Ruth attempts refinement rather than fashion in 2023*second half

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Ruth attempts refinement rather than fashion in 2023*second half

12wonderY
Edited: Jul 4, 2023, 9:50 am

Welcome to the second half of my reading year.



I finished Thunderbird Falls - 81 in ebook just moments before it disappeared from Libby. It’s an aggrevating read. The author relies too much on Joanne’s stubbornness and deliberate ignorance to drive the plot and the crisis. But there are interesting situations and the secondary characters are very nicely drawn.
And there are a few memorable quotes which I’ve saved in CK. I do love a good phrasing.

22wonderY
Jul 4, 2023, 10:04 am

I’ve listened to 40% of Dead Man’s Hand and giving it up. Most people are praising this first work by the son of Jim Butcher, but it really hasn’t gotten going this far in. I’m not particularly interested in either of the main characters.

32wonderY
Edited: Jul 4, 2023, 12:26 pm

It’s too hot to be outside today. I go out to the deck and do little tasks and then back inside to catch up on the Libby pile.
Tossing The Christmas Postcards at 10% read. Cute premise, but uninteresting characters.

Returning Poverty, by America, also at 10% read. It’s fascinating, but in a very negative way.

42wonderY
Edited: Jul 4, 2023, 7:17 pm

I should know better than to get my recommendations from Instagram.
The Duke & I (18%) has a “hero” that twice now has admitted to the reader that he would have taken liberties if he didn’t know the young lady’s brother. That is a distinctly unsavory trait and I don’t want to spend further time with him or an author who thinks that’s acceptable.

5quondame
Jul 4, 2023, 7:30 pm

>4 2wonderY: I can't remember if the lady in question was in favor of his taking such liberties or not, and that does make a difference. At least I don't remember that bothering me when I read it. But I haven't got around to another of the Bridgerton novels.

62wonderY
Jul 4, 2023, 11:27 pm

>5 quondame: He doesn’t consider her willingness. His first thought upon seeing her is wanting to back her up to a wall and kiss her.

72wonderY
Jul 5, 2023, 1:00 pm

I returned Demon Copperhead to the library today. I despise that I read only about 14% of it; but I’m a coward.

8quondame
Jul 5, 2023, 5:03 pm

>6 2wonderY: But does he do it? Unacted upon urges aren't what I'd judge characters on. In fact a complete lack of desire to do dreadful deeds makes good behavior unimpressive.

92wonderY
Jul 5, 2023, 5:35 pm

>8 quondame: I didn’t hang around to find out. I doubt it’s a plot point and it was used the first time to indicate how much he was physically attracted to her at first sight. But the only reason he refrained had nothing to do with her, but who her brother was.
It was a cheap device and had echoes of “ If you’re famous, they let you do it.”

102wonderY
Edited: Jul 6, 2023, 5:37 am

Discontinuing The Wicked Bargain at 7% with no recall of the content.
Also, -Witch King at 12%, Martha Well’s new fantasy. It’s okay, but not grabbing me.

11quondame
Jul 6, 2023, 7:59 pm

>10 2wonderY: I finished them both. I preferred Witch King by 2 whole stars. I think WK gains momentum as it goes, though I think I found it pretty compelling throughout.

122wonderY
Jul 6, 2023, 8:10 pm

I like the simplicity/sparseness of the Murderbot stories. Witch King seemed too busy/complex. I may visit it again another time.

132wonderY
Edited: Jul 7, 2023, 7:49 pm



I thought this week would be a good time to read Common Sense - 82. It was surprisingly economically based in some ways. Paine goes back to Samuel to prove that God doesn’t prefer kings, and so they don’t have any special claims. He thinks it’s absurd for a continent to be ruled by an island. He spends time discussing not only the potential trade market with the rest of Europe, but calculates the value and cost of the British navy and a theoretical US navy. He proposes a Congress and claims The Law should be king. He also advocates term limits for congress members so they don’t lose touch with their people.

142wonderY
Jul 11, 2023, 2:51 pm

Watched Frontline’s PBS documentary
Clarence and Ginni Thomas: Politics, Power and the Supreme Court

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJuRx1wARUk

In a way, I feel sorry for them and how they shaped their lives.

152wonderY
Edited: Jul 13, 2023, 6:58 pm



The Firebrand and the First Lady - 83 exhaustively covers the life of Pauli Murray, black activist and poet. The relationship she maintained with Eleanor Roosevelt is the pretext and focus of the book, but wasn’t particularly necessary, as her life is worth telling.

Also 14 Cows for America because it was mentioned as being on a banned books list recently. Lovely story and the illustrations are stunning.

162wonderY
Jul 15, 2023, 6:12 am

It appeared from recent references that I had missed out on an iconic film. So I watched My Cousin Vinny. It was mildly entertaining. I thought Marisa Tomei was much better than any of the other actors. And the judge was amusing.

172wonderY
Jul 15, 2023, 7:15 am

An Immense World is possibly too detailed for my patience level just now. I’ve listened for almost two hours and I’m still in chapter 1. Each chapter is devoted to a particular animal sense. I might enjoy more a couple of later chapters, particularly the one on vibrations. But Libby is set to take it back soon.

18lesmel
Jul 15, 2023, 3:30 pm

192wonderY
Edited: Jul 26, 2023, 12:02 pm

Listening to Austen’s The Watsons/Sanditon - 84 and being repulsed by either the obnoxious characters or the narrator’s rendition of them. Sanditon is the worse of the two.

Though I understand that Sanditon has been finished and that the appearance of the hero improves the whole situation. I will look for it.

202wonderY
Edited: Jul 25, 2023, 6:27 pm



The Murder of Mr. Wickham - 85 is a successful exercise in bringing characters from five Jane Austen novels together for an extended house party hosted by the Knightleys. An additional character is the offspring of the Tilneys of Northanger Abbey.

It’s been a while since I’ve read any of them, so I had to make up a cheat sheet to keep the Brandons and Bertrams and Wentworths straight.
It’s an absorbing murder mystery. A few facts remain obscure even while introduced. Besides Wickham, there is not one character I dislike. The various marital dramas are convincing. The one that stands out is Fanny’s theological discernment which is at odds with her husband, the cleric.

I’m only 2/3rds through; so I may have more to note later.

Finished it in good order. It’s a good story. Looking for a sequel.

21BonnieJune54
Jul 25, 2023, 4:57 pm

>20 2wonderY: That sounds fun. I should look out for it.

22fuzzi
Jul 26, 2023, 6:58 am

>20 2wonderY: I just posted in the MysteryKIT thread that I'm not much of a mystery fan, but enjoy recommendations.

I think this is one I will give a try. Thanks.

232wonderY
Edited: Jul 27, 2023, 11:56 am

Disposing of What the Hex and Go Hex Yourself with an “Ew!”

242wonderY
Jul 28, 2023, 12:28 pm

The library had a tea party birthday celebration for Beatrix Potter this morning. It was all ages; the youngest (but one) celebrating her third birthday today.
We were encouraged to dress up.
I was given credit for the original inspiration for the event, having had conversation with Shelley, one of the librarians.

I met Barb, a transplant from Baltimore who lives on Boone Street (where daughter lived). She’s retired and moved here with her husband 8 years ago after researching small towns. Also met Melissa and Cecilia, recently from Cambodia. They moved here a month ago and Cecilia will be attending Berea College. Her older sister is on staff at the college. Cecilia was dressed as Mister McGregor. She told about being in a Potter ballet in Cambodia.

The librarians are my kind of people. One of them brought her two extensive sets of tea china. They served rolls and other pastries and petit fours. They had a large fabric mural of McGregor’s garden on the wall and props for the children to have their photos taken.

The film Miss Potter was shown, but allowing the young ones to still party in their own way. I had not seen the film before. Beautiful film. Well done!

I sat on the floor and read The Tale of Miss Moppet to some little girls. Miss Moppet bangs her head on the cupboard, so I gestured to the bruise on one of the girl’s forehead. That led to a beautiful conversation about it being a birth mark and being her mother’s favorite color - blue.

My gardening acquaintance, Carol Ann, was also there with several friends and I was introduced to her quilting buddies.

I realized that the garden scene is basically what I am aiming for in my own yard. It’s nice to have it so usefully drawn out!

252wonderY
Edited: Jul 29, 2023, 6:20 pm

Trashy mystery novel Buried in a Good Book - 86. Not recommended. The main character is the last to know whodunnit. Her theories are silly, but the resolution is ludicrous.

262wonderY
Jul 29, 2023, 6:23 pm

I’ve been re-reading Network Effect - 87. For some reason, the plot is slippery for me in audio.

272wonderY
Jul 30, 2023, 2:57 pm

I had a decrepit Mrs. Pollifax volume left in the LFL, and tried it. Instead I decided to listen to the first story, The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax - 88, and was rewarded with a good time. I’d like to think that good sense and friendliness win out over terrible circumstances every time.

282wonderY
Aug 1, 2023, 7:54 am

Just wanted to share this outstanding post:

Artist models

https://www.instagram.com/p/CvBHcn-retg/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

292wonderY
Edited: Aug 21, 2023, 2:24 pm

Ever since Earth Day, I’ve kept a library copy of The Fate of Food nearby, meaning to start it and never beginning. I see I also borrowed it in 2020 from Libby, also never starting it. Okay, I found it in audio, which ups my chances.
Cracking open the hard copy, I see (at least) two subtle literary references in the intro. A company making a vegan beverage called Soylent Inc. (ewwww!) and “…when I imagine a world in which my adult children… struggle to rig Mark Watney-style indoor cropping systems…”

Chapter 9 Water
Chapter 12 - New experimental food crops

302wonderY
Aug 14, 2023, 9:54 pm

There are several works that complete Austen’s Sanditon fragment. Marie Dobbs published hers in 1975.



Sanditon - 89 has a whole slew of unpleasant or silly characters. Charlotte spends a lot of time assessing them and trying to make conclusive assessments. She takes her time and is willing to change her mind and with generosity. She has a difficult time assessing Sidney Parker in particular. This did not really feel like an Austen novel.

312wonderY
Aug 16, 2023, 9:18 am

I think I became aware of We Deserve Monuments in the YA group, and borrowed from Libby because it has themes of racism and lgbtq+. It’s expiring and I’ve only been listening sporadically, not remembering the story in between times. At 35% read, it’s more about friendship. The town history aspect promised doesn’t appeal to me at all; but I do like the parts where Avery is working on getting to know her grandmother who has just been diagnosed with a non-treatable cancer. Cantankerous old woman has a decent story to tell. But I’m not captured enough to renew it.

322wonderY
Edited: Aug 21, 2023, 2:23 pm

.

332wonderY
Aug 16, 2023, 1:45 pm

My back has been spasming this morning, so I’ve been sitting against the heating pad. Good time to watch a film.

I saw a post on Instagram that alerted me to the documentary Reel Injun, so I ordered it through inter library loan. Wow! Powerful and discerning. I will watch it again and write down some names and film titles.

Who knew that silent films depicted American Indians so well?

342wonderY
Edited: Aug 20, 2023, 7:33 pm

Returning Black Boy Joy only partially read. If these short stories are outstanding or significant, I’m clueless.

Probably going to discontinue The Late Mrs. Willoughby at about half read. Disappointing, considering I liked the first book so well. This one is sloppy and repetitive. Did she vomit in her death throes or did she not? I clearly recall that she did; but the doctor says later that vomiting would have saved her life.

Confirming I quit this at 56%. Cringe!

352wonderY
Aug 20, 2023, 5:22 pm

Chinese science fiction. I thought I should give it a try. Well, I did. Doesn’t interest me. The Three-Body Problem. Don’t ask me to explain the plot, please.

362wonderY
Edited: Aug 25, 2023, 2:35 pm

Enchanted Streets - 90 is too self-referential. The author loses his journalist job and pursues employment half-heartedly for an entire year, but also finds himself examining and appreciating the lives of the little critters he finds in Chicago. Someone suggests he write a book, and this is the result. Way too self referential and not presented in an interesting manner. Deservedly obscure. Worth what I paid for it - $0.

372wonderY
Aug 30, 2023, 1:27 pm

Expiring on Libby today

We Should Not Be Friends at 26% read. It drags and I can’t find a reason to continue. Uninteresting life story.

Confessions of a Shopaholic briefly sampled. Eh. Ew.

382wonderY
Aug 30, 2023, 7:40 pm



This was a discard from the library that I brought home because of the beautiful paper cut artwork. It wasn’t what I expected. Too dense a story to be an Easy Reader, it was shelved with Junior books, but probably not attractive to that age group either.
The Invisible Kingdom - 91 is about a lonely prince. His father dies when he is 13, and he has just attained his majority at the end. There is a resolution, but also a cliff hanger. This is the first of a trilogy. The palace Bootman is a true friend, and wise.

392wonderY
Edited: Sep 4, 2023, 10:38 am

Just a random book I picked off the free table because of the cover.

Deadline - 92 is an excellent YA story, not at all limited to its target audience.

My review:
What marvelous and well-rounded characters! Every one of them has a reason for being, and the author reveals them, sometimes through a dream character named Hey-Soos. Respect everyone’s journey.
There is also some side exposition about school curriculum, particularly in history and civics, that just now is in the news and general awareness. (Book was published in 2007.)
This is my first exposure to Crutcher, but I will read him again.
Also pleased to see the publisher, Greenwillow Books, still with the excellence I remember from when my kids were small.

I will tag this one “right living.” There was only one character without a redemption arc. I wonder about him.

402wonderY
Edited: Sep 8, 2023, 12:55 am



Mouse Guard: Legends of the Guard volume three - 93

I saw this randomly at the library. I do like the illustrations in Mouse Guard, and this book features the illustrators and shows the variances between them. It’s a series of tales told by the characters competing to have their room and board bill forgiven by June, the June Alley Inn proprietor. The stories are abrupt and suffer from that. But the artwork mostly makes up for it.

412wonderY
Edited: Sep 9, 2023, 8:11 am



In the post-Roe world, this book has important things to say. Ejaculate Responsibly - 94 is formulated in 28 arguments, each pointing out how little the male is held accountable for reproduction before, during and far after intercourse and its consequences. I am hoping this book doesn’t just flash by and be dismissed. It’s important.

422wonderY
Sep 9, 2023, 7:58 pm

I have followed Pamela Terry on Instagram since I’ve been spending time over there. She has a keen sense of beauty. I’ve finally gotten around to reading her first book.



The Sweet Taste of Muscadines - 95 is lush with sensory descriptions. And though there is nothing exceptional about the story, it is well told and the characters are good people. Overall satisfying.

432wonderY
Edited: Sep 20, 2023, 10:35 am

I’m not concentrating well and have let lots of audiobooks expire without listing my attempts.
The Moorchild is going to disappear and I will let it go for now. I’m finished with part 1.

Because I liked Chris Crutcher, I went looking for more. I downloaded a book and a short story called “The Meat Grinder.” I like his longer fiction better.

442wonderY
Edited: Sep 22, 2023, 1:42 am



Soeur Angèle and the Embarrassed Ladies - 96 was mentioned in the TBSL group and sounded charming. So I ordered it and one sequel. Obscure it shall remain. I do like the Professor, her mentor.

452wonderY
Sep 22, 2023, 9:25 am



I’ve been listening to Carol Burnett read In Such Good Company - 97 and it’s been very comforting. Those were good times in entertainment.

462wonderY
Edited: Sep 24, 2023, 10:10 am

Leaving Chris Crutcher’s autobiography, King of the Mild Frontier at 25% read. Too mild. And embarrassing male adolescence.

472wonderY
Sep 28, 2023, 10:09 pm



Soeur Angèle and the Bell Ringer's Niece - 98 was promised as like Father Brown, which I liked as an adolescent. This was really no fun at all. There is not much sleuthing going on and the villains are slimy and despicable. Not much in the way of resolution either.
And the cover is just awful !!

482wonderY
Sep 30, 2023, 4:55 pm

I’m at 22% in Lessons in Chemistry, and I think I’m going to drop it. Elizabeth and Calvin have their charms, but I’m finding the story disjointed. And the flashbacks are painful. I don’t like painful.

492wonderY
Sep 30, 2023, 7:07 pm



Counting Coup - 99 is short but informative.

50lesmel
Sep 30, 2023, 9:20 pm

>48 2wonderY: Oh, it's such a good book (but everyone has their own tastes, right?). The tv filming scenes are worth a read even if you skip through the book. :)

512wonderY
Sep 30, 2023, 9:39 pm



I nearly didn’t finish Thornhedge - 100 because the narrator irritated me so much. She read the entire book in a monotonous minor key.

522wonderY
Edited: Oct 1, 2023, 12:46 pm

Jim Embry, in a seed saving workshop a few weeks ago, introduced me to the concept of organizing socioculturally and economically by watersheds rather than by state or nation.

Serendipitously, the same concept is at work in A Half-Built Garden, which I’m listening to. Here, in the 2080s, environmental groups have seized practical control and protection of their local watershed, and governments and corporations usually defer to them.
When an alien species lands in the Chesapeake watershed, NASA and corporate interests have to stand one step back while the local science team leads negotiations.
So far, this writer has turned the first contact tropes upside down. Love it!

53quondame
Oct 1, 2023, 6:56 pm

>52 2wonderY: Oh! Ruthanna Emrys has previously impressed me, so BB!

542wonderY
Edited: Oct 1, 2023, 9:18 pm

For my print book of the moment, I started reading Devil’s Cub and I don’t like it. A hero that seems to have no redeeming traits.

Help me out here. I need encouragement to continue!

55quondame
Oct 1, 2023, 9:31 pm

>54 2wonderY: I'm not fond of any of the books featuring Leonie or her brood. This doesn't seem to be a majority opinion.

56BonnieJune54
Oct 1, 2023, 10:45 pm

I probably liked the female character Mary. I listened to it ages ago on cassettes.

57MarthaJeanne
Oct 2, 2023, 2:29 am

>54 2wonderY: Bad 'boy' redeemed by the love of a good woman. Stay with it a bit longer. If you have read These old shades you will enjoy meeting up with those characters again a few decades on.

582wonderY
Oct 3, 2023, 8:55 pm

Heyer certainly has a lot of work to do. He has no redeeming features that I can see. What filth.

592wonderY
Oct 10, 2023, 9:13 pm



The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich - 101 is a fun graphic novel. Nice characters, lovely art, silly story. LGBTQ theme right out of Shakespeare.

60fuzzi
Oct 12, 2023, 6:36 am

>57 MarthaJeanne: I agree with you.

>54 2wonderY: Devil's Cub was a little tough to get into but I found myself enjoying it.

61sarah_d_writer
Oct 12, 2023, 8:01 am

>28 2wonderY: Checked it out! They look alike! Uncanny resemblance!

62sarah_d_writer
Oct 12, 2023, 8:03 am

This message has been flagged by multiple users and is no longer displayed (show)
Wanted to recommend His Lingering Perfume: A Raw Story of awkward love which you can easily find on Amazon. A wonderful light quick read. A book that you can finish soon

Link to the Kindle version: https://amzn.eu/d/fVtJxo6

63MarthaJeanne
Edited: Oct 12, 2023, 9:26 am

>62 sarah_d_writer: Author spam. What a pain!

Her other spam message was removed by that group's admin.

642wonderY
Oct 12, 2023, 6:46 pm

>63 MarthaJeanne: Did you message her?

65MarthaJeanne
Oct 13, 2023, 7:50 am

No.

662wonderY
Oct 13, 2023, 9:20 am

Finally starting a most peculiar book, because it was the only thing in the car when I drove to my doctor’s appointment.

“Other texts fell by the wayside - some important, valuable even, but for whatever reason not quite up to sacred snuff.”

I like her!

67MarthaJeanne
Oct 13, 2023, 10:22 am

>66 2wonderY: Do I need this?

682wonderY
Oct 13, 2023, 11:44 am

Possibly? She’s entertaining and possibly thought provoking. I’m not far into the book yet.

Here is contents page:

69MarthaJeanne
Edited: Oct 13, 2023, 12:17 pm

Sounds interesting. I just ordered it. (and four other books)

702wonderY
Oct 15, 2023, 3:56 am

>69 MarthaJeanne: Incorrigible!



Little Bear’s Friend - 102 is a simple story, with a bit of a feel of the Hundred Acre Wood, but less interesting. Maurice Sendak’s illustrations are charming though, and pull the story up.

71quondame
Oct 15, 2023, 4:16 am

>70 2wonderY: I remember those charming illustrations from long ago, before I bothered to note the names of all but 1 or 2 authors and illustrators, and so didn't recall that Maurice Sendak was responsible for those delights.

72MarthaJeanne
Edited: Oct 15, 2023, 6:05 am

>70 2wonderY: Well. Does it help that three of them are ones I have wanted for a long time? (A weaving book, and two recent additions to the Valdemar series. The third one of the new trlogy will wait until it is available in paperback.) The last one showed up in the recommendations. Embroidered Treasures: Birds I probably should not have bought it, but, but, but I want to see the pretty embroideries.

732wonderY
Oct 15, 2023, 6:50 am

>72 MarthaJeanne: No criticism meant, dear! Ooh! I’d like a look at the embroidery book!

742wonderY
Edited: Oct 15, 2023, 7:07 am



I’ve been slogging through Enough - 103, read by the author. She was given poor advice to make this a full biography. Her childhood is not interesting and her family relationships are cringe-worthy. It takes too long to get to the relevant part and it’s nearly 80% until she gets her head on straight. She credits Alexander Butterfield, the subject of The Last of the President’s Men, with finding her moral compass.
Her interactions with Mark Meadows and Matt Gaetz also induce cringing and retching. She does not present herself well.

75MarthaJeanne
Oct 15, 2023, 10:32 am

It sounds as though you have had enough of her.

762wonderY
Oct 15, 2023, 11:39 am

>75 MarthaJeanne: True. She’s not a writer even with a ghost writer. Neither is she a narrator.
There was a short section worth reading.

77MarthaJeanne
Oct 15, 2023, 11:55 am

So the title fits.

782wonderY
Oct 15, 2023, 2:01 pm



How to Keep House While Drowning - 104 is about cleaning. At first, Davis sounded whiny about how complex each household task really was; but when she buckled down, it was more about attitude and self-permission. I enjoyed her approach and her acknowledgement that she could not fathom the difficulties others might be dealing with in their own lives. But she tried to remove guilt and to break down functional pieces and worked on self-rewarding and also looking out for each other. Turned out to be a very generous book.

I listened while I was doing various productive tasks around my own out of control house. For instance, I realized that access to the eave storage did not have to be a squeeze through a set of studs today. So I removed a stud and more drywall.

792wonderY
Edited: Oct 18, 2023, 6:54 am



A Half-Built Garden - 105 combines a couple of science-fiction themes. First contact, with two species landing quietly on Earth on the US east coast. Time period in the 2080s with the federal government present, represented by NASA, but less powerful. Regions are governed by ecology groups that decide by member consensus and the priority is the health of the waterways. (They note and analyze materials the aliens evacuate from their ship.) Corporations still operate, but reluctantly within bounds of ecological interests.

Complex dance of interests represented by individuals of the various groups. New family structures and a variety of genders.
Absorbing. Successful.

Solarpunk art:

https://www.instagram.com/reel/Cx-6hX4rmVm/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

80quondame
Oct 16, 2023, 8:51 pm

>79 2wonderY: That is about to fall off my Kindle, and I've had slow going with my chosen saga.

812wonderY
Edited: Oct 17, 2023, 1:48 pm

The Purloining of Prince Oleomargarine - 106 was thankfully only an hour’s listen. It was atrocious.

The Octopus Scientists is a waste of time. Determined at 38% read.

82BonnieJune54
Oct 17, 2023, 5:44 pm

>81 2wonderY: My Octopus Teacher was a good film about an octopus.

832wonderY
Edited: Oct 18, 2023, 11:15 am



For the Halloween season, I listened to A Witch’s Guide to Fake Dating a Demon - 107. Cheesy, but okay. She has plant magic, which was a plus.

842wonderY
Oct 26, 2023, 6:18 am



I’ve read a lot of Ruritanian romances over the years, but never had hands on the original till now. I was not particularly enamored with The Prisoner of Zenda - 108. I will follow up and give Hope another chance.

852wonderY
Edited: Oct 30, 2023, 7:09 pm



I listened to the author read The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian - 109. It was a good experience. He remembers the wretched wonderfulness of adolescence.

There was another audio version read by someone else. That one rated 8 hours. This one was 5 hours. Scratching my head.

862wonderY
Nov 20, 2023, 9:19 pm

I’ve been sampling and discarding bunches of books on Libby. Some really bad stuff, like two compilations of famous authors’ junk stories.
Women Who Wrote and Classic Love Stories Volume 1.

I went back to a seasonal favorite, Winter Solstice 110. Next time I will skip the first 5 hours, as I’m already acquainted with the characters. The remaining 12 hours will do for me.

The next book has already irritated me; the narrator pronounced ‘gibbous’ with a soft G.

87lesmel
Nov 20, 2023, 10:03 pm

>86 2wonderY: Is it a regional thing? Merriam-Webster has both pronunciations: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/gibbous

882wonderY
Edited: Nov 23, 2023, 12:29 pm

I’m still not happy with my Libby choices.

and then you’re dead has annoyingly cheerful narration. But the content is grim. No thanks.

Also, Graceling is a boring fantasy adventure.

892wonderY
Nov 24, 2023, 9:33 am

An hour and a half into Mrs. Dalloway, and I can see it isn’t for me. I’m finding the language too precious and the mullings in her head tedious.

902wonderY
Nov 26, 2023, 5:28 am

I grabbed my copy of My Friend the Chauffeur to bring with me. I know I’ve read it partway; not sure I ever finished it.
This time, I’m pausing to Google the places they travel through, and so appreciating more the descriptions and history elaborated in the story. Yes to the “lapis lazuli sea!”

912wonderY
Dec 3, 2023, 12:53 pm

I’ve been listening to All the Light We Cannot See - 111 for a week now, and I’m still short of 40%, and it will disappear from my queue tomorrow. Taking credit for the effort, but won’t renew it this year. Perhaps I’ll finish it next year. It is absorbing. But too long.

I had also gotten through most of Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm -112 but paused to consider a bit of wisdom from Aunt Jane, about how pretty smooth rocks are on the shore, but it’s the rough tumbling in the water that gets them to their beauty. I will switch back today and finish it. I think I’ve resisted reading it just because of its popularity. I have loved all of the Wiggins books I’ve read.

92quondame
Dec 3, 2023, 5:38 pm

>91 2wonderY: I didn't take to Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm. It seemed all tell and no show after reading the Anne of Green Gables books.

932wonderY
Dec 3, 2023, 7:10 pm

Yes, I thought it was just okay. My favorite of hers has been Rose o' The River and the two in this thread -
https://www.librarything.com/topic/347678#

942wonderY
Dec 4, 2023, 3:10 pm

Two short stories by Louis L’Amour - Desert Death Song and Trap of Gold - 113

952wonderY
Dec 4, 2023, 7:49 pm

Accidents May Happen - 114 has been lying around for a while. It was a simple read and I learned some interesting facts. Published in 1996, at least one invention is now obsolete - Liquid Paper.

96fuzzi
Dec 5, 2023, 6:25 pm

>94 2wonderY: I really like Trap of Gold. Every time I reread it I find myself holding my breath, afraid of the outcome even though I've read it several times!

972wonderY
Dec 6, 2023, 1:09 pm

A Yuletide Kiss - 115, three short stories with the same setting and characters, but different romances. Preposterous! Not worth finishing the last one.

982wonderY
Dec 9, 2023, 8:55 am

It Ended Badly might attract history nerds. And I thought I was one. I did not need to hear about the frightful practices of a few of the Roman emperors towards their spouses and family and subjects. Discontinued at 10%

992wonderY
Dec 12, 2023, 8:58 am

I read a lot of Booth Tarkington decades ago, but I hadn’t read all of his stuff. Hoping to find something in audio, I listened to The Magnificent Ambersons - 116. It felt at the beginning a lot like his adolescent stories such as Gentle Julia. He did poke fun at the youngster, George. But it turned tragic and also, at chapter 28, sociopolitical commentary. I liked what he said. But the story ends too abruptly.

Looks like I need to get some chatter going if I’m to get to 150 posts in just two weeks. Help!

100MarthaJeanne
Dec 12, 2023, 9:23 am

Do you want meaningful comments or just random chatter?

1012wonderY
Dec 12, 2023, 9:36 am

Whatever you’ve got to spare.

1022wonderY
Dec 12, 2023, 5:00 pm

I’m going to happen to be at the library this evening. One of their book groups is having a pot-luck dinner. Maybe I’ll know someone or get to ask questions. I will have my appetite tucked in a pocket.

103fuzzi
Dec 12, 2023, 7:23 pm

>99 2wonderY: I picked up Penrod. I didn't get very far. I didn't find it funny, not at all.

104fuzzi
Dec 12, 2023, 7:25 pm

>102 2wonderY: hope you have a good time, and don't come home with The Crud. Our church had to postpone the children's Christmas play last Sunday as most of the kids and the directors were sick.

105fuzzi
Dec 12, 2023, 7:26 pm

1062wonderY
Dec 12, 2023, 7:26 pm

Well that didn’t take long. I stepped inside the meeting room to ask a few questions about the reading group. The librarian chooses the books read based on the library’s monthly theme and availability of enough copies to pass out. Seems a fairly uninspiring format. In fact, I’ve read the book chosen for January, The Kitchen Front. It was an okay story, but what glares in my memory are two extremely doubtful circumstances of characters. But that’s neither here nor there. I wasn’t invited to stay for the potluck.

107fuzzi
Dec 12, 2023, 7:27 pm

>106 2wonderY: oh, that wasn't very friendly...

1082wonderY
Dec 12, 2023, 7:29 pm

>105 fuzzi: I did. That metal is seductive. I follow a few mudlarkers on Instagram and one lady found a scrap of gold jewelry today. It’s color fascinates.

109lesmel
Dec 12, 2023, 10:10 pm

What book have you liked most this year?

110reconditereader
Dec 13, 2023, 1:48 am

...or least!

111MarthaJeanne
Dec 13, 2023, 5:38 am

>104 fuzzi: Not just here?

1122wonderY
Dec 14, 2023, 12:47 pm

Check back. That’s an activity I save for the last week of the year😎

1132wonderY
Dec 14, 2023, 5:36 pm

The Woman Who Smashed Codes - quit at 27%. It was expiring and it hadn’t grabbed me.

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind is due soon. I may let it go and borrow it next year and start further along. The first bit is tribe folktales.

1142wonderY
Edited: Dec 14, 2023, 8:41 pm

In the library today, on my way to pull A Most Peculiar Book, my eye snagged on The Secret Lives of Color.

It has captured me! It starts with a Ruskin quote:
“The purist and most thoughtful minds are those which love color the most.” - The Stones of Venice

It’s got science and history and stories. Her interest was ignited while reading the descriptions of fashions of the 1790s.

Ha! I see it’s been on my wishlist for 4 years. I am consistent.

115lesmel
Edited: Dec 14, 2023, 9:36 pm

>114 2wonderY: I borrowed that in 2021. It's an interesting book to peruse.

116fuzzi
Dec 15, 2023, 6:27 am

>114 2wonderY: looking forward to your comments!

1172wonderY
Dec 19, 2023, 10:15 am

Listened to Bookshops and Bonedust - 117, but without the attention it probably deserved. Neither the action nor the characters caught me up. I will probably try another listen next year. I loved the first book.

1182wonderY
Dec 20, 2023, 9:16 pm

Bright Lights, Big Christmas - 118 is entirely mediocre. But it’s the season…

119MarthaJeanne
Dec 21, 2023, 2:14 am

>118 2wonderY: Maybe it's the season for mediocre.

1202wonderY
Dec 21, 2023, 9:12 am

I’m going to try to add and edit all the works I read this year, so they show on the new year in review feature. I’ve never used the finished read date. Tiresome. I’m halfway through January.

121fuzzi
Dec 21, 2023, 11:56 am

>120 2wonderY: I don't see myself doing that, it's just a lot of work for...what?

Even after I updated the charts in the custom option many of my reads aren't showing. I think it's because some of them are rereads, so the review was already posted in LT. Also, I don't review the books of the Bible that I read, but I do count them towards my total.

1222wonderY
Dec 21, 2023, 2:18 pm

>121 fuzzi: True. I’ll just start in January

123MarthaJeanne
Dec 21, 2023, 2:57 pm

I like to keep the date finished, and on books I don't finish I put a date started. This is useful if I pick up the book again a year or 5 down the road.

1242wonderY
Edited: Dec 22, 2023, 11:35 am

Daughter sent me that slip of video of Ruth Stout I posted in another thread. I texted her about the book I picked up by her. Now she wants to see the book. But I’ve been cleaning and have no idea where it might be. Nope, it’s not in the box of presents for her. Nor is it on my garden books shelf.

I decided to enjoy my music cassettes today. They’re in a drawer near the stereo but haven’t been used in quite some time. I have good music.
Started with Will O’ the Wisp by Leon Russell.
I looked it up and Google informed me that Barnes & Noble still sell music on CDs. Hadn’t considered that as a source; but of course! I updated my collection while I worked at Borders.

Also thought of a book I want to share with the grands, so I ordered three copies of Goodnight, Mr. Tom from Abe.

1252wonderY
Dec 22, 2023, 10:15 pm

1262wonderY
Dec 23, 2023, 10:02 am

Currently fixing my “currently reading” collection, which seems to still be carrying stuff from 2020 as well as other random stuff. It’s a collection marker that I no longer care about. Emptying it.

1272wonderY
Dec 23, 2023, 11:58 am

Listening to a cassette I taped long ago.

Push Push
Impressions of New York on the flip side.

1282wonderY
Edited: Dec 24, 2023, 11:11 am

A couple cassettes I might be willing to discard

Jean-Luc Ponty & Stephane Grappelli
my father’s face - shocking! I have a lot of Kotke. But I never listen to this early album.

I organized my CDs yesterday as well and finally took the few hours to rub the duct tape debris from the spines. I had taped them into the open carrier box when I moved. Acetone is yuck. My lips absorbed it.

On my way to Rose’s house now.

129quondame
Dec 25, 2023, 3:23 am



Merry Christmas, Ruth!

130fuzzi
Dec 25, 2023, 10:36 am

1312wonderY
Dec 25, 2023, 12:41 pm

Thank you both. I hope your Christmas is full of warmth and cheer and joy.

1322wonderY
Dec 26, 2023, 8:59 am

Drat! The ebook A Soul as Cold as Frost goes back tomorrow, so I opened it. 562 pages if read on the phone. Argh! And I can tell I want to consume this one. The phrasing is so curly and delicious. I’d rather have someone read it to me, but no audio is available.

1332wonderY
Dec 27, 2023, 11:34 am

Tired of Winning - 119 is mostly a recap of what’s been in the news, but it is organized.

Listened to more jazz
Swing, Swing, Swing
Great Jazz Vocalists
and
Arcady: After the Ball

1342wonderY
Dec 27, 2023, 11:38 pm

I’m on the downslope and will finish tomorrow. My Friend the Chauffeur - 120 is not the best of the Williamson oeuvre, but it has enough highlights to make it well worthwhile. One of its particular strengths is descriptions of the scenery; especially the colors.
“…the splendid old crenellated bridge of dark red brick (toning deliciously with the clear, beryl-green of the swift-rushing Adda) made a noble preface for the city.”

1352wonderY
Dec 28, 2023, 4:19 pm

>134 2wonderY: The travelogue descriptions really ramp up in the last third of the book, with Venice being a veritable paradise. Oddly, it also ends as a melodrama.

I’m listening to more jazz today:
Original Jazz Classics volume 1
Unforgetable, with love
B.B. King
Lena Horne

1362wonderY
Dec 28, 2023, 4:35 pm

I letting Making It So go back at 50%. It’s fine, and read by the author; but I several other items I’d rather get to.

Also letting Emmet Fox’s Sermon on the Mount go for now, it’s an ebook. I may order a hard copy if I decide to read it.

1372wonderY
Dec 28, 2023, 5:30 pm

Six Earlier Days - 121 is really just a scrap. It’s a prologue to Every Day, which I recently recalled and want to finish up the series.

138MarthaJeanne
Dec 29, 2023, 4:22 am

>135 2wonderY: I think Venice just naturally calls for descriptive writing. Of all the places I will never see again, I think Venice is the hardest to accept.

1392wonderY
Dec 29, 2023, 9:11 am

>138 MarthaJeanne: Photography on the internet echo Williamson’s ardor for the city. If I ever travelled, Italy is where I would want to go.

Listening to female vocalists
Night Flight
I Hear a Symphony
Billie’s Blues
Anytime…Anywhere

1402wonderY
Dec 29, 2023, 5:53 pm

I’m taking a point for Intergalactic Exterminators, Inc - 122 just because I survived 12 chapters (27%) and wrote a review. Geez! This dreck won awards? A Cygnus and an Audie? Unbelievable.

141fuzzi
Dec 29, 2023, 6:11 pm

>140 2wonderY: I wonder, sometimes, who chooses the winners...and what were they thinking? Smoking?

142MarthaJeanne
Edited: Dec 29, 2023, 6:26 pm

People have different reactions to things that are written that they don't understand/enjoy/figure out. Some people think that 'If I don't get it, it must be very deep or intelligent.' I usually think, 'This person can't write clearly, or doesn't know what he is talking about.'

It's like the emperor's new clothes . Who wants to be the first to admit that he couldn't get through it.

1432wonderY
Edited: Dec 30, 2023, 1:27 pm

I was hoping for something along the lines of Janitors of the Post-Apocalypse series, with characters you could applaud and giggle about.

Well, I’m messing with a few piles. I found an errant library book.
I’m having trouble committing to a book.
Might as well take a point for Don’t Bet on the Prince - 123, though I probably won’t read part 3 - feminist literary criticism. And I will probably dispose of the book. There is likely a feminist library on campus that would take it.

1442wonderY
Edited: Dec 31, 2023, 10:06 am

A preliminary review of my reading year.

I started and abandonned 66 books.
I read several that I didn’t use in the count.
A Sick Day for Amos McGee - 124
14 Cows for America - 125
The Fate of Food - 126
The Marvelous Pigness of Pigs - 127


I watched 13 films that I recorded, mostly documentaries.
I assembled 3 jigsaw puzzles.
Listened to at least 2 Rachel Maddow podcasts.

I did not finish Devil’s Cub, but I found it tossed on the bedroom floor. I will attempt to finish it by tomorrow night.

I will post more details about groups of books and mention some favorites tomorrow.

145MarthaJeanne
Dec 31, 2023, 8:43 am

It looks like this topic also needs just a few more messages.

1462wonderY
Dec 31, 2023, 11:34 am

I’ve got it mapped out. No worries.

I’m working, yes working my way throughDevil’s Cub. Twelve chapters of unpleasant people. Vidal’s manner is still odious. Where are the characters that make this book worth reading?
Secrecy? Half-way through and most in London have heard bits of the scandal. Leonie smashes a Sevres vase that doesn’t belong to her.
If not for Heyer loyalty, I’d fling the book again.

1472wonderY
Dec 31, 2023, 2:24 pm

I’m glad I’ve bolded titles. Much easier on the eyes when I’m skimming through.

Age categories first:
Picture books - 8
YA and mid grade - 25, of which 8 were concerning dolls or dollhouses.

Re-reads - only 5. I’m surprised at that.

Graphic novels - 4

Favorite authors
Georgette Heyer - 4, possibly 5
Terry Pratchett - 3

1482wonderY
Dec 31, 2023, 2:34 pm

Adult book categories

Science fiction/fantasy - 23
Mystery - 5
Romance - 14, most are TBSL

Political - 12
Science - 5
Biography - 10
Design & Arts - 7
Inspirational/Spiritual - 7
Nonfiction not categorized - 4
General fiction - 1

Books I started and still may finish someday:
Lessons in Chemistry
Demon Copperhead
Both were hard on me because they pushed emotional buttons I’d rather not.

1492wonderY
Dec 31, 2023, 2:41 pm

A couple of subcategories that continue to interest me

World War 2 - 3

Tattered But Still Lovely - 26
I’m particularly glad to have spent so much of my reading pre-1950.
A few that gladdened me:
Grandma Called it Carnal
The Old Peabody Pew
Rose of Old Harpeth
Buttered Side Down

Two that I’m glad I finally read, though they weren’t favorites:
The Prisoner of Zenda
Common Sense

1502wonderY
Edited: Jan 1, 10:46 am

My five favorites of 2023

Rose of Old Harpeth
A Hobbit, A Wardrobe and a Great War
A Dress of Violet Taffeta
A Half-Built Garden
Reel Injun - this is an obscure documentary I had to find through ILL.

Another activity that took some LT time is contributing to policing Spam profiles. I’ve done word searches to ferret out some of the most common types of offenders. But mostly, I just check new member profile pictures every day, which catches 20 to 50, depending on how busy the SEO people (or bots, I suppose) have been. Vietnamese betting sites predominate.
I’m now the top contributor in the category.
Lifetime numbers:
2wonderY (28,325), rybie2 (21,843)

151quondame
Dec 31, 2023, 4:21 pm

>146 2wonderY: Leonie is my least favorite Heyer major character.

1522wonderY
Dec 31, 2023, 10:34 pm

And, I managed. Devil’s Cub - 128. If this had been my first Heyer, I would never have picked up another. At last a character I could appreciate, the all-knowing and unscrupulous Duke of Avon.

This year’s numbers are close to last year. I can no longer spend hours reading, as my eyes and my brain won’t cooperate on long stretches.

I started my year with a quote. Let me read it once more:

“ To live content with small means; to seek elegance rather than luxury, and refinement rather than fashion; to be worthy, not respectable, and wealthy, not rich; to listen to stars and birds, babes and sages, with open heart; to study hard; to think quietly, act frankly, talk gently, await occasions, hurry never; in a word, to let the spiritual, unbidden and unconscious, grow up through the common — this is my symphony.”

Yes. It’s been a very good year.

This topic was continued by Ruth seeks imperishable vitality in 2024.