1. Tell us your best "only in New York" story.

One day in the late 80s, W. (then boyfriend, now husband) told me that the muffler was about to fall off. I merrily drove to work in Brooklyn. On the way home, I offered a lift to a friend who lived in the West Village. To get to the West Village from Brooklyn involved a drive up Hudson Street, which was then still cobblestoned. Sure enough, those bumpy cobblestones knocked the loose muffler off, and it dropped in such a way that it was stabbing into the street – no further forward progress was possible. I got out of the car, looked underneath, and stood up scratching my head. What next?
With that, out of a manhole nearby emerged a ConEd worker. “What seems to be the problem?” “Well, my muffler’s fallen off.” “No problem.” With that, he disappeared into his truck, reappeared with stainless steel baling wire, dove under the car, and wired the muffler in place with his heat-proof gloves. It wasn’t fixed-fixed, but it was enough to get me home. I don’t even remember giving him a tip – but I should have.
2. What is your favorite cookbook?

The runner-up would be nearly anything by Julia Child.
3. What toy of your daughter's do you play with while she's asleep, or otherwise secretly covet?

4. How did you choose your child's name (if you can answer without revealing more than you'd like)? What, if any, were the ones that got away -- the boy names, or the ones that your partner vetoed?
We never bothered to discuss boy’s names, because we knew she was a girl - I’d had a CVS. We started some lists, which included things simple (Anne), outré (Elektra), family (Elizabeth), and Shakespearean (Rosalind, Isabella, Portia*, Miranda). As it happens, Miranda kept showing up on the list – three times according to the lists I kept. And so she became Miranda. Curiously, neither of us gave any thought to the Miranda Warning, or to Carmen Miranda – it was all about the Bard.
*We couldn’t call her Portia – people would have thought we’d named her after the car.
5. Describe (or photograph) a piece of art or other treasured object in your home and tell us why it's special.

Are you up to being interviewed? Let me know and I'll make up some questions! And thanks, Mayberry Mom, for pushing me off on all these tangents!
You know I love to talk about myself!
ReplyDeleteI'm coveting that gray elephant right about now.
ReplyDeleteVery fun - I especially love your NYC moment!
ReplyDeleteMy mom has a lot of local art in her house like that. Such a nice ambience.
ReplyDeleteJulia Child--inexplicably, right after I had my baby, my husband took up French cooking, working his way through Mastering the Art of French Cooking. I wish I had had more help back then, but at least I ate well.
Great interview.