Sunday, October 26, 2025

Back to School




My elementary book club is starting up again, which is good news because we weren’t sure we could make it happen. But I’ve laid in a supply of cookies and we’re giving it a go.

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 68 books, but I’ve finished a bunch of those so I think I’m not really trending upward. The library thinks I have 48 physical books checked out but the lost one is found so I’m happy. In unrelated news, I’ve checked off two more libraries in my quest to visit all the KCLS branches. My household rule is that you can check out up to you age number of books, so I’m still legal! 

getting 

Books Completed  Sept 19 - Sept 25


I Survived the Shark Attacks of 1916: Graphic Novel, Lauren Tarshis. This one really shines as a graphic novel, because both monster pranks and shark attacks are great illustration opportunities and the history is minor.

Endling: The First, Katherine Applegate. I read the first with my Tuesday book club, and I remember people being uncomfortable with the talking animals eating each other. The line between stranger and lunch remains blurred here. The adventure stuff works but I’ve forgotten how this group got together so I was never sure how strong their bond was. Still, it was a good pick for my Renton Highland Library Quest.

Black Wolf of Boston, Wen Spencer. I’m glad I reread this, both because there’s a lot of exposition I had forgotten and also because it came back to me as I read it and made it even more fun. I think the first time I was a bit slowed down by remembering how the world worked.

Grendel’s Guide to Love and War, A.E. Kaplan. Matching Scintillation pick. I didn’t like this as much as most of the group; I thought the Beowulf stuff made the love story more u balanced and less fun than it would have been without the links. I get how people identify with the villains in stories when they feel out of place, but hey, still murder no matter what your reason. This book didn’t have actual murder, but I didn’t feel as sympathetic to Grendel’s shenanigans because of the base story. The Beowulf stuff on its own was cool though.

Mayhem at a Halloween Wedding, Emmeline Duncan. This is the second in a lightweight series about a small town book store owner. I enjoy them as a peek into a life I don’t have, and this delivers with an elaborate wedding our heroine is a maid of honor for. The rituals around weddings to me were baffling even while having my own, so this one was pleasantly exotic.

Masterminds, Gordon Korman. Good pick, Talbot Hill kid. Korman delivers another fun and meaty adventure story. There’s a sequel so I hope the dead kid somehow was saved off page.

Karen’s School Pictures Graphic Novel (Baby-sitter’s Little Sister), Ann Martin & Katy Farina. Karen gets glasses! Will she wear them for her picture? The politics at this posh private school are fascinating.

Ayiti, Roxane Gay. The next shelf in the Renton library gave me a taste of Gay’s fiction; previously I had only read her essays. She could drop me into a couple realized character in only a few lines; some stories were only a few pages long but still left me feeling complete. A lucky find.

From the Roots Up, Tasha Spillet-Sumner. The next stage in the comics about Native Americans getting murdered in cities left me a bit confused. The focus has moved to a group of kids who attend the local Indian community center and convince the leaders to move to a more open approach to mixed genders and what roles people can have; the loss of more traditional members who feel ignored is treated as good riddance.

Here in Harlem: Poems in Many Voices, Walter Dean Myers. The poet says he was inspired by Spoon River Anthology and he also succeeded in giving the feel of a community through short glimpses of the poetry in various members.

Game Changer!: Book Access For All Kids, Donalyn Miller and Colby Sharp. I got some good ideas for my kidlit bookclub this year as well as general support for loving seeing kids read.

I Survived the Eruption of Mount St Helens, 1980, Lauren Tarshis. I liked this even better as part of a series than I had as a stand alone: it’s good but it does kind of rest on the established structure.

Books Started


I Survived the Shark Attacks of 1916: Graphic Novel, Lauren Tarshis.
Mayhem at a Halloween Wedding, Emmeline Duncan. I enjoy this author.
Karen’s School Pictures Graphic Novel (Baby-sitter’s Little Sister), Ann Martin & Katy Farina. Checking another off the list.
Black Tie and Tails, Wen Spencer. I bought this in hard cover.
I Survived the Bombing of Pearl Harbor, 1941,  Lauren Tarshis. The pile is getting smaller.
Some Sunny Day, Adam Baron. Next in the Renton Highland Library Quest.
Game Changer!: Book Access For All Kids, Donalyn Miller and Colby Sharp. How to get kids to read by giving them books.
From the Roots Up, Tasha Spillet-Sumner. I read the first one.
Mary Anne and the Search For Tigger, Ann M. Martin, up to number 25!
Hundredfold, Anthony Esolen. New poetry book.
I Survived the Eruption of Mount St Helens, 1980, Lauren Tarshis. I’m rereading this one because I read it years ago.
Arabella of Venus, David Levine. Listening to the audio while doing chores.
The Hexologists, Josiah Bancroft. Sword & Laser pick.



Bookmarks Moved

The Way of Kings, Brandon Sanderson
Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
Beowulf, J. R. R. Tolkien
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger
Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi
An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
A, B, C: Three Short Novels, Samuel Delany
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
The Farwalker’s Quest, John Sensel. Classic Cybils finalist.
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford

Bookmarks Languished

I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!   
                                        
                                                                                                   Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno.
                                                                                               Marry Me By Midnight, Felicia Grossmann       
                                                                                   True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                             South Riding, Winifred Holtby                                   
                      Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
                     Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
                     The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
                     Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
             Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
            Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles
         So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
         Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
      I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson
      One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
   The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell   

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

Knight Owl and Early Bird, Christopher Denise. A small bird joins the knightly order, which consists of a bunch of humans and now two small birds. No one comments on this. Somehow armor that fits the birds is available. That’s my favorite part of these books; the background strangeness as the simple emotional arc moves along in the front.

Last Stop on Market Street, Matt de la Pena. I see why this won the awards.

Leo’s First Vote, Christina Soontornvat. Wow, this author can do it all. I liked the kid’s enthusiasm and how they let the school election almost be a tie, and I was impressed at how well she avoided modern partisan politics.

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Currently learning laundry details for linen and cotton.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. The ending feels like a beloved dog circling to find the perfect spot.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe. More dull Arnold stuff.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. Mail bribe.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. 
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. I like that I remember these books.

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Wolf Hall
  • Library Book: Give Me a Reason
  • Hugo Finalist: Heavenly Tyrant
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Red Shirts
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  Interview With the Vampire 
  • Scintillation Book Club: Crucible of Time
  • Cloudy Book Club:  Someone You Can Build a Nest In
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Spook
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: North Woods
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Fantasy, Historical/biography
  • Friday Book Club: Black Wolves of Boston 1 & 2
  • Romance Book Club: Doctor romance

Saturday, October 11, 2025

Tired of Myself



I spent a lot of the week leaning into being worried about the biopsy of the growth near my eyelid until finally I got tired of it and just went on with my life. Since I’m so far behind, I can say that the procedure was fine and everything was benign, and what I should have worried about was the severe eye pain probably caused by a dry spot, and then the fall on my face, both of which were much more traumatic. Past me, what a waste of moping! You will soon have real things to mope about!

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 70 books, but I’ve finished a bunch of those so I think I’m not really trending upward. The library thinks I have 42 physical books checked out but I’ve lost one so that shouldn’t count. My household rule is that you can check out up to you age number of books, so I’m legal again! 

Books Completed  Sept 12 - Sept 18


Catfishing on Catnet, Naomi Kratzer. A fun reread, and we all enjoyed it. I had more sympathy for the adults this time around.

The Last Wizard’s Ball, Charlaine Harris. I really like her characters, even when that means they do things that emotionally realistic and narratively sad. I also like how different and yet consistent the characters seem from different points of view. This book was all in Lizbeth’s, but others have been in her sisters and it’s very well done.

Every Heart a Doorway, Seanan McGuire. Foolscap book for Back To School month. Funnily, this is the least academic school story ever; I don’t think there are any classes, just therapy. Admittedly it moves fast and there are several murders, so therapy is probably more useful than geometry.

Aussie Next Door, Stephanie London. HEA-guaranteed romance with fun characters and setting. She gives both halves work to do on themselves to make them earn their ending. I kinds skimmed through the middle since I had read a previous one and saw what was happening since I knew where it ended, but focused in again for the character conclusions.

Daisy and the Deadly Flu (Girls Survive), Julie Gilbert. I’m not sure about these sex segregated survival books. I hadn’t realized the I Survived ones started out as all boys. Anyway, this one was extra depressing because I also recently lived through a deadly flu.

Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer. This time I alternated reading and listening, and I still really enjoyed this and found the principles of reciprocity powerful. Some book club members found it repetitive, which I can see, but we all appreciated the homey touches like her life as a single mom and her struggles with the pond.

Blonde Identity, Ally Carter. For amnesia month with the Romance book club. This was fun and zippy and then I completely forgot to dial into the book club!

Claudia and the Sad Goodbye, Ann M. Martin. Babysitters Club 26. I though this did a really good job with grief and its stop and go continuity.

Pokémon Sun and Moon 4,  Hidenori Kusaka. Some kids wandered around and had some Pokémon battles, and something bad is happening to the islands, maybe. This are hard for me to follow.

Books Started

Aussie Next Door, Stephanie London. I liked her other book.
Claudia and the Sad Goodbye, Ann M. Martin. Babysitters Club 26.
Pokémon Sun and Moon 4,  Hidenori Kusaka. Talbot recommended.
Blonde Identity, Ally Carter. For amnesia month with the Romance book club.
Ayiti, Roxane Gay. Next book in my Renton library Quest.
Here in Harlem: Poems in Many Voices, Walter Dean Myers. Next poetry book.
Black Wolf of Boston, Wen Spencer. Reread before reading the new one.
The Way of Kings, Brandon Sanderson. Time to read it.
Masterminds, Gordon Korman. Talbot Hill recommended.
The Farwalker’s Quest, John Sensel. Classic Cybils finalist.
Beowulf, J. R. R. Tolkien. Scintillation book club.
Grendel’s Guide to Love and War, A.E. Kaplan. Matching Scintillation pick.
Catfishing on Catnet, Naomi Kratzer. Friday book club pick.



Bookmarks Moved

Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
Endling: The First, Katherine Applegate
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger
Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   


Bookmarks Languished

I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!   
                                        
                                                                                                Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno.
                                                                                            Marry Me By Midnight, Felicia Grossmann       
                                                                                True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                          South Riding, Winifred Holtby                                   
                   Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
                  Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
                  The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
                  Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
          Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
         Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles
      So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
      Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
      A, B, C: Three Short Novels, Samuel Delany
   I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson
   Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
   One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell   

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

The Concrete Garden, Bob Graham. A very cosy story, recommended by the podcast Even The Trunchbull. We watch a neighborhood of kids draw in chalk on their complex’s basketball court, with lots of small details in the illustrations to add to the simple text. The adults are inspired but the kids just go on to the next thing. It’s set during the pandemic, or at least during a time of masking, but the kids are too small to worry about it when there’s a major crisis like a dog messing up some chalk flowers by weeping in them.

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Currently learning laundry details.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe. More dull Arnold stuff.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. Mail bribe.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. 
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. I like that I remember these books.

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Wolf Hall
  • Library Book: War of the Wind
  • Hugo Finalist: Heavenly Tyrant
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Red Shirts
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  Interview With the Vampire 
  • Scintillation Book Club: The Last Witchfinder
  • Cloudy Book Club:  Someone You Can Build a Nest In
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Spook
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Lady Tan’s Circle of Women
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Graphic Novel, Spooky
  • Friday Book Club: Someone to Build a Nest In (finished)
  • Romance Book Club: Werewolf romance.

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Maybe I Float



This week started with a burst of energy. I started reestablishing my morning walk or run habit, I got through my errands in a time,y fashion, and I made some appointments I had been procrastinating on. Unfortunately one of these involved sending a picture of a minor blemish to a dermatologist, and they told me to come in next week for a biopsy. So much for my energy burst!

Now I had hours of moping to work in around my day. It’s depressing when my best case scenario is being told I have a wart on my face, like a witch. It is true that I’ve entered lakes and not drowned, so I think my odds are good. 

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 63 books, but I’ve finished several of those so I think I’m not really trending upward. The library thinks I have physical books checked out but I’ve lost one so that shouldn’t count. I think that’s still bit too high. This paragraph seems very familiar.

Books Completed  Sept 5 - Sept 11


Accident of Stars, Foz Meadows. I liked this more than the one with the arranged marriage. It was more action based and had a brisker tone, with less navel-gazing protagonists. I think I also liked the multitude of viewpoints more than a first person, which gave insights into the secondary world from both its residents (immigrant and natives) and the accidental visitor.

Karen’s Worst Day, Baby-sitter’s Little Sister, Ann Martin. A lot of this bad day involves watching other people have a good thing. I don’t think seeing someone you love get a surprise present counts as something bad happening to you, and I think helping little kids realize that is important. Karen is still working on this, and she isn’t getting much help. But her very extended family is very compassionate in other ways so maybe she’ll get there on her own. I notice that neither of her little brothers complain when the big kids take her out for ice cream to cheer her up.

Karen’s Kittycat Club, Baby-sitters Little Sister Graphic Novel, Katy Farina & Ann Martin. This one worked better for me with text because the whole point is her being carried away and being mean.

The Unravelling, Benjamin Rosenbaum. Man this must have been a great book club. There’s so much to unpack here! The worldbuilding was doing amazing things; lots of cool ideas and then showing what follows from them. 

Tribute, Sherwood Smith. I’m going to miss these characters a lot. I ran out to get the next in the series but I think it’s a big jump down the timeline.

Who Fears Death, Nnedi Okorafor. As an apocalypse book it wasn’t great, since it’s set in the future where no one worries about how it happened beyond some founding myths. But as a good read about kids with too much power and a society with a lot of casual injustices it really works.

Parable of the Talents Graphic Novel, Octavia E. Butler & Damian Duffy. I think this did a great job of translating the book to graphic form and retaining its power. And I still think Lauren’s kid is a huge jerk, but Butler makes her a believable one. (The brother is a bigger jerk, but at least he knows it.)

Sheine Lende, Darcy Little Badger. I love how capable Little Badgers’s teens are, and I like seeing how the live as both Americans and tribal members. And the magical touches in her alternate world work for me. Good going, Hugo voters.

Karen’s Witch, Baby-sitters Little Sister, Ann Martin. As an adult, it is hilarious to me when Karen storms the garden club with accusations of witchcraft because it would have been embarrassing as a parent but unlikely to happen to me with my unimaginative children.

Karen’s Worst Day: Baby-sitters Little Sister Graphic Novel,  Katy Farina & Ann Martin. Yeah, it definitely feels more bratty from the outside when Karen feels sorry for herself because her siblings have nice stuff.

The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers, Robinson Jeffers. I like that he really pushed old fashioned poetry back into the mainstream. But honestly a lot of his stuff didn’t land for me. The people in his long poems were unlike anyone I’ve ever met, although maybe they were the kind of people he hung out with, although I’m assuming all the murders were poetic license. Some of the shorter works resonated.

Bonded In Death, J. D. Robb. Other than a short bit of child torture this one was more pleasant than gruesome. I liked seeing the cadre of the butler’s old resistance buddies, although so many of them crowded most of the usual social crowd off the pages.

I Survived the Battle of Gettysburg, 1863, Lauren Tarshis. Wow, a lot of deaths in this one. 

Monstress Vol. 9, Marjorie M. Liu. I like the idea and the story, but the illustrations are so rich I find them exhausting. (Yes, I’m complaining the art in a comic is too good). I see why it keeps getting Hugo nominations but I’m not going to pick it up on my own.

Books Started


Karen’s Kittycat Club, Baby-sitters Little Sister Graphic Novel, Katy Farina & Ann Martin. Checking them off.
Karen’s Witch, Baby-sitters Little Sister, Ann Martin. This is the first Karen book.
Bonded In Death, J. D. Robb. Oops. I’m one behind.
This Tender Land, William Kent Kruger. Missed book club book.
Karen’s Worst Day: Baby-sitters Little Sister Graphic Novel,  Katy Farina & Ann Martin. These are fast reads.
Daisy and the Deadly Flu (Girls Survive), Julie Gilbert. I’m comparing to the I Survived series.
Every Heart a Doorway, Seanan McGuire. Foolscap book for Back To School month.
The Last Wizard’s Ball, Charlaine Harris. I really like her characters.


Bookmarks Moved


Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
Endling: The First, Katherine Applegate
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell   
Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi

Bookmarks Languished

I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!   
                                        
                                                                                             Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno.
                                                                                         Marry Me By Midnight, Felicia Grossmann       
                                                                             True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                       South Riding, Winifred Holtby                        
                  An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
                Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
               Calypso, Oliver K Langmead       
               The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
               Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
            Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
       Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
      Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles
   So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
   Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
   A, B, C: Three Short Novels, Samuel Delany
I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

“Meetings on the Stair: an Essay ” by Diane Duane. What are we doing when we tell fantasy stories? Where is the line between lying and dreaming? If you saw a Tardis would you go in?

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Currently learning laundry details.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Trusting magicians is exhilarating.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane. Mail bribe. More dull Arnold stuff.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. Mail bribe.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. 
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. 

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Wolf Hall
  • Library Book: A, B, C
  • Hugo Finalist: Heavenly Tyrant
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Every Heart a Doorway (finished!)
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  The Hexologists
  • Scintillation Book Club: The Last Witchfinder
  • Cloudy Book Club:  A Witches Guide to Magical Innkeeping
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Blue Skies
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Lady Tan’s Circle of Women
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Recommendations: Babysitter’s Little Sister, Pokémon 
  • Friday Book Club: Someone to Build a Nest In (finished)
  • Romance Book Club: Werewolf romance.

Monday, September 15, 2025

Fire on the Beach, With Pizza



A lovely week with lots of friends. Our bookclub summer tradition is to meet at the home of our remote member and judge the years Cybils picture book finalists. Sadly last minute things intervened for several of us, so it was only my sister and I on the road to Oregon, but we three were the original founders of this club almost twenty years ago so it was a fun reminder of our history. Also gourmet husband exerted himself masterfully, especially at breakfast with his perfect omelets. We spent one evening on the nearby beach munching on pizza around a fire pit and the other evening watching Dune.

Then I got to spend the rest of the week chasing down the members who missed the weekend so they could also judge the picture books, an arduous process that involved several new and delicious restaurants. One meal was at a park where we shared our shade with another reader, who invited me to the Renton Silent Reading club, so I found a new book club that will help rather than hurt my reading pile!

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 62 books. That’s trending downwards!The library thinks I have 64 physical books checked out. I think that’s still bit too high. This paragraph seems very familiar.

Books Completed  Aug 29 - Sept


Claudia and the Phantom Phone Calls, Ann M. Martin. I guess this one pretty silly, but the girls were sensible in their silliness (I liked them calling the cops). Too bad Kristy agreed to go out with the jerk though. That does not age well.

Devils, Joe Abercrombie. This Sword and Laser pick was good at what it did but it sure did it for a long time.

The Mushroom Hunters, Langdon Cook. I learned a lot about tasty mushrooms, most of which I immediately forgot, and got a glimpse into a completely new aspect of the fine dining industry. Also I’m pretty sure I’m not going to start foraging on my own. 

The Adventure of The Demonic Ox, Lois McMaster Bujold. Penric discovers the spiritual, emotional, and physical risks of fatherhood but with Desdemonia’s help manages to survive.

Karen’s Witch Graphic Novel, Katy Farina & Ann M. Martin. The problem with the graphic novels is that I find Karen a bit selfish and bratty, and in the text we see her working on being a better person but we miss some of that here.

Pokémon Sun and Moon Vol 3, Hidenori Kusaka. A key plot point was the kid misunderstanding something and rushing off with a wrong idea, but since I tend not to get things until the third time they are brought up I was doomed to follow in his narrative footsteps.

The Bright and Breaking Sea, Chloe Neill. Cloudy pick that was fun. Would have fit in with Foolscap’s beach read discussion and it even took place on a ship!

I Survived the Nazi Invasion Graphic Novel, Lauren Tarshis & Georgia Ball

I Survived the Molasses Flood, Lauren Tarshis & Georgia Ball. Library due dates caught up to me so I jumped this to the top. The pictures helped this time; the event is quick and works well as pictures.

She Who Became the Sun, Shelley Parker-Chan. Yay, Sword and Laser gave me the chance to finally finish this! Great characters and theme work, and now my formless background knowledge of Chinese history is deeper.

Books Started


Pokémon Sun and Moon Vol 3, Hidenori Kusaka. Talbot Hill recommendation.
Read Dangerously, Azar Nifisi. I bought this because I never finished Reading Lolita in Tehran.
The Mushroom Hunters, Langdon Cook. Last square on my Summer Book Bingo Card.
Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer. Reread for River Runs Under It bookclub.
Karen’s Witch Graphic Novel, Katy Farina & Ann M. Martin. Baby-sitter’s Little Sister book.
Karen’s Worst Day, Baby-sitter’s Little Sister book.
I Survived the Battle of Gettysburg, 1863, Lauren Tarshis. I should see how many more there are.
I Survived the Nazi Invasion Graphic Novel, Lauren Tarshis & Georgia Ball. Baby-sitter adopters get better credit than these.
I Survived the Molasses Flood, Lauren Tarshis & Georgia Ball. But libraries shelve these under Ball and the others under Baby-sitter.
Who Fears Death, Nnedi Okorafor. My apocalypse book for T&P book club.
Parable of the Talents Graphic Novel, Octavia E. Butler & Damian Duffy.

Bookmarks Moved


I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson
Tribute, Sherwood Smith
Accident of Stars, Foz Meadows
Sheine Lende, Darcy Little Badger
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
The Unravelling, Benjamin Rosenbaum
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell         
The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers, Robinson Jeffers
Endling: The First, Katherine Applegate
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name

Bookmarks Languished

I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!   
                                        
                                                                                          Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno.
                                                                                      Marry Me By Midnight, Felicia Grossmann       
                                                                          True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                    South Riding, Winifred Holtby                        
               An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews   
             Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
            Calypso, Oliver K Langmead
            Monstress Vol. 9, Marjorie M. Liu
            The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
            Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
         Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
    Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
   Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles
So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole
Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
A, B, C: Three Short Novels, Samuel Delany

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

PEW!: The Stinky and Legen-dairy Gift of Colonel Thomas S, Meacham, Cathy Stephane’s Ogren. Nice historical story of how Andrew Jackson enjoyed a ginormous cheese given by someone whose name resembles mine. For some reason Ogren is cagey about the President who got the cheese. I liked the cheerful pictures of the cows, the cheese making, the journey and the cheese parties at the White House.

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Currently on different knits.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Coming home.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane (no picture). Matthew Arnold is duller than I remember.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. (no picture). Mail bribe. Moving into soft sciences.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. Mail bribe.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. 
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. These are actually useful since I know nothing of classroom management.

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Wolf Hall
  • Library Book: A, B, C
  • Hugo Finalist: Heavenly Tyrant
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Every Heart a Doorway (finished!)
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  The Hexologists
  • Scintillation Book Club: Beowulf
  • Cloudy Book Club:  A Witches Guide to Magical Innkeeping
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Blue Skies
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Braiding Sweetgrass
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Recommendations: Babysitter’s Little Sister, Pokémon 
  • Friday Book Club: Someone to Build a Nest In (finished)
  • Romance Book Club: The Blonde Identity 

Sunday, September 7, 2025

Lego Land



So I attended BrickSlopes, a Lego convention in Sandy, Utah. This year my brother lured his siblings into attending more of it -  I helped my other brother assemble a parrot while the Lego brother raced to finish his own (it was a timed event, but one brother was not a Lego user we figured I could disqualify him by sorting bricks and then we might finish before the room was closed). Emboldened we volunteered for another timed assembly the next day, where we performed equally badly but managed to finish exactly half of the assignment and retired in good grace. And we also spent some time at a class teaching us techniques to make Lego figs dance and wiggle around.

It was a lot of fun and I’ll go again next year to see my Lego brother strut his stuff and to hang out with the non-Lego brother and his family. Also the game I set up to finish the second half of the build was quite enjoyable, involving some nice shots and penalty drinking by the Lego experts in the family.

On Sunday I zoomed into the Foolscap bookclub to discuss Arabella of Mars and the concept of good “beach reads”. I had managed to finish the book on time, which has not been a usual event this summer. Monday was the drive home to Seattle, where I got the wheel for more of the drive and we found our Greek gyro place in Boise. Home at last!

My prodigal cat got a full vet work up and we were sent home with instructions to obtain some poo to check for tag-along infestations. Ew. To distract myself from this task I zoomed around to a handful of libraries to complete my acquisition of all the Cybils picture book finalists. After all, I have a vacation weekend coming up!

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 62 books. That’s trending downwards!The library thinks I have 73 physical books checked out. I think that’s still bit too high. 

Books Completed  Aug 22 - Aug 28


Ordinary Time, Annie B. Jones. What a lucky find! I found Jones a thoughtful and deep companion, someone willing to think about and examine her life but also rejoice in happiness and acknowledge learning experiences both pleasant and distressing. Her discussions of her faith were moving, her relation with her husband inspiring, and her love of books refreshing. I gotta check out her podcast.

Pokémon Sun and Moon V2, Hidenori Kusaka. I’m still frequently baffled by the action scenes but I manage to keep somewhat aware of the plot. I think they are making progress towards the goal of finding the guardians and figuring out what is wrong. Or as Sun would say, making a million dollars.

The Color of Ice, Barbara Lynn Probst. I thought I was getting a vacation romance but instead read a novel that was a love song to Iceland, a middle-age unwrapping, and a new start for a family. It worked out really well for me, but I’m glad I didn’t finish it in time for the holiday romance book club meeting.

Arabella of Mars, David Levine. Foolscap book pick. I enjoyed this reread and I hope to finish the whole trilogy. The rest of the club also had fun and we talked about what makes a beach read; how to ride that line between interesting and engaging but not distressing or intense.

Moon Over SoHo, Ben Aaronovitch. This was a great road trip novel, with a narrator who did lots of British accents for different characters and a story that kept us interested. It made the drive out to Utah pleasant and we finished it as we drove up to Idaho on the way home.

Whispers Under Ground, Ben Aaronovitch. So I had the next one ready to go. We had to speed this one up a bit to finish just as we drove into my neighborhood but the narrator was up to it and honestly I think the plot only benefitted from zipping by before we could question anything. We liked the overarching plot as it settled over the rather complicated book plot. The hoarse voice of damaged Leslie was a bit hard to follow, and one character’s voice was unfortunate read at exactly the pitch of the road noise, but in general we enjoyed having the miles zip by as we listened.

Dawn and the Impossible Three Graphic Novel, Ann M. Martin & Gail Galligan. Dawn is awesome in this but the book was better than the graphic version. 

The Honey Witch, Sydney J. Shields. Cloudy book club read this a few months ago, but I put it down when I fell in love with the premise: what if choosing magic meant giving up the chance for true love? But see, this is a romance book so it obviously wasn’t going to be about that, it was about getting true love after thinking it was impossible. And it was, and it did that fairly well. Maybe someday someone will write that other book though, that would be really interesting.

I Survived the Destruction of Pompeii, AD 79: Graphic Novel, Lauren Tarshis. Lava pictures! Ok, the eruption was nice but I felt the pictures didn’t do as good a job of placing the book in history with a different society and different expectations and different literacy and everything. The book was better.

Books Started


Arabella of Mars, David Levine. Foolscap book pick.
I Survived the Destruction of Pompeii, AD 79: Graphic Novel, Lauren Tarshis. Lava pictures! 
Whispers Under Ground, Ben Aaronovitch. Car trip audio.
So Let Them Burn, Kamilah Cole. Belated Hugo reading.
The Bright and Breaking Sea, Chloe Neill. 



Bookmarks Moved


Tribute, Sherwood Smith
The Adventure of The Demonic Ox, Lois McMaster Bujold
Claudia and the Phantom Phone Calls, Ann M. Martin
Accident of Stars, Foz Meadows
Sheine Lende, Darcy Little Badger
The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers, Robinson Jeffers
Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
A, B, C: Three Short Novels, Samuel Delany
Devils, Joe Abercrombie
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton
Endling: The First, Katherine Applegate
The Unravelling, Benjamin Rosenbaum
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell         
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer

Bookmarks Languished

I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!                                           
                                                                                       Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno.
                                                                                   Marry Me By Midnight, Felicia Grossmann       
                                                                       True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                 South Riding, Winifred Holtby                        
            An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews
         I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson
         Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
         Calypso, Oliver K Langmead
         Monstress Vol. 9, Marjorie M. Liu
         The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
         Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
         Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
      Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
   One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

Katy Duck Is A Caterpiller, Alyssa Satin Capucilli. Talbot Hill recommendation. A fun picture book showing a kid with strong opinions but also a sense of respect for her teachers and also a good understanding of the art of dancing.

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Currently on different knits.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Coming home.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane (no picture). 
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. (no picture). Mail bribe. Moving into soft sciences.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. Mail bribe.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. 
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. 

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Who Fears Death
  • Library Book: Parable of the Talents
  • Hugo Finalist: Sheine Lende
  • Ebook I own: Tribute
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Every Heart a Doorway
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  The Hexologists
  • Scintillation Book Club: Beowulf
  • Cloudy Book Club:  A Witches Guide to Magical Innkeeping
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Who Fears Death
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Braiding Sweetgrass
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Recommendations: Babysitter’s Little Sister, Pokémon 
  • Friday Book Club: Catfishing on Catnet
  • Romance Book Club: Amnesia

Monday, September 1, 2025

Can’t Stop Won’t Stop




WorldCon continued to be a lot of fun. I hung out with friends, met fellow Shields (people who listen to the Sword and Laser podcast), crossed foam swords with my son, attended the award ceremony in person (with my friends), knew some of the winners, and acquired a few books. On Sunday I was part of a panel about book clubs which was very affirming. My son and I got a hotel room on Saturday so we could stay late and it was well worth it - we even saw some of the parties.

On Monday I got up early so I was ready when my brother picked me up for our drive to Utah. There was a LegoConvention called BrickSlopes the next weekend and we wanted to hang out with our older brother before hand. An easy drive later we arrived. Ben Aaronovitch’s Moon Over SoHo was an excellent travel companion and my brother’s wife had packed us a delightful assortment of snacks.

My Utah relatives are amazing hosts, so we had a great few days. Beautiful mountains all around, thriving garden to pick through, friendly pets to snuggle, everything I wanted. I took my iPad to another place where they managed to resurrect it long enough for me to do a final backup before it feinted again.

I even finished a book in time for a book club, something I haven’t managed to do for a few weeks. Our Romance Book Group was discussing Jane Austen books and retellings of them, and we had many examples and discussed why the stories stay vibrant and what retellings are trying to do.

Goodreads thinks I am currently reading 64 books. Almost to three pages! The library thinks I have 77 physical books checked out. I’m hoping to bring that down closer to my age in the next week.

Books Completed  Aug 13 - Aug 19


The Wild Girls, Pat Murphy. As I was reading this a friend mentioned it as we were talking about childhood beloved books. Neat timing! Although come to think of it, it came out two decades ago and is she that much younger than me? My childhood was four decades ago. Anyway, cool friendship, cool artistic integrity, cool growing up and seeing adults as people, people like you will be.

Karen’s Birthday Graphic Novel, Ann M. Martin & Katy Farina. I do like the ones that hint that divorce can be hard on kids. It’s validating as that was my experience.

Ascendance of a Bookworm Fanbook 5, Miya Kazuki. I’m mostly here for the stories although the accounts of the full-cast audio making are fascinating. When I finished I thought I saw a new book but after I bought it I realized it was in Japanese. Oops. At least she’s still writing!

Mrs. Pollifax, Accidental Tourist, Dorothy Gilman. I enjoyed this more than the first time through, probably because it’s been a few years. I liked her independence and her karate moves and how she and Farrell trade off the initiative and the rescuing.

Northranger, Rey Terriero. This is a good YA romance and the graphics are done well. But I didn’t think the call backs to Northanger Abbey did it much favor for me, since it mostly ignored my favorite things about Austen and doubled down on the personal embarrassment, which opposite to the original. But the book club was great with many new members and a lot of good discussion of what we want in a retelling, what modern retelling as can do, and other topics.

I Survived the Joplin Tornado 2011, Lauren Tarshis. This was really terrifying.

Maddie and the Monstrous Storm, Julie Gilbert. This is a good contrast to the I Survived series. It does mostly the same thing but with guaranteed girl protagonists (not a plus for my book club) and uses different authors. But the structure of plunking a kid with a problem in a historical section and then giving them a much bigger problem remains, and often the initial problem is handled in the course of the disaster promised in the title. I think more named characters died in this one than I’m used to.

Books Started


Karen’s Birthday Graphic Novel, Ann M. Martin & Katy Farina. Babysitter Club and Talbot Hill rec.
Dawn and the Impossible Three Graphic Novel, Ann M. Martin & Gail Galligan. Babysitter Club book.
Moon Over SoHo, Ben Aaronovitch. Audio for drive to Utah.
The Adventure of The Demonic Ox, Lois McMaster Bujold. Another Penric!
Ordinary Time, Annie B. Jones. Library grab because a bookstore owner who writes essays is my jam.
Accident of Stars, Foz Meadows. Scintillation book club.
Maddie and the Monstrous Storm, Julie Gilbert. A different version of the I Survived series.
Northranger, Rey Terriero. For the Romance reading group; it’s a Jane Austen retelling.
Pokémon Sun and Moon V2, Hidenori Kusaka. Talbot Hill Rec.
Claudia and the Phantom Phone Calls, Ann M. Martin. Babysitter Club #2.




Bookmarks Moved

Tribute, Sherwood Smith
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers, Robinson Jeffers
The Color of Ice, Barbara Lynn Probst
The Honey Witch, Sydney J. Shields
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton


Bookmarks Languished

I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence!                                           
                                                                                       Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno.
                                                                                   Marry Me By Midnight, Felicia Grossmann       
                                                                       True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                                 South Riding, Winifred Holtby     
                         The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell         
                     A, B, C: Three Short Novels, Samuel Delany
            An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews
         I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson
         Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
         Calypso, Oliver K Langmead
         Monstress Vol. 9, Marjorie M. Liu
         The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
         Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
         Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
      Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
   One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
Devils, Joe Ambercrombie
Sheine Lende, Darcy Little Badger
The Unravelling, Benjamin Rosenbaum
Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
Endling: The First, Katherine Applegate
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

 None. 

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. Currently on different knits.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Coming home.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane (no picture). 
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. (no picture). Mail bribe. 
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. Mail bribe.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. 
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. 

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Who Fears Death
  • Library Book: The Mushroom Hunters
  • Hugo Finalist: Sheine Lende
  • Ebook I own: The Demonic Ox
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Every Heart a Doorway
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  She Who became the Sun
  • Scintillation Book Club: Accident of Stars
  • Cloudy Book Club:  The Bright and Breaking Sea
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Who Fears Death
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: Braiding Sweetgrass
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Recommendations: Babysitter’s Little Sister, Pokémon 
  • Friday Book Club: Catfishing on Catnet
  • Romance Book Club: Amnesia

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Ready To WorldCon




This was a very pleasant weeks. I planned and ate nice dinners, actually went on a run, met my friend for a hike, and in general was on top of things. This is good because I was also preparing for the Seattle WorldCon, a five day convention celebrating SF fandom and creators. This convention is held yearly but moves around each time, and I’ve started attending the past few years because I like books and authors and other nerdy things. This year it was in my hometown, and a bunch of us from one of my book clubs planned to go.

Since I had been to some I was the local expert, and also I was somehow also placed on several panels, discussing kids books and book clubs, and moderating a librarian, a kidlit author, and a SF legend on how to get kids to read more SF. So I spent some time collecting some thought on this stuff, and hopefully managed to pull off my imposter syndrome on the two Thursday panels.

Oh, also my iPad died.

Goodreads thinks I am down to 63 books. Almost to three pages! The library thinks I have 77 physical books checked out, because I had to go to 4 libraries to get picture books for my book club and I had no shelf control. 

Books Completed  Aug 7 - Aug 13


Lawless, Leah Litman. All Supreme Court justices are political. They decide what the decision should be based on what they like, and then look for laws to justify that. But the current court is distinctive in not even pretending to be consistent either with the law or with prior decisions. They are also openly corrupt, and think the problem is with people pointing it out. Why shouldn’t they accept large sums from the people in front of them? That doesn’t create even an appearance of bias, according to their greedy framing. It’s rather discouraging in terms of making our country deplorable.

When the Moon Met the Sun, Alaina Hope. I bought it because it was written by a relative of a friend. But I read it because the writing was good and the worldbuilding was fun. It had a young vibe but I’m here for that. I’ll look out for the next one.

Castle, David Macaulay. This was a quality recommendation from my elementary book club. The illustrations were the driver, showing how the construction worked, with the text explaining the pieces. I may have read the earlier edition ages ago with my kids, but this color version is redone enough that I’m counting it as new.

Not That Kind of Good Guy, John Ringo. A big disappointment. The competence porn was unbelievable and usually buried beneath a pile of alt-right misunderstandings, which kind of diminished the sense of competence. Like, our your teen hero was super smart and had won early admittance to places like Stanford and a random assortment of Ivies, but he couldn’t go because he was white. Apparently those schools never admit white males, and definitely never give them scholarships. I had a long paragraph complaining about a fraction of the problems, but when you read John Ringo you expect some “OH JOHN RINGO NO” moments (rape is genetically essential for human survival, etc). But in this book the ratio of OH NO to story is way too high; it should be no higher than 1:4 and this felt like 4:1. Even if some of the NOs were softer (Bill Clinton was on watch for 9/11) they still weren’t story.

Karen’s Roller Skates (Babysitter’s Little Sister book), Ann M. Martin. I enjoyed watching Karen’s explanation for the fall that broke her arm get better and more elaborate. It was a pity when mean people kept pushing it back towards reality.

Year of Wonder, Clemency Burton-Hill. Yay, I’m done! Now I’ll read the appropriate one for the day and if I need more music maybe I’ll just spin the wheel.

Long Live Evil, Sarah Rees Brennan. I paused while reading this because I didn’t want the thing that had to happen to happen. But I had to see and it happened. Brennan does this sort of thing very well. 

Because Internet, Gretchen McCulloch. wut? Ikr! Words, she knows them.

Books Started

Castle, David Macaulay. Talbot Hill rec. 
The Color of Ice, Barbara Lynn Probst. I got this ages ago for the Vacation Romance book, but it’s not a romance so good thing it wasn’t my pick for that.
Not That Kind of Good Guy, John Ringo. Sometimes Ringo writes good competence porn.
Karen’s Roller Skates (Babysitter’s Little Sister book), Ann M. Martin. Talbot Hill rec.
Ascendance of a Bookworm Fanbook 5, Miya Kazuki. I need all the bookworm content.
I Survived the Joplin Tornado 2011, Lauren Tarshis. Hey, a new state!
Miss Pollifax, Accidental Tourist, Dorothy Gilman. Reread.
Death in the Spires, K.J. Charles. Reliable author.

Bookmarks Moved

Tribute, Sherwood Smith
Devils, Joe Ambercrombie
Sheine Lende, Darcy Little Badger
The Unravelling, Benjamin Rosenbaum
Bourne Supremacy, Robert Ludlum
Endling: The First, Katherine Applegate
The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers, Robinson Jeffers
The Honey Witch, Sydney J. Shields
The Wild Girls, Pat Murphy
Hearts Still Beating, Brooke Archer
Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
The Luminaries, Eleanor Catton

Bookmarks Languished

I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence.
                                                                                                
                                                                                    Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno.
                                                                                Marry Me By Midnight, Felicia Grossmann       
                                                                    True Colors, Abby Cooper.
                                                              South Riding, Winifred Holtby     
                      The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell         
                  A, B, C: Three Short Novels, Samuel Delany
         An Exchange of Hostages, Susan R. Matthews
      I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson
      Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel
      Calypso, Oliver K Langmead
      Monstress Vol. 9, Marjorie M. Liu
      The Hunger and the Dusk, G. Willow Wilson
      Speculative Whiteness, Jordan S. Carroll
      Track Changes, Abigail Nussbaum
   Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao
One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford

Picture Books, Poems, and Short Stories

 None. 

Books on Slow Mode

Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. On to laundry and linens.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Reintegration.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane (no picture). 
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. (no picture). Mail bribe. Student essays are not as polished as professional work. On to social sciences!
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. Mail bribe.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe. Teen romance is hard.
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. Onto book 2!

Books Acquired

I only notice when I’m caught up.

Future Plans

This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Devils
  • Library Book: The Bright and Breaking Sea
  • Hugo Finalist: Sheine Lende
  • Ebook I own: The Demonic Ox
  • Foolscap Book Club Book:  Every Heart a Doorway
  • Sword and Laser Club Book:  She Who became the Sun
  • Scintillation Book Club: Accident of Stars
  • Cloudy Book Club:  The Bright and Breaking Sea
  • Torches and Pitchfork Book Club:  Who Fears Death
  • River Runs Under It Book Club: This Tender Land
  • Talbot Hill Book:  Recommendations: Babysitter’s Little Sister, Pokémon 
  • Friday Book Club: Dune
  • Romance Book Club: Amnesia