Archive for June, 2014

cookbook review: Salad Samurai

salad samurai

Salad Samurai by Terry Hope Romero. Publisher: Da Capo Press/ Lifelong Books (June 2014). Cooking/Vegan. Paperback. 180 pages. ISBN 978-0-7382-1487-0.

Big salads are a major component of my diet. I eat them year round. Usually that’s my dinner. I make great salads. The key is adding as many extras, as much color and variety as possible. So I looked forward to checking out the recipes in Veganomicon co-author Terry Hope Romero’s latest. She divides it by season making it super easy to pick what’s fresh and available.

Some yummy, creative salads include Strawberry Spinach Salad with Orange Poppy Seed Dressing; Blueberry Tamari Greens Bowl; Asparagus Pad Thai Salad; East-West Roasted Corn Salad; Green Papaya Salad with Lemongrass Tofu; Polish Summer Soba Salad; Pesto Cauliflower & Potato Salad; Grilled Miso Apples & Brussels Sprouts Salad and Almond Falafel Crunch Bowl. Gorgeous pictures, excellent tips and simple instructions included.

There’s a section on salad dressings (something I don’t make myself often enough) and a section on salad toppings. In the dressings section, the Creamy Cilantro Lime dressing, Lemon Tahini dressing, Upstate dressing [sundried tomato, nutritional yeast, tahini, apple cider vinegar], the Marvelous Miso dressing are relatively easy and delicious. The toppings section includes ways to prepare croutons, tofu [there’s Ginger Beer Tofu and That 70s Tofu], seitan and lentils to bulk up salads.

There’s lots of vegan deliciousness in these pages.

RATING: ****/5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from Da Capo Press.

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On Tour: MIDGE URE

Grammy and Brit Award-winning musician Midge Ure will release his first new album in over a decade entitled Fragile [eOne Music] on August 18. He’s embarking on a tour that will start in August in North America with dates in New York, Boston, Toronto and Las Vegas.

The Retro Futura Tour 2014 lineup also includes Thompson Twins’ Tom Bailey, Howard Jones, China Crisis, Katrina of Katrina & The Waves and introducing Right The Stars

Tour Dates:

Aug 21 New York, NY – Best Buy Theater
Aug 22 Glenside, PA – Keswick Theatre
Aug 23 Brookhaven, NY – Pennysaver Amphitheater
Aug 24 Boston, MA – Wilbur Theatre
Aug 26 Toronto, Canada – Kool Haus
Aug 27 Chicago, IL – Ravinia Festival
Aug 29 Los Angeles, CA – Greek Theatre
Aug 30 Saratoga, CA – Mountain Winery
Sep 03 Tempe, AZ – The Marquee
Sep 04 San Diego, CA – Humphreys Concerts By the Bay
Sep 05 Las Vegas, NV – Mandalay Bay
Sep 06 Sandy, UT – Sandy Amphitheatre

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Lifetime TV movie review: Outlaw Prophet

outlaw prophet

FLDS is the bizarre offshoot of the Mormon Church or Church of Latter Day Saints. Like any fundamentalist or extremist group, it takes Mormonism to the most extreme with strict principles as the most intense religious sects tend to do. They have isolated themselves on a compound far away from most of society where they can live within their own rules for the most part. Until they really slip up or do something truly illegal.

Outlaw Prophet: Warren Jeffs is the true story of the fundamentalist Mormon leader who spent more than a year on the FBI’s “10 Most Wanted List” for unlawful flight on charges related to his alleged arrangement of illegal marriages involving underage girls. When his father died Warren Jeffs became the new FLDS Prophet, convincing himself and others that he was meant to lead the group in any and every manner he chose. Jeffs [remarkably played by Tony Goldwyn] quickly implemented new rules. He married several of his father’s wives. He forced girls to marry against their will as soon as they got their periods. He told followers: “I will be the voice of god. Anyone who won’t hear it, I will cast them out.”

Due to the insular setting and male-to-female ratio, there’s inbreeding, disease, abuse and disgusting, dangerous, unimaginable situations. Warren Jeffs has 25 siblings. They take plural wives. Men marry child brides. There’s very little education, especially for women. Only the highest leaders live relatively well. Unnecessary men get expelled from the compound.

These girls/ wives are so young. It’s so wrong and upsetting. And Jeffs is uber disturbing. He’s intensely watching this girl Elissa Wall [Joey King] and says to her: “Your mother tells me you’re getting your monthly visitor. That means you’re ready.” Cut to a few days later and she’s bawling because she doesn’t want to get married. She’s ripped from the house by Jeffs and forced to marry. Later the husband tells Jeffs she’s not having sex with him. Jeffs stresses that he’s a man and basically should use force with her.

At another point, first wife Janine [Molly Parker] examines some women to be married. Rebecca had been married to Warren ‘s father and says she won’t marry Jeffs. Says it’s against their religion. Jeffs locks her in her room for the disobedience. Sometime later Janine lets Rebecca out to escape.

He’s extreme. Bans all media, dancing, music and sports. He has men take all the dogs out of the compound. Apparently dogs are evil or dirty. They put them in a pit and shoot them. Horrific. He excommunicates a bunch of men who begin questioning what he’s doing. There are cringe-worthy sex scenes. Jeffs has sex with one young wife while three others wait naked on bed. At another point the wives hold another wife down so that Jeffs can rape her. Repulsive.

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Tony Goldwyn [most familiar as President Grant on Scandal] sinks into this role and exudes evil in every scene. He’s convincingly disquieting as Warren Jeffs. He impressively plays up the peculiar sex scenes, the power-play moments and delirious prophet revelations.

When the compound’s finally raided and Jeffs becomes a fugitive with one of his favorite wives in tow. The movie’s based on the book When Men Become Gods by New York Times bestselling author Stephen Singular. Elissa Walls [who later wrote a memoir about her experience in the sect] and another agree to testify against Jeffs and he’s imprisoned for life. However he never loses control of his church. He remains the Prophet and he still leads and rules his “followers” from prison. While you’ve read the news stories, it’s worth watching this Lifetime dramatization. Adds color and reality to it all.

Outlaw Prophet: Warren Jeffs airs Saturday, June 28 at 9pm ET/PT on Lifetime.

Immediately following the movie’s world premiere, Lifetime will air the hour-long documentary Beyond the Headlines: Warren Jeffs, at 10pm ET/PT.

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book review: Wonderland

Wonderland

Wonderland by Stacey D’Erasmo. Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (May 2014). Contemporary fiction. Hardcover. 256 pages. ISBN 978-0-544-07481-1.

“I blow the song through the back of the rickety concert hall and out into the night, folded, gleaming, fast, faster, unbroken, alive, whirling inside the secret chamber, rose and gold, unstoppable, irresistible, straight into the veins, hair-raising. I take another breath. I am the train, I am the tracks, I am the whistle on the train. I am speeding down the prairie. I heat up.”

She was once a bit of a darling in the alternative scene. Itching to attempt it all one more time, perhaps one last time, 44-year-old alt rocker Anna Brundage recorded an album and financed her own European tour. Her music provided outsiders some solace, recognition. She helped bridge the gap for those misunderstood in society. This could be her last chance for any relevance. For any shot in her music career. For any notoriety.

Exquisitely written. Lyrical style. Filled with lovely descriptions and a phenomenal sense of place. You’re on tour with Anna throughout Europe. If you liked Welcome to the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan, you’ll appreciate this novel. Author Stacey D’Erasmo divulges Anna’s story in a journal format which allows the reader to discover Anna through her reflections on family and lovers, past and current tour experiences and aspirations. The novel seamlessly jumps from present to past without being choppy or jolting. D’Erasmo spent time on tour with Scissor Sisters [a FUN live act] and read several memoirs including When I Grow Up by esteemed 40-something alternative singer/songwriter Juliana Hatfield.

The daughter of two artists, it seemed inevitable that Anna and her sister would either follow in their paths or venture into completely uncharted territory. Anna became the musician, sometimes comfortable and relatively reasonable if not terribly risky to her sculptor and potter parents. Although Anna married for a short time it was a marriage to another musician and fragile artistic egos can’t often survive that sort of union. He’d been in her band. Those things carry all kinds of volatility and challenges. Her sister, on the other hand went off to college then later married, settled in Wyoming and raised a family. The complete dichotomy to her wayward, creative sister.

“I didn’t just want to be famous; I wanted to be something better than famous. I wanted to lie down at last in the heat of the gap.”

While on tour Anna hooks up with random guys in cosmopolitan cities, spends the night with one of her band members and contemplates her past and her future in the music industry. She recalls her deepest love, a long-time affair with a married man, Simon, who lived in Switzerland and would meet her almost anywhere out on tour she wanted. She finally broke it off because he said he’d never break up his family. Although Anna didn’t care about marriage and a family she did not want to be put in that tenuous position any longer. During this tour she contacts Simon. They haven’t seen each other for seven years. He’s now to her great astonishment divorced.

Wonderland reveals the darker aspects to being a musician on tour. The waiting, inertia, nervousness, wanting and need for acceptance. It also provides insight into the lighter elements. The triumphs, joys and connections. D’Erasmo evokes alluring moments and reveals vulnerabilities and disappointments. You get the sense what it’s like for Anna and key moments during the tour: on stage, backstage, en route to a venue and after both outstanding and mediocre performances. Recommended to musicians, music aficionados and those who appreciate quality contemporary literature.

RATING: ****/5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

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music review: Be Calm Honcho

honcho dreams

Coming up with band names can’t be an easy thing. Be Calm Honcho threw me for a bit of a loop with its unusual nomenclature. Not a Beck song. Not Spanish or Hacienda-infused. According to Merriam-Webster, honcho means a person who is in charge of other people.

The San Francisco-based alt-pop band utilizes an eclectic mélange of instrumentation and arrangement. Honcho Dreams is a collection of smart, dramatic songs in the vein of Laurie Anderson or Neko Case. Spoken word poetry set to music. Quirky. Distinctive.

Vocalist Shannon Harney transforms her voice in imaginative, unusual ways. Featuring a superb melody and powerful, sultry vocals, the opener “Step Out” lingers in my head for hours after I’ve heard it. Swanky and edgy “Mean Pack” has the sing-speak lyrics: “without people we are a person/ clean as the snow and gone with the wind/ but with people we are everybody/ expansive as the skyline and here/ like we are here.” There’s the slower, prettier “Pretty on the West Coast” and darker “Always My Fault.” On “Each Day” it sounds as if Harney’s uvula is vibrating and quivering. Her vocals sound that exotic. Be Cool Honcho will take you to unique places. As music should. Twangy, grooving, a bit jazzy, explosive, subdued. Strange abundance.

Honcho Dreams
Crossbill Records [June 24, 2014]

purchase at Amazon: Be Calm Honcho – Honcho Dreams

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in the realm: Summer Reading Part I

[descriptions from Goodreads]

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Close Your Eyes, Hold Hands by Chris Bohjalian [Doubleday, July 8]
–story of Emily Shepard, a homeless girl living in an igloo made of garbage bags in Burlington. Nearly a year ago, a power plant in the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont had a meltdown, and both of Emily’s parents were killed. Devastatingly, her father was in charge of the plant, and the meltdown may have been his fault—was he drunk when it happened?

evergreen

Evergreen by Rebecca Rasmussen [Knopf, July 8]
–It is 1938 when Eveline, a young bride, follows her husband into the wilderness of Minnesota. Though their cabin is rundown, they have a river full of fish, a garden out back, and a new baby boy named Hux. But when Emil leaves to take care of his sick father, the unthinkable happens: a stranger arrives, and Eveline becomes pregnant. She gives the child away, and while Hux grows up hunting and fishing in the woods with his parents, his sister, Naamah, is raised an orphan. Years later, haunted by the knowledge of this forsaken girl, Hux decides to find his sister and bring her home to the cabin.

euphoria

Euphoria by Lily King
–For years, English anthropologist Andrew Bankson has been alone in the field studying the Kiona tribe of Papua, New Guinea. Haunted by the memory of his brother’s public suicide, and increasingly infuriated with and isolated by his research, Bankson is on the verge of killing himself when a chance meeting with colleagues, the controversial and consummate Nell Stone and her wry Australian husband Fen, pulls him back from the brink. Nell and Fen have just finished their studies of the bloodthirsty Mumbanyo and, in spite of Nell’s ill health, the couple is ravenous for another new discovery. Together with Bankson they set out to uncover the Tam, a local tribe with an almost mythic existence.

rise and fall

The Rise and Fall of Great Powers by Tom Rachman [Dial Press, June]
–Tooly Zylberberg, the American owner of an isolated bookshop in the Welsh countryside, conducts a life full of reading, but with few human beings. Books are safer than people, who might ask awkward questions about her life. She prefers never to mention the strange events of her youth, which mystify and worry her News arrives from a long-lost boyfriend in New York, raising old mysteries and propelling her on a quest around the world in search of answers.

I love you more

I Love You More by Jennifer Murphy [Doubleday, June]
–Picasso Lane is twelve years old when her father, Oliver, is murdered at their summer beach house. Her mother, Diana, is the primary suspect—until the police discover his second wife, and then his third. The women say they have never met—but Picasso knows otherwise.

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Summer TOUR: Wild Ones

wild ones

Portland’s electro-pop band Wild Ones will be on tour in the Midwest and along the East Coast in August with shows in Portsmouth, Boston, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Chicago, Indianapolis and Providence, RI.

July 25–Capitol Hill Block Party – Seattle, WA
August 06–The Press Room – Portsmouth, NH
August 07– Iron Horse – Northampton, MA
August 08– ArtsRiot – Burlington, VT
August 09– KahBang Festival – Bangor, ME
August 10– Great Scott – Boston, MA
August 12– Pianos – New York, NY
August 13– BAR – New Haven, CT
August 14– North Star Bar – Philadelphia, PA
August 15– Glasslands – Brooklyn, NY
August 16– The Pinch – Washington, DC
August 18– Beachland Tavern – Cleveland, OH
August 19– Schuba’s – Chicago, IL
August 20– The Hi-Fi – Indianapolis, IN
August 21– The Smiling Moose – Pittsburgh, PA
August 23– Columbus Theater – Providence, RI

Wild Ones website

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TV NEWS: Lifetime’s The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story

saved-by-the-bell1

Did you spend Saturday mornings watching Saved by the Bell? I never thought much about the behind-the-scenes facets of the squeaky clean sitcom but someone did. The movie explores the challenges and experiences of six unknown young actors placed into the Hollywood spotlight and growing up under public scrutiny while attempting to maintain the images of their popular characters on and off-screen. Lifetime will air The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story on Labor Day. It’s currently filming in Toronto.

Original series’ casting director, Robin Lippin (Lizzie McGuire) completed the casting. Dylan Everett (Degrassi: The Next Generation) plays Mark-Paul Gosselaar [mischievous ringleader Zack Morris], Sam Kindseth (Shameless) is Dustin Diamond [geeky sidekick Screech]. Julian Works (Paranormal Activity, Modern Family) stars as Mario Lopez [uber-happy-jock A.C. Slater], Alyssa Lynch (The High Jumping Witch) Tiffani-Amber Thiessen [girl-next-door Kelly Kapowski], Tiera Skovbye (Supernatural, Girl in Progress) is Elizabeth Berkley [smartypants Jessie Sapano] while Taylor Russell McKenzie (Blink) will portray Lark Voorhies [fashion darling Lisa Turtle].

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The cast of ‘The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story.’ (From left) Taylor Russell McKenzie (Lark Voorhies), Dylan Everett (Mark-Paul Gosselaar), Alyssa Lynch (Tiffani-Amber Thiessen), Julian Works (Mario Lopez), Tiera Skovbye (Elizabeth Berkley) and Sam Kindseth (Dustin Diamond).

The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story premieres Labor Day, Monday, September 1 at 9pm ET/PT.

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Choice Quote: Dakota Fanning

dakota fanning

“It’s about both genders being equal. There’s a history where when women get to a certain age in this industry, the roles become strictly the mother, the wife, or the older single woman. There should be more of a variety because there are so many different paths that humans take and they should be given a platform to be seen.”

–Dakota Fanning on women in Hollywood and film, The Daily Beast, May 29, 2014

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book review: Fourth of July Creek

fourth of july creek

FOURTH OF JULY CREEK by Smith Henderson. Publisher: Ecco (May 2014). fiction. Hardcover. 480 pages. ISBN 978-0-06-228644-4.

“The mother collected unemployment but her full-time occupation was self-pity. She slippered around the house in sweatpants and smoked a lot of weed and took speed and tugged her hair over her face in a shape pleasing and temporary and dumped forth her old bosom and smiled prettily for herself and discovered nothing in the mirror to recommend her to anybody for anything.”

Fitting title for a painstakingly detailed novel about a social worker tasked to cover a rural, impoverished area in western Montana who encounters a survivalist battling everyone including the FBI. Sad, forlorn. Set in the 1980s. Provides insight into a social worker’s challenges and stressful existence.

Not surprisingly Pete Snow’s personal life is in near shambles. Pete drinks heavily as soon as his day ends. He has almost no relationship with his teen daughter and then his ex-wife moves off to Texas. Soon after, the estranged thirteen-year-old daughter runs away after a debauched party. Snow begins dating another social worker who lives in Missoula. She’s a product of the system herself, grew up in foster homes shuffled around and then decided to become someone who ideally helps others with lives as difficult as hers. Of course that’s the goal.

“Sexual deviancy came as little surprise anymore. Nymphomania, satyriasis, pedophilia, coprophilia, telephone scatologia—there wasn’t a particular paraphiliac that hadn’t crossed Pet’s path at one time or another.”

Smith Henderson writes the darkest, harshest, extreme scenarios. The central focus remains the erratic, strange Jeremiah Pearl—secluded in a wooded area. He’s stockpiled and barricaded and waits for some sign, some end of everything, the apocalypse. Pearl harbors strange ideologies and remains averse to any government intervention including when Snow tries to assist Pearl’s son. Jeremiah pushes Snow away repeatedly but Snow keeps coming back undeterred.

“He drove his Corolla with the windows down, but pumped them back when mammatus clouds popcorned over the Flathead Valley and gumdrops of rain began to splash his windows. He turned onto Highway 28 and the clouds quit raining altogether and shortly thereafter broke up like a crowd after a fistfight.”

Excellent writing but I struggled through large chunks. While initially pulled in by impressive descriptions and turns of phrase, the story lagged and side-plots drew me astray. I mainly just wanted to find out what would happen with the survivalist. Would there be a Waco-style ending?

RATING: 3.5/5

–review by Amy Steele

FTC Disclosure: I received this book for review from Harper Collins.

purchase at Amazon: Fourth of July Creek: A Novel

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