Current:Home > FinanceIn 'Kiss Me in the Coral Lounge,' Helen Ellis' home life takes center stage -Elevate Capital Network
In 'Kiss Me in the Coral Lounge,' Helen Ellis' home life takes center stage
View
Date:2025-04-17 09:12:44
David Sedaris has Hugh. Gracie Allen had George. And Helen Ellis has Lex. Beloved partners and foils for their comedy.
Ellis' home life takes center stage in Kiss Me in the Coral Lounge: Intimate Confessions from a Happy Marriage, her latest collection of hilarious, off-the-wall personal essays. Not just personal but, as her subtitle promises, at times intimate.
The most surprising revelation: Three months into lockdown, after 25 years of monogamy, the couple decides to refresh their sex life with Viagra. Ellis writes, "If someone told me when I was younger that the best sex I'd ever have would be in my fifties with my fifty-something-year-old husband, I'd never have believed them." In a book set largely during the dark days of the pandemic, she also offers this bit of advice: "A secret to a happy marriage is to seek out the bright side."
Ellis moved from her Tuscaloosa, Alabama, hometown to New York City in 1992, bringing her twisted Gothic humor and Southern Lady Code with her. (Featured in her book of that title, the Code boils down to: "If you don't have something nice to say, you say something not-so-nice in a nice way.")
During years of painful literary rejections, Ellis worked as a secretary and also became a top-tier poker player. She married Lex Haris, a journalist, in 2001. But, despite his best efforts, she didn't move into the Upper East Side Manhattan apartment in which he'd grown up as a first generation Greek American — the setting for many of her stories — until they were engaged. In "How to Talk About Touchy Subjects," Ellis relays how he brought up the issue: "I want to talk with you about doing something you said you'd never do," he said over a dinner celebrating their two-year dating anniversary. "Whale watch?" she asked, with perfect comic timing.
They still live in his family's old apartment, although it's been renovated. The Coral Lounge is what they call their TV room, "because we painted it a delirious shade of coral that borders on Starburst candy orange."
It's hard to top the fusillade of violent verbs — shredding cheese, strangling defrosted spinach — with which Ellis described the mad homemaker attacking food prep in her 2016 breakout book, American Housewife. But she comes close. In "Married...with Plants," about another pleasurable pandemic pastime besides sex and stickers (don't ask), she writes that before she found a virtual plant care consultant, "I smother-mothered my succulents. I sun-poisoned my calathea."
Ellis manages to keep things fresh even when she returns to subjects she's written about before — including housecleaning, undergarments, and Christmas trees. In "How to Keep House," she's a motivational cheerleader: "Refold your bra drawer because it looks like a turtle orgy. Vacuum your feelings. Angry cleaning is still cleaning." As for summiting the Mount Everest of laundry: "If you can fold a fitted sheet, you can conquer the world."
As in her last book, Bring Your Baggage and Don't Pack Light, several of the essays find inspiration in Nora Ephron and her gift for capturing the universal in one's own domestic and cosmetic concerns. In "My Husband Snores and Yours Will Too," Ellis writes about how her husband's nighttime sonic blasts work their way into her dreams: "More than once, I have dreamed I was being seduced by Darth Vader." Her friends' husbands, she says, "sound like they're chainsawing crackers in bed. How do I know? Because this is what we talk about when we talk about our husbands. Snoring and skin tags and prostates and knees."
Not all of the 19 essays are winners, but even the lesser entries feature more laugh lines than a before ad for face cream. In "How to Collect Art," Ellis offers a few clever distinctions — between découpage and décolletage and between folk art ("poor people did it") and outside art ("crazy people did it").
Ellis has some serious points to make, but unlike Ann Patchett's earnest This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage, comedy is what drives Coral Lounge. Even so, Ellis makes clear that a successful marriage involves recognizing your limitations and sharing a willingness to try new things, some of which take (like Viagra), and some of which don't (like swing dancing). Ellis quips, "When it comes to activities, my husband and I are like horse-pill-size multivitamins: one a day. All my marathons are on HGTV. I won't run to catch a bus. I burn calories talking with my hands."
Ellis caps this charming collection with an ever-evolving "Contract for a Happy Marriage." Among its amendments is a "Material Clause." What's that? It's an acknowledgment of the source of her literary material: "Mrs. will not 'pressure' Mr. to do things so that she can have something to write about. Those activities may include, but are not limited to, bungee jumping, ziplining, flea markets, corn mazes, sadomasochistic role-play, 'anything on a boat' or 'leaving the city to do something he can do in the city.'"
Fair warning: These are a few things we won't be reading about in Ellis's next book. But I'm sure she'll find something else to amuse us.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- 90 Day Fiancé: Love in Paradise Trailer: Meet the Couples Looking to Make Love Last
- Jersey Shore's Mike The Situation Sorrentino Gets Real About Expanding His Big Italian Family
- See Laverne Cox Make Her Diabolical Return to The Blacklist
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- 20 Strange and Unusual Secrets About Beetlejuice Revealed
- Louisiana teen Cameron Robbins missing after going overboard on Bahamas cruise during graduation trip
- Australia police offer $1 million reward in case of boy who vanished half a century ago
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- These Iconic Blake Lively and Beyoncé Outfits Are Getting the Royal Treatment at Kensington Palace
Ranking
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Nova Scotia wildfire forces 16,000 to evacuate, prompts air quality alerts along U.S. East Coast
- Chanel West Coast Details Her Next Chapter After Leaving Ridiculousness
- Vanderpump Rules’ Tom Sandoval Shares His Regrets About Affair With Raquel Leviss
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Madeleine McCann search near Portugal reservoir leads to objects secured, but unclear if they're clues
- Selena Gomez Proves She Loves BFF Taylor Swift Like a Love Song at iHeartRadio Awards
- Snorkeler survives crocodile attack by prying its jaws off of his head
Recommendation
Tony Hawk drops in on Paris skateboarding and pushes for more styles of sport in LA 2028
French classic Citroen 2CV car made of wood fetches record price at auction, and it even runs
Asylum restrictions are justified given sheer number of migrant arrivals, top U.S. official says
95-year-old great-grandmother tasered by police in Australia nursing home dies of her injuries
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Why Up Fans Are Heated Over New Pixar Short Carl’s Date
Natalie Portman Shares How She Talks to Her Kids About Injustice
Japan shooting and knife attack in Nagano reportedly leaves 3 dead, including 2 police officers