Sunday, January 25, 2026

Super Bad Timing

  



So, last year, on Friday before Thanksgiving, I had my meeting with a dietician to discuss my pre-diabetic blood sugar readings. Wow, what bad timing. Apparently it’s not just a matter of the right fractions on a plate but a need to maintain a low total of carbs per meal. Even if that meal is Thanksgiving dinner.

Two bookclubs in the weekend cheered me up a bit, and I managed to make the sides assigned to me (pinwheels, pumpkin pie, and a last minute liverwurst thing that appears to have no carbs). And on Thanksgiving itself my family supported me by never passing the rolls and stealing all the pie.

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 61 books. That’s creeping back down. The library thinks I have 65 books checked out, which is way too many and many of them are approaching their due dates. But, a few more are picture books so I’ll finish them on time. 

Books Completed November 21 - 27


Semiotics, Sue Burke. This was full of cool ideas, with a band of idealists trying to colonize a new planet and their struggles to survive over generations as technology fails and their understanding of the environment evolves. The human relationships are complex and often difficult, although we don’t spend much time with anyone as the book moves over five or so generations. The relationships across species introduce questions about what it means to be a person, to be exploited, to be intelligent. The conversation with book club went over literary, intellectual and scientific questions and was really engaging.

Diary of an 8 Bit Warrior: Shadow Over Aetheria, Cube Kid. Yeah, this is aimed squarely at the early reader market and missed me by a mile. Starting with book 8 didn’t help. Some jokes went under my feet and others over my head because of my limited Minecraft nous.

I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson. I like how some poems are moments in nature, some are facets of humanity, and some are ice cold understandings of death.

Please Pay Attention, Jamie Sumner. Eh, I hadn’t realized this was a free verse book. It mostly read like a lot of hitting return on the typewriter. But I like seeing the world from a wheelchair view.

Framed in Death, J.D. Robb. Bad guy was bad, Eve is good, torture scenes not super graphic. So a fun one.

Sarah Journeys West, Nikki Shannon Smith. I liked this one. It’s an African American’s family view of the Oregon trail, which is an angle I haven’t seen. The kid is still ahistorical and I found it annoying how often she was right and her family was wrong and how well they ok that, but there were lots of factual details which are the strengths of this series so the ungrounded characters didn’t ruin things for me.

What Feasts At Night, T. Kingfisher. On this reread I noticed how much I like the relationship with the batman and how much horror I had managed to forget. The dream horse stuff will hopefully disappear from my nightmares again.

The Farwalker’s Quest, John Sensel. A really cool Cybils fantasy from 2008. I like these kids books that don’t stop to explain the child’s emotional state and problems, instead focusing on action that lets me see that stuff for myself. There was real risk and trauma, which was a problem for squeamish adult me but should be fine for kids.

Books Started

How I Got My Shrunken Head, R.L. Stine. Goosebumps book.
Sarah Journeys West, Nikki Shannon Smith. A Girls Survive book.
Diary of an 8 Bit Warrior: Shadow Over Aetheria, Cube Kid. A MineCraft book.
Alex Wise Vs the Cosmic Shift, Terry J Benton-Walker. Sequel.
Please Pay Attention, Jamie Sumner. Grabbed on sight while library sampling.
The Serviceberry, Robin Wall Kimmerer. Wanted more from this author.
What Feasts At Night, T. Kingfisher. Reread for Cloudy book club.
Moon Of the Crusted Snow, Waubgeshig Rice. For Torches and Pitchforks.
Claudia and Mean Janine Graphic Novel, Ann Martin & Raina Telgemeier. Comparing to the text one.



Bookmarks Moved

The Pursuit of… , Courtney Milan
The Way of Kings, Brandon Sanderson
Ascendance of a Bookworm, Fanbook 7, Miya Kazuki
Gold Dust, Catherine Asaro
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
Ice Cold, Tess Gerritsen.
All the Beauty in the World, Patrick Brinkley
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger
Inventing the Renaissance, Ada Palmer
Arabella of Venus, David Levine
Floating Hotel, Grace Curtis


Bookmarks Languished


I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!                                       
                                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                 True Colors, Abby Cooper
                                                                                                           South Riding, Winifred Holtby                     
                                                   Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
                                                   The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
                                                   Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
                                           Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
                                          Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles                        
                                 The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell 
                        Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi
               The Last Witchfinder, James K. Morrow. Scintillation book club.  
         An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
         So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
      Hello Stranger, Lisa Kleypas
      Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
   One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
   Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
   Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
   The Library of Borrowed Hearts, Lucy Gilmore
   Bluebird, Ciel Pierrot
3 Days, 9 Months, 27 Years, John Scalzi

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

None.

Books on Slow Mode


Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Organizing one’s laundry is the current topic.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe. Emily Dickinson is cool.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon James. The ending moves back to the personal.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. My gaming is not on this level.
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. I’m getting some good ideas for kid management. 

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Fair Trade
  • Library Book: Hazel Boy and the Deep Blue Sea
  • Friend Book Club: Ladagna Means I Love You
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  The Witch’s Guide to Innkeeping
  • Sword and Laser Club Book: I’m Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom
  • Scintillation Book Club: Aunt Munda
  • Cloudy Book Club:  Wooing the Witch Queen
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  How to Fall in Love With Questions
  • Romance Book Club: Art of Love
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: The God of the Woods

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Days Getting Dark

 


Hmm. Back in November my sister, my son, and I volunteered again at the CERT graduation exercise, playing very annoying victims. We always show up early to get some wounds painted on. It’s a good review of my CERT skills as well. I’m also getting back into running, with an emphasis on not falling down. And I snuck into the local school’s book fair and got some books and some book adjacent toys, mainly notebooks.

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 67 books (I’m actually writing this on New Years Day). That’s creeping up again but I’m falling behind on marking things done so not as badly as it appears. The library thinks I have 65 books checked out, which is way too many and many of them are approaching their due dates.

Books Completed November 14 - 20

Heavenly Tyrant, Xiran Jay Zhao. This Lodestar (not a Hugo) nominee took me a few tries to get through. I couldn’t  get immersed in the protagonist’s voice, partly because I’m old and she’s definitely a very passionate teen, and partly because she kept angrily circling the same emotional paths. But I like the worldbuilding and the questions it raises. I like how revolution is messy and demands compromises as well as determination, and how decisions can be reevaluated after seeing how things are working.

North Woods, Daniel Mason. I enjoyed this biography of an apple orchard, but I felt the pieces were stronger than the sum of its parts. I didn’t like the occasional dips into ghosts and mysticism, which grew stronger at the end, leaving me with a feeling of emptiness. But it was an interesting read and the library book group had some good things to say.

Some Sunny Day, Adam Baron. Great luck with this pick from the next shelf at the Renton Highlands library. Cam was a fun kid with an interesting family and an exotic life (he’s English). I liked his intense way of dealing with the world and his loyalty to the people who make him food.

Dad Rock Dragon Quest, Joan Reardon. I liked the character development in these books, which felt necessary but not very didactic. Seeing the protagonist learn to understand her dad’s flaws as well as his good points was fun, especially when there are dragons. I kinda hope she learns to do that with her mom and the mom’s boyfriend, because they kinda seemed to be using dad’s more flamboyant flaws to get away with taking their own shortcuts. 

The Babysitters’ Summer Vacation, Ann M. Martin. Kid summer camps are always a fun fantasy for me, and now I’m enjoying seeing how different the TV show take on this is.

Rafe: A Buff Male Nanny, Rebekah Witherspoon. This felt a little odd to me, because it was half a sensitive story of two adults working out good boundaries for a loving relationship and half those same adults having very raunchy sex along the way. Witherspoon was good at both, but for me those are different reading experiences so not knowing what the page would bring me kept me on my toes.

The Gentleman’s Book of Vices, Jess Everlee. I’m glad I finished this; it was sweet.

Thirst, Mary Oliver. Very good bedtime reading. Some poems that knock the top of your head off.

Books Started

The Pursuit of… , Courtney Milan. A trusty and trusted writer of  historical romance. 
Ascendance of a Bookworm, Fanbook 7, Miya Kazuki. I’m still addicted.
Framed in Death, J. D. Robb. I’m here for another one.
3 Days, 9 Months, 27 Years, John Scalzi. I’m getting a kindle for Xmas (shh, don’t tell me what I got me) and it comes with Kindle Unlimited so this fell into my electronic hands).
Dad Rock Dragon Quest, Joan Reardon. Fun fantasy I saw while visiting libraries.
Rafe: A Buff Male Nanny, Rebekah Witherspoon. For Doctor month at our romance club.
The Gentleman’s Book of Vices, Jess Everlee. Huh, this was a dnf (did not finish) that I meant to get back to.
Ice Cold, Tess Gerritsen. I’m jumping into the Rizzoli & Isles series at #8, but I’ve seen at least ten minutes of the tv show so I grabbed this from the G shelf for my Renton Reading My Library Quest.


Bookmarks Moved

The Way of Kings, Brandon Sanderson
Gold Dust, Catherine Asaro
Semiotics, Sue Burke
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
All the Beauty in the World, Patrick Brinkley
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger
Inventing the Renaissance, Ada Palmer
Arabella of Venus, David Levine
The Farwalker’s Quest, John Sensel
Floating Hotel, Grace Curtis
I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson    

Bookmarks Languished


I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!                                       
                                                                                                                               
                                                                                                              True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                                                        South Riding, Winifred Holtby                     
                                                Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
                                                The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
                                                Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
                                        Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
                                       Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles                        
                              The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell 
                     Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi
            The Last Witchfinder, James K. Morrow. Scintillation book club.  
      An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
      So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
   Hello Stranger, Lisa Kleypas
   Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
The Library of Borrowed Hearts, Lucy Gilmore
Bluebird, Ciel Pierrot


Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories


Iggy Peck, Architect, Andrea Beaty. This series is great it all its formats. I liked the concept, the illustrations and the rhymes.
Do You Want to Be My Friend?, Eric Carle. This book is very proud of how it is teaching all these pre reading skills, but I think it is so fun that even the parents won’t notice.
The Princess and the Pony, Kate Beaton. Ugly pony, polite Princess, and a good example of thinking outside the box. I read this a few years ago and enjoyed it again.
Still a Family: a Story About Homelessness, Breanna Reeves Sturgis. Does what it says on the tin.
SumoKitty, David Beidrzycki. Excellent life lessons from an excellent kitty.
Robobaby, David Weisner. Excellent book about the importance of older siblings when getting a new robobaby.
The World Needs More Purple People, Kristen Bell. Kinda preachy but I liked it. I think one of my kids would have resented the didacticism and the other would have only heard a suggestion to dye himself purple.
Yes You Can, Cow!, Rashmi Sirdeshpandi. Recommended by the Even the Trunchbull podcast, this was as good as I expected. I think stage families would appreciate it.
Dim Sum Palace, X. Fang. Another winner from the Even the Trunchbull podcast. It’s a bedtime story, a love story to dumplings, a cosy story, and now I’m hungry.

Books on Slow Mode


Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Organizing one’s laundry days is the current topic.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe. Emily Dickinson is cool.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon James. The ending moves back to the personal.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. My gaming is not on this level.
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. I’m getting some good ideas for kid management. 

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Fair Trade
  • Library Book: The Memory Thieves
  • Friend Book Club: Movie month!
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  The Martian
  • Sword and Laser Club Book: I’m Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom
  • Scintillation Book Club: Morgaine Chronicles
  • Cloudy Book Club:  Wooing the Witch Queen
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  How to Fall in Love With Questions
  • Romance Book Club: Snowed in together: Stitch in Snow
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Orbital 

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Funny Faces



In early November I slowly started getting back into running, with not falling my highest priority. I hiked and walked as well. The numbness on my face has receded to mostly a small part of my lip which somehow I mostly notice while driving. Not while talking or eating really, just while driving.

So I guess I make a lot of funny faces and contorting my mouth as part of my driving process? No wonder I’m such an excellent driver! 

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 61 books (I’m actually writing this on New Years Day). That’s accurate as I worked at cleaning up the list yesterday.

Books Completed November 7 - 13

What Stalks the Deep, T. Kingfisher. A reread that I was looking forward to; I like the sworn-soldier idea and its implementation. I had managed to forget how far into horror this got; the whole sequence with the horses shedding and stuff was very vivid.

Boy-Crazy Stacey, Ann M. Martin. I liked how the kids would talk to the babysitters and how they dealt with some fears that way. The TV adaption changed that to a crush on the babysitters. Humph.

I Survived the Great Chicago Fire, 1871, Lauren Tarshis. Although the illustrations of the fire were great, I still prefer the written version because of the greater character development and period details.

Faye and the Dangerous Journey, Kim Sigafus. This one is good at period details, although once again the kid seems modern.  Good history but duller stories.

Pokémon Sun and Moon 7, Hidenori Kusaka. I am definitely losing track of the sub plots, but I’m all in on the million dollar quest and also better pharmaceuticals.

At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. I loved falling into this book and hanging out with the characters.

Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer. I’m too old for teen romance. Even with zombies. But I see why it was a Cybils finalist.


Books Started

What Stalks the Deep, T. Kingfisher. Cloudy pick.
Floating Hotel, Grace Curtis. Sword and Laser pick.
Faye and the Dangerous Journey, Kim Sigafus. A Girl Survives book.
Thirst, Mary Oliver. Next poetry book and I’m here for it.
Gold Dust, Catherine Asaro. More about Bhaaj and her Dust Knights.
Pokémon Sun and Moon 7, Hidenori Kusaka. Gotta get the whole series!
Semiotics, Sue Burke. Scintillation book club pick.
The Babysitters’ Summer Vacation, Ann M. Martin. It’s a super special! (That means all the girls get to narrate.)



Bookmarks Moved

The Way of Kings, Brandon Sanderson
One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
Arabella of Venus, David Levine
The Farwalker’s Quest, John Sensel
Some Sunny Day, Adam Baron
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger
Inventing the Renaissance, Ada Palmer
All the Beauty in the World, Patrick Brinkley.
The Library of Borrowed Hearts, Lucy Gilmore
North Woods, Daniel Mason
Bluebird, Ciel Pierrot
Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao

Bookmarks Languished


I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!                                       
                                                                                                                               
                                                                                                           True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                                                     South Riding, Winifred Holtby                     
                                             Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
                                             The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
                                             Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
                                     Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
                                    Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles                        
                           The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell 
                  Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi
         The Last Witchfinder, James K. Morrow. Scintillation book club.  
   An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
   So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
Hello Stranger, Lisa Kleypas
I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson    
Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

I’m Sorry You Got Mad, Kyle Lukoff. A shade too didactic, but I still enjoyed it. It’s a kid forced to rewrite an apology until it has the actual shape of an apology, with illustrations showing the context of the kid’s emotions and his relationship with the one he harmed as well as other classmates. I like it when picture books use illustrations and text separately to build a bigger story.

The Book That Kibo Wrote, Mariana Ruiz Johnson. Kind of funky illustrations but a neat idea of how a book affects different people. It’s the teacher saying of doors and windows, but shown in how each animals relates to Kibo’s book - as an exotic other world or as nostalgia or whatever.



Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Shopping for towels.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon James. The ending moves back to the personal.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. My gaming is not on this level.
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. I’m getting some good ideas for kid management. 

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Fair Trade
  • Library Book: Ghosted
  • Friend Book Club: Movie month!
  • Hugo Finalist: Reread Short Stories
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Hugo Short Stories, 
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:   The Book That Wouldn’t Burn
  • Scintillation Book Club: Morgaine Chronicles
  • Cloudy Book Club:  The Gilded Crown
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Canticle For Leiberwitz
  • Romance Book Club: Snowed in together: Stitch in Snow
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Orbital 

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Candy For Everyone!




On Halloween day I realized I hadn’t decorated at all, so I dragged out the bin and put up stuff. Then I went to get my COVID shot. I had just enough candy to last the evening, although I was lucky it was rainy and unpleasant because I had no spares. The streets were pretty empty when I turned off all the lights and went to hide upstairs.
The next day I was tired from the shot but still managed a bit of a run; my face still is numb in spots so I’m fairly careful how I step. And this week I managed to knock off a few more libraries for my list.

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 80 books, but I’m so far behind at marking things as complete that who knows. The library thinks I have 74 physical books checked out. In unrelated news, I have completed my quest to visit all KCLC libraries (in real time, not back in October). 

Books Completed  Oct 31 - Nov 6


Lily and the Great Quake, Veeda Bybee. A Girl Survives book. I’m still chugging through these but they aren’t as rich as the Tarshis books. Lily is a girl who likes her book and is there for the San Francisco earthquake; the book is strong on action and some facts but light on historical feel and character development.

Interview With the Vampire, Anne Rice. Wow did this make me feel old, because I have vague memories of reading it back in the day and I was so clueless. I missed all the erotic bits between the guys. These men are professing their love for each other and it went right over my head. Also I had completely forgotten the interviewer until the scene at the very end; what a gormless chump.

Rei Escapes Disaster Graphic Novel, Susan Griner. Another depiction of the tidal wave (I read an I Survived book about it). This one has the viewpoint of local school kids. I’m still hung up on the teacher sending two of the kids back on their own for some reason, because that made the narrative better but the teacher seem incompetent. Also I’m so old it’s hard for me to read the black and white comics.

Come See the Fair, Gabriel Savin. I got halfway through this as a Cybils reader a year ago before deciding it wasn’t strong enough, but I hate unfinished books so I went back. It took a lot for me to sympathize with the main character as she stopped doing things quickly and didn’t start again until two-thirds through when there was no one else to do things. And the ending didn’t satisfy me. But it’s a good story and brings 1800s Chicago to life.

Hundredfold, Anthony Esolen. These poems respect both poetic forms and the Roman Catholic understanding of Christ. I appreciated the love and effort that went into them although none begged me to take it home. But each one is part of the bigger edifice Esolen is building, and I enjoyed reading through his book.

Mary Anne Saves the Day, Graphic Novel, Ann Martin and Raina Telgemeier. Fun but not as good as the original. I like the nuance of a written book.

I Survived the California Wildfires, 2018, Lauren Tarshis. Wow, this kid has such a big problem that even the wildfire takes a while to get his attention. And history is getting very recent — probably school kids can remember the fires.

Anya Flees the Fallout, Erin Falligant. Early year I read an adult history of Chernobyl, so I was interested to see how the Girls Survived book showed the experience from a kid’s point of view. Needless to say it was not encouraging to hear her dad was a fireman (sent in to literally shovel on top of the radioactive pile) and that she had a beloved pet (all pets were abandoned and then shot as radioactive), and that was before her grandfather opted not to evacuate his home. Anya seemed to vary in age according to narrative requirements and her parents clearly kept their opinions of Russian news veracity from her and her older brother.

Spook, Mary Roach. For Torches & Pitchforks book club. Roach is always fun as she wanders about to experts and asks questions even if they are dumb. Sometimes the questions are dumb, sometimes the experts are, but it mostly works. The chapter in India didn’t age that well but after that rough start we mostly had fun.

Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum. For my Hugo judging I skipped to the essays about things I’ve read or seen, but it was worth going back to read the rest. I like her way of taking literature seriously on its own terms, judging it by what questions it asks and how it answers them. Even when I disagreed with her I appreciated how she made her points. 

The Poisoned King, Katherine Rundall. Although not as perfect as the previous book, that’s a high bar that leaves a lot of room for a good read. I liked the characters and the situations and the illustrations and the way actions had consequences.

Books Started


Rei Escapes Disaster Graphic Novel, Susan Griner. A Girls Survive book.
All the Beauty in the World, Patrick Brinkley. Recommended by a librarian.
Anya Flees the Fallout, Erin Falligant. A Girls Survive book.
The Poisoned King, Katherine Rundall. Because I loved book 1.
I Survived the Great Chicago Fire, 1871, Lauren Tarshis. I’ve already read the graphic novel.
Boy-Crazy Stacey, Ann M. Martin. Another babysitter club book.


Bookmarks Moved

The Way of Kings, Brandon Sanderson
Bluebird, Ciel Pierrot. 
Arabella of Venus, David Levine
Some Sunny Day, Adam Baron
Hello Stranger, Lisa Kleypas
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger
I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson    
Inventing the Renaissance, Ada Palmer
North Woods, Daniel Mason. 
Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
The Farwalker’s Quest, John Sensel
One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name

Bookmarks Languished


I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!   
                                        
                                                                                                                        Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno             
                                                                                                        True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                                                  South Riding, Winifred Holtby                     
                                          Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
                                          The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
                                          Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
                                  Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
                                 Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles                        
                        The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell 
               Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi
         The Last Witchfinder, James K. Morrow. Scintillation book club.
      Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
      Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

Ahoy, Sophie Blackall. A good story about imaginative play with the illustrations dancing between reality and the game, but I found the artistic style a bit repellent. The people fell into an uncanny valley for me. But this was a personal thing;I bet most kids would like it.

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Shopping for towels.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Long slow ending is like finishing a milkshake; good to last drop.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon James. I liked the essay in Track Changes about this book.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. 
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. I like that I remember these books. Or not; I had confused Last Stop On Market Street with a different book.

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Red Dragon Codex
  • Library Book: The Sailor Cipher
  • Hugo Finalist: So Let Them Burn
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Hugo Short Stories, 
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:   The Book That Wouldn’t Burn
  • Scintillation Book Club: My Name Is Red
  • Cloudy Book Club:  The Gilded Crown
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Canticle For Leiberwitz
  • Romance Book Club: Snowed in together: Stitch in Snow
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Orbital 
  • Talbot Hill Book:  realistic fiction, school stories
  • Friday Book Club:  Movie Night!

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Volunteer and Make Friends, They Said



I’m so far behind I barely remember what was going on. I marched in a rally (No Kings!), gave blood, met my new Ukrainian friend so she could practice English with me, went to see Patricia Briggs talk about her new book (and bought said new book), and complained about my slowly de-numbing face. Oh, the power went out for a day so we went out to brunch and they let us recharge all our devices. Thank you, Countryside Cafe!

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 77 books, but I’m so far behind at marking things as complete that who knows. The library thinks I have 80 physical books checked out. In unrelated news, I have completed my quest to visit all KCLC libraries (in real time, not back in October). 

Books Completed  Oct 24 - 30


I Survived the American Revolution, Lauren Tarshis. An I Survived book. Once again I prefer the original to the graphic novel retelling, despite the latter’s great illustrations. I enjoy seeing the interiority of the character, and Tarshis makes each one individual and complex. I felt his friendship with the Black workers was earned, not just pushing modern sensibilities back into the past to make a character more,sympathetic.

Blind Date With a Werewolf, Patricia Briggs. I went to hear the author talk about this book and her writing in general, and she was great. Then I wandered over to buy a copy, and my friends joined me although they have moved completely digital in their reading. I thought she did a great job taking some stories originally written as a lark and building a book with an arc and a theme from them; I expected a book of short stories and got a novel.

Where the Woods End, Charlotte Salter. I met this author so I went out to get her book, and it was good and powerful and far too scary for wimpy me. The danger to the kids, both physical and psychological, was very real and conveyed with skill and yikes, it was hard to finish. But I think it would be great for kids.

Give Me a Reason, Jayci Lee. The Tacoma Extreme Library Challenge has a Slot for K-drama, so I grabbed this book about a star returning to California where she has a second chance romance. It was fun, but emotionally the couple came across more as the late teens they were when they tragically parted so she could go off and save the family fortune by become a K-drama star. Hey, I don’t think she ever learns about the zillions he made as a nebulous investment guy before becoming a fireman. 

Books Started


Lily and the Great Quake, Veeda Bybee. A Girl Survives book.
Spook, Mary Roach. For Torches & Pitchforks book club.
Bluebird, Ciel Pierrot. Partner read for a book club.
Blind Date With a Werewolf, Patricia Briggs. Buy on sight author.
I Survived the California Wildfires, 2018, Lauren Tarshis. Only a few left.
North Woods, Daniel Mason. River Runs Under It pick.
Mary Anne Saves the Day, Graphic Novel, Ann Martin and Raina Telgemeier. Fun but not as good as the original.
Hello Stranger, Lisa Kleypas. Romance with a doctor, for Romance book club.


Bookmarks Moved


The Way of Kings, Brandon Sanderson
Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
Arabella of Venus, David Levine
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
The Farwalker’s Quest, John Sensel
Interview With the Vampire, Anne Rice
Hundredfold, Anthony Esolen
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
Some Sunny Day, Adam Baron
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger
An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
Come See the Fair, Gabriel Savin
Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
Inventing the Renaissance, Ada Palmer

Bookmarks Languished


I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!   
                                        
                                                                                                                     Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno             
                                                                                                     True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                                               South Riding, Winifred Holtby                     
                                       Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
                                       The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
                                       Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
                               Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
                              Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles
                        I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson    
                     The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell 
            Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi
            One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
      The Last Witchfinder, James K. Morrow. Scintillation book club.
   Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
   Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford


Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

Super Goat Girl, Tracey Baptiste. Recommended by the podcast Even the Trunchbull, this is a fun book about a new kid in a class of superheroes. She’s unsure of herself but has hidden strengths, yet her classmates are a little hesitant to accept her. There are great illustrations and clever puns (the teacher, who gets rescues a lot, is Miss Damsel) and goats are cool.

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. On to picking the right material for a household linen job. Or a carpet.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Long slow ending is like finishing a milkshake; good to last drop.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon James.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. 
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. I like that I remember these books. Or not; I had confused Last Stop On Market Street with a different book.

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Red Dragon Codex
  • Library Book: Tom Lake
  • Hugo Finalist: So Let Them Burn
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Hugo Short Stories, 
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  Floating Hotel, The Book That Wouldn’t Burn
  • Scintillation Book Club: Fangirl
  • Cloudy Book Club:  What Feasts At Night, The Gilded Crown
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Moon of the Crusted Snow, Canticle For Leiberwitz
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Barracoon
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Animal Stories, nonfiction
  • Friday Book Club: Some Sherlock Holmes pastiche

Sunday, November 30, 2025

Numb Face, Faint Heart



I’m so far behind I barely remember what was going on. I marched in a NomKings rally and complained about my slowly de-numbing face. We had a friends bookclub but over zoom because of traffic, and we heard more stories about a member’s recent trip to Japan.

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 72 books, but I’m so far behind at marking things as complete that who knows. The library thinks I have 80 physical books checked out. In unrelated news, I have completed my quest to visit all KCLC libraries (in real time, not back in October). 

Books Completed  Oct 17 - 23


Year of the Tiger, Alice Wong. I just heard that Alice Wong died, so that is coloring my memories of the book. She felt very vibrant on the page, pushing to be heard and refusing to sit quietly. I didn’t always agree with her, but I did appreciate how much she did to clear the way for quieter people with disabilities to be heard as well. And her family strikes me as regular people being quietly amazing for their kids.

Beowulf, J. R. R. Tolkien. I read the translation ages ago for a book club, but I finally managed to get through all the end notes, which weren’t really worth it. I believe that Tolkien worked hard and knew a lot of Old English, but I don’t and can’t really appreciate whether or not a letter dropped out of words I don’t know.

The Stars Did Wander Darkling, Colin Meloy. Horror for kids is still too scary for me; I probably am much worse at seeing kids in danger than kids are. I did like the nostalgia factor as it was set in the last century. 

Lady Tan’s Circle of Women, Lisa See. Lots of conversations about historical medicine, foot binding (that was a tough one), and marriage and privileges. I liked this view into a period I don’t know much about, and will look out for this author.

Redshirts, John Scalzi. I enjoyed this reread, although I again noticed my biggest complaint with this; it’s hard for me to tell his characters apart by voice and they have long bantering conversations. There’s a fun bit where it’s plot relevant that someone doesn’t talk much but I hadn’t noticed because I treated the main groups conversations as kind of an internal hive mind stream of consciousness. But there was plenty to talk about.

Ruth and the Night of Broken Glass, Emma Carlson Berne. Good competent writing that gives an overview of the historical event but I didn’t get a strong sense of place and time from the characters.

Books Started

Give Me a Reason, Jayci Lee. I need a K-drama book.
Where the Woods End, Charlotte Salter. I met her at the Seattle WorldCon.
Ruth and the Night of Broken Glass, Emma Carlson Berne. A Girls Survive book.
I Survived the American Revolution, Lauren Tarshis. An I Survived book.


Bookmarks Moved

The Way of Kings, Brandon Sanderson
Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
Interview With the Vampire, Anne Rice
Hundredfold, Anthony Esolen
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger
Inventing the Renaissance, Ada Palmer
Come See the Fair, Gabriel Savin
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
Some Sunny Day, Adam Baron
An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy

Bookmarks Languished

I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!   
                                        
                                                                                                                  Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno             
                                                                                                  True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                                            South Riding, Winifred Holtby                     
                                    Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
                                    The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
                                    Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
                            Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
                           Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles
                        So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
                     I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson    
                  The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell 
         Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi
         The Farwalker’s Quest, John Sensel
         One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
   The Last Witchfinder, James K. Morrow. Scintillation book club.
Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
Arabella of Venus, David Levine

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

None.

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Currently learning laundry details for more polyesters. 
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Long slow ending is like finishing a milkshake; good to last drop.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. I’m in the end game and I think I missed some things.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. The teen romance stuff isn’t working for me, but it’s true it’s just as easy to fall in love with a rich guy (as my grandmother used to say).
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. I like that I remember these books.

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Wolf Hall
  • Library Book: Tom Lake
  • Hugo Finalist: So Let Them Burn
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Hugo Short Stories, 
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  Floating Hotel, The Book That Wouldn’t Burn
  • Scintillation Book Club: Fangirl
  • Cloudy Book Club:  What Feasts At Night, The Gilded Crown
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Moon of the Crusted Snow, Canticle For Leiberwitz
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Barracoon
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Animal Stories
  • Friday Book Club: Some Sherlock Holmes pastiche

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Self-Indulgent Reading For Healing



Well, after my diagnosis I had a doctor’s note to avoid running for a while and complete latitude to feel sorry for myself and pamper myself as much as possible. So I had a lovely dinner at a really nice Italian restaurant (walked there so I could have wine), whined for sympathy at the family zoom call, and spent sunny days ambling about to the Seaside library, bookstore, bagel place, pancake place, Thai place…, and I spent rainy days petting the cats and calling for food delivery. I must say I do convalescing well. 

At the end of the week my friends came home from Japan, so I heard their fascinating stories, woke up to delicious omelets being prepared by my jet lagged host, and then drove home to reunite with my own cats, who were desperately in need of petting and had been completely neglected by my house mates, who never even fed them.

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 65 books, but I’ve finished a few of those so I think I’m trending downward. The library thinks I have 83 physical books checked out. In unrelated news, I knocked off ten more libraries on my KCLS branches quest; I think I have three or four left (I’m not sure if one is a branch or another set of lockers).


Books Completed  Oct 3 - 9


Toll of Honor, David Weber. This one is for dedicated completists; it’s retelling some things from a different point of view and using that to give us some back stories of characters who get popular later. Skimming is important in this series as things tend to be explained several times to make sure the reader is keeping up; it’s a sprawling story so I guess that makes sense. I had fun and didn’t have to concentrate much, so it was a perfect read while petting a cat is waiting for a cat to come in from the patio when I wanted to close the back door. 

War of the Wind, Victoria Williamson. A Cybils nominee I went back to finish. I liked the setting and the band of misfits, but I thought it took a while for the protagonist to get over being a huge pain and that the ending slid a few to many things into neat packages. Also I’m still mad about the dog.

Secret History of Home Economics, Danielle Dreilinger. Although I didn’t love this as much as some as I felt the writing was competent but not inspired, I did enjoy learning about what home economics and and has been, and what it could be, and why the patriarchy continues to try to undermine and devalue what it sees as women’s stuff.

Books Started


Secret History of Home Economics, Danielle Dreilinger. Recommended by Miss Yingling.
Redshirts, John Scalzi. Foolscap monthly pick.
Interview With the Vampire, Anne Rice. Sword and Laser monthly pick.
Lady Tan’s Circle of Women, Lisa See. River Runs Under It monthly pick.
The Stars Did Wander Darkly, Colin Meloy. Talbot Hill Challenge: Scary Book


Bookmarks Moved

The Way of Kings, Brandon Sanderson
Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
Inventing the Renaissance, Ada Palmer
Year of the Tiger, Alice Wong
Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
Come See the Fair, Gabriel Savin
Arabella of Venus, David Levine
An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
Hundredfold, Anthony Esolen
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger

Bookmarks Languished

I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!   
                                        
                                                                                                               Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno             
                                                                                               True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                                         South Riding, Winifred Holtby                     
                                 Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
                                 The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
                                 Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
                         Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
                        Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles
                     So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
                     Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
                  I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson    
               The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell   
         Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
      Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi
      Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
      The Farwalker’s Quest, John Sensel
      One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
   Some Sunny Day, Adam Baron
   Beowulf, J. R. R. Tolkien
The Last Witchfinder, James K. Morrow. Scintillation book club.

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

None.

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Currently learning laundry details for rayon..
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Relationships are affirmed.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. I’m in the end game and I think I missed some things.
War QCross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. 
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. I like that I remember these books.

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Wolf Hall
  • Library Book: Framed In Death
  • Hugo Finalist: So Let Them Burn
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Wooing the Witch King
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  Floating Hotel
  • Scintillation Book Club: Semiosis
  • Cloudy Book Club:  What Feasts At Night
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Moon of the Crusted Snow
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Barricuda
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Animal Stories
  • Friday Book Club: Some Sherlock Holmes pastiche
  • Romance Book Club: Doctor romance (Hello Stranger)