Everything Our Editors Loved in January – Outside Magazine

Posted: February 3, 2020 at 12:42 pm


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Its a new decade, so naturally, a fewOutsidestaffers dove into books and showsabout self-optimization. The rest of us stuck with witty outdoorpoems,foraged dinners in rural New Mexico, and a seriously dark John Cusack film about skiing.

When I was home for the holidays, my mom lent me The Art of Work, by Jeff Goins, which was the perfect read to kick off the new year. Its message is that anyone canfindmeaningful work if you try. One idea that especially encouraged me was that you should engage with new ideasrather than constantly fretting over making the correct decision. If youre looking for a step-by-step book about the same subject, check out Pivot, by Jenny Blake.(Id definitely file The Art of Work under inspiring literature instead of practical self-help.)

Jenny Earnest, audience development director

Ive been spending my afternoon coffee breaks flipping through Sydney Zesters Run Wild and Be, a joyful collection of poems and short stories that celebrate wild places, trail life, and endurance running. I am not a runner, but Zesters wit and humor transcend the sport. She beautifully speaks to the ways that women draw strength from putting their muscles to work in the outdoors. One line I keep coming back to is from the poem Mt. St. Helens: My favorite love / is made on the summit / in snow-capped stillness.

Aleta Burchyski, associate managing editor

Hot tip: whenever assistant editor Abbie Barronian tells you to read something,read it. This month I have been fully absorbed with her latest recommendation, The Neapolitan Novels, by Elena Ferrante, a four-book series following the lifelong friendship of two women born in Naples, Italy, in the 1940s. The writing is sparse and beautiful, but whatkept me reading way past my bedtime are Ferrantes delicate portrayals of relationships between friends, family, spouses, lovers, and more. Each book is highly addicting in the best possible way.

Kelsey Lindsey, associate editor

I tore through Anna Wieners debut memoir Uncanny Valley, which recounts her unlikely experience as a literary twentysomething working in the tech world. (If you want a taste of what the book is like, this excerpt was published in The New Yorker a few months ago.) In 2013, she left her job in book publishing for one at a startup, which eventually led to a series of other startup jobs. Wiener isan outsider in Silicon Valley, and her observations of celebrated companies and the (mostly) men who run them are incisive. Throughout the book, she rarelyrefers to companies and other major players by their proper names: Facebook is the social network that everyone hated,and Amazon is the online superstore.Wiener describes the moment were all experiencing, as technology colonizes more and more of our lives, with a perspective and specificity Ive never read elsewhere. And while it may cause you existential angst, her writing is a pleasure to read.

Molly Mirhashem, digital deputy editor

Jungle Princeis a three-part series produced by TheNew York Times The Daily podcast. Its based onEllen Barrys blockbuster newspaper featureabout a long-lost, purportedly royal family in India, and itsone of the most beautiful audio stories Iveever heard. Barry hosts the episodes, and she has a perfect, soothing voiceplus, the story is epic. Someone is definitely going to make a movie out of this.

Katie Cruickshank, senior digital marketing manager

Ive been told this is the least on-brand thing about me, but I love cruising around to singer-songwritery pop albums. (You all just havent listened to Golden Hour enough.) For long drives this winter, Ive been cuing up Maggie RogerssHeard It in aPast Life; itlayersdeft song lyrics with samples from the natural world and catchy beats.

Xian Chiang-Waren, associate editor

I hate to admit it, but Ive been deeply absorbed in Gweneth Paltrows The Goop Lab on Netflix. As someone whos read endless studies on the supposed therapeutic uses of psilocybin, the first episode about a guided mushroom trip in Jamaica was especially engrossing.

Emily Reed, video producer

Ive been a John Cusack stan since my tweens. My love was rekindled when I rediscovered the best aprs-ski movie of all time (fight me): the cult dark-comedy gem Better Off Dead. PostSixteen Candles but preSay Anything, J.C. stars as the heartbroken Lane Meyer, a teenager set on killing himself after his girlfriend leaves him for the ski-team captain. The biggest draw here isnt the plot, or even the over-the-top ski scenes, its the drug-inspired, peak-eightiesjokes. Plus, one characters expertadvice will get you through any gripping run: Go that way, really fast. If something gets in your way, turn.

Maren Larsen, Buyers Guide deputy editor

I am, on average, a year late watching new films. But after noticing the buzz about the Netflix documentary Cheer, I binged-watched the six-episode series. It follows the cheerleading team at Navarro College, in Texas, as ittravels to a national competition in Florida. The documentariansfocused on the obstacles that cheerleaders must overcome in addition to competition (injuries, gender bias, broken family structures) with visual finesse. The film makes a strong case for the rigors of this disciplineit might be in the Olympics in 2028andis a perfect gateway to get to know and fall in love with a sportthat has been on the sidelines for a long time. I seldom cry, but when the Navarro team executed an impeccable pyramid on thetournament circuitsbiggest stage, I was on the verge of tears.

Wufei Yu, editorial fellow

I went to a foraged dinner in northern New Mexico called Shed: A Dinner Project. Its run by chef Jonny Ortiz and his partner, Afton Love. Ortiz, who is 29, grows, forages, or hunts for every ingredient possible in the meal, from river mint and mountain nettle to wild elk and local trout. He serves things like Anasazi beans cooked in a micaceous clay pot with winter squash and Chimayo red chile, or raw wild elk with cactus fruit. One dessert he served the night I was there was a delicate dark-chocolate shell filled with apple cider that explodes with flavor once in your mouthour table sat in awe afterward. Ortiz serves local wines and mezcals with the mealand makes the ceramics you eat off of, too. Shed hosts about tenguests at a time, usually only on weekends (tickets sell out super fast for each dinner). We dined in an old barnlike spaceand could see Ortiz and Love cooking and preparing the food. It was like watching and experiencing food art.

Mary Turner, deputy editor

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Everything Our Editors Loved in January - Outside Magazine

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