... you are lucky enough to have a couple of early Christmas cactus blossoms,
I hope your week is off to a beautiful start!
Striving to be highly reasonable, even in the face of unreasonableness. Reading, knitting, and some alcohol may help.
... you are lucky enough to have a couple of early Christmas cactus blossoms,
I hope your week is off to a beautiful start!
I read four books this week so I'll share my thoughts here with you. The two average ones are up first.
While I think Mr. Davis tried to be 
somewhat evenhanded in presenting both the United States National Park 
perspective and that of Native Americans, but for me he was not 
completely successful. I came away with too many personal stories, too 
much history told in a rather dull, textbook-like way, and not enough 
from the Native American side of the story. For a book that sets out to 
center those voices, their presence often felt secondary.
Still, I
 appreciated Davis’s effort to grapple with such a difficult subject and
 his willingness to confront the political and moral complexities of the
 monument. A Biography of a Mountain is a thoughtful, if uneven, 
read that may appeal most to history buffs and those curious about how a
 single mountain can embody so many layers of the American story.
Thank
 you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for providing me with a copy of
 this book. It will be published on November 11, 2025. 
I’ve read John Grisham since his early days, when his legal thrillers were taut, fast-paced, and nearly impossible to put down. Unfortunately, The Widow didn’t have that same energy for me. The setup, a small-town lawyer whose new client turns out to be more than she appears, had some promise, but the story moved at a sluggish pace and often meandered through subplots that didn’t add much tension or urgency.
Simon Latch is an interesting enough protagonist, and the premise of being wrongly accused should have made for a sharp, suspenseful read. Instead, the narrative felt underwhelming, more reflective and procedural than thrilling. Grisham’s writing is still smooth and readable, but the spark that once made his courtroom dramas so gripping just wasn’t here.
All in all, The Widow was an average read, but not the kind of tightly wound legal thriller I used to read Grisham for. This one was also a three star read.
I’m happily joining Kat and the Unravelers today, with a completed Rainbow Scarf for Ryan and the beginnings of what will hopefully be a pair of socks for Justin. I took the scarf along when I visited Ryan on Monday, asked him to make sure he tried it on for length before I left, and then we both forgot. It's a bit longer than six feet, but I left it on the needle so I can easily take out a few inches if he thinks it's too long. I'll post a proper picture when it's done/approved and bound off.
What are you making and reading this week?
I consider myself lucky for lots of reasons, but today it’s because I have a kid who cooks really good food for me. Ryan enjoys being in the kitchen, and since John’s garden happens to be at Ryan’s house, we usually head over there once a week. While John checks the garden, Ryan makes us lunch. (Our soil here in New Jersey has untreatable verticillium wilt that makes it unsuited for a garden here and is also slowly killing our trees, but that’s a sad story for another day.)
We used to go out to diners, but no matter what we ordered, Ryan would usually say he could make it better. (And honestly, he’s right.) These days he often asks if there’s anything we’re hungry for, and I usually tell him it’s chef’s choice - whatever he feels like making is fine with me. He’s made us omelets, egg salad, grilled cheese, macaroni and cheese, hamburgers, sausage corn chowder, “supper on a bread slice” (a dish my mother used to make, but Ryan’s version is much improved), and his absolutely stellar onion soup gratinée.
Ryan sent me home with the leftovers. I am, without a doubt, very lucky.
Every year when my library puts up its Banned Books display, I can’t resist spending a little extra time browsing. There’s something both funny and thought-provoking about seeing which titles have landed on that list, and, in many cases, why.
This year, a few of the choices made me laugh out loud. Right there among the “dangerous” and “controversial” works were Bad Kitty and Captain Underpants. Really? Those mischievous cats and underwear-clad superheroes are what we’re worried about corrupting young minds?
When my sons were growing up in the 1990s, Captain Underpants books were a fixture in our household. They made the boys laugh, and, truth be told, they made me laugh, too. The idea that they’re banned for “offensive language,” being “unsuited for their age group,” or “encouraging disruptive behavior” is almost too funny to me. My kids were perfectly capable of coming up with their own disruptive behavior without any help from a cartoon character in his underwear.
Banned Books Week (it was October 5 -11 this year) is a good reminder of why libraries matter so much; they should be able to offer everyone the freedom to explore ideas, to question, to laugh, and to learn. Standing in front of that display each year, I’m grateful for the librarians who work hard to ensure those stories stay on the shelves, waiting for curious readers to discover them all over again. Checking out the books that make people uncomfortable are often the ones most worth reading.
I read several books this week but I'm saving a couple of them for a post I have planned for Friday. In the meantime, here is a slightly strange yet interesting book that I also read. Life, and Death, and Giants by Ron Rindo is one of those quietly 
unusual novels that sneaks up on you with its tenderness. I picked it up
 from my library’s shelves without quite knowing what to expect, and I 
ended up genuinely touched by its mix of fable-like wonder and 
small-town realism.
The story follows Gabriel Fisher, an orphan 
born extraordinarily large (eighteen pounds and twenty-seven inches at 
birth) whose life unfolds somewhere between myth and Midwest. Raised 
first by an older brother and later by strict Amish grandparents who try
 to hide him from the world, Gabriel’s journey is both physically and 
spiritually outsized. When a high school coach discovers him working in 
the fields, his secret life bursts into the open, setting off a series 
of events that test faith, love, and community.
Rindo writes 
beautifully about rural Wisconsin and the complex, sometimes 
claustrophobic ties of family and belief. There’s a quiet moral weight 
to the story, a sense that kindness and cruelty coexist in the same 
hearts. I especially appreciated how the novel balanced magical realism 
with grounded emotional truth.
That said, the pacing felt uneven 
at times, and a few plot turns veered toward the sentimental or 
predictable. Still, Gabriel himself is such a memorable character, both 
gentle and formidable, that I found myself thinking about him long after finishing.
... you start out reorganizing the freezer and somehow end up baking a cake. It was one of those “If You Give a Mouse a Cookie” kind of days, but with a very happy ending.
We have three chest freezers, mostly because we freeze a lot of garden produce, and both John and Justin hunt. Every fall, I have to clean them out and reorganize things so I can actually find (and use) what’s inside. I finished one freezer and had just started on the second when I discovered a bag of cranberries I’d frozen, probably last Thanksgiving. I moved them to the fridge to thaw, and then thought about them every time I opened the door.
Here’s Laurie’s recipe, in case you’d like to try it, too: