Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Unraveled Wednesday: 1/17/24

I'm joining Kat and fellow Unravelers with the same old Funfetti Hitchhiker, looking much the same except for the addition of eight or ten teeth. There are four or five inches of snow on the ground and I couldn't bring myself to go out and arrange the Hitchhiker for a photo in the snow. The best picture I could manage was the Hitchhiker in a pile in front of my snow day baking yesterday (two loaves of zucchini bread and one cheese bread to go with chili from the crockpot).

I hope to finish the Funfetti fun soon, but I'm not going to make any promises or even educated guesses. 

I finished two books before I started on the many books I requested from NetGalley over the holidays. Notes on Your Sudden Disappearance and House Love were both three-star books for me. If you'd like to read my reviews for them, you can click on the book title in the Read section in the right-hand sidebar. The first ARC book that I finished for NetGalley was a bit of a mindf**k but in a good way. Fluke, by Atlantic writer Brian Klaas, deals with chance, chaos, and why everything we do matters. In No Country for Old Men, Cormac McCarthy wrote “You never know what worse luck your bad luck has saved you from.” I've considered that on several occasions in my life, but after reading Fluke I may have to consider that luck might not even exist. The author wonders "whether the history of humanity is just an endless, but futile, struggle to impose order, certainty, and rationality onto a world defined by disorder, chance, and chaos.” Klaas opens the book with the story of how Hiroshima and Nagasaki were chosen to be bombed, and it comes down to the fact that Henry Stimson, US Secretary of War, had visited Kyoto and took that city off the list so Hiroshima was bombed instead. Clouds covered Kokura which had been the target of the second atomic bomb but cleared over Nagasaki at the last possible moment.

The many examples in the book can mess with our views of "everything happens for a reason" and be a bit disconcerting. Klaas writes that "the natural world seems to seesaw between contingency and convergence." "Convergence is the “everything happens for a reason” school of evolutionary biology. Contingency is the “stuff happens” theory." It turns out that very little is in our direct control and that idea is somewhat freeing. Klaas is not recommending that we all just wait in bed for stuff to happen to us because, in a world full of flukes and random occurrences, we can still have an effect: “What you do matters. But it also matters that it's you, and not somebody else, who's doing it.” Fluke provides a readable, interesting way to think about (and maybe even better understand) our infinitely complex world and our role in it. The book will be published January 23, 2024. 

What are you making and reading this week?

18 comments:

  1. I was just thinking that today would be a good day to bake something (if only to heat up the house a little more), so perhaps I'll take some bananas out of the freezer for just that, inspired by your baking.

    Fluke sounds like a really interesting read and one that would really make you think a bit differently about everything. I just finished a really thought-provoking book (I'll talk about it in my post today) and am listening to an audio ARC of Laurie Frankel's newest novel, which thankfully doesn't require me to think too hard. And of course I'm still knitting my sweater!

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  2. I think that Funfetti Hitchhiker is the perfect addition to those yummy looking loaves of bread!

    Fluke sounds curious... and as a person who does not believe in luck this might be a good book for me! Thanks for the excellent review!

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  3. I love the warm and cosy photo you took inside instead of outside and I'm a little hungry after seeing your baking!!

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  4. I'm munching on a bagel, but I'd rather have some of your bread. The Hitchhiker is just so darn pretty - you can show it in every post as far as I'm concerned. Fluke does sound interesting...not sure it's for me, but books that make you think and question are always a good choice!

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  5. Cheese bread? Did you say . . . cheese bread???? That sounds pretty darn heavenly to me. (I think I may need the recipe . . . ) Your Funfetti Hitchhiker looks perfect nestled among the fresh loaves! (It can meet the snow some other day. . . )

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  6. Those breads look amazing. I keep eyeing my little oven and thinking about baking something but then I try to bend over and realize my tummy is suddenly getting in the way. Back to my pre-holiday diet, I'm afraid. It was fun while it lasted.

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    1. I did not need the zucchini bread but I have loads of shredded zucchini in the freezer from the garden last summer. It's got vegetables in it so it must be healthy! :-)

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  7. Those breads look good and it's definitely the perfect weather for baking!

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  8. Now I'm stuck on cheese bread & chili!! Mmmmm.

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  9. You've definitely piqued my curiosity with your Fluke review....AND I'm kinda wanting to eat some of that cheese bread!! I've never made that...is there a recipe you recommend?

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    1. Here's the recipe I used (nice and simple): https://www.spendwithpennies.com/cheese-bread-quick-bread/

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  10. Cheese bread and chili? yummmm!! also, Fluke does sound ... interesting!

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  11. The funfetti looks lovely beside those loaves. Warm cheese bread sounds very good this time of year. Fluke intrigues. I've never been a "Stuff happens for a reason" person but I guess I never thought of it in opposition to the other "Stuff just happens." The book sounds like it makes the reader consider ideas in different ways and that is always a good thing.

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  12. I like the look of that hitchhiker with the Lacey Hall, I’ve met a few of the regular type. I’m gonna have to look that pattern up.
    It’s cold here in England, like everywhere in the northern hemisphere at the moment, and we had warming Bean Chilli last night with a slice of my sourdough. You’re making me think I missed a trick and should’ve made a cheese one! Next time…

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    1. PS I’m also a NetGalley reader and started one titled The Shadow Key last night. Enjoyed the first few chapters a lot.

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    2. That Hitchhiker is just the same as the "regular" pattern, except the 8th row is replaced with a row of k2tog, yo after the the 5-stitch bind off for the tooth.

      The cheese bread was good, but I bet your sourdough was better!

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  13. I never get tired of looking at that HH, Bonny. It's just the ticket in this subzero weather we are having. Makes me remember sunshine and balmy breezes will be back. OK, you got me at cheese bread! That might just be the thing I am need this week. Fluke sounds like a fascinating book, but I am ambivalent about it after your review. I am simultaneously drawn to it and repelled by it. I feel about luck as I do fate. The logical part of my brain says that they fall right into the same category as religion. All of those concepts have always seemed to be human attempts to create constructs of this world that explain the inexplicable in order to comfort us. After all, entropy is not very comforting or encouraging! I am going to mull over whether or not I need to read this book, but I very much appreciate your review.

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  14. I am firmly in the anti-everything-happens-for-a-reason camp. The world is random, things happen, both good and bad and indifferent, but it is a human tendency to try to see a pattern. There is no pattern except the seasons. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

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