Postcard Revival Redux

Getting these was like getting a perfect present every day. They came from Italy and Germany and Ohio and Seattle and Chicago and… Not shown? The stunning set of postcards from Lia, collage artist extraordinaire. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. All of you. And yes, I’d still happily send you a postcard. Here’s the …


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Beautiful Bikeable Portland, Oregon

It’s not just the fact that you can get a snappy 2bd 3ba condo for well under what we paid for our Seattle digs. It’s the vibe that reminds us of what we loved about Seattle when we first got here, a certain funky unpretentiousness. And the moderated landscape that makes biking everywhere doable for …


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On Writing About Place and Authenticity

For some time now, I’ve been meaning to write to the editors of my favorite magazine, National Geographic Traveler to say this: I love you, but could you quit throwing the word “authentic” around? Nitpicky, obsessively literal, and probably very annoying, I know. But stick with me.

Here’s the definition of authentic from Webster’s via Dictionary, trimmed for the etymology and pronunciation details):

1. Having a genuine original or authority, in opposition to that which is false, fictitious, counterfeit, or apocryphal; being what it purports to be; genuine; not of doubtful origin; real; as, an authentic paper or register.

To be avenged On him who had stole Jove’s authentic fire. –Milton.

2. Authoritative. [Obs.] –Milton.

3. Of approved authority; true; trustworthy; credible; as, an authentic writer; an authentic portrait; authentic information.

4. (Law) Vested with all due formalities, and legally attested.

5. (Mus.) Having as immediate relation to the tonic, in distinction from plagal, which has a correspondent relation to the dominant in the octave below the tonic.

This is my deal: I don’t think you can describe a place as authentic as though it could be real or fake unless you’re talking about an actually facsimile of place, like the Venetian in Vegas or the Polynesian Cultural Center on Oahu. These are reproductions of places that exist in the real world as real places. The Venetian and the Cultural Center are freaky fake. The “authentic” places aren’t so scrubbed; the canals of Venice are stinky, Oahu has crazy traffic. There’s no Starbuck’s in Venice, but seven bucks for a cappucino? And the real Hawaii is covered with food chains, they’re everywhere.


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Recent Reads: RuinAir and Dark Summit

Flying Ruinair in Germany is like shopping in Aldi but knowing there is a Marks and Spencer or a Sainsbury store nearby where the prices are also Lidl. I wasn’t sure what was bugging me about Ruinair until I came across that particular passage. The book is funny, snarky, self deprecating, all thing things I …


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Postcard Update

The nice folks at Postcard Perfect like the idea of you sending postcards so much, they’ve given me a freebie code to share until Monday, the 26th. It’s good for US postage only (sorry) but you’ll get two domestic postcards for free or two international ones for 75c each. I’ll send you the code when …


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File Under: Always Carry Your Camera

My photo won the prize for “Most Unusual Object” in West Seattle Blog’s Garage Sale Contest. No, smart guy, the unusual object wasn’t ME, it was two huge bags of duck decoys. Me: How many duck decoys does a person need? Duck Decoy Guy: About a dozen. Me: And how many do you have here? …


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