Our menus for 04/05/26 – 04/11/26

All set for next week, precluding the daily “What shall we have for dinner tonight?” conversation. What strikes your fancy?

Day Meal
04/05/26
Sunday
•  Meatballs in marinara sauce c̅ large-shell pasta
•  House salad
04/06/26
Monday
(Pelagic Run Club runners’ happy hour)
•  Happy hour snacks
04/07/26
Tuesday
•  Broiled lobster tails c̅ drawn butter
•  Baked potatoes
•  House salad
04/08/26
Wednesday
(Kitchen renovations start)
•  Grilled hot dogs
•  Quinoa salad
04/09/26
Thursday
•  Grilled chicken breasts
•  Sweet potatoes
•  House salad
04/10/26
Friday
•  Fish sandwiches
•  Coleslaw
•  Green beans
04/11/26
Saturday
•  Chicken cordon bleu
•  Mashed potatoes
•  Broccoli
Loading spinner

Finished book #22 in 2026

Book #22
Stiff: Dear Edward book cover
Book: Dear Edward Author: Ann Napolitano
Source: Library loan
Format: Audiobook
Pages: 352 Duration: 03/27/26 – 03/31/26 (5 days)
Rating: ★★★★☆ Genres: fiction, coming of age, young adult, trauma
📕10-word summary: Aftermath of a 12-year-old lone survivor of a plane crash.
🖌6-word review: Satisfying, intriguing, dual-timeline, well-paced survival story.
💭A favorite quote: “There was no reason for what happened to you, Eddie. You could have died; you just didn’t. It was dumb luck. Nobody chose you for anything.”
Description:* One summer morning, 12-year-old Edward Adler, his beloved older brother, his parents, and 183 other passengers board a flight in Newark headed for Los Angeles. Among them are a Wall Street wunderkind, a young woman coming to terms with an unexpected pregnancy, an injured veteran returning from Afghanistan, a business tycoon, and a free-spirited woman running away from her controlling husband. Halfway across the country, the plane crashes. Edward is the sole survivor. Edward’s story captures the attention of the nation, but he struggles to find a place in a world without his family. He continues to feel that a part of himself has been left in the sky, forever tied to the plane and all of his fellow passengers. But then he makes an unexpected discovery — one that will lead him to the answers of some of life’s most profound questions: When you’ve lost everything, how do you find the strength to put one foot in front of the other? How do you learn to feel safe again? How do you find meaning in your life?*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I only recently learned of this author, having read Hello Beautiful in February. I like dual-timeline stories, especially when both narratives are equally interesting, which was the case for me in this book. Of course, I liked that there was a gay (secondary) character — a passenger on the plane — in the book. I encountered one funny, and one just plain interesting, AI-related things about this book. The funny one was that it described Veronica, the chief flight attendant, as “professional and composed.” Uh, she had sex in the lavatory with a passenger! And the interesting one was that I asked it about the gay character (a soldier) in the book, and it said that he wasn’t gay, but that another character — the brother of the protagonist — was (secretly) gay. I was, like, “HUH???” Then I asked if the brother of the protagonist was gay, and it said, “No, he was secretly dating a girl he didn’t want his parents to know about, but he wasn’t gay.” So, I asked again about the soldier being gay, and (this is the interesting part, because it hasn’t happened to me before using AI, which I’ve used a lot), it said, “I apologize, I was wrong earlier when I said he wasn’t gay. Yes he was gay, and his chapters explore identity, secrecy, and longing.” And finally, one of the genres listed for this book is “young adult,” which I guess it could be, but it covers a lot of themes that I feel are a little beyond young adult. But then again, I’m an old fuddy-duddy and YMMV.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #21 in 2026

Book #21
Stiff: Bridgerton: The Duke & I book cover
Book: Bridgerton: The Duke & I Author: Julia Quinn
Source: Library loan
Format: Audiobook
Pages: 339 Duration: 03/21/26 – 03/25/26 (5 days)
Rating: ★★★★☆ Genres: historical fiction, romance, regency
📕10-word summary: Regency-era family dramatic enough to have their own TV series.
🖌6-word review: Not bad for a romance novel.
💭A favorite quote: Colin: “I hate when you’re right.” Penelope: “I know; pity for you, I so often am.”
🎓New-to-me words: ton, rake, woolgathering
Description:* In the ballrooms and drawing rooms of Regency London, rules abound. From their earliest days, children of aristocrats learn how to address an earl and curtsey before a prince—while other dictates of the ton are unspoken yet universally understood. A proper duke should be imperious and aloof. A young, marriageable lady should be amiable…but not too amiable. Daphne Bridgerton has always failed at the latter. The fourth of eight siblings in her close-knit family, she has formed friendships with the most eligible young men in London. Everyone likes Daphne for her kindness and wit. But no one truly desires her. She is simply too deuced honest for that, too unwilling to play the romantic games that captivate gentlemen. Amiability is not a characteristic shared by Simon Basset, Duke of Hastings. Recently returned to England from abroad, he intends to shun both marriage and society—just as his callous father shunned Simon throughout his painful childhood. Yet an encounter with his best friend’s sister offers another option. If Daphne agrees to a fake courtship, Simon can deter the mamas who parade their daughters before him. Daphne, meanwhile, will see her prospects and her reputation soar. The plan works like a charm—at first. But amid the glittering, gossipy, cut-throat world of London’s elite, there is only one certainty: Love ignores every rule…*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This is the first (of 8) in the Bridgerton book series. I read a “TV tie-in” edition, which is identical to the original novel but contains an extra epilogue. Since I don’t watch TV and Bob rarely reads books, we usually aren’t able to discuss storylines, but since he has seen the first 3 seasons of the Netflix series, we were able to compare and contrast our thoughts about this story on which the first season was based. I typically only read the first book of a series that become movies, as I did with Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone and The Hunger Games — and that’ll be the same with this series. I’m not interested in reading the other 7 Bridgerton books. Romance is not a genre I enjoy — and it’ll suit me just fine if I never again hear about his corpulent manhood arriving at her cradle of femininity, after which he spilled his seed on the bed instead of deep inside her. With that said, I’m glad I read this, if for no other reason than it adds some tiny tidbits into my vast void of pop culture knowledge. Tangential ejaculation: You don’t ever want me on your trivia team!

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #20 in 2026

Book #20
Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers book cover
Book: Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers Author: Mary Roach
Source: Library loan
Format: Audiobook
Pages: 292 Duration: 03/19/26 – 03/20/26 (2 days)
Rating: ★★★★☆ Genres: nonfiction, science, medical, humor, death, history, biology
📕10-word summary: A scientific, intellectual, and emotional look at our bodies’ destinies.
🖌6-word review: Informative, at times humorous, and detailed.
💭A favorite quote: “The way I see it, being dead is not terribly far off from being on a cruise ship. Most of your time is spent lying on your back. The brain has shut down. The flesh begins to soften. Nothing much new happens, and nothing is expected of you.”
🎓New-to-me words: venerated, divarication, many other biology, chemistry & medical terms
Description:* Mary Roach takes the age-old question, “What happens to us after we die?” quite literally. And in Stiff, she explores the “lives” of human cadavers from the time of the ancient Egyptians all the way up to current campaigns for human composting. Along the way, she recounts with morbidly infectious glee how dead bodies are used for research ranging from car safety and plastic surgery (you’ll cancel your next collagen injection after reading this!), to the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin. While the myriad uses for cadavers recounted are often graphic, Roach imbues her subject with a sense of dignity, choosing to emphasize the oddly noble purposes corpses serve, from organ donation to lifesaving medical research.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This was a interesting, informative, and at time, light look at a subject that a lot of people find heavy and shy away from, but that I find interesting. I only took off a star (4, instead of 5), because I’m not really into medicine, biology, and chemistry to the depth explained in this book. So, YMMV depending on that. One frustration I had reading this now-23-year-old book was that I wondered how some of the ways to “process” dead bodies just beginning to be explored in 2003 (e.g., water cremation) have progressed. Well ChatGPT & AI to the rescue! Q: What are the eco-friendly ways to avoid burial and cremation? A: natural (green) burial | conservation burial | human composting (natural organic reduction) | water cremation (alkaline hydrolysis) | tree pod burial | mushroom burial suit | reef burial | biodegradable caskets & shrouds | and home funeral + natural burial.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #19 in 2026

Book #19
Perfection book cover
Book: Perfection Author: Vincenzo Latronico
Source: Library loan
Format: Print
Pages: 125 Duration: 03/17/26 – 03/19/26 (3 days)
Rating: ★★★★☆ Genres: fiction, Italian literature, existentialism
📕10-word summary: Millennial expats Anna and Tom drift in search of perfection.
🖌6-word review: Excellently simulates existential ennui — without dialog.
💭A favorite quote: “But each time, after a while, they would remember those trips more generously, as if the act of remembering could alter the experience itself.”
🎓New-to-me words: monstera, acanthus, vibratile, koine, tillandsias, “travel rabbit
Description:* Millennial expat couple Anna and Tom are living the dream in Berlin, in a bright, plant-filled apartment in Neukölln. They are young digital creatives, freelancers without too many constraints. They have a passion for food, progressive politics, sexual experimentation, and Berlin’s 24-hour party scene. Their ideal existence is also that of an entire generation, lived out on Instagram, but outside the images they create for themselves, dissatisfaction and ennui burgeon. Their work as graphic designers becomes repetitive. Friends move back home, have children, grow up. An attempt at political activism during the refugee crisis proves fruitless. And in that picture-perfect life Anna and Tom feel increasingly trapped, yearning for an authenticity and a sense of purpose that seem perennially just out of their grasp.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: My friend Todd mentioned he was reading this book, so I checked it out. The main characters are “digital creatives,” and I appreciated the industry-related tools and technologies named throughout the book — graphic-design tools, photo- and image-editing tools, social-media platforms, and internet infrastructure. There was no dialogue at all in this story, as the author has said he has “a terrible ear for dialogue.” As a result, there was a lot of description in it. Critics have noted that “the lack of dialogue makes the book read like a catalogue of objects and curated spaces, mirroring the couple’s image‑driven lives.” The main themes explored include: the illusion of aesthetic perfection; expat life and cultural detachment; ennui, aimlessness, and millennial drift; and authenticity vs. performance. I think the author succeeds in making ennui interesting, which is why among its awards is being shortlisted for the International Booker Prize.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #18 in 2026

Book #18
Audition book cover
Book: Audition Author: Katie Kitamura
Source: Library loan
Format: Print
Pages: 197 Duration: 03/14/26 – 03/16/26 (3 days)
Rating: ★★★★☆ Genres: fiction, family, identity, existentialism, acting
📕10-word summary: A woman, her husband, and possibly her son contemplate identity.
🖌6-word review: Compelling storytelling with lots of ambiguity.
💭A favorite quote: “Lou immediately stood and went to him, and I remember thinking that even if he was without talent he would enjoy some level of success, in some capacity, he had a face that was made for being looked at.”
🎓New-to-me words: languorous, sinuous, carapace, mottled, avidity, rictus, contrapuntal
Description:* Two people meet for lunch in a Manhattan restaurant. She’s an elegant and accomplished actress in rehearsals for an upcoming premiere. He’s attractive, troubling, and young—young enough to be her son. Who is he to her, and who is she to him? In Audition, two competing narratives unspool, rewriting our understanding of the roles we play every day — partner, parent, creator, muse — and the truths every performance masks, especially from those who think they know us best.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I loved the author’s voice in this story. I kept thinking of this book as very, very interesting — as opposed to fascinating. The beginning of Part II brought forth the figurative “record scratch” eliciting a great big “HUH???” from me. I’m not a fan of ambiguous endings, which this book definitely has — and in fact, there’s a lot of ambiguity throughout it — but I was surprisingly okay with it. What I wasn’t okay with was not one, not two, but three instances of the (overused & my nemesis) word, conspiratorially.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #17 in 2026

Book #17
What Happened Next book cover
Book: What Happened Next Author: Edwin Hill
Source: Free First Reads download
Format: Kindle
Pages: 292 Duration: 03/09/26 – 03/12/26 (4 days)
Rating: ★★★★★ Genres: fiction, mystery, thriller
📕10-word summary: Investigation of 25-year-old crime uncovers betrayal and community, family secrets.
🖌6-word review: Intriguing. The bodies really pile up.
💭A favorite quote: “Our father opted for the dog races at Suffolk Downs, not the polo grounds in Newport.”
🎓New-to-me words: lichen, antitorque pedals, selectperson, “gave up the ghost
Description:* Charlie Kilgore was too young to remember anything, really, about how events on the lake unfolded 25 years ago. He just knows what he’s been told: that his father stabbed a man to death, left Charlie’s mother critically wounded, and then disappeared, never to be seen again. Now Charlie believes there must be more to what happened. But when Charlie [returns to his hometown and] starts asking questions of people with so much to hide, getting to the truth becomes dangerous. Because on this lake — in this family — the past isn’t dead and buried at all. In fact, it’s back with a vengeance.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This free, advanced copy (it’s schedule to be published in April 2026) was an unexpected delight. There’s a lot going on in this small town as a 25-year-old murder is questioned by a young man who was in the thick of it, but as an infant, when it all went down. A lot of suspects emerge, and a lot of people “give up the ghost” as the bodies of even major characters pile up. One thing that was nice was that there were 3 gay characters who were just people who happened to be gay, which is to say it didn’t affect the plot in any way, so it wasn’t a big deal at all. I like stories that normalize being gay. I’d not heard of this author before, but several reviewers said they love all of his books. I’ll probably read another one of them this year.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Our menus for 03/15/26 – 03/21/26

All set for next week — precluding the daily “What shall we have for dinner tonight?” conversation. What strikes your fancy?

Day Meal
03/15/26
Sunday
•  Sliced ham
•  Sweet potatoes
•  House salad
03/16/26
Monday
(Runners’ happy hours return!)
•  Happy hour snacks
03/17/26
Tuesday
•  Chicken stir-fry c̅ mixed vegetables
•  Egg drop soup
03/18/26
Wednesday
•  Stuffed peppers
•  Spaghetti squash
03/19/26
Thursday
•  Grilled shrimp kabobs
•  Wild rice salad
03/20/26
Friday
•  Chef salad c̅ grilled chicken strips
03/21/26
Saturday
•  Über Wisconsin
•  Tomato-basil soup
Loading spinner

Finished book #16 in 2026

Book #16
The Price of Honey book cover
Book: The Price of Honey Author: Liane Moriarty
Source: Free First Reads download
Format: Kindle
Pages: 34 Duration: 03/08/26 – 03/08/26 (1 day)
Rating: ★★★☆☆ Genres: fiction, short stories, novella, thriller, mystery, sci-fi
📕10-word summary: Tech billionaire’s widow and ex-wives surprised at unexpected funeral shenanigans.
🖌6-word review: Disarrayed programming, technology, AI, sci-fi mash-up.
💭A favorite quote: “She’s rarely referred to as Luisa. Always her full name: Luisa Long. It’s just one of those names.”
🎓A new-to-me word: epigenetic
Description:* In the car on the way to her husband’s funeral, Honey Beckett still can hardly believe that Barney is actually dead. Granted, he was more than twice her age. But he was Barney Beckett, visionary tech genius, full of surprises—by turns romantic, inspirational, and controlling. Always in control. At the service, she impulsively goes to sit with the three ex-wives: practical Rita, fiery Svetlana, ambitious Meredith. Each broke up the other’s marriage in turn—and now, one final betrayal awaits.*From amazon.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I didn’t dislike this book, but I was glad it was short. This was my 4th book by this author — Nine Perfect Strangers (read in 2019), What Alice Forgot and The Husband’s Secret (both read in 2020) — and it was my least favorite of them. It’s hard to pinpoint why this storyline didn’t really work for me, but it’s something to do with it being unclear whether what was happening was due to a programming error, sinister technology, or AI gone awry, and it took a little too long (especially relative to the length of the story) to get what was actually happening. My favorite quote (above) was because that’s exactly the case with my name. At almost every (professional) job I’ve had, my colleagues have tended to say my whole name when they see me: “Hi, John Martin.” When it was all said and done, I was glad this book was a free download.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Anna’s cards – Day 8 – Monday, 03/09/26

Our lovely friend, Anna, is in rehab after a serious operation, and she loves U.S. mail, so I’m sending her a card a day until she’s able to go home. Today’s card:



John’s:

Courtland Drive abode
Sits longingly waiting for
Anna to come home

Bob’s:

Many additions
Kids, rooms, and a fluffy dog
A big house of love

John’s:

Bicycles await
They have each taken a stand
Leaning to the leaves

Bob’s:

Waiting for a ride
Neighborhood misses you, too
We will see you soon

John’s:

Daffodils not still
Swaying gently in the breeze
Yellow ribbons wave

Bob’s:

Early spring flowers
Signs of growth and renewal
Good days on the way

Loading spinner

Finished book #15 in 2026

Book #15
Annette: Sierra Summer book cover
Book: Annette: Sierra Summer Author: Doris Schroeder
Source: Friend loan
Format: Print
Pages: 285 Duration: 03/03/26 – 03/08/26 (6 days)
Rating: ★★★★☆ Genres: fiction, young adult, childrens, mystery, juvenile
📕10-word summary: Annette (based on Annette Funicello) has an exciting, adventurous summer.
🖌6-word review: Has definite young-adult vibes. Easy reading.
💭A favorite quote: “C’mon, Annette! Let’s get into our sunbonnets!”
🎓Some new-to-me words: ailanthus, gasser
Description:* Annette’s summer began with an invitation from her cousin, Tonia, to visit the town of Lost Creek, located in the Sierra foothills. Her invitation was full of excitement as she explained Lost Creek’s centennial celebration plans. The town would turn back time to gold rush days, wear pioneer costumes, and choose a centennial queen. And Tonia’s gang would be there for the fun — handsome Johnny Abbott and all the others. It did sound wonderful, and as Annette climbed into her little white sports car, she was anticipating a pleasant visit. Little did she realize as she sped along that this would probably be the most exciting summer of her life. Annette becomes involved in a mystery before she even arrives at the home of her cousin — a mystery that threatens to ruin the lives of several people.*From amazon.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: As a big fan of Annette Funicello, my husband owned this book from way back. Ready to “give it up” (i.e., donate it), he asked me if I wanted to read it first — to which I succumbed. What struck me the most about the book was its illustrations which made all of these teen characters look like they were in the twenties or so. I was also a little surprised by how unabashedly wealthy these young kids were, driving fancy sports cars as one example. It was an easy read; it took me 6 days mostly because it wasn’t riveting or anything, and I’ve been doing a lot of creative work the past week, which engaged me more than reading.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Reusing Ziploc bags

Bob and I do this, all the while joking that we didn’t live through the depression but our parents did.

We hang them on the clothes rack on the porch to dry, and we 𝘯𝘦𝘷𝘦𝘳 reuse bags that were used to marinate! 😂 (We actually rarely, if ever, use plastic bags for marinating. We have Tupperware for that.)

Loading spinner

Finished book #14 in 2026

Book #14
Do You Mind If I Cancel?: Things That Still Annoy Me book cover
Book: Do You Mind If I Cancel?: Things That Still Annoy Me Author: Gary Janetti
Source: Library loan
Format: Audiobook
Pages: 159 Duration: 03/01/26 – 03/01/26 (1 day)
Rating: ★★★★☆ Genres: nonfiction, memoir, humor essays, comedy, LGBT
📕10-word summary: Funny and poignant look at the “indignities of everyday life.”
🖌6-word review: It grew on me. Ultimately amusing.
💭A favorite quote: “For those of you who don’t know, Dynasty was a sensation that took over the fucking country for a few years in the 80s. It was our Game of Thrones, but with shoulder pads.”
Description:* Gary spends his twenties in New York, dreaming of starring on soap operas while in reality working at a hotel where he lusts after an unattainable colleague and battles a bellman who despises it when people actually use a bell to call him. He chronicles the torture of finding a job before the internet when you had to talk on the phone all the time, and fantasizes, as we all do, about who to tell off when he finally wins an Oscar. As Gary himself says, “These are essays from my childhood and young adulthood about things that still annoy me.”*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This book was recommended to me by a friend, and I was a little turned off by it at the beginning, but then I adjusted my attitude and I ended up enjoying it a lot. In the beginning, I thought the humor was a little too “drag-queen-bitchy” for my taste. I’d never heard of this author since I never watched Family Guy, which I only just now realize is not the same show as Modern Family, which I also never watched. (If you think that’s bad, until I one day saw pictures of Kylie Minogue and Nicki Minaj in an article, I thought they were the same person. #BlessMyHeart) I see that Gary was also a writer for Will & Grace, which I did watch but never paid any attention to who the writers were. With it all said and done, I did have a few literal laugh-out-louds in the last half of the book.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #13 in 2026

Book #13
Between Two Trailers book cover
Book: Between Two Trailers Author: J. Dana Trent
Source: Library loan
Format: Kindle
Pages: 256 Duration: 02/28/26 – 02/28/26 (1 day)
Rating: ★☆☆☆☆ Genres: nonfiction, memoir, religion, mental illness
📕10-word summary: Preschooler drug dealer quits, becomes a professor, then a minister.
🖌6-word review: Not my cup of tea. Abandoned.
Description:* Growing up, Dana tries to be the daughter each of her parents wanted: a drug lord’s heir and a debutante minister. Dana imagines that her hidden Indiana life is finally behind her after she graduates from Duke University and becomes a professor and an ambivalent female Southern Baptist minister. But Dana was a child of the drug trade. Though she escapes flyover country, she realizes that she will never be able to escape her father’s legacy, and that her childhood secrets have kept her from making peace with the people and places that shaped her. Ultimately, Dana finds that no one can really “make it” until they return to where their story began.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I really wanted to like this book, and I read 30% of it before abandoning it. The author is speaking [about this book] nearby in a couple of weeks, and I intended to attend her talk, which is why I decided to read it. I’m going to forgo that, too. I found no redeeming qualities in the characters and escapades related in the first third of the book, and as good as it might “turn,” I just wasn’t willing to slog through more.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #12 in 2026

Book #12
The House of Mirth book cover
Book: The House of Mirth Author: Edith Wharton
Source: Library loan
Format: E-book
Pages: 406 Duration: 02/22/26 – 02/28/26 (7 days)
Rating: ★★★☆☆ Genres: historical fiction, classics, literature, class, New York
📕10-word summary: New York socialite’s serial inconsequential decisions about love compound tragically.
🖌6-word review: Heavy. Beautifully — if not challengingly — written.
💭A favorite quote: “But we’re so different, you know: she likes being good, and I like being happy.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: crepe-de-chine, empyrean, chary, desultory, bezique, sylvan, odious, oubliettes, dissembling, Quirinal, adjuration, mauvaise honte, parterres, marquetry, puerile, propinquity, infelicity, lustral, cuirassed, ormolu, effulgence, proscenium, sward, stereopticon, phaetons, stertorous, impenitent, adumbrations, excrescences, aigrettes, orangeine, c-spring barouche, victoria, antimacassar
Description:* Edith Wharton’s dark view of society, the somber economics of marriage, and the powerlessness of the unwedded woman in the 1870s emerge dramatically in the tragic novel The House of Mirth. Faced with an array of wealthy suitors, New York socialite Lily Bart falls in love with lawyer Lawrence Selden, whose lack of money spoils their chances for happiness together. Dubious business deals and accusations of liaisons with a married man diminish Lily’s social status, and as she makes one bad choice after another, she learns how venal and brutally unforgiving the upper crust of New York can be.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This is my third Edith Wharton book in as many years, two of them as Mostly Social Book Club books (including this one), and my order of preference is: 1) Ethan Frome, 2) The Age of Innocence, and now this one 3) The House of Mirth. One of the things I like about these classics is the way things are said, but only up to the point at which they become hard to parse. Jane Eyre and The Age of Innocence were easy, but this one was on the verge of being slightly esoteric. Example: “She had even risen earlier than usual in the execution of her purpose.” (Translation: She got up early to get shit done.) I absolutely loved the ending of this book, which is all you really need to know about the kind of endings to books that I like. 😂

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Our menus for 02/22/26 – 02/28/26

All set for this week — precluding the daily “What shall we have for dinner tonight?” conversation.

Day Meal
02/22/26
Sunday
•  Ham chef salad
02/23/26
Monday
•  Scallop & Corn Soup (Content Team Cookbook, p. 6)
•  House salad
02/24/26
Tuesday
•  Dinner salad c̅ cold shrimp
02/25/26
Wednesday
•  Turkey c̅ cranberry sauce
•  Mashed potatoes
•  Broccoli florets
02/26/26
Thursday
•  Chicken tacos
•  Cream salad
02/27/26
Friday
•  Kathy Vaillancourt’s award-winning Maine Maple Haddock
•  Cheesy broccoli & cauliflower
•  House salad
02/28/26
Saturday
•  Chicken cordon blue
•  Butternut squash
•  Garlic butter c̅ rotini & vegetables
Loading spinner

Finished book #11 in 2026

Book #11
Pocketbook of Quotes from Socrates to Lebowski book cover
Book: Pocketbook of Quotes from Socrates to Lebowski Author: Sean Thompson
Source: Free BookBub download
Format: Kindle
Pages: 385 Duration: 02/10/26 – 02/21/26 (12 days)
Rating: ★★★☆☆ Genres: nonfiction, quotations, philosophy
📕10-word summary: Quotes by a diverse set of people: inspiration, motivation, entertainment.
🖌6-word review: Incredibly sloppy editing detracted from enjoyment.
💭A favorite quote: “Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.” ~Albert Einstein
🎓Some new-to-me words: inclemency, fand, Feldwebel, obsoledge
Description:* Are you interested in learning from the greatest philosophers, artists, writers and minds of all time? Do you want to have a handy collection of quotes that you can read anytime, anywhere? Do you want to fill your mind with wisdom, inspiration, and insight? If you answered yes to any of these questions, then this book is for you. This is a compact and convenient book that contains hundreds [of] quotes for all occasions. You’ll find quotes on topics such as life, knowledge, virtue, happiness, friendship, and more. This book is perfect for anyone who wants to enrich their mind and soul through the timeless teachings of the greats.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: One of the things that stood out to me after reading so many quotes is that there are probably quotes to support whatever you believe, as many of them contradict each other. For example, there are many quotes that contend that solitude is necessary to your being, while another whole slew contend that we cannot exist in solitude as we’re all intertwined. The editing of this book (at least the kindle version I read) was just bad, bad, bad. This included many missed terminal punctuation marks (mostly periods), capitalizing the word after a semicolon in a sentence, completely wrong words (e.g., throng instead of through, near instead of never), different fonts and line spacing on the same page, and some paragraphs in black and some in a lighter (almost) gray colored font, errant spaces mid-word (e.g., “you’ re” and “you ‘ re”), and paragraph breaks (i.e., hard to tell sometimes if a paragraph break was a new paragraph in the same quote or a new quote starting). Even the blurb on Goodreads had an editing error in it — see the word “of” I have highlighted in the description above — I added it because it was missing. For posterity, of the 12-day duration reading this book, I was on a cruise for 8 days of it and didn’t read.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #10 in 2026

Book #10
Hello Beautiful book cover
Book: Hello Beautiful Author: Ann Napolitano
Source: Library loan
Format: Kindle
Pages: 387 Duration: 02/06/26 – 02/07/26 (2 days)
Rating: ★★★★★ Genres: historical fiction, romance, family, mental health
📕10-word summary: A modern, darker re-imagining of Louisa May Alcott‘s Little Women.
🖌6-word review: Great pacing — it moved right along.
💭A favorite quote: “He was encouraging by nature; he attended college track events just to cheer on the slowest runners.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: caterwauled, physio
Description:* William Waters grew up in a house silenced by tragedy, where his parents could hardly bear to look at him, much less love him—so when he meets the spirited and ambitious Julia Padavano in his freshman year of college, it’s as if the world has lit up around him. With Julia comes her family, as she and her three sisters are inseparable: Sylvie, the family’s dreamer, is happiest with her nose in a book; Cecelia is a free-spirited artist; and Emeline patiently takes care of them all. With the Padavanos, William experiences a newfound contentment; every moment in their house is filled with loving chaos. But then darkness from William’s past surfaces, jeopardizing not only Julia’s carefully orchestrated plans for their future, but the sisters’ unshakeable devotion to one another. The result is a catastrophic family rift that changes their lives for generations.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I thoroughly enjoyed this book, especially reading it right after reading Little Women, regarding which the author says, “If this [story] sounds slightly ‘Little Women-esque’ to you, then that’s the point. The book is a subtle, modern-day homage to Little Women. When the four Padavano sisters stepped into the story — each of them strong-willed and loving but so different from one another — I realized they were the heartbeat that would shape the rest of the novel. They became my homage to the fictional sisters I loved so much growing up: the four March girls in Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women.” There certainly are “nods” to the 4 Little Women sisters in this story, but the parents are completely different from those in Little Women, especially the mother. And there wasn’t a “one-to-one correspondence” between the 4 (Hello Beautiful) Padavano sisters and the 4 (Little Women) March sisters. I also felt that this “re-imagining” was much darker than Little Woman, which actually appealed to me. This was a Mostly Social Book Club book, and the best thing about it was that, while I was on the library waitlist for it, I was inspired to read Little Women while I waited.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #9 in 2026

Book #9
Little Women book cover
Book: Little Women Author: Louisa May Alcott
Source: Library loan
Format: Audiobook
Pages: 504 Duration: 02/01/26 – 02/05/26 (5 days)
Rating: ★★★★★ Genres: historical fiction, classics, romance, literature, young adult
📕10-word summary: 4 sisters endure hardships and enjoy adventures in this classic.
🖌6-word review: There’s a reason it’s a classic.
💭A memorable quote: “Mothers have needs of sharp eyes and discreet tongues when they have girls to manage.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: deportment, derogation, redoubtable, saleratus, assiduity, loquacity, wheedlesome, superannuated, propitious, salubrious
Description:* The charming story of the March sisters, Little Women has been adored for generations. Readers have rooted for Laurie in his pursuit of Jo’s hand, cried over little Beth’s untimely death, and dreamed of traveling through Europe with old Aunt March and Amy. Aspiring writers have found inspiration in Jo’s devotion to her writing. In this simple, enthralling tale, Louisa May Alcott has created four of American literature’s most beloved women.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I loved the writing in this book. It reminded me of Jane Eyre in that it’s “older” English, but not that Old English that’s unintelligible. And I thoroughly enjoyed the turns of phrases. My impetus for reading this classic now is because our next Mostly Social Book Club book is Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano, and its story has parallels with Little Woman. And since I’m still waiting for the book from the library, and I’d never read Little Women, which was available immediately, I went ahead and slipped it in. ChatGPT has graciously summarized the parallels between the two stories, and now that Little Women is fresh in my mind, I look extra forward to reading Hello Beautiful as soon as it’s available.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

How X Decides What 550 Million Users See (10-minute read)

Full disclosure: I left Twitter when it changed to X, so I’ve never used the platform.

X recently open-sourced its algorithm. This post dissects the code to find out how it works. The algorithm tries to maximize positive engagement and minimize negative engagement while prioritizing quality over quantity.

Controversial content persists despite penalties because volume overwhelms penalty. Rage bait works when the engaged audience vastly outnumbers the offended minority. Early engagement matters because of feedback loops, not because of any multiplier for fast likes.

Read the full article on Code Pointer.

Sources:
•  TLDR. (2026, February 2). TLDR Newsletter. https://a.tldrnewsletter.com/web-version?ep=1&lc=f5cb7e17-003d-11ed-9258-0241b9615763&p=f506196a-0010-11f1-8219-038103267f56&pt=campaign&t=1770033693&s=b1ae5ccaa098e95025d02e286faf4b0178ff0f03d200dff5e776f132678924d7
•  Yongkyun. (2026, January 28). [x-algorithm] How X Decides What 550 Million Users See. Code Pointer. https://codepointer.substack.com/p/x-algorithm-how-x-decides-what-550

Loading spinner

Loyalty Is Dead In Tech (3-minute read)

It used to be that early employees who took the risk along with the founders shared the outcome. That is no longer the case, with founders leaving companies and employees in acquihires that license the technology and abandon the rest.

Employees are starting to learn that a ‘mission’ is just a recruiting pitch. There are still some founders who would rather go slower than abandon the people who believed in them — finding them has never mattered more.

Read the full blog post on Balancing Act.

Sources:
•  TLDR. (2026, February 2). TLDR Newsletter. https://a.tldrnewsletter.com/web-version?ep=1&lc=f5cb7e17-003d-11ed-9258-0241b9615763&p=f506196a-0010-11f1-8219-038103267f56&pt=campaign&t=1770033693&s=b1ae5ccaa098e95025d02e286faf4b0178ff0f03d200dff5e776f132678924d7
•  Kothari, N. (2026, January 30). Loyalty is dead in tech. Balancing Act. https://writing.nikunjk.com/p/loyalty-is-dead-in-tech

Loading spinner

Miss Saigon & Madama Butterfly

My favorite Broadway play is Miss Saigon, and my favorite opera is Madama Butterfly. A coincidence? I think not.

Correlation between Miss Saigon characters and Madama Butterfly characters.

A few nuances worth noting:

  • Miss Saigon expands the world of the story, giving more psychological complexity to characters who were archetypal in Madama Butterfly.
  • The Engineer is the biggest departure — he’s not just a matchmaker but a satirical, morally elastic survivor of history.
  • Chris is intentionally written to be more sympathetic than Pinkerton, whose callousness is central to Puccini’s critique of colonial attitudes.
  • Kim’s agency is different from Cio-Cio-San’s: her choices are shaped by war, displacement, and survival, not just romantic devotion.
Loading spinner

Finished book #8 in 2026

Book #8
The Celebrants book cover
Book: The Celebrants Author: Steven Rowley
Source: Library loan
Format: Large print
Pages: 320 Duration: 01/27/26 – 01/29/26 (3 days)
Rating: ★★★☆☆ Genres: fiction, LGBT, queer, friendship, chosen family
📕10-word summary: Non-binary version of The Big Chill augmented by pre-deceased funerals.
🖌6-word review: An interesting, unique concept goes awry.
💭A memorable quote: “We weren’t meant to see everything, we weren’t built to do everything, we aren’t capable of knowing everything. At a certain point, peace has to be found with the choices we’ve made.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: Malinois, paean, trine, planchette, huipil
Description:* A Big Chill for our times, celebrating decades-long friendships and promises — especially to ourselves — by the bestselling and beloved author of The Guncle. It’s been a minute — or five years — since Jordan Vargas last saw his college friends, and 28 years since their graduation when their adult lives officially began. Now Jordan, Jordy, Naomi, Craig, and Marielle find themselves at the brink of a new decade, with all the responsibilities of adulthood, yet no closer to having their lives figured out. Though not for a lack of trying. Over the years they’ve reunited in Big Sur to honor a decades-old pact to throw each other living “funerals,” celebrations to remind themselves that life is worth living — that their lives mean something, to one another if not to themselves. But this reunion is different. They’re not gathered as they were to bolster Marielle as her marriage crumbled, to lift Naomi after her parents died, or to intervene when Craig pleaded guilty to art fraud. This time, Jordan is sitting on a secret that will upend their pact.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I wanted to like this book more. I really did. But I didn’t. This is my third Steven Rowley book, and I probably won’t read any more by him. I also wanted to love The Guncle more than I did, but I absolutely loved The Editor. (Full disclosure: Having been an editor for a living and loving Jackie Kennedy Onassis may have influenced that.) I guess we can call it progress that there was a time when I thought anything by a gay author or about gay people was fantastic but am now more discerning. There were 2 “scenes” in this book that really didn’t work for me, and they were long scenes — one about a skydiving outing the 5-person group did together, and the other was near the end that went on and on about kittens. Blech.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Amazon to Shut Down All Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh Stores (2-minute read)

Amazon is closing all Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh physical stores and will shift its focus to online same-day delivery and expand its Whole Foods market business. The Go and Fresh stores failed to deliver a distinctive customer experience and couldn’t be scaled up.

Some of the shuttered stores will be converted into Whole Foods stores. Amazon plans to open 100 new Whole Foods stores in the coming years.

Read the full article on The Wall Street Journal

Sources:
•  TLDR. (2026, January 28). TLDR Newsletter. https://a.tldrnewsletter.com/web-version?ep=1&lc=f5cb7e17-003d-11ed-9258-0241b9615763&p=b15e8732-fc24-11f0-bc22-3d95a36bc826&pt=campaign&t=1769601519&s=1daa52b836bc88d7dd95273d851fe73c4ec39e56f4328e5a9d50c4a16e29c13b
•  King, K., McLain, S., & De Avila, J. (2026, January 27). Amazon to shut down all Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh stores. The Wall Street Journal. https://www.wsj.com/business/retail/amazon-to-shut-down-all-amazon-go-and-amazon-fresh-stores-0301dfb7

Loading spinner

Low-rent garage

In anticipation of a potential ice or snow storm, we covered our Fusion with tarps to preclude having to scrape off ice and snow.

It was a little windy and it was blowing the tarps up when we first put them on, so we brought out our trash, recycle, and yard waste bins to use as anchors. 😂


One friend walking by texted us: “Bob and John, Peter and I would like to know if your garbage cans attacked your car before or after happy hour last night?” 😍

Responding that it’s been fun watching people walk by and doing a doubletake when seeing it, she responded: “If you only had a garage. 😂”

I texted back: “Bob’s 1999 Tacoma — in flawless condition — gets that spot.”

Loading spinner

Exercise check-in

I love my six-pack so much, I protect it with a layer of fat.
 
#Home #40Minutes #Strengthening #Back #Core
#KneeStraighteningHolds #KneeToChestHolds #PosterierPelvicTilts #Bridges
#BicycleCrunches #DeadBugs #Clamshells #SideSlides
Loading spinner

Recent implicit affirmations

I’m a big fan of recognizing “implicit affirmations,” which come in many forms. Here are a few examples of them:

  • being hello worthy
  • being good company
  • doing good
  • being thought of
  • being asked to lunch
  • positively influencing another
  • being around others
  • greeting others
  • people participating in your outings or events

After these 11 recent implicit affirmations that Bob and I recognized, read nine 50-word stories I wrote about implicit affirmations in general and have happened to me in the past.


Some recent implicit affirmations Bob have recognized and appreciated:

  1. Guy, our friend and neighbor, has a two-seat subscription to a movie theater series asked Bob to attend their Seven Samurai screening.
  2. Guy also has a two-seat subscription to the NC Opera, and he invited me to attend Madama Butterfly with him at the end of this month.
  3. When we told our friend Kevin that our holiday card to him had recently been returned, he said, “We should figure out how to cut out the middleman and you can hand-deliver it to me — want to get a cocktail someplace some night?” to which we invited him to stop by after work one day and have a (free) drink and some snacks at our house. And which he promptly did the next day.
  4. Jennifer & Ian, whom we recently met at a neighborhood gathering included us for a brunch in celebration of Jennifer’s birthday.
  5. Dyson & Samantha, whom we met at our neighborhood New Year’s Eve progressive cocktail party, invited us over for happy hour yesterday. Oh! And while we were there, Dyson chose to open a 48-year-old bottle of booze with us, which just happens to be our “house bourbon of choice” — Canadian Club.
  6. A few days ago, Claire, our friend and neighbor was walking by with her dog Fergus, and she texted asking us if we were home and might be available for a little chin-wag. She said Fergus saw our house, where he knows he’ll get a treat, and wanted to stop by. Consider us affirmed by both Claire and Fergus.
  7. Kim, our friend and neighbor — and published author who’s starting a blog — asked me if I’d be willing to fill out a questionnaire about readers to potentially post in her blog, and after sending her my responses, she said,”Thanks so much, John! I knew you’d go at this with gusto!”
  8. Jen, our friend and neighbor, texted us: “If you’re walking with us to the Capitol tomorrow to see the monks, we’re leaving our house at 2:30.”
  9. Beth, our friend and neighbor, knows I love bananas, and she recently gave me a bottle of banana simple syrup that she’d made specifically for me.
  10. Erin, our friend and neighbor, texted us amid the recent snow/ice storm: “Hi neighbor! Just wanted to check in during the storm and let you know we’re around if you need anything. Let’s hope the power stays on tonight. ☺️🤞”
  11. Allison & Peter, neighbors of ours who when walked by our house and saw a tarp we had thrown over our car, with trash bins leaning against it to keep it from blowing off, to preclude having to clear it from potential ice and snow, texted us: “Bob and John, Peter and I would like to know if your garbage cans attacked your car before or after happy hour last night?”

Thanks to all of you for affirming us!


Here are nine 50-word stories about how implicit affirmations have manifested themselves for me in the past:

You’re hello worthy You’re good company You’ve done good
I recognized it as an implicit affirmation when someone walked by me without my seeing them but still said, “Hello, John.” It would’ve been easier for them to just slip by without a greeting, but they made the effort in spite of that, so I must be important to them. I recognized it as an implicit affirmation when I asked a colleague if they wanted to take a walk to the nearby café for a cup of coffee and they said yes without an apparent thought of—or as much as a glance at—the cup already on their desk. I recognized it as an implicit affirmation when a young colleague asked me if I’d be willing to have lunch with him one day to “pick my brain.” He wanted me to share with him as many things I could think of that have contributed to my apparent financial security.
Thinking of you Let’s do lunch Influenced by your writing
I recognized it as an implicit affirmation when a colleague messaged me: “John Martin! Was just peeling an orange with the Tupperware tool you gave me 400 years ago and thought about you.” It would have been easier not to message me, and I wouldn’t have had my day made. I recognized it as an implicit affirmation when, a few months ago we’d left it at “Let’s get together as soon as it’s safe to,” and that friend followed up now that it is safe with an invitation to lunch. It would have been easier to just let it ride. I recognized it as an implicit affirmation of having read my 50-word stories when a friend direct messaged me during the Q&A part of a virtual work meeting: “Are we on the same meeting? Thanks to you, I’m listening for how moderators tweak the Q&As. Hope you are doing well!
Proximity Greeting Participation
I recognized it as an implicit affirmation when, in the spreadsheet to reserve a workstation to use in the office now, a colleague chose one next to mine. Only 2 of our 11 floors in the building are being used, and the desks are spaced apart in a checkerboard pattern. I recognized it as an implicit affirmation when a colleague working in a different area took time to come to my workstation to say hello. We’d both worked last week and had seen each other then, so it would have been natural to not make the extra effort this time. I recognized it as an implicit affirmation when a colleague came to my desk last week for a short bourbon outfitters™ gathering at my workstation when he didn’t even want any bourbon. The easier response would have been to pass with a, “No thanks; I’m not going to drink today.”

Do you recognize any recent implicit affirmations in your life?

Loading spinner

Finished book #7 in 2026

Book #7
The Queens of Crime book cover
Book: The Queens of Crime Author: Marie Benedict
Source: Library loan
Format: Audiobook
Pages: 310 Duration: 01/23/26 – 01/25/26 (3 days)
Rating: ★★★★☆ Genres: historical fiction, mystery, crime, women, writers
📕10-word summary: 5 famous female crime writers collaborate to solve a murder.
🖌6-word review: 5 powerful protagonists. Creative, fun story.
💭A memorable quote: “Very few of us are what we seem.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: pantheon, ignominy, skullduggery, morass
Description:* London, 1930. The 5 greatest women crime writers have banded together to form a secret society with a single goal: to show they are no longer willing to be treated as second-class citizens by their male counterparts in the legendary Detection Club. Led by the formidable Dorothy L. Sayers, the group includes Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, Margery Allingham and Baroness Emma Orczy. They call themselves the Queens of Crime. Their plan? Solve an actual murder, that of a young woman found strangled in a park in France who may have connections leading to the highest levels of the British establishment.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This is my third book by this author, having read in 2022 The Only Woman in the Room (about Hedy Lamarr) and The Personal Librarian (about Belle da Costa Greene — personal librarian to famous financier and investment banker J.P. Morgan), and it’s a departure from her regular kind of storytelling, which is typically a fictionalized version of a woman in history who’s been overlooked or under-appreciated. In this story, instead of 1 woman, she writes about 5 women — who are actual, famous crime writers: Dorothy L. Sayers, Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, Margery Allingham, and Baroness Emma Orczy — and she has them all collaborating to solve one unsolved, real-life murder. Benedict incorporates each writer’s strengths, both as writers and of their main characters, such as Dorothy Sayers’ Lord Peter Wimsey who stars in 11 of her novels, and Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot, appearing in 33 of her novels and Miss Marple, who appears in 12. I found it to be an interesting, creative, and fun premise and would definitely recommend it, especially if you’re a fan of the mystery genre. Oh, bonus! There were at least 3 uses of one of Moira Rose’s vocabulary words: chin-wag.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Our menus for 01/25/26 – 01/31/26

All set for this week — precluding the daily “What shall we have for dinner tonight?” conversation.

Day Meal
01/25/26
Sunday
(Drinks w/Dyson & Sam, 5 p.m.)
•  Chicken tacos
•  Cream salad
01/26/26
Monday
•  Meatloaf
•  Mashed potatoes
•  Steamed cabbage
01/27/26
Tuesday
•  Ham steak
•  Garlic & rotini vegetables
•  Steamed carrots
01/28/26
Wednesday
•  Pepperoni pizza supreme
•  House salad
01/29/26
Thursday
•  Grilled filet mignon medallions
•  Air-fried-in-hush-puppy-mix okra
•  New potatoes
01/30/26
Friday
(John @ Madama Butterfly w/Guy, 7:30 p.m.)
•  Scallop & Corn Soup (Content Team Cookbook, p. 6)
•  Hearty bread
•  House salad
01/31/26
Saturday
•  Grilled chicken thighs
•  Potato salad
•  Green beans
Loading spinner

Finished book #6 in 2026

Book #6
Killing Floor book cover
Book: Killing Floor Author: Lee Child
Source: Library loan
Format: Kindle
Pages: 532 Duration: 01/19/26 – 01/22/26 (4 days)
Rating: ★★★★★ Genres: fiction, thriller, mystery, crime, suspense, detective, action, adventure
📕10-word summary: Ex-military policeman stumbles into corrupt town. Kicks ass. Takes names.
🖌6-word review: Excellent storytelling. On the violent side.
💭A memorable quote: “I had to decide how to use that pressure. I had to decide whether it was going to crush me or turn me into a diamond.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: flight case, interdiction, shunted, jinked, Perspex, intaglio, lithography, letterpress, sap, camber
Description:* The first Jack Reacher novel. Ex-military policeman Jack Reacher is a drifter. He’s just passing through Margrave, Georgia, and in less than an hour, he’s arrested for murder. Not much of a welcome. All Reacher knows is that he didn’t kill anybody. At least not here. Not lately. But he doesn’t stand a chance of convincing anyone. Not in Margrave, Georgia. Not a chance in hell.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I’ve only read short-story books by Lee ChildEleven Numbers and Safe Enough and Other Stories. I wanted to get a feel for his writing before diving into the Jack Reacher series. I was impressed with his writing, giving both those books 5 stars. I had no idea there were thirty Jack Reacher novels, and this is my first one. I’d originally planned to run through a couple (in order of publication, of course; because, that’s how I roll), but I’m rethinking that now. I’m torn, because I loved the writing and the plot, but I really abhor violence, and the worst (meaning most brutal) kind of violence takes place in this story. And I have no reason to think that’s going to abate in any way in future books. I’ll probably try at least the second book, Die Trying, which I’m in the queue for at my library. I hear there is a Reacher TV series, starring Alan Ritchson (a hunk!), and there are two Reacher movies, starring Tom Cruise. Bob’s the movie-watcher in our family, and he said, “Tom Cruise is too wimpy to play Reacher.” I’ve seen neither, as I don’t watch TV or movies, and with the violence in this book, I don’t have any desire to watch either.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Granny’s cleavage

It smells like standing next to your grandmother who — even hours earlier — applied a quarter-cupful of floriferous perfume to her cleavage.

If you miss that, good news!

You can relive it every time you freshen the air in your washroom with this brand and scent:

Whew! It’s a lot.

Loading spinner

A new, AI-generated opera mindmap

In the past, I’ve created mindmaps for 4 operas before going to see them:

Tosca

Rigoletto

The Merry Widow

The Barber of Seville


I’m going to see Madama Butterfly in a couple of weeks, and I’ve been wanting to create one for it, but being lazy and because we can, I thought, “Why don’t I ask AI to draw me one?”

This is what it came up with after a lot of prompt refinement.

Although I have absolutely no drawing talent, I kinda like my own creations better. 😂

Loading spinner

Finished book #5 in 2026

Book #5
Tell Me Everything  book cover
Book: Tell Me Everything Author: Elizabeth Strout
Source: Library loan
Format: Large print
Pages: 326 Duration: 01/16/26 – 01/18/26 (3 days)
Rating: ★★★★★ Genres: fiction, friendship, family, love
📕10-word summary: Lucy and Bob share an incredibly intimate, but nonsexual, relationship.
🖌6-word review: Elizabeth Strout at her absolute best.
💭A memorable quote: “She had apparently not remembered the time — weeks ago — that she had asked him to write the letter B on the back of her underpants, and he did not remind her that she had one more pair — the pair she had been wearing — which needed a B; he did not want to embarrass her.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: schlumpy, snot-wot
Description:* It’s autumn in Maine, and the town lawyer Bob Burgess has become enmeshed in an unfolding murder investigation, defending a lonely, isolated man accused of killing his mother. He has also fallen into a deep and abiding friendship with the acclaimed writer, Lucy Barton, who lives nearby in a house next to the sea. Together, Lucy and Bob talk about their lives, their hopes and regrets, and what might have been. Lucy, meanwhile, befriends one of Crosby’s longest inhabitants, Olive Kitteridge, now living in a retirement community on the edge of town. They spend afternoons together in Olive’s apartment, telling each other stories. Stories about people they have known – “unrecorded lives,” Olive calls them – reanimating them, and, in the process, imbuing their lives with meaning.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This is book #5 in a 5-book series, of which I first read book #4, Lucy by the Sea, then book #3, Oh William!, both of which I loved. Having enjoyed both of those so much, I decided to read the other 3 books in the series. So, next I read book #1, My Name is Lucy Barton, which I didn’t love at all, and which unfortunately, was the case with book #2, Anything is Possible! I know if I’d’ve read them in order, I would have stopped after books #1 & #2. I’m happy to say that this final book was on par, if not the best, of the 5-book series! I just love this author’s voice, and I loved the appearance in this book of Olive Kitteridge, who is the titular character in another of this author’s book, which I loved. So to recap about the series: I recommend skipping books #1 and #2 and reading books #3, #4, & #5.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Touching your face while sleeping

In bed one morning — many, many years ago now — a partner asked me if I knew that I often have my hand touching some part of my face while sleeping.

I think of this often, in fact almost every time I wake up and discover I’m doing it. The two most common scenarios are: 1) one or two fingers on my cheek or 2) my thumb and forefinger like a horseshoe around my chin.

I hadn’t realized I do that, so naturally, I did some research on it. And I find one of the reasons very interesting.


The research says:

There is a recognized correlation between sleeping with your hands touching your face and the behaviors established in the womb. This sleeping position is considered a form of self-soothing that mimics the comfort, warmth, and security experienced during fetal development.

The Womb Connection (Fetal Development)
  • Early Development: Touch is the first sense to develop, with receptors forming around 8 weeks of gestation.
  • Self-Soothing Behaviors: Ultrasound scans indicate that as early as the second trimester, babies frequently touch their faces and suck their thumbs for comfort.
  • Space Limitations: In the third trimester, limited space causes many babies to rest with their arms flexed near their faces.
  • Long-term Imprint: These early movements and positions establish a “map” of the body and create a “memory” of comfort that continues after birth.
Why Adults Sleep with Hands on the Face
  • Self-Soothing and Security: This posture, sometimes called “T-Rex arms,” acts as a subconscious way to calm the nervous system.
  • Comfort: Touching the face can trigger the release of neurotransmitters that create a sense of safety, similar to being in the womb.
  • Sensory Regulation: It can be used to manage sensory input or reduce anxiety.
Types of “Womb” Sleeping Positions
  • Fetal Position: Sleeping on the side with knees drawn up often mimics the protective, warm posture of the womb.
  • “Dinosaur Hands” (T-Rex): Elbows bent with hands tucked under the chin or on the chest, often to feel secure.
  • Face Touching: Resting hands on the forehead, cheeks, or covering the mouth for comfort, often to reduce anxiety.

Loading spinner

A postcard that made me literally howl

There I was this past Sunday, reading this week’s PostSecrets, when I came across a postcard in the collection that after literally howling, I created this card and put it in the U.S. mail to Bob.


Backstory:

Whenever we stay in hotels, Bob loves to get to know the people who service our room, although most times, we turn down daily service, because it’s so wasteful and we use very little. We definitely don’t want our sheets or towels changed, especially if we’re spending only one night.

We usually do use the coffee packets/pouches/k-cups, though, and since he knows they won’t come in for service and replace them, he keeps an eye out for one of their unattended carts in the hallway to grab some replacements for the next day.

We also each like 3 pillows, and if we forget to ask for the extra ones, he’ll look for hallway closets where the extra linen might be stored, and I can’t even describe the excitement if he finds one and it’s unlocked.

It cracks me up. Which is why, when I saw this postcard: 1) I immediately thought it was one that he would submit to PostSecret, and 2) it made me guffaw.

Loading spinner

Finished book #4 in 2026

Book #4
The Nickel Loop book cover
Book: The Nickel Loop Author: Nancy Houser-Bluhm
Source: Friend loan
Format: Print
Pages: 340 Duration: 01/12/26 – 01/15/26 (4 days)
Rating: ★★★★★ Genres: historical fiction, time travel, romance, LGBT, women’s rights, food safety
📕10-word summary: Time travelers meet “part way” — help each other through it.
🖌6-word review: Different, interesting experience of time travel.
💭A memorable quote: “There’s a bond that forms when people go through traumatic events together.”
Description:* Emmeline, a driven young woman, has withdrawn from friends and family since her adored father died suddenly. Traveling by train to visit her sister in a small Colorado town, she steps from 2022 into 1938. When she meets kind, well-educated Nicholas, she recognizes his panic and disbelief. He just arrived from 1898. The two struggle to grasp their shattered reality but blending into 1938 draws them close and love sparks. When a psychic offers hope for returning to their own times, will they forfeit what could be? Nicholas is astonished by the advances 1938 offers but Emmeline knows the 1930s hold little opportunity for her as a woman. A discovery intensifies the pull back to her own time. Can her heart exist on two timelines?*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: In spite of not being a sci-fi, magical realism, or fantasy fan, I do like time-travel stories. Other time-travel books I’ve enjoyed include The memory Collectors, Remember Me Tomorrow, Oona Out of Order, The Midnight Library, Mrs. Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, The Time Traveler’s Wife, In Five Years, and A Wrinkle in Time.

The refreshing part of this time-travel plot was: of the two people traveling, one lands in 1938 from the future (2022) and the other from the past (1898). One thing I especially liked about the way the story unraveled was that it was like it anticipated my questions and then answered them. Some examples:

  1. I was wondering how Nicholas’ cabin became a museum. And in the very next chapter, that was answered.
  2. I was wondering which family members were currently (in 1938) living in what was Emmeline’s sister’s home in 2022 (because it was a “family home” handed down over the years), and then Nicholas & Emmeline went there to see who was living there now.
  3. I began wondering how Emmeline’s family (specifically her mother and sister) were reacting to her having gone missing in the future, and that eventually happened in chapter 18 with a jump back to 2022.
  4. I wondered why Emmeline didn’t take a photo of Nicholas on the cell phone she had with her in 1938, which couldn’t be used as a phone at all, but whose camera would have been functional, and later on, when it was too late, Emmeline wondered herself why she hadn’t done that.

And of course, I liked that there was a gay character in the book.

A final comment about this book is that the author went to high school with Bob (my husband), and she’s my friend on Facebook, which fortunately didn’t influence my review of the book — thank goodness, as that could have been awkward. (Thanks for a great story, Nancy, and for anticipating my questions as a reader — and more importantly — answering them! 😍)


See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

This year’s Christmas gift from a thoughtful giftgiver

Our friend, Tracy Bailey, “knows her audience” when she gives gifts. Last year, she made us a cookbook with recipes that related to places we visited during the year.

This is her gift for 2025’s Christmas:

The first delivery contained a story inside a card with this cover:

And this storied letter was inside:


It also included these 2 cards:


And, finally, this decal, a bookmark, and a ribbon:




It’s a very cool gift for a reader and a writer, and I look forward to the other 2 deliveries! Thanks, Tracy! 😍

Loading spinner

The “AI-Generated Hit Movie” Horror Story (9-minute read)

Roku’s CEO predicts that the first 100% AI-generated hit movie will be released in the next three years. AI-generated video is already flooding social media, so it is not unreasonable to believe that fully AI-generated movies will be possible in three years.

The bigger question is whether there will be an audience for that content. It is likely that AI-generated content will raise the demand for human-generated content. There may be a market for hybrid content, but a purely AI-generated movie topping the box office by 2029 is unlikely.

Read the full article on Spyglass.

Sources:
•  TLDR. (2026, January 12). TLDR Newsletter. https://a.tldrnewsletter.com/web-version?ep=1&lc=f5cb7e17-003d-11ed-9258-0241b9615763&p=75705fcc-ef98-11f0-9f88-870dc8dd9c2c&pt=campaign&t=1768219211&s=26832720481d3119de8fb7f3ab2dec03f98096d6016c3a53b6b7a939a8724c9a
•  Siegler, M. (2026, January 10). The “AI-Generated Hit Movie” Horror Story. Spyglass. https://spyglass.org/ai-generated-hit-movies

Loading spinner

Finished book #3 in 2026

Book #3
Anything is Possible book cover
Book: Anything is Possible Author: Elizabeth Strout
Source: Library loan
Format: Large print
Pages: 254 Duration: 01/08/26 – 01/11/26 (4 days)
Rating: ★★★☆☆ Genres: fiction, family, dysfunction, class
📕10-word summary: Woman returns to visit her siblings after 17 years away.
🖌6-word review: Had trouble keeping track of characters.
💭A memorable quote: “Unease came into the room with the girl.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: lambert, kohl, cornetto, caseggiato, dappled
Description:* Here are two sisters: One trades self-respect for a wealthy husband while the other finds in the pages of a book a kindred spirit who changes her life. The janitor at the local school has his faith tested in an encounter with an isolated man he has come to help; a grown daughter longs for a mother’s love even as she comes to accept her own mother’s happiness in a foreign country; and the adult Lucy Barton (the heroine of My Name Is Lucy Barton, the author’s celebrated New York Times bestseller) returns to visit her siblings after 17 years of absence.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This is book #2 in a 5-book series, of which I first read book #4, Lucy by the Sea, then book #3, Oh William!, both of which I loved. Having enjoyed both of those so much, I decided to read the other 3 books in the series. So, next I read book #1, My Name is Lucy Barton, which I didn’t love at all, and which unfortunately, was the case with this book #2! I know if I’d’ve read them in order, I would have stopped after this book (#2). Now I’m hesitant to read book #5, Tell Me Everything, but I’m hoping that they got better as they went along and that I will enjoy book #5 as much as I did numbers 3 & 4. I’m at least going to start it, and if it’s more like books 1 & 2 than books 3 & 4, then I’ll abandon it.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Our menus for 01/11/26 – 01/17/26

All set for this week — precluding the daily “What shall we have for dinner tonight?” conversation.

Day Meal
01/11/26
Sunday
•  Ground turkey tacos
•  Mexican zucchini
•  Cream salad
01/12/26
Monday
•  Cheesy Amish breakfast casserole
01/13/26
Tuesday
(WCPL photo-organizing webinar, 7 – 8 p.m.)
•  Hot dogs
•  Fries
•  House salad
01/14/26
Wednesday
•  Fish
•  Rotmos
•  Steamed cabbage
01/15/26
Thursday
•  Hot smoked sausage/cabbage/broccoli stir-fry
01/16/26
Friday
•  Shrimp
•  French onion soup
•  Quinoa & spinach power blend vegetables
01/17/26
Saturday
•  Quinoa salad
•  Ham steak
•  Steamed cauliflower
Loading spinner

Fine print you won’t see on a “straight” cruise…

We’re getting ready to go on a Caribbean cruise by Vacaya, a company that creates inclusive LGBT+ vacations, and in this case is chartering Holland America Line’s Nieuw Statendam for a 7-day cruise to Grand Turk, San Juan, Charlotte Amalie (St. Thomas) and & Half Moon Cay (Bahamas).

I was just reading the FAQs and found these items interesting and unique.

Lanyards

When boarding Nieuw Statendam, you’ll be greeted by several V[acaya] Team members who’ll give you a choice of 3 different colored lanyards — red, yellow, or green.

Not only will the lanyard hold your room key card (especially helpful when in a swimsuit without pockets), but it’ll also help tell a part of your story at a glance:

RED – I’m happily taken and off the market, but definitely open to new friends.
YELLOW – I’m magical and mysterious. Ask for my deets.
GREEN – I’m open and ready to mingle.

We recognize you’ll be making a lanyard decision on Day 1 that might look a little different by Day 3. If you decide later that you’d like a different color, please swing by the VACAYA Hospitality Desk when open (hours are listed in your daily program) and we’ll be happy to offer an alternative while supplies last.

Nudity

Parties: Our theme parties will provide you with endless opportunities to show off your style with imaginative costumes. Just keep in mind that your penis and balls and your vagina have to be covered. But by all means don’t be afraid of the exciting world of sheer fabrics… we love them! Because Lido Market will be open late into the night (and we know you’re going to want a burger at 2am), we ask that if you’re wearing a costume that exposes your butt cheeks, that you wrap a towel around yourself while dining. Towels will be available near the entrance of the dining hall.

The pool deck: Just like with the men, women are allowed to use the Lido Pool or Sea View Pool topless. If anyone would like to sunbathe fully nude, please use our Clothing Optional Sun Deck while at sea. Please note that nude sunbathing is not allowed on the Clothing Optional Sun Deck when we’re docked alongside the pier.

Restaurant dress: Tank tops in the main restaurants for dinner aren’t the best choice. Let’s be real… only a few of us (and we applaud you fetishists) would want to see a hairy armpit while enjoying filet mignon and lobster.

Clothing optional sun deck

VACAYA will offer a clothing optional space onboard where sun lovers can sunbathe in the nude. We’ll have details of the exact location shortly before the cruise. The clothing optional sun deck is only available on Sea Days. While in all of our ports, swimsuits are required on the upper decks.

And obviously… we ask that cameras not be used in this area.

Red light district

Our Red Light District will be open nightly (with the exception of Night 1 and Night 7) from 11pm till the wee hours. We ask all guests to be respectful in regard to cleanliness. Supplies, towels, and trash receptacles will be readily available; please use them. A simple rule to ensure we’re able to continue offering the RLD: if you make a mess, clean it up. Also…

Be polite and respectful.

This should go without saying, but no means no. Whether that “no” is verbal, physical, or simply one’s attitude, if someone seems disinterested, leave them alone. Don’t try to initiate play if someone is walking away, shaking their head, pushing your hand away, or otherwise declining via body language. Don’t be pushy or rude. You’ll be asked to leave the space if you are.

Understand that consent is sometimes non-verbal.

To put a finer point on the above: if someone is blindfolded and on all fours, they’re likely giving you non-verbal consent to have sex with them. If a guy is standing there with his dick in his hand, he’s giving you non-verbal consent to approach and likely give him oral sex. If, however, anyone pulls away or otherwise signals a change in intent, that means they’ve declined consent, too.

These are obvious situations and pretty common, but if you’re ever unsure, it’s always acceptable to ask. Other situations, however, may not be so clear. Be aware of your body language and the body language of others, and remember that non-verbal consent gets harder to read when alcohol is involved.

That being said, please understand when entering a play space like the Red Light District, a certain degree of consent is waived.

If you walk into a space where people are having sex, you waive a degree of consent. That’s the reality of the situation. Of course, you still retain the ability to deny consent; if someone touches you, you can gently rebuff them or move their hand away. Anonymous groping and touching is a feature of these spaces, and by entering them, you will all but certainly face it. Please keep this simple rule in mind: don’t be an asshole. Don’t push yourself on someone if they’re clearly denying consent.

Understand that not everyone reads body language the same way.

If you’re in the Red Light District where talking is at a minimum and body language is the primary mode of communication, you run the risk of misreading someone’s intent – a risk everyone assumes by being there. If you have to be more direct with someone, open your mouth and speak. There is a big difference between misreading someone’s body language and ignoring a direct, verbal “no.” If the latter occurs, tell the V Team members who’ll be present at the RLD each night. Disrespecting consent isn’t sexy; it’s harassment. And pushing it too far could be criminal.

Don’t let rejection ruin your night.

Some people will want to play with you, some simply won’t. The person you’ve been looking at all night may not be in to you, and that’s okay. Accept it, and know that’s part of the reality of every play space.

Never talk about who you saw at the Red Light District, and never take photos or videos.

The Red Light District is a place people go to be uninhibited, to break loose from the morals and judgement of society, and fulfill their sexual fantasies. Respecting the privacy of others is key to maintaining that atmosphere. Talking about other attendees outside these venues reflects poorly on you, and detracts from the purpose of the space. CAMERAS ARE NOT ALLOWED IN THE RED LIGHT DISTRICT.

If you choose to have unprotected sex, assume the risks.

All sex carries some risk of HIV/STI transmission, but that risk can be minimized if you take certain precautionary measures, like using condoms or taking PrEP. Even with condoms, you’re still at risk for common sexually transmitted infections, and PrEP only protects you from HIV. This is why the official PrEP page on the CDC’s website states you should use condoms in conjunction with PrEP to protect yourself from infections like syphilis, chlamydia, and gonorrhea.

If you choose not to wear condoms, you obviously have a higher risk of getting an STI than your condom-wearing peers. That’s a simple fact. There’s no shame in it, however. It’s just a fact of sexual life today. If you enjoy anonymous play – no talk, no names, no chatter – you assume even higher risk, and such risk is absolutely part of this kind of experience.

Since risk is unavoidable, there’s no reason to let that reality prevent you from enjoying what you enjoy. Take necessary steps to keep yourself healthy. Get tested frequently. If you’re HIV+, get on meds as soon as possible and take them diligently. HIV+ people who take their medications as prescribed become undetectable, meaning HIV antibody tests can’t detect the virus in their blood, and they are unable to infect their sex partners with HIV, regardless of condom use.

Get tested for HIV and other STIs after the cruise.

If you go into the Red Light District often and regularly have sex there, please get tested after our time together. Frequent testing is how our community reduces the spread of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections.

Loading spinner

Finished book #2 in 2026

Book #2
The Correspondent book cover
Book: The Correspondent Author: Virginia Evans
Source: Library loan
Format: Kindle
Pages: 291 Duration: 01/06/26 – 01/07/26 (2 days)
Rating: ★★★★★ Genres: fiction, family, books about books, grief
📕10-word summary: Woman finds solace in literature, connecting with people by letter.
🖌6-word review: Nonpareil narrator. Commendable characters. Laudable letters.
💭A memorable quote: “I’ve now stood before my closet on three occasions and leafed through what I own, and the only black anything I have anymore is a dress I was probably wearing in the 1990s, which dips down to the uppermost part of what used to be my cleavage, but which now resembles the skin of a raw plucked chicken.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: dryads, lichen
Description:* Sybil Van Antwerp has throughout her life used letters to make sense of the world and her place in it. Most mornings, around half past ten, Sybil sits down to write letters—to her brother, to her best friend, to the president of the university who will not allow her to audit a class she desperately wants to take, to Joan Didion and Larry McMurtry to tell them what she thinks of their latest books, and to one person to whom she writes often yet never sends the letter. Sybil expects her world to go on as it always has — a mother, grandmother, wife, divorcee, distinguished lawyer, she has lived a very full life. But when letters from someone in her past force her to examine one of the most painful periods of her life, she realizes that the letter she has been writing over the years needs to be read and that she cannot move forward until she finds it in her heart to offer forgiveness.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This book is all the rage right now, and I waited several months for it on my library‘s waiting list. It was at — or near — the top of many “2025 best book of the year” lists. I certainly agree with its high ratings, as I enjoyed it tremendously. I love a good epistolary novel, probably because the idea of reading other people’s mail greatly appeals to me. I loved the variety of people she wrote to, including a couple of authors (Ann Patchett to name one that I love). I also love books about books, to which I recently devoted an entire blog entry, and there were several books mentioned in this book that I’ve read including, Hamnet, The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox, Bel Canto, The Dutch House, 84 Charing Cross Road, The Uncommon Reader, Cutting for Stone, Rebecca, The Remains of the Day, Demon Copperhead, Crossing to Safety, and Wuthering Heights. Also book/author-related, there were a couple of Joan Didion books mentioned, whose Notes To John I recently read. And a final relevant-to-me thing in this book was a plotline in it about DNA testing, which reminded me of my recently read book: The Lost Family: How DNA Testing is Uncovering Secrets, Reuniting Relatives, and Upending Who We Are.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

A lost art…

We received this thank-you card in our mailbox from a couple we met recently at an event at our local bottle shop, Pelagic and invited them to our Pelagic Run Club Runners’ Happy Hour when they start back up after the time change in the spring.

To which I responded:

“Oh, the lost art of a hand-written thank you note! Bob and I are huge fans of them and send them regularly. (In fact, it takes everything in us not to send you a thank-you card for your thank-you card! 😂)

“Thank you for your very kind words, and we look forward to partying with y’all in 2026!”


Coincidentally, we are on our last thank-you card, so I just ordered a box of 100 of them — 25 of each of these:

Loading spinner

Stinking, Spongy, Dark, Huge: A Spider Web Unlike Any Seen Before (6-minute read)

Researchers discovered a spider web in a cave in the Balkans — created by two usually-hostile species of spider — that spans about 1,140 square feet.

Read the full article on nytimes.com.

Sources:
•  TLDR. (2026, January 6). TLDR Newsletter. https://a.tldrnewsletter.com/web-version?ep=1&lc=f5cb7e17-003d-11ed-9258-0241b9615763&p=626a8c9c-eae6-11f0-8b48-219a26ca4ae6&pt=campaign&t=1767700726&s=44756345edeac5216c5709d6ee1eb03a67b3efa552864fd01d0737eee1934f66
•  Hassan, A. (2025, November 11). Stinking, spongy, dark, huge: a spider web unlike any seen before. http://www.nytimes.com. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/08/science/biggest-spiderweb-sulfur-cave.html

Loading spinner

Finger-Prick Blood Test Could Offer Easier Way to Detect Alzheimer’s, Researchers Say (4-minute read)

Dried blood analysis could be a feasible and scalable way to detect the brain changes linked to Alzheimer’s. Researchers have developed a dried blood test that, while less accurate than traditional blood tests, showed good ability to distinguish people with Alzheimer’s-related disease.

The method is cheaper than traditional testing and could potentially be performed outside of clinical settings. The same technique could potentially be used to detect other conditions, such as multiple sclerosis and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

Read the full article on bloomberg.com.

Sources:
•  TLDR. (2026, January 6). TLDR Newsletter. https://a.tldrnewsletter.com/web-version?ep=1&lc=f5cb7e17-003d-11ed-9258-0241b9615763&p=626a8c9c-eae6-11f0-8b48-219a26ca4ae6&pt=campaign&t=1767700726&s=44756345edeac5216c5709d6ee1eb03a67b3efa552864fd01d0737eee1934f66
•  Gale, J. (2026, January 5). Finger-prick blood test could offer easier way to detect Alzheimer’s, researchers say. Bloomberg.com. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-01-05/alzheimer-s-detection-may-get-easier-with-simple-finger-prick-blood-test

Loading spinner

Finished book #1 in 2026

Book #1
What Happened to the McCrays? book cover
Book: What Happened to the McCrays? Author: Tracey Lange
Source: Amazon Unlimited loan
Format: Kindle
Pages: 352 Duration: 01/01/26 – 01/05/26 (5 days)
Rating: ★★★★☆ Genres: fiction, family, romance, grief
📕10-word summary: Couple destroyed by loss of their son tries to recover.
🖌6-word review: Angst and sadness dominate the narrative.
💭A memorable quote: “It was a curious thing being in that room again. He felt a little lost in time, like he was visiting the boy who used to inhabit this space and dream about his future.”
🎓A new-to-me word: puffy
Description:* When Kyle McCray gets word his father has suffered a debilitating stroke, he returns to his hometown of Potsdam, New York, where he doesn’t expect a warm welcome. Kyle left suddenly two and a half years ago, abandoning people who depended on him: his father, his employees, his friends—not to mention Casey, his wife of sixteen years and a beloved teacher in town. He plans to lie low and help his dad recuperate until he can leave again, especially after Casey makes it clear she wants him gone. The longer he’s home, the more Kyle understands the impact his departure has had on the people he left behind. When he’s presented with an opportunity for redemption as the coach of the floundering middle school hockey team, he begins to find compassion in unexpected places. Kyle even considers staying in Potsdam, but that’s only possible if he and Casey can come to some kind of peace with each other.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: A friend of mine recommended this book, which she loved. It was a good story, which I enjoyed, but for me, it took a little too long to get to the crux of what really happened the day the couple’s son died and why it was so hard for them to forgive themselves and each other.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2026 and previous years: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Our menus for 01/04/26 – 01/10/26

Happy New Year! Thanks to Bob for getting us “good to go” for the upcoming week! What day shall we expect you?

Day Meal
01/04/26
Sunday
•  Pork loin
•  Mashed potatoes
•  Green beans
01/05/26
Monday
•  Shrimp, rice, & vegetable stir fry
01/06/26
Tuesday
•  Smoked sausage
•  Butternut squash ravioli
•  Rotmos
01/07/26
Wednesday
•  Cod c̅ coleslaw
•  Crinkle-cut fries
•  Fruit salad
01/08/26
Thursday
•  Hamburger soup (p. 150 of Best Hamburger Recipes cookbook)
•  Crusty bread
01/09/26
Friday
(LTBG Happy Hour @ Nomad, 6 – 8 p.m.)
•  Spinach lasagna plan-aheads
•  Zucchini
01/10/26
Saturday
(Possible visit from Anne, Dan, Evalyn, etc.)
•  Chicken tacos
•  Mexican corn
•  Cream salad
Loading spinner

2nd Annual Mordecai New Year’s Eve Progressive Cocktail Party

We had our 2nd annual neighborhood New Year’s Eve progressive cocktail party, with this year’s theme being “Pours and Passports”:

In a countdown to midnight, 4 Mordecai neighbors opened their homes for an hour each and offered drinks and snacks related to their stop’s country. We had ~50 people attending this year’s event, up from 28 in our inaugural year in 2024.


First Stop

The house, for Italian Indulgence

Our host, Marianne

Featured Italian cocktails:
•  Aperol Spritz: Aperol, Prosecco, sparkling water, orange slice
•  Negroni: gin, sweet vermouth, Campari, orange wedge

Featured Italian snacks:
•  Two antipasto platters of cured meats, olives, cheeses, grapes
•  Crackers & bread slices to complement the platters
•  A variety of biscotti
•  Marcona almonds
•  Tiramisu (in honor of a guest’s birthday)

At this first stop, we asked everyone to create a name tag comprising their name and how long they’ve lived in Mordecai.

I pulled an Emeril Lagasse on Bob’s and my name tags and kicked them up a notch (Bam!) with a picture of our house on it.

Also at this stop, people made good use of the selfie station provided by Marianne & Jen!

Click on first image to bring up the gallery to flip through.


Second Stop

The house, for French Fusion

Our hosts, Brian & Jeff

Featured French cocktails:
•  Cognac French 75: cognac, champagne, simple syrup, lemon juice
•  Minuit a Paris: vodka, St-Germain, cranberry juice, simple syrup, lemon slice

Featured French snacks:
• Spinach & cheddar quiche
• Baguette slices with ham, Gruyère cheese, French butter, & cornichon
Gougère cheese puffs with Parmesan and Pecorino cheeses
• Macarons 


Some people shots at this stop:


Third Stop

The house, for Irish Imbibements


Our hosts, John & Mary Beth

Featured Irish beverages:
•  Irish coffee with a jigger of Jameson Irish Whiskey and Nana Casey’s secret recipe for sweetness, topped with a dollop of whipped cream
•  Guinness beer
•  Black Bush Irish Whiskey
•  Writers’ Tears Irish Whiskey

Featured Irish snacks and artifacts:

Snacks
•  Scones
•  Guinness Glazed Meatballs
•  Bleu and cheddar cheeses from Ireland

Artifacts
•  Statue of St. Patrick, patron saint of Ireland
•  A piece of crochet from Mary Beth’s grandma
•  Photos in remembrance of family now gone: both sets of parents; John’s brother, Tom; John’s great-grandmother, Nana Casey (of the secret-Irish-Coffee-sweetness-recipe fame)
•  Books related to Ireland, among other items

Some people shots at this stop:



Fourth Stop

The house, for Mexican Mixers

Our host, Amy

Amy’s co-host, Neal, provided the food

Featured Mexican cocktails:
•  Palomas: tequila, grapefruit juice, sparking water, lime juice, coarse sea salt
•  Champagne for the midnight toast (full disclosure: not Mexican)

Featured Mexican snacks:
• Crema de garbanzo con cilantro y jalapeños asado acompañado de zanahorias, apio y pimientos morrones
• Rugelach de chocolate mexicano y nuez pacana & Rugelach de queso fresco ahumado y jalapeño asado
• Pastel de tres leches

Sheets of paper were available to write on with “Sh*t you don’t want to take into 2026” and burn in the fire pit before midnight. Some example sh*t people wanted to jettison:

The accumulation of liquid courage across 4 hours and 4 homes brought the socializing to a peak during this final hour of 2025!

Ending up with the countdown on TV and a champagne toast at midnight.


And if there was any doubt that fun was had by all, a look at Amy’s kitchen at the end of the night!


Thanks to all who hosted our four stops this year and your enthusiastic and generous hospitality!

After this second one of these neighborhood progressive cocktail parties, it’s obvious it’s a great way to spend New Year’s Eve. In fact, I recently wrote three 50-word stories about some advantages of spending New Year’s Eve this way:

Loading spinner

Three 50-word stories about some advantages of our 2nd annual neighborhood NYE progressive cocktail party.

Being with neighbors Seeing some houses Being off the roads
The 4 houses hosting this year’s event — with an hour at each house and a theme of “Pours to Passports” — will feature a cocktail and a snack from their respective countries: Italy, France, Ireland, & Mexico. In addition to “Mexican Mixers,” we’ll have a midnight champagne toast at the last stop. I’ve lived in this neighborhood for 10 years now, and I’ve never been in 3 of the 4 houses hosting this year. I’m looking forward to checking them out, which is a great aspect of this party, along with meeting several new neighbors that’ve moved in since last year’s party. Beyond the neighborhood community being shared, which is no small thing in itself, another great thing about this kind of party — walking around the neighborhood — is keeping all of us off the roads. And bonus for Bob and me, the final stop is at the house of our next-door neighbor!

Read other 50-word stories that I’ve written.

Loading spinner

Finished book #136 in 2025

Book #136
My Name is Lucy Barton book cover
Book: My Name is Lucy Barton Author: Elizabeth Strout
Source: Library loan
Format: Large print
Pages: 193 Duration: 12/30/25 – 12/30/25 (1 day)
Rating: ★★★☆☆ Genres: fiction, family, relationships
📕10-word summary: Heart-to-heart conversations between mother and hospitalized daughter with tenuous relationship.
🖌6-word review: Surprisingly less than I expected, wanted.
💭A memorable quote: “‘It’s not my job to make readers know what’s a narrative voice and not the private view of the author,’ and that alone made me glad I had come.”
Description:* Lucy Barton is recovering slowly from what should have been a simple operation. Her mother, to whom she hasn’t spoken for many years, comes to see her. Gentle gossip about people from Lucy’s childhood in Amgash, Illinois, seems to reconnect them, but just below the surface lie the tension and longing that have informed every aspect of Lucy’s life: her escape from her troubled family, her desire to become a writer, her marriage, her love for her two daughters. Knitting this powerful narrative together is the brilliant storytelling voice of Lucy herself: keenly observant, deeply human, and truly unforgettable.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I’m reading the 5-book Amgash Series by this author, of which this is the first book in the series, but my third book in the series, as I’m reading them out of order. In 2023, I read the 4th book, Lucy by the Sea in my book club just after the pandemic, and which was actually centered around the pandemic, and I loved it. Just last week, I read the 3rd book in the series, Oh William!, and loved that, too, and which prompted me to read the remaining 3. So, imagine my surprise when I read this first book in the series and didn’t love it. I’m glad I didn’t read this one first, because I might not have gone on to read the others. I’m very curious to read the 2nd book, Anything is Possible, in 2026 to hopefully see how the writing improves to the level I loved in books #3 and #4.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2025 and previous years: 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #135 in 2025

Book #135
Juror #3 book cover
Book: Juror #3 Author: James Patterson
Source: Library loan
Format: Large print
Pages: 352 Duration: 12/29/25 – 12/30/25 (2 days)
Rating: ★★★★★ Genres: fiction, mystery, legal thriller, crime
📕10-word summary: Juror #3 plays a significant role in back-to-back murder trials.
🖌6-word review: Legal thriller unfolds at good pace.
💭A memorable quote: “Growing up poor in small Mississippi towns, I had learned at an early age to anticipate other people’s reactions. And when my gut failed me, I had my fists.”
Description:* The murder of a woman from one of the town’s oldest families has Rosedale’s upper crust howling for blood, and the prosecutor is counting on Ruby’s inexperience to help him deliver a swift conviction. Ruby’s client is a college football star who has returned home after a career-ending injury, and she is determined to build a defense that will stick. She finds help in unexpected quarters from Suzanne, a hard-charging attorney armed to the teeth, and Shorty, a diner cook who knows more than he lets on. Ruby never belonged to the country-club set, but once she nearly married into it. As news breaks of a second murder, Ruby’s ex-fiancé, Lee Greene, shows up on her doorstep — a Southern gentleman in need of a savior. As lurid, intertwining investigations unfold, no one in Rosedale can be trusted, especially the twelve men and women impaneled on the jury. They may be hiding the most incendiary secret of all.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: The is my second James Patterson book, having read his Merry Christmas, Alex Cross 13 years ago in 2012. It’s been a while since I’ve read a book centered around a trial, and I really enjoy them. I’ll have to look for more to read in 2026, perhaps starting with 1 or 2 from this list of 11 Best Legal Thrillers That Bring the Courtroom Drama, only a couple of which I’ve already read. As I have to believe that most readers of this book are, I was surprised when what seemed like the climax of the drama around juror #3 was reached in the middle of the book. It’s one of those times when you think, “Dang, there’s still half the book left. How can that be?” Read on.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2025 and previous years: 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Our menus for 12/28/25 – 01/03/26

This week’s menus. Looking forward to Wednesday’s fun foods! What strikes your fancy this week?

Day Meal
12/28/25
Sunday
•  Pizza plan-aheads & catch-as-catch-can
12/29/25
Monday
•  Turkey c̅ cranberry sauce
•  Mashed potatoes c̅ gravy & stuffing
•  Brussels sprouts
12/30/25
Tuesday
•  Kielbasa c̅ pineapple
•  Scalloped potatoes
•  House salad
12/31/25
Wednesday
(Mordecai NYE Progressive Cocktail Party – “Pours & Passports”)
•  Chez nous, 6 p.m.: Pre-party, light hors d’oeuvres of potato skins
•  Marianne’s house, 8-8:55: Italian drinks & treats
•  Jeff & Brian’s house, 9-9:55: French drinks & treats
•  Mary Beth & John’s house, 10-10:55: Irish drinks & treats
•  Amy’s house, 11-midnight: Mexican drinks & treats + champagne toast
01/01/26
Thursday
•  Fettuccine c̅ meatballs
•  Green beans
•  House salad
01/02/26
Friday
•  Ham steak
•  Broccoli casserole
•  House salad
01/03/26
Saturday
•  Grilled chicken breasts
•  Pasta salad
•  Green beans
Loading spinner

Finished book #134 in 2025

Book #134
The Mayfly book cover
Book: The Mayfly Author: Ben Rogers
Source: Free BookBub download
Format: Kindle
Pages: 268 Duration: 12/28/25 – 12/28/25 (1 day)
Rating: ★★★☆☆ Genres: fiction, short stories
📕10-word summary: 8 quite different short stories, albeit some with common themes.
🖌6-word review: Sometimes arcane writing; many unappealing-to-me plotlines.
💭A memorable quote: “But you’ve never heard me refer to my ‘Mr. Morning’ as a ‘beaver basher’ or a ‘cranny axe!’ Still, if it be necessary, do allow me to herein and henceforth renounce this most troublesome organ, which ‘serves as duct for the transfer of sperm but equally so the dissemination of so much poisonous masculinity.’ Lord. To think all my life I’ve been lugging such a weapon betwixt my legs! When last we shared a bed and you tugged me to tumescence, am I to understand you were actually trying to uproot the root of all evil? Do tell…”
🎓Some new-to-me words: Mephistos, Sikorsky, mayfly, riffle, absquatulating, helpmeet, escritoire, larder, memento mori, Sozodont, road agentry, invectives, pudenda, rusticate, manzanita
Description:* The life of a mayfly can be harrowing or hilarious, but it is always short. So, too, the short story.
Fans of the genre will love the inventive specimens on display in this rollicking debut collection. A group of aging engineering professors take the weekend off for some fun and felony. A pro cyclist learns the cost of greatness in a Pushcart-nominated ride. A member of the Manhattan Project sees the world’s first nuclear reaction through resentful eyes. A Hollywood editor discovers what belongs on his cutting room floor. And in 1869, an aspiring writer pens a series of letters during his doomed homecoming to Virginia City, Nevada.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I wanted to like this book more than I did. I really don’t like when I’m reading a story and I’m not exactly sure what’s going on in it for an extended period of time. There were a few of those in this collection. The biggest problem, I think, was that I wasn’t interested in, or just didn’t like, the plotlines of most of the stories. Some examples include: a bunch of guys (implausibly) stealing a Reno landmark, an athlete pushing himself beyond safety, anthropomorphizing animals, and a bunch of privileged kids pulling pranks at an exclusive tennis camp. The story I liked the most appealed to me because it was epistolary in nature and it was about writing, but it was way too long for a short story in an anthology. If it wasn’t the last story in the collection, I probably would have abandoned it, but it was ultimately satisfying — the ending “saving it.” It would have been better as a novella, or perhaps as the first story instead of the last, at which time you already had an expectation of it being much shorter than it turned out to be.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2025 and previous years: 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #133 in 2025

Book #133
Oh William! book cover
Book: Oh William! Author: Elizabeth Strout
Source: Library loan
Format: Large print
Pages: 240 Duration: 12/25/25 – 12/28/25 (3 days)
Rating: ★★★★★ Genres: fiction, family, relationships
📕10-word summary: Writer and her ex-husband are still figuring each other out.
🖌6-word review: Beautiful writing. Protagonist’s “voice” is captivating.
💭A memorable quote: “Please try to understand this: I have always thought that if there was a big corkboard and on that board was a pin for every person who ever lived, there would be no pin for me.”
🎓Some new-to-me words: Chagas disease, schistosomiasis
Description:* Lucy Barton is a writer, but her ex-husband, William, remains a hard man to read. William, she confesses, has always been a mystery to me. Another mystery is why the two have remained connected after all these years. They just are. So Lucy is both surprised and not surprised when William asks her to join him on a trip to investigate a recently uncovered family secret — one of those secrets that rearrange everything we think we know about the people closest to us. What happens next is nothing less than another example of what Hilary Mantel has called Elizabeth Strout’s “perfect attunement to the human condition.” There are fears and insecurities, simple joys and acts of tenderness, and revelations about affairs and other spouses, parents and their children. On every page of this exquisite novel we learn more about the quiet forces that hold us together — even after we’ve grown apart.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: I loved this book, as I loved the author’s Lucy by the Sea, which our book club read in 2023. I just love the way the protagonist narrator thinks and speaks. Lucy by the Sea is actually the 4th book in a 5-book series, and this book, Oh William!, is the 3rd in the series, and after reading it, I’ve decided to read the other 3 in the series: My Name is Lucy Barton (#1), Anything is Possible (#2), & Tell Me Everything (#5).

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2025 and previous years: 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner

Finished book #132 in 2025

Book #132
Rich Dad, Poor Dad book cover
Book: Rich Dad, Poor Dad Author: Robert T. Kiyosaki
Source: Library loan
Format: Print
Pages: 288 Duration: 12/25/25 – 12/26/25 (2 days)
Rating: ★★★☆☆ Genres: nonfiction, business, finance, money, personal finance, self-help, personal development
📕10-word summary: Important things about money that our schools don’t teach you.
🖌6-word review: Very educational, but heavy on hype.
💭A memorable quote: “Ray Kroc’s McDonald’s is not in the business of hamburgers; it’s in the business of real estate. Today, McDonald’s is the largest single owner of real estate in the world, owning even more than the Catholic Church.”
🎓A new-to-me word: chaologist
Description:* Rich Dad, Poor Dad is Robert’s story of growing up with two dads — his real father and the father of his best friend, his rich dad — and the ways in which both men shaped his thoughts about money and investing. The book explodes the myth that you need to earn a high income to be rich and explains the difference between working for money and having your money work for you.*From goodreads.com’s synopsis.
Thoughts: This book made me glad we’re retired and (financially) comfortable in retirement. I completely agree that our education system does a disservice to people by not teaching basic finances, and I’m glad I took on learning it myself and early in my life. These type of hyped-up financial (inspirational?) books remind me of books about losing weight, the similarity being that to lose weight, you need to expend more calories than you take in and to grow wealth you need to spend less money than you take in. In the end, it really is that simple. But it’s not easy, and most people aren’t willing to do it. And I’m extremely grateful (and lucky) to have a life partner who was willing to do it in his life, too.

See the rest of the books I’ve read in 2025 and previous years: 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019.

Loading spinner