Category Archives: Blog Hops

Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Books That Need a Sequel

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Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.

Photo of a person’s hand who is holding up two fingers. I feel like I’ve been pretty fortunate with the numbers of books I wanted sequels for that eventually were written.

Here are some more books I wish had sequels:

Room by Emma Donoghue

Why: I want to know what Jack’s life is like when he’s older. Spending the first five years of one’s existence in captivity must lead to all sorts of medical and social challenges later on.

 

Frankenstein by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

Why: Frankenstein’s monster needs a better ending than the one he received!

 

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro

Why: I was confused by the passivity of the main characters in this novel and thought the ending undermined the point the narrator was making about their lives.

 

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

Why: I loved these characters and thought they could have a lot more to say. Sorry, have to be vague here to avoid spoilers, but here’s hoping the film adaptation of this that’s in the works shares more about their later lives.

 

Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

Why: This was one of the most gentle post-apocalyptic books I’ve ever read, and I wish the final scene could have segued into a sequel that explored this world and how people thrived in it in greater depth.

 

The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters

Why: The last few scenes set up all sorts of possibilities for a contemporary sequel to this tale as the land around Hundreds Hall was sold and new houses began to be built right next to the crumbling mansion. I could just imagine neighbourhood kids exploring this area without realizing the history of the place and what they may find there.

 

The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey

Why: Faina‘s child is eventually going to want to know what really happened to their mother which would be an excellent reason to revisit this world.

 

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Things I Wish More Books Talked About

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I believe we’ve had this topic before, but I’m purposefully not looking up my old post about it. Let’s see how I answer it this time without that influence.

 (I promise the baby goats in today’s photo are relevant to the post 😂).

Three kids (baby goats) sticking their little white heads between the wooden fence slats as they peer out at the world. 1. Disabled and/or chronically ill heroes whose diagnosis is not the main storyline.

2. Failure. (For example, how characters deal with not getting what they want but maybe ending up with something even better instead).

3. Rabbits. You all know how much I love rabbits!

4. Antarctica. I can think of so few books set there, but with global temperatures rising I wonder if humans will eventually start living there year-round.

5. Fitness and exercise. So many heroes and heroines are described as being in great shape, especially in the thriller genre, but the plot often glosses over how much work it takes to grow and maintain those strong muscles.

6. Sick days. Whether it’s food poisoning, the common cold, or something much more serious, characters in books almost never have a few days spent in bed feeling icky. I find that odd.

7.  Socially awkward characters. I wish we had more examples of protagonists who maybe don’t always make a great first impression but who are wonderful folks once you get to know them.

8. Funny things that pets do (but the pets do not die in the book).

9. Genuinely kind and good people from every walk of life. (Can you tell I’ve been reading too many scary stories lately?)

10. Slice of life fiction. I need low-stakes conflicts. Show me what happens when Henry runs out of coffee beans but doesn’t live close to a coffee house or when Agnes forgets to shut the back gate and the goats all escape. That’s the sort of trouble I want to read about.

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Top Ten Tuesday: Books That Surprised Me


Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

Photo of two light brown gift boxes with red ribbon tied around their lids. They are sitting on a red surface in front of a red wall.As usual, I’m focusing on the positive for this week’s prompt. Here are ten books from various genres that have fantastic plot twists.

No, I won’t give any hints about what they are, and I’m requesting that everyone reading this to do the same if you’re already familiar with any of these stories.

Some things are best left for new readers to discover on their own.

If anyone knows of some great contemporary diverse authors who write fantastic plot twists, please share! A lot of these are older books and therefore not as representative as what I’d normally pick.

1. I Am the Cheese by Robert Cormier

2. Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk

3. The Stepford Wives by Ira Levin

4. The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde

5. And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie

6. Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman

7. Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane

8. Johnny Got His Gun by Dalton Trumbo

9. Beloved by Toni Morrison

10. Life of Pi by Yann Martel

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Books I Discovered on Social Media

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There is a glowing red heart icon hanging suspended in an otherwise pitch black room. A person’s finger is reaching up to touch the heart icon but has not quite reached it yet. 

The red glowing light from the icon is just barely bright enough to illuminate this scene. Mastodon is the social media site I spend the most time on. Their Bookstodon hashtag is a particularly great place to learn about new books, but I’ve also found great reads Goodreads and, up until about two years ago, Twitter.

Here are some of the many books I’ve discovered on social media, several thanks to my friend Berthold Gambrel. The links below are to my reviews of these books.

Veterans of Love and War: A First World War Ghost Story by Steven Glick

War Bunny by Christopher St. John

Only the Living Feel Remorse – A Ghost Story by Ash Deza

The Cybernetic Tea Shop by Meredith Katz

The Future Is Female by Lisa Yaszek (Editor)

The Future Is Female! Volume Two, the 1970s – More Classic Science Fiction Stories by Women by Lisa Yaszek (Editor)

Vespasian Moon’s Fabulous Autumn Carnival by Berthold Gambrel

Samantha, 25, on October 31 by Adam Bertocci

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Top Ten Tuesday: Underrated Books


Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

Five hardback books of various sizes are stacked neatly on top of each other with the largest book on the bottom and then each book on top of the stack a bit smaller than the ones below it. The colours of their covers from largest to smallest are light grey, dark blue, black, cream, and dark grey. The original theme for this week was “My Unpopular Bookish Opinions,” but I’ve decided to veer in a different direction instead.

Here are some books that have four or five star ratings on Goodreads but who are not well known. As I haven’t read any of them yet, I can’t give an official recommendation.  They simply look interesting to me. 

If you’ve read any of them or if you have another title to share that’s highly regarded but not well known, I’d love to hear your thoughts. There’s nothing like finding a gem of a book that most people haven’t heard about yet.

2. Luna & the Magical Piano by Kaia Verheyen
9. Please Don’t Tell Cooper He’s a Dog by Michelle Lander Feinberg

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: 10 Unusual Things About Me

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The word “today” is written on a sheet of lined paper in a spiral notebook. Beneath the word there is a numbered list that hasn’t been filled out yet. All we see are numbers 1 through 4 with space to write whatever was supposed to be on this list.Hmm, let’s see….

1. I have an ancestor named Deacon John whose true identity has never been discovered and who I am fascinated by. We have documentation of him in the mid-1800s in the U.S., but the area of Germany he always claimed to be from has zero records about him.  No notice of birth, no baptism records, nothing. Our family tree is almost entirely German and French according to those DNA test kits that were popular a few years ago, so he probably really was German instead of from some other ethnic or racial group. Maybe he changed his name or was from a different town in that corner of the world, though?

2. I abhor the smell and taste of olives. If you eat olives around me, I will graciously leave the room or turn my head and hope for a gentle breeze between us. Under no circumstances will I help you eat them, but I will wish you well if this is a food you like.

3. Several years ago, I was filling out a family history form for a doctor’s office and started writing down a mild medical condition that one of my nephews has. Then I remembered that he’s adopted. (Our family loves everyone equally, so I don’t spend much time thinking about who is and isn’t a blood relative unless there’s a pressing reason to do so like answering family medical history questions).

4. I have been known to hug trees in the spring when they finally have leaves again. I so miss leaves and other greenery during the winter!

5. Sometimes I’m a little too stoic. Once I visited my family doctor for a suspected case of pneumonia. When she asked how I was, I said, “oh, alright.” I was not, in fact, alright until after the antibiotics kicked in and the simple act of breathing no longer lead to coughing and the unpleasant things a body can do when you’re unable to stop coughing.

6. I occasionally have dreams about blogging, from writing posts to visiting other people’s sites and commenting on their latest content. Some of these sites don’t even exist in real life, they’re just apparently run in dreamland by friends I’ve made online. It’s one of my happier types of dreams other than the ones where I get to explore old mansions and try to find their attics before I wake up. If I can find the attic in time, I get to talk to all sorts of famous dead people and pick their brains which is quite rewarding.

7. Sometimes my dreams have commercials in them which vexes me terribly as one can never fast-forward through them. I’d much rather have a nice, calm lucid dream instead.

8. I spent years petitioning my parents for a baby sister and even went so far as to help pick her name: Grace Marie. It never happened as they had enough children to raise already, but I still sometimes wonder what little Gracie might have been like if she existed.

9. There’s a specific clicking sound a mouth can make that can draw squirrels to you. I enjoy being a squirrel whisperer on occasion with that noise, although I’m still not sure what it means to them.

10. I have an occasional, light stutter.

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Top Ten Tuesday: Books with Springy Covers


Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

A double rainbow over a young wheat field in British Columbia, Canada. March and April are a muddy, rainy time here in Southern Ontario. The dry, sunny scenes filled with colourful flowers that you see in the media or in stock photos do happen here, but not until May and June after the ground has firmed up and the plants have actually had a chance to, you know, grow.

If you arrive any earlier in the year than that, pack rain boots and do not plan any outdoor picnics. What I like about this time of year, other than the slowly warming days and longer hours of sunshine, are the rainbows.

When you get a lot of thunderstorms and rainstorms, this generally also means you’ll see your fair share of rainbows as well.

So rainbows are my interpretation of the springy cover theme this week. Here are ten picture books that feature rainbows on their covers. As I tend to prefer real rainbows to drawings of them, I’m including a real rainbow in this post and links to the rainbow book covers below.

1. A Rainbow of My Own by Don Freeman

2. The Rainbow Goblins by Ul De Rico

3. Sky Fire by Frank Asch

4. Ava and the Rainbow by Ged Adamson

5. The End of the Rainbow by Liza Donnelly

6. Elmer and the Rainbow by David McKee

7. Storytime: The Greedy Rainbow by Susan Chandler

8. The Rainbow Weaver by Lyndsay Russell

9. The Leprechaun Who Lost His Rainbow by Sean Callahan

10. Rainbow Rider by Jane Yolen

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Characters I Never Want to Meet

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Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.

A drawing of a hand making the thumbs down gesture. This week’s list was much easier to come up with than the prompt from last month that asked us to list characters we want to meet.

So who would I never want to meet?

The kid from The Giving Tree.  There’s so much selfishness, greed, and codependence in this story. It’s a one-way relationship where the tree gives literally everything it has and the boy (who later grows into an adult and then an old man) is still never satisfied or willing to reciprocate. Yikes!

Hannibal Lecter from The Silence of the Lambs.  Can I assume most of you are familiar with this film or the book it was based on? If not, know that Hannibal was a violent man who did unspeakable things to his victims without an ounce of regret.

Rufus Weylin from Kindred. The protagonist in this novel is a young black woman (yes, her race is important to mention here due to reasons that will soon be clear) living in the 1970s who keeps being pulled back into time to save a brutally racist and sexist slaveowner. There’s a metaphor involving him in this book I’ll leave up to other readers to figure out for themselves, but Rufus isn’t someone I’d ever want to meet in person due to how violent and unpredictable he was.

Humbert Humbert from Lolita. This book disturbed me so much I stopped reading within a few pages and will never return to finish it. Let’s just say that there was something seriously wrong with this man and the way he thought about children.

Kevin from We Need to Talk About Kevin. What I find chilling about this villain was how ordinary his origin was. He had a safe and healthy childhood with two committed parents as well as countless other adults who tried to help him as his behavioural problems escalated. Seeing what he grew up to be frightens me as he had every reason and opportunity to become a peaceful, law-abiding citizen instead.

The Lady of the Green Kirtle from The Silver Chair. I’ll bet many of you read this book as a kid, but if not it’s a good read. This character scared me because of how convincing she could be even when she was obviously wrong. Her magic made it hard for people to remember the terrible things she had done which added extra layers of difficulty when the protagonists confronted her.

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Top Ten Tuesday: Books about April Fool’s Day


Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

A page in a journal that has clouds and stars drawn on it. The word April is written in cursive on top of a blue cloud and a purple one. The original theme for this week was Books You’d be a Fool Not to Read. It was creative, but struggled with it because taste in books in so subjective.

Even if a story is well edited and has excellent character and plot development, you and I might still have wildly different reactions to it depending on everything from genre to tropes to writing style to who wrote it. I mean, there are certain authors who are must-reads for me no matter what they write! 

Therefore, today I’m going to be sharing a list of books about April Fool’s Day instead.

1. Addison the April Fool’s Day Fairy by Daisy Meadows

2. Fools Rush In: An April Fools Day Anthology by Celia Kennedy

3. April Fool’s Day (Nancy Drew and the Clue Crew, #19) by Carolyn Keene

4. Tsunami: The True Story of an April Fools’ Day Disaster by Gail Langer Karwoski

5. Look Out, It’s April Fools’ Day by Frank Modell

6. April Fool’s Day by Kathleen Hanna

7. The April Fool’s Day Mystery by Marion M. Markham

Have you read any of them? Are you aware of other books set on April 1?

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Favourite Comfort Foods and Why (+ Recipes)

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The word recipe spelled out with each letter on a separate beige plastic tile. There are two small bouquets of dried flowers lying next to the plastic tiles on the white surface they’ve been placed on. The meals I make are filling and made from common and generally inexpensive ingredients. That is to say, I’m no Martha Stewart or Megan Sussex, but I do like experimenting in the kitchen.

While precise measurements are necessary for certain recipes, I tend to prefer dishes that are more flexible so I can add in little bits of this and that if there’s something in the fridge, freezer, or cupboards that needs to be used up soon. I find it comforting to avoid food waste as much as I possibly can.

Carbohydrates are also comforting to me as you all are about to find out. 😉

 

Cleaning Out the Fridge Rice

(Or fridge rice for short. Ha!)

This is the sort of food I make when I need to make something for dinner and maybe have a few leftovers to use up but don’t have the energy to do anything fancy.

Cook 1 cup of the rice of your choice according to package instructions. Generally, this means about 2 cups of water for 1 cup of rice.

This is a comforting base that needs some extra flavours now like:

  • Eggs (scrambled or hard-boiled)
  • Instant ramen (cook them in about 30-50% the usual amount of water before mixing them in. You want the noodles soft but not to have a ton of extra liquid left over.)
  • Nearly any sort of vegetables you have in your freezer, especially mixed veggie options
  • leftover bits of seafood, chicken, beef, or other protein options from previous meals
  • Beans
  • Sliced almonds or other small nuts
  • Canned water chestnuts

Or whatever else you have in the fridge, freezer, or cabinets that seems like it would go into a rice or stir fry dish. If you like hot sauce, soy sauce, or VH sauce, these can be substituted for the ramen noodles flavouring pack if you wish or sparingly added in if you’re really craving salt.

It’s cheap and tasty way to use up various bits of food that aren’t enough to make a full meal on their own.

 

Mom’s Chicken Taco Soup

This recipe is straight from my mom!

Ingredients:

1 can black beans
1 can pinto beans
I can diced tomatoes, or 1 fresh tomato diced
1 can corn
1 can chicken with juices
3-4 cups water
½ cup rice

½ teaspoon each of:
Cumin
Chili powder
Paprika
Garlic powder
Thyme
Rosemary
Marjoram
Oregano
Salt
Pepper
Cinnamon
Vinegar
Hot sauce

1 tablespoon each:
Cocoa
Ketchup
Brown sugar
Oil

 

Mom’s Instructions:

I heat the oil in a pan first, and then, if the tomato is fresh, I add that next and let it cook for a bit. Then I stir in the rice and the spices and just keep adding ingredients until everything’s in there. simmer it for an hour or until the rice is soft.

 

Strawberry Spinach Salad

I know salad might not seem like the quintessential comfort food at first glance, but this is one of my all-time favourite salads even though I’m generally not a big fan of spinach. The sweet, tangy dressing pairs with the strawberries and spinach perfectly.

Ingredients

2 tablespoons sesame seeds
1 tablespoon poppy seeds
1/2 cup white sugar
1/2 cup olive oil
1/4 cup distilled white vinegar
1/4 teaspoon paprika
1/4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon minced onion
10 ounces fresh spinach – rinsed, dried and torn into bite-size pieces
1 quart strawberries – cleaned, hulled and sliced
1/4 cup almonds, blanched and slivered

Directions

1. In a medium bowl, whisk together the sesame seeds, poppy seeds, sugar, olive oil, vinegar, paprika, Worcestershire sauce and onion. Cover and chill for one hour.

2. In a large bowl, combine the spinach, strawberries and almonds. Pour dressing over salad, and toss. Refrigerate 10 to 15 minutes before serving.

 

Brownie in a Mug

This is a great way to make a single serving of brownies if that’s all you need.

Ingredients

1/4 cup flour (30 grams)
1/4 cup sugar (50 grams)
2 Tbsp (13 grams) cocoa (natural, unsweetened)
Pinch of salt
Tiny pinch of cinnamon
1/4 cup water (60 ml)
2 Tbsp canola oil or vegetable oil (NOT extra virgin olive oil, it’s too strongly flavoured)
1 to 2 drops vanilla extract
1 small scoop of ice cream,  1-2 teaspoons (13-26 grams) heavy whipping cream, or dairy-free alternatives  (optional)

Instructions

Place flour, sugar, cocoa, salt, and cinnamon in a microwave safe ceramic mug. Stir with a fork or spoon to mix well and break up any clumps.

Add the oil, water, and vanilla to the cup and stir until the mixture is smooth and there are no lumps.

Place in microwave and heat on high until the mixture is cooked through, about a 1 minute and 40 seconds for a 1000 watt microwave. You may have to experiment and adjust the time depending on your microwave. Begin with 60 seconds increments and increase until the brownie is done. It should still be moist when cooked through, not dry.

Let cool for a minute and serve with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or a teaspoon or two of whipping cream poured over.

 

 

I look forward to seeing everyone else’s recipes!

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