Newsweek - National News, World News, Health, Technology, Entertainment and more... | Newsweek.com
SPONSORED BY
TipSheet Blog - Newsweek.com
  • A Christmas Story—And Four More

    Karen Springen | Dec 15, 2007 01:31 PM
     We love Dr. Seuss (who doesn’t?), but there is more to kids’ Christmas books than “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.” Here are Tip Sheet’s picks:

    ‘Olivia Helps With Christmas’ by Ian Falconer (ages 5 to 7; $18.99). Kids will identify with Olivia, an adorable piglet who frowns when she opens a gift of a sweater and booties but beams when she gets a sled and maracas.

    ‘The Nutcracker’ by Susan Jeffers (ages 5 to 8; $16.99). This beautifully illustrated condensed version of the famous story will prep young kids for seeing and understanding the ballet.

    More
  • Holiday Bar Must-Haves

    Newsweek | Dec 15, 2007 01:20 PM
    By Tara Weingarten

    You don’t need to spend a fortune on tipples when hosting a holiday get together. Tip Sheet put together a selection of new and classic bottles that will make your party sparkle.

    More
  • Advertisement
  • Light It Up!

    Newsweek | Dec 8, 2007 10:45 AM
  • I’m Too Sexy For My Santa Hat

    Newsweek | Dec 8, 2007 10:45 AM
    By Roxana Popescu

    Instead of hiding from your aunt’s optical zoom this holiday season, why not flaunt what you’ve got? Three pros offer tips for looking great in family photos.

    Practice makes perfect. Try out different expressions in the privacy of your bathroom mirror, says Jonathan Becker, a contributing photographer for Vanity Fair. If you know what works best, then you’ll look confident—and natural— in pictures.

    More
  • Recipe: Ride this Sidecar!

    Julia Reed | Dec 1, 2007 12:27 PM
    2 tablespoons superfine sugar

    1 lemon wedge
    3/4 ounce freshly squeezed lemon juice
    1 ounce Cointreau
    2 ounces brandy
    Place the sugar in a shallow saucer. Wet half of the inner and outer rims of a chilled stemmed cocktail glass with the lemon wedge. Dip the rim into the sugar.
    In a cocktail shaker half-filled with ice, combine the lemon juice, Cointreau, and brandy. Shake well and strain into glass. Garnish with a lemon twist.

    More
  • Cool It With The Lights

    Karen Springen | Oct 27, 2007 11:22 AM

    Nov. 5, 2007 issue


    Deck the Halls with LEDs: Your Christmas decorations can burn just as brightly with less electricity

    This year, Americans will send nearly 2 billion holiday cards, use more than 38,000 miles of ribbon and leave millions of Christmas trees on the curb. Does that mean you should feel guilty for having a great time? Nah. Neither does it mean forgoing any of the elements that make the holiday season special. “You don’t have to sacrifice the celebration for sustainability,” says Zem Joaquin, founder of ecofabulous.com and eco-editor of House & Garden. Her advice: be “eco-wise.” Here are a few secrets for an environmentally friendly—but still festive— holiday season.

    More
  • Food: Top Turkeys

    Kathryn Joyce | Oct 20, 2007 11:35 AM
    Oct. 29, 2007 issue As Thanksgiving approaches, a panel of 24 tasters sampled eight turkeys and rated them on flavor, texture, moistness and “ overall appeal. ” Surprisingly, frozen birds often bested fresh ones. 1. Rubashkin’s Aaron’s Best PRICE: $1.99... More
  • Adventure: Take A Literary Field Trip

    Newsweek | Oct 13, 2007 01:24 PM
     
     
    Silvia Otte
    Book It: A sunflower field in Gascony, the setting for the Hours’ literary tour ‘Madame Bovary’s France’...

    By Anna Kuchment
    Oct. 22, 2007 issue

    Last summer Bill Busse, a retired architect from Palo Alto, Calif., took a trip down the Mississippi River and through the pages of his favorite childhood stories. In the Mark Twain Mississippi River Tour (from $5,495; literarytraveler.com), Busse, his wife, Barbara, and a dozen other travelers stayed aboard a 1920s paddlewheel steamboat, heard lectures about Mark Twain and his work and visited Twain’s hometown of Hannibal, Mo. The highlight: walking through the cave where Twain set some of Tom Sawyer’s and Becky Thatcher’s exploits in “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.” “I’m not sure that people realize this was a real place,” says Busse. “It just grabbed me.”

    Though trips like Mark Twain’s Mississippi appeal to all age groups, their popularity has grown as baby boomers approach their empty-nest years. “Baby boomers are a very well-read group and they travel quite a bit,” says Cathy Keefe, spokeswoman for the Travel Industry Association. A 2006 TIA survey showed that 56 percent of adults were interested in enrichment, or educational, trips. “As kids, we ask, ‘Why, why, why?’ but then we get busy with our lives and put those questions away,” says Ann Kirkland, founder of Classical Pursuits (classical pursuits.com) in Toronto. “But there comes a time when we have a little more space for reflection and we go back to those questions.”

    More
  • Uncorked: Rhone Valley Reds

    Newsweek | Oct 13, 2007 01:18 PM
    Oct. 22, 2007 issue Let’s drink to autumn As a chill creeps into the air, it’s time to stock some hearty reds for everyday drinking. The Rhône Valley is a great source of well-priced robust reds, which typically blend grenache and Syrah with smaller amounts... More