TRAVEL

Field Photos, Edition No. 5: The Best Coffee in Brooklyn

   

This week I'm on a quick trip up to New York City to meet with a few wonderful people (like my sweet friend Jennifer Miller) to talk about journalism and writing books. Today, I'm driving over to West Point to visit my old home and my sister Leigh's sweet family.

But before all that... I had to hit the streets of Brooklyn Heights and take a few photos to share and find a cup of good coffee. Mission accomplished.

brooklyn street

Jennifer's office, overlooking a beautiful May day:

brooklyn books

From the outside looking in:

Brooklyn brownstone

From the inside looking out:

brooklyn door

brooklen flower box

The best coffee in Brooklyn? Found. Tazza in Brooklyn Heights.

Brooklyn Tazza

BONUS. The view from an apartment in Harlem.

harlem

I miss Nashville. But I love New York.

Mor Field Photos: Edition No. 4 // Edition No. 3 // Edition No. 2 //Edition No. 1

Field Photos, Edition No. 3: Charleston, SC

I've been enjoying a quick trip down to Charleston, SC this week (more about that soon!), and WOW. I haven't even been here 24 hours, and I already love this place. Sunshine. Palm Trees. Beautiful people. Really, really good food.  Charleston has it all. I'll be heading home to Nashville tomorrow to start tackling our kitchen, but before we get into all that... enjoy these field photos from Charleston!

Here's how it all started. I ordered shrimp and grits and a cucumber martini. For lunch.

IMG_1603I also ate these. Woof.

poogan's porch biscuits

pooganSpeaking of woof, this is Poogan, a puppy that just happened to be on the porch of Poogan's Porch. He's from Hilton Head, and was just in for the weekend. We hit it off because I fed him some biscuit.mary beth

My sweet friend and host, (and birthday girl) Mary Beth (aka Mbeezy). rogue waveYesterday I had the great opportunity to meet (and sip bourbon) with Rhett Boyd, the owner of Rogue Wave Surf Shop. Unfortunately, I did not score surf lessons like I'd hoped. Too cold.king street

kudu coffee

Kudu Coffee. And I ran into Drew Miller (pictured above) from Furman! Small World. charelston photos

Check back soon for more photos!

Travel: #butchersonthecoast

It's Friday, and here in Nashville, the weather's a little bit dreary. So, to itch my cabin fever scratch, I've just spent a nice long time perusing my favorite "hashtag" on twitter and instagram: #butchersonthecoast. Butchers in Seattle

My friends Brad and Jennifer Butcher are on an incredible journey out west, and have been there for about three weeks now.  They've been photographing hotels, weddings, and God-inspired scenery, and every single photo they tweet has me drooling for the romance of the west. Take a look at a few more of their photos from the trip below:

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I guess it helps when your wife is a complete and total stunner.

See more photos from Brad and Jen's trip to the coast here, and take a look at some older photos they took of Patrick and me a couple of years ago, here!

Also, you can take a look at our 2011 trip to California, here (although the pictures are a lot less awesome).

... and of course... don't miss my newest story in the Christian Science Monitor here!

Have a happy, happy weekend!

A Writing Retreat: Blue Ridge, Georgia

IMG_1103 I like taxidermy. It harkens back to the late great 1990s Harry Connick Junior tear-jerker, Hope Floats, where I first was introduced to the idea of stuffed mammals. But somehow, more recently, it's been popping up out of nowhere, surprising me with beady eyes, stiff fur, and an eerie thought that life can end, and still go on.

I saw a lot of great taxidermy last weekend (before my birthday and my first Skillery class) on a short trip to Blue Ridge, Georgia, to meet up with two other Atlanta-based writers, Jennifer Bradley Franklin and Kate Abney. Jennifer (who is also the managing editor of this great publication), was nice enough to offer up her family's taxidermy-filled log cabin for the weekend as a place where we could  hunker down and send out as many pitches as possible in one 24-hour period.

So on Friday morning, I woke up at 6 a.m., drove for four hours listening to my new favorite music, and ended up here:

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As beautiful as the scenery was, I'm sad to say I spent most of the day and night staring at my computer screen forcing words onto paper... after all... that was the point. But I was also surrounded by taxidermy. Lots of it. Animals who'd lived their lives and now stood in stoic mockery of how each and every pitch I sent sounded: dead.

It's easy to make it look easy when it's easy. But it's hard to make it look easy when it's hard. And last weekend, it was hard as the feet and the snout and the chest of each cotton-stuffed animal staring in my direction.

But those creatures looked look peaceful in repose. No longer fighting for their life. No longer concerned about their next meal or burrowing down or the frost or the predator above. I wondered if I could bring that kind of death to my life. That kind of peace to my preoccupation.

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IMG_1061But I guess at some point you have to decide if you're going to let the death get you, or if you're going to live on. If you're going to let the "thanks but no thanks," e-mail determine that it's time to shrivel up and stop in your tracks—or if you'll let "no" mean "try again."

Because unlike the beautifully dead decor—safe, unmoving, and predictable—this life is not. Taxidermy stiffens a righteous dynamic creature into one frozen moment, and we all could freeze like that too. Some of us already have. Frozen into a peaceful comfortable routine that requires less than a beating heart. Frozen into the same story lines and bylines and goal lines.  I could decide this is good enough and stop right here. But I can't.  I'm still moving. Still breathing. Still unsafe, unpredictable, and unstable.

And it hurts.

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Field Photos, Edition No. 2: Greenville, SC

best Greenville SC hotel

It's no secret that one of my favorite places on earth is nestled into the piedmont region of the Appalachian Mountains. Just a few hours from the beach and just a stone's throw from the mountains, Greenville, South Carolina is a gem that's seen unprecedented development in it's downtown corridor.

From the beauty of the Westin Poinsett (pictured above and below), to the thrilling suspension bridge in Falls Park, Greenville is bustling with local southern flavor, the right mixture of traditional and modern architecture, and plenty to see and do, all on one street!

Greenville, SC the best hotel

Greenville, SC city hall

Greenville PavilionThis outdoor pavilion on the Reedy River is the site of plenty of outdoor receptions. Beautiful!

Greenville, SC architecture

Greenville, SC suspension bridge

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Greenville, SC cook's kitchen

Greenville, SC pavilion

Greenville best coffee houseAnd what other city leaves engraved advice on the stones you walk on?  Answer: no cities.

Greenville Stone 2

Greenville StonesGreenville Statue