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How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Taylor Jenkins Reid
How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Taylor Jenkins Reid

Los Angeles Times

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Taylor Jenkins Reid

There are many factors that led Taylor Jenkins Reid to choose space as the backdrop of her new novel, 'Atmosphere,' a thrilling love story set at NASA in the 1980s. One may very well have been her L.A. commute. Specifically, her journey along the Dr. Sally Ride Memorial Highway, a portion of the 101 Freeway in Encino. 'I am sure that it worked its way into my subconscious,' Reid says. 'It was there waiting for me because I've driven by that sign so many times.' So much of Encino and the Valley inspires Reid, the author of a shining repertoire of bestselling novels including 'Daisy Jones & the Six' and 'The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo.' She talks about the hikes, the views and the charming restaurants that have stood for generations. Here's how she'd spend a perfect day in L.A. with her husband, Alex Jenkins Reid, and their 8-year-old daughter, Lilah. 8 a.m. Wake up and grab a book Everybody in my house is reading in bed. I am reading 'Harlem Rhapsody' by Victoria Christopher Murray. I have been late multiple mornings now because of how much I'm enjoying it. It's like, 'Oh, sorry, I was reading.' My kid does the same thing. She and I will both be like, 'Wait, it's already 7:40? You're supposed to be in school!' But both of us are reading. 9:30 a.m.: A place where everybody knows your name My family and I love to go to this small diner in the Valley called Millie's. It's a no-frills place, but the food is so good and my husband's family has been going there for at least 30 years. The server always remembers my husband's grandpa and asks how his grandma's doing and how his mom is doing and his brothers are doing. It has such a lovely small-town feel to it. Also, the tortilla soup is incredibly good. It's, like, one of my favorite things 10:30 a.m.: Hit the trailAfter that, I inevitably will try to bribe my daughter into a hike. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. The thing is, she actually does love to hike and just forgets that she does. Where I love to go — and I have not been able to because of the fires — is the Upper Canyonback Trailhead [temporarily closed] in Encino Hills. There are two ways you can go. If you go to the left, there's a really great view of the city. You can see down to Century City and even downtown on a clear day. And the hills are gorgeous. But if you go to the right, you can see the Encino Reservoir and eventually you get to a decommissioned Nike missile silo. We make a game-time decision. Noon: A bookstore afternoon Then I have to make good on the way that I bribed my kid and one of her favorite things to do is go to Vroman's in Pasadena. It has one of the best children's book sections in Los Angeles — it takes up half of their second floor. She'll grab a bunch of books, I will have grabbed books from downstairs and we'll be sitting on a bench reading them. And you know, my husband's like, 'Dude, would you like to leave and actually pay for these?' 2 p.m.: Hop around Old Town Pasadena Not that far from Vroman's, there's this intersection that has so many things that all of us like. Motto Tea Cafe serves Japanese soufflé-style pancakes. They're so fluffy! My daughter normally gets the plain ones with the Nutella cream on top. This place is often quite packed, so we order in advance. Then there's this ice cream place called Kinrose Creamery that is unbelievable. They indulged me by letting me try basically every flavor. They have a sour cherry with candy floss that is unlike anything I've ever had. And there's a park near there, Central Park, that is really beautiful and has a very expansive playground area. And so my kid will go play for a little while. 3:30 p.m.: Indulge an obsession On the walk back to our car, I will go to Farrow & Ball and just look at paint colors. I'm completely obsessed with paint colors, so I make my family go pretty often. I never have a reason to be there. When the person is like, 'How can I help you? Are you looking to paint something?' I'm like, 'No, I just want to look at paint colors.' They've got great names for all their paint — I could probably name them all for you, literally. The ones I have in my house: Dead Salmon, Skimming Stone, Wimborne White. My daughter and I have become obsessed with a very pretty coral-y orange called Naperon. Both of us are like, 'We have to paint something Naperon!' There's a woman who is the color curator for Farrow & Ball and her name is Joa Studholme. She's the only person that is famous to me and my daughter. She makes these videos where she's talking about why they came up with a paint color and my kid and I will just watch them four different times. 5:30 p.m.: Best pasta ever Every Sunday night, we eat takeout from Lido Pizza. Doesn't matter the fanciest place I've ever been to — this is the best pasta. I love it so much. And there's something about their salad dressing that is exactly what my taste buds want in a salad dressing. I have gone so far as to order a full jug of it for my house. It's such a humble, unassuming place. We've been taking my daughter there since she was a baby. When the movie 'Booksmart' came out, we were watching it and saw that a whole scene takes place in the Lido parking lot. We eat there every single Sunday night, and at this point, they have to just know the call is coming sometime around 5:30. 7:45 p.m.: The 'Goodnight Special' My daughter gets into bed and reads for an hour. During that time, my husband and I will watch an episode of something — lately, we've been watching 'The Studio.' Then when it's time to go to bed, she comes out of her bedroom and asks for the 'Goodnight Special.' It's when I hold her for a minute and sing to her. She called it that just one day. She was like, 'I need the 'Goodnight Special.'' I was like, 'I think I know what you mean by that.' And then my husband and I will go to bed around 10:30.

Local bookstores, dealt another blow by L.A. fires, become ‘community touchstones'
Local bookstores, dealt another blow by L.A. fires, become ‘community touchstones'

Los Angeles Times

time06-02-2025

  • Business
  • Los Angeles Times

Local bookstores, dealt another blow by L.A. fires, become ‘community touchstones'

The Eaton and Palisades fires effaced entire communities, destroyed thousands of homes and left more than two dozen dead. They also dealt yet another blow to the region's bookstores, which were still reeling from the effects of COVID-19 lockdowns and last year's dual Hollywood strikes. Fortunately, all of the bookstores in the region — a few of them dangerously close to the fires — are still standing, and for many customers, the leisurely impulse to buy a book has taken on new urgency. As the region slowly begins to engage in the process of rebuilding, neighborhood bookstores have become tiny beacons of light, drawing Angelenos seeking solace and consolation. The local bookstore has turned into a vital 'third place' of social interaction, crucial to the survival of L.A. County's fire-ravaged communities. For Peter Wannier, who owns independent bookstore Flintridge Bookstore, the Eaton fire that ravaged Atladena — just a short drive from La Cañada Flintridge — stopped his business cold. 'We certainly lost a week's worth of business,' says Wannier, whose store was vacated under a mandatory evacuation order and lost power for five days. 'Our bookkeeper has been unable to return to her house, which was in the fire zone. We all know people who lost their homes.' And yet, in the days and weeks that have followed, Wannier has seen the store slowly come back to life. Instead of the usual transactional bustle, Flintridge Bookstore has become a gathering place for people to share their stories, exchange grievances and commiserate with Wannier's staff, many of whom have been working at the store for a decade or longer. 'Our sales staff have been with us for a long time, and people want to see familiar faces right now,' he says. 'A few days after the fires started, one of our regulars came in and spoke for an hour about her situation. Customers come to us because we've known so many of them for years. We are more than booksellers. We are old friends.' Vroman's Bookstore, a Pasadena fixture for more than a century, has seen many of the store's employees displaced by the Eaton fire. Some of them lost their homes. 'We closed the first two days of the fire because the situation was so precarious,' says Vroman's Chief Executive Julia Cowlishaw. When Vroman's reopened its doors on Jan. 10, 'we were so glad to see each other. And our customers started coming back. We knew people needed a refuge and that we could be that place for some.' As Vroman's foot traffic slowly picked up, Cowlishaw and her team kicked into mobilization mode, doing everything they could to help quell the frayed nerves of their neighborhood. 'We have a long legacy here of giving back to this community, which has been with us for so long,' says Cowlishaw. She encouraged customers to use the store as a safe space for their families, increasing the number of children's story times per week as well as hosting crafting sessions. Vroman's has also tapped into its long-standing alliances with Pasadena's schools and nonprofit organizations, mounting an ongoing book donation initiative for Children's Books for Altadena and conducting a food drive in conjunction with Friends in Deed, a nonprofit that provides food, shelter, housing and eviction prevention for the community. The store has also donated books and art materials for children in evacuation shelters. Like Vroman's, Brentwood's Diesel bookstore found itself close to danger as the Palisades fire threatened to engulf neighboring communities. 'The first night of the fires, there was a Brentwood Homeowners Assn. meeting and everyone was fearful of the fire crossing the 405,' says Diesel owner Richard Turner, who bought the store last year from longtime L.A. booksellers John Evans and Alison Reid. 'Fortunately, that didn't happen, but it's hard to tell how much of our customer base is gone forever.' The store was unusually quiet in the weeks following the fires; only now has business started to pick up. 'It's lovely and sad, seeing people come into the store to tell their stories and commiserate,' says Turner. A retired advertising executive who is new to the book business, Turner has been heartened to see Diesel becoming 'an important community touchstone' in the wake of the firestorms. 'I wasn't expecting it at this moment,' he says. One of Turner's employees, Liz Lee, found herself in evacuation limbo, unsure whether her Palisades residence was still standing. After weeks of uncertainty, Lee finally received word that the house, while intact, was no longer inhabitable. Turner has initiated a GoFundMe page to help Lee find a new home and replace her belongings. 'She managed to get her laptop and some other items, but we're going to get Liz back on her feet,' says Turner. In addition to numerous GoFundMe campaigns sponsored by booksellers, there have been small and significant acts of kindness along the way. At Diesel, one anonymous donor bought a gift card for $1,000, with the directive to donate a book to any child that requested one. At Vroman's, customers are buying books for friends and family who may have lost personal libraries acquired over a lifetime. School libraries were also decimated. Multiple educational institutions were destroyed by the fires, many of which rely on indie bookstores to supply them with required reading material for their fall and spring semesters. Stores such as Diesel and Vroman's have kick-started school book drives in conjunction with Los Angeles Wildfires Book Drive, the brainchild of Veronica Bane, a young adult author and English teacher at the Alliance Susan & Eric Smidt Technology High School in Lincoln Heights. Bane was moved to act when she heard the harrowing stories of families that had lost their homes in the Eaton fire, including parents and children at her school. 'Like so many people, I was watching all this devastation happen around me, scrolling through the Watch Duty app on my phone, and my husband and I decided to help deliver necessities to fire victims,' says Bane. As an author with deep ties to the local literary community, Bane realized she could help replace some of the library books burned in the fires. 'I sent out a Google Form for requests, just saying, 'If you have books to donate, please reach out.'' Bane quickly had hundreds of offers from near and far, including Australia. Authors, influencers and publishing houses have also signed on to donate. 'I knew that, despite the loss of their schools, teachers would be teaching students in some building soon enough,' she says. 'And that is what's happened. But they still needed books. So I took some boxes to a few makeshift schools.' Since then, Bane has crisscrossed L.A., delivering curated book boxes for educators. At a recent event at Black Cat Fables in Monrovia, Bane gave away more than 5,000 donated volumes. 'People need shelter, they need necessities. I know a book is not on the same level as those things,' she says. 'But I also know that for me and my students, books can be what get you through a dark time. I can't replace a classroom, but I can show families and educators that the community cares, and hopefully that provides some comfort.'

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