Patricia and Walter Wells: They've Always had Paris...and a Good Deal More
It might have been Bill Ragsdale who told me about Patricia Wells all those years ago.
Wilmot Ragsdale - Rags, as he was affectionately known - was a rather legendary journalism professor at UW-Madison. I never took one of his classes, but I had a drink with him once at a friend's celebration. S., my friend, had finished defending her master's thesis and a rather large group of us celebrated over wine and spaghetti at an Italian restaurant near the sprawling campus.
In the early 80s, Jane Brody, a prominent journalism-school alumna, was all the buzz, but someone - was it Rags or his friend and colleague Hartley E. Howe, who was one of my professors? - said there was another J-school grad who had just begin to write about food in Paris.
I was envious. I was studying French in those days, after a long hiatus, and I was struggling. I was also struggling financially, trying to hold body and soul together by writing news releases, crunching numbers for one historian and running errands for another.
Learning and writing about food in Paris sounded like a dream to me, but it was reality for Patricia Wells, a fellow Wisconsinite, and her handsome husband Walter, also a journalist.
Imagine how delighted I was to learn a few weeks back, that the couple had written a book together, "We've Always Have Paris...and Provence."
Patricia begins her acknowledgments quoting Bill Ragsdale. "Be bold," he used to say, and he said it to Patricia, too. I, too, have kept those words in mind and they've propelled me forward often.
Walter and Patricia alternate writing passages, and so their story is told in two voices, with two perspectives.
I like these people - and not just because they are or have been fellow journalists. They have high standards and they've worked hard. Their life has not always run smoothly, but it has been good - very good. I've learned a lot about Paris and Provence from them over this chilly Wisconsin weekend, and a good deal about myself and where I want to go in the future. As role models, Patricia and Walter Wells are good ones to have.
Read this book. Try the recipes. (Of course, there are recipes!) If you like food and you like France, it is necessary.
Note: The photo above was taken outside a Paris restaurant on Rue de Monttessuy a year ago. It bears no relationship to Patricia or Walter Wells, except that it was taken near a restaurant recommended by Patricia. The restaurant is Au Bon Accueil. On our first night in the quartier a year ago, a small jazz band seranaded someone at the restaurant. We were charmed.
Comments
Hope all is well.
Are you terribly busy these days? I know I am.
Lydia, I want to take a class from her, too, but they are always filled.
Christine, I hope you enjoy this book. Yes, I have been away from home every night for the past 10 days, out of town, and occupied all weekend. The weekend I read this book was my last free moment. I am looking forward to the three-day weekend ahead, aren't you?
And I love the photo featured. The lighting is so lovely.
I could not put the book down. It was like spending the weekend with two friends!
Eileen (passions to pastry)
www.livingtastefully.com
And of course "My Life in France," by our beloved Julia.