I am finishing the book Julie and Julia by Julie Powell this week. It's a really good book. I loved the whole story. It's all about Julie's journey to cook her way through Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking. That's cooking over 500 recipes in only 365 days! Julie, in addition to trying to complete this daunting task, offers a unique and funny perspective throught the book. Julie often compares herself to Julia Child. They funny part is that while they kind of share a name, they are vastly different people. They have some similarities, but they are incredibly different from each other.
Julie Powell is a almost 30 year old woman. She is married to a man she met back in Texas in High School. She is a secretary at a government agency who's policies she doesn't agree with in the slightest. She really hates her job. She moved from Texas all the way to New York City to become an actress. She lives in a terrible apartment with a lot of really big functional problems. Her plans and goals she set out to accomplish are not really panning out. She's not exactly happy with her life at this point. She needs something to improve her life at the beginning of the book. When she decides to attempt to cook her way through MtAoFC many people really doubt her. Julie is kind of disheveled. Sher lives a mainly frugal live, and she's a little bit crazy. Although on the other hand, Julie is a really determined and proud person in my opinion. She's fun and interesting and clever, she just doesn't really have her life figured out, and in her case that's really not a good thing.
Julia Child however, is vastly different. In the Wikipedia artickle about her it says "Julia Child (née McWilliams;[1] August 15, 1912 – August 13, 2004) was an American chef, author, and television personality. She is recognized for introducing French cuisine to the American public with her debut cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking". She was a very sucessful person. Julia Child was dignified and wealthy, and while she was reported to be a fun person, she seems very serious. When I read the parts about her in Julie and Julia, Julie demonstrates great respect for Julia, Julia however, "is reported to have been unimpressed by Powell's blog, believing Powell's determination to cook every recipe in Mastering the Art of French Cooking in a year to be a stunt." I don't really know what to think about this but, she is definately entited to her own opinion. Julia Child to me means good and fun cooking, but French sophistication along with a dignified personality.
Julie and Julia are really different people. Then again, how would you like to be compared to one of the greatest home chefs of all time?
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
The Man Who Walked
He was the man who walked across the Twin Towers. He was regarded as brave and strong, yet insane, after, when people knew who he was. He was a different person before and after the stunt.
Before he walked across the towers he was a different man. He was a man with no job or real stable life. The trouble was, he needed money for his plan to really work. He truly was a mastermind. He had it all planned out. He knew they would need, fake IDs, wire, balancing pole, bribe money and all sorts of tools for the mechanical aspect of it. To make money he just did petty things he didn't care for. He did all sorts of odd jobs, and I don't mean like a handy man, he was talented and found all sorts of jobs he could use his talents in. He was a magician at parties. He hated it sometimes and sometimes enjoyed it, he made himself into different people at these jobs. He performed in parks in bad neighborhoods for tips. When he did this he was near junkies and drug dealers all the time. He only cared about raising the money to pull this "trick" off. He was completely obsessed with his plan to walk across the towers. His whole life was all about pulling off his stunt.
After he pulled off the stunt he must have been a different man. He was not injured. He was not hurt mentally or physically. He was happier as a person. In one chapter there is a judge and he is the judge for Philipe Petit's case in court. He describes him as a happy man. He almost thinks of him as too happy and pleased with himself. Throughout the whole book the people who see and hear him all describe him as a happy person who is incredibly pleased with himself. It's interesting because he has committed a large crime and has made many people look ridiculous, but he's still so happy. When you see his perspective you are amazed and astonished by the way he views everything. Although his voice is not in the first person he shines through the authors voice with passion and emotion. You are able to see his point of view and you can see why he was so happy when he finished this spectacle. This was a monumental thing for this crazy man.
He is such an interesting man. He really made all of New York City reexamine their experiences and how much adventure they have in their lives. He was a revolutionary.
Before he walked across the towers he was a different man. He was a man with no job or real stable life. The trouble was, he needed money for his plan to really work. He truly was a mastermind. He had it all planned out. He knew they would need, fake IDs, wire, balancing pole, bribe money and all sorts of tools for the mechanical aspect of it. To make money he just did petty things he didn't care for. He did all sorts of odd jobs, and I don't mean like a handy man, he was talented and found all sorts of jobs he could use his talents in. He was a magician at parties. He hated it sometimes and sometimes enjoyed it, he made himself into different people at these jobs. He performed in parks in bad neighborhoods for tips. When he did this he was near junkies and drug dealers all the time. He only cared about raising the money to pull this "trick" off. He was completely obsessed with his plan to walk across the towers. His whole life was all about pulling off his stunt.
After he pulled off the stunt he must have been a different man. He was not injured. He was not hurt mentally or physically. He was happier as a person. In one chapter there is a judge and he is the judge for Philipe Petit's case in court. He describes him as a happy man. He almost thinks of him as too happy and pleased with himself. Throughout the whole book the people who see and hear him all describe him as a happy person who is incredibly pleased with himself. It's interesting because he has committed a large crime and has made many people look ridiculous, but he's still so happy. When you see his perspective you are amazed and astonished by the way he views everything. Although his voice is not in the first person he shines through the authors voice with passion and emotion. You are able to see his point of view and you can see why he was so happy when he finished this spectacle. This was a monumental thing for this crazy man.
He is such an interesting man. He really made all of New York City reexamine their experiences and how much adventure they have in their lives. He was a revolutionary.
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Which Life?
In the book Let The Great World Spin by Colum McCann, he shows all sorts of characters. Two characters in particular that he demonstrates very well are Tillie and Claire. These two women are vastly different. Tillie is a prostitute and Claire is a rich woman. These two woman are as different as two woman can be.
Tillie is a woman who has been a prostitute for almost her entire life. She seems really sad. She's also very lonely, even though she's with someone every night. She's also totally unstable. She uses drugs all the time, she talks about shooting up all the time. It also makes me really sad to read about her demeaning herself. She constantly calls herself "Tillie F*&%ed up Henderson". She's really mean to herself. She calls the pimps she's with "daddies" She has a new "daddy" all the time. She also lives on the street. She also has no friends just competitors. It's also really upsetting because she was expected to become a hooker. I mean, even her mother wanted her to become a hooker. She wanted her to go on "the stroll" (that's what they all call being a prostitute). Even though she has a ton of sad and depressing things that complicate her life, she also is very free. She doesn't really have to be chained by the things most people are chained by.
Claire is extremely different. She has the life many people would dream for. She has a really nice life. She lives in a beautiful house in a beautiful neighborhood. There is a sense of stability in her life. She has a huge income, a husband, and a whole life that is almost the same everyday. That's not to say that her life is great or perfect, because it isn't, but her life is pretty good in general. She knows her son, unlike Tillie. Claire's son died in the war in Vietnam. Even though he died, she still knew him, she still loved him and raised him. She has a husband she can rely on, and is proud of herself for what she has accomplished. The whole situation that she's in is light years better than Tillie's, except for the fact that she's confined to rules and a life she has to have because of her accomplishments. I think she's got a good life but sometimes I feel sorry for you.
All in all, I think both woman's lives have pluses and minuses to them. They both have good parts in their lives and bad parts, some people have more bad than good and some have more good than bad, but it usually evens out in the end. Still, I can't imagine what it would be like to be either of them.
Tillie is a woman who has been a prostitute for almost her entire life. She seems really sad. She's also very lonely, even though she's with someone every night. She's also totally unstable. She uses drugs all the time, she talks about shooting up all the time. It also makes me really sad to read about her demeaning herself. She constantly calls herself "Tillie F*&%ed up Henderson". She's really mean to herself. She calls the pimps she's with "daddies" She has a new "daddy" all the time. She also lives on the street. She also has no friends just competitors. It's also really upsetting because she was expected to become a hooker. I mean, even her mother wanted her to become a hooker. She wanted her to go on "the stroll" (that's what they all call being a prostitute). Even though she has a ton of sad and depressing things that complicate her life, she also is very free. She doesn't really have to be chained by the things most people are chained by.
Claire is extremely different. She has the life many people would dream for. She has a really nice life. She lives in a beautiful house in a beautiful neighborhood. There is a sense of stability in her life. She has a huge income, a husband, and a whole life that is almost the same everyday. That's not to say that her life is great or perfect, because it isn't, but her life is pretty good in general. She knows her son, unlike Tillie. Claire's son died in the war in Vietnam. Even though he died, she still knew him, she still loved him and raised him. She has a husband she can rely on, and is proud of herself for what she has accomplished. The whole situation that she's in is light years better than Tillie's, except for the fact that she's confined to rules and a life she has to have because of her accomplishments. I think she's got a good life but sometimes I feel sorry for you.
All in all, I think both woman's lives have pluses and minuses to them. They both have good parts in their lives and bad parts, some people have more bad than good and some have more good than bad, but it usually evens out in the end. Still, I can't imagine what it would be like to be either of them.
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