Snazzy Shoe Store for Seventh Avenue

That’s right. The new store going in where Seventh Avenue Books used to be (Seventh Avenue between 2nd and 3rd Streets) is Eric, a shoe store I’ve been to on the Upper East Side. It’s a mini-chain and this, I’m guessing, is their first outer borough shop.

Interesting how many Manhattan shops and restaurants are coming to the Slope. Barrio, Carmen’s Kid Rx, S’Nice. I guess the rents are a bargain here compared to what they’re used to. Here’s something abotu the Eric shops from New York Magazine:

Upper East Side moms and their downtown-minded daughters trek to this
footwear mini-chain–a neighborhood mainstay since 1976–for their fix
of traditional and contemporary shoe styles, like demure heels perfect
for a jaunt to the Hamptons and trendy wedges made for the school
semi-formal. Founder Eric Mudick stocks his small, pastel-painted
boutiques with a good sampling of designer styles, including Cynthia
Rowley’s red leather slingbacks, called the Runway Wedge, and her
Grecian-style Tabitha flats. There are also plenty of more conservative
offerings, like Enrico Antinori’s sensible pumps in seasonal prints, as
well as Mullen’s classic kitten heels. Younger girls gravitate toward
the swank, Indian inspired slippers by CYD and Eric’s own line of
ballet flats.

Countdown to Fifty: Three Days To Go

With three days to go until the big Five Oh, I had one hell of a day:

Spending the day in the ER at Mt. Sinai Hospital with my dad waiting for a room brings up a lot of thoughts about life, death and everything in between.

Small moments of kindness mean everything. They’re enough to make you cry. Life feels heavy, hard, murky and dark.

One finds illumination where one can.

Teen Spirit Catches Dylan Fever

Here’s this week’s Smartmom from the award-winning Brooklyn Paper.

Smartmom did not go to the Bob Dylan show in Prospect Park last week. Instead, she was dining on grilled salmon, fresh corn and arugula salad in the backyard of a Sag Harbor summer rental while the world’s greatest songwriter was singing “Rainy Day Women #12 and 35.”

It’s not like she didn’t want to be there. When the tickets went on sale in June, she was quick to type “Tilden,” the special code that she read about on BrooklynPaper.com that enabled her to charge two $85 tickets to her credit card before the rest of the Dylan-loving masses could buy them.

Expensive, yes. But it was Bob Dylan in her own backyard. Who could resist?

Smartmom could tell that Hepcat was dubious about the purchase.

“That’s an awful lot of money,” said Hepcat, ever frugal. “Besides, aren’t we going to be in Sag Harbor that week?”

Well, yeah. But that didn’t matter. They could always Jitney back to the city for the night.

“It’s Dylan, after all,” she said.

“It’s Sag Harbor, after all,” he said.

In the end, Smartmom gave the tickets to Teen Spirit, a huge Dylan fan. In a sense, she was passing on the baton. Just like she’d given him her old acoustic guitar.

“You got tickets? Wow. Of course I want to go,” he yelped when she gave them to him. Clearly, he was expecting a life-changing experience. First, he had to choose whom to take. Then he decided that he was going to bring his guitar to the show.

Afterwards, he wanted to play Dylan one of his songs.

Smartmom and Hepcat did little to disabuse Teen Spirit of this wacky idea. A boy can dream. Besides, he never listens to them anyway.

In some ways, Teen Spirit is just like his mom.

Smartmom and Dylan go back, way back. Not only was he the voice of her generation, but he’s been the soundtrack of her life.

When Smartmom was 11, her parents gave her a vintage leather jacket (from Ridge Furs on Eighth Street) and a Dylan songbook.

Boy, did Smartmom love that aviator jacket. But that songbook was her bible for so many years. She was a budding singer/songwriter, after all. And he was her hero.

Smartmom saw Dylan at Madison Square Garden, in upstate Binghamton, at Madison Square Garden again during his Born Again phase when he sang with those great back-up singers. She saw him with Tom Petty and later with GE Smith and again at Madison Square Garden in concert with Joni Mitchell.

She even ran into him once on Eighth Avenue in Park Slope across the street from the Montauk Club on June 12, 2000, Teen Spirit’s ninth birthday. The musical legend was wearing a white cowboy hat and walking with a photographer.

“Omigod,” she screamed. “That’s Bob Dylan.”

“Who?” Teen Spirit asked.

Boldly, Smartmom asked Dylan for an autograph. He obliged and signed his name on the back of an American Express billing envelope she had in her bag. Luckily, she didn’t mail it.

That envelope, now framed, sits on the bookshelf in her and Hepcat’s dining room.

A few years ago, Teen Spirit bought Smartmom “The Definitive Bob Dylan Songbook” for her birthday. He dropped hints for days, “You’ll probably start to cry when you open my gift.” And he was right.

So fair is fair. Smartmom has had plenty of Bob Dylan in her life and last week was Teen Spirit’s chance to revel in the legend. He knows that Dylan can barely sing anymore. He knows that you can’t recognize the songs because Dylan changes the tunes; it’s a veritable game of “Name That Tune” when he starts to play.

Still, Teen Spirit was ready for anything (though he was, fortunately, talked out of bringing his guitar by a friend).

In Sag Harbor, Smartmom thought about her son at the show.

But she was there in a way. Through her son’s eyes and ears. Plus, she got to hear about it in the morning.

“He can’t sustain a note,” Teen Spirit said. “He basically just yells the words.”

And that was worth it all.

Big News: Bird on Fifth Avenue

So the other day I walked up Fifth Avenue from Third and I missed the REALLY BIG NEWS. Bird, the much loved, very stylish women’s clothing shop that started in the South Slope is now on Fifth Avenue between 2nd and 3rd Streets. It was actually a pioneer in the South Slope and is now an iconic Brooklyn brand I’d say.

Well, they’ve closed their South Slope shop and are concentrating on Fifth Avenue, Smith Street, and an upcoming shop in Williamsburg.

The Fifth Avenue shop will sell men’s clothing as well as  Green Bird, their line of green clothing. I haven’t been over there yet but I am chomping at the bit.

For me the shop is on the expensive side and the sizes aren’t always to my body’s liking BUT they do have Petit Bateau t-shirts, great shoes, accessories and jeans. And lots, lots MORE.

Y’know, I don’t even know which storefront that is. I’ve been very out of touch with that particular block lately. Watch out every one, the storefront that was Lulu’s will also, finally, get occupied now.

316 Fifth Avenue
between 2nd and 3rd Streets

Countdown to Fifty: Four Days To Go

Four more days. Here’s today’s thought:

Life gets more complex the older you are. There’s more to deal with. More to think about. One longs for the carefree days of one’s twenties. Trouble is: you never know how carefree you’ve got it until you don’t got it no more. And no matter what your age it’s always something.

With just four days to go until the big Five Oh, I am trying to get used to my new number. It’s like a new black t-shirt that doesn’t really fit. I could just put it back in the shopping bag or put it on, stretch it out a bit, add an accessory and wear it anyway.

I guess I have to wear it anyway.

Flyer Remover: Let Him Be Says Sister

The Brooklyn Paper has the story and there’s an excerpt below. Turns out that the Park Slope flyer remover—the person who has been removing stoop sale signs and other signs from area lamp posts – has a very caring sister who urges the community to be sensitive to her brother’s issues.

“The public needs to understand my brother, that he does this
because he is autistic,” said the sister, who requested anonymity
because there have been threats against her brother as he’s walked his
flier-removal beat throughout Park Slope and nearby Prospect Heights.

The Brooklyn Paper got in touch with the woman after she responded to a story last week
about the activities of the so-called “Ripper.” That story recounted
that some people in the neighborhood are angry that he is pulling down
signs, which are actually illegal, though others defended his
activities as a public service.

She also posted a long letter on the Web site Brooklynian that asked her neighbors to “please leave him be.”

She signed it, “Concerned Sister 11215.”

In a subsequent interview with The Brooklyn Paper, the sister said
her older brother’s sign-removal campaign started about five years ago
and is directly related to his autism.

“He’s not doing this to be an a—hole or a killjoy or to
inconvenience people,” she said. “It is something that his mind
believes he absolutely must do. My mother often describes that he
thinks of it as his job, his mission. He is compelled to do it.”

She said the family has long tried to get him to stop — mostly out
fear that someone who has posted a sign will harm him — but he
continues to keep his daily schedule of tidying the neighborhood.

“He has been confronted many times,” she said. “He gets upset and
comes home and relates the incidents to my mother and to me. There’s a
specific group of people from a moving company who have threatened him
physically. But people have to understand that he is absolutely not
violent and not a threat to anyone.”

Last Chance: 10 More Performances of Life in a Marital Institution

I just got this email from the very talented James Braly. Just 10 more performances of his acclaimed Life in a Marital Institution at the Soho Playhouse.

The Off Broadway run of LIFE in a Marital Institution will end as scheduled, on Sunday, August 31.    Meaning, there are only 10 more performances of the New York Times and Time Out /NBC Critic’s Pick that inspired a woman in the front row last week to cry out, “Jesus Christ!”  It was a special moment, in a summer full of them:

    — The New York Times Reader’s Favorite Shows currently lists LIFE as #9 Off Broadway, a follicle AHEAD (!) of Hair.

    — NPR’s Brian Lehrer interviewed me on his show recently, as did New York media institutions Joe Franklin and Joey Reynolds, where I was paired with sex therapist Dr. Judy for a discussion about female anatomy, albeit she did most of the talking.

    — Producer Anna Becker’s hilariously repulsive “Got Breastmilk?” ad campaign was rejected by Facebook–at the start of National Breastfeeding Week, no less.  Evidently, the tastemakers at Facebook are not Lactivists.

    But I digress.  LIFE must end in New York City (a national tour is being planned), so now is your last chance to catch the show Off Broadway.  Details at www.jamesbraly.com.   Use discount code SEB for $15.00 off tickets to remaining performances.

    It’s been a great run, and if you haven’t seen LIFE–or if you haven’t seen it at Soho Playhouse–please come.  Director Hal Brooks joined me on this adventure almost two years ago, and his work has been nothing less than transformational.

Adopt a Fountain?

Oh. It’s an art project! Still, I’m not sure what this is about. If you figure it out let me know.

ADOPT/LE-FONT is looking for participants throughout Brooklyn
to adopt and temporarily house a simple fountain. The
fountains will become available for hosting on September 1
and will remain available for consecutive week-long intervals
throughout the month. Adoption is free and open to the public.

Please contact us at 646.309.6031 or adoptlefont@gmail.com


	

New on Fifth Avenue

A quick walk on Fifth Avenue from Third Street to Save on Fifth on 7th Street revealed the following.

–The space that was Pizza By The Park on 3rd Street west of Fifth Avenue is going to be another restaurant.

–A new WINE shop is going in on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets in the space that previously housed Living on Fifth.

–Work is being done in the space that used to be Cocotte on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 4th Street. It will be a restaurant.

–The Drama Cafe building between 4th and 5th Streets is for sale. The Drama Cafe is closed.

–The Bagel Shop on the corner of 4th Street and Fifth Avenue is renovating.

–Get Fresh on Fifth Avenue between 5th and 6th is adding a cafe to its take-out food concept.

Countdown to Fifty: Five Days to Go

In just five more days. Here is today’s thought:

I don’t feel depressed today. Something has lifted. And I am starting to think about what I want to do on the big day. Meditate, run around the park, drink a beer sitting outside at The Gate, hang out with friends, watch Obama’s acceptance speech, have a good dinner with Hepcat and the kids.

These last gorgeous days of summer have me thinking about the busy Fall ahead. There’s lots of writing to do. A new school for OSFO. Senior year for Teen Spirit. Much to think about; much to do.

So there is life after August 28th: Loads to organize and plan…

September 14: Brooklyn Book Festival

The Brookyn Book Festival will be here before you know it. Brought to you by Marty Markowitz, Brooklyn Literary Council and Brooklyn Tourism, the Brooklyn Book Festival, a huge, free event presenting an array of literary stars and emerging authors who represent the exciting world of literature today is on September 14th.

    The Brooklyn Book Festival is one of America ’s premier literary and literacy events—a hip, smart, diverse gathering attracting thousands of book lovers of all ages. The festival is organized around themed readings and devoted to timely and lively panel discussions. The inclusion of top national and international authors and new partners has expanded the festival’s reach while continuing to celebrate and enhance Brooklyn ’s contemporary and historic literary reputation

    Confirmed authors include Joan Didion, Richard Price, Jonathan Lethem, Dorothy Allison, Russell Banks, A.M. Homes, George Pelecanos, Terry McMillan, Jonathan Franzen, Susan Choi, Esmeralda Santiago, Thurston Moore, Paul Beatty, Jacqueline Woodson, Chuck Klosterman, Jimmy Breslin, Pete Hamill, Nikki Turner, Elizabeth Nunez, Ed Park, Pico Iyer, Gail Carson Levine, Cecily von Ziegesar, Chris Myers, Jane O’Connor, Jon Scieszka, Mo Willems and many more.

    “These days, Brooklyn is indeed the Creative Capital of America. We’re home to many of the world’s renowned writers and a thriving reading audience—as well as a destination for culture-seeking tourists worldwide,” says BP Markowitz. “The Brooklyn Book Festival is as diverse as our borough itself, and it’s only fitting that it’s now become a must on the national and international literary circuit. How sweet it is!”

    The festival boasts five outdoor stages in Borough Hall Plaza and Columbus Park , as well as “Reading Rooms” inside beautiful, historic Borough Hall and nearby at the Brooklyn Historical Society and St. Francis College auditorium. An outdoor literary marketplace will include more than 140 booksellers, publishers and literary organizations.

    Young adults and young adults at heart are in for a special treat. The Brooklyn Book Festival caters to the facebook set with hip panels on topics from graphic novels to fantasy and wildly popular teen “glamour fiction” at the “Youth Stoop” stage. Children of all ages will also be entertained at the Target “Children’s Area,” whereby kingpins of children’s lit like Mo Willems and Jane O’Connor will read from their work.

    Again this year, beautiful, collectable Brooklyn Book Festival bookmarks will be available at all branches of the Brooklyn Public Library and most independent bookstores.

    The 2008 Brooklyn Book Festival is an initiative of Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz presented by Brooklyn Tourism and the Brooklyn Literary Council. Target is a major sponsor of this year’s Festival and Time Out New York will once again serve as the event’s media sponsor. NYC and Company Foundation is a cultural partner.

    Following is a complete list of confirmed authors to date. As programming information becomes available, check www.visitbrooklyn.org. Also visit myspace.com/brooklynbookfestival and the Brooklyn Book Festival Official Site on facebook

Being Young and Arab in America: Moustafa Bayoumi at Barnes and Noble

Bayoumi_book_2
Brooklyn College English professor Moustafa Bayoumi, author of the just-released How Does It Feel to Be a Problem?: Being Young and Arab in America, did a reading at the Park Slope Barnes and Noble on Wednesday night. Author Richard Grayson was there to report on the reading from this compelling look at the lives of seven young Arab-Americans coping with post-9/11 life in our borough. This is from Grayson’s blog, Dumbo Books of Brooklyn.

by Richard Grayson

The store had configured the seats and author’s position somewhat differently than for the overflow Pete Hamill crowd, but we got downstairs about 12 minutes early and it was already standing-room only.

Peaches, the B&N coordinator, introduced the author pretty much with the canned bio from his publisher, which is pretty impressive for such a young scholar:

    Moustafa Bayoumi is an associate professor of English at Brooklyn College, the City University of New York. Born in Zürich, Switzerland and raised in Kingston, Canada, he completed his Ph.D. in English and comparative literature at Columbia University. He is co-editor of The Edward Said Reader and has published academic essays in Transition, Interventions, The Yale Journal of Criticism, Amerasia, Arab Studies Quarterly, The Journal of Asian American Studies, and other places.

    His writings have also appeared in The Nation, The London Review of Books, and The Village Voice. His essay “Disco Inferno,” originally published in The Nation, was included in the collection Best Music Writing 2006. From 2003 to 2006, he served on the National Council of the American Studies Association, and he is currently an editor for Middle East Report. He is also an occasional columnist for the Progressive Media Project, an initiative of The Progressive magazine, through which his op-eds appear in newspapers across the United States. He lives in Brooklyn.

Bayoumi, who jokingly said he’d brought his own cheering section, began by saying that his book was three years in the making. Inspired by such works as Random Family, Nickel and Dimed, and the writings of the brilliant Joan Didion and Edward Said (particularly After the Last Sky), the author said he hoped to use the tools of narrative to tell truths about the lives of contemporary Arab-Americans facing not just the tough-enough challenges of growing up but of having to cope with the havoc and hostility in a post-9/11 world.

His title comes from the W.E.B. Du Bois’ 1903 classic, The Souls of Black Folk, which astonished us when we first read it in the spring of 1973 in Prof. Dan Mayers’ Afro-American Literature class at Brooklyn College. It’s a book we’ve taught in several classes, and of course it contains a famous essay discussing not just the "double consciousness" that black Americans develop but with the conundrum of how a person lives when her very existence seems to be a "problem" to others.

(Aside: We were once taken aback in 1981, when at a party while we were guest-teaching at the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts, a self-described "redneck from West Monroe, Louisiana," asked us: "Grayson, what’s your feeling about the Jewish problem?" Soon we’d learn that Mike Stone, despite his good-old-boy accent and manner, was an English teacher who knew more about the works of Saul Bellow than we did. A born provocateur – as he proved again the same night when he told us that he’d "never seen a Jew drink Pepsi before" – Mike made us think and we ended up having dinner with him every time we came to New Orleans.)

Prof. Bayoumi said he chose to write about young Arab-Americans in Brooklyn not just because he lives and teaches here and would avoid having to travel for research, but because, according to the 2000 census, the largest number of Arab-Americans in a city are in New York, with Brooklyn having more residents of Arab descent than the other boroughs. Dearborn, Michigan, may have a higher concentration of Arab-Americans, but Brooklyn’s population is larger.

He then read, in a lively voice, an excerpt from the early part of the book which is both a lyrical and informative description of our borough, and then briefly outlined the seven young Brooklynites portrayed (the word "profiled" is not to be used here) in How Does It Feel to Be a Problem?.

Rasha, whose story can be found in Bayoumi’s New York Magazine article, was living a normal life until the trauma of being caught up in the detentions and mass arrests following 9/11. Thrown in jail along with the other members of her family, Rasha undergoes an experience that is appalling but ultimately inspiring inspiring.

(Second aside: As a law school administrator at a South Florida university with a large Arab-American student body, we constantly heard stories of middle-of-the-night knocks on the door and people being taken away. For example, Lubna – whose Palestinian family ran a popular restaurant in the heavily Jewish surburb of Sunrise – had been a student when we taught constitutional history and other legal writing subjects to undergraduates in the late 1990s and who was a first-year law student when we got our new job there. Her husband was one of those taken in during a mass arrest and was kept in custody for days until the government finally admitted that there was no reason at all to hold him further. Sometimes it seemed to us that there was no student of Arab descent who didn’t have a similar story.)

Prof. Bayoumi said he’d wanted to interview a soldier, and he found Sami, a Park Slope Christian kid who joined the Marines and left Port Authority for basic training on the night of September 10, 2001. By morning, when he’d arrived at base, everything had changed and the recruits knew they were preparing to go to war. Sami ultimately served two tours of duty in Iraq, and the book details his conflicting feelings about being there.

Yasmin was 15 and decided to get involved in student government at her high school. To her surprise, she’s elected to office in a landslide, only to find that she later is pressured to resign because, due to her Muslim religious beliefs, she cannot attend a school dance where attendance is mandatory for student officers. Facing a mixture of anti-Muslim bigotry and the mindless (but selective) adherence to rules common among the more moronic educators in our public schools, Yasmin eventually chooses to fight. Earlier today, along with Prof. Bayoumi, Yasmin – now, we are glad to report, a law student – eloquently told her story on WNYC’s Leonard Lopate Show.

Akram, whose Palestinian family lives in Sunset Park and owns a grocery in East Flatbush where he works, confronts many pressures after 9/11. But he maintains a mordant sense of humor (driving with three buddies, he says, "There’s that new Arab store," and when they ask where, he points and says, "Target") and the dream of going to booming Dubai.

Lina, an Iraqi-American, has to deal with her conservative parents as well as societal pressures and her infatuation with an Iraqi man takes a surprising turn when he’s revealed to be a spy for, no shit, Saddam Hussein.

Omar, an aspiring journalist, thinks he’s hit the jackpot when he scores an internship with Al Jazeera, only to find that his credentials seem suspect when he begins an apparently fruitless search for employment.

And Rami, whose father, like many Arab-Americans, is picked up on criminal charges for a minor offense – this was common among owners of corner stores, Prof. Bayoumi said – becomes more religious and devoted to Islam, just as her father does in prison.

Prof. Bayoumi read another excerpt in which Yasmin and her father go to midtown to see an attorney to discuss a possible case against the high school for removing her from student government, an excerpt typical of his lavish attention to detail and character development.

A question-and-answer period covered a lot of ground. The author said his biggest surprise was just how hard everyone seemed to work, making it difficult for the young people to find time to talk with him. (Third aside: in our opinion, compared to most working-class people, full-time college professors are on a perpetual vacation.)

The Brooklyn Arab-American community is close-knit, despite differences in national origin, neighborhood, and to some extent religion. Local organizations like the Arab-American Association of Bay Ridge do a good job in helping recent immigrants and families with young children, but finding support for teens and young adults is a bit harder. There are maybe three degrees of separation about Brooklynites of Arab descent, and there’s a lot of networking among the borough’s mosques.

Although there’s been considerable Arab immigration to the U.S. since the 1880s, and they’ve been in Brooklyn for a long time – we started going to the bakeries, food stores and restaurants like Sahadi on Atlantic Avenue in the late 1960s and early 1970s for couscous, baba ghannuj, baklava and typical Arab hospitality – there also was a lot of discrimination prior to 9/11.

For example, in the fall of 1989, alerted by an article in the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee newsletter, we went to our local Spencer Gifts in Hollywood, Florida and found, in the store window in the Diplomat Mall a display of several Halloween costumes, with one called "The Arab" or maybe "The Sheik" joining other presumably scary figures as "The Witch" and "The Werewolf."

When we protested the costume, featuring a kefiyeh-headed mask with stereotypical hook-nosed Semitic features and a maniacal grin, the store manager just shrugged and appeared unmoved by our argument that he’d never feature a similar costume of a felt-hat-topped payiss-wearing Hasid in our heavily Jewish area. Basically, all we could do was write a long outraged letter to the Hollywood Sun-Tattler, the daily newspaper for which we’d worked as a humor columnist a few years before, and that didn’t stop the sales of this racist outfit.

One hopes that such a Halloween costume would be haram in 2008, but we’re not so sure. If you want to educate yourself about Arab-Americans and get to read some compelling stories, get Moustafa Bayoumi’s book, as a long line of Barnes & Noble customers did last night.

Countdown to Fifty: Six More Days To Go

Six more days and I will be celebrating a major milestone. Here is my thought for today:

With six more days until the big Five Oh I find myself feeling depressed. I’m not sure if that’s because of the forthcoming birthday or because my father is ill, Hepcat is in California and my good friend is in the hospital having her hip replaced (my second 65-year-old friend this summer to have a hip replacement).

I woke up early this morning to the cacophonous sound of garbage trucks with a hangover from last night’s Barrio margarita.

Underslept, sad, missing Hepcat, I am closing in on a big birthday.

 

Waterfalls Causing Environmental Damage?

Nyc_waterfall2
According to the Brooklyn Eagle, there have been complaints about damage to trees due to the NYC Waterfalls. Here’s an excerpt from their article:

"The Public Art Fund’s dramatic NYC Waterfalls, a big tourist draw
throughout the summer, are scheduled to be turned off in October.

"But that may be too late for many of the plants and trees both near the
River Café and further down along the Brooklyn Heights Promenade.

"Two of the four dramatic waterfalls, designed by Danish artist Olafur
Eliasson, are near the Brooklyn waterfront, one under the Brooklyn
Bridge and the other between Piers 4 and 5. When they were turned on in
June, there was nothing but praise for them.

"‘An Environmental Assessment Study was done, and it was concluded that
there would be no lasting impact from the project,” said Rochelle
Steiner, director of the Public Art Fund.

"However, starting about a month later, there were complaints that the
partially salt river water that is being sprayed up through the
waterfalls was causing many of the trees and plants in the River Café’s
famed garden to become prematurely brown and yellow. Owner Michael
“Buzzy” O’Keefe planted the trees 32 years ago when he opened the
restaurant in the Fulton Ferry area."

The Brooklyn Paper also has a story today.

The Waterfalls have claimed another victim.

Trees, shrubs, and greenery along the fabled Brooklyn Heights
Promenade are showing severe signs of stress, and in some cases, death
— thanks to a constant battering of brackish East River water spewing
from Olafur Eliasson’s “New York City Waterfalls” project.

The Promenade foliage is just the latest victim of Eliasson’s four-headed killing machine. As The Brooklyn Paper reported earlier this month,
the waterfalls’ saline spray has severely damaged trees at the River
Café in DUMBO, turning their greenery a decidely autumnal hue.

Big Reward For Finding Man Who Attacked Elderly Woman

NY 1 reports that $15,000 is being offered for help finding the horrible person who attacked an 85-year-old Brooklyn woman.

The attacker, who is thought to be responsible for 20 other similar crimes, was caught on tape
choking and robbing Lilian France in an elevator at a Crown Heights apartment building on Washington Avenue.

100 Blacks in Law Enforcement called Wednesday for the
installation of more video cameras around the borough.

Urban Environmentalist NYC – Ask the Expert

Here is the occasional feature from the Center for the Urban Environment (CUE). In this submission CUE staff interviews Alexandra Zissu, writer/editor/speaker and native New Yorker. Zissu who will be speaking on the subject of “Breathe Easy: A How-To for
Creating a NonToxic Home Environment"
at Green Brooklyn.. Green City on September 18th. The event—sponsored by the Center for the Urban Environment—is in its fourth year and is the borough’s largest celebration of environmentally conscious programs, projects, and initiatives in New York City. In close partnership with the Green Market at Brooklyn’s Borough Hall, this year the full day fair and symposium promises to help New Yorkers weed through what ‘green’ really is. For more information visit www.greenbrooklyn.org.

CUE: Thanks for taking the time to answers some questions in our “Ask the Expert” corner. As a guru of the non-toxic home environment—let’s start with the basics. How do you define toxic?

Zissu: Anything with the potential to harm human health and the environment. That’s pretty wide ranging, I know, but also covers what I tend to refer to as toxic.

CUE: If I can’t do everything to keep my home free of toxins—what are the three most important things I can do?

Zissu: I often give a talk to various groups that covers a "toxic top ten list" — ten home areas where people can make changes that will really make a difference in terms of minimizing their exposure to the bad stuff. Before I launch into the top ten, I always give three beyond simple changes anyone can do tomorrow to immediately reduce indoor air pollution. Once you’re feeling proactive, it’s easier to launch into those ten areas, I have found. These three tips include:

1. Take off your shoes before or just after entering your home. The residues on your soles — gas, pesticide, dog shit and so much more — should not be tracked into your home, especially if you have a crawling baby. One scientist I often interview at the NRDC says removing your shoes should be considered an “everyone-does-it” public health measure along the lines of handwashing. Apparently Brooklyn has the second highest pesticide use in all of New York State (thanks, roaches). Kicking off your heels couldn’t be easier and the results are dramatic and instantaneous.

2. This is particularly important among for urban working types: don’t dry clean your clothes. Wet clean or CO2 clean instead. The chemical used in conventional dry cleaning is a probable human carcinogen. For more information: http://www.thegreenguide.com/doc/ask/wetclean

3. Switch all of your conventional cleaners to green ones. 

CUE: There are so many “green” products out there, how can the average consumer differentiate between those that are legitimate and those that are not?

Zissu:  It’s tragic that there is so much greenwashing going on right now. At the same time there are very few trustworthy regulations out there along the lines of the USDA Organic stamp for food that could help the average consumer figure out which so called eco cleaning product, face cream, or even mattress is what it claims to be. So it’s crucial to do your homework before you go shopping. That way you’ll never find yourself in the grocery store wondering which "green" toilet scrub is better. Luckily there are now many great resources to help you figure out what’s legit. See below.

CUE: For local Brooklyn-ites, how does “buying local” play out in building a non-toxic home environment?

Zissu:  To my mind, buying local usually refers to food. Brooklyn has many great farmers markets, clued-in restaurants, and a well-regarded food Co-op that can make local eating a reality, even year round. In terms of local for other aspects of the home, I like to ask myself whenever I’m in the market for anything — is it possible to get, say, a chair that was made around here from reclaimed wood from around here? Craig’s List, Freecycle, and dumpster diving make furnishing "locally" more possible. So does hiring local artisans to do millwork, and doing things like buying locally made pottery and clothing. There are even people in and around the city making soaps, creams and more. All of this falls under the term local.

CUE: Theses are tough financial times for many of us—does income play a role in living organically and what are some easy things that everyone can do in their house that doesn’t require added expenditures or products?

Zissu:  I get this question more often than any other question. I’ll start with food: I have belonged to a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) farm for 8 or 9 years right now (check out www.justfood.org for CSAs that deliver in Brooklyn) and although I love and frequent my local farmers markets, I find it to be the most inexpensive way to get local, organic fruits and vegetables. Through them I now also buy my meat and things like honey and maple syrup. You’d think my grocery bills would be much higher than they were back when I wasn’t only eating local/organic but they aren’t. Eliminating supermarket shopping from my life has made the overall experience a lot cheaper. This carries over to all other aspects of life. Yes, the "green" things I buy are often more expensive than their conventional counterparts but living this lifestyle— I buy so much less extraneous stuff than I used to that I actually spend much less money now than before. There is a lot of focus on purchasing things when discussing an environmentally friendly way of living. I understand why, but it’s a bit of a contorted conversation. When I think of my own environmentalism, I don’t automatically think of shopping! But I know that transitioning to a more treehugging approach requires changing more than a few products. On the whole, I find "green" to be a leaner existence, and therefore less expensive. Or at least no more expensive than my conventional counterpart. To answer your question more fully, I’d say NOT buying anything new doesn’t require added expenditures or products. Use all purpose products instead of buying ten different cleaners for various rooms in your house, or a cream for your eyes, another for elbows, another for hands. You get the point. Kids maybe need one new toy instead of eighteen. Try making your own cleaning products. Carrying around a reusable water bottle really cuts down on cash and waste. Less is more. And less plastic is even more than that.

CUE: As the co-author of The Complete Organic Pregnancy—you have taken a long view of organic, non-toxic living. What is the single greatest benefit it brings you and what are some good resources for others who are interested in embarking on a similar path in their own lives?

Zissu: I don’t know what the benefit is and that’s the point. There have been 80,000 to 100,000 new chemicals introduced in the U.S. since World War II and the human health effects of less than 5 percent of these are known. I think of it as defensive driving with my body, and with my daughter’s body. I don’t personally want to wait around for our government to play catch up and admit which plastic contains harmful hormone disrupting chemicals, or which flame retardant shouldn’t have been in our mattresses, or — oops! — what’s the next DDT. Following the precautionary principle and taking steps to avoid and/or minimize exposure to the unknown is really what this is about. I have done the research and made some conclusions about what I hope the benefits are, but ultimately only time will tell. That this approach also keeps these very same chemicals away from other humans (hello, farmers) and out of the environment at the same time is critical.

Here are some of my favorite resources: www.thegreenguide.com;  www.thedailygreen.com;  www.plentymag.com;  www.simplesteps.org;  www.watoxics.org;  www.healthychild.org;  www.treehugger.com

Alexandra Zissu lives in the West Village with her family. She is co-author of The Complete Organic Pregnancy (Collins, 2006), co-writes "Ask an Organic Mom" for TheDailyGreen.com and "Green Mums" for Cookiemag.com. She’s also The Green Guide’s parenting columnist, kids editor at New York Magazine, and has written recently on eco-topics for T: The New York Times Style Magazine, Plenty, and Health among other publications. Her next book covers obsessively greening your kitchen and is due out from Clarkson Potter in 2010.

Interview conducted by Rebeccah Welch—Associate Director of Public Affairs at the Center for the Urban Environment. As a guide to a more sustainable New York City, the Center is dedicated to educating individuals about the built and natural environments. For more about our work visit www.bcue.org.