and at some point, he reached out and started holding my hand.  I have, on several occasions in my life, felt something akin to a lightening bolt in my stomach.  I felt it in the days leading up to our wedding, and when I walked on stage to deliver a talk to 200 people, and many times in the weeks leading up to mini’s birth — part exhilaration, part nerves, part breathless, and open-hearted awe.  But the first time I ever felt it was when Mr. Magpie reached out for my hand that night:  a switch flipped.  We were electric.

“Friends don’t hold hands,” I tapped out giddily, nervously in an email to M. that night.  “…Right?”

With curiously auspicious timing given this recent hand-holding development, my relationship with fratty mcfratterson (FMF) fizzled, as did Landon’s with his then-girlfriend.  To be fair, the writing had been on the wall for some time with FMF; we were not in it for the long haul.  Looking back, the fact that I never once imagined marrying FMF or even spending the upcoming summer together — such long-term thoughts simply did not compute, did not occur to me — should have been a red flag.  Still, the break up was surprisingly dramatic, and FMF begged me to be a good sport and at least attend his fraternity’s spring date function with him, which was two nights later, even if we weren’t together.  With the immature, drama-loving illogic only a college student can pull off, I agreed.

The night was A Disaster.

By the end of the pre-game held in one of the beautiful gardens off of UVA’s historic lawns, we were a hot mess.  FMF was angry, suspicious of my relationship with Landon, and apparently unphased by the presence of dozens of other party-goers, as I’m certain that everyone knew that we were breaking up by the time we boarded the bus to head to the venue.  There were tears involved.  When I slipped away to the bathroom during the dinner portion of the evening, I found my way to my best girlfriend, who was attending with a friend of FMF’s as a courtesy to me.

“I need to get out of here,” I said.  She nodded in agreement.

I called Landon.  I knew he was playing softball with some buddies that evening, but he answered nonetheless, a little breathless.

“It’s a big mess.  I need to get out of here.  Can you pick me up?”

For some reason, when I remember this part of the story, I always imagine him transposed into that scene from The Godfather, when Sonny gets a call from his sister, who’s been beaten by her husband.  He squints into the phone and says, firmly, gesturing with his pointer finger to the ground: “You stay there.”  And then drives off in a daze to rescue her.

So Sonny came for me, his boxy Jeep barely rolling to a stop before he leapt out of it.  He was dirty, his gray sweats marked with mud from sliding across home base, his face flushed, his hat on backwards —

It was the first of a trillion and ten times in which Landon arrived and made everything right.  He scooped me up, drove me home, and we’ve been together ever since.

“That’s probably more than you wanted to hear,” I told my new friend, after getting to the very end of the story, suddenly a little too aware of how long I’d waxed poetic about my Landon.

“No, I liked it,” she said, waving her hand as if to dissolve my apology.  “It’s like it was meant to be.”

Meant to be.  I feel just that way about our story.  Though I’m a big believer that God’s hand is in all things, there is something particularly poetic and formal about our getting together — formal in the literal sense, in that there’s a legible shape to it.  The oddness of our not crossing paths until a high school graduation party for a gal whose parents had at one time seemed like probable parents-in-law; the foreshadowings of marriage so early into our relationship in the form of a sorority pledge card and a silly bit of snail mail between two friends; the electric hand-holding; the farce of other relationships, feints poorly disguising our truer feelings; the chivalrous rescue at the fraternity formal.  Sometimes these happenings feel foreign — as though they happened to someone else, a sentiment I often feel when reminiscing about the events of my youth.  “Did I live in Lyon for a semester?”  “Did I actually sing-rap 50Cent’s Candyshop as a part of an interview?” “Did I really steal that magnet from the National Zoo gift shop?”  (Yes to all of these things.)

But the other day — Valentine’s Day — I arranged to meet up with Mr. Magpie at a wine bar in midtown after he got off of work.  As I walked down sixth avenue, I walked by a hotel we’d stayed at a few years ago while in town to pitch the business we built together and that we’ve since dissolved.  A flood of mixed emotions washed over me — bitterness, nostalgia, sadness.  Lost in my own brooding, it barely registered that I’d entered the wine bar, and I suddenly looked up and caught sight of A Babe with a capital B sitting at the wine bar, waiting for me.

BAM — the same lightening bolt I felt that time he grabbed my hand on 14th street when we were young.  I was looking at this man sitting at the bar, waiting patiently for me, not having ordered a drink yet (“we need to confer on the wine situation,” he said, as I sat down — “bubbles, I assume?”), and the weight of all of the things we have been through together — births and deaths and businesses and moves and heartaches and heartbreaks and triumphs and failures — seemed at once suspended from and implicit in the meeting of our eyes.  And that’s how I often feel when I get a moment to step back and admire Mr. Magpie in all of his glory: half of me sees the smile wrinkles in the corners of his eyes, the graying hair, the distinguished look he’s cultivated with age — physical reminders of the very full, though not without struggle, life we’ve lived thus far together — and the other half sees the boy in the olive green shirt that brought out the hazel of his eyes when we were just kids.

Post-Scripts.

+How to dress like the protagonist of a Nancy Meyers movie.

+My favorite organization gear.

+A review of my favorite spring tote.

+The best book I’ve read in a long, long time.

+On failure.

+On the agony of watching your babies grow.

+Spring 2023 fashion finds.