At Dress for Success and Women of Wardrobe's annual Summer Soiree, generously hosted by Tootises, fashion-forward attendees dressed in pretty pastels, bold patterns and lots of ruffles — many designed by Houston's Hunter Bell, who showed off her fall line alongside jewelry by Claudia Lobao. Chairs Karishma Asrani, Courtney Campo, Allie Danziger and Melissa Sugulas welcomed guests to the event, which toasted the 20th anniversary of Dress for Success, and raised more than $20,000 for the org.
ACROSS 610 FROM his Post Oak Hotel at Uptown, Tilman Fertitta has just purchased the 14-acre mixed-use River Oaks District development. The acquisition is his second luxury-property purchase in recent months; the Rockets owner bought the Montage Laguna Beach for $650 million in November 2022.
According to a source cited by the Houston Chronicle, Fertitta paid close to $450 million for River Oaks District, which has retail offerings including Cartier, Balmain, Zimmerman, Brunello Cucinelli and Dior, plus more than 67,000 square feet of office space, and 279 apartment units. The development was previously owned by "an entity tied to JPMorgan Asset Management, which bought the center for $550 million in 2016," per the Chronicle.
“Adding River Oaks District to our Post Oak Hotel family of offerings seamlessly complements the curated experience we have created for the luxury-seeking consumer,” said Fertitta in a statement. “This is the perfect moment in time to add this premier mixed-use development to our luxury portfolio, creating incredible cross-promotional opportunities and elevating the standard for luxury dining and shopping for Houstonians and international travelers alike.”
The statement touted the "synergy" among Fertitta's award-winning Post Oak Hotel, adjacent Post Oak Motor Cars, his high-end Uptown restaurants, and his latest acquisition of River Oaks District.
River Oaks District (photo by Francisco Ramos)
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New Novel Probes Houston Culture, Friendships and the Wrath of Hurricane Harvey
Jhane Hoang
Mar. 1, 2024
WHEN HURRICANE HARVEY unleashed its wrath, Mumbai-born author Nishita Parekh and a few family members, some of whom had homes in evacuation zones, holed up in her second-story apartment, safe from the flooding — but trapped. “Five adults and two kids, crammed into this one-bedroom space,” recalls Parekh. “We ended up having a good time. But that experience planted a seed in my mind that this would make a good premise for a mystery."
It became her debut novel, The Night of the Storm, a classic locked-room mystery featuring a multigenerational Indian-American family struggling with the cultural mores of their homeland and xenophobia lurking throughout Western culture. Their struggle comes to a head when Harvey compels the recently divorced Jia and her troubled teenage son Ishaan to take refuge at her sister Seema’s and husband Vipul’s Sugar Land home.
While Ishaan grudgingly looks after Seema’s toddler, Jia tries to befriend her sister’s superstitious mother-in-law; brother-in-law Rajendra and his very white wife Lisa; and a handsome, duplicitous neighbor named Rafael.
When the first body falls, it’s a shock, and as accusations and recriminations fly, Parekh’s love for her culture and skill as a writer compels the reader to empathize with each of her characters, however unlikeable they may be.
Parekh is especially good at conveying the interior life of Jia, a single working mom. “Some of my closest friends are single moms, and they are my heroes,” says Parekh, who lives in Texas with her husband and a toddler. For Indian single moms, there’s another layer of social stigma and shaming, including the pressure not only to have a child but a child of a certain gender. “It’s sad to say this, but brown, South Asian women are finding the novel very relatable,” says Parekh.
Parekh, who has devoured mystery novels since she was a child — ones which rarely featured people from her culture — has changed the game with Storm, and like any first-time author who has dreamed of seeing their book in a bookstore, she is feeling proud and nervous. “Twenty percent excitement, 80 percent anxiety!” laughs Parekh.
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