I'm taking a break from the book talk today to share some slow cooker recipes.
Jinjer told me about CrocktoberFest! Here are a couple of easy meals.
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I'm taking a break from the book talk today to share some slow cooker recipes.
Jinjer told me about CrocktoberFest! Here are a couple of easy meals.
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Hello October! Yesterday we drove to a park where Loki likes to walk and saw the parking was roped off to a small area. The National Guard was set up, available to give people ready made meals and tarps. It was astonishing to see the number of vehicles coming through to pick something up. What a horrible path of devastation this storm left. I am hoping, as are we all, the rest of the hurricane season is quieter.
We lost water for a bit and are still using bottled water for cooking, brushing our teeth, etc. Water is back and we have a boil notice but that's just a minor inconvenience.
September reading was quite varied in location and genres. I did not have a DNF this time :-) Thanks to hurricane Helene I finished two books in record time. This knocks out four books I had listed for my fall reading.
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Earlier this month we had my husband's birthday and some surprisingly nice weather. He has been able to get out with his solar telescope in the daytime and a few evening sessions with his other scope. Perfect.
Now we are prepping for Hurricane Helene. Getting the Kindle, phones, etc all charged for the loss of electricty.
My week has been a dermatologist appointment, biopsy, bread making and a slow cooker recipe my son sent. The excitement never ends :-)
While looking at a news story on my phone I saw there was an Instagram post embedded and I couldn't access it. So I dusted off my old Instagram account to have a look. Then I tried to follow a few book blogs and authors. Apparently you have to get permission now even if the accounts are public.
Currently reading Trust and while very well written it's more narrative than dialogue. Thus I took a short break to read Sipsworth. I finished this in a day and it's a sweet story. Helen Cartwright is in her eighties and returned to England to live out her last years quietly and alone.
She had a full life in Australia with her husband and son but they are gone now. She isn't ill but she knows at her age the end is coming. Without friends or family she decides to settle in the English neighborhood where she grew up over 60 years ago. Helen finds that life still has a few surprises for her.
Simon Van Booy is an author new to me. He grew up in rural Wales and currently lives in New York, writing and volunteering as an E.M.T. I will seek out more of his work.
Sharing with:
First off, a shout out to ShelleyRae at Book'd Out. I haven't seen you post in a while, you've been in my thoughts and I miss you.
Let's talk fall reading. Or Spring reading if you are in the southern hemisphere :-)
I enjoy making lists as it keeps me focused. Sometimes I deviate but overall, it's helpful. Here's what I have so far but some could get swapped out depending on interest.
Trust by Herman Diaz (currently reading)
Sipsworth by Simon Van Booy (currently reading) #BriFri
Long Island by Colm Toibin #BriFri
The Life Impossible by Matt Haig #BriFri
My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante (a buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card)
I Cheerfully Refuse by Leif Enger
The Woman Behind the Door by Roddy Doyle #BriFri
This is a list in progress so I welcome suggestions and comments on any of these you have enjoyed. Four of my books will be linked with Joy's British Isles Friday. Love my U.K. authors :-)
Sharing with:
Earlier this month Deb at Readerbuzz posted Armchair Foodie Travel Books which I found interesting. Several I had previously read but the Batali book about Spain was one I sought out. Luckily the library had a copy.
I will go through this nonfiction while I read Trust by Herman Diaz. Trust is on my fall reading list (which is still shaping up), won a Pulitzer prize in 2023 and is grabbing me from the start.
Finished last night - The Orchard by Peter Heller was on sale for one dollar for Kindle so I couldn't pass that up. Check that out HERE. That's a great price for a Peter Heller novel. I'd told a friend about it but I think this price might only apply to U.S. based accounts.
This is an interesting book as it's told from a woman’s perspective. All the other books I have read by Heller focus on male characters in a wilderness setting, outdoorsy men who have deep thoughts, some insecurties about life choices/relationships being a key component. The Vermont setting here features a defunct orchard, nature and living off the land.
There are haunting characters, the mother with a sad and educated background. Frith is the daughter, named for a character in The Snow Goose by Paul Gallico.
Frith refers to her mother as Haley; this is a bit of a coming of age story. Something which doesn't usually appeal to me. Haley is a translater of Chinese poetry and rears her daughter in a wooden cabin with a wood stove for heat and very little money. Haley and Frith are very well read - anything from Charlie and The Chocolate Factory, Treasure Island, The Old Man in the Sea, We Die Alone (about the Norwegian commando who outskied a Nazi division) to Grendel.
There is quite a bit of poetry in this book, there are some wonderful reflective passages from Frith as an adult, an educator who teaches at Amherst, and the memories of her unusal childhood with an amazing woman.
Heller brings you straight into this unusual family situation and pulls at your heartstrings at the end. 4.5 stars ๐
On this rainy day in north Florida I am working on book lists, baking bread and reading of course :-) Hope your week is going well.
Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon.
Last week's post inspired me to make a new reading list for fall. More on that later as I round it out.
Here is my update of Nigel Slater's The Kitchen Diaries. Funny I started up with this again in the middle of the year.
I finished reading the diary entries for August and decided to make a white bean soup. Nigel has an entry with photo of a white bean salad sitting on greens with lots of garlic. No matter that it's quite hot where I am, I have always liked soup so I thought I'd adapt the ingredients. Today it's rainy so this worked out well.
Sharing with:
I joined up with Cathy at 746 Books for her summer reading challenge and while I didn't complete my orginal list, I did read ten books. I had a DNF with North Woods by Daniel Mason, substituted The Girl Returned by Donatella Di Pietrantonio for Women in Translation Month and couldn't get my hands on Long Island or The Alternatives on time.
The longest book was September at 613 pages and most others averaged 325 pages+
We can't get delivery of anything here but when I was alert enough to make the 25 mile round-trip to the grocery store, I did manage to get groceries via an Instacart order. Thank you Jinjer for talking to me about Instacart! First time I have used it. They were able to place our order for fresh vegetables and fruit directly into our hatch with no contact. What a blessing that was. Ok, I am done whining....
Today I will do blog housekeeping. See the list called Listopia on the right? ๐
If you are ever interested in books with a setting in a particular country (or an author specific to that country) just click on the hyperlink. Any books I have reviewed on this blog will take you to those posts. Looks like some countries need to be added from my tags.
Update since I posted this yesterday - If interested Peter Heller's book The Orchard is on'y $1 via Amazon for Kinlde. Quite a deal HERE.
Tomorrow I am planning on starting September by Rosamunde Pilcher. Then I will see about a books-of-summer roundup and decide what books I fancy in autumn.
That's about it...here's a photo of Loki chilling out with me on the sofa. He's a good boy, knows how to relax and is never without his tiger. ๐
I just finished my first book this month for the Women in Translation project. I'd hoped to read another translated book but I did not plan well. Here is my reading buddy Loki keeping me company.
A Girl Returned is a heartfelt story about a thirteen year old girl who suddenly finds out her mother is actually her aunt. It gets worse when she is deposited in a run down home, introduced with zero fanfare to her birth mother and natural siblings.
Apparently she had been living with her aunt since she was an infant, believing this to be her natural mother. She had a good life near the sea, friends at school, activities, love and solitude. Her new home is hectic and financially insecure. Her first meal at a table with her mother, father, two brothers and a sister was chaos as hands were flying across the table to grab food. Talk about culture shock.
Her sister Adriana was a blessing to her as they became devoted to one another.
I felt very sorry for her when she bought herself a birthday pastry and a little candle, then secreted herself in a room and quietly sang happy birthday. No one remembered, no one knew.
A great revelation near the end as to why her aunt gave her up then returned her back to her birth mother came as a surprise. This story is told roughly twenty years in the future by the girl who is never called by name.
This book was first published in 2017 in Italian and is now available translated by Ann Goldstein. I read this for the Women in Translation August event. I have rounded to 3.5 stars and would read more by this author. Adding it to my summer reading list as well.
Let's start with my PSA regarding turtles and comments :-) So far, no turtles I can see and the nest does not appear to be disturbed but..we have had some serious storms and hard rains so, who knows.
Also, if you don't see your comment here within 12 hours or so you can email me. What is up with the spam redirect? Ugh.
What is new....
Watching the first two seasons of The Unit, an older series from 2006. This is based on Eric Haney's nonfiction book Inside Delta Force.
Something unusual - we see turtles now and then in the field but this time, we saw one laying eggs! I looked up the approximate time period for hatching so perhaps I can share turtle baby photos in the future .
July reading was quite varied in location and genres. I had a DNF with Daniel Mason's latest book North Woods.
Nope ๐
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I'm joining in on the First Book of the Year hosted by Sheila at Book Journey . Check out the link HERE and join in if you like. It...