Mid-month Reading Round-up

For the second year in a row, I have set a reading goal of 100 books. I managed to read and/or listen to 119 books. I have always been a voracious reader, resorting to reading cereal boxes when there was nothing else handy to read. I will probably exceed the 100 books again this year at the rate I’m going. So far, I’ve read seven books. I’ve broken down my goal into smaller ones as well: to read a classic a month, to read six nonfiction books this year, and to complete a formal reading challenge.

My reading challenges come from two sources: The Book Girls, who host several challenges such as the Book Lover’s year-long challenge with a different book related theme each month, a decades challenge, a “lifetime” challenge, and an In-case-you-missed-it challenge. Read with Allison also has a challenge list that inspires me to push out of my comfort zones. I also subscribe to the Book of the Month Club and the Aardvark Book Club as a source of books.

So far in January, I have finished seven books already.

I actually started two books in December of last year, The Secret Garden and The Teller of Small Fortunes. I had never read The Secret Garden as a child, but I had seen the movie with Gary Oldman several years ago and enjoyed it. I was entranced by the book and the way Mary and Colin grew as characters.

The Teller of Small Fortunes was a slow starter for me, and I put it aside during the holidays. However, once I picked it up again, I was hooked. This is the story of a fortune-teller who finds a family as she travels from town to town telling “small fortunes,” hoping to avoid the attention of the guild of magicians and seers. It is also a story of reconciliation and second chances.

Lula Dean’s Little Library of Banned Books caught me by surprise. I expected it to be more humorous, and there are some comic moments. But the subject is all too serious–and timely. Lula Dean sets out to clean up her town by getting rid of books that she believed would corrupt the young people. Strange things begin to happen, though, when she sets up her own Little Library in her front yard, stocked with “safe” titles, she thinks. People start getting books and adding their own. Then Lula decides to run for mayor after her rival runs on a plank to remove the statue of a Civil War general, who just happens to be Lula’s great-great-great grandfather. That’s when all you-know-what breaks out and the truth about the popularity of Lula Dean’s library comes to light. The novel is so timely because it mirrors what is happening throughout the country today as more and more communities face questions of censorship.

Every so often I have to reread a favorite classic. I have had a love-hate relationship with Wuthering Heights since I was in high school and my English teacher wanted me to read it. It was one of those books that I was not quite ready for at sixteen, but ten years later, it became MY book and the basis for my master’s thesis. On StoryGraph, Wuthering Heights is classified as a romance, but it is unlike the typical romance. If Cathy and Heathcliff are in love, it is a dangerously obsessive love. What I love about this novel now is the language Emily Bronte uses. It is clear that she is heavily influenced by the first generation Romantic poets Wordsworth and Coleridge as well as by Byron and other later Romantic writers. The final paragraph of the novel has to be my all-time favorite passage in literature:

“I lingered round them, under that benign sky; watched the moths fluttering among the heath, and hare-bells; listened to the soft wind breathing through the grass; and wondered how any one could ever imagine unquiet slumbers for the sleepers in that quiet earth.”

Lord Redmond and Daniel Haze return in Irina Shapiro’s latest mystery in the Redmond and Haze Mystery series. This time, they investigate the murder of a medium who had helped them in a previous case locate Daniel’s missing daughter. They also grapple with their trust of those who claim to communicate with the dead. Daniel uses his expertise as a police officer working for Scotland Yard while Lord Redmond uses the medical sciences to provide important clues to solve the crime. I’ve already pre-ordered the next book in the series.

The Stolen Queen is a historical mystery/thriller, according to StoryGraph. When an important artifact, a fragment of a statue of a little known female Egyptian pharaoh is stolen during the annual Met Gala, a curator must face a tragedy in her past to recover the stolen piece. She must also return to Egypt, the place where she faced that tragedy. With the help of Annie, Charlotte not only recovers the stolen artifact, but she also recovers her family. I enjoyed the dual time periods. The novel starts slowly; however, the last third of the book moves very quickly, and I was hard pressed to put it down. (I may or may not have stayed awake until the wee hours of the morning reading.)

I’m not sure what to say about Therese Bohman’s Andromeda. It is a very short novel, just under 200 pages. It is beautifully written, the language often poetic. Bohman creates some beautiful metaphors about reading and the importance it can have. There are two narrators: Sofie, a young intern hired to become an editor for the publisher’s Andromeda imprint, and Gunnar, the editor-in-chief, who mentors and grooms Sofie with the idea that she would take his place when he retired. The book is roughly divided into two halves with each narrator telling his or her story. Sofie focuses on her relationship with Gunnar and the publishing business whereas Gunnar narrates his “life story.” The thread that runs through both parts is the importance reading and books had in their lives and in their relationship. I have to admit, though, that I’m not sure I can say I liked the book, but I will say that I’m glad I read it.

Now, I’m ready to start book number eight from a pile of books I bought last year. That’s another one of my goals: to read last year’s purchases. I think I’m going to read Mistress of Lies by K. M. Enright next. I’ve seen it come up on several “best of 2024” lists recently. It’s been collecting dust for a while.

Year-end Reading Wrap-up

I did it. I set a reading goal of reading at least 52 books this year, and I met that goal before June. Then I set a new goal of 100 books and met that goal in October. As of today, I have read 119 books, and will probably read and finish one more before December 31. I started The Teller of Small Fortunes earlier this month but have not finished it.

In some ways, this was a slow month; I finished seven books. It was also a busy crafting month to get ready for Christmas as well as the other busy-ness that comes with the holiday season. I have to admit that I started a few and put them away or they are still in progress.

Five of the books I read this month fall into the category of historical novels, some with more romance than others. I read the latest installment of the Tabitha and Wolf novels, An Intrepid Woman, and enjoyed it. It is an easy read with a story that is more plot driven than character driven. Actually, the same can be said for the first five books. Of those books, I especially liked the Victorian mystery An Exhibition of Malice by Emily L. Finch, which is set against the background of the Industrial Revolution and the Great Exhibition of 1862, ten or so years after the exhibition sponsored by Prince Albert in the middle of the 19th century. If we think industrial espionage is only a modern thing, this novel suggests that stealing plans for inventions has been around for a whole lot longer.

The two contemporary novels, The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year and The Last Love Note were both good reads. The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year was a lot of fun. It is light-hearted and funny as well as a good mystery. It makes use of the “enemies to lovers” trope even though the enemy part is one-sided. And, of course, there is the happily ever after ending. This novel makes use of the Agatha Christie country-house mystery and a locked-room disappearance. Ally Carter also uses Agatha Christie’s own mysterious disappearance for inspiration in this novel.

When I began The Last Love Note, I thought I was going to read a rom-com. The first couple of chapters made me laugh out loud; however, the novel started getting pretty heavy as it developed into the story of a forty-year-old widow’s coming to terms with the death of her husband from early onset and rapid Alzheimer’s and single-parenthood. Yet, in spite of the heaviness of these plot threads, there is a lightness and at times some comic relief as she slowly learns that she can have a new life (and love) and a second chance at happiness. I admit that I did the ugly cry through the last ten chapters of the book.

As I finished this book, I thought back over the books I have read this year and looked at my list of best books of each month:

January–The Fury

  • January–The Fury
  • February–The First Ladies
  • March–The Lost Apothecary
  • April–Touch Not the Cat
  • May–Shakespeare: The Man Who Paid the Rent
  • June–The Women
  • July–The Lost Story
  • August–The Cliffs
  • September–Emily Wilde’s Encyclopedia of Faeries
  • October–Lady Macbeth
  • November–Before the Coffee Gets Cold
  • December–The Last Love Note

All of these books were such good ones, and it is hard to pick my favorite. I am going to go with The First Ladies, though. It is a novel about the friendship between Mary McLeod Bethune and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. These two women are often footnotes in the history books, and their roles in the civil rights movement are overshadowed by likes of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and other men. Yet this novel showed how important their work was. Moreover, it also showed how difficult interracial friendships can be, even today, when we are supposedly more enlightened. I often learn more history from the historical novels I read than from the history books, and this one certainly played into my interest in history.

I tried to read more nonfiction this year and actually finished three really wonderful books: Judi Dench’s autobiographical Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent, Killers of the Flower Moon, and The Boys in the Boat about the 1936 US Olympic eight-man rowing team. It would be hard to choose which is the better book, but I will admit that Shakespeare:The Man Who Pays the Rent is my favorite. Dame Judi Dench gave me such insight into the characters from the plays she performed, and I almost wished I were teaching again so I could share those insights with my students. I listened to both of the books on Audible and realized that I loved listening to nonfiction more than fiction. Killers of the Flower Moon is a difficult book to read and listen to because of its subject, the exploitation of Native Americans out of greed. I highly recommend this last book.

I am already lining up my books for the coming year. I can’t wait to see what selections will be offered in the Book of the Month and the Aardvark Book clubs. My book group that meets monthly at the local coffee shop will be reading Wuthering Heights as our first book of the year. I am looking forward to reading that one again. I wonder how much it has changed since I read it as a sixteen year old, a twenty-six year old, a thirty-something, and now as a sixty-six year old. And I wonder how my reading will compare to our high school senior’s reading. (Imagine a book club with three sixty-something women and one seventeen-year-old! We do love our girl, though. She has been a wonderful addition to our group!)

2025 Book Journal

Is it too early to start planning and setting reading goals for 2025? Probably, but it’s already the fourth day of December. I feel that the month may fly by before I’ve had time to blink.

Last year was the first year I set a reading goal. I began with a goal of fifty-two books—a book a week. As of yesterday, I have read 113 books. And I wrote in my book journal about every one. I really enjoyed the process. When I set up my book journal at the beginning of the year, I had all sorts of stuff in it and found that some of the things just weren’t relevant to me. I included five or six reading challenges, none of which I really followed. However, keeping statistics (books completed and genres, etc.) was revealing. I knew I tended to read a LOT of novels set in the Regency period, most of which involved either romance or mystery (or both). I found that I favored certain authors in the Regency genre. Keeping the statistics did help me broaden my reading.

I have purchased some printable reading and book journals and two bound journals. None of these completely suit me. One of the problems with the printables is the size. I do not want a letter-size journal. I use the classic Happy Planner for my daily planner/calendar, and I wanted that 7 by 9.25 inch size for my reading journal. I could resize the page in the printing app, but sometimes that meant the writing on the page was too small, or the space for writing responses was not optimal. And of course, there were things on the page that I didn’t care about tracking. A bound journal does not allow for additional pages or rearranging them if desired. So, I pulled out my dot grid refill paper, black felt-tip pen, and ruler and began designing. My pages are pretty plain right now, and I may embellish them later.

First, I made a list of what I wanted in the journal:

  • 2025 Reading Goals
  • Books I’ve Read
  • Books I Want to Read
  • Monthly Statistics
  • Favorite Books of the Month
  • Favorite Book of the Year
  • Book Club Picks
  • Book Notes/Reviews
  • Reading Challenges
  • A Year-end Reflection

My reading goals for 2025 are

  1. Read at least 100 books
  2. Read or reread at one classic a month
  3. Read or listen to at least six nonfiction books this year
  4. Complete at least one book challenge

Next, I created the Books I’ve Read pages. It’s a simple table with four columns

  • Title and author
  • Genre
  • Format (book, e-book, audiobook)
  • Finished

This gives me an “at-a-glance” option to see the books I’ve read as well as a way to count them in a hurry. Another at-a-glance table lists the books I want to read with two columns for the title and author and a check box for whether I’ve read it or not.

After making individual pages for each month this year, I combined my statistics page into one chart:

It took some “doing” to get it like I wanted it. There is a rather liberal use of the Wite-out correction tape on this page.

I plan to make a kind of collage of my favorite books for each month. I love the StoryGraph app for creating collages of books read during the month. I can cut out the images I want to use and adhere them to my page.

Finally, I have a page designed for book notes:

I will add pages for reading challenges, should I decide to participate, and a final page for reflection. I am waiting on a composition notebook style cover. I also plan to make dividers for each section, just so I can find my place easier. I imagine I will also embellish some of the pages and add some creative pages as I go.

So–here’s to looking forward to another year of reading!

November Reading Update

I really slowed down my reading this month. Perhaps it was because some of the books were longer and “slower” reads. It’s also the beginning of the holiday season, and things get busy.

I seem to be falling back into familiar and comfortable genres this month–historical romances and mysteries as well as some fantasy and magical realism.

An Audacious Woman, A Discerning Woman, Deadly Lies, and Murder at the Foundling Hospital are all historical mysteries set in the 19th century. Sarah F. Noel’s “Tabitha and Wolf” mystery series features the recently widowed Lady Pembroke (Tabitha) and the new Earl of Pembroke (Wolf) as they investigate various murders while navigating a tricky romance. These novels are light and sometimes humorous, especially when Tabitha’s mother-in-law, the Dowager Countess of Pembroke decides she wants to become an investigator. Besides the mystery aspect, the novels are also about finding one’s family and belonging as Tabitha’s family includes not only the new Earl and the Dowager Countess, but a trusted family friend and two street urchins who become her wards.

Deadly Lies is the latest book in the Angus Brodie and Mikaela Forsythe Murder Mystery series by Carla Simpson. Lady Forsythe is an independent woman of the late nineteenth century who becomes involved with the often surely Angus Brodie when her sister goes missing (Book I). In this latest installment, they investigate the murders of two young women found with a red rose. Mikaela narrates the story as it unfolds with occasional glimpses into Brodie’s point of view when he goes off on his own. Mikaela, like her elderly great-aunt who raised her and her sister after her parents’ deaths, is intelligent, witty, and more than a little free-spirited. This series is mostly light-hearted and fun.

Murder at the Foundling Hospital is the third installment of the Tate and Bell series by Irina Shapiro. Set in London in the latter half of the nineteenth century, the novel follows Detective Bell and Nurse Gemma Tate as they investigate the murder of Amanda Tate, a fourteen-year-old foundling. Together, they piece together the clues that eventually bring the killer to justice, but at the expense of Gemma’s job at the Foundling Hospital. Shapiro uses more history in the development of the plot than Noel or Simpson as she draws on the details of the Crimean War for context. This novel is darker in tone and without the humor of Noel’s and Simpson’s novels, but it is no less a good read.

I seem to be choosing more books from the fantasy and magical realism genres. Weyward, Where the Library Hides, Before the Coffee Gets Cold, and The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door all incorporate some measure of paranormal or supernatural elements. Emilie Hart’s Weyward tells the story of three women of the Weyward family from three different time periods: one a 17th century woman accused and tried for witchcraft, a teenager from the 1940s, and a young woman from the present who retreats to her great-aunt’s cottage to escape an abusive marriage. All three women have an affinity with nature that is often called “witchcraft.” All three women have complicated and even dangerous relationships with the men in their lives. However, although bad things happen to these women, they come through their experiences stronger and more independent than ever. Resilience is the key. I enjoyed this book and truly did not want it to end. Perhaps there will be another Weyward book that tells the story of Kate’s daughter named after her ancestors, Altha the 17th century “witch” and Violet the 20th century botanist and scientist.

Where the Library Hides by Isabel Ibanez continues the story begun in What the River Knows. Inez has gone to Egypt at the end of the 19th century to find out what happened to her parents. At the end of the first novel, she discovers that her mother is still alive, and she receives a rather unromantic marriage proposal from her uncle’s assistant Whit. Where the Library Hides has the two, now married, searching for the lost loot from Cleopatra’s tomb and Inez’s mother. Ibanez throws in a plot twist near the end of the novel that I truly did not expect, but it made sense. This sequel ties up all the loose ends and brings the mystery to a very satisfactory close. The epilogue, though, may foreshadow some more books about characters introduced in this novel. I will be following Ibanez for other books.

Before the Coffee Gets Cold was our choice for the November book club. It also falls into the genre of magical realism. Four characters have the opportunity (and the desire) to travel in time. There are several rules, though, that govern their time travels: they can only meet people with whom they have met in the coffee shop; they will not change the present by going to the past or the future; and they can stay away for only as long as the coffee stays warm. Failure to drink the coffee before it gets cold will turn them into a ghost. Three choose to go back in time while one character chooses to go into the future. All three come away from their time travels with new understandings of themselves and others. I had my doubts about this book when I started it. It felt too objective. However, as we followed each character into their pasts, presents, and futures, the reader does get to know them and feel engaged with them. By the end of the first vignette, I was fully engaged and ready to devour the stories. I will certainly be reading the other books in the series.

H. G. Parry’s The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door combines the history of the post-World War I Lost Generation with fantasy. I’m not sure there’s a name for this genre! It’s a combination of historical fiction and fantasy and romance. Clover Hill wants to learn to do magic so that she can release her older brother from a Faerie curse he received at the battle of Amiens during the first world war. She attends Camford University where she becomes friends with three students who come from the class known as the Family, people who have had magic in their blood for generations. What makes Clover different is that she is not from a magical family but is an ordinary farm girl. However, through hard work, study, and research, she does learn magic and eventually obtains the spell to release her brother. However, she had to pay a high cost. This is a heart-breaking story of love and friendships that go awry and of lost trust; it is also a story of restoration, forgiveness, and reconciliation. Even though events become quite dire, there is a thread of hope throughout.

It was hard to pick a best book for the month, but I think I decided on Before the Coffee Gets Cold. It is an easy-to-read novel, even in translation from Japanese. The characters are for the most part likeable and relatable. There are really no villains in this book at all, unless, that is you count death, Alzheimer’s, and loss as villains. There are no murders to solve. In the end, the book is full of love and hope.

As the Christmas season approaches, I know I will have more books to read. I haven’t selected specific holiday books (yet), though I have started Tommy Orange’s book Wandering Stars, which follows a survivor of the Sand Creek Massacre. It’s a heavy way to begin this season of joy.

September Reading Wrap-up

I know, it’s only the 26th and there are four more days. I probably will finish another book before the end of the month, but I’ve read the bulk of the books for the month. I didn’t read as many books as I have some months, but that’s okay. I started a couple that I haven’t finished, though, so I’m still reading.

Most of the books I read this month were lighter fare. At least four were murder mysteries of one sort of another. A couple could be classified as romance novels. One of the books fell into the category of magical realism. Several were historical novels.

Irina Shapiro did not disappoint in the latest addition to the Redmond and Haze series. Murder of Innocents had Dr. Jason Redmond and Detective Daniel Haze searching for the murderer of two little boys. Dr. Redmond may be an aristocrat, but he is from America. He served as a surgeon for the Union army during the American Civil War and spent time as a prisoner of war in the infamous Andersonville prison. His knowledge of anatomy and medicine and Haze’s skills as an investigator make them a formidable team.

C. Hope Clark’s Reunion on Edisto follows the career of Callie, Edisto Beach’s first female police chief. In the seventh installment of the series, Callie, now sober for nearly a year and in a stable relationship with Mark, the owner of the new Mexican restaurant, El Marco, has to search for a missing classmate who has come to the island to plan a class reunion. As Callie works the case, she also solves a cold case from her high school days. While I was not sympathetic to Callie when I first began the series, I began to like her as I near the end of the series.

I read two books by Madeline Martin last year, The Last Bookshop in London and The Keeper of Hidden Books, both set during World War II. The Booklover’s Library is also set during World War II. Like The Last Bookshop in London, The Booklover’s Library is set in England. The Booklover’s Library begins before the Blitz and tells the story of a young widow who must make the agonizing decision to send her daughter to the countryside for safety. She also must find a job to support herself during this time. The novel speaks to the power of books to comfort during hard times. I learned more about the effects of war on women and children from this book. That’s the power of a good historical novel; it brings the history to life.

The Inheritance of Orquidea Divina is way out of my comfort zone in terms of genre. I liked the book. However, it took me quite a few pages and chapters to buy into the elements of magical realism. There are a couple of things that really struck me in the story. Orquidea’s need to have roots takes on a physical aspect when she turns into a tree the day she dies. We all need that place we can put down roots and belong. Marimar finds that place in Four Rivers on her grandmother’s estate. The second thing that resonated was the idea of “inheritance.” What do we actually inherit from our ancestors?

The book I disliked this month is That Night in the Library. I could not sympathize with any of the characters; they were all unlikable to some degree. The death from some kind of poisoning of one member of the small group gathered to re-enact an ancient Greek ritual sets off a series of additional deaths. By the time the group is rescued, only two of the seven remain alive. Moreover, with the exception of Kip, the first to die, nearly every one of the others kills, helps to kill, or witnesses the violent death of others. This is a “locked room” mystery in the vein of Agatha Christie, but there are no redeeming characters in this novel, and no feeling that justice has been served in the end.

Studies at the School by the Sea is a light-hearted romance of two teachers from two different schools, both English teachers, and both concerned with the well-being of their students. However, there are obstacles to their romance ranging from an ex-fiance’s accident to the lack of privacy on a school Outward Bound retreat. I haven’t read the first three books in the series; however, that did not hinder me from enjoying this book.

My pick, though, for the book of the month is Emily Wilde’s Encyclopedia of Faeries. Emily goes to an isolated island in the Arctic Circle to conduct research for book, an encyclopedia of faeries. From facing hostile villagers and down-right mean changelings, Emily has a number of adventures. When her colleague joins her, though, things get really interesting, and she discovers his secret identity. I had fun reading this book! I do enjoy a good fantasy.

Five Books (and Authors) Worth Reading

This is the first year I actually set a reading goal with numbers:

  • 52 books for the year
  • 12 classics
  • 12 nonfiction

I even threw in a few challenges:

  • Thirteen Moons
  • Genres
  • Read through the Ages
  • The Classics
  • Fully Booked
  • Your New Favorite
  • Thoughtful Reading

And there are the book clubs:

  • Book of the Month Club
  • Aardvark Book Club
  • Read with Jenna
  • Reese’s Book Club
  • Oprah’s Book Club
  • Read with Allison

All of these are great resources for finding new books to read. The problem is that my “To Be Read” list gets longer and longer. As the saying goes, “So many books, too little time.” At present, I’ve read sixteen books, only one of which is nonfiction. I started my classic, Les Miserables. (I think this book should count as three as it comes in at 1500 pages!).

Here is a list of five recommendations so far:

The Fury by Alex Michaelides: This book uses the “locked room” murder mystery trope (even though the locked room is an island assessible by boat only) without a Poirot, Miss Marple, or Sherlock Holmes to solve the case. Instead, there is a first-person narrator who may or may not be completely reliable. There are enough plot twists and turns to keep it interesting. The characters are not completely likeable, but they are interesting.

I bought The First Ladies by Mary Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray last summer and put off reading it for quite some time. I regret that decision now. This is the story of the friendship between Eleanor Roosevelt and Mary McLeod Bethune. I didn’t know much about either lady, but I learned a great deal about them from this historical novel. The authors not only tell the story of how their friendship grew, but they also tell the story of the civil rights movement. As I read, I felt that “the more things change, the more things remain the same.” We have come a long way, but the book shows me that we still have a long way to go.

In The Lost Apothecary by Sarah Penner, Caroline goes to London to “celebrate” her tenth wedding anniversary–alone. She joins a mudlarking group and finds a late 18th-century apothecary bottle with a crude bear etched on it. This leads her to search for its origins. While she finds the origins of the bottle, she also finds herself. The novel is not exactly a time-slip novel, but there are parallel stories: Caroline’s story in the present, and the story of Nella, the apothecary, and her young customer, Eliza. This is a story of love and betrayal and friendship. I highlight recommend this book.

I do love a good historical romance and mystery, and The Spinster’s Guide to Danger and Dukes by Manda Collins did not disappoint. This is one of the add-ons for the March Aardvark Book Club box. When Poppy Delamere learns that her younger sister is accused of murdering her husband, Poppy goes to clear her name. She literally bumps into the Duke of Langham who is on his way to the same village to celebrate his grandmother’s birthday. Although the two seriously do not like each other, they combine forces to clear Poppy’s sister’s name and thwart the Duke’s grandmother’s matchmaking attempts during the birthday celebration houseparty. Collins uses the tropes of enemies-to-lovers, fake dating, and mysterious but menacing secret societies to create a lighthearted and fun read. It was the break I needed from the “heaviness” of Les Miserables.

Heartless Hunter by Kristen Ciccarelli is another book club recommendation. It fits into the category of Young Adult literature given the protagonist is eighteen years old. The novel also fits into dystopian and fantasy categories as well. The protagonist, Rune, is a witch, but witches are being hunted and killed by the current regime. She works undercover as the Crimson Moth to help witches escape to the mainland from their isolated island. When she comes under suspicion, she flirts with a witch hunter and, not surprisingly, the two fall in love. The novel ends on a cliff hanger, so there will be a book two. I am looking forward to reading it.

I have always been a voracious reader, and setting these reading challenges has been fun. What else would a retired teacher of English do?

2024 Reading Goals

My daughter-in-law is a voracious reader! I thought I was one, but she has me beat! Her reading goal for this year is 100 books. I set a modest goal of 52, at least one book a week. So far, I’ve read two–both on my iPad Kindle app, and both historical novels set in the 19th century. Oh, and both mysteries rather than romances. I started the January Book of the Month selection, The Fury, set in modern times on an isolated island in the Aegean Sea, cut off from the mainland and accessible by boat only. There is a murder. I suppose, even though the murder occurs outside in the garden, it is a “locked-room” mystery since the only suspects are those who are visiting the privately owned island. The owner is a sort of reclusive movie star. I’m just a few chapters in, though, so there will be no spoilers. I don’t know even know who the victim is, only that he has been murdered! So far, even the narrator is unnamed.

Sherry inspired me to create a book journal/book log to track my reading. I haven’t finished it yet; somehow, it keeps growing. My pages include the following:

  • a title page, which isn’t complete yet
  • a numbered grid to track my reading goal of completing 52 books this year
  • A goal tracker with includes some reading challenges for the year
  • a pretty bookshelf tracker (color-coded according to genre)
  • a pages read tracker and a genre tracker
  • “books I’m grateful for”–I want to add some books I’ve read before I began this journal, but I’m not sure about that. I’m thinking of printing off small book covers to put on this page of those books.
  • The Thirteen Moons Reading Challenge
  • Reading through the Ages Challenge
  • Book of the Month tracker
  • Reading the Classics Challenge
  • The Thoughtful Reading Challenge
  • Discover Your Next Favorite Novel Challenge with specific reading suggestions

I haven’t finished the last four spreads. On the occasional blank pages, I’m going to add some quotes about books and reading.

I plan to add a page for nonfiction as soon as I figure out what I want to do. My goal is to read twelve nonfiction books this year. (I have three or four already sitting on my TBR pile.)

So, here are my reading goals for the year. It’s going to be fun to see if I can meet that goal!

Back to School

It is that time. . . .  Back to school for teachers and for students. Officially, I start Monday. Unofficially, I’ve been working on school stuff all summer long. I’ve spent a few days working with my yearbook staff making plans for this year’s book. I’ve been reading, and reading, and reading, and researching. Now, I have to put it all together. I have immersed myself in teaching literature, not reading, not literacy, but LITERATURE. I completed the Advanced Placement Literature and Composition Institute this summer.

I’m not ready.

I’m getting the butterflies in the stomach.

I’m asking myself, “What the heck do you think you’re doing going back to secondary education at your age? You should be retiring!”

Well, the answer to the question is that I really, really enjoy my job. I love the little school where I teach. I am comfortable there even though I get nervous at the beginning of the school year. It’s the introvert in me. But come August 15, the first day with students, I will be ready, and I will put on my “learned extrovert” shirt, and get out there and put myself out there.

So, what did I read this summer? Well there was the required summer reading:

Jane Yolen’s Mapping the Bones, the story of twins Chaim and Gittle who try to escape a ghetto in Poland with the Polish resistance but end up captured. They attract the attention of one of Mengele’s doctors when Gittle contracts typhoid

Markus Zusak’s The Book Thief, the story of a little girl who is placed in foster care and who steals books as seen through the eyes of Death.

Corrie ten Boom’s The Hiding Place, the story of her family’s participation in the resistance movement to save Jewish lives and her imprisonment in the concentration camps of Nazi Germany.

There is a theme there, can’t you tell? The upper school is going to Washington in September, and one of the places they will tour is the Holocaust Museum. I want my students to be fully away of what they will experience when they enter that place. I know, there are other places of equal importance throughout that city, but for me, this place is especially hallowed ground.

I’ve also re-read Wuthering Heights and The Picture of Dorian Gray. I had forgotten how creepy Dorian Gray could be! I had also forgotten about some of the darker themes in that book.

And I’ve done a ton of professional reading, 180 Days, A Novel Approach, Whole Novels for the Whole Class, Write Beside Them, among others.

For fun, I’ve read several Regency romances—formula stories, really, but light, easy to read and finish in a day or two. I’ve also been reading Linda Castillo’s Kate Burkholder series. Kate is the Chief of Police in Painter’s Mill, Ohio, which has a fairly large Amish population. It’s one thing to be the first female Chief of Police in this small rural town, but she is formerly Amish herself. It is her knowledge of the Amish ways that helps her solve the crimes that come her way. These books are seriously researched. They will keep you turning the page until the very end.

Tomorrow afternoon, I meet students and some parents to give out textbooks. School is starting.

It’s Friday!

I think I will wrap up this week with a “Currently” entry. I use the Happy Planner for my day-to-day planning and scheduling. I have other planners and journals as well—one for school to keep track of lessons, meetings, classes, and the like; another for a more detailed bullet journal; and a third to keep track of my steps toward business. I like the Happy Planner that I’m using because it has a “Currently” list at the beginning of each month.

So, CURRENTLY, I am. . .

Reading: I just finished Murder on the Moor by Julianna Deering. It is the fifth in the Drew Farthering detective series. I enjoyed it, and it kept me guessing until I could stand it no longer, and I peeked at the end. Even though I discovered the solution to the mystery, there was one twist I didn’t expect.

I’m also reading several books on business planning: The Right Brain Business Plan by Jennifer Lee; The Creative Entrepreneur by Lisa Sonoma Bean, in particular. I’m also reading parts of The Artist’s Way at Work: Riding the Dragon by Julia Cameron and others, as well as two books by Eric Maisel: Life Purpose Boot Camp and Become a Creativity Coach Now! These books are informing my decisions regarding my becoming my own boss.

And of course, there are a few Regency romances in the mix—too many to name.

Planning: Sometimes I think the question is what am I NOT planning? Of course there is the business planning (more later). But the big thing I am planning for May is a dinner to honor Sherry and my son Aaron with close friends and family who were unable to attend their wedding. I may be an introvert at heart, but I do enjoy being with family (for small doses!).

Watching: I am not a Netflix or Hulu binge watcher (unless my older son is home), but I have several shows that I do watch routinely when I can: Elementary, a modern take on the Sherlock Holmes character; NCIS, NCIS LA, and NCIS New Orleans; Bull, and  Dancing with the Stars. I have just started watching Grey’s Anatomy this season, and it is becoming a regular. Criminal Minds is also on my list. I will be glad when the mystery of who is framing Spenser Reed is completely solved. (Wednesday night’s episode went a LONG way in answering the question!) I’m not sure I like the dark turn that Spenser Reed’s character is taking. I liked the boyish, naïve Reed!

Drinking: Blenheim’s Hot Ginger Ale. It is made right here in South Carolina, and it is the best. After drinking this ginger ale, all other ginger ales taste like a “drink of water,” as my father would say about things that were wet but relatively tasteless. During the last couple of weeks, I’ve had bronchitis and sinusitis, and Blenheim’s was one of the few things I could taste.

Loving: I have a rather eclectic taste in music, but lately, I am really loving the music of the duo Marion Hill. They are featured on some commercial singing their song “Down.” I like the jazz feel to their music. I made a Marion Hill channel on Pandora.

There isn’t a category for this, but I am enjoying playing the piano again, but I am having to do some serious practice! I have been asked to play for a wedding in December. I figure if I start learning the music now, by December, I will be comfortable with it. I am so proud of my Betsy Ross spinet made in the 1930s by the Lester Piano Company, now out of business. When I received it as a gift from some dear friends who attend my church, I had it tuned. The tuner was amazed that it was in such good condition! There are a few worn pads, which cause some “clicking.” But you know, it gives the piano some character. (You can see the keyboard in the banner image above!)

I would love to know what is currently in your lives!

Words and Wednesdays

I’ve had an “itch” to write recently—well, more than recently. I’ve been writing since I was in high school. I remember giving my high school English teacher a short story I had written. She liked it. My college English profs told me that I thought—and wrote—well. One even asked me in front of the class how I had learned to write. I was between my junior and senior year in high school taking a second-year college level British lit course from Beowulf to the beginning of the nineteenth century, using the ubiquitous Norton Anthology of British Literature, Volume 1, with the famous portrait of Queen Elizabeth I on the cover.

I don’t know when I fell in love with words, with reading. Mama says it was from birth. She read to me and to my sister all the time, often falling asleep herself before I did. She grew desperate and tried everything to read me to sleep: the “begats” from the Bible, dictionary definitions, and even encyclopedias. I would wake her to “finish the story.” The love of words has never worn off.

I am in a writer’s group on Facebook, and one of our regular rhythms is Wednesday Words That Work. I think about the words that work. I am not a good memorizer, but I remember things that I have read and heard that resonate with me:  Tennyson’s short poem “The Eagle,” “He clasps the crag with crooked hands. . . . “; the scene at the end of Keats’s “The Eve of St. Agnes” when the lovers slip through the quiet halls of the castle as if in a dream; the “unquiet slumbers” of Cathy and Heathcliff at the end of Wuthering Heights; even the opening lines of Pride and Prejudice and the reminder that every young lady needs a husband (not much has changed in the last two hundred years!) I could probably go on for a long time remembering the words that worked for me.

The words that work for me are those that I visualize. As a teacher, I have taken all kinds of learning styles inventories, and the results are remarkably similar: I am a visual learner. It is not surprising, then, that I am also drawn to photography and other visual arts. Pictures may be worth a thousand words, but a phrase or two of well-chosen words can inspire a thousand pictures as well. While I devour Regency romances by the dozens (finishing one this afternoon, probably), I will forget about these novels quite quickly. The novels and books I remember are the ones that use words to create vivid pictures and scenes as I read.

As I write, I think about the poetry, too, that has been inspired by art. (There is a fancy name for that kind of literature): Browning’s “My Last Duchess” ( which may or may not have been inspired by real people or real paintings—with Browning, who knows?); “Musee des Beaux Arts,” and quite a few others.

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Pictures, words, images.  Stay tuned for more about an online course I am writing.

In the meantime, please enjoy this new-to-me blog, Words and Images by Cynthia which combines words and images. I have gotten lost in Cynthia’s writing and photography. I found her through another interesting and inspiring website, The Creativity Portal.