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Kim

Kim Jong-il is dead, it’s cold as a witch’s tit outside, and I haven’t commenced my Christmas shopping. I’m craving comfort food and comfort clothes, and even Julia Green’s mural of a flying sausage in downtown Boise has me jonzing: I want to eat bratwurst; I want a personal shopper; I want a return to bustling health; I want to rock the lederhosen.

Poncho: Anthropologie (Boise, Idaho)

Leggings: Splendid (Fancy Pants, Boise)

Instead, I content myself with padding around in extreme comfort wear. (As long as one owns a poncho and a pair of Splendid leggings, I believe, there is no excuse for sweats.) Mere hours after this picture was taken, I wore this same outfit, sans poncho, to Body Jam—a.k.a. fantastically dorky hip-hop dance class—at the Downtown Y. If depression involves taking yourself too seriously, Body Jam is a tricyclic.

Cece suede ballet flats in wild berry: J. Crew (Boise Towne Square)

I have high arches and bad feet (nails in my left ankle and torn up cartilage in my right toe), so I’m very careful about shoes—especially ballet flats—but this new model by J.Crew is a delight to wear. Made in Italy, they have plenty of padding as well as an arch-hugging, hidden wedge that makes feet feel happier and calves appear sexier. No more web-footed duck walk when I’m wearing these hot pink tamales.

Gloves: echo (Marshall’s)

I am always cold. I love elbow length gloves. ‘Nuff said.

Long wool coat: Donnybrook (Made in Ukraine)

After a few minutes of freezing my butt off, I changed my look to Delhi Duty Free meets Perestroika. I bought this coat at Burlington Coat Factory when I was 16. I now have a healthy aversion to most things I liked when I was 16, but not the Velvet Underground and not my Dr. Zhivago coat.

Faux fur trapper hat: North Face

Earrings: My dad brought these back from Luang Prabang, Laos

Only five more days till Christmas . . . . I will definitely be shopping local.

Dear Photographer:

Thank you, Spiderwoman (a.k.a. Kelly Lynae)! xo xo xo

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Because something is happening here 

But you don’t know what it is

Do you, Mister Jones?

Lara Croft Concert Raider

Jacket: AXARA Paris (Saigon)

Backpack: Osprey (R.E.I., Boise)

Turquoise jeans: Russian Market (Phnom Penh)

In April of this year, my Phnom Penh buddy and I bought sapphires, got our hair did, and boarded a night bus bound for Ho Chi Minh City. My editor at the Southeast Asia Globe had charged me with covering a historic first: finally, a Bob Dylan concert in post-war Vietnam. Because my friend knew a restaurateur who was hosting Dylan, there were even whispers that we might get to meet the Thin Man himself.

Photo by John Idaho

We spent the weekend stalking Dylan. When we weren’t attempting to order sushi backstage (and being thrown out as politely and chivalrously as I’ve ever been booted out of anywhere), we gorged on Vietnamese street food delicacies from rickety-tick plastic chairs and got our nails shellacked in three Abstract Expressionist layers. (In Southeast Asia, when it comes to fashion, more is more.)

We should have bought her durian 

It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Bling)

Nails: District 1 (Saigon)

Blue and green sapphire rings: Central Market (Phnom Penh)

Stalk break

Anime-inspired haircut: De Gran salon (Phnom Penh)

Tiger’s eye bracelet: Central Market (Phnom Penh)

When we finally caught a glimpse of Dylan, it was as he ascended the stage in his black suit jacket with gold buttons, tuxedo trousers with satin piping, a pink shirt with a bolo tie, and a white wide-brimmed hat that acted like a visual magnet.

Bob Dylan LIVE IN SAIGON (Photo: Reuters)

But even the formidable shadow cast by the hat’s brim couldn’t disguise Dylan’s incredible, craggy visage: he looked like a Rembrandt, a face out of deep time. A face, smiling frequently with a punch of old man swagger, apparently having a very good time of it in the city formerly known as Saigon.

Onsie: mansion (The Emporium, Bangkok)

Green sapphire earrings: Central Market (Phnom Penh)

Boo: V. Boots

At the end of Dylan’s 18-song set, as the Vietnamese fashionistas scattered for nightcaps and the die-hards slowly lowered the softly glowing screens of their iPhones, there was only one thing left to do:

Photos by V. Boots & Kim Yum Grub

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I spent the weekend driving through the Badlands of South Dakota at 90 mph in a rented Chrysler and reading Joan Didion’s new memoir, Blue Nights. (Although not, pray, at the same time.) With its sharp, silhouetted hoodoos and arid skies with pinpoint stars, both the moonscape of the Badlands and Didion’s prose induce a similar hypnotic mood: an apprehension of losses yet to come, a hard-edged circumspection, and an imaginative flight from which one is reluctant to return.

Toggle sweater jacket: sleeping on snow (Anthropologie, Boise)

Skirt: Rebecca Taylor (Fancy Pants, Boise)

Salmon tank top: J. Crew (Boise)

Didion’s memoir was occasioned by the death of her daughter in 2005. As the poet Meghan O’Rourke observes in her Slate.com review, Blue Nights is not so much a grief memoir, but a regret memoir: “another thing altogether, a stranger, patchwork beast. It is written by an author with no hope of recovery, who has let go of her magical thinking.”

Badlands by Geof Theref

Handbag: Dooney & Bourke (Dillard’s, Boise)

Jade bracelets: Rangoon Airport (Burma)

I was touring the Badlands by night because I am foolish (a bad, bad place to break down) and because I had a meeting to make with tribal leaders on the Rosebud Indian Reservation, home to the Sicangu Lakota—the Upper Brulé Sioux Nation. A list of notable Lakota Sioux reads like a Who’s Who of heroes: Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, Black Elk, Red Cloud, and the indomitable Billy Mills.

The reservation is a strange, patchwork beast. I met with highly educated and politically active young Lakota men and women. I also met up with a 61-year-old grandmother who looks about 95 and is caring for her 30-plus grandchildren in a graffiti-tagged house with nothing but plastic tarp covering its windows to keep out the frigid, Dakota winter.

Earrings: Lucia (Park Slope, Brooklyn)

Sage gloves: echo (Marshall’s)

Grey tights: Marks & Spencer (London)

Shoes: Nicole (yard sale)

In reviewing Blue Nights, O’Rourke notes that “writing of regret . . . cannot gesture toward redemption, or undo what has been done.” Amid rapidly changing conditions, there’s a spiritual immutability to the Badlands, the Lakota people, and the steady state of reverence for her daughter’s life that Didion evokes in Blue Nights. Part of letting go of my own magical thinking is admitting that I have regrets about my life; that I could have done things differently.

The Lakota kept winter counts, or pictorial calendars with one picture representing each year. The Lakota call them waniyetu wowapiWaniyetu is the word for year, which is measured from first snowfall to first snowfall. Wowapi means anything that is marked on a flat surface and can be read or counted, such as a book, a letter, or a drawing.

Detail of 19th century Rosebud winter count (Lakota Winter Counts, Smithsonian Institution)

“For everything there is a season,” writes Joan Didion in Blue Nights. “Ecclesiastes, yes, but I think first of The Byrds, ‘Turn Turn Turn.'” If, like the Lakota, I had to choose one picture to embody this entire year it would be driving at night through the Badlands: I can see no farther afield than my headlights; strange, daunting formations surround me—and yet, I persevere.

 

 

Photos by Bethany Walter

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