Katie CotugnoKatie Cotugno
Tellin' stories, eatin' snax. NYT bestselling author of messy, complicated, feminist love stories
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five good things 0 comments

five good things

Katie

March 13, 2015

1. Fresh Off the Boat and The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, both of which had me cackling all week long like The Office used to ten years ago. I should try to watch more things that make me laugh like that. It makes my stomach feel good.

2. The First Mess, which is full of recipes so beautiful and practical and delicious-looking it took me like twenty minutes of drooling perusal to realize they’re all effing vegan despite the fact that it very clearly states that on the home page. I made these two both this week and: yup. Yup.

3. This cover of Knocking on Heaven’s Door from The 100 finale, and actually everything about The 100 finale, which I thought was earned and sad and great. I want to write a book like The 100 only without the spaceships and violence and I want the CW to make a show of it scored with moody covers of songs from the 1970s. I feel like that’s probably tacky to admit, but whatever. I want it. I’m manifesting.

4. The night of the toilet phone incident I met two girls who I thought were just the coolest, but I always feel like a creep trying to make new friends as an adult and also: toilet phone. Anyway, I finally facebooked them and asked if they wanted to go for drinks this week and guess what: they said yes and it was great and fun. Life lesson, etc etc.

5. Those two days of spring we had this week, and this NYT article in case you were in danger of getting at all sentimental about it.

Happy weekend. I gotta pack for real now.

HOW LIFE IS 1 comment

oprah knows what’s up.

Katie

March 10, 2015

Sierra said she read you’re supposed to let your toes breathe between pedicures and I had a perpetual pedicure from 1998 until this past December, so I decided to take a break. Turns out I hate not having a pedicure, though, and recently it really started to make me feel like Meryl Streep in Into the Woods, so yesterday I took the day off from my office job– to do a lot of things, ostensibly, but really go to the nail place. I broke out my spring jacket. I brought the home decor magazines Marissa sent me in the mail.

It was the best day!

A couple of weeks ago I fell down an internet wormhole and ended up at a blog about being fabulous and manifesting your best life that I’m not going to link to because it’s embarrassing and I don’t want you to click on it and judge me. You know how you’re hate-reading something and then all of a sudden you find yourself nodding along and you realize it’s been like four hours and you’re not hate-reading it anymore, you’re just regular-reading it? That was my experience with this website. I told my sister about it and she laughed at me. Then she said: “Okay so what are we supposed to do to make it work?”

I think self-care is a gross phrase, honestly. It reminds me of “lovemaking” and is just generally a little too Joshua Tree for me. But the older I get the more important the idea of it feels to me–doing the kinds of things for myself I’d do for the people I love and want to make happy. Taking the steps I can take to give myself the life I want to have. I’m not about to hire someone to pick up my laundry or sort my mail or write my next book from a suite at the Liberty (although God bless you if you can make it happen), but I can damn well make a kale salad and put fresh sheets on the bed. A doughnut on a Sunday morning. A nap on a Saturday afternoon. A new pair of soft, pretty pajamas instead of the t-shirt with the name of my freshman dorm on it.

It’s easy to feel like the small things don’t matter–like they’re silly or frivolous or selfish somehow, like it’s wrong or somehow stupid to take the time to be nice to yourself. But it’s worth it, I’m learning slowly but surely. I can tell when I look down at my toes.

five good things 0 comments

five good things

Katie

March 6, 2015

1. I stopped wearing my snowboots on Thursday, because I decided it was time. I trust the weather will catch up eventually.

2. The World Below by Sue Miller, which I rediscovered as part of the apartment cleanout and which is kind of great in a slightly overwrought late 90s way. Sue Miller’s books are so sexy. I want to invite her to dinner and give her wine and make her tell about all her affairs.

3. This week the move meant buffalo chicken salad and turkey meatloaf wrapped in bacon, clearing a cluster of empty bottles out of the fridge. I’m going to start packing on Sunday. I’m going to plant a garden in the yard.

4. Three springs ago I had the wiggles so I started walking to Castle Island every day, listening to Nora Roberts books on my headphones and combing out the thoughts in my brain. I wrote the story that got me into grad school. I got the deepest, darkest tan of my life. I can feel that same restlessness creeping back in now, that ceaseless urge for motion. Soon it will be warm enough to go.

5. I forgot my lunch at home this week and my husband got in the car and dropped it off. It was nice.

Tell me what you’re doing this weekend. Tell me your good things.

fiction 1 comment

Fiction: Ferris Wheel Kid

Katie

March 3, 2015

Note: this story originally went up in 2011, but I feel like enough of you are new here that a repost is okay. See you on Friday for Five Good Things, or come say hi on twitter! 

*

Some poor slob pukes corn dogs all over the giant swing ride, so Trevor’s got some time to kill while the maintenance guys hose it down. He shoves his hands deep in the pockets of his jeans and wanders the bright crowded length of the midway to the trailer where Rue is selling candy apples, looking bored. Rue always, always smells like candy apples. “What are you doing here?” she asks, leaning out the window and peering down at him, raising her voice so he can hear her over the cheerful electronic racket of the water gun game. She’s got a couple of sprinkles stuck to her arm. “Did somebody yak?”

“Yeah.”  Next to the Gravitron, the swings are pretty much tops when it comes to average rate of gastric upset per rider. It’s bad luck Trevor got stuck running it this year, but he’s fifteen and the youngest and he has to pay his dues. “Not even a kid, either. An old guy.”

Rue shakes her head in contempt. “People should know their limits. Hey Ma,” she calls over her shoulder, toward the back of the trailer where Leanne is working the fryer for funnel cake, her capable hands speckled with burns. “Trevor’s got a barf break. I’ll be back in ten minutes.”

“Take twenty dollars out of the box and see if you can’t find me some singles, will you?” he hears Leanne say; then:  “Hi, Trev.”

“Hey.”

After a minute the door screeches open and Rue hops down, shoving the money into the back pocket of her fraying denim shorts. “Where we going?” she asks. Trevor shrugs.

They weave through the crowd toward the edge of the fairgrounds, past the bandstand and the trucks and the huge humming genny, cables snaking out every which way . It’s August in Oklahoma, and hot. Trevor stops to smile at some pretty girls who are checking him out, cutoffs and flip-flops, one of them holding a puffy blue cloud of cotton candy. Rue rolls her eyes.

“What?” he asks.

“Nothing.”

It’s the end of the summer, getting dark a little earlier now, the sun going down pink and purple over the flashing neon spokes of the ferris wheel.  Soon they’ll head south to Texas and Florida for the winter: Thanksgiving in Pensacola, Christmas in Spur. They’ve been fair kids their whole lives, him and Rue. There’s a rhythm.  “So,” he says, dropping down in the grass near the tree line, digging a cigarette out of his jeans.  “Tomorrow.”

“Tomorrow,” she replies, sitting beside him and nodding at the lighter. “Did you steal that from your dad?”

Trevor doesn’t answer. “Tell me again where this place is?”

Rue eyes him, patient. “Massachusetts,” she says, which he already knows. “Boston.”

“And tell me again what exactly you’re going to do there?”

“Trevor,” she says, flopping backwards onto the dry, weedy grass, her sneaker-clad feet flying briefly in the air. He’s acting stupider than he is on purpose, and they both know it. “Come on.”

“What?”

“Cut it out. You know what.”

“I really don’t.”

“Uh-huh.” Her hair’s spread all around her, a curly blond halo around her heart-shaped face. When they were younger, folks around the fair all used to call her Shirley Temple, until she got old enough to tell them to go screw. “It’s a good school, you know.”

“Do you hear me saying it’s not a good school?”

“It’s a real school, not my mom in a trailer trying to teach us plane geometry before we get to Euclid and have to unload for the week.”

“Your mom’s a good teacher.”

“My mom never graduated high school!” Rue huffs out a short, noisy breath. “Do you really want to do this your whole life?”

Trevor considers that. “Well, no,” he says eventually, blowing smoke rings up into the air. He’s been practicing all summer–Joel, who works the carousel, taught him how. “At some point I’d like to run the scrambler. That’s where the real money is.”

“Be serious.”

“I am.”

“Trev,” Rue says softly, and she just looks so sad for a minute, eyes dark and cloudy, like she’s already a million miles gone. And whatever, maybe most of the places he’s been to he’s only seen in passing, always on the outskirts of town, but Trevor knows how the world happens and he knows that if she gets on the train tomorrow then that’s just–that’s it. Show’s over; carnival’s gone. So he does the first thing that pops into his head: he leans over and kisses her, just for a second, soft. She tastes like caramel and wax.

Rue blinks. “What, exactly, was that?” she asks.

“I mean–”

She throws her head back and laughs–not mean at all, that’s not what she’s actually like, not really–but like she is so on to him. She always has been, he guesses; they’ve known each other since they were three. “Did you just kiss me?” she asks, like she can hardly believe it. “Did you think that would make me stay?”

“I don’t–shut up,” he says, shaking his head. Jesus Christ, she really is a pain in the ass.

Rue takes the cigarette out of his hand, inhales. “Creative,” she says thoughtfully.  “Would have worked when I was thirteen, maybe.”

Trevor looks at her with some interest. “You had a crush on me when we were thirteen?”

“I said maybe.”

They lie there for awhile, side by side in the grass. The sound from the midway drifts palely back, shouts and music. “What about your mom?” he asks. He feels like a piece of shit for saying it because that’s her Kryptonite, that’s what’s going to make her feel two inches tall, and he knows it and he says it anyway. “What’s she going to do without you?”

“Oh, okay. We can be done now.”  Rue shakes her head a little and gets to her feet, brushing dirt off the back of her shorts. “That’s mean, Trevor.”

“I know,” he says immediately. What an asshole he is. “I’m sorry.”

“No, seriously, that sucked.”

“I know.”

He grabs her hand, tugs. “Don’t–I didn’t–Rue.”

Rue sighs again, but she doesn’t let go, which is something. Her grip is warm and damp. And God, he doesn’t know why he’s being such a loser about this–why he can’t just throw her a high-five and say see you when I see you. He guesses he’s used to going, is all. He guesses he’s not used to being left.

Rue hesitates for a moment. She’s still holding onto his hand. “You could kiss me again if you wanted,” she tells him finally. “You could, you know. Kiss me goodbye.”

Trevor blinks. ”Goodbye,” he repeats, like it’s a word he’s never heard before, like it’s regional slang. “So you’re seriously–this is it. You’re actually going.”

Rue laughs a little, quiet, like she almost can’t believe it herself.  “Yeah, Trev,” she says, and her fingers lace between his like a promise. “I actually am.”

So he climbs to his feet and he does it, two hands on her tan, smooth face. The cigarette smolders on the dusty ground. The carnival flares in the distance.

five good things 0 comments

five good things

Katie

February 27, 2015

1. The late-winter emergency trifecta of Lush Dream Cream, Josie Maran Daily Moisturizer and Bag Balm. I am officially so old I need three different lotions to keep me from cracking into a billion pieces and blowing away like so much dust.

2. Linda has a tumblr, and it’s about cooking and eating and loving yourself. I cannot even properly explain to you just how much this is all the things I love in one place.
3. Dirty Dancing, aka a perpetual good thing both on this blog and in my life, because a man in a position of power recently tried to shame me for liking it WHEN HE HADN’T EVEN SEEN IT TUNA ARE YOU KIDDING ME. Little did he know I am impervious to shame. JK I am not at all impervious to shame, 1 Shame Street is pretty much my permanent address, but I AM impervious to shame when it comes to the things I like that men in positions of power think are stupid. There’s a blog post in me about this. Stay tuned.
(I’m punchy this week. Can you tell I am punchy this week?)
4. Moving next month means trying to use up every weird ingredient in your pantry, and trying to use up every weird ingredient in your pantry makes you feel like you are on Chopped every night, only without the pressure and occasional bloodshed. Recently: sausage and brussels spaghetti, sesame-ginger chicken with rice. Also full disclosure I made a pudding pie with a graham cracker crust and the crackers were so stale it tasted like legit play-doh and had to be trashed (uhhh but not before I scraped all the pudding out of it and into my mouth, duh). Win some, lose some.
5. The plan is to shake up the look of this website for the springtime and am thinking about shaking up the content while I’m at it. What do you all want to see here? Guest posts? Articles from my imaginary feminist zine, Me + Uterus? A small collection of pornographic images? Hit me up on twitter and let’s discuss.

Happy weekend, yous. I’m wearing new boots.

HOW LIFE IS 2 comments

things to do in Boston when the winter refuses to end

Katie

February 24, 2015

Read romance novels. Throw parties. Watch John Legend and Common’s Oscar performance over and over. Drink margaritas with your sister and laugh so hard you snort salt up your nose. Fill your spring capsule with sweaters, because sweaters are on sale right now and frankly you can’t imagine when you might be able to wear anything that isn’t a sweater. Nap. Take the train to New York to see your family. Put band-aids on your cracking knuckles. Write your novel. Fix your thesis, sort of. Start a Pinterest board, but a secret one, because you still think Pinterest is kind of embarrassing. Burn a lemon basil candle. Watch five hours of Fixer Upper. Anticipate House of Cards. Make soup. Make granola. Make brussels sprouts. Make lists. Dream of tomato plants. Dream of the ocean. Watch the sun come back.

five good things 0 comments

five good things

Katie

February 20, 2015

1. A very small, very cute little boy who hopped off the T at Park Street yesterday and called “Thank you!” to the driver. “That was very nice,” his mom said.

2. The other day I was cleaning my office and I found a $100 gift card to Williams Sonoma which I somehow had forgotten I had, or thought was empty, or something? Anyway, it felt like God was telling me to order a waffle iron, so I did. If you want to come over for waffles you’re invited.
3. It’s Lent. I love Lent because it means spring is coming, and also because it’s a time for projects, and I love projects. I’m doing a Lent project. It’s small but good. I’ll let you know how it goes.
4. The other night I was cutting an orange and I had the strongest smell memory of sitting on the couch with my dad eating
oranges and watching ER when I was in high school. It made me miss my dad and my house and being a teenager and Noah Wyle’s handsomely beaky face, but more than that it made me happy. It was a good orange.
5. One more from the T, which can frankly use all the good things it can get: last night I was on the Red Line when a girl in her twenties approached an old lady sitting across from me, said, “Excuse me, I’m just gonna…” then knelt down and re-velcroed the old lady’s boot.
I want to be like that girl. I want us all to be like that girl. Happy weekend.

five good things 0 comments five good things

five good things

Katie

February 13, 2015
1. The 100, which I started on a whim a couple weeks ago and which, in spite of being kind of a nonstop gore-fest, has some of the raddest, most well-rounded lady characters I’ve ever seen on TV. Buffy Summers would be proud.
2. That Barack Obama video that you’ve probably already seen, and that Florence video you’ve probably already seen, and these Fretful Porcupine recordings that are maybe new to you, because they were new to me yesterday, and they made me really happy.
3. The feeling of writing something you are, for this one moment at least, really, honestly excited to share with the world.
4. It seems like it will never be warm again and we’re supposed to get another foot of snow this weekend, but yesterday morning I woke up and heard birds singing. Spring is coming. I know it is.

5. I’m seeing 50 Shades of Grey today, because this is America and I do what I want. Happy Valentine’s, loves of mine. Have the best weekend.

five good things 1 comment

five good things

Katie

February 6, 2015

1. A rather brilliantly successful weekend in New York, during which we celebrated birthdays and babies alike; I drank free beer, ate fried chicken, navigated the Brooklyn shuttle without getting murdered and managed to make it home in the snow. Frankly I deserve a prize.

2. The Longform Podcast, introduced to me by the always-brilliant ladies at Two Bossy Dames. Writers! Talking about writing! And other stuff!

3. The fact that my commute has been twice as long as normal all week has, at the very least, given me a lot of time to read. Just finished: Richard Price’s Lush Life, which, while not the kind of thing I’m usually super into (think gritty crime drama of the decidedly non-Serial variety) was kind of a pleasing New York analog to the Wire rewatch happening in my house these days. Plus truthfully it had been taking up space on my shelf for like 5 years and I am glad to have it gone.

4. Tanya’s blog, which I just subscribed to recently and which is smart and cool and beautiful, just like Tanya herself.

5. My plans for this weekend are the BSB movie and doughnuts from Blackbird. That’s it. Right on.

Food 1 comment

snow day pasta

Katie

February 3, 2015

photo

I didn’t grow up in a cooking house. My mom fed us every night because she loved us and didn’t want us to die, but for the most part she found time in the kitchen both boring and exceedingly stressful. The first time I called her on the phone from Boston and told her I was making chicken stock from scratch, she was quiet for a minute and then she said, “Whose child are you?” She taught me a lot of things, but making a tear-free Thanksgiving dinner was not one of them. There are no secret, sacred marinara recipes in my family.

I love cooking, though, and I’ve been doing it pretty regularly for eight years now, which sounds like a long time, the age of a third-grader, but in terms of what I actually know how to do doesn’t actually feel like that long at all. I’m still pretty scared of sauces. I think I hold my knife wrong. I set off the smoke alarm literally every time I cook bacon, and while to be fair I think that has more to do with the air flow in my house than my culinary abilities, it still makes me feel like a dope.

However! I figured out recently that I must be getting better bit by bit, because the percentage of improvised things I make that are totally inedible has decreased pretty dramatically, and if you look back at the dubious archives of this blog, you will see that that used to happen a lot.

A recent winner: this snow day pasta, which I made for lunch last week when I was out of bread and my only requirement was that I did not want to leave my house.  This is the kind of recipe you could easily adjust depending on how many people you’re trying to feed; my numbers made enough for two big bowls.

3 slices bacon, chopped

1/3 pound whole-wheat linguine

½ cup frozen peas

¼ cup Boursin cheese

¼ cup grated parm

½ lemon

salt & pepper to taste

Cook your bacon (don’t set off the smoke alarm if you can help it); remove with a slotted spoon and set aside. Boil your pasta for 7-8 minutes, until al dente. A minute or so before the pasta is finished cooking, add peas. Drain, reserving 1/2 cup of pasta water. Toss the pasta and peas with the Boursin and parmesan, adding the pasta water to thin it out a bit. Garnish with bacon and the juice of 1/2 lemon; add salt and pepper to taste.

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Love Junkie.

Katie Cotugno

Katie Cotugno is the New York Times bestselling author of eight messy, complicated feminist YA love stories, as well as the adult novels Birds of California and Meet the Benedettos. She is also the co-author, with Candace Bushnell, of Rules for Being a Girl. Her books have been honored by the Junior Library Guild, the Bank Street Children’s Book Committee, and the Kentucky Association of School Librarians, among others, and translated into more than fifteen languages.  Katie is a Pushcart Prize nominee whose work has appeared in The Iowa Review, The Mississippi Review, and Argestes, as well as many other literary magazines. She studied Writing, Literature and Publishing at Emerson College and received her MFA in Fiction at Lesley University. She lives in Boston with her family. 

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