To listen click HERE and I think you'll love it.
Tuesday, July 8, 2025
Afternoon in Paris with Sacha Distel and Comme Toi with Ishtar #ParisInJuly
Sunday, July 6, 2025
Paris in July
Paris in July would be lovely. I visited many decades ago but it wasn't in July. So much to see, experience, taste and enjoy. I will be enjoying things French and particularly Parisian from home instead of in person, getting creative cooking, reading and visiting others for inspiration.
Paris in July is hosted by Emma at Words and Peace. Check out the info for joining in HERE.
Some things I have on tap are Hemingway's A Moveable Feast, a few French recipes, DeBussy's music for one of our listening evenings, and a couple of novels set in France.
If you are joining in let me know what titles or subjects you have in mind. This will be a fun activity for hot old July here :-)
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
Storms, Internet and some good reading
#SundaySalon #BriFri
Here we are into the first week of July. We've had a few big storms blow in this past week and had hail one evening. The winds were so strong that day my wind chimes blew sideways and stayed vertical for a bit. I thought they may blow into my neighbor's yard, yikes. Welcome to the hurricane season and the almost daily summer rains.
Loki has had his Heartgard and Nexgard meds and I need to get the next 6 months worth from the vet now. The time passes so quickly. He is settling in nicely in our new home, probably helpful that much of our furniture was moved with us so...familar items and scents. Here he is napping by the CD shelves.
Let us get to bookish chat // I finished my Classics Club Spin and read Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay, review Here. I liked it and plan to find the version with the author's deleted final chapter.
Did a DNF on Niall Williams book The Time of the Child. Reviews are good for it and from the plot description I thought I'd love it. It was too lyrical and not enough dialogue for me. That said, I believe I am in the minority on not liking this one.
Currently reading The History of Sound by Ben Shattuck and enjoying it. This one I have not put down nor been distracted. I will look for more of his work.
Sunday, June 29, 2025
Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay #ClassicsClub
Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay was my spin pick for The Classics Club. I read the lenghty forward and it seems there was a question about the author's first hand knowledge, or is it entirely a work of fiction. It is labeled as historical fiction with a setting in 1900 at a girl's college in Victoria Australia. The locations Hanging Rock and Macedon ranges are real.
Mrs. Appleyard established a girls college and boarding school insisting on a very English "uniform" and forms of etiquette. When the story begins it's Valentine's day, the girls exchanging cards and planning a picnic at Hanging Rock. Mrs. Appleyard is a strict head mistress and very unyielding, trying to keep with "proper" English customs in an unsuitable environment regarding clothing.
It is mentioned how the governess, teacher and young ladies are required to wear gloves, voluminous dresses and hats in spite of the scorching Australian heat. Appleyard did not believe in adapting for the heat. The description of the landscape, flora and heat are well written, placing you in the scene.
" Insulated from natural contacts with earth, air and sunlight, by corsets pressing on the solar plexus, by volumious petticoats, cotton stockings and kid boots, the drowsy well-fed girls lounging in the shade were no more a part of their environment than figures in a photograph album, arbitrarily posed against a backcloth of cork rocks and cardboard trees."
A few of the girls napped while several of the senior girls decided they would like to walk and get closer to the Rock. Miss McGraw, the mathmatics teacher, wanted to take measurements and so it was agreed they could walk but be gone no more than one hour. It should be noted everyone's time pieces stopped at noon.
Over an hour later one girl came screaming down the path and couldn't recall what had actually happened but the senior girls and Miss Mcgraw were missing. After searching as long as possible the coachman returned to the college. From there on, the scandal of it blackened the college until it's ruin.
There are many more characters who played a large part; Albert the stableman and Michael, a young artistocrat living with his aunt and uncle, forming an unlikely friendship with Albert. The two of them went lookng for the missing girls independent of the police investigation. One of the girls was found, close to death, but she could not remember a single thing about the walk after the picnic or anything about the missing girls and teacher.
There is an otherworldly and eerie atmosphere about the disappearances and the subsequent events which seemed to touch on the lives of anyone involved with this picnic.
As Joan Lindsay attended a girl's boarding school in the same vicinity it has been suggested this is very loosely based on a true story. That is never revealed to be true and I think this novel was a brilliant fiction Lindsay created. As the author stated when asked, "Whether Picnic at Hanging Rock is fact or fiction, the reader must decide for themselves...it hardly matters."
It should be noted there was a final chapter which the editor asked Lindsay to delete, leaving things ambiguous rather than explaining. I'll be looking for that version called The Secret of Hanging Rock, it would include chapter 18, to see how our author wanted to end this.
4 stars
Sharing with The Classics Club for the spin.
Monday, June 23, 2025
Monday Mailbox
Monday Mailbox is hosted by Vicki at I'd Rather Be at the Beach. This is a weekly event to share books we added to our collections.
Last week I bought Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay for the Classic Club Spin and started it a few days ago.
From the library I received Time of The Child by Niall Williams for Kindle checkout and hope to get to it before it's due back.
Did you get any books this week? Check out Monday Mailbox to see who linked up this week.
Friday, June 20, 2025
Home is where the rabbits roam
Friday, June 13, 2025
Classic Club Spin time!
It's the Classic Club Spin Time! Here's my book list for spin #41
- A Room with a View by E.M. Forester
- A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute
- Agnes Grey by Ann Bronte
- All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
- Daisy Miller by Henry James
- Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
- Goodnight, Mr. Tom by Michelle Magorian
- Hotel Du Lac by Anita Brookner
- It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis
- Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
- Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay
- Scapegoat by Daphne Du Maurier
- Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut
- Tess of the D'urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
- The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
- The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank
- The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford
- The Quiet American by Graham Greene
- The Road to Wigan Pier by George Orwell
- To Sir with Love by E.R. Braithwaite
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
Italian drama and Typhoid Mary
Happy Tuesday! I thought I would take some time to catch up on the blog for tv and book chat. Here a few I finished.
Finished a buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card - The Story of a New Name by Elena Ferrante. This is book two in the series. I rounded up to 4 stars. The characters are complicated and you want to read more about the interactions between Lila and Elena but wow, what a vile bunch of characters surrounding them.
Elena and Lila have been friends since they were very young and always had a tempetuous relationship. At times they are fiercely loyal to one another and other times, barely controlling their jealousy with sharp comments or snubs. Definitely a different friendship than any I have ever experienced. They are young women now, Lila married at 16 to the overbearing Stefano. He beats her, he buys her the best of everything but he will never break her spirit. Sadly, Lila realizes too late she should have not married him.
Elena continues with her studies and excels with her educational pursuits. While she has a bit of envy about Lila's financial stabilty and standing in their community, Lila in turn has some envy about Elena being able to continue school and escaping the life in the neighborhood.
Jealousy, barbed comments, love and more in this novel.
๐๐๐๐๐๐
I also finished Fever by Mary Beth Keane.
Other books I have read by Keane are Ask Again, Yes and The Half Moon. Looking forward to The Walking People.
As for watching, we have finished season one of Landman and Billy Bob Thorton is fantastic in the lead role.
It's spin time at the Classics Club so I will get my spin post up or scheduled before the weekend. I'm hoping for one of the British authors such as Graham Greene, Ann Bronte, Forester or Hardy. We will see.
As I write we have two more nights in our home and then off to a hotel with Loki, then closing on the new place. Catch up with you later :-)
Sharing with:
Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon
Saturday, June 7, 2025
If it's rainy I'll be reading.....
It's been raining off and on for days and my flowers are thriving. I suppose I will plant more at the new house next week as I love the vibrant colors.
Library Loot
I was not expecting Frozen River to be available to me for weeks as I was number 22 on the hold list so I didn't think to suspend it. The library does rent books when one is popular so I suppose that's what happened here. Either way, I will tuck into this fat novel and hope to finish in my timeframe allotted.
That's my week's Mailbox Monday and Sunday Salon. Hope you received some goodies this week.
Sharing with Vicki for Mailbox Monday and Deb at Readerbuzz.
Monday, June 2, 2025
Mailbox Monday
Mailbox Monday is hosted by Vicki and gives us a chance to share what we have gotten in this week.
Katherine at I Wish I Lived in a Library had posted about this book But Have You Read the Book? See her post here. Fortunately my library had a copy.
It was fun going through the titles and seeing which ones I'd read, which I had watched but not read and which ones I'd read and watched.
That's my week's Mailbox Monday. Hope you received some goodies this week.
Sharing with Vicki for Mailbox Monday
Friday, May 30, 2025
Some good reading this month
The end of May already....wow. Nothing new here except catching up on some emails and errands. We finished watching the series Firefly and I sure wish they had continued it. Next week is my birthday so we will get a pizza and watch The Martian that evening. Loki has been looking a bit unhappy about the lack of furniture in the house these days but that will all change soon.
On to book chat. I have been very behind in writing anything or linking up.
I read Rick Steves On the Hippie Trail but never linked up. Review in the link.
I also finished Where the Forest Meets the River. This picks up five years after the first book with all the same characters and I loved it. Can't wait for her to publish the last one in this series because I need to know what happens with Greg, Rose, Nate, Richard and ...well, all of the characters in this small town. There have been some revelations, some closure and lots of hope but she sure left us with a few cliff hangers!
Most recently there was The Distance Between Us by Maggie O'Farrell, a recommendation by Les at Coastal Horizons. As with any O'Farrell book I've read this one grabbed me straight away. There isn't a lot of dialogue, especially in the beginning chapters, but the descriptive writing drops you right into the middle of Jake's Hong Kong new year celebration and resulting tragedy. The other storyline, which will eventually merge, takes us into Stella and Nina's world in London, Wales and Scotland. All three of our main characters have big secrets.
Next up will be a roundup for Elena Ferrante and Rosamunde Pilcher books.
I hope you have gotten some good reading in this May. Thinking of Shelleyrae at Book'd Out where she is dealing with severe flooding. Thoughts are with you!
Armchair travel for May has taken me to Maine, Scotland, England, Hong Kong, Italy and Ireland.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday and Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon.
Mid February Update
Hello February. So far this month has been productive in regards to reading and other pursuits. Lots of walking, cleaning out the house and ...
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Wild Dark Shore. I was hooked on this story after the first chapter. A woman, close to death by drowning and hyperthermia, washes up on t...




































