Monday, March 30, 2026
TTT: Buzzwords that Make Me Want to Read a Book
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Sunday Salon -- NO Kings!
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| No Kings Rally in Puyallup, Washington. I'm guessing there were around 1000 people. Not bad for a small, conservative community! |
Omg! Huge shoutout to San Francisco, CA! Ocean Beach, you crushed it! 🌊
— Alt National Park Service (@altnps.bsky.social) March 28, 2026 at 2:57 PM
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- I finally finished:
- The Master and Margarita by Bulgakov. I've been reading this Russian classic since the first part of February and it feels good to finally be done with it.
- The Road to Tender Hearts by Hartnett. It was a slow starter but I ended up really liking this hilarious book.
- Startlement: New and Selected Poems by Ada Limón. So talented. A very satisfying poetry collection. And I took my sweet time reading this one, too.
- I'm currently reading:
- Poems and Prayers by Matthew McConaughey. I am enjoying the sections on prayers the best. 20% complete.
- China Room by Sahota. Two storylines set on a farm in India separated by decades. Very depressing so far. 30% complete. A book club selection.
- What We Can Know by McEwan. I just started this book which is set in the future. 4% complete.
- Library book haul: (for National Poetry Month -- April)
- The Trees Witness Everything by Chang
- Woman Without Shame: Poems by Cisneros
- Goldenrod: Poems by Maggie Smith
- Pilgrim Bell: Poems by Akbar
- Why Fathers Cry at Night by Alexander
- Blogging this week:
Saturday, March 28, 2026
Classic review: THE MASTER AND MARGARITA
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Review: THE ROAD TO TENDER HEARTS (+Friday56 LinkUp)
Things were falling apart at the nursing home in Pondville, a small town in the armpit of Massachusetts..
He was dead, they said, already, so she didn't need to hurry to the hospital.
A darkly comic and warm-hearted novel about an old man on a cross-country mission to reunite with his high school crush—bringing together his adult daughter, two orphaned kids, and a cat who can predict death. (Publisher)
RULES:
You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
Click here to enterMonday, March 23, 2026
TTT: Spring 2026 Reading List (and How I Did On My Winter Reading List)
- SOTH Gals (April) : China Room (Sahota)
- RHS Ladies (April): So Far Gone (Walter)
- SOTH Gals (May) : TBA
- RHS Ladies (May) : TBA
- SOTH Gals (June) : TBA
- RHS Ladies (June): TBA
- Classics Club Spin Book TBA from this list -- Possibly: Madame Bovary (Flaubert)
- Printz Award Winner or honor book -- Possibly: The Legendary Frybread Drive-In (Leitich)
- A past Pulitzer Prize winner from this list -- Possibly: American Pastoral (Roth)
- 2026 One Big Book Challenge -- Moby-Dick (Melville)
- Women's Prize winner or finalist -- Possibly: Flashlight (Susan Choi)
- Three Goodreads Spring Challenge selections TBA, starting April 1st.
- SOTH Gals (January) : The Wind Knows My Name by Isabel Allende
- RHS Ladies (January): The Lion Women of Tehran by Marjan Kamali
- SOTH Gals (February) : All My Knotted-Up Life: a Memoir by Beth Moore
- RHS Ladies (February) : The Correspondent by Virginia Evans
- SOTH Gals (March) : We Need No Wings by Ann Davila Cardinal
- RHS Ladies (March: The Road to Tender Hearts by Annie Harnett
- Classics Club Spin Book TBA from this list -- The Master and Margarita (Bulgakov)
- Printz Award Winner or honor book --Song of the Blackbird (von Lieshout)
- A past Pulitzer Prize winner from this list -- American Pastoral (Roth)
- 2026 One Big Book Challenge -- Moby-Dick (Melville)
- First book of 2026 -- Worth Fighting For (Pavlovitz)
- A Marriage at Sea by Sophie Elmhirst
- Hogfather by Terry Pratchett
- So Far Gone by Jess Walter
- Separation of Church and Hate by John Fugelsang
- Wreck by Catherine Newman
- Replaceable You by Mary Roach
- Mother Mary Comes to Me by Arundhati Roy
- Perfection by Vincenzo Latronico
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Sunday Salon -- 97!
- Currently reading:
- The Master and Margarita by Bulgakov. Yes, I am still struggling along on this tome of a book, but actually think I will make it by the CC Spin deadline the end of the month. I still don't understand the story -- it is just mostly zany stories involving Satan, at least I think so. 79% complete.
- Startlement: New and Selected Poems by Ada Limón. I'm enjoying this collection very much. 33% complete.
- The Road to Tender Hearts by Annie Hartnett. A book club selection for a meeting next week. I'd better get a move on it. 27% complete.
- Recently finished:
- Corelli's Mandolin by Louis de Bernières. I read this first go round in the 1990s. This reread I listened to the audiobook with Don. We both loved it. Don helped me write the review and what he had to say was so sweet -- it melts my heart. (Audiobooks with Don review: Corelli's Mandolin.)
- Toni at Random by Dana Williams. A look at Toni Morrison's career at Random House Publishing. She not only was an amazing author, she was an incredible editor responsible for publishing many important books which advanced Black authors or themes.
- We Need No Wings by Ann Dávila Cardinal. Another book club selection, this one about a women who is confronting changes in her life looks to a family relative, St. Teresa for inspiration and answers.
- Blog posts the last two weeks:
- Sunday Salon: March 7th
- TTT: Book titles with Ordinal Numbers
- Review: Vigil
- TTT: Books with Green Covers
- Getting Ready: National Poetry Month
- Review: We Need No Wings
- Review: Corelli's Mandolin (If you pick just one link to follow, pick this one!)
- Reading Challenges: I completed the Goodreads Winter Challenge which was to complete 12 reading tasks. Now I wait for April for their next board to open up for the Spring Challenge.
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| Toni at Random fulfilled the last two tasks: Black Heritage and Her Story. A two-fer. |
― Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita
"Audiobooks with Don"--Review: CORELLI'S MANDOLIN
Captain Corelli's Mandolin is an emotional, funny, stunning novel which swings with wide smoothness between joy and bleakness, personal lives and history, between an hour-by-hour narrative riddled with meals and walks and cuffs and courtship and a decade-by-decade sweep through the years. It's lyrical and angry, satirical and earnest.
Love is a temporary madness, it erupts like volcanoes and then subsides. And when it subsides you have to make a decision. You have to work out whether your roots have so entwined together that is is inconceivable that you should ever part. Because that is what love is. Love is not breathlessness, it is not excitement, it is not the promulgation of promises of eternal passions. ...That is just being "in love," which any fool can do. Love itself is what is left over when being in love has burned away, and this is both an art and a fortunate accident. Your mother and I had it, we had roots that grew towards each other underground, and when all the pretty blossoms had fallen from our branches we found we were one tree and not two.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Review: WE NEED NO WINGS (+Friday56 LinkUp)
The first time Tere Sánchez levitated, she was in the garden.
But the most famous depiction of Santa Teresa was the Bernini sculpture, The Ecstasy of Saint Teresa. The Italian baroque artist had created a marble portrayal of the transverberation of the saint, the vision she'd had where her heart was pierced by the golden flaming arrows of a seraph, an angelic being.
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| Bernini's the Ecstasy of Saint Teresa (Rome) |
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| Statue of St. Teresa (Ávila) |
"The soul here resembles someone on a journey who enters a quagmire or swamp and thus cannot move onward. And, in order to advance, a soul must not only walk but fly." --Saint Teresa de Ávila, The Book of Her Foundations
RULES:
You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
Click here to enterGetting ready: National Poetry Month
National Poetry Month, April, is nearly here. For some reason this event, which I am determined to celebrate each year, always seems to sneak up on me. But not this year. This year I am getting ready for it early.
Yesterday I found this list of the best 48 adult poetry books of the last five years. I took the little quiz and discovered I have already read 12 of them, which puts me in the top 97% of people who filled out the quiz. What does that say about me? What does that say about everyone else? 97%, ridiculous. From the list I found five books I want to read because I've already read something by this poet/author and I've placed these titles on hold at the library:
- And Yet by Kate Baer
- Pilgrim Bell: Poems by Kaveh Akbar
- The Trees Witness Everything by Victoria Chang
- Woman Without Shame by Sandra Cisneros
- Goldenrod by Maggie Smith
- Little Alleluias by Mary Oliver.
- Poems and Prayers by Matthew McConaughey
- Startlement: Poems by Ada Limón
- Why Fathers Cry at Night: a Memoir in Love Poems, Letters, Recipes, and Remembrances by Kwame Alexander.

























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