Showing posts with label FromtheShortStack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FromtheShortStack. Show all posts

Saturday, July 01, 2023

Weekly Mews: Summer Book Downsizing & My Latest Bookish Mewsings (Please Vote in My July TBR Poll!)

I am linking up to the Sunday Post hosted by Kim of Caffeinated Book Reviewer and The Sunday Salon (TSS) hosted by Deb Nance of Readerbuzz  where participants recap our week, talk about what we are reading, share any new books that have come our way, and whatever else we want to talk about. I am also linking It's Monday! What Are you Reading? hosted by Kathryn of Book Date where readers talk about what they have been, are and will be reading.

I am linking up Stacking the Shelves hosted by Marlene of Reading Reality a meme in which participants share what new books came their way recently.  



I had not planned to be away from my blog so long this time, but I ended up with allergic conjunctivitis, which was quite uncomfortable for awhile there. Prescription eye drops helped where over the counter ones didn't.  Mostly though, I think time and rest helped. I am all better now, fortunately. 

Mouse enjoyed her time this past month at musical theater camp. They ended with a performance of several Disney songs they all performed to. Mouse had a featured role as Mrs. Potts in their performance of "Be Our Guest". I love to hear her sing. All of the kids did an amazing job. 

It feels like summer is finally making an appearance in my part of the world with rising temperatures. We spent the afternoon at an early Independence Day celebration. My mom is a member of her community Masquer's Theatre Club, and they put on a very nice presentation for everyone in attendance. I am glad we were able to go! 

I have to work this coming holiday and so it will be a regular work week for me. For all my American friends, I hope you have a happy and safe 4th of July, whatever you have planned!


In the middle of reading
Untangled: Guiding Teenage Girls Through the Seven Transitions into Adulthood by Lisa Damour
Neverseen (Keeper of the Lost Cities #4) by Shannon Messenger




My TBR List is hosted by the awesome Michelle  at Because Reading. It’s a fun way to choose a book from your TBR pile to read. The 1st Saturday of every month, I will list 3 books I am considering reading and let you vote for my next read during that month. My review will follow (unfortunately, not likely in the same month, but eventually--that's all I can promise). 

I could use your help deciding which book to read next! I am terribly behind on my cozy mystery reading, especially considering I took on the Cruisin' Thru the Cozies challenge this year. This month, I have selected three historical cozy mysteries for you to choose from. One is a new to me series while the other two are series I have already started. Which of these three books do you think I should read next? Have you read any of them? If so, what did you think? 


Murder in Postscript
(Lady of Letters #1) by Mary Winters
When one of her readers asks for advice following a suspected murder, Victorian countess Amelia Amesbury, who secretly pens the popular Lady Agony column, has no choice but to investigate in this first book in a charming new historical mystery series.

Amelia Amesbury—widow, mother, and countess—has a secret. Amelia writes for a London penny paper, doling out advice on fashion, relationships, and manners under the pen name Lady Agony. But when a lady’s maid writes Amelia to ask for advice when she believes her mistress has been murdered—and then ends up a victim herself—Amelia is determined to solve the case.

With the help of her best friend and a handsome marquis, Amelia begins to piece together the puzzle, but as each new thread of inquiry ends with a different suspect, the investigation grows ever more daunting. From London’s docks and ballrooms to grand country houses, Amelia tracks a killer, putting her reputation—and her life—on the line.
[Goodreads Summary]

A Botanist's Guide to Flowers and Fatality
(Saffron Everleigh #2) by Kate Khavari
1920s London isn’t the ideal place for a brilliant woman with lofty ambitions. But research assistant Saffron Everleigh is determined to beat the odds in a male-dominated field at the University College of London. Saffron embarks on her first research study alongside the insufferably charming Dr. Michael Lee, traveling the countryside with him in response to reports of poisonings. But when Detective Inspector Green is given a case with a set of unusual clues, he asks for Saffron’s assistance.

The victims, all women, received bouquets filled with poisonous flowers. Digging deeper, Saffron discovers that the bouquets may be more than just unpleasant flowers— there may be a hidden message within them, revealed through the use of the old Victorian practice of floriography. A dire message, indeed, as each woman who received the flowers has turned up dead.

Alongside Dr. Lee and her best friend, Elizabeth, Saffron trails a group of suspects through a dark jazz club, a lavish country estate, and a glittering theatre, delving deeper into a part of society she thought she’d left behind forever.

Will Saffron be able to catch the killer before they send their next bouquet, or will she find herself with fatal flowers of her own in Kate Khavari’s second intoxicating installment.
[Goodreads Summary]

Death of an Unsung Hero
(Lady Montfort #4) by Tessa Arlen

In 1916, the world is at war and the energetic Lady Montfort has persuaded her husband to offer his family’s dower house to the War Office as an auxiliary hospital for officers recovering from shell-shock with their redoubtable housekeeper Mrs. Jackson contributing to the war effort as the hospital’s quartermaster.

Despite the hospital’s success, the farming community of Haversham, led by the Montfort’s neighbor Sir Winchell Meacham, does not approve of a country-house hospital for men they consider to be cowards. When Captain Sir Evelyn Bray, one of the patients, is found lying face down in the vegetable garden with his head bashed in, both Lady Montfort and Mrs. Jackson have every reason to fear that the War Office will close their hospital. Once again the two women unite their diverse talents to discover who would have reason to murder a war hero suffering from amnesia.

Brimming with intrigue, Tessa Arlen's Death of an Unsung Hero brings more secrets and more charming descriptions of the English countryside to the wonderful Lady Montfort and Mrs. Jackson series.
[Goodreads Summary]

Thank you for voting!


Finished reading recently


Falling by T.J. Newman (Avid Reader Press/Simon Shuster, 2022; 320 pages)
When the shoe dropped into her lap the foot was still in it. [opening of Falling]
A pilot is put in an impossible situation when his family is held hostage. He is given a choice. Crash the commercial airliner he is flying or his wife and two children will die. The book takes place over the course of a six hour flight from Los Angeles to New York. This fast paced thriller kept me turning pages as fast as I could; it was intense right from the start. Talk about a harrowing read! The perspective changes back and forth over the course of the novel, from what is going on on the ground to events occurring in the sky, with occasional flashbacks into the characters' lives. I loved the way the flight crew pulled together in the most direst of circumstances. Falling was an entertaining and suspenseful read. I can see this one translating well to the big screen. 


The London Séance Society by Sarah Penner (Park Row, 2023; 350 pgs)
At an abandoned château on the wooded outskirts of Paris, a dark séance was about to take place. [opening of The London Séance Society]
Lenna Wickes takes an apprentice position with the world renowned spiritualist Vaudeline D'Allaire in Paris, intending to learn what it will take to talk to her dead sister and find out who killed her and why. Vaudeline herself has made a career out of conjuring spirits of murder victims to discover who killed them, and Lenna's own sister had once been a devote student of the spiritualist's.

When Vaudeline is asked to come to London, a place she fled after her life was threatened, to help solve the murder of a friend and fellow spiritualist, she reluctantly does so, with Lenna serving as her understudy. Lenna's own sister had died in London and perhaps this will be her chance to get some answers. The two women join forces with Mr. Morley, a high ranking member of the exclusive all men's club, the London Séance Society, in an effort to find the truth, only to find themselves getting more tangled in a web of lies and deceit, not to mention murder. Lenna's story is interspersed with the narrative of Mr. Morley's, which makes it an even more compelling read.

Although the novel got off to a slow start, heavy in set up, once Lenna and Vaudeline arrived in London, the book really took off for me, and I was hooked. Given Lenna's background and skepticism in the occult, her training under a famous spiritualist may seem out of character. Her guilt over her ongoing argument with her sister about the validity of the occult, however, weighs heavily on her, not to mention her desperation to find out what happened to her sister and why. The two women made an interesting team, to say the least, and I appreciated seeing their relationship evolve over the course of the novel. 

While I suspected early on the direction the novel would go, it was such fun to see the many paths the author took the mystery elements. The plot is extremely well crafted, wrapped in the perfect setting--Victorian Paris and London, at the height of of the spiritualist movement. The Gothic atmosphere, complex characters . . . I liked it all. 

Thank you to everyone who voted for The London Séance Society in my June TBR poll! 

Challenge Met: Historical Fiction Reading Challenge / COYER

What are you reading right now? What do you plan to read next? 


I have slowly been working my way through the short stories in Reader, I Married Him. Some stand out favorites were Francine Prose's "The Mirror", where Mr. Rochester attempts to convince Jane that Bertha was a parrot, and "A Migrating Bird" by Elif Shafak, about a young Muslim student who falls for a outsider, a visiting student. It's a story about love, hope, and loss. I also really liked "Behind the Mountain" by Evie Wyld about a housewife who has recently moved to a new town, going through the motions of living while longing for something different. And then she meets Annie. 

The ending of Joanna Briscoe's "To Hold" made that particular short story for me. I wasn't too taken with "Dangerous Dog" by Kirsty Gunn, unfortunately. I also read "It's A Man's Life, Ladies" by Jane Gardam and "Reader, I Married Him" by Susan Hill, neither of which made much of an impression on me. 

Emma Donoghue's "Since First I Saw Your Face" is based loosely on the real life Mary "Minnie" Sidgwick Benson. Set in 1872-3, about an affair between two women while convalescing at a boarding house, one of whom (Minnie) was married and had given birth to child after child and the other who had fell hopelessly in love with the other.   

I also read a couple of stories in Kim Harrison's Into the Woods anthology, both in the Beyond the Hollows section. This section of the book is made up of stories outside of Rachel Morgan's world. She sets up each of her stories in the collection by sharing a little backstory about them, which I appreciate quite a bit. It was no different with the two stories I read recently. "Pet Shop Boys" is a vampire-fae horror story about an unwitting pet store clerk who gets more than he bargained for when he goes on a date with mysterious woman. It is one of those stories that creeps up on you and then bang! I much preferred "Temson Estates", however, which is about a man who inherits a plot of woodland from his grandfather. A wrench is thrown into his plans to sell the land for logging when his great aunt introduces him to a well-kept secret about the woods and it's inhabitants. I liked the mythology of this one, but felt the story was way too short. 

Have you read any good short stories recently? Please share!


After our optometry appointments earlier this week, Mouse and I stopped at Barnes and Nobles and brought home these three books:


Spellbinders: The Not-So-Chosen Ones by Andrew Auseon
Yellowface by R. F. Kuang
Pegasus: The Flame of Olympus (Pegasus #1) by Kate O'Hearn

What new books made it onto your shelf recently? 


I am in the process of downsizing my physical book collection (again), this time trying to be more ruthless. Since my husband's books are mixed in as well, he has some say. Although most are mine. My mom took a few bags full of books to give away, and hopefully I can get the rest to the  local library in good time. I still have a few more shelves to go through, mostly in other parts of the house, but I feel like I have made good progress so far! I even have empty shelves! As tempting as it will be to fill them with more books, I want to get some pet-friendly plants (that hopefully the cats won't actually get into) to maybe place in strategic locations on the shelves. (I apologize in advance for the angle these photos are taken from--there was some standing on couches required.)


Two empty shelves! I will likely rearrange the books a bit so the empty spaces are higher or more central--away from the cats as best I can manage.


I still have a couple of shelves on this side of the library to go through as you can see (both full of my daughter's books--we won't mention the giant basket of her books off camera in the corner), but I cleared one whole shelf (currently with owls keeping watch) and have space on a couple of others. 


This is my cats' favorite shelf to sit on to look out the window, especially when it's open. 


I also went through the bookcase by my bedside, which is where I keep most of my unread graphic novels and poetry books. A few of Mouse's books have found a home there as well for the time being, as I make my way through them. 

Many of the books I am letting go are books I have read (and do not feel the need to keep) or got so long ago I have lost interest in. I kept them in anticipation that my interest would swing back in their direction, but, truth be told, I have so many other books that I am eager to read--and the ones I'm less interested in just keep getting pushed farther back on my priority to read list. And of course there are favorites I cannot bring myself to part with. My next project will be to tackle the shelves in the spare bedroom . . . We're also hoping to get my daughter a new bookshelf for her room as her current one is overflowing and then some. 

Do you catalog your books? I have been using Goodreads for a number of years now to record the books I read,* but I use LibraryThing as a catalog for as all the books I own. I haven't been the best at keeping it updated, other than adding physical books that come in, and so one of my goals over the next few months (years?) is to slowly get that updated: add tags, remove books I no longer own or move them to the donated collection, and add e-books that haven't already been added (I'm sure there are a lot--I always forget to record my e-books). This will be an ongoing project for a long while, I imagine. 

*I have been using the free version of Storygraph  to record the books I read for about a year and a half as well to  see if I like it better than Goodreads,, but I am not sold on it. It has the neatest graphs and tables though. Here's my favorite one depicting the moods of the books I have read so far this year: 



I recently watched the first season of Invasion, a mix of a psychological drama and alien invasion series featuring an ensemble cast. It got off to a slow start for me, but it grew on me, and I would like to see the second season when it comes out.

Although I haven't read Wool by Hugh Howey, I watched the first season of Silo, which I really enjoyed. This science fiction dystopian series has me intrigued, and I have so many questions! Enough to read the books? I am still undecided. Have you read them? If so, what did you think?

My husband talked me into starting Severance, a science fiction psychological thriller, about a group of people who underwent a procedure separating their lives in such a way that their work self and personal life self  have no memory of each other and what the other does. We are almost half way through the first season and I am still not sure what I think of it, but my husband is enjoying it.

I am glad The Wonder Years is back for a second season. It is one of our favorite family shows. Remakes of shows do not always work out, but this one has its own charm and has won us over. 

What have you watched recently?


I hope you have a great week! 
Let me know what you have been up to!

© 2023, Musings of a Bookish Kitty. All Rights Reserved. If you're reading this on a site other than Musings of a Bookish Kitty or Wendy's feed, be aware that this post has been stolen and is used without permission.

Saturday, June 10, 2023

Weekly Mews: Reading Poetry / June's TBR Winner / And Hopefully Rain

I am linking up to the Sunday Post hosted by Kim of Caffeinated Book Reviewer and The Sunday Salon (TSS) hosted by Deb Nance of Readerbuzz  where participants recap our week, talk about what we are reading, share any new books that have come our way, and whatever else we want to talk about. I am also linking It's Monday! What Are you Reading? hosted by Kathryn of Book Date where readers talk about what they have been, are and will be reading.

I am linking up Stacking the Shelves hosted by Marlene of Reading Reality a meme in which participants share what new books came their way recently.  



I heard a rumor rain might be on the horizon. As much as I enjoy sunshine, I love rainy days, and they are rare enough here this time of year that I always look forward to them. So, I hope it does rain! 

We celebrated my husband's birthday the middle of the week--it was relatively lowkey despite being a milestone birthday. We plan to celebrate more this weekend and see Spiderman: Across the Spiderverse. We all enjoyed the first film in the series and are looking forward to the second. Last weekend Mouse and I dragged Anjin to see The Little Mermaid, which we all loved. My daughter is hoping she can talk her grandmother into taking her to see it again this summer. 

Today we went to see some of Mouse's friends perform in their end of the season dance recital. All the dancers did such a good job! And I think Mouse's friends were especially glad to have her there to support them. They got to spend some time together after the performances, making it extra fun for them all. It was nice to be a spectator this time around--not running in every direction to make sure costumes, make-up, and kids were in place. I miss the connections we made with people when Mouse was dancing at a studio, but I don't miss the too full schedules and constant running around as much.

Work was a little easier this past week--less busy, but still busy enough. I actually was able to get caught up on some of my online trainings finally. There's a big region meeting/potluck this coming week. 

What have you been up to? 

Finished reading this past week
Playing It Safe (Electra McDonnell #3) by Ashley Weaver (bookish mewsings to come)
Mom, Can I Do My Laundry at Your House?: Poems from Your Adult Child by Olivia Roberts 
Exile (Keeper of the Lost Cities #2) by Shannon Messenger
Flutter, Kick by Anna V.Q. Ross



In the middle of reading
Untangled: Guiding Teenage Girls Through the Seven Transitions into Adulthood by Lisa Damour



My TBR List is hosted by the awesome Michelle  at Because Reading. It’s a fun way to choose a book from your TBR pile to read. The 1st Saturday of every month, I will list 3 books I am considering reading and let you vote for my next read during that month. My review will follow (unfortunately, not likely in the same month, but eventually--that's all I can promise). 


Thank you to everyone who voted in this month's TBR poll! It was a close race, but ultimately there was only one winner. Weyward by Emilia Hart received 7 votes and The Last Heir to Blackwood Library by Hester Fox got 8 votes. The London Séance Society by Sarah Penner won with 10 votes! I will be starting The London Séance Society very soon and am looking forward to it!  


Thank you for voting! 
What are you reading? 


This week I picked up and read a review poetry book I received via Edelweiss (all opinions are my own), Mom, Can I Do My Laundry at Your House?: Poems from Your Adult Child by Olivia Roberts (Chronicle Books, 2023; 64 pgs). It is the type of book that would make a fun little gift for a mother as a way to say thank you--nothing serious, just for a chuckle and a hug. It's less insightful and more simplified, meant to bring a smile to the reader's face.

I found some of the poems more relatable than others--maybe because I'm an older adult child and some of the pop references are from a younger generation. But there were many relatable gems in the book too--like how my mom graciously doesn't say a word about my messy house when she visits, how she tolerated listening to my favorite songs over and over again while I was growing up (and still does with her grandchild), that she is "amazing, kind, patient, and beautiful", helped me with my homework when I was in school, mediated sibling fights, loved me and loves me still through my worst and best and every mood in between, and how good she is at folding fitted sheets (I still can't do it well), among other things.
When I was young I thought you were an invincible superhero

Now I realize you are just a human
and you have human feelings
and make human mistakes
and do all the other human things just like everyone else

You're still a superhero to me anyway [excerpt from Mom, Can I Do My Laundry at Your House?]

I come from there, with lavender
greenery small against the bricks. 
[opening of "House" by Anna V.Q. Ross]
I also read Flutter, Kick by Anna V.Q. Ross (Red Hen Press, 2022; 96 pgs). I wish I had words that could adequately convey how much I loved this collection of poems and just how much it resonated with me. The poems vary in style, and I admire the way Ross uses style and language with purpose. I loved the imagery in Ross's poems and the way she juxtaposes daily routines with reflections of loss, fears, and traumatic memories, sometimes touching on political and world events as well. I felt these poems as I read them and live many of them as a mother (especially of a daughter) and as a woman who was once a girl. Some made me cry, my own memories of trauma and fears as a mother facing me on the pages of the book, and others made me smile. There was one poem that made me laugh, in part because it is as if the poet could see the ads on my Facebook feed in "The Algorithm Thinks I Need a Girdle". 

That this collection of poems spoke to me makes it even more meaningful for me personally, but, in general, I found Ross's poetry to be not only insightful and though provoking, but also very well crafted. 
Is it an apparition, a machine of memory,
or is the story and remembering? 
["What Is the Poem" by Anna V.Q. Ross]

Have you read either of these collections of poetry? If so, what did you think? What poetry have you read lately? 


I was looking for a quick read one day recently and settled on "Million Dollar Baby" by Kim Harrison. It's one of the novellas in her Into the Woods anthology, based on her Hollows urban fantasy series. I have been enjoying the stories in this collection for the most part and this one was no different. Elf Trent Kalamack reluctantly teams up with Jenks, the pixie, in order to kidnap Trent's and Elisabeth's daughter, who had been kept from him by Elisabeth. The kidnapping is a good thing in that Elisabeth isn't the nicest of elves--and would let her daughter get killed in the crossfire if it meant taking out Trent. I liked seeing the relationship between Trent and Jenks evolve over the course of the novella. Trent doesn't trust many people and it shows. It was interesting to read a story told from Trent's point of view. He's not always as confident as he often comes across, afraid of becoming like his father and also of what Rachel thinks of him. Spending more time with Jenks is always a fun time. Don't underestimate the pixie! 

What short stories, novellas or essays have you read lately? 


At Mouse's recommendation, I squeezed in the second Keeper of the Lost Cities book, Exile, by Shannon Messenger (Aladdin, 2013; Middle Grade Fantasy; 576 pgs) earlier this week. These books are relatively fast reads despite being long. Exile picks up soon after the first book ended. Sophie is settling in with her adoptive parents at Havenfield, adjusting to life as an elf. Havenfield is the kind of place I would love to live: an animal rehabilitation center. Although not of animals you and I are familiar with. 

In Exile, Sophie befriends a rare mythical creature called an Alicorn and is tasked with training her so she can be moved safely to the sanctuary. The female alicorn is a sign of hope for the elven community and not everyone thinks Sophie is up for the job. But Silveny, the Alicorn, only trusts Sophie. There's also the little problem of the people who want to harm Sophie. They haven't been caught. And there are still secrets about her past and existence that Sophie would like to find answers to. Oh, and the fallout from when Emissary Adlen Vacker enlists Sophie to help him with his latest top secret job.

A lot seems to rest on this 13 year old's shoulders and I blame the adults. She's extraordinarily gifted, most likely more so than all the other elves. I am enjoying seeing the trouble she gets into--and is pulled into through no fault of her own--and how she gets out of it. She's got a great group of friends--although maybe too many guys who have crushes on her (Mouse is Team Keefe). I have some theories about who is behind what and what direction certain storylines may go, but there have been a few surprises along the way, and I look forward to seeing what Sophie and her friends end up doing next. 

Are you reading any children's or middle grade books right now? If so, what? 


The local independent bookstore is in between locations, but I was able to order a couple of books online through them. Originally, the owner planned to open at the new location later this month, but it looks like it will be after the first of July instead.  


The Bangalore Detectives Club (Kaveri and Ramu #1) by Harini Nagendra
Treasure Island by Robert Luis Stevenson (Mouse's request)

What new books made it onto your shelf recently? 


I hope you have a great week! Let me know what you have been reading!

© 2023, Musings of a Bookish Kitty. All Rights Reserved. If you're reading this on a site other than Musings of a Bookish Kitty or Wendy's feed, be aware that this post has been stolen and is used without permission.

Saturday, March 04, 2023

Weekly Mews: Reading A Little Bit of This and That & Welcome to March! (Please Vote in My TBR Poll!)

I am linking up to the Sunday Post hosted by Kim of Caffeinated Book Reviewer and The Sunday Salon (TSS) hosted by Deb Nance of Readerbuzz  where participants recap our week, talk about what we are reading, share any new books that have come our way, and whatever else we want to talk about. I am also linking It's Monday! What Are you Reading? hosted by Kathryn of Book Date where readers talk about what they have been, are and will be reading.






February was a very wet month in my part of the world, with lots of rain and strong winds. Then this past Wednesday, it snowed--an extra rare occurrence. Okay, so maybe it was really graupel, which is not snow exactly, but is more like little pellets created when water freeze on falling snowflakes. It's much softer than hail and is sometimes called snow pellets. So, for this Southern Californian, my family, and all of my neighbors who rarely experience snow except for admiring it on the on the distant surrounding mountain tops (or when we visit said mountains),  we are holding onto our delusion that it was snow. 



Unfortunately, February also brought illness our way. My mom came down with COVID, which I was not a big surprise considering how it was running rampant through the community where she lives. Luckily, she only had a mild case. My husband, daughter and I all caught colds, which seemed to linger awhile. Mouse ended up having to miss one of her Girl Scout cookie booth days, but she made up for it last weekend, working two booths at our assigned store. Armed with umbrellas and warm coats to combat the freezing weather, we were better just in time to attend the open house at the local middle school that was held for incoming seventh graders. We had been on the campus before for Mouse's band concerts last year, but this was the first time we were able to visit different classrooms, meet a handful of the teachers, and get a feel for the campus. I think we all came away feeling a little less anxious (although not entirely) about the transition from elementary school to middle school. At least for now. 

Currently reading: 


How the Word is Passed: A Reckoning with the History of Slavery Across America by Clint Smith
A Perilous Undertaking  (Veronica Speedwell) by Deanna Raybourn


My TBR List is hosted by the awesome Michelle  at Because Reading. It’s a fun way to choose a book from your TBR pile to read. The 1st Saturday of every month, I will list 3 books I am considering reading and let you vote for my next read during that month. My review will follow (unfortunately, not likely in the same month, but eventually--that's all I can promise). 

I could use your help deciding which book to read next! I went with a ghost theme this time around. I did not realize how many ghost themed books I have! I narrowed it down to these three because they appeal to me most right now. Which of these three books do you think I should read next? Have you read any of them? If so, what did you think? I can't wait to see which book you select for me!

The Sentence
by Louise Erdrich 
The Sentence asks what we owe to the living, the dead, to the reader and to the book.

A small independent bookstore in Minneapolis is haunted from November 2019 to November 2020 by the store's most annoying customer. Flora dies on All Souls' Day, but she simply won't leave the store. Tookie, who has landed a job selling books after years of incarceration that she survived by reading with murderous attention, must solve the mystery of this haunting while at the same time trying to understand all that occurs in Minneapolis during a year of grief, astonishment, isolation, and furious reckoning.

The Sentence begins on All Souls' Day 2019 and ends on All Souls' Day 2020. Its mystery and proliferating ghost stories during this one year propel a narrative as rich, emotional, and profound as anything Louise Erdrich has written. [Goodreads Summary]

Under the Whispering Door by T.J. Klune 
Welcome to Charon's Crossing.
The tea is hot, the scones are fresh, and the dead are just passing through.

When a reaper comes to collect Wallace from his own funeral, Wallace begins to suspect he might be dead.

And when Hugo, the owner of a peculiar tea shop, promises to help him cross over, Wallace decides he’s definitely dead.

But even in death he’s not ready to abandon the life he barely lived, so when Wallace is given one week to cross over, he sets about living a lifetime in seven days.

Hilarious, haunting, and kind, Under the Whispering Door is an uplifting story about a life spent at the office and a death spent building a home. [Goodreads Summary]

Episode Thirteen by Craig DiLouie
Fade to Black is the newest hit ghost hunting reality TV show. Led by husband and wife team Matt and Claire Kirklin, it delivers weekly hauntings investigated by a dedicated team of ghost hunting experts.

Episode Thirteen takes them to every ghost hunter's holy grail: the Paranormal Research Foundation. This brooding, derelict mansion holds secrets and clues about bizarre experiments that took place there in the 1970s. It's also famously haunted, and the team hopes their scientific techniques and high tech gear will prove it.

But as the house begins to reveal itself to them, proof of an afterlife might not be everything Matt dreamed of.

A story told in broken pieces, in tapes, journals, and correspondence, this is the story of Episode Thirteen — and how everything went terribly, horribly wrong.  [Goodreads Summary]


Thank you for voting!

March brings breezes loud and shrill,
Stirs the dancing daffodil. [excerpt from "The Months" by Sarah Coleridge]
I am keeping up with reading of at least one poem a day, making my way through A Nature Poem for Every Night of the Year edited by Jane McMorland Hunter. There's a beauty to these classic poems that just draw me to them. 

Below are a few snippets from poems that particularly moved me. I love the imagery of winter and the hope of spring to come that many of these poems speak of. 
The trees are bare, the sun is cold, 
And seldom, seldom seen;
The heavens have lost their zone of gold
The earth its robe of green

And ice upon the glancing stream
Hast cast its sombre shade
And distant hills and valleys seem
In frozen mist arrayed.
[excerpt from "The Blue Bell is the Sweetest Flower," verses 3-4, by Emily Bronte]
★                          ★                          ★
Another day awakes, And who - 
 Changing the world - is this?
He comes at whiles, the winter through,
 West Wind! I would not miss 
His sudden tryst: the long, the new
Surprises of his kiss.
[excerpt from "West Wind in Winter" by Alice Meynell]
★                          ★                          ★
Bending from Heaven, in azure mirth
It kiss'd the forehead of the Earth,
And smiled upon the silent sea, 
And bade the frozen streams be free, 
And waked to music all their fountains,
And breathed upon the frozen mountains
And like a prophetess of May
Strewed flowers upon the barren way
[except from "To Jane: The Invitation," verses 11-18, by Percy Bysshe Shelley]
★                          ★                          ★
How shall we open the door of Spring
 That Winter is holding wearily shut?
   Though winds are calling and waters brawling,
   And snow decaying and light delaying,
 Yet will it now move in its yielding rut
And back on its flowery hinges swing,
   Till wings are flapping
   And woodpeckers tapping
   With sharp, clear rapping 
      At the door of Spring.
[excerpt from "The Door of Spring" by Ethelyn Wetherald] 
Do any of these snippets speak to you too? Have you read any poetry recently that you would recommend?


I enjoy short stories from time to time but do not read them often. I always tell myself I should. I certainly have plenty of short story collections and anthologies. This past week, I finally cracked open my copy of Reader, I Married Him: Stories Inspired by Jane Eyre, edited by Tracy Chevalier. I am curious to see what direction each of the authors took with the stories they wrote for the anthology.

So far I have read the first three stories in this collection.  "My Mother's Wedding Day" by Tessa Hadley was interesting. It is the story of a young woman on the verge of adulthood, set on the day of her mother's summer solstice wedding to a much younger man. Jane and her family lead an unconventional life--even the wedding will be atypical--and Jane is figuring out how she fits into the world. I really liked "My Mother's Wedding Day" and could see the same spirit in Hadley's Jane as Jane Eyre herself, even if the two stories are very different from one another. 

Next I read Sarah Hall's "Luxury Hour" which is about a new mother who gets away for about an hour a day to swim and take some much needed time for herself. On this particular day, she runs into someone from her past and the memories come flooding back. A different time and life. An affair. While it was well written, I was not enamored with this story, admittedly. 

My favorite of the three is Helen Dunmore's "Grace Poole Her Testimony" which was wild. Dunmore's portrayal of Grace Poole, an employee at Thornfield Hall. As much as I love the novel Jane Eyre (and the character), this take on the characters was truly inspired. The story is written from the viewpoint of Grace and so it is all about her impressions of Jane Eyre and Mr. Rochester. I have no illusions about Mr. Rochester being a romantic hero, even as much as I love the novel, but he's even less likeable in this short story. 

★                          ★                          ★

I subscribe to way too many magazines that seem to pile up more than they get read. One magazine I do manage to get to, while not always right away but eventually, is Oh, Reader, which is a magazine specifically for readers about readers--with a good few book recommendations thrown in as well. 

In the most recent issue there was an article about iyashikei manga by Katie Gill, a librarian and podcaster. I asked my husband and daughter who are much more in the know about manga, and neither had heard of it before. It's a type of manga in which there isn't much conflict and is low on tension. I can see why Katie Gill is drawn to this type of manga. There are times when all I want to do is read low stake novels. I will have to give  iyashikei manga a try.  Two examples given were The Flying Witch by Chihiro Ishizuka and Girls Last Tour by Tsukumizu, which my daughter has said she wants to read now that she knows about them. So, we may start with those!

 Maggie Neal Doherty's article "On Not Marrying Our Books" is very relatable. She references reading Anne Fadiman's essay "Marrying Libraries" in Fadiman's book Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader. I remember reading that one too. Maggie and her husband decided not to mix their books, which I can completely understand. My husband and I did decide to merge our collections, and it was challenging at first. Especially when we came to duplicates because we each wanted to keep our own copies. But we did it. And that was that. For awhile. Our personal library today is not so much filled with his books as it is quite a bit more filled with mine; and we both have separate shelves that are strictly are own in another part of the house. I suppose that makes us somewhere in between Anne Fadiman and Maggie Neal Doherty--and still very much married.

What short stories have you read recently? Do you subscribe to any bookish magazines? Have you read any interesting articles or essays recently? 


Mouse is reading the first in the Five Kingdom's series, Sky Riders by Brandon Mull. She had to take a brief break from it when she realized her copy jumped from page 152 to 185 and then double printed thirty-two pages--definite a printing error there. Has that ever happened to you? She now has a new copy and is enjoying it very much.  On the manga front, Mouse is reading volume twelve in the Promised Neverland series by Kaiu Shirai and illustrated by Posuka Demizu.


She recently finished The Third Door by Emily Rodda. She thought the ending was a little bit confusing and said it was overall an okay read. She liked the first two books in the trilogy better. 


My husband I have been watching the first season of the original Doctor Who series featuring William Hartnell as the Doctor. My husband got me hooked on Doctor Who with the show's revival in 2005, and I have always wanted to go back and watch the original series. Neither of us have seen the early episodes before, but we are enjoying them more than I anticipated. Nine of the episodes during the first season are missing  (97 missing from the first six seasons), and so they are presented as episodes in production stills, with audio recordings  from random people who taped the shows while watching from their homes. I appreciate the BBC's effort to preserve and recover as many of the episodes as possible, but am relieved most of them are live action. 

What have you watched recently?

I hope you have a great week! Let me know what you have been up to and reading and watching!

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