Saturday, December 18, 2021

Baking Like Crazy: Reindeer Shortbread Bites; Best Brownies Ever; Sablés au Citron; The Best Chocolate Chip Cookies; and Winter Vanilla Chai Cookies with Eggnog Nutmeg Glaze








I've made it to 500 books read and reviewed for the year, and that's where I'm going to stop. I will continue to read, of course, but I'll save the last chapter of everything I'm reading now until the first day of the new year. It's the way I like to start the year.





We are working on our finalist lists for the 2021 Cybils Fiction Picture Book and Board Book Awards.




Last week I posted here at Readerbuzz:










Good Thing #1
I went (masked) with my friend to see Tuna Christmas at the college in my town.

Good Thing #2
I went with friends (masked) on the Tour of Homes in my town.

Good Thing #3
Our book club had a fun Christmas cozy mystery discussion, 
and the books lent themselves to some fun Christmas cozy mystery treats.
(Cozies often seem to be set in bakeries, I think.)

Bonus! Good Thing #4
And I've been baking like crazy! 
Photo above, starting at 10 o'clock, and going clockwise:





I'm happy you joined us here at the Sunday Salon. Sunday Salon is a place to link up and to share what we have been doing during the week. It's a great way to visit other blogs and join in the conversations going on there. 


Some of the things we often talk about at the Sunday Salon:

  • What was your week like?
  • Read any good books? Tell us about them.
  • What other bookish things did you do? 
  • What else is going on in your life?


Other places where you may like to link up over the weekend are below. Click on the picture to visit the site.

        

My linkup for Sunday Salon is below. 

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Arkansas: What a View!



We recently spent a week hiking in Arkansas.
The second day we hiked Pedestal Rock
We did a hike each day for the next three days: Last Hikes in Arkansas.

We stayed at a place near Petit Jean State Park.
It has a great view.




 


For more wordless photos, go to Wordless Wednesday.

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Books on My Winter 2021 To-Read List

The Souvenir Museum by Elizabeth McCracken

     Why? McCracken is quirky. I like quirky.

Oh William by Elizabeth Strout

     Why? I've heard lots of good things about Oh William. And I adore Olive Kitteridge.

The Holiday Swap by Maggie Knox

     Why? It sounds fun.

Midnight Chicken (and Other Recipes Worth Living For) by Ella Risbridger

     Why? Cook the Books, a bimonthly foodie book club marrying the pleasures of reading and cooking, chose this as their December-January selection.

Gastro Obscura: A Food Adventurer's Guide by Cecily Wong

     Why? Atlas Obscura was delightful.

Once Upon a Wardrobe by Patti Callahan Henry

     Why? Narnia.

Man and Superman by George Bernard Shaw

     Why? I am listening to this play with Judi Dench and Ralph Fiennes. My last Classics Club selection of the year.

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis

     Why? #Narniathon21.

Red is My Heart by Antoine Laurain and Le Sonneur.

     Why? I'm a fan of Antoine Laurain.

One Italian Summer by Rebecca Serle

     Why? In Five Years had an intriguing premise. This book has an intriguing premise.





Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each Tuesday That Artsy Reader Girl assigns a topic and then post her top ten list that fits that topic. You’re more than welcome to join her and create your own top ten (or 2, 5, 20, etc.) list as well. Feel free to put a unique spin on the topic to make it work for you! Please link back to That Artsy Reader Girl in your own post so that others know where to find more information.   

MON | Dec. 20 – #AMonthofFaves What’s On Your Winter Reading List. What are some of the books you plan to read in the next few months? How did you choose them? Are they from the “Best Books of the Year” lists, recommendations from friends, raved about on the internet? https://www.girlxoxo.com/

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Can I Read and Review 500 Books This Year? Yes, I Think I Can...

 










What I Read
Happy Day! The big news this week is that I (finally!) finished reading David Copperfield. I've been reading on it since August. Somehow I missed reading this one earlier in life, but I'm delighted that I decided to give it a read now. My review is here.





What I Am Reading

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis
Birdie's Bargain by Katherine Paterson
The Dire Days of Willowweep Manor by Shaenon K. Garrity
One Italian Summer by Rebecca Serle
The Kindness Workbook: An Interactive Guide for Creating Compassion in Yourself and the World by Robin Raven
Kindness Tales: World Folktales to Talk About by Margaret Read MacDonald






Last week I posted here at Readerbuzz:







I finished the 2021 Nonfiction Reader Challenge and signed up for the 2022 Nonfiction Reader Challenge hosted by Shelleyrae at Book'd Out. You can sign up here.




I am awfully close to 500 books for the year...







Good Thing #1
I saw the most beautiful bird I've ever seen, a Great Blue Heron.




Good Thing #2
My library is offering a monthly online calligraphy class.
Why have I never tried this before now?



Good Thing #3
monarch caterpillar on a milkweed plant last week...





I'm happy you joined us here at the Sunday Salon. Sunday Salon is a place to link up and to share what we have been doing during the week. It's a great way to visit other blogs and join in the conversations going on there. 

Some of the things we often talk about at the Sunday Salon:

  • What was your week like?
  • Read any good books? Tell us about them.
  • What other bookish things did you do? 
  • What else is going on in your life?

Other places where you may like to link up over the weekend are below. Click on the picture to visit the site.

        

My linkup for Sunday Salon is below. 

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

Holiday-Themed Cozy Mysteries? What Are Cozy Mysteries? And Can You Suggest Some?

 

 


It's December and our book club always picks a holiday-themed group read. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens. A Christmas Memory by Truman Capote. The Gift of the Magi by O. Henry. Skipping Christmas by John Grisham. One Man's Christmas by Leon Hale. Any Christmas mystery by Anne Perry. The Best Christmas Pageant Ever by Barbara Robinson. 

These were pretty straightforward, and we were all pretty much able to find these and read these and discuss them along with Christmas cookies and cocoa.

We celebrated ten years of our book club this year, and now the holiday-themed books have grown thin. But one member, Rae Longest of Powerful Women Readers-fame, suggested we each read a holiday-themed cozy mystery.

And there was silence in the group. What in the world, one brave soul asked, is a cozy mystery?

And...well, I know a cozy mystery when I see one, I think...But I honestly couldn't explain.

So, I turn to you, my cozy mystery experts out there. Can you help us? What is a cozy mystery? Could you suggest some holiday-themed cozy mystery titles or authors who write cozies with a holiday theme? 

And, just for me, could you tell me if either of the books pictured above would be considered cozies? 

And, if you have never heard of a cozy mystery would you just chime in, in the comments, so some of my book club friends don't feel so alone...


Wondrous Words Wednesday is a weekly meme where you can share new words that you’ve encountered, or spotlight words you love.  Feel free to get creative! It was first created by Kathy over at Bermuda Onion and is now hosted at Elza Reads.

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Ten Little-Known Books That Would Make Fantastic, if Somewhat Unconventional, Movies


The Monk Downstairs by Tim Farrington

"Rebecca Martin is a single mother with an apartment to rent and a sense that she has used up her illusions. I had the romantic thing with my first husband, thank you very much, she tells a hapless suitor. I'm thirty-eight years old, and I've got a daughter learning to read and a job I don't quite like. I don't need the violin music. But when the new tenant in her in-law apartment turns out to be Michael Christopher, on the lam after twenty years in a monastery and smack dab in the middle of a dark night of the soul, Rebecca begins to suspect that she is not as thoroughly disillusioned as she had thought."


The Bright Side of Disaster by Katherine Center

"Very pregnant and not quite married, Jenny Harris doesn't mind that she and her live-in fiancé, Dean, accidentally started their family a little earlier than planned. But Dean is acting distant, and the night he runs out for cigarettes and doesn't come back, he demotes himself from future husband to sperm donor. And the very next day, Jenny goes into labor. In the months that follow, Jenny plunges into a life she never anticipated: single motherhood. At least with the sleep deprivation, sore boobs, and fits of crying (both hers and the baby's), there's not much time to dwell on her broken heart. And things are looking up: Jenny learns how to do everything one-handed, makes friends in a mommy group, and even gets to know a handsome, helpful neighbor. But Dean is never far from Jenny's thoughts or, it turns out, her doorstep, and in the end she must choose between the old life she thought she wanted and the new life she's been lucky to find."


The Loop by Joe Coomer

"Lyman, a thirty-year-old orphan, is sipping coffee on the front steps of the trailer he calls home one morning, when a ninety-year-old parrot arrives with a beakful of cryptic sayings -- such as "That which hath wings shall tell the matter" -- and a mysterious past. Convinced that heeding the bird's wisdom will lead him to answers about himself he so desperately seeks, Lyman combines his night job as a courtesy patrolman, circling the highway that loops around Fort Worth, with days in the library. Together with Fiona, the loquacious librarian, he traces his adopted pet's origins, and while what Lyman ultimately discovers may not help him piece together his own past, it paves the way for a future he never imagined."


The Ladies' Man by Elinor Lipman

"Thirty unmarried years have passed since the barely suitable Harvey Nash failed to show up at a grand Boston hotel for his own engagement party. Today, the near-bride, Adele Dobbin, and her two sisters, Lois and Kathleen, blame Harvey for what unkind relatives call their spinsterhood, and what potential beaus might characterize as a leery, united front. The doorbell rings one cold April night. Harvey Nash, older, filled with regrets (sort of), more charming and arousable than ever, just in from the Coast, where he's reinvented himself as Nash Harvey, jingle composer and chronic bachelor, has returned to the scene of his first romantic crime. Despite the sisters' scars and grudges, despite his platinum tongue and roving eye, this old flame becomes an improbable catalyst for the untried and the long overdue."


The Music Shop by Rachel Joyce

"It is 1988. On a dead-end street in a run-down suburb there is a music shop that stands small and brightly lit, jam-packed with records of every kind. Like a beacon, the shop attracts the lonely, the sleepless, and the adrift; Frank, the shop’s owner, has a way of connecting his customers with just the piece of music they need. Then, one day, into his shop comes a beautiful young woman, Ilse Brauchmann, who asks Frank to teach her about music. Terrified of real closeness, Frank feels compelled to turn and run, yet he is drawn to this strangely still, mysterious woman with eyes as black as vinyl. But Ilse is not what she seems, and Frank has old wounds that threaten to reopen, as well as a past it seems he will never leave behind. Can a man who is so in tune with other people’s needs be so incapable of connecting with the one person who might save him? The journey that these two quirky, wonderful characters make in order to overcome their emotional baggage speaks to the healing power of music—and love—in this poignant, ultimately joyful work of fiction."


The Portable Veblen by Elizabeth Mckenzie

"A young couple on the brink of marriage—the charming Veblen and her fiancé Paul, a brilliant neurologist—find their engagement in danger of collapse. Along the way they weather everything from each other’s dysfunctional families, to the attentions of a seductive pharmaceutical heiress, to an intimate tête-à-tête with a very charismatic squirrel."


World of Pies by Karen Stolz

"In this remarkable debut work from author Karen Stolz, readers follow the arc of a girl's life as she grows to womanhood. From crushes to surprise baby sisters to nail polish to a devastating death, Roxanne is our guide through a life that has moments of tenderness, poignancy, sorrow, and great humor, as well as some wonderful baking memories. A sumptuous novel--though like the best pie, tart in all the right places."


The Ingredients of Love by Nicholas Barreau

"While in the midst of a breakup-induced depression, Aurélie Bredin, a beautiful Parisian restaurateur, discovers an astonishing novel in a quaint bookshop on the Ile Saint-Louis. Inexplicably, her restaurant and Aurélie herself are featured in its pages. After reading the whole book in one night, she realizes it has saved her life―and she wishes more than anything to meet its author. Aurélie's attempts to contact the attractive but shy English author through his French publishers are blocked by the company's gruff chief editor, André, who only with great reluctance forwards Aurélie's enthusiastic letter. But Aurélie refuses to give up. One day, a response from the reclusive author actually lands in her mailbox, but the encounter that eventually takes place is completely different from what she had ever imagined. . . . "


The Lover's Dictionary by David Leviathan

"Taking a unique approach to this age-old problem, the nameless narrator of David Levithan's The Lover's Dictionary constructs the story of a relationship as a dictionary. Through these sharp entries, he provides an intimate window into the great events and quotidian trifles of coupledom, giving us an indelible and deeply moving portrait of love in our time."


Snapper by Brian Kimberling

"Set in a brilliantly observed rural Indiana, Snapper is a book about birdwatching, a woman who won't stay true, and a pick-up truck that won't start. Here turtles eat alligators for breakfast, Klansmen skulk in the undergrowth, and truckers drop into the diner of a town named Santa Claus to ensure that no child's Christmas letter goes unanswered, while Nathan grapples with the eternal question: should I stay, or should I go?"


Have you read any of these? Do you have any suggestions for books that would make fantastic, if somewhat unconventional, movies?

And, btw, don't wait for the movie...these make fantastic, if somewhat unconventional reads as well...



Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each Tuesday That Artsy Reader Girl assigns a topic and then post her top ten list that fits that topic. You’re more than welcome to join her and create your own top ten (or 2, 5, 20, etc.) list as well. Feel free to put a unique spin on the topic to make it work for you! Please link back to That Artsy Reader Girl in your own post so that others know where to find more information.   

Saturday, December 4, 2021

The Wardrobe Door is Now Open!

 





We went into the children's department at Fabled Bookshop & Cafe in Waco through a wardrobe entrance on a recent visit.

I'm going straight from Nonfiction November into the wardrobe. December is the beginning of #Narniathon21, an event in which we read C. S. Lewis' famous heptalogy, a book per month, in publication order. We are beginning with The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Join us by finding out more here.








 An Alphabet for Gourmets by M.F.K. Fisher ⭐⭐⭐⭐






Book Towns by Alex Johnson ⭐⭐⭐⭐


Why Do Robins Have Red Breasts? by Jo Stevens ⭐⭐⭐⭐


I wrapped up nine nonfiction books during the last week of November. Frankly, I'm a little tired of nonfiction now! Click on the link to read my full review.




The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis
Mrs. Claus and the Santaland Slayings by Liz Ireland
and any other good fiction I run across!





The Cybils are pouring in. Here's my husband bringing in a stack of books I received one day last week.




Last week I posted here at Readerbuzz:






Good Thing #1
Christmas decorations are up.

Good Thing #2
I love the winner of the Great British Bake Off.


Good Thing #3
Project FeederWatch has begun again.




I'm happy you joined us here at the Sunday Salon. Sunday Salon is a place to link up and to share what we have been doing during the week. It's a great way to visit other blogs and join in the conversations going on there. 

Some of the things we often talk about at the Sunday Salon:

  • What was your week like?
  • Read any good books? Tell us about them.
  • What other bookish things did you do? 
  • What else is going on in your life?

Other places where you may like to link up over the weekend are below. Click on the picture to visit the site.

        

My linkup for Sunday Salon is below.