Lunching with literate ladies of Laguna
Another page was added recently to the city’s many charitable
chapters.
About 40 women attended the first Ladies Who Lunch ... and Read
fundraiser for the Laguna Beach Library. Mayor Elizabeth
Pearson-Schneider and Friends of the Library President Martha Lydick
hosted the luncheon at Tivoli Terrace.
Participants were asked to introduce themselves and submit the
names of two of their favorite or recently read books they would
recommend, with speakers’ names to be drawn from a hat (more about
hats later).
Diane Kloke, who has belonged to a book club with
Pearson-Schneider for 16 years, said “River Town: Two Years on the
Yangtze,” by Peter Hessler, resolved many of the differences between
what she expected to see when she traveled to China and what she
actually saw on the “totally” guided trip.
Michelle Falkowski recently reread “The Fountainhead” by Ayn Rand.
“It made me think differently about houses,” Falkowski said. “A house
has a soul, like a person.”
Laguna Beach County Water District General Manager Renae Hinchey
also delved into Asian culture. She recommended “Geisha -- A Life”
and “Samurai’s Garden.”
“My friends, Patricia Turnier, an avid reader, and Janet Pressman,
a volunteer at the Friends of the Library bookstore, read everything
and pre-screen and recommend books to me,” said realtor Bobbi Cox, a
generous contributor the Friends. “When I hit on an author I really
like, I read everything that author writes.”
Read anything by Nelson DeMille, she said.
Irma Wolfson shared her favorable opinion of a book not yet for
sale: Joan Didion’s “Year of Magical Thinking.” Wolfson said people
in the book business often get advance copies of books. She is a
former manager of Latitude 33 and already involved with the bookstore
Jane Hanauer is planning to open in the Pottery Shack.
“Belly Laughs” made Allison Tosti laugh. She confided that she is
pregnant -- although the ladies had to take her word for it.
“That is a poor excuse for a belly,” said Bree Burgess Rosen, who
once had to completely rewrite the script of “Lagunatics” to account
for her unexpected but obvious pregnancy.
Cindy Prewitt recommended “Bookseller of Kabul.”
“Lipstick Jungle” by Candace Bushnell, who wrote the book on which
“Sex in the City” was based, is what City Treasurer Laura Parisi said
she reads when she isn’t boning up on how to discipline her teenager.
Parisi also has started “Secret Lives of Bees,” recommended by her
hair stylist.
Cynthia Weitz gave a report on “My Sister’s Keeper.”
Pearson-Schneider is reading biographies, fulfilling a vow to read
about every American president.
“Politics have been really ugly from the beginning,” she said.
The luncheon was such a success that Pearson-Schneider and Lydick
were urged to organize one every six months.
“Start looking for hats,” Pearson-Schneider said from beneath the
brim of her “Breakfast at Tiffany’s”-style black straw cartwheel.
As an extra fillip to the luncheon, some of the ladies wore hats.
“Looking at these hats, a rainbow has nothing on this group,” said
Lydick, who topped off her outfit with a beige straw fedora.
Laguna Beach Seniors Inc. President Pauline Wolpin wore a purple
straw, velvet-trimmed hat.
“It was my wedding hat, 54 years ago,” Walpin said.
Anne Wood wore a picture hat she said protects her eyes from the
sunlight. Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman wore a baseball cap.
City Clerk Martha Anderson looked lovely in her beige straw
picture hat, but being a perfectionist, she wasn’t happy that the hat
didn’t exactly match the trim on her suit.
All of Kloke’s hats were inherited from her late mother-in-law,
Eloise Kloke, an administrator at UCI.
“She got dressed up for every occasion,” Kloke said.
Pearson-Schneider presented a $50 Cedar Creek gift certificate to
Pamela Simpson, whose leopard-print toque, trimmed with a beige silk
flower, was as stylish as her reading.
She described a favorite book, “Bergdorf Blondes,” as “Sex in the
City” meets “Bridget Jones.”
“This luncheon [and the hat contest] was Elizabeth’s idea -- she
got it rolling and organized at the same time she was running the
city, dotting all her I’s and crossing all her T’s,” Lydick said.
Not to mention that Pearson-Schneider was in the middle of moving
into a new home.
“Our library has lost a lot of funding from the county,”
Pearson-Schneider said. “Our Friends fund summer reading programs for
children and teens, and they buy more books [for the branch] than the
county does.”
Laguna Beach County Water District Commissioner Debbie Neev said,
“I have twin boys, and I love the summer reading programs.”
Children’s librarian Rebecca Porter knows how important the
Friends are to the children of this town.
Branch manager Mariana Hof knows how important the Friends are to
the entire operation.
Besides the purchase of books, the Friends also pick up the tab
for some necessary capital improvements to the library ignored by the
county, which only accepts responsibility for the roof, air
conditioning, heating and staff. Repainting, landscaping -- nope.
Lydick is preparing for the Oct. 27 Friends of the Library annual
dinner meeting and silent auction -- a major fundraiser for the
library,
“You want to know what pain is,” Lydick said.
“It is opening your mail box everyday and finding it filled with
books -- and you can’t read them. They have to be in pristine
condition for the auction.”
The auction was begun two years ago by the simple but
time-consuming expedient of writing to authors and asking for
donations. That year, authors donated 188 books.
Last year, local author Ted Taylor was honored at the dinner. As
of the luncheon, Lydick has had 127 responses, but expecting many
more to come in October.
For more information about the Friends of the Library, membership
or dinner reservations, call (949) 497-7053.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652; hand-deliver to Suite 22 in the Lumberyard,
384 Forest Ave.; call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949) 494-8979.
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