Monday, February 16, 2026
TTT: Books for Armchair Travelers
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Sunday Salon -- ¡Mexico!
- Top left: We met up with two of my siblings, Tony and Kathy, and their spouses. In the photo we are finishing our meal in the Asian restaurant at the resort. In addition to two buffets on site, there were several specialty-themed restaurants (Mexican, Asian, Italian, Fish, etc.) which required reservations. I've never been to an all-inclusive resort before. I liked it a lot for the ease and convenience. During the days couples would split up and do whatever they wanted and then every evening we would get together for dinner and sometimes drinks and games afterwards. On Sunday, Feb. 7th, we all gathered at the Sports Bar on the resort site and watched the Superbowl together. They switched the audio to English but it didn't matter since it was so loud in the bar. There were a lot of noisy fans cheering for their favorite team. Since we are all from the West Coast of the US, we all cheered for the Seahawks.
- Top center: This is the view from my lounge chair on many days as I laid under the palm trees near the sea. My husband preferred to lounge on the curtained beds next to my chair. I ended up reading almost a whole, big book (over 400 pages.) The temperatures in the shade were usually in the low 80s with a nice ocean breeze. Often we could see the adventurous souls who ventured out for parasailing, as they sailed by being pulled by boats. Books completed this week: The Guardian and a Thief by Marjan Kamali and The Story of a New Name by Elena Ferrante. I'm still currently reading the Wild Dark Shore by McConaghy. I'm listening to Vinegar Girl by Tyler.
- Top right: One afternoon we went to a nearby cenote, The Garden of Eden Cenote, for a refreshing outing. A cenote is a natural, water-filled sinkhole formed by the collapse of limestone bedrock, revealing an underlying, crystal-clear groundwater system. Derived from the Mayan word ts’ono’ot ("well"), these pools are predominantly found in Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula and were historically considered sacred, representing entrances to the underworld. In the photo you see me and Don sitting on a mossy rock watching little fish nibble at the dead skin on our feet and legs. This was my favorite activity of the trip...the cenote, not the fish.
- Middle left: I did a lot of bird watching. Pictured is the Great Kiskadee. Other new birds to me: the Great-tailed Grackle; a group of Ocellated Turkeys; several Tropical Mockingbirds; Yucatán Jays, they were everywhere around the cenote; the Common Squirrel-Cuckoo; I heard the Altamira Oriole and saw its woven, upside-down nest; Brown Pelicans; Black vultures. I also met the Harris Hawk who was working the resort with a handler to keep down the number of grackles who would harass us otherwise. Two other birds seen around the cenote which I've seen before -- an Anhinga pair and a Green Heron working the edges of the sinkhole.
- Center: Sunrise over the Caribbean Sea.
- Middle right: Ruins at Tulum, one of the last cities built and inhabited by Mayans, prominent during the 13th to 15th centuries. (Wiki)
- Bottom left: Nohuch Mul pyramid is the tallest structure in the Mayan ruins at Coba. My sister joined Don and I one day to explore the ruins at Coba and Tulum. Coba is very spread out so our guide (a beautiful Mayan woman) and Don rode bikes between sights, while Kathy and I were escorted around by pedicab. The Spaniards never found this location so it is more intact than many of the other Mayan settlements because it was abandoned about 1100 CE and the jungle had grown over it before the Europeans arrived. We could have climbed the pyramid, behind us in the photo, but that didn't sound fun to Kathy and I so Don didn't push it. (Wiki)
- Bottom middle: Spider monkeys. Signs everywhere at the resort implored people to not feed the animals, but the monkeys were opportunistic little thieves. If someone left their sliding glass door open even for a minute, they would race in and steal from the complimentary fruit bowl. The resort also had a bunch of coatimundis running around. They are raccoon-like. Agoutis, rodents which are like little capybaras. White-tailed deer and iguanas were everywhere.

Here is one stealing our last apple. - Bottom right: Don and I grabbed a last hour of sun before we left our Mexico resort and made our way home to Washington State.
- Thank you, Tony and Becky for making our Mexico trip possible!
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Thursday, February 12, 2026
Review: ATMOSPHERE: A LOVE STORY (+Friday56 LinkUp)
Dec. 29, 1984 Joan Goodwin gets to the Kennedy Space Center well before nine, and Houston is already airless and muggy.
Friday56 quote:
Happiness is so hard to come by. I don't understand why anyone would begrudge anyway else for managing to find some of it.
Joan Goodwin has been obsessed with the stars for as long as she can remember. Thoughtful and reserved, Joan is content with her life as a professor of physics and astronomy at Rice University and as aunt to her precocious niece, Frances. That is, until she comes across an advertisement seeking the first women scientists to join NASA’s space shuttle program. Suddenly, Joan burns to be one of the few people to go to space.
Selected from a pool of thousands of applicants in the summer of 1980, Joan begins training at Houston’s Johnson Space Center, alongside an exceptional group of fellow candidates: Top Gun pilot Hank Redmond and scientist John Griffin, who are kind and easygoing even when the stakes are highest; mission specialist Lydia Danes, who has worked too hard to play nice; warmhearted Donna Fitzgerald, who is navigating her own secrets; and Vanessa Ford, the magnetic and mysterious aeronautical engineer, who can fix any engine and fly any plane.
As the new astronauts become unlikely friends and prepare for their first flights, Joan finds a passion and a love she never imagined. In this new light, Joan begins to question everything she thinks she knows about her place in the observable universe. Then, in December of 1984, on mission STS-LR9, it all changes in an instant.Fast-paced, thrilling, and emotional, Atmosphere is Taylor Jenkins Reid at her best: transporting readers to iconic times and places, creating complex protagonists, and telling a passionate and soaring story about the transformative power of love—this time among the stars. (Publisher)
RULES:
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Click here to enterMonday, February 9, 2026
TTT: If You Love These Books -- You Will Love Books
Thursday, February 5, 2026
Review: THE LION WOMEN OF TEHRAN (+Friday56 LinkUp)
December 1981: I stood on the lacquered floor -- a small woman in black with a rectangular name badge on my chest.
Friday56 quote:
Lionesses. Us. Can't you see it, Ellie? Someday -- you and me -- we'll do great things. We'll live lives for ourselves. And we will help others. We are cubs now, maybe. But we will grow to be lionesses. Strong women who will make things happen.
While this novel didn't deliver the emotional punch I was expecting it to, it does fulfill its promise at providing a story filled with feminine courage and moral fortitude. Ellie and Homa are good examples of what women have always been fighting for and will continue to do so, especially in places where it is dangerous to do so. 3.5 stars
RULES:
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Click here to enterWednesday, February 4, 2026
Classics Club Spin #43
CC Spin # 43
1. The Good Earth by Buck
2. The Master and Margarita by Bulgakov
3.
Death Comes for the Archbishop by Cather
4.
Don Quioxides by de Cervantes*
5.
The Cherry Orchard by Chekhov
6.
Heart of Darkness by Conrad*
7.
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Conan Doyle
8.
Invisible Man by Ellison*
9.
Madame Bovary by Flaubert*
10. The
Scarlet Letter by Hawthorne
11. The
Sun Also Rises by Hemingway
12. Siddhartha
by Hesse
13. The
Talented Mr. Ripley by Highsmith
14. On
the Road by Kerouac
15. Elmer
Gantry by Sinclair
16. Moby
Dick by Melville*
17. Midnight’s
Children by Rushdie*
18. The
Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Sparks
19. Dracula
by Stoker*
20. Scoop
by Waugh
*Books in the top 30 classic books list.
Monday, February 2, 2026
TTT: Books with Cool Typography on Covers
| How Do You Spell Unfair? by Carole Boston Weatherford. UNFAIR is the point! |
| The Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham Jones. There's an extra HUNTER in there. |
| Shackled: How Two Corrupt Judges Defied Justice, Made Millions, and Harmed Thousands of Children by Candy J. Cooper. $HACKLED by or for money. |
| Flamer by Mike Curato. It was the summer of campfires where the Mike came to self-acceptance. |
| How to Write a Poem by Kwame Alexander and Deanna Nikaido Imagination is the focus on these poems. |
| The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley. The typography wins for the batch I've shared. |
| Tilt by Emma Pattee. The whole world is tilted after an earthquake. |
| Song of a Blackbird by Maria van Lieshout. Hmm. Can't remember what blackbirds have to do with this Holocaust story. |
| Watchmen by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. Iconic cover. |
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Sunday Salon -- Songs for Now
"The fight against ICE in Minneapolis defies easy categorization. Is it activism? Protest? Political opposition? Resistance? None of these terms quite captures what we are seeing: people putting their bodies on the line to care for immigrants and impeding the operations of a paramilitary force in their city. My colleagues have come up with their own, apt ways to describe it: Maybe this is “neighborism,” or a movement for “basic decency.” I like the way an elderly couple named Dan and Jane, in one dispatch, explained their motive for joining the effort: “humanist.”... The word that comes to mind is dissidence...Dissidence is not revolution; it is is not political opposition. It's something much more elemental. It emerges in environments where power -- usually government power -- tramples on the basic conditions of life as people know and value them. We recognize what that means in Minneapolis: People do not like to see their neighbors terrified and rounded up. They do not like to see masked men with guns acting with impunity. They do not like their children being afraid to go to school...The movement that has arisen on the city's frigid streets is about defending what any reasonable American would call "normal" -- the expectation of a life without the threat of violence and coercion."
Books read in January (hyperlinks to my reviews):
- Worth Fighting For: Finding the Courage and Compassion When Cruelty is Trending by John Pavlovich -- essays on motivation for Christians (not Christian Nationalists!) to keep fighting for justice. My first book of 2026. 4 stars.
- The Wind Knows My Name by Isabel Allende -- Two stories of children separated from parents, one because of the Holocaust, the other through cruel policies of separating families at the border. Their stories coalesce. A book club selection. 5 stars.
- Wreck by Catherine Newman -- a woman, Rocky, is navigating through her life after the death of her mother and the diagnosis of a serious disease. She's a wreck. 5 stars.
- So Far Gone by Jess Walter -- An audiobook with Don. A man who has hermited himself away from the world is called upon to help his grandchildren and find his daughter, who is married to a man deeply involved in the Christian Nationalist movement. The book has serious themes, but is quite humorous. 5 stars.
- Mother Mary Comes to Me by Arundhati Roy -- a memoir by a favorite author of The God of Small Things. Her life and this memoir is also very wrapped up in Roy's relationship with her mother, Mary. Another audiobook with Don. This was the #1 best book of 2025. I see why. 5 stars from both of us.
- A Passage to India by E.M. Forster -- a classic set in India in the 1920s. this is my first classic of the year and my first Forster book. 4 stars. (Review pending.)
- The Lion Women of Tehran by Marjan Kamali -- an epic tale of two girls/women who become friends in childhood and remain so throughout their lives as Iran goes through political turmoil. A powerful story. A book club selection. 4.5 stars. (Review pending.)
- The Correspondent by Virginia Evans -- a story told through letters, emails, and notes. We get to know a woman, Sybil, through the letters she writes and receives. Another book club selection. 4.25 stars.
- Replaceable You: Adventures in Human Anatomy by Mary Roach -- The funniest science writer alive. I've read several of Roach's books and always enjoy them. This book however was a little over my head in places. An audiobook-with-Don selection. We just finished it yesterday to avoid the looming deadline at the library. 3.5 stars. Don rated it 3 stars (he doesn't do fractions). (Review pending.)
- Atmosphere: A Love Story by Taylor Jenkins Reid -- Two female astronauts fall in love but it is the early 1980s and they cannot be open about their relationship. I really liked the space information. I gained some new thoughts. Audio. 4.5 stars. (Review pending.)
- Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy -- A family on a remote island, caretakers of the planet's seed bank. A strange woman who washes ashore. A storm on the horizon.
- Vinegar Girl by Anne Tyler
- Detransition, Baby by Terrey Peters
- Katabasis by R.F. Kuang





























