Books Read in Bora Bora

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I spent most of November reading:  in bed, at meals, on our deck overlooking the ocean, on the beach and by the pool with SPF 50 sunscreen slathered on any exposed skin.  Although I've gone back to reading "real" hardback books at home, the Kindle is still an absolute treasure trove for travel.  I'm increasingly appreciative of the option to increase the font size, so I can continue to push back the date when I have to wear reading glasses.

I had been reading Living with a Wild God:  A Nonbeliever's Search for the Truth about Everything by Barbara Ehrenreich before we flew away to Bora Bora, so I finished that first.  It's worth reading for people who are interested in mystical / spiritual / transcendent experiences, although it wasn't as penetrating as I hoped it would be.  William James' The Varieties of Religous Experience (1901) is still my favorite book in this area.  Sam Harris' Waking Up:  A Guide to Spirituality without Religion is next on my list to read.    

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 Then I started in with my true love – literary fiction:

  • A Gate at the Stairs, and Bark:  Stories by Lorrie  Moore, 
  • Amy and Isabelle by Elizabeth Strout,
  • Where the God of Love Hangs Out by Amy Bloom, 
  • The Girl Who Fell from the Sky by Heidi W. Durrow,
  • Ajax Penumbra 1969 by Robin Sloan  
  • The Newlyweds by Nell Freudenberger,
  • By Nightfall by Michael Cunningham (whose short story, White Angel (1989) is absolutely on my Top Ten All Time list),
  • The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides
  • Netherland, and The Dog by Joseph O'Neill  

All of these were lovely in their own way, but I'm afraid I have to join the bandwagon and say that the best book of the month (and therefore the year) was All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr.  My dear friend, Clarissa, had suggested we both read it for discussion during an upcoming trip we're taking together.  I'm glad she did.  It is beautifully written, complex, and well worth the accolades it's receiving.

One of the many habits I have that baffles Brad is to re-read books I've already read.  After reading a plethora of new novels and short stories, I revisted a tome, Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace, which I first read in Alaska in 2005.  My blog review of my first reading is here.  It has the same number of pages and footnotes the second time, and was just as funny and sad and all that, maybe heightened by DFW's suicide in 2008.

Then I re-read some other wonderful fiction:  

  • Three Junes by Julia Glass
  • The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi
  • Smilla's Sense of Snow by Peter Hoeg
  • The Art of Fielding, which is in the same league as All the Light We Cannot See.  I loved this book when I read it for the first time in 2012, and imagine I'll be re-reading it throughout my reading life.  It's one of those first novels that I can't believe is a first novel, like The Kite Runner and The Lovely Bones.  

  After all that literary fiction, it was time for some palate-cleansing science fiction.  I read William Gibson's new book, The Peripheral, and re-read old favorites Neuromancer and Pattern Recognition.  Gibson is far and away my favorite science fiction writer, although I did also re-read Dune by Frank Herbert on this trip, which I've read maybe a dozen times.

In preparation for the New Year, I read and re-read several business / organizing / writing / inspiration books.  (Asterisks indicate re-reading.)

  • *The Power of Habit:  Why We Do What We Do by Charles Duhigg
  • *The Power of Less:  The Fine Art of Limiting Yourself to the Essential … in Business and Life by Leo Babauta
  • *Zen to Done:  The Ultimate Simple Productivity System by Leo Babauta
  • *The Joy Diet:  Ten Daily Practices for a Happier Life by Martha Beck
  • *Making a Literary Life:  Advice for Writers and Other Dreamers by Carolyn See
  • The Willpower Instinct:  How Self-Control Works, Why It Matters, and What you Can Do to Get More of It by Kelly McGonigal
  • Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely
  • Essentialism:  The Disciplined Pursuit of Less by Greg Mckeown 

Somewhere in there I also re-read a couple of favorite action adventure spy conspiracy thriller books:  The Color of Night, and An Absense of Light, both by David Lindsey.

And that was about it.  I'm looking forward to a 2015 full of reading and writing, and maybe some more Pacific Ocean sunsets. 

 

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Art and Alinea in Chicago

I love living in my small town, but I also love visiting big cities and getting caught up in the hustle and bustle for a few days.  Brad and I just spent 4 nights in Chicago on a Wellesley College Davis Museum Friends of Art tour, which gave us access to unbelievable private art collections and stunning real estate, as well as time together with other art lovers.

We had lovely weather during most of our visit except for a drizzly Saturday.  This is the view from our 26th floor hotel room.  It's a city!  

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 We also were fortunate enough to have a friend help us secure a reservation at Alinea, the temple of molecular gastronomy which was just ranked the number 7 restaurant in the world

This post mostly consists of course by course documentation of the dining experience, so if you're not a foodie you may want to skip this one — although it's fun to watch Brad on video after experiencing his green apple helium balloon dessert.

We were among the first people seated, which turned out to be really nice because we were the first to receive each amazing new course and could have the complete element of visual surprise.  We sat side by side on the banquette so that the experience felt even more like a performance.  It was actually nice to be just the two of us so that we could focus on the food and not be distracted at all by conversation. 

 At Alinea they do a wonderful thing and give you a copy of your menu without the guests even asking.  

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 To begin:  an ice sculpture is placed on the bare table -  

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First food:  Steelhead roe with carrot, coconut, and curry flavors

Served with Cocktail of Gimonnet Brut with St. Germain and Esterhazy Beerenauslese 

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 Then what we called the Swamp Thing Collection:  oyster leaf mignonette, king crab with passionfruit, heart of palm, allspice; mussel with saffron and oregano; razor clam with shiso, soy, daikon, served in a bed of kelp and seaweed from the Pacific.  

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Shells after eating, along with mystery iceberg  

 

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The server then brings a Bunsen burner machine with vegetables that the water boils up around while you're eating your next course - 

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A single bite for each of us - 

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Then a scallop "acting like agedashi tofu" with absurdly precise vegetables arrayed about –  

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 Broth from the Bunsen burner is poured over to make soup - 

 Then you are presented with a rubbery ring (not from the space shuttle) - 

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Upon which is placed toro tuna with thai banana, sea salt, and kaffir lime foam –  

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 Then it's time to approach the iceberg with a glass straw –  

 

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Which contains a liquid of beet, hibiscus, and licorice – a bracing palate cleanser and a signal that the flavors move from the ocean to the earth - 

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Burn Morel mushrooms with ramps, fiddlehead fern, miner's lettuce and a quail egg served on hot stones and a burned plank that is still warm.  This was amazing, full of spring flavors - 

 

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 Another earthy course:  Hot potato, cold potato, black truffle, butter, served in a wax dish with the ingredients separated on a pin that you pull to let them drop into the soup and then drink in one swallow.  Incredible flavors –  

 

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The empty wax cup

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And after all this theater, this was the most visually intriguing part:  an array of accompaniments, including  candied pecan, mint jelly, cinnamon, various and sundry herbs, and a blue gel of anise  

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 To be eaten in whatever combination the diner pleases in combination with turbot prepared 3 ways - 

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And the messy tray after we'd had our way with it - 

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Another single bite:  the black truffle explosion, with broth and romaine and parmesan inside. Unbelievable –  

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 And another performance art course.  The server brings a metal vessel containing a lavender infused bath of hot water which sends the aromatic essence around.  Then individual bites are placed in a display inspired by a Miro painting with silverware in the title - 

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As you eat each bite you place the utensil in the lavender bath so that at the end all the silverware is gathered neatly together - 

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The next course is served in an intriguing metal pronged device.  This was Anjou pear fried with onion and brie, served on a flaming cinnamon stick.  While this was visually interesting, and smelled wonderful, it was my least favorite in terms of texture and flavor - 

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But it's fun and dangerous to have fire at the table –  

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The pre-dessert palate cleanser was tiny but incredibly intense flavored assortment of gingers.  My favorite was Indian influenced with turmeric and yogurt –

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 The metal pins after the tidbits are eaten - 

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The presentation of a metal straw for the first dessert course - 

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Blueberry with buttermilk, sorrel, and macadamia flavors –   

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 You remove the glass stopper in the middle and liquid is poured in to make smoke and create a cold broth to complement the sweetness of the dessert flavors.   

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After eating - 

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The next dessert course is mostly for the visual mastery of a  green apple balloon filled with helium - 

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The server told Brad to remove his glasses to prevent the sticky balloon from getting all over.  I didn't love getting sticky stuff on my face, but Brad enjoyed his helium.  His commentary:  

 

 

The final dessert:  white chocolate vessel with strawberry, English pea, and lemon powders in a signature Alinea moment -  

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 After pouring liquid into the white chocolate vessel, the server spreads Chantilly cream, English pea, strawberry, and lemon powders as well as flower petals and tiny meringues and assorted other spring accessories to create a Monet on the table - 

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The server gives the white chocolate vessel a sharp thwack and shatters it and then leaves you to figure out where to begin - 

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And that's all, and surely, that's enough.  Amazing.  

I'm  including a link to Brad's iPhone photos, documenting his wine pairings and giving a different perspective - 

The kitchen - 

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And I'll take a day or two to rest and then post about our other lovely dinner at Sepia

I'm sorry we're leaving just as the Roy Lichtenstein retrospective opens at the Art Institute of Chicago.  Maybe we'll make a return trip to see that and eat some more!  

 

Brad’s Birthday Bash Finale

 I'm back in snowy frigid Boulder after a week in mostly sunny Scottsdale, and the memories of our friend-filled birthday celebration week are helping keep me warm.

 On Brad's actual birthday night, we had Japanese food at Sushi Roku restaurant at the W Hotel, where they did a wonderful job of making the evening special.

The happy group:

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The happy couple: 

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Brad wearing the beautiful scarf his mother made for him – as a headband:  

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 Excellent tuna sashimi: 

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 A thoroughly chocolate cake: 

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And fireworks: 

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We had a lovely experience at the Sanctuary at Camelback, playing tennis, taking advantage of the spa, and lounging by the pool and hot tub.  I've always said that I can't imagine living in a place where there isn't snow in wintertime, but I may be changing my mind! 

Flowers blooming in December: 

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The view from the pool from Casa 5: 

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Tennis at Casa 5: 

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The living room at Casa 9: 

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The best part of all, of course, was having friends and family gather together to celebrate.  We're looking forward to  next year! 

 

 

Bismarck

Marathon #18 in Brad's quest to run one in each of the 50 states is completed.  We spent two nights in Bismarck, North Dakota and I can cross another state off of my list.

Brad blogs about his race here.  I really liked following him on Run Keeper Live to see where he was at all points during the marathon.  

It's race day!  Light rain, cloudy, gloomy: 

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Brad's usual pre-marathon preparation – last minute emails:

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Before:

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During:

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Crossing the finish line: 

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After – feeling pretty good: 

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Back in our hotel room – with finisher's medal:

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 Next up, Newport, Rhode Island on October 15th and St. Louis, Missouri the following Sunday October 23rd. 

Back in Boulder

I've had a glorious summer in Paris and Tuscany, but eventually it's time to come home.  

I missed the dogs, 

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and our house (photographed by friends hiking across the canyon) 

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and Colorado peaches for breakfast, sitting outside watching hummingbirds in the flowers - 

It's good to be home - 

Here is a link to an entertaining interview of Brad by David Cohen of TechStars, where you can see the swimming pool and villa and the general beauty of the place.  

Our penultimate night in Tuscany we went to our new friends' house for pizza made in their very own brick oven.  Yum.  Here we document Brad's limited footwear options after two months away: 

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The lemon cake we had for dessert - 

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This photo is of a dessert that Jeff made for a previous dinner while Brad's parents were visiting Tuscany, which is part of the explanation why my scale says exactly what it said two months ago.  Sad but true. 

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 Some photos of flowers in my very own yard –  

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Time to get to work - 

 

Italian Cooking

The bounty and beauty of the Tuscan countryside:

Our welcome dinner at Casetta, our home away from home for the month: 

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Here we see an important meeting of serious guys: Howard, Mark, and Brad, hard at work:

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Last night, arranged through the kindess of the owner of Casseta, we all attended a cooking demonstration class and dinner by Jeff Thickman, which was truly amazing.  I didn't take many photographs, but I will post again in the future with a full description of the experience.  

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Another Tuscan sunset:

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Under the Tuscan Sun

Now we've moved from a spectacularly beautiful urban environment to a spectacularly beautiful pastoral environment in the Tuscan countryside outside of Florence.  Here's a panoramic view that Brad took last night.

 

And some photos of the place:

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 We played tennis this morning on clay courts with visiting friends Mark and Pam Solon.  The clay shouldn't have surprised us since most European courts are clay surface, but it did.  We'll probably play every day, and have other tennis playing friends arriving next week.  It is definitely hot, and we're shifting into the Italian pacing of getting up early while it's cool, then a nice long afternoon siesta, then later dinner.  

And the wireless is obviously working quite well –  


Final Fine Dining – Taillevent

We've eaten so much incredible French food that we almost decided not to have a final celebratory Parisian dinner with Jason, but then we got a last minute reservation at Taillevent and just had to go. 

Jason, not looking a day over 40, and me sporting my La Vie du Grande Norde scarf as I zoom toward my 45th birthday in September:

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And the beautiful French food - 

Soup for Jason:

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Risotto with mushrooms and white almonds, without the optional frog's legs:

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Lamb for Jason:

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Langoustine with apricot and parsley for Brad and me – the Before photo:

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And After:

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We had a lovely cheese course which wasn't photographed, but was surely enjoyed.  

We were really quite full of food after a month of fine dining, so we kept dessert small. 

One scoop of sorbet for Brad: 

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 Two scoops of sorbet for Jason:

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 And a perfect strawberry tart for me, with flecks of gold foil as accents:

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 At some point we'll need to return for the full degustation experience when we haven't already been eating ourselves silly for an entire month.

 

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Posting some random photos that weren't included in previous food posts:

The wines at Le Cinq:  

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Lobster at Le Cinq for both Brad and me: 

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Before our Le Cinq dinner in our fun French apartment: 

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And still my favorite Paris photo, courtesy of Brad: 

 

 

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