Showing posts with label #TBR list. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #TBR list. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 05, 2020

Another day, but not another dollar

It's what's for supper:
White bean and roasted tomato stew


Even for a quarantine day, this one started off badly. For one thing I got up an hour earlier than I meant to and that makes for a long day. I’ve never figured out how to set the clock next to my bed, so I always have to calculate that if it says it’s 6:57, it’s really 7:57. This morning I must have misread 5:57 for 6:57. (I must get Christian of Jacob to fix that for me—Jordan can’t figure it out either.) I did think it was unusually dark outside, but I saw the patio was wet and reasoned it was cloudy.

So there I was up, reading the day’s news and mail while drinking my tea, when the eight o’clock segment of TODAY came on. Wait a minute! It should have been the third hour, the one that starts at nine. Nope, my computer confirmed that it was only eight.

Then our new neighbor decided to power wash something, presumably the large deck in his back yard. Only he didn’t have one of those hand-held power washers like we have which only spit out a small stream. He rented some kind of commercial thing that came with a separate remote generator. I left out the key adjective—it was a noisy generator. And it went on for about an hour. Annoying is the word that comes to mind.

Then I was trying to send my monthly column to Lone Star Literary Life. Took me three times before I remembered to attach the darn thing after I wrote an email. If you don’t subscribe to that, you might want to look into it. A free newsletter about Texas and books.

The good thing that happened was I discovered what I was doing wrong about Blogger.com. I thought they had changed the format, and if I’d known who to complain to, I would have. Last night I could not figure out how to post my blog. Finally, nearing midnight I gave up and went to bed. This morning, first thing, I found a link that said, “Return to conventional Blogger.” And there it was—the screen I am familiar with.

So by nine o’clock, I had posted my blog for the night before, gotten past the glitches of the early morning and had the whole day before me. So what did I do? I wasted the time. I was like Alice following all those rabbit holes. Eleven came and went, and I still hadn’t done my thousand words for the day. I won’t labor you with details, but I did finally write my words.

I also came to a conclusion. I have not been carving out enough time to read. Perhaps it’s my ongoing feeling that I must speak out about the situation in our country or maybe my relatively new obsession with writing the novel I’m working on. Then again, it may be just sheer laziness and the need to nap. At any rate, my TBR (to be read) list is growing out of bounds. I resolved to make more time. Right now I’m reading Provence 1970 by Luke Barr, nephew of food writer MFK Fisher. It is about the year when major figures in American cookery—Julia Child, MFK Fisher, Richard Olney, editor Judith Jones, James Beard, and others--came together in Provence and realized that they must turn their sights from France to America, from the old traditional to new ways with food. It was time to look at American food. I’m enjoying it, and today I’ve spent quite a bit of time reading.

And this evening, I spent time cooking a recipe I’ve wanted to try for some time, a stew of roasted tomatoes and cannelloni or white kidney beans. I ate in solitary splendor, as the Burtons had gone to a front-lawn, distanced supper with neighbors. My dinner was good—the first time I’d fixed it, and next time I’d cut back a bit on garlic and salt (both may be the problem of halving a recipe) and I might add grated Pecorino or Parmesan over the top. But It was good, and I enjoyed it. I have enough left over for lunch, and then the remains will go into the freezer for a soup pot.

So now I’m watching the second installment of the PBS special on the George W. Bush presidency. Tonight, with focus on the Iraq War, it brings up a whole lot of anger that I’d like to leave behind me.

Thursday, March 19, 2015

My TBR and other reading

I'm delving into a new book tonight--The Erotica Book Club for Nice Ladies. Beyond that marvelous title, I can't say much--I'm only forty pages in. But I thought it might be fun to mention a few titles I've recently enjoyed...and some on my TBR (to be read) list.
In light of the fuss about Harper Lee's forthcoming sequel (is that the right term?) for To Kill A Mockingbird, I read The Mockingbird Next Door, Marja Mills' account of the eighteen months she spent living next door to Nelle Harper Lee and her sister, Alice. It's a charming book, well written, with nice and surprising insight into the lady we thought was a reclusive author. Not so in her hometown. There was a bit of celebrity name-dropping about it, but I enjoyed it. I also liked Sheila Connolly's An Early Wake, about Maura Donovan's continuing immersion in an Irish small town and the pub she inherited--this time Irish music provides the thread that bind the murder mystery together. In The Book Stops Here, Brooklyn Wainwright, bookbinder and appraiser, appears on a TV show where people bring old books for her to appraise. When some turn out to be unbelievably valuable, trouble ensues. Kate Carlisle is the author. Poisoned Prose, by Ellery Adams, brings one of my favorite characters back on stage, Olivia Limoges with her dog (whose name I can't remember but who is a great character). This time Olivia invites storytellers to meet with the Bay Writers--only one of them is dramatically murdered. You'll see that my taste runs to mysteries.
But on my TBR: Leslie Budewitz's Assault and Pepper, first in a new series about a spice shop in Seattle. I've enjoyed Budewitz's previous books (Crime Rib, etc.) and look forward to this one. Julie Hyzy is one of my favorite authors and I'm looking forward to the newest in her series about Grace Wheaton. In this one Grace's estranged sister shows up at Marshfield Manor, where Grace is curator, and all manner of trouble follows.
I have a strong love of all things Scottish so Juliette Blackhurst's Keeper of the Castle is on my list. Juliette specializes in renovation of buildings but gets drawn into her boyfriend's project of renovating  a building shipped from Scotland. I think there's a ghost involved. And then there's A Wee Murder in My Shop, in which an American tourist buy a Scottish shawl only to find it comes accompanied by a spirit from the past. Once home in Vermont, she runs into murder--and asked the spirit for help.
One I'd like to read but am not sure about is Not My Father's Son, a memoir about a brutal boyhood under a harsh Scottish father. Then again, we can't think of Scots as always happily playing the bagpipes--a touch of realism should be good.
Happy Reading everyone.