Friday, October 24, 2014

The Age Old Question: What should I wear, costume ideas from Delicious Reads

witch hat ideas, make your own witches hat, halloween on a budget, delicious reads, book club, dress up
 Our book club loves to dress up! (I will also love it soon, I'm sure.) I remember not wanting to go places as a young girl because I did not "have anything to wear." I am now 34 and still have an occasional pile of discarded outfits on my bed to put away. I am so much more comfortable in my own skin now, that I don't stress too much, unless someone asks me to show up in a costume. I don't consider myself to have a lot of "costume like" clothes. Most of the time when we dress up for book club, I attempt to try.

This past book club meeting I felt slightly awkward for being the only person NOT dressed up, I didn't even try...lame. I didn't think I really had anything to wear. After observing all the outfits, I realized I actually had a lot of options sitting at home in my closet. You will find me very easily in the pictures.

If you are looking for inspiration from books for your costume. Check out what these ladies put together from their closets. The magic is in creating a hairpiece of some sort. 


Check out these links to see more details. 

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald (20's Art Deco) 
The Diviners by Libba Bray (Flapper styles)
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen (Georgian society)
Blood Moon by Teri Harmon (Witches)
Bossy Pants by Tina Fey (Tina Fey)
Carter Beats the Devil by Glen David Golf (Magicians/Devil)
Walt Disney by Bob Thomas (Disney inspired)
The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson (Victorian Gothic)

This weekend, I am planning to attend a Halloween Witches Tea at the Grand America. Although it says costumes optional, I have a feeling that if I show up without a hat I will feel a little blah humbug. So I jumped on a broomstick and put a costume together. I have learned by observing the creative ladies at book club that there are so many ways to glitz up the things that are already in your closet. I did have to buy a witches hat for $3. At first I thought I was going to have to work hard and get out all my craft supplies to make it look a little more festive.



Then I realized that there could be an easy formula to put this together.

1. Pick a favorite ribbon or ribbons to layer and wrap around the cone.
2. Decide on a focal point - this could be a bird, a spider, a pumpkin, a flower, or a bat.
3. Find a few whirly gigs that will add texture. Ex: pipe cleaners, fabric, rafia, moss, leaves...
4. Assemble. Hot glue is your friend. Voila!!

I still made a mess pulling everything out...but the assembly was quick and easy. 




Happy witching!
Elizabeth


Friday, January 17, 2014

"Bossypants" {by Tina Fey} Book Review

AUTHOR: Tina Fey

NUMBER OF PAGES: 272

YEAR PUBLISHED: 2011

PUBLISHER: Little, Brown Book Group

READING LEVEL: Adult (18+)

GENRE: Autobiographical Comedy


BOOK SUMMARY:
"Before Liz Lemon, before "Weekend Update," before "Sarah Palin," Tina Fey was just a young girl with a dream: a recurring stress dream that she was being chased through a local airport by her middle-school gym teacher. She also had a dream that one day she would be a comedian on TV.
She has seen both these dreams come true.
At last, Tina Fey's story can be told. From her youthful days as a vicious nerd to her tour of duty on Saturday Night Live; from her passionately halfhearted pursuit of physical beauty to her life as a mother eating things off the floor; from her one-sided college romance to her nearly fatal honeymoon -- from the beginning of this paragraph to this final sentence.
Tina Fey reveals all, and proves what we've all suspected: you're no one until someone calls you bossy.

(Includes Special, Never-Before-Solicited Opinions on Breastfeeding, Princesses, Photoshop, the Electoral Process, and Italian Rum Cake!)"
*Book Summary found on amazon.com.


DELICIOUS READS STAR RATING FOR BOSSYPANTS:
3.5 out of 5 Stars


OUR GROUP REVIEW:

“You can’t be that kid standing at the top of the waterslide, overthinking it. You have to go down the chute.”

Our discussion began as our fearless moderator Brooke took Tina’s advice and went for it! Brooke, dressed in full Tina Fey regalia, delivered a monologue similar to the beginning of each Saturday Night Live show. Tina, I mean Brooke, spoke of her love of Alec Baldwin, obsession with food and her highly praised book Bossypants. Brooke had all of us laughing!

Book Formats:
More than half of our members listened to the audio-book version of Bossypants, which was Grammy nominated thanks to the narration by Tina Fey. The remaining members read a hardcopy and were able to see many of Tina’s unforgettable childhood pictures sprinkled throughout the book. Either way, it’s a win!

Writing Style:
Bossypants is unlike a typical autobiography. Each chapter in the book doesn’t progress easily through her life as Tina aged, rather the chapters read more like the “best of” her quirky encounters from her life. 

Some of our members really enjoyed the ease at which you could pick up Bossypants, read a chapter and not have to retain what happened in previous chapters. Other members found it was difficult to connect to the book because there weren’t overlapping characters and stories to tie it all together.

Overlying Theme:

Brooke pointed out that many sketches Fey wrote for Saturday Night Live and 30 Rock, dealt directly with issues women deal with at home, at work and through the eyes of others.
We discussed four of these issues in great depth.

1.Unfair Judgment:

Tina cites many examples of snap judgments placed on her in chapters of the book: the scar on her face, personal low-points during the time she worked at the YMCA, gender restrictions during her days traveling with the improvisation troupe, becoming a mother & working mother, and hate-mail from people making assumptions.

Instead of wallowing in self-pity, Fey used those slights and put-downs to propel her forward and to make her stronger, self-assured and more outspoken.

We discussed that as women, it seems to be in our wiring to remember and relive the negative things that happen to us much easier than positive things. Which is true in for Tina Bossypants as well.

“I would not trade any of these features for anybody else’s. I wouldn’t trade the small thin-lipped mouth that makes me resemble my nephew. I wouldn’t even trade the acne scar on my right cheek, because that recurring zit spent more time with me in college than any boy ever did.”


2. Tina’s “Rules of Improvisation That Will Change Your Life and Reduce Belly Fat”:
Although hilarious, Fey makes these rules relatable to any woman, actress or not. The highlights of the rules, as found in Bossypants are:

1. Agree, or at least have the respect to understand another and their opinion
2. Say “yes” to doing something, don’t just sit there
3. But don’t simply say “yes”, say “yes…and…” don’t forget to contribute to the conversation or the resolution
4.  Make statements: speak in statements instead of apologetic questions, make statements with your actions and your voice
5. There are no mistakes, only opportunities

“Whatever the problem, be part of the solution. Don’t just sit around raising questions and pointing out obstacles.”

Our members felt the most difficult rule to follow is number four; we find that we’re asking questions in order to make everyone around us comfortable. We talked about overcoming this and being more assertive because it will solve problems faster and our voice will be heard.


3. Sexism vs. Equality in the Workplace:

This issue was rampant during Tina’s time traveling with her improv troupe and in the early days of her SNL career. Many people in her industry believed women were there to play supportive roles.

We discussed the hilarious Kotex Classic Ad that Tina devised; in that case men weren’t necessarily sexist, just ill informed. Our group spoke about similar situations where men have misunderstood us.
(View Kotex Classic Ad HERE)

We also talked about Tina’s comical experience with Photoshop and posing for the cover of a magazine. Throughout the book she explained the ridiculous expectations on women to look perfectly beautiful in every way.

Our group weighed in on how rampant these expectations of perfections is—we not only give these expectations to ourselves, but others put them upon us too. One of our members summed it up superbly, “confidence above any of our features is most beautiful.” 

“If you retain nothing else, always remember the most important rule of beauty, which is: who cares?”

4. Mommy Guilt:

Tina talks about several issues around the decision to become a mother, breastfeeding a baby, going back to work after a baby and the question of having an additional child.

These are things that many of our members have dealt with and we all agreed that the best thing you can do for any mom is to listen to her, be supportive and don’t give advice unless they REALLY ask for it.

When asking for help or advice, it doesn’t mean you’re a weak person it means you’re strong enough to admit that you need help or love with being a mom.

"Obviously, as an adult I realize this girl-on-girl sabotage is the third worst kind of female behavior, right behind saying "like" all the time and leaving your baby in a dumpster.”


Favorite excerpt from the book:

Most of us agreed one of the most likeable stories was what we like to call “Tina’s Incredibly Insane Week”. This occured when Fey played her first famous person (Sarah Palin) on the SNL opener, shooting scenes with Oprah Winfrey for 30 Rock and planning her daughter’s birthday party. 

“By the way, when Oprah Winfrey is suggesting you may have overextended yourself, you need to examine your f****** life.”

We all agreed the way Tina handled this week was with multi-tasking grace. She held her daughter’s birthday party to the same importance as meeting with Oprah Winfrey, which as many of our members are moms we relate.


Author Q&A:

It was difficult to find a written interview with Fey about Bossypants, she did participate in a 45-minute spoken interview with NPR about the book and here are some excerpts.


On her birth
"[My mom] was 39 when she delivered me. I think she had had my brother eight years earlier, and then in 1960s medicine, they had told her at some point, 'Oh, no, you're done. Don't even worry about it, dear. You're out of business.' And so I was a surprise."

On the criticism she got for playing Sarah Palin
"You can find this freshly posted as of yesterday. 'She should be ashamed of what she did to Sarah Palin,' which I think is a discredit to both me and former Gov. Palin. She's not fragile. And I'm not mean. And to imply otherwise is a disservice to us both. No one ever said, 'Oh, that Will Ferrell. He should be ashamed of the way he's conducting himself playing George W. Bush.' No one would ever say that."
On working with Alec Baldwin and Tracy Morgan
"They are different. It's funny because it's rare that we're all three together. The way that things are scheduled, I'll go on and it's either a day of all me and Alec ... or all me and Tracy. It's fun when we're all together ... but we kind of know each other by now, and we know the rhythm of who likes to shoot their coverage first and who likes to wait and go second."

On her mother forcing her to try on a bra over her clothes in J.C. Penney
"At the time it was horrifying. And I developed very early. I was probably in fifth grade getting a bra. I developed breasts so early and so strangely high that the bra was more to clarify what they were. That they were not a goiter or something. It was mortifying, but I can absolutely see making that same mistake because you transition as a mother from literally just pulling a booger out of that person's nose whenever you see one until at some point they assert: 'No, I'm a person. You can't fix my underpants on the subway.' "
On how women present themselves in comedy
"It's just such a tangled-up issue, the way women present themselves — whether or not they choose to put their thumbs in their panties on the cover of Maxim and judge each other back and forth on it. It's a complicated issue, and we didn't go much further on saying anything other than to say, 'Yeah, it's a complicated issue and we're all kind of figuring it out as we go.'

"In the episode [of 30 Rock called "TGS Hates Women"], we have a fake website called Joanofsnark.com that the women at Jezebel.com immediately recognized that it was their website basically and it was ... I don't have the answer. But I find it interesting that Olivia [Munn, a correspondent on The Daily Show] gets people who go after her on some of these sites because she's beautiful, and that's part of it. I think if she were kind of an aggressive, heavier girl with a Le Tigre mustache posing in her underpants, people would be like, 'That's amazing. Good for you.' But because she's very beautiful, people are like, 'You're using that.' It's a mess. We can't figure it out."



Content:

Language/Profanity: Heavy (20+ swear words including f***)

Sexuality: Moderate (women’s effect on men, women competing with other women)

Violence: None

Drug/Alcohol Use: Mild

Intense/Scary Scenes: None
 
Check out our all of our meeting details HERE to see photos, our menu and tons of other ideas for your book club!

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Do your thing and don't care if they like it "Bossypants" {by Tina Fey} Book Club Ideas




We couldn't have picked a better book to start 2014 off with a BANG when we chose "Bossypants!" 
Tina Fey's writing is honest, intimate, observant and of course, H I L A R I O U S!!   
To start the evening off, we played a game where everyone had to guess which famous actor or actress they were by asking only yes or no questions to guess the name on their back.
 It was the perfect way to get the meeting going!

Now, let's E A T!
From what we read, Tina Fey is a junk food "foodie!"
We made sure to have as many of her favorite foods on the table as possible as we teetered on the edge of developing diabetes. 


And then, it was time for Tina Fey, 
The woman, 
The giggle factory ,
The legend herself,
To make her appearance.
Brooke was the PERFECT Tina!
(She could have filled in as her stunt or butt double on set if you ask me!)


Before "Tina" got us started on our book discussion, we were all treated to a short  but oh so sweet stand up act that had us giggling like book club girls through our Krispy Kreme's and Pepsi!

(You can see an excerpt of her performance on Brooke's writing blog HERE)
Brooke, you are FEARLESS and we love you for it!

"LIVE FROM NEW YORK, IT'S SATURDAY NIGHT!"

I mean, COME ON... 
She could totally pass for Tina's twin sister right?  ;)

Start start off our discussion, Brooke challenged us with a FOOD QUIZ.
We had three minutes to write down as many reasons why Tiny Fey brought up the list of foods mentioned through out the book!
   

"I WANT TO GO TO THERE"
And so we did.
Just as Tiny Fey writes/preforms many parodies for SNL that are hilarious, there is usually an underlying message of truth or importance. Bossypants is no exception. Here are a few of the topics we discussed that were highlighting in her book:
-Unfair Judgments
-Sexism vs. Equality in the workplace
-Rules of Improv-Saying YES
-Mommy Guilt 
The video below is of Tina Fey reading the prayer she wrote to her daughter which is HILARIOUS! You have to watch it! (Unless you don't like to laugh then this video is not for you.)
 

We have a few fabulous human beings in our book club, 
scroll through and see for yourself.




"Thank you and Goodnight!"


You can download our "Bossypants" PowerPoint presentation HERE.
And don't forget to check out our star rating and full book review HERE.
Don't forget to check out Brooke's Tina Fey SNL performance HERE