Category Archives: The New York Times

Isle of Capri

Isle of Capri, 3rd Ave. and 61st Street

In addition to the high style and classic French presentation of restaurants like La Grenouille, La Caravelle and Lutece, 1960s New York offered another kind of “fine” dining experience — the clubby neighborhood classic, often a bistro with sidewalk seating.  After my mother divorced my step-father and sold the apartment in the Dakota we moved to Park Avenue on the Upper East Side which was home to many of this other type of restaurant, probably because there were fewer people who cooked in this more rarified neighborhood.  One of our regular haunts was the Isle of Capri.  It was a “fancy” restaurant but run by a family, the Lamanna’s, who made everyone feel as if they were eating at a rich Italian relative’s house.  In 1967 Craig Claiborne validated the restaurant’s local reputation by naming it “the best small Italian restaurant in New York” and giving it three stars in the New York Times.  It was the kind of place where everyone seemed like a regular and so, for a while, were we.  My and Robbie’s La Grenouille training and matching Florence Eiseman dresses made us pretty additions to the crowd and the simple plates of pasta–fettuccine alfredo was our favorite–and veal piccata we were given made us feel happy and at home.  
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Jeannette Walls

“Reality is just so interesting, why would you want to escape it.”

Jeannette Walls, author of the wonderful and inspiring Glass Castle, talks to The New York Times Book Review this Sunday about her love of memoirs and what she’s been reading and liking including Chanel Bonfire.  I’m honored and grateful for the shout-out.  Use the link to read the conversation and get information about her new book and first novel, “The Silver Star”.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/16/books/review/jeannette-walls-by-the-book.html?smid=tw-share&_r=0

<a href=”http://www.hypersmash.com”>www.hypersmash.com</a>

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