Thursday, October 16, 2025

Classics Club Spin Time!

 Here's my book list for the Classics Club Spin 

  1. A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute
  2. Agnes Grey by Ann Bronte
  3. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
  4. Breakfast at Tiffany's by Truman Capote
  5. Catch 22 by Joseph Heller
  6. Daisy Miller by Henry James
  7. Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
  8. Goodnight, Mr. Tom by Michelle Magorian
  9. Hotel Du Lac by Anita Brookner
  10. It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis
  11. Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
  12. Scapegoat by Daphne Du Maurier
  13. Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut
  14. Tess of the D'urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
  15. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
  16. The Covenant by James Michener
  17. The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford
  18. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
  19. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark
  20. The Road to Wigan Pier by George Orwell
When the spin number is announced on Sunday 19 October I will read that book before December  21, 2025.  Will you be joining in?  Check out the announcement post HERE.




Friday, October 10, 2025

Reading, CrocktoberFest and Planting

Hello bookish friends.  First week of October has me reading outside thanks to cooler temps, using the slow cooker and planting pollinators. I hope your week is going well.

Currently reading The Elements by John Boyne.  


From Goodreads - "The narrative follows a mother on the run from her past, a young soccer star facing a trial, a successful surgeon grappling with childhood trauma, and a father on a transformative journey with his son. Each is somehow connected to the next, and as the story unfolds, their lives intersect in unimaginable ways."

I'm over halfway through with this book and it's quite a page turner.  Set in Ireland and England, there are triggers on rape and abuse but nothing graphic. 

Four different stories and circumstances with the point of view of a perpetrator, a victim and I am not so sure about the enabler label on one story. Anyway, Boyne is linking up these stories and people in each section titled Air, Earth, Water and Fire. I can't put it down.

Surprise in the mail - Thank you to Deb at Readerbuzz for the seed packet and lovely card!  I have planted them and hope for some pollinators to visit.  I also planted my Seed Pop but so far, only a few sprouts.  Maybe I am overwatering.  We will see.


Here is the one I planted.  They come in different varieties for butterfly, bees and birds.



CrocktoberFest time.  This slow cooker isn't mine but I thought it looked so cute .


First thing I wanted to do was make this Peach and Pear Cobbler (click on link for recipe).  I made it ages ago and posted on my defunct food blog.  Dessert in a slow cooker - yes please.  Next crock effort is a lentil soup.  We are starting to get cooler temps.  Very excited.


Sharing with:

Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon

Joy for British Isles Friday



Saturday, October 4, 2025

September reading and October plans

 Well we got through September.  While I am longing for fall temperatures here, my friends in the southern hemisphere are about to experience Springtime :-)  Clearly I need a home is two  parts of this world, haha.

So a wrap up of September reading and watching.  

I was saddened to learn of Nan's passing.  She wrote at Letter from a Hill Farm and will be missed.  Les wrote a lovely tribute to Nan and you can read that HERE

📚 Books read ðŸ“š

The Correspondent by Virginia Evans (a buddy read with Susan at the Cue Card)

The Last Letter of Rachel Ellsworth by Barbara O'Neal

Forever Home by Graham Norton

Vanishing Cornwall by Daphne du Maurier - a nonfiction for my 2025 Nonfiction Reading Challenge at Book's Out. and British Isles Friday.


I enjoyed the book and learning so much about the history of Cornwall.  It was a place du Maurier had such a passion for and influenced so many authors we have read in classic literature.  The part about Yorkshire and the Bronte sisters and family was very interesting to me.  Reading about their Cornish mother and aunt and how it sparked their imaginations, inspiring the plots and locale in their books.

The myths and legends about Arthur, King Mark and Tristan were page turners as well.  Too many stories in here to address all but if you have an interest in the history, landscape,  myths and legends about Cornwall, please check your local library for a copy of this book.

As a few commenters stated they didn't know Daphne du Maurier wrote any nonfiction.   I thought I would include a screen shot of the book listing her books.  She wrote many about Francis Bacon, I suppose her big interest, as well as memoirs.

Category for the nonfiction challenge is Myths and Legends.




Watching



We have enjoyed all three of these shows.  You can't go wrong with Gary Oldman in Slow Horses and while I have not read the book series by Mick Herron I like the show.  Looking forward to the next season as it airs.
Chief of War is almost entirely in Hawaiian and is subtitled so be prepared to read it. 


Sharing with




Saturday, September 27, 2025

The Correspondent by Virginia Evans
{ a good epistolary book with great book suggestions}

The Correspondent by Virginia Evans was a 5 star buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card.   I loved this book and the epistolary style appealed to me.  From decades back I have been a letter writer.  You can create a history of your relationships through your letters, if you save them over the years.


You will meet our letter writer, Sybil Van Antwerp aged 73, and follow her through her from 2012 to 2021.  She writes to family, friends, authors and anyone she wants to share an opinion.  I love Sybil.  She has regrets as I'm sure we all do .  The themes of friendship, grief, love and growth are found within her tale.  Sybil is a strong woman and tries her best with some challenging situations.  I love her letters to Rosalie - her best friend and sister-in-law.  They usually end with "what are you reading, I am reading XX."

There are many characters so in the beginning I would write down the name and relationship so  wouldn't be confused.

I couldn't resist writing down all the books mentioned within her letters.  Some were letters to the authors expressing thoughts on the books and most of the others were a "I'm reading this, what are you reading" between friends.  Have you read any of these?

  • Outlander by Diana Gabaldon
  • Round House by Louise Erdrich
  • Inferno by Dan Brown
  • Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier
  • The World Below by Sue Miller
  • To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
  • Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
  • State of Wonder by Ann Pachett
  • Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese
  • Blue Nights by Joan Didion
  • The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion
  • The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro
  • Never Let me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
  • Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie
  • Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner
  • The Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson
  • Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie
  • Mary Poppins by P.L. Travers
  • Ulysses by James Joyce
  • 84 Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff
  • Travels with Charley by John Steinbeck
  • Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
  • Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry

Some I've read and some have been on my to-read list.  Maybe this is a good list to start for winter reading. Hmmm...

Please check out Susan's excellent review HERE.

FYI - This book is on sale for Kindle today for $1.99. Check here.

Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon.


Friday, September 26, 2025

The Last Letter of Rachel Ellsworth and a book question

 Two woman who experienced tramatic events in their lives come together and travel.  It's more than that though.


It's about friendship, trust, facing the grief in your life and choosing to move forward. Mariah Ellsworth was an Olympic champion snowboarder and experienced a devasting injury.  Later in the book you'll find out how she was injured and why she's in physical therapy. It definitely wasn't what you would expect. She is also mourning her mother Rachel and decides to finish a book project Rachel started about Parsi tea houses in London, Marrakech, and India.  But she can't do it on her own. She needs physical help and a person who can speak fluent French.

Veronica answers the advert and applies for the position to travel with Mariah.  She is old enough to be Mariah's mother and that makes for an interesting relationship. Veronica needs the job and the money as her husband left for for a younger woman and continually tries to indercut her on alimony. Her adult children are whiny, they don't want mom to be away at Christmas time yet they don't plan to spend any time with her. They will be at a ski resort with dad.  Veronica is  in a bad place and this job and travel is exactly what she needs.

Definitely an armchair travel book.  I liked her book We Believed in Mermaids more than this one but I was never tempted to DNF this book.  If you like the settings in England this book has a bit in London.  The authors book The Lost Girls of Devon will immerse you in that part of England.


Trading Post / Here is  something I thought I'd throw out there and see if anyone has seen this book I am having a wee bit of trouble acquiring. 

The End of Seeing by Christy Collins - Can't find this one on Amazon and I am looking to find a used copy that doesn't cost me an arm and a leg.  Big ask.  If you happen to see it at a used bookstore, and it's not too expensive, I would happily trade you a book or paypal you the cost and postage.  Or point me toward a source I'm sure I don't know about and I can acquire. 

UPDATE- Thank you Deb, I bought it!  Just the right price too.

My book habit..... 🤷‍♀️

Upcoming is the nonfiction about Cornwall by du Maurier and The Correspondent review.

Sharing with Joy for British Isles Friday.

Saturday, September 20, 2025

Weekly Update

My weekly update is a bit disjointed today so I'll just ramble on. I somehow strained my back and neck muscles. Probably the yard work we have tackled. It hurt to hold a Kindle or book up or for me to look down at the book, as I usually do.  No heating pad in the house so I ordered one from Amazon.  It is helping but if anyone has any ideas I'm all ears.

Question: Has anyone been in contact with Nan of Letters from a Hill Farm? I have not seen her post since March. I had a card to send her and realized I did not have her address.

Monday Mailbox - I'd not had many incoming books so have not been linking with Monday Mailbox hosted by Vicki.  I did receive this cookbook from awesome Jinjer and made a rice dish.  This week I am making a lentil soup.  

Also have the nonfiction by Daphne du Maurier Vanishing Cornwall. This is a memoir/history and myth and legend kinda book.  I've Cornwall but I love shows and book with the setting. 


Just finished a buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card - The Correspondent by Virginia Evans and loved it. Review coming up.


Sharing with:
Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon 
Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Vicki for Monday Mailbox

Friday, September 5, 2025

Good reading and recipes this first week of September

The first week of September almost behind us and I sometimes marvel we have been in our "city" home for almost three months.  I love the quiet street we live on, talking to people who are walking or doing gardening, being close to the library, pizza, ammenities....and no more 25 mile trip to get to the grocery store. Bliss.

Books // This week I finished a Graham Norton book called Forever Home.  The setting is Ireland, as are most of his books, and the subject matter of dementia and relationships are the main themes.   I've read three of Graham Norton's books so far and can say I enjoyed the others more than this one. Most of the characters were believable and well described but there is a subplot about three quarters of the way in that's ridiculous, in my opinion. 3.5 stars


Here are previous Norton books which I enjoyed. HoldingHome Stretch and A Keeper.
For what it's worth I very much enjoyed Holding and could recommend that one for those interested in Irish village life and interactions with the community.

Currently reading The Correspondent as a buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card. The epistolary style is very appealing to me as I still like writing letters.  



What's for dinner //  Thank you to Jinjer for sending me a cookbook!  First recipe that grabbed me was the rice dish with mushrooms, onions and peas.  This rounded out the honeyed lemon chicken dish.  Recipe for the chicken here if interested.



This dish could be the main event for vegetarians (just swap out the chicken broth) or as a filling side.


Sharing with:
Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon 
Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.


Saturday, August 30, 2025

August Reading, Watching and Lightning Strike

The end of August already.  As the heat was extreme, I was in quite a bit and so my reading time increased.  We did have a severe storm blow in and a lightning strike so close to the house that we had damage. 

It fried our DVD player, 5 outlets in the house and the gas water heater.  Xfinity went out for a bit but I will say I was impressed by the quick response time by a technician.  Thirty minutes after the storm a tech was outside our house hooking us up. Many people in our area were without electricty and Internet for days.  Our neighbor had to have a new air conditioner replaced- yikes!  So while I will complain about a $3,800 gas water heater, it was less expensive than a new AC unit.

Here are the books I finished this month  (Reviews are in the links)

For Nonfiction-  The Day the World Came to Town by Jim DeFede


The Atlas of Abandoned Places



📚  Three Fiction Reads 📚



Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy

Heartland by Amity Gaige

The Quiet American by Graham Greene (Classics Club)


Watching


We abandoned The Terminal List with Chris Pratt after almost finishing the first episode. He is completely unbelievable as a Navy Seal.  What we did find and like is an older show called Person of Interest   starring  Jim Caviezel. It's an interesting concept and we are up into season 2 now.  Loving the slow character reveals and development.  That said, I don't see us watching all 5 seasons.


Shrinking with Harrison Ford and Jason Segal. Love this show and the dialogue between the characters.  Just finished season 2 and I can't wait for season 3 to release! Thank you Les for recommending.  🤎 It brought a tear to my eye at the end of season 2.


Armchair Travel this month took me to Newfoundland, Maine, Australia, Vietnam and many remote places around the world with the Atlas of Abandoned Places :-)

What books and shows did you enjoy this month?  Suggestions are always very welcome.

Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon.

Friday, August 15, 2025

Graham Greene and Charlotte McConaghy books this week

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 the Arctic shore of a remote island.  The woman, Rowan, is dragged up to the lighthouse and cared for by Dominic Salt and his three children.  She has grave injuries requiring stitches where jagged rocks tore her body open.


 

When Rowan awakens the little boy, Orly Salt, asks her name.

"I'm Orly Salt. And you're on an island in the middle of the Southern Ocean, fifteen hundred kilometers from any other landmass.  Closest is Antarctica. So my question for you is: How did you get here Rowan?"

She is on Shearwater island, an island one hundred and twenty kilometers squared.  It's a tundra climate with many species of plants and hundreds of sea lions, seals and the last colony of royal penguins in the world.  It's also a research island where millions of seeds are stored to repopulate the earth after flooding.

All of them have secrets and as soon as you think one has sinister intentions, you get their backstory.  You've heard the saying -  don't-judge-a-book-by-it's-cover - and the reveals of all the characters took me by surprise, just when I thought I was figuring them out.

Rowan does not reveal her husband Hank is a reseacher who sent alarming emails to her while she was in their Australian home.  Dominic Salt, the father, doesn't know she is Hank's wife (at first) and there is quite a story there about Hank. Other researchers seem to have vanished, the children  (Raff, Fen and Orly) have lived on the island for the last eight years with their widowed father and I don't think any of them are thrilled to be leaving for civilization.  You are plunged into the cold, the storms and I hate to use this overused descriptor but it's atmospheric. 

I will be reading more by this Australian author.   5 stars.

The Quiet American

The setting is Vietnam in the 1950's and there is fighting between the Vietnamese and the French. France wants to hold on to the power they have, with the help from American govenment. As we all know, when France pulls out the Americans were involved in the war.  This one was on my Classics Club list I knocked out in a few days.


Aiden Pyle is the American who isn't in Vietnam to absorb the culture or as a journalist to report on the conflict.  He is an agent of the United States with the intent of bringing a better government and way of life to the Vietnamese people. That's one point of view because imposing American "values" to restructure is to ignore the the intact culture and regard as inferior. 

Thomas Fowler is the British opium addicted journalist who befriends Pyle.  Fowler was basically living with the lovely young Vietnamese woman named  Phuong.  She would prepare his opium pipe in the evenings and was quite devoted.  Then Pyle became infatuated with her and promised her marriage, Was he trying to save her from the middle-aged married Brit as well as "saving" her country?

Pyle is naive and ingenuous. Fowler has no moral compass. 

This is a classic but not one I personally found fantastic.  I am obviously in the minority.  In the past I have enjoyed some of Graham Greene's novels but this one was just meh for me. Knocking another off for my Classic Club list. 3 stars


Friday, August 8, 2025

If I'm stuck inside, I'll be reading...

Only a week and a half into the month and I have some books to share with you.  Some I finished in the last 4 days and the Jim DeFede book I started the end of July. Lots going on here but mostly I am inside because of extreme temperatures, so reading is my go-to for entertainment.

 The Day the World Came to Town by Jim DeFede


This nonfiction was a fast read.  I had no idea about the coordination involved getting scores of planes to land as quickly as possible, steering clear of U.S. airspace after the terrorist attacks on 9/11. After a certain point crossing the Atlantic from Europe a pilot could turn back and return to their original airport or make that decision to push on. Unbeknowst to the pilots, they would be stranded in Canada for many days, with uncertainty about moving on to the original destinations.

Imagine thousands of unscheduled flights finding an airport in Canada.   This book focused on Gander in Newfoundland, the many passengers from all over the world.  The people of Gander coming together to provide food, towels, linens and cots, opening their homes to strangers to give them a place to shower or to stay with them instead of a makeshift shelter.  The spirit of community is a credit to the people in Gander and I wish more people around this conflicted world could be as kind.

There are may reviews on this book and many quotes already but the individual stories about where some came from, friendships made and the back story on handling such as unexpected large scale event made for fascinating reading. You'll read about a few families returning to the US after many weeks traveling to Kazakhstan with their adopted child, a couple who are worried about their NYFD son who is missing while on duty at the towers, refugees,  and so many more personal stories.  5 stars.


The Atlas of Abandoned Places



Places I will never get to and some I would love to see.  What a cool book.  In addition to the locations, including latitude and longitude, there is history and many photos.  Here is an example below 👇 As you can see from the photo they estimate roughly 750,000 of these garden shed sized bunkers all over Albania.  Many are completely abandoned but some have been repurposed as museums, storage for livestock feed and more. They are from the Cold War era.


In England you can see some very interesting forts along the Kent coastal area.  Guy Maunsell designed these forts, sometimes called Maunsell Forts or His Majesty's Forts, during WW II.  They were desgined to guard Thames estuary and the coastal region




They look like they belong in a Star Wars movie.  What a fascinating sight this must be along the Kent coast in England.  



Currently finishing up the Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy. Wow, what a page turner. I need more of her books but I wonder if any of the others can top this one.



Next up I plan to read another off my Classic Club list, The Quiet American by British author Graham Greene. That's the plan anyway but you never know when a different book will lure me away.


It's still extremely hot in north Florida so Loki says
Yes, please, to a cold Pupcup.



Saturday, August 2, 2025

July was a busy month...books, visits and food

This past month has been a good one for me reading, armchair traveling and a few days with our Nebraska granddaughter.  

I joined in on the Paris in July at Words and Peace. Prepared many French dishes HERE and read books with the French theme  which were new to me. Much thanks to Emma at Word and Peace for hosting this event. 


✔ Read two from my Classics Club list - A Moveable Feast and Picnic at Hanging Rock.


✔ Completed another nonfiction for Shelleyrae's Nonfiction Reader Challenge -  Hidden Libraries 



🤔 Learning about streaming and Internet after living rural for 33 years.  Wow.  What a world that's been opened for us.

My granddaughter is in town visiting her mother so we've been able to get some visiting in, go for some lunches and school shopping. Fun stuff.

Armchair travel took me to France, England, Australia, Maine and all over the globe thanks to Hidden Libraries.

And now it's August...July went by so quickly.  Hope you had a good month of reading and joyful experiences.

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Hello December....❄

Hello world. I've been absent for a bit but probably haven't missed anything crucial.  I guess.  Life got mad at us in November.   E...