Katie CotugnoKatie Cotugno
Tellin' stories, eatin' snax. NYT bestselling author of messy, complicated, feminist love stories
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    • LIAR’S BEACH
    • YOU SAY IT FIRST
    • RULES FOR BEING A GIRL
    • 9 DAYS & 9 NIGHTS
    • TOP TEN
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    • 99 DAYS
    • HOW TO LOVE
    • ANTHOLOGIES
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    • MEET THE BENEDETTOS
    • BIRDS OF CALIFORNIA
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Uncategorized 2 comments

and the beat goes on.

Katie

April 13, 2010

You guys are so awesome. Thanks SO MUCH for all the writing love yesterday. And an extra-special shoutout to Abbey and Nikki, both of whom offered to break the legs of anybody who was snotty to me about my relationship. My general attitude about that kind of thing is u b u i’ll b me, but I do so love the idea of having a couple of lady enforcers in my back pocket.

I made tomato feta salad last night. Tom grilled sausages. He said, congratulations on being so fancy.

Other than that, I have nothing to report.

Uncategorized 10 comments

Oh hey.

Katie

April 13, 2010

Here I am.

I may have squealed a little.

Gotta go eat dinner bye.

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the welcome table

Katie

April 12, 2010

I found our first kitchen table on the street in Jamaica Plain in the summer of 2006, and I made Tom jam it into his car. He was still driving the Maxima, which was the first car he ever bought, and it was so shiny and always smelled like seat-cleaner and in the cupholder was always Orbit gum and the puka shells I brought him from Hawaii, where I went in 2002 before we started dating but after he kissed me in the elevator of an apartment complex in Yonkers, New York.

“That table is a giant POS,” he warned me, but he wedged it in the backseat anyway, because he always does.

We were still living with the boys then, and we didn’t need a table, so it leaned against the wall in pieces in the lobby of our building for a long time, next to a stack of phone books and a five gallon bucket of rock salt and the mail bin that Quack added my name to after I moved in, the last roommate and the only girl. I felt weird and out of sorts and like I didn’t belong there, but Quack put my name on the mailbox, and that was where I lived.

When Tom and I moved to this apartment in 2008 (right after my birthday, right after my parents, the summer I cried every day and didn’t read any books) and DID need a table, we didn’t have any chairs to go with it, so I found two of them on the street on garbage night (things that are always on the curb on garbage night in Southie: chairs, toilets, empty cases of Bud Light) and painted them a clayish gray that was in the messup bin at Home Depot for a dollar. Marissa gave us two more when she moved home to Ohio after she quit law school to become a baker.

I am pretty sure this is the story of all of us learning to be grownups.

It was too big for the kitchen, this table, and the chairs were too big to push in, but we made it work the way you make things work when you’re too poor to buy things like a new table when you have one that works just fine, when you are using this table as a desk and an ironing board and a stepstool to change light bulbs and a flat surface on which to chop peppers for chili at the same time as you seal letters to magazines that will reject you more times than they say yes. I threw a hundred haphazard dinner parties on that table. I made one million egg sandwiches. I put my head down on it and laughed and sobbed and cleared beer bottles and studied Spanish index cards (la mesa) and iChatted and baked birthday cakes and no matter how many times I wiped it down it never looked entirely clean. Once I spilled some water over a stack of papers and didn’t bother wiping it all up and when I went to move them later the ink from the magazine on the bottom had come off on the laminate.

Boston, it said on the table, only backwards.

All of this is to say that on Saturday, after talking about it forever, we went to Ikea and bought a new table and four matching chairs, a sweet little set that fits the space and makes the kitchen look rather lovely and trim, like it belongs in a house where people have their shit together. “You like it?” Tom asked about a thousand times yesterday morning, while he drank a giant iced coffee and put the thing together. “You’re sure?”

“I like it,” I promised. I like it very much.

Haney came with us to Ikea. She needed drawer fronts for her entertainment unit. Haney was in the car that night after the kiss in the elevator at the apartment complex in Yonkers, New York. She lived with her mom in a studio apartment and we used to hang out there whenever we could, because her mom worked nights and wasn’t home to know if we strolled in a few minutes late or talked incessantly about boys until four in the morning, which we occasionally (usually) did.  We bought denim skirts and magazines. We were sixteen years old.

When they dropped me off at my parents’ house that night, at home, I wandered into the kitchen, where the legs of our kitchen table and all four chairs had been throughly and systematically gnawed by our golden retriever, Eloise, when she was a puppy and teething. She’d come up and whine while you ate your dinner, rest her heavy head in your lap.

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Five Good Things: Skinny Reefs Edition

Katie

April 9, 2010

1. Who’s got two thumbs and sold her first piece of writing this week?  THIS GUY. There is an actual website out there that is paying me actual American dollars to put words together. ACTUAL AMERICAN DOLLARS. Details to come, but this…this is the goal. So.

2.  Dreams From My Father: completely engaging. Taking Woodstock: intermittently delightful. Bones: oh hey those partners sure do love each other huh?

3. Things that are happening this spring: Philadelphia to see Rachel, a road trip to Bamboozle with Marissa and Sierra, a week at home to see my sister graduate summa cum awesome at Yankee Stadium, Dave Matthews in Hartford as always, an inevitable Lost-related brain melt, three weeks during which I am the only gal in my office, a transcontinental visit from one Jennie Palluzzi, and my twenty-fifth birthday. I…should probably start taking some vitamins.

4. Our mail lady at work is named Karen. She has clear braces and wears a pith helmet in the rain.

5.  I ate nachos twice this week. I mean, that’s disgusting, but it’s also pretty fab.

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A Big Hi

Katie

April 9, 2010

to my mama, who just started reading this blog.

She says: “It feels like I am spending time with you when I read it.”

She also says: “Don’t waste your tears on the porch swing” and “Please see a doctor about that cough.”

I miss you, Mom.

Uncategorized 7 comments thursday random

“Kill your darlings.” (Thursday Random)

Katie

April 9, 2010

Top three fears, in no particular order:

1. Being convicted of a crime I didn’t commit

2. Being buried alive (it has not been a good week for me, current events-wise)

3. The apocalypse and the breakdown of institutional society

No really. These are my top three.

Haney says: “Kate, these are all Catholic school fears.”

Tell me what you’re afraid of.

Uncategorized 4 comments recip

No Carb Left Behind.

Katie

April 6, 2010

No Knead Bread: DO IT.

Seriously: the crispiest, airiest, most flavorful loaf I’ve ever made, and the first time I didn’t come away secretly thinking to myself, “Man…I should have just gone to the bakery.” You have to plan for it, but other than that it takes zero effort. Really. NO KNEAD. Yes delicious.

Full disclosure: putting my enamel Dutch oven into the actual oven at such a high temperature made it kind of darken around the bottom. But I think that makes me seem badass and legit, which , coincidentally, is my goal in the kitchen AND in life. So…everybody wins!

In conclusion: I am so done with all other bread recipes. Even (gasp) Ina’s. I KNOW RIGHT.

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Easter Parade.

Katie

April 6, 2010

Uncategorized 3 comments five good things

Five Good Things: Niecy Nash Edition

Katie

April 2, 2010

Do you guys think Niecy Nash is a drag queen? A little bit I do.

ANYWAY.

1. Ask and you shall receive: my jury duty got cancelled today, which means I’ve got myself an unexpected Friday off, and it is seventy degrees outside. Am erranding, thrifting, planting, writing, baking, and generally bringing the funk. Happy, happy.

2. Tom, in conversation last night: “He didn’t believe me, because he doesn’t know what a maniac you are.” Also we went for a walk to Carson Beach and I told him all about how when I was in seventh grade we acted out the Stations of the Cross and all the robes smelled like the kids who had worn them before you and this girl in my class made up R-rated lyrics to “We You There When They Crucified my Lord,” and Tom went to Catholic school too and he knew exactly what I was talking about.

3. An Education: completely lovely and affecting even though it stars Creepy Peter Saarsgard as Creepy Peter Saarsgard. Plus it really made me want to get a spiffy dress and some Audrey Hepburn sunglasses and jet over to Paris for a little while and practice being fabulous.

4. I mentioned last week that I was jonesing for prints for the kitchen. Thanks to everybody for your suggestions–Kim, especially, was a total Soldier of Art. I was looking for something that elicited some kind of gut happiness, and I’m delighted to report that the 8×10  prints by NayArts had me throwing my head back and dying of glee. I bought five of them, and cannot wait until my kitchen walls are adorned with reminders like “I love banjo music” and “Let’s pretend we are secret agents.”

5.. My tax refund is enough for a plane ticket to London in the fall. I’M JUST SAYING.

Okay. I’m going outside now.

Uncategorized 2 comments thursday random

“I’m from New York. I will kill to get what I need.” (Thursday Random)

Katie

April 1, 2010

* This week, frankly, has been balls. And nothing bad even happened. In fact, stuff has actually been pretty positive writing-wise, and Tom grocery shopped and cleaned the bathroom while I was babysitting last night, neither of which I had even mentioned needed doing. Dear Tom, you are and continue to be amazing. But honestly, it’s just been a lot of after-work obligations and not getting home until eleven every night and schlepping all over creation with my giant work bag and waiting for the bus and JURY DUTY and trying to cram stuff I actually like to do into ten-minute increments here and there and feeling like I’m only giving half my attention to everything. It just starts to chafe after awhile and makes me feel kind of vulnerable and lost. However:  there is a boyfriend and a giant cocktail waiting for me at the end of this day, and I will persevere. Also, Ash has a great post up about doing nothing which I really, really liked.

* Current musical obsessions: everything by The Script, One Republic’s Waking Up, Gaga. Also, you all should read this article because it is HI-larious.

* To be filed under: “Romantic Movies I Will Write One Day”: the one about the brothers who have to clean our their dead parents’ house and fall in love with the same girl, the one about the family restaurant, the one with the lead written specifically for Handsome Shane West.

*  Joshilyn Jackson’s The Girl Who Stopped Swimming: fine, but ultimately obvious and disappointing (and a little offensive, actually, if I put my Lit Major goggles on…?). Dear Frankie: such a freaking delight, and if you still think Gerard Butler is a zero after watching this movie you can just stand there in your wrongness and be wrong. Dreams From My Father: burning a hole in my purse at this very moment. At home: The Brothers Bloom and An Education. Will let you know how it goes.

* I have a nifty new Sigg bottle with a nifty K. Barteski design on it. I probably should stop complaining.

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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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