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Posts Tagged ‘Time Out Chicago’

The Origins of Our Writing Partnership: How SWHW Really Came to Be

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009
GREG WROTE:

This past Monday Claire and I were asked to present a story about our writing partnership at a salon, in particular about SWHW. Below is what I read out loud:

There was a Hawaiian sun setting in the background when we first worked on She Wrote, He Wrote: Claire and I, armed with our laptops, stumbled into a coffee shop on Broadway and Clark called Maui Wowi, and it was with the shop’s wall-length photograph of the Pacific Ocean at sunset to our left – a picture we couldn’t stop looking at because we were both amused with and impressed by its size – Claire explained to me her idea of starting a writing project together. About writing a joint blog.

“I don’t know if I want to write a blog,” I said. “You’re the blogger.”

For as much writing as I try to get published, I attempt to remain somewhat impersonal with it. I’d rather write pop culture-induced anecdotes that reflect on how ridiculous everyone else is, instead how ridiculous I am. Blogging, it seemed to me at the time, appeared to be too similar to journal writing, and no one wants to hear what I dreamt about last night. No one wants to read about what I was going to be up to on a Tuesday afternoon. No one wants to hear my daily thoughts and nightly rants.

“No,” Claire said. “It’s not going to be like that at all because we’re going to have a focus, which is the most important thing about blogging, and we’re going to write about a determined experience. Together, but separate.”

Claire talked more about her idea, explaining how we’d both write about the same event without reading each other’s work, how we’d post them side-by-side in a he-said-she-said slant and how it would work because our writing styles are so different. And so it was then that our blog She Wrote, He Wrote was conceived right there under a two-dimensional Hawaiian sun.

I only said yes to this whole idea because I felt confident in Claire not only as a life partner, but as a writing partner. She has an amazing control of language – both orally and in the written form – and she uses it responsibly to not only insightfully wax on the world through her own five-year-old blog, but she’s out there getting published in major magazines and freelancing for some pretty respectable publications. I placed one foot, and then another, on her coattails. I got into a wobbly surfer stance. I’ll ride Claire’s wave, I said.

After all, it was because of Claire that I started writing for The Huffington Post. I sent them a pitch to be a columnist and never heard back; Claire sent in a better pitch and they gave her a profile and free reign, and she then recommended me to her editor. It was because of Claire’s writing and submitting knowledge that I got a piece accepted at Chicago Public Radio, and it was because of her gigs as a travel writer I was able to travel to Boulder, Costa Rica and Jamaica last year almost for free. And it was directly because of her I landed an entire page book review in the Chicago Reader after a certain Time Out editor continued to ignore me. In Claire, I trust.

She is my editor, my proofreader, my first reaction-er. I respect her opinion so much that it sometimes pains me to not take her advice on a title, the certain use of a picture, or if the phrase “ass-faced dicknose” has two hyphens or one. And sometimes she might not totally get something I’ve written, like the Transformers piece I did for Cracked Magazine or the AC/DC parody list I wrote for Yankee Potroast entitled “Dirty Deeds Done Not So Dirt Cheap.” No matter what, though, I go to her first.

My partnership with Claire is more than a writing one, we’re in love and she’s pregnant and we’re on the same Lost episode. It’s amazing to share all this with my wife, but I do want to point out four other memorable partnerships I’ve had in my life:

1. Fifth grade. With classmate Brian. We put together a totally cool 3-D Icarus diorama that involved a lot of bendy straws and red magic marker.

2. In high school, my tennis doubles partner for a year was my good friend and troublemaker, Will. We made the #1 doubles finals at a Catholic schools tournament and we not only lost the match, but we also lost our tempers. When we refused to shake our opponents hands up at the net, the mother of one of them yelled out “Real nice. They won’t even shake their hands.” In response, Will shouted in front of a hundred people who were watching, “Shut up, bitch!”

3. In grad school I collaborated with two friends on a sitcom pilot and two episodes that revolved around a vampire columnist living in Minneapolis who has lots of flashbacks and a bumbling doctor friend that we saw being very George Costanza-y. Somehow, our show has yet to be picked up by Showtime.

4. A long time ago I was basically attached at the hip with my friend Lennie, who was this huge oafish guy. We worked side-by-side on a ranch, and while I was trying to make enough money so that I could buy a piece of land for myself to settle down on, Lennie really only cared about one thing: rabbits. The problem was that just when we were making enough money to move, Lennie… kinda killed the ranch owner’s wife while just trying to stroke her hair. Broke her neck, actually. And our partnership ended tragically when I decided it was better to shoot Lennie in the back of the head instead of letting him get lynched by the mob that was after him.

The pregnancy has put She Wrote, He Wrote in limbo at the moment. We’re spending a lot more time on the couch than out reviewing the newest restaurant. But I know that if this little writing project were to end, that it’s for the best so that we can finally start working on that screenplay we’re supposed to be writing together.

CLAIRE WROTE:

This past Monday Greg and I were asked to present a story about our writing partnership at a salon, in particular about SWHW. Below is what I read out loud:

In the beginning, all we did was write. I was living in Los Angeles, in a sunny little apartment by the beach. I’d quit my job to work on a book and each morning when I got up I’d make coffee and then sit down at my computer, where there was always an email from Greg waiting for me. He was living in Chicago, working some job that I never quite understood the details of, in a tall building in the Loop — something I was unable to picture since I’d never been to Chicago. I’d never met Greg either but nonetheless, his emails quickly made my day feel incomplete in their rare absence.

Both of us being writers, we’d become acquainted with each other through a website we both wrote for. It was a community of writers, this website, and so this guy, Greg Boose in Chicago, who wrote surprisingly funny vignettes about odd situations he found himself in, seemed safe. We wrote to each other about our lives in big cities, about the people we went on dates with and about nights we returned home alone. We wrote a lot about writing, about our ambitions and the ways in which words filled us up like nothing else could. These letters back and forth were addictive, each one more carefully composed than the next and each one just a bit more revealing than the last.

Truthfully, I never thought anything would come of it. I certainly didn’t think that a year and a half after beginning those emails I’d be here before you, pregnant and married to Greg Boose from Chicago who still works that same mysterious job in the Loop. But, to everyone’s amazement, including our own, something in those letters and emails took hold, perhaps proving that words are sometimes stronger than they seem.

It’s a funny thing to partner with someone. Sometimes it happens before you know it. Our partnership has almost always taken shape in the form of writing. It became automatic, before we’d even met in person, to send each other drafts of what we were working on, to use each other as editors. I would send excerpts of the book I was working on and he would send irreverent humor pieces that made laugh out loud, startling the sleeping cat in my lap.

Greg and I are different writers. His words smack of sarcasm and a sharply twisted humor. I tend towards the more introspective and reflective. Rather than make up stories, which we rarely do, both of us tend to draw observations, commenting or immersing ourselves in some situation or experience past. It was easy to read his work — easy to comment and criticize since it was so remarkably different than my own. And I suspect he felt the same way about me. Had we both been writing thoughtful essays about the shadows of our lives or absurd lists of “Yo Mama” jokes, it might have been different. There might have been a competitiveness there, or a sharper nit-pickiness that neither of us has ever displayed.

Eventually Greg and I met in person, a few months after we’d sent those first emails back and forth. The meeting took place near an empty baggage claim carousel at O’Hare airport, and I suppose that it was then and there, in a simple way, that our partnership truly began. I was fresh off a flight from Boston, having decided at the very last minute to stop in Chicago on my way home from a trip to the East Coast. Greg had been pacing the airport for over an hour and had already changed his shirt once in attempt to conceal how sweaty the whole ordeal was making him. And ever since that warm May afternoon, when I finally got to know both Greg and Chicago in person, we’ve been working together on love and life and writing…and all the other things that fall somewhere between the three of those.

Six months after I moved here I convinced Greg to start a writing project with me called She Wrote, He Wrote — a website in which we would review restaurants and events and situations from a dual perspective. I figured that given our different writing styles and varied backgrounds, something interesting might emerge. And from fancy cocktails to running mixes to surf lessons in Costa Rica, Greg and I have proven over and over, to ourselves and to our readers, exactly how two people can have the same experience yet be in two completely different places. And it’s proven to me over and over the exact strength of our partnership — that as merged as we are, as combined as our days and hours and lives seem to be, we each still live in our own world, albeit one enhanced and enriched by the other.










Pull Up a Seat at Forkably Hip’s Next Available Table

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008
GREG WROTE:

Growing up in a family of six kids, my mother always had to calculate recipes from books to make sure there would be enough to go around for eight mouths. I never thought about this math as a child, but looking back on those days now allows me to give her even more credit for what she did in the kitchen.

On Sunday evening Claire and I attended a Forkably Hip dinner party, thrown by Andrea Newberry and a few of her friends. Here’s a picture of Andrea and her fiance Ira working hard to feed the 25 or so hungry mouths out in the living room:

There were eight filled seats at my table, just like when I was a kid, but this time I didn’t have my signature green plastic cup or any of my brothers’ elbows jabbing into my ribs. This time I was surrounded by seven hip women who drank wine and talked politics, who discussed their interesting Chicago jobs and exchanged business cards: two of the women created websites, one ran an aerial dance company, one restored Japanese books for the Art Institute, another ran a fashion blog, and the woman next to Claire was a Time Out Chicago editor.

Andrea’s food, which can best be seen and described on her latest blog post, was both delicious and fun.

As the conversation and wine flowed, so did the courses to our table. So did the piles of dirty dishes away from us.

If I didn’t have Claire and her social networking skills, and if I wanted to meet a bunch of interesting and social people in a comfortable atmosphere, then I would reserve a seat at Forkably Hip’s next event. Even with Claire, I’ll still want to reserve a seat.

Forkably Hip
BYOB
Suggested Donation: $25.00
forkable.blog@gmail.com

CLAIRE WROTE:
I grew up going to dinner parties. As the only child of two much older parents who loved to entertain, I think half of my childhood was spent flouncing around the living room while my parents’ guests sipped cocktails and mingled in their Saturday night finest.

Growing up in that environment did two things for me: not only do I now love to host my own little soirees, but I’m very appreciative of the details that go into someone else doing the same. Throwing a dinner party isn’t just about the food. Even though the evening may revolve around that very thing, there are so many other factors that come into play when designing a successful get-together in your home. From the people you invite, to the lighting, the music and even the arrangement of furniture, each angle must be accounted for, otherwise your party may end up feeling a little off, like a table with one leg too short. On the other hand, there’s nothing quite like attending a truly successful dinner party. The feeling you have, upon walking out the door, still slipping your coat on, a warm glow rising up through you, a smile lingering on your face…there’s nothing quite like that.

We went one such dinner party just the other night. Andrea Newberry of the blog Forkably Hip, hosted a fantastic evening in her home in Humbolt Park with her fiance Ira on Sunday. Andrea’s blog is billed as “Slow Food for Fast Living” and uses these events to demonstrate exactly what she means by that. Sunday night’s event was deemed “Forkably Hip” and was co-hosted by fashion blog writer Amber Mortenson of Painfully Hip, thus ensuring that not only would the food be good but the guests would be fabulous (and well-dressed). The menu was French Provincial (a caramelized onion tart to begin, Coq au Vin as the main dish and a luscious dessert of plum dumplings) and Andrea had cleared out the living room, giving way to space for three long tables at which we all sat.

There was only one person that Greg somewhat knew at the party and I knew no one; the rest of the guests were a really interesting mix of magazine editors, aerial theatre performers and historical book restorers. Conversation, as well as wine flowed through the night and Andrea disappeared and reappeared throughout night, presenting us with a delectable meal. As Greg and I pulled on our coats at the end of the night and walked down the steps outside of her apartment, a smile graced both our faces — a sure sign that Andrea Newberry knows what she’s doing.

You Can’t Get More American (Or Indigestion) Than Having a Hot Dog on the Fourth

Thursday, July 10th, 2008
GREG WROTE:

My uncle and cousin were in town for the 4th of July weekend from San Francisco and they wanted to really experience Chicago. And instead of cramming themselves onto a Loop train during rush hour or sitting in traffic on Diversey during any time of day, they wanted to try an authentic Chicago hot dog.

If you aren’t aware, a Chicago dog includes these seven ingredients: a dill pickle slice, celery salt, tomatoes, onions, mustard, sport peppers and relish.

We flipped through the current Time Out Chicago, asked neighbors for advice, ground our teeth and pointed fingers at each other’s chests, and finally ended up at U Lucky Dawg (formerly known as Fluky’s):

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I hadn’t eaten a hot dog in over a year - since my one and only Cubs game - and when we got inside we were all overwhelmed with menu. My uncle and I ordered the Chicago-style while my cousin got a cheese dog and Claire, for Lord knows what reason, got a chili cheese dog. We took the trays outside to the front patio.

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We consumed.

Claire’s reaction: She couldn’t believe she just ate that chili cheese dog.

My cousin’s reaction: She never really tasted the cheese.

My uncle’s reaction: He could eat another one of those.

My reaction: I could eat another one of those.

I headed back inside to order three more Chicago style dogs, one for the girls to split, and we consumed some more.

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Might I advise that if you haven’t eaten a hot dog in over a year and then down two loaded ones in under ten minutes, that you should beat yourself up immediately. Physically and mentally. Get it over with.

We headed back to the apartment with all of our foreheads against the car windows, blaming each other for the second round, and when we got home nobody spoke to each other for hours. By the time it was ready to leave for the fireworks, our stomachs had somewhat settled, but it was the hot dogs that we oohed and aahed and ughed over on the blanket that night.




CLAIRE WROTE:

So, I was dragged (somewhat reluctantly) to the U Lucky Dawg hot dog stand on the 4th of July with Greg, his Uncle Ron and cousin Mandy.

I say “dragged” because, as American as it might be, getting hot dogs on the 4th of July isn’t my idea of perfection. I would have much preferred to take a picnic basket to the lake to watch fireworks. (We did go to the lake that night to watch fireworks, but by then all we had with us was some bottles of water, a king-sized bag of almond M&Ms and several moderate cases of indigestion.)

What I would have liked to take with us in a picnic basket had we not gone to U Lucky Dawg:

* A wedge of Humbolt Fog
* Crackers
* Olives
* Possibly some aged salami
* Marcona almonds in olive oil & sea salt
* Loaf of crusty French bread
* Strawberries
* Chocolate
* A bottle or two of Rosé

In place of the above, I sat outside at a picnic table on a fairly noisy stretch of Western and ate a charred chili-cheese hot dog.

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Now, I may sound snobby with my bourgeois picnic basket up there, but I ate that hot dog as though I’d been waiting for it all day. I hadn’t had a hot dog in a long time, since I only have one maybe every couple of years, and I can’t actually remember the last time I had one before this chili cheese dog. But suddenly there we were in line in front of the counter, all of us gazing up at the menu board, and Greg and Ron were set on ordering the famous Chicago-style dog, which I’m sure Greg will explain the components of in his post. I had already decided against ordering it, and was trying to decide on what exactly I would order, when I flashed on a childhood memory.

When I was a kid growing up in Sandy Springs, a suburb of Atlanta, my Dad used to take me to a hot dog place called G.D. Ritzy’s, which has since all but disappeared (although a comeback is rumored), and we always ordered the chili-cheese dog with shoestring fries and chocolate milkshakes. And it was like this thing that my Dad and I did together — one of those things that becomes forever encompassed by a little bubble of nostalgia, making it so that every time you are ever forced to order a hot dog you always go for the chili-cheese, no matter that you are 30 years old and no longer eat hot dogs and it’s the 4th of July and you just hosted a vegetarian yoga brunch on your deck.

And so I ate the chili-cheese hot dog and it was just okay, all dripping with that processed nacho cheese sauce and swimming in some kind of bland chili. In fact, I ate it so fast that Greg was still reveling in his Chicago-style dog when I was done, so I asked for a bite and immediately realized that I’d fallen into a terrible nacho cheese-flavored trap of nostalgia and should’ve just listened to my fiance when he suggested I get the Chicago-style. And then I think it was Ron who suggested we order another round. Seven minutes later found me still sitting on a picnic bench on a noisy stretch of Western on the 4th of July now splitting a Chicago-style hot dog with Mandy, my stomach already beginning to churn, as it would continue to do so for the next eight or so hours.

All in all, I’m glad we went, if even just for the memory of going to G.D. Ritzy’s with my Dad (and perhaps for the reminder that I shouldn’t eat hot dogs for another few years). Next year we’re doing the 4th bourgeois-picnic-style, and if anyone insists on hot dogs I’ll make some pigs-n-blankets with a nice grainy mustard.




U Lucky Dawg
6821 N Western Ave, Chicago
773.274.3652

Sinning in the Second City Would Be a Lot Easier If We Knew More About It

Friday, June 20th, 2008
GREG WROTE:

Something I prided myself on when I lived in Cleveland was that I knew its history. Not all of it, but a good deal. I bought and read books about its origins. I stopped to read plaques. I talked to people in my neighborhood. Climbed buildings. Discovered new roads. Picked pockets. Robbed the dead. Whatever.

In Chicago, however, I feel completely ignorant on the origins of the city. In Cleveland I would often pepper my walks with facts about the street we were on or what that store used to be, but here I have to tell my weekend visitors “You know, I couldn’t really tell you what that is” or “I don’t know how to get there.” Or I get too embarrassed and make things up like “I believe that statue is for the guy who finally ended the month-long war between the raccoon people and the Chicago librarians in 1914″ and “My parents actually own that and you wouldn’t believe how much it’s worth.”

So it was interesting for me to listen to the author of “Sin in the Second City,” Karen Abbott, talk about Chicago in the early 1900s. Claire and I walked to The Book Cellar in Lincoln Square for a literary kick, and instead of sitting back and listening to an author read a chapter from her book, Abbott only opened up her paperback once to read a letter from one of the main characters. The rest of the time she gave me a history lesson, discussing what Chicago was like during the rise of Chicago’s Everleigh Club, the most famous brothel in American history.

Sex. Politicians. Sex. Al Capone. Syphilis. Balzac. Sex. Chicago’s Red Light District. Gold Plated Pianos. Ministers. White Slavery. Sex. Thievery. Reformers. Prostitutes. Millionaires. More.

Abbott answered the many questions of the crowd of 20 with ease, informing everyone on the birth control methods of the prostitutes and what happened when one got syphilis (the doctor wrote a fake report so she could keep working (and spreading (her legs and the disease))).

We bought the book, approached the author for a signature, I blurted out something lame, and Claire saved me by talking about a famous stripper in Atlanta who crushes beer cans in between her enormous breasts.

I’m looking forward to reading the book for some more Chicago history so that the next time I’m walking a visitor through the Loop I don’t have to talk about the raccoon people I’ve built up in my mind.



They stand three-feet tall and have the top halves of humans, the bottoms and hands of raccoons, by the way.




Sin in the Second City
Karen Abbott
Random House - March 1, 2007
Now out in paperback, 297 pages

CLAIRE WROTE:

We went to a reading on Thursday night at our neighborhood bookstore, The Book Cellar. Greg picked this one out from a listing in Time Out Chicago and I’m always up for a reading, especially one at The Book Cellar so I was game. I’d heard of the book, “Sin in the Second City,” could even conjure up an image of its cover, yet I knew nothing of what it was about.

When we got there we grabbed a center table and a copy of the book and I set to work ordering a glass of wine. This is one of the things I love about The Book Cellar — they sell wine. And good wine. I returned to the table with a glass of Pink Zeppelin, a fantastic and elusive dry rosé from Red Zeppelin Winery out of Paso Robles.

Come summer I almost only want to drink rosé, which contrary to its color and name, is not a sweet wine, and seemed the perfect accompaniment to a reading from a book about Chicago’s most famous brothel, The Everleigh Club.

While I sipped my wine and skimmed the back of the book — something about historical fiction that wasn’t really fiction about two sisters who ran a famous whorehouse in Chicago at the turn of the century — I studied the author from the corner of my eye. She was easy to pick out with her glass of champagne and dog-eared copy of the book in her hand. She was chatting with who seemed to be her publicist and a couple of eager fans as they waited for the reading to begin.

I’m always more interested in the author than the book. In fact the more I love a book, the more interested I become in the author. I got into an argument about this with a friend some years ago. My friend felt that the author should be completely irrelevant to the enjoyment of the book but I protested. Being a writer myself, I’m constantly fascinated by the writing process and the drive and motivation a person has to sit down and pound away at these little keys until, as Karen Abbott put it when I queried her about her book writing experience, “your eyes bleed.”

Abbott didn’t disappoint. She was very pretty and young and stylishly-dressed with a fantastic wide leather belt and cute brown shoes and she spoke loudly and clearly and quite unapologetically about a subject that she was clearly fascinated by: the Everleigh sisters, Minna and Ada, who opened what would become one of the most famous whore houses in the world. The author stood for the entire 45 minutes of her reading, which wasn’t a reading at all but rather a kind of talk on this subject that she adoringly researched for three years before writing the book, and all the while I continued to study her.

I noted the way she stood, with one foot sometimes stepping back behind her as if to propel her closer to us, and the way she shifted the length of her brown hair from side to side. I liked the way she seemed to light up when talking about these women whose lives she so fastidiously researched and grew to know intimately. She said she missed them terribly when she finished, her eyes crinkling a bit.

Sipping away the last dregs of my lovely rosé at the end of her talk, I was completely sold on reading this book, whose cover was familiar to me long before its contents. Much like how strangers and all the little details of their outward appearances can become just as recognizable as someone you know the depths of.