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gabrielle zevin writes

{Sunday|Confessions}
{Monday|Nostalgia/Obsessions}
{Tuesday|Hijinks}
{Wednesday|Narcissism}
{Thursday|Chocolate}
{Friday|Nonsense}
{Saturday|Wisdom}

{Stop by my letter blog with Carolyn Mackler: Dear Writer}

Posts tagged all these things i've done:

wednesday narcissism, no. 7: anya on tragedy
hipsterbookquotes:

Submitted by notesfromagloe.

wednesday narcissism, no. 7: anya on tragedy

hipsterbookquotes:

Submitted by notesfromagloe.

tuesday hijinks, no. 6: brief synopsis of Because It is My Blood, the sequel to All These Things I’ve Done, which comes out September 18, 2012. The story takes place partially in Oaxaca — isn’t Oaxaca pretty?

Because It Is My Blood

Every time I think I’m out, they pull me back in.”- Michael Corleone, The Godfather

Since her release from Liberty Children’s Facility, Anya Balanchine is determined to follow the straight and narrow. Unfortunately, her criminal record is making it hard for her to do that. No high school wants her with a gun possession charge on her rap sheet. Plus, all the people in her life have moved on: Natty has skipped two grades at Holy Trinity, Scarlet and Gable seem closer than ever, and even Win is in a new relationship. But when old friends return demanding that certain debts be paid, Anya is thrown right back into the criminal world that she had been determined to escape. It’s a journey that will take her across the ocean and straight into the heart of the birthplace of chocolate where her resolve—and her heart—will be tested as never before.

firsttimeuser:

tismark:

Street Scenes from Oaxaca

We were in Oaxaca about two days, but significant days, Dec 31st and Jan 1st. Pretty much all of my walking around the city photos are from New Year’s Day. I don’t know what the atmosphere of Oaxaca is like any other time of the year but I’m sure it’s a beautiful city no matter what. Looking back at my photos of Mexico, I very nearly booked a flight to see Oaxaca for New Years AGAIN - that would have been two years in a row. I went another direction but I still feel sure I’ll visit Oaxaca again one day.

About: Website / Photography Site / Travels / Twitter

thursday chocolate, no. 8: this one’s about coffee, which frequent readers of my various ramblings will know I prefer to chocolate anyway. According to this piece on NPR, Sultan Murad IV, a ruler of the Ottoman Empire, used to decapitate people for drinking coffee!
Other interesting bits:

“If you look at the rhetoric about drugs that we’re dealing with now — like, say, crack — it’s very similar to what was said about coffee,” Stewart Allen, author of The Devil’s Cup: Coffee, the Driving Force in History, tells The Salt. In Murad’s Istanbul, religious leaders preached on street corners that coffee would inspire indecent behavior. As the bean moved west into Europe, physicians rallied against it, claiming that coffee would “dry up the cerebrospinal fluid” and cause paralysis.

But apparently the motivation was really political:

Monarchs and tyrants publicly argued that coffee was poison for the bodies and souls of their subjects, but Mark Pendergrast — author of Uncommon Grounds: The History of Coffee and How It Transformed Our World — says their real concern was political. 
 “Coffee has a tendency to loosen people’s imaginations … and mouths,” he tells The Salt.
And inventive, chatty citizens scare dictators.
According to one story, an Ottoman Grand Vizier secretly visited a coffeehouse in Istanbul.
“He observed that the people drinking alcohol would just get drunk and sing and be jolly, whereas the people drinking coffee remained sober and plotted against the government,” says Allen.

British anti-coffee manifesto from the 17th century:

npr:

Drink Coffee? Off With Your Head!
Most folks who resolved to cut down on coffee this year are driven by the simple desire for self-improvement.
But for coffee drinkers in 17th-century Turkey, there was a much more concrete motivating force: a big guy with a sword.
Sultan Murad IV, a ruler of the Ottoman Empire, would not have been a fan of Starbucks. Under his rule, the consumption of coffee was a capital offense.
The sultan was so intent on eradicating coffee that he would disguise himself as a commoner and stalk the streets of Istanbul with a hundred-pound broadsword. Unfortunate coffee drinkers were decapitated as they sipped.
Murad IV’s successor was more lenient. The punishment for a first  offense was a light cudgeling. Caught with coffee a second time, the  perpetrator was sewn into a leather bag and tossed in the river.
But  people still drank coffee. Even with the sultan at the front door with a  sword and the executioner at the back door with a sewing kit, they  still wanted their daily cup of joe. And that’s the history of coffee in  a bean skin: Old habits die hard. —Adam Cole

thursday chocolate, no. 8: this one’s about coffee, which frequent readers of my various ramblings will know I prefer to chocolate anyway. According to this piece on NPR, Sultan Murad IV, a ruler of the Ottoman Empire, used to decapitate people for drinking coffee!

Other interesting bits:

“If you look at the rhetoric about drugs that we’re dealing with now — like, say, crack — it’s very similar to what was said about coffee,” Stewart Allen, author of The Devil’s Cup: Coffee, the Driving Force in History, tells The SaltIn Murad’s Istanbul, religious leaders preached on street corners that coffee would inspire indecent behavior. As the bean moved west into Europe, physicians rallied against it, claiming that coffee would “dry up the cerebrospinal fluid” and cause paralysis.

But apparently the motivation was really political:

Monarchs and tyrants publicly argued that coffee was poison for the bodies and souls of their subjects, but Mark Pendergrast — author of Uncommon Grounds: The History of Coffee and How It Transformed Our World — says their real concern was political. 

 “Coffee has a tendency to loosen people’s imaginations … and mouths,” he tells The Salt.

And inventive, chatty citizens scare dictators.

According to one story, an Ottoman Grand Vizier secretly visited a coffeehouse in Istanbul.

“He observed that the people drinking alcohol would just get drunk and sing and be jolly, whereas the people drinking coffee remained sober and plotted against the government,” says Allen.

British anti-coffee manifesto from the 17th century:


npr:

Drink Coffee? Off With Your Head!

Most folks who resolved to cut down on coffee this year are driven by the simple desire for self-improvement.

But for coffee drinkers in 17th-century Turkey, there was a much more concrete motivating force: a big guy with a sword.

Sultan Murad IV, a ruler of the Ottoman Empire, would not have been a fan of Starbucks. Under his rule, the consumption of coffee was a capital offense.

The sultan was so intent on eradicating coffee that he would disguise himself as a commoner and stalk the streets of Istanbul with a hundred-pound broadsword. Unfortunate coffee drinkers were decapitated as they sipped.

Murad IV’s successor was more lenient. The punishment for a first offense was a light cudgeling. Caught with coffee a second time, the perpetrator was sewn into a leather bag and tossed in the river.

But people still drank coffee. Even with the sultan at the front door with a sword and the executioner at the back door with a sewing kit, they still wanted their daily cup of joe. And that’s the history of coffee in a bean skin: Old habits die hard. —Adam Cole

Tuesday Hijinks, No. 4:  An interview with me about the paperback version of All These Things I’ve Done and title reveal for the second book.
Something I wanted to put in the interview but didn’t. All the titles of the books in the series add up to form a synopsis of the series. At this point, you have half the sentence: All these things I’ve done because it is my blood… etc. 
P.S. The jacket on my tumblr is - I believe - the final version; it’s a little bit different than the one on BookPage.

Tuesday Hijinks, No. 4:  An interview with me about the paperback version of All These Things I’ve Done and title reveal for the second book.

Something I wanted to put in the interview but didn’t. All the titles of the books in the series add up to form a synopsis of the series. At this point, you have half the sentence: All these things I’ve done because it is my blood… etc. 

P.S. The jacket on my tumblr is - I believe - the final version; it’s a little bit different than the one on BookPage.

Thursday Chocolate, no. 6: minimalist mustache cake. Aside: Mustaches are everywhere these days. It’s starting to seem a bit sinister to me. 

Thursday Chocolate, no. 6: minimalist mustache cake. Aside: Mustaches are everywhere these days. It’s starting to seem a bit sinister to me. 

(via whatmakesm3beautiful)

Wednesday Narcissism no. 6: What higher honor can a book receive than to be gosling-ized? Yes, we are amused. 
ryangoslingyoungadult:

Thank you, Bookphilia!
Book Reference: All These Things I’ve Done by Gabrielle Zevin.

Wednesday Narcissism no. 6: What higher honor can a book receive than to be gosling-ized? Yes, we are amused. 

ryangoslingyoungadult:

Thank you, Bookphilia!

Book Reference: All These Things I’ve Done by Gabrielle Zevin.

Thursday Chocolate #2 - Classic Lucille Ball.

Thursday Chocolate #2 - Classic Lucille Ball.

(Source: booyoowhore)

Friday Nonsense: the usual suspects.
flavorpill:

Fast Food Mascots as Gangsters

Friday Nonsense: the usual suspects.

flavorpill:

Fast Food Mascots as Gangsters

Thursday Chocolate.
lovesunshinehappiness:

l’amour du chocolat

Thursday Chocolate.

lovesunshinehappiness:

l’amour du chocolat

OMG! An All These Things I’ve Done jack-o’-lantern!
Thanks to the clever Vivien & YA Highway for the link.

OMG! An All These Things I’ve Done jack-o’-lantern!

Thanks to the clever Vivien & YA Highway for the link.

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