(Out)House Beautiful+ the 12 Best Outhouse Magazines Ever

Dear Reading Friends, since we’ve enjoyed some time together here, and you've visited my meadows, the waters around this island, in weather fair and foul; and since you've even seen inside my closet and banya, I feel as though it’s time to offer the full gesture of hospitality and friendship: Welcome to our Outhouse. (A note to my long-time readers: this is a reprise of the most popular last-summer post. But my periodical choices and the reasons remain firm. Stay a moment and refresh!)

We’re proud of our outhouse. It has unique design features which I'll share another time. But it’s not simply a functional and decorative double-seater. Like all the best outdoor salles des bains, it's so much  more: it's a reading room, a cultural gathering place, a destination. 






















Outhouses have always been places of inspiration. I myself, during daily visits, consider topics like  beauty, humanness, mortality. “All flesh is grass and its beauty like the flowers of the field,” I think, as I stroll through flowers on the way to its door. “Of dust we are made, and to dust we will return,” I ponder as I leave. I will doubtless need to devote another post to this building, but here, now, I am after something practical, answering a question posed for generations: what is the best reading material for the outhouse? 





We subscribe to many publications, too many, but we find multiple uses for the 30+ magazines we subscribe to out here, among them fire-starting, package-stuffing, fish-wrapping and of course, outhouse reading and enrichment.

Jose Ortega y Gasset has famously written, “Tell me the landscape in which you live and I’ll tell you who you are.”  My present version of this quote reads, “Tell me what you read in the outhouse, and I’ll tell you who you are.”   I know I’m taking a chance with Too Much Disclosure here, divulging the contents of our toilette, but  in the interests of reading, the ongoing health of magazines, and the hope that all outhouses will continue to double as reading rooms,  I present the winners in each category, and invite you to consider subscribing to these fine publications:    




 Most Ironic Outhouse Magazine:  


This geeky publication reporting on the futuristic-now makes us glad to keep at least one part of our bodies solidly in the past. 





Most Likely to Create a Wait Line:



 Excellent in-depth articles, but for outhouse placement, we stress the value of the cartoons. Quick, punchy, in-and-out---Next in  line!












Most Literary:   





It keeps us elevated to the Artful and Mysterious 
 on days when the outhouse has too many flies and we're sure we know the end of all flesh.






Most Urban:: 



The New Yorker wins again!  (It’s especially fun to read The “About Town” section and marvel at how New Yorkers feel like they’re the center of the world. Whereas we in Alaska know we're not---nor do we want to be!)

Most Inspirational: 




Martha Stewart’s Living. We mostly just look at the photos. (I’m waiting for her Outhouse issue. It will likely be called “Re-fashioning the Toilette al Fresco”)



Most Erudite:





Books and Culture. After reading the scholarly reviews, you leave the outhouse feeling lighter in body, but gravid in mind.


Most Redundant




 One of my husband’s favorites. Excellent writing and photographs, but---does a 5-windowed outhouse 
need another window? It's the same reason I don't have "Alaskan art" on my walls. I already have windows.

People’s Choice Award:  




The Utne Reader. (The articles in this lively alternative digest not only report on the hopeful counter-culture, but they’re the perfect length for outhouse business.)



Most Theological and Personal All-Time Favorite (and not just because I write for it)



Christianity Today: This magazine considers all aspects of faith and culture from a refreshingly biblical viewpoint. (And with the new emphasis on a physical, embodied faith, this magazine fits right in at the outhouse, reminding us at just the right moment that our bodies are God-made and good---all the time.)  

Most Likely to Incite Anorexia and Sex-Obsession:



I have nothing more to say about this magazine except: Our outhouse doesn't subscribe.


Most Likely to Be Used as Toilet Paper


Too much fake beefcake on the covers. Do these guys know how to lift a hammer, run a skiff, build an outhouse? That's what I thought!


I hope you’ll be inspired to subscribe to more magazines, and to consider with me what this is really about. When we choose what we subscribe to, and then when we sift through the pile on our tables and in our bathrooms, looking for that article, that photo that nabs and stirs us, we're shopping for better selves. We want to be smarter; we want to understand this mysterious world better; we want to be moved and changed and enlightened. All this in three minutes or less. 

And it happens. When returning on the long walk from the outhouse to the rest of my life, I am pondering something about astronomy, Handel, youth, New York theatre, grizzly bears, French fries, Jesus . . . The exchange is complete. I emerge lighter, more comfortable, ready for more work, and the world is a richer, vaster, deeper place.    

Should you be one of the less fortunate, who doesn’t get to walk through flowers and grass on the way to the bathroom, even your inside room can become an educational gathering place. 

What cultural offerings are on your bathroom shelves? 

14 comments:

  1. Love this...ever since my kids were young the bathroom has been a bit of a sanctuary ....closed doors...even if they knocked....dangled there fingers under the door...I could steal away moments...so I have always had books ....because this maybe the only time I had to read even a sentence or two...habits are hard to break...no small children...but it is still a favorite place to read...I love the variety of your selection ....it inspires me to expand :). Btw...awesome outhouse :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Ro, Indeed, the bathroom IS a sanctuary when you have small children. We are a little crazy with the magazines, but I love it as well (if I could just convince my husband to occasionally dispose of them!) I do have to give my husband credit for the architecture of the outhouse: 3 steps, arctic entry, full panoramic view. Who needs a flusher??

      Delete
  2. We actually have built-in bookshelves in the bathroom in our new home Leslie. My husband refers to it as the library. I have poetry books within easy reach. Perfect for a quick read :)
    I do love the wallpaper in your little sanctuary.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Really? Bookshelves--that's great!! And poetry, yes, so perfect! Just a single image sometimes is all you need to brighten you day . ... The wall paper is actually hand painted flowers done by my daughter a few years ago. She painted the flowers we walk through to get there---lupine and iris.

      Delete
  3. I highly recommend "Uncle John's Bathroom Reader". It has articles of various sizes to accommodate visits - everything from trivia to more detailed articles i.e. the history of General Motors. All contained in one volumn.

    When our kids were small, we taught them not to knock if we were otherwise occuppied in the loo, unless something was burning or someone was bleeding. It was the only way at the time I could get any time alone!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Last week Zoya and I were checking out all the old outhouses in Old Afognak Village. Almost all of them were 2 seaters. We got to wondering how often did 2 people used the outhouse at the same time? Would just anyone use it at the same time or would only close friends or siblings use it at the same time? Or only in emergencies? Now I noticed that yours is a 2 seater too. So what is the answer to the question? Patrick

    ReplyDelete
  5. Just finishing up "Eight Days," a fascinating historical book by Matthew Goodman. One of the facts he brings to light is that the Cosmopolitan started out as a family oriented magazine in 1886.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hard to believe now .. but this is the pattern of so many things. They begin with good motives (theCyrus family doing the Disney show) and then ... spiral down. The human heart is scary!!

      Delete
  6. Funny outhouse story: My grandmother was raised by cultured parents with indoor plumbing, but they both died by the time Grandma was 16, so she had to set out on her own and find a way through much too soon in life. She ended up marrying my grandfather and went to live with his parents on their rural farm where indoor plumbing had not yet arrived. On her first day there, she went out to use the loo and came back to ask about toilet paper. Her new mother-in-law (a rather crazy lady) abruptly told her, "If Sears & Roebuck is good enough for me, it's good enough for you!" And when that ran out, there was always a bucket of corn husks.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Your humor made me smile this morning! I also enjoyed seeing what you read. I haven't been over to visit for awhile but enjoyed catching up a bit. I love getting a glimpse of your wild world.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for visiting my outhouse, Rhonda!! Yes, I love this place---and am grateful to be able to share it with you!

      Delete
  8. After reading some articles I just want to get their email address and send a comment. As if I can help to update their model of reality. I do have some different perspectives. If you would like to read my book: Embedded Systems Project.

    ReplyDelete
  9. hello thanks for this, very good article. Fırsat

    ReplyDelete