Jesse Kornbluth is a New York-based journalist and editor of a cultural concierge service (books, music, movies), HeadButler.com.
As a journalist, he has been a contributing editor for Vanity Fair and New York, and a contributor to The New Yorker, The New York Times, etc.
In l996, he co-founded Bookreporter.com. From l997 to 2002, he was Editorial Director of America Online.
His books include Highly Confident: The Crime and Punishment of Michael Milken; Airborne: The Triumph and Struggle of Michael Jordan; and Pre-Pop Warhol.
The first time I took the elevator to Twyla Tharp's penthouse was a grey, chilly morning in early April. We sat in her minimalist office that overlooked a terrace that overlooked Central Park, but when you're in a room with Twyla Tharp, it's hard to notice anything else.
When last we left Christopher Hirsheimer and Melissa Hamilton, they had triumphantly self-published Canal House Cooking Volume No. 1 -- and we had adopted it as our never-fail summer cookbook. Now our tans have faded, the leaves have fallen and they're back with Volume No. 2,...
For almost half of her 7.5 years, our daughter has gone to sleep as her mother delivers a lecture. Not the kind of lecture that follows bad behavior -- our kid just prefers facts to fiction. And so her mother gives a nightly discourse called "Bore Me to Sleep."
7 Comments|
Posted November 18, 2009
| 01:35 PM (EST)
I came to Cormac McCarthy so late that the first book of his I tried to read was "No Country for Old Men". It was so silly I had to put it down. Forget the very satisfying violence and the plot about stolen money. Consider the Texas sheriff who meditates...
2 Comments|
Posted November 16, 2009
| 08:59 AM (EST)
I can tell the holidays are coming because cookie baking has commenced. Right now we're in the experimental mode. I've just sampled chocolate cookies with chocolate-covered espresso beans, and although they seemed fine to me, they were unceremoniously trashed -- not up to the standards of the establishment, I was...
2 Comments|
Posted November 14, 2009
| 01:08 PM (EST)
Two guys I didn't know asked me to write a piece about men for an anthology about Good Men. I have learned to be cautious about invitations like this, so I asked for a list of possible topics. Sure, they said, and hit SEND.
1 Comments|
Posted November 13, 2009
| 11:14 AM (EST)
For a writer of memoirs, Mary Karr has had a charmed life. That is, a lot has happened, almost all of it colorful, much of it painful. And, in each of her three books, she's followed the advice of mentor Tobias Wolff ("Take no care for your dignity") and produced...
1 Comments|
Posted November 5, 2009
| 06:52 AM (EST)
Of all the towering figures of the twentieth century, both good and evil, Winston Churchill was the most valuable to humanity, and also the most likable. It is a joy to write his life, and to read about it. None holds more lessons, especially for youth: How to use a...
3 Comments|
Posted October 21, 2009
| 10:18 AM (EST)
Last winter, the HeadButler.com community raised funds for a medical mission to Honduras. Now four students at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and a team of doctors -- a general surgeon, one OB/GYN, one anesthesiologist, and possibly a radiologist -- have committed themselves to another mission, this time to Liberia....
11 Comments|
Posted October 19, 2009
| 06:50 AM (EST)
I never watch Meet the Press, but I tuned in to see David Gregory kick off NBC's coverage of "The Shriver Report: A Woman's Nation Changes Everything." Instigated by Maria Shriver, this year-long study is the centerpiece of a week of programming on NBC and a cover story...
1 Comments|
Posted October 8, 2009
| 12:50 PM (EST)
I read the new Philip Roth novel the other day -- it's just 140 pages, with fewer words than usual per page, so you can knock it off in a few hours -- and I'm still disturbed.
This in an improvement over my reaction when I finished it.
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Posted September 11, 2009
| 07:38 AM (EST)
Depending on where you sit, President Obama's speech about health care was either a long- overdue line in the sand or, as the Congressman from South Carolina would have it, a lie.
From where I sit, it was just the opening salvo in a much larger change in the...
Coco Chanel couldn't be making a star turn in media at a better time.
Start with Anne Fontaine's film Coco Before Chanel, coming to American theaters this fall after dazzling audiences in Europe. It's the right film about Chanel: the early years. And though the facts are as murky...
40 Comments|
Posted August 26, 2009
| 04:47 PM (EST)
Dominick Dunne, who died this morning, was Vanity Fair's brightest star for more than two decades. If you don't know the real story, that is how you'll remember him. A success. A winner.
The Vanity Fair pieces and the bestselling novels and the TV show all occur in Act...
Posted November 24, 2009 | 10:29 AM (EST)