Category Archives: French Quarter
Save Tujague’s – Please –
If this doesn’t beat all. FQ building owner showing his ignorance for his own family’s legacy and his building by saying he is selling one of the most historic restaurants in the city to a t-shirt shop owner in the Quarter who says it will soon be filled with fried chicken and more t-shirts. This building housed Madame Begue’s which was the most popular pre-Civil War era restaurant in New Orleans (and maybe North America) and was rejuvenated by This guy’s brother, the convivial Steven Latter as an “everybody knows your name” French Quarter place. Now that Steven Latter has passed away, they have barely waited for him to be in the ground before pulling this crap.
Not sure much can be done by regular citizens-this may be up to the money folks who can throw some dollars at this jerk to get him to sell and move the hell away.
Stay tuned.
UPDATE: SAVED by the citizens of our city with new menu and cookbook.
Save Tujague's – Please – The Editor's Room – March 2013 – New Orleans, LA.
Telling the Truth: Creative Non-Fiction workshop
Sunday workshop on creative non-fiction.
First, lets talk about how people choose seats at a workshop. Fascinating.
Twenty four of twenty-eight seats remain empty throughout to the far right quadrant. In the packed middle, more people sit to the right middle rather than the left middle. Turns out the air conditioning blows furiously on the almost empty quadrant. I remain.
Those who sit front and center never take notes. Note takers sit to the back and to the side.
Some move chairs to have a full unimpeded view, no matter if their choices change the possible flow of how latecomers and early leavers quietly come and go.
There is a digital writer who sits near to the back who is excitedly recognized by a woman and they have a pleasant chat, after which she moves away. She does not sit near him.
At the second workshop in this room right after the first, another woman with a professional camera takes pictures of him and his tiny gray braid that begins under his porkpie hat and ends after the collar of his tropically flowered shirt.
The panelists themselves sit at the table on stage in lean forward or uncomfortable up and down mode. I also wonder if they choose where to sit and if not, if they should.
In order: confident man/writer, affable writer, witty woman/actor, quiet writer, Mod.
The confident man/writer with the sharp-edged face who probably has his ups and downs with other people sits on the end and stares ahead. As I look to where he is looking, I think he might be looking at a mirror. After an introduction where he discounts the introduction for what he is known for doing, he does begin to share important details and connects for a minute in his second pass when the Mod talks of his well-known iPhone theft story, (picaresque is how the writer himself describes it) – which I have read – and his chat about it disarms all of us.
He talks of affable writer’s piece “The frankies”: Dorothy Parker coined it to talk about writers who told too much, were too frank.
Confident man/writer believes we have 2 sets of criteria for reading essays:
1. Fresh, witty interesting
2. Looking for people to make a fool of themselves or to tell too much
This seems like a cocktail party answer that he may have given before yet it is probably true and shows he has observed more than was originally likely.
The affable writers writer is addressed directly by the others and answers the others throughout and clearly knows the others work. He is a people person; his peanut butter and pickle sandwich story was funny and he knows that his comment about “anti-foamers” NY food stories was a perfect point for this audience to hear. Well played sir.
The witty woman (actor)/writer has lots of personal sharing with the audience that ends in rueful laughter. She was the first female winner of the Stella shouting contest at this festival.
The last writer, at first, talks slowly and with hesitation. He has an odd voice and accent. His intro is almost impossible to understand and trails off, somewhat uncomfortably it seems.
However, he is clearly valued by others on the panel and later on gets his bearings.
“Obscene, oppressive and critical eugenics” is his take on the New Republic’s take on essays, the one mentioned by Mod at the beginning. He takes hard umbrage at the idea of magazine writers as a new version of essayists; that was their milieu (which I appreciate as a word when pronounced by educated people) over the 300 years of essay writers.
The slowness of his voice grows on you and comes to sound like the bass line of this hour.
Audience time. The idea of the Mod’s that the writers would talk among themselves first was unrealized and probably doomed to failure in a non-Utopian workshop world.
Q: Memoir and essay?
Quiet writer: Implicit danger in any form that takes so much of it from the first person. Human tendency to find yourself more interesting than you really are.
Affable writer breaks in to say about quiet writer’s work: “His essays are like early Paul McCartney songs.”
Q: How does one move from technical writer to more personal writer
Confident man/writer: Write what is so personal that it seems wrong to publish.
Q: Southern woman who was a column writer loooong ago and told editor-bashing stories about saying “I” and then would not stop talking.
Witty woman actor answers amusingly and then talks of essayists with minds on fire. Contemporary non fiction can present the self in myriad forms.
Q: Voice compliment for witty woman actor/writer from 2nd year TWLF festival goer who asks about lack of madness in essay work and at this festival. She liked the statement of “Bleeding edge” which she says she has been assigned in her lifetime.
Confident man/writer asks sensible question about what she means. Questioner answers with what seems like a non-sequitur about madness and says this is a pleasant protest about lack of madness in the weekend.
Affable writer offers olive branch that all writers are medicated which, oddly brings mad applause from what sounds like 3 people, none near me thank god.
Q: Facts? Do you work around them?
Quiet writer: A fuddy duddy about facts.
Q: Willie Morris question, mostly writers look blank and none want to offer an answer at first.
Confident man/writer: New York Days-loved it, but then read review that called WM a liar.
Affable writer: Liked North Toward Home and collections.
Mentioned Donna Tartt piece about WM too.
More on seating. People sit quietly in this festival and rarely leave before the end.
After all is done, woman leaves stage quickly and men stay. Quiet writer soon looks ready to leave.
Mod tidies, having ended precisely on time.
A writer who talks of his signing with a passing organizer holds a small crowd at the back with quick talk and agreeable banter. Finally, he and his crowd leaves.
I checked-the Confident man/writer could not see the mirror from his seat.
The next workshop fills slowly, it is lunch time in New Orleans after all.
Conversation with Michael Cunningham
Michael Cunningham launched his career by publishing short stories in ”The Atlantic Monthly” and ”Paris Review”. His debut was an impressive feat for a student still in the midst of his MFA program at Iowa’s Creative Writing Workshop. Cunningham’s early successes were telling omens of what lay ahead — six novels, a Pulitzer Prize, a film adaptation of his novel ”The Hours” starring Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman, and Julianne Moore, as well as many awards and fellowships. Novelist and former journalist Amy Stolls interviews Cunningham to get the stories behind his path to literary success. Expect an engaging discussion of literature and the writing life.
Location: Hotel Monteleone Queen Anne Ballroom
Included in: All-Access Pass, Literary Panel Pass, Student Panel Pass, Teacher/Senior Citizen Literary Panel Pass, One Day Festival Panel Pass, Single Panel Ticket (only available on site)
Price: $10 (Single Ticket Event: only available on site), or included in All-Access Pass ($500), Festival Panel Pass ($75), or Day Panel Pass ($30)
Ticket Code(s): AllAccessPass, LitPanelPass, StudentPanPass, Sr/TeachPanPass, DayPanelPassSun
Fringes of the festival
Once you buy a panel pass for the TWLF, I understand that you might then feel compelled to squeeze every dime from it, running from one room to the next, checking off workshops, circling possibilities, slowly scanning the merchandise table in a spare moment, sure that the right gift for your literary friends is here. I have been guilty of that. 75 bucks doesn’t come that easily to me and so often I equate value with quantity, like so many Americans. I do, after all , shop at the dollar store.
Luckily, with age comes experience (let’s not talk about the bad eyesight and odd aches- what DID I do to my arm?) and so I have grown more aware of my choices, at least those that are available with a panel pass.
I could sit in the uncomfortable chairs of a ballroom or a museum through the post-breakfast to cocktail hours, hoping that the gentleman behind me would realize that his throat clearing is not discreet at all, but incredibly well-timed to cover the bon mots that most likely were what the rest of the audience was chuckling over when my ambient hearing returned. I could do that and have.
Or, I could pack up when I feel the energy lagging at the 12:10 mark and head for a fortifying gumbo lunch at the most appropriately named restaurant for a Tennessee festival goer (I believe in you. you CAN decipher this) followed by a cheap cocktail from the oddly agreeably afternoon haunt of the Chart Room, ultimately heading to Crescent City Books for an afternoon of lessons.
Once there, you meet Isabel, their traumatized but healing cat and talk of books and John Boutte with local author and bookseller Michael Z.
You head upstairs and immediately find a book that has no reason to be prominently displayed (this visit it was “Farmers Last Frontier: Agriculture 1860-1897, which is an astounding find this month), sit with your discreet, illicit cocktail and thumb through it while viewing books and book lovers, pausing to think of calliopes on steamboats and why people honk their horns so often and how creaking stairs can be both frightening and comforting.
And salute Tennessee and his devotees who bring you to the Quarter this fine day.
Civil code in New Orleans
Researchers at TWLF talk about the differences in New Orleans civil law (derived from Napoleonic law) from English common-law states:
1. Daughters and sons inherited equally
2. Woman never lost family name even after married. “Marie Laveau, wife of Paris.”
3. Unmarked or widow could conduct business
4. Married woman retained control of what she brought to marriage and half of community property acquired in her marriage.
5. Married woman could petition for separation of property in case of husbands bad business dealings.
Friday on the sliver
As I read through my TWLF schedule to plan my day, I treat myself with a breakfast at Satsuma in the Bywater. Green egg sandwich, wheat grass shot (grown by a MidCity neighbor Jeff on his screened porch) and an immune booster juice.
There is a special delight in spending a day on the streets along the Mississippi, with their graceful curves and views of massive ships slowly passing at eye level. Narrow sidewalks open to old dusty brick walls and uneven stairs with acoustics that encourage fascinating side conversations and allow odd snippets to be overheard…
“Do you know the history of Utah and the Mormons before US intervention?”
“Did you replace the whole machine or just the part that was dripping?”
“I could use a Bloody Mary; actually I would abuse a Bloody Mary right about now…”
“I think that bag would work great for sneaking stuff into JazzFest.”

You must be logged in to post a comment.