Vogue: It’s already been a great year for readers.

Vogue: It’s already been a great year for readers.

If you’re a book lover, it’s likely your side table stack is still topped with reads you optimistically picked up last year (and the year before that), which can make it tough to select from what’s freshly hitting stores in 2020. To help guide you through all these literary riches, Vogue *editors and contributors are here with their selections for the best books of 2020, from novels to memoirs to artistic tomes.

Uncanny Valley by Anna Wiener (MCD/Farrar, Straus and Giroux, January)

Uncanny Valley

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If we must live in a surveillance state, it might as well be under the attentive eye of Anna Wiener, whose memoir, Uncanny Valley (Farrar, Straus and Giroux/MCD), is equal parts enchanting and subversive. The New York native graduated into a recession and found a job at a New York literary agency that paid mostly in prestige. Seduced by tech’s lucre and ostensible utopianism, Wiener moved west, where life proved eerily comfortable for a hard-driving millennial. Her account of living inside the Bay Area bubble reads like HBO’s Silicon Valley filtered through Renata Adler; Wiener is a trenchant cultural cartographer, mapping out a foggy world whose ruling class is fueled by empty scripts: “People were saying nothing, and saying it all the time.” The book’s author does the very opposite. — Lauren Mechling

Apartment by Teddy Wayne (Bloomsbury, February)

Apartment

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Teddy Wayne’s noir bromance Apartment (Bloomsbury) is set in 1996, back when successful authors enjoyed godlike status, and the young men who dreamed of joining the pantheon had no social media platforms where they could act out their fantasies. The unnamed protagonist of this novel is surrounded by self-regarding professors and students who find no favor with his workshop submissions. The one exception is Billy, a charismatic Midwesterner who sees promise in his classmate’s pages. Billy sleeps in the basement of the dive bar where he works—until the narrator extends an invitation to live with him in exchange for cleaning and companionship. What follows is an amusing, increasingly uneasy account of an odd couple and their unstable power dynamic as Billy’s star rises, and his host, whose heart is “clamped shut like the shell of a stubborn pistachio,” comes to accept that their bond is not all it’s cracked up to be. — Lauren Mechling

In the Land of Men by Adrienne Miller (Ecco, February)

In the Land of Men

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The high-flying New York literary scene of the ’90s is also the backdrop of Adrienne Miller’s memoir In the Land of Men (Ecco). Miller was an erudite and self-possessed college graduate who came to Manhattan and found work in men’s magazines, first at GQ, then, at 25, as the literary editor of Esquire. Up against the industry’s unapologetic sexism and her own impostor syndrome, she developed a façade of unflappability. Two decades later, she recounts her years as “improbable gatekeeper” and spins an elegy for the glory days of American magazines, with cameos by Norman Mailer, George Plimpton, and Dave Eggers. The star of the show, though, is David Foster Wallace, who used to crank-call the young editor and quickly became her greatest confidant. So began a long-distance love affair that defied definition and, in the clear light of 2020, propriety. Their “rhizomatic conversations” were playful, fun, and vexingly slippery. What a treat to listen in. — Lauren Mechling

Always Home: A Daughter’s Recipes & Stories by Fanny Singer (Knopf, March)

Always Home

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When Fanny Singer was a baby, her mother, the culinary demigod Alice Waters, would take her to Waters’s famed Berkeley restaurant, Chez Panisse, swaddle her in fresh dish towels, and place her in an extra-large salad bowl while she worked. Singer attributes her lifelong love of greens to these “early kitchen cribs.” “It was definitely an unconventional upbringing,” concedes the 36-year-old by phone from San Francisco. Singer’s memoir, Always Home: A Daughter’s Recipes & Stories (Knopf), out this month, is a tender portrait of the woman better known to the world as the mother of the farm-to-table movement. — Chloe Malle

Live Beautiful by Athena Calderone (Abrams, March)

Live Beautiful

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For 14 months, Athena Calderone ping-ponged between the East and West Coast and farther off to Copenhagen and Lyon for her latest book, Live Beautiful (Abrams), produced with photographer Nicole Franzen. By the end, she was left with a collection of design magazine–worthy photographs, but also a number of shots that captured her from a less glamorous vantage. “I was looking at the behind-the-scenes photos, and there were all of these images of me in somebody’s shower,” she recalls with amusement. — Lilah Ramzi

 

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*All products featured on Vogue are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
GALLERIA: SUGAR COATED FLORAL EXPERIENCE – Edina, MN

GALLERIA: SUGAR COATED FLORAL EXPERIENCE – Edina, MN

Unfortunately, just cancelled:

Shoppers are in for a ‘treat’ at this year’s Sugar Coated Floral Experience as they explore the sweeter side of spring, full of fabulous florals and oversized candy sculptures. This FREE, 15-day event, with gardens by Bachman’s, is sure to satisfy any sweet tooth!

Photo opportunities abound at this blooming spring extravaganza with an extra sweet setting that would bring even the bees to their knees, including a 6-foot-tall gummy bear in a floral forest, and a 13-foot-high ring pop. Don’t forget to look up throughout the experience to spot the charming cotton candy clouds!

Savor the delicious scents and sights from March 29 – April 12, 2020 during Galleria mall hours. Free valet parking is available throughout the Floral Experience (except Easter Sunday) at the east entrance, near CōV Restaurant.

WESTIN EDINA GALLERIA FLORAL EXPERIENCE PACKAGE

Offering a direct connection to the Galleria shopping center, The Westin Edina Galleria welcomes travelers with elevated accommodations and thoughtful amenities. Shop, stay and play!

Galleria

69th Street & France Ave

Edina, MN 55435 (map)

 

FINDFURNISH – Minneapolis, MN

FINDFURNISH – Minneapolis, MN

“We travel the country to bring you the very finest mid century modern and vintage industrial furnishings for your home, your office, your life.”

Marie Zellar and Brian Wilcox have been finding, restoring, and selling vintage furnishings for more than a decade. They stage their Northeast Minneapolis storefront with the latest finds. The store is an ever changing composition of mid-century modern, Danish modern, and vintage industrial furniture, lighting, decor, and art. Looking for something not on the showroom floor? Give them a budget and a timeline and they’ll track it down.

 

Reviews:

Mandy Tauferner: One of the nicest vintage Mid Century stores in the Twin Cities. The pricing is fair and I love that you don’t have to sort through junk to find high quality items. They’ve already done that for you! Their inventory is constantly changing because it’s not overpriced. Brian is very knowledgeable about the items and clearly loves what he does. Not only that, but I find him to be extremely honest and forthcoming about his business, which is a rare commodity in this competitive industry. I love following the Instagram account to see all the fresh inventory and drool over all the stuff I don’t have room to buy. Thanks for always making me feel welcome!

Dan Rosenberg: Walked into the store with no expectations, and found the perfect chair to complement our home. We walked the store, and didn’t see anything right away that would fit our needs. On our way out, Brian, Find Furnish owner, caught our attention and asked what we were looking for. We described our living room – a scene of blacks and browns to contrast the bright white walls. Brian found the perfect chair for us in his warehouse, even put us on FaceTime with his partners.

Neal Rasmussen: Great place. I found prices inline with what I was expecting for the period. I picked up a great lamp for a reasonable price. They were open to offers and negotiable on prices. I’ll be back.

Saint Paul Farmers’ Market Over 150 Years – St. Paul, MN

Saint Paul Farmers’ Market Over 150 Years – St. Paul, MN

In 1853, St. Paul was indeed a frontier town. Dirt streets, log cabins and steamboats were the order of the day. As early as 1852, the Minnesota Pioneer newspaper called for an organizational Farmers’ Market. A Market House, a two-story brick building, was constructed at Seventh and Wabasha streets. It was St. Paul’s first public market. While fresh produce was only available during the season, dairy products, flour, cakes and candies could be purchased year-round.
The Market has had several homes during its long history, but always in the downtown St. Paul area. Its longest tenure was at Tenth and Jackson streets, opening in 1902. It remained there until freeway construction and downtown development claimed the site, causing a move to Fifth and Wall streets in 1982. A new design reminiscent of the original market–corrugated fiberglass–covers the 167 open-air stalls and bricks pave the walkways. The location today is near one of the areas selected in 1853 by St. Paul to house the first Farmers’ Market.
Today, plans continue to develop a new and bigger market. The Market is operated by the St. Paul Growers Association, Inc. The association allows only fresh, locally grown produce to be sold–directly from the grower to the consumer. Also available are bakery goods, cheese, poultry, beef, pork, lamb, maple syrup, eggs, bagel sandwiches, honey, organic plants and produce, flowers, plants, shrubs and many other items.
For over 165 years, The St. Paul Farmers’ Market has been proud to enjoy the support of the community. That tradition of support continues today.

Winter Markets in Downtown, St. Paul, and at the Bachman’s in Apple Valley, you’ll find fresh mushrooms, root veggies, humanely raised meats, eggs, cheese, honey, baked goods, deserts, chocolates, jellies, jams, fermented foods, syrups, sauces, salsas, spices and other specialty products from independent and local, small-batch food makers.

Downtown St. Paul Farmers Market:

Open Every Saturday, 9am-1pm, at our Downtown location: 290 5th St E, St. Paul

Winter Markets at Bachman’s:

This weekend at the Bachman’s in Apple Valley, Saturday, 9am-1:30pm.

The best ‘Corner Store Vintage’ – Minneapolis,  MN

The best ‘Corner Store Vintage’ – Minneapolis, MN


The best ‘Corner Store Vintage’ is Located on Bryant Ave. & West Lake Street in the heart of the Uptown & Lyn-Lake shopping districts in Minneapolis MN. In business since 1974 selling exceptional vintage clothing for men & women. A collectors paradise!


TESTIMONIALS

Best place to pick up sunglasses, and anything else you might need that is extra cool.

– Matthew S

This is a fun place. Lots of ventage clothing and jewelry. Worth stopping by.

– Jeff H

There’s such a variety of exceptional sweaters, boots, coats and jeans – very easy to find the best, like a vintage Ralph Lauren Country shawl collar sweater. Always good conversation and fascinating design.

– Robyne R


900 W Lake St
Minneapolis, Minnesota
(612) 823-1270

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