Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Short Term Reading Goals

How many books do you have languishing on your shelves or your Kindle which you've owned for more than two years?  I have plenty.  So I ask myself, what inspired me to purchase them and when will I make time to read them....and then a few more titles distract me and it goes on and on.

As I was in a list making mood I noted a few titles I definitely want to make time for within the next 2 months.  That's a good goal for me as I am still reading from The Classics Club, the 2026 Nonfiction Reading Challenge and some buddy reads

Here they are, in no particular order, and I think I can manage these by mid March.

Hotline by Dimitri Nasrallah

Wandering Souls by Cecile Pin

Within the Walled City by Virginia Evans




Nonfiction

Wild Ride: A Memoir of I'V. Drips and Rocket Ships by Hayley Arceneaux (thank you Katherine for bringing this one ot my attention)


A Time Remembered: American Women in Vietnam by Olga Gruhzit-Hoyt


Bush School by Peter O'Brien (thank you to Shelleyrae from alerting me to this one) 


I think I will start with the Cecile Pin book about Vietnam refugees. 

📚 Do you have a goal list of books you plan to read soon? 📚


Sunday, January 18, 2026

Reading and fussing....

This week I finished the last book in the Dalton trilogy by Shannon Bowring.


In a Distant Valley by Shannon Bowring, a buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card.  This is the last book in the Dalton trilogy and what a wonderful series.  Bowring brings the characters to life.  You can visualize them, hear them, anticipate what they may say or do and hope to encourage them.  She made them real.  Can't wait to see what she comes out with next. I'll do a more detailed review on Goodreads.

Celestial Lights by Cecile Pin is scheduled to be published in March 2026.  I was fortunate enough to receive an ARC from LibraryThing



This book starts in 1986 with the explosion of the Challenger and  Oliver Ines' birth. Little Ollie is growing up in a small English town, his bedroom ceiling and wallpaper are covered with stars which glow at night.  Around age 10 he cycles to a neighbor's home at the request of his mother to trade off produce and meets a girl named Philly.  The children have a connection and become friends, their lives weaving in and out of each others paths after a chance meeting at a London College.

Between the chapters are log book entries from Commander Oliver Ines as he is on a ten year mission, in charge of a spaceship and crew headed to Jupiter.
Ines is an astronaut employed by a private company owned by a billionaire. Hmmm....

 He reflects on events in his life, his childhood, university days, the career in the Navy and his love of Philly and family.  It's introspective as he considers his relationships and regrets, reconciling choices he made.  This is a well fleshed out character study of a man who wonders if he made the correct choices and if they were worth it.
Themes are family, friendship, belonging and compassion. 4 stars.


This is a book blog...mostly.  I try to keep frustrations on the state of our country out of my writing but this week was bad.  So....rant.

Rant..............

Political news - this sums it up. I honestly hope the damage can be reversed one day.  Hopefully in my lifetime.


The Agriculture Secretary actually suggested Americans can save money on food by eating "one piece of chicken, one piece of broccoli and a tortilla" - see here.

You know what I suggest?  These politicians who enjoy free health care and have financial security have to trade places with a family trying to make ends meet for an entire month.   Trade places with individuals experiencing financial insecurity during the days of rising costs, those experiencing food insecurity, without health care or the cush benefits these politicians enjoy and take for granted.

Put the names in bowl and draw = making sure a quarter of those names are those who are struggling with homelessness,  those who sleep in their cars, those who struggle to feed their children especially when some states have pulled the free lunches for kids.  See what they think about some real life issues.

Don't get me started on Greenland.....

Rant over.

Ok, let's end with more book chat. Just picked up The Ferryman and His Wife, a translated book by Norwegian author Frode Grytten and started it yesterday.  As you can see by the photo I was able to sit outside a bit.




  Tonight brings a wintery mix, as the weather station calls it, so I will be once again covering my plants as freezing temps are back again.  All week apparently.  Being inside means bread making, puzzles and reading.

Hope your week will be a good one. Lots of good reading and anything that makes you happy.

Linking up with:

Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon

Joy for British Isles Friday (for Celestial Lights)

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Subpar Planet by Amber Share
{2026 Nonfiction Reading Challenge}

This book uses the unique concept of gathering one star reviews of amazing travel destinations and combining it with historical info.  Some reviews such as "Only go if you like art" referring to The Louvre leave you shaking your head.  I mean...duh.

Educational and entertaining plus the armchair travel I crave.  That's a win-win-win for me! That said, I give it 3.5 stars.  



The layout of the book covers the Americas, Africa, Europe, Asia and Oceania with details about the history of the landmarks and wonders of the world.


The comment on the left side of the page is the one star review.  Might have been nice to have a more detailed review but what do you expect from someone who states Stonehenge is just a field of random stones or the sunrise over Mt Fuji was nothing spectacular. No pleasing some people.


The opposite page tells some history of the visited site and tips on best times to visit.  It's amusing but don't expect true photos of the venues. 

Tags are Nonfiction, Nature, Travel, Humor, Geography and History.

 Linking up with Shelleyrae at Book'd Out for the 2026 Nonfiction Reading ChallengeCategory: Humor




Saturday, January 10, 2026

New books on the horizon

Hello my bookish friends!  How was your week? I've been fortunate to have some great titles available to me and had some good reading time.

Posted this week - my first nonfiction of the year Daughters of the Bamboo Grove

New books on the horizon - I picked up this month's issue of BookPage and found some good books coming out later this year.


A new Maggie O'Farrell and Ann Patchett book will go on my holds list as soon as they are published. The titles are Land and Whistler, respectively.  Also I saw Tana French has a new book coming out but I am not a fan of her Cal Hooper series so I will pass,  That said, I love Tana's writing and very much miss the Dublin Murder Squad series.  Hoping the next book she writes will go back to that series...hopeful but doubtful.


Currently reading / Subpar Planet by Amber Share.  A humorous nonfiction about celebrated landmarks and disappointed visitors.  



Watching/  I don't remember who posted about this show but we recently watched Ambassadors and it was enjoyable. Some comedy and  drama about  the British ambassadors to fictional Asian country Tajbekistan.   One of the actors is Keely Haws who we recognized from two other British shows -  Mrs. Wilson and Line of Duty


I hope you had a wonderful week with good books.  What are you reading or watching this week? Suggestions are always welcome and appreciated.

Linking up with:

Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon

Joy for British Isles Friday


Thursday, January 8, 2026

First book of year - Finished

 I finished my first book of the year - Daughters of the Bamboo Grove by Barbara Demick.




In 1979 Chinese law was enacted to limit one child per family. You could petition or apply to have another child if your first baby was a girl.  Boys were desired and there were brutal laws about having children without a permit.  Having another child without a government sanctioned permit came with such severe penalties.   If you didn't have a planned birth you could be fined as much as a year's wages, have your house demolished and property confiscated.

If you were found pregnant without a permit a woman could be hog-tied and hauled away for a forced abortion.  Then they'd send you a bill. Those who hid an extra birth by giving the child to a family member to raise for a while were punished if a neighbor ratted them out.  Then the Family Planning Office would come seize the baby or toddler and take it to an orphanage where they would be a adopted out to foreigners.  All for a hefty price, it was like buying a child.

But that isn't how the government "marketed" the babies.  It was said the children were abandoned by their mothers so people felt good about adopting a child no one wanted.  An American family adopted a baby who, unbeknownst to them, was a twin.  What the adoptive family didn't know was this baby had a family who diligently searched for her for years.  There are many such scenarios like this.  Children taken and the birth families with little resources trying to find their babies.

This book details the history and focuses on one family in particular - the separated twins and how they came to find one another again.  It's good story, very sad at times.

Grace Newton, who is an adoptee and writes about it on her blog Red Thread Broken,  recalled a conversation she had on a flight to China.  Because she is Chinese the seatmate "launched into the familiar spiel about how "lucky" she was: "I didn't tell him how unlucky it is not to know your first family, to not know your medical history, to not know who you are and  have to fly seven thousand miles to try and figure it out, to feel like a foreigner wherever you go. Adoption has given me great opportunity,  but it was at a great cost," she wrote on her website.

The tags on this book are History, Adoption, China, Asia, Nonfiction, Memoir.
352 pages, 4.5 stars.

Linking up with Shelleyrae at Book'd Out for the 2026 Nonfiction Reading Challenge. Category: History



Saturday, January 3, 2026

New year, new planner and pen

Here I am welcoming 2026 with a pretty planner and a new Scriveiner ballpoint pen.  #happiness


Posted this weekA Couple of Favorites for 2025.  That was a good reading year for me.  I can't read over 100 books as some of you all can but the ones I did read were excellent.






My first book will be Daughters of the Bamboo Grove by Barbara Demick.  I am already close to 60 percent into it.  Fascinating yet brutal how the female children were viewed and treated. #nonfiction


Watching /  We had finished For All Mankind and are now trying Invasion.  Drumming my fingers waiting on Shrinking to come back,


Last but not least we have Loki.  He has a toy that goes with him everywhere.  To bed, sitting outside getting sun.....his constant companion. 



The neighbors cat, Griffin, visits him quite a bit and they check each other out when we walk. But Loki is not going to share his toy.  Nope.



Linking with Deb for Sunday Salon.

Short Term Reading Goals

How many books do you have languishing on your shelves or your Kindle which you've owned for more than two years?  I have plenty.  So I ...