Thursday, June 25, 2026

A Stitching Up a Storm Weekly Link Round-Up

 


Not much to say this week. My nieces in the UK are suffering through a heat wave. Although the temperatures are nowhere near what they are here in Phoenix, I feel for them because, not only are they not used to such heat,  neither are they prepared for it. I doubt Phoenix would be the metropolis it is without the invention of air conditioning, but countries with little experience of heat haven't had any reason to adapt for it. 

Yes, I've been stitching up a storm on those needlepoint tissue box covers. My home health nurse kept looking covetously at one of the completed ones, so I'll be making her one, too. I send progress report photos to the person I'm making them for, and he's shown them to some of his friends. From the sound of it, I could have myself a booming cottage industry if I wanted. However, I don't want to. I tried that before, and I grew sick to death of making the same thing over and over. Using different color combinations wasn't enough to encourage me to keep on stitching for profit.

Here's a photo of three of the requested five that I've completed.


Looking at them, you wouldn't believe I used the exact same pattern on all three, would you?

Virtual hugs to you all. Enjoy the links!


Books & Other Interesting Tidbits

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • These butterflies can live 25 times longer than their relatives. They might provide insights into healthy aging in humans.
  • Female dolphins seem to remember which males were aggressive during mating season-- and may try to avoid them.
  • A border collie named Milo goes to great lengths to complete his human's fetch challenges.
  • Male bowerbirds in Australian cities are turning human trash into treasure to impress potential mates. (I've loved bowerbirds ever since watching one of Sir David Attenborough's documentaries.)
  • Ants can get distracted by cookies, chips, and other junk food. Here's why that could be a problem for the environment.
  • See the first-ever photographs of Cozumel's elusive dwarf fox, one of the rarest canids in the world.



The Wanderer
  • Major Oak, the 1,200-year-old tree with ties to the Robin Hood legend, is presumed dead after failing to produce leaves.
  • Hidden tunnels dating back to Henry VIII's reign were discovered at this English boarding school, where the king once lived.
  • Welcome to Pieve Santo Stefano, Italy's "City of Diaries."
  • The ghost roads of Ireland's Great Famine.
  • To see the magnificence and majesty of Machu Picchu without the hike, check out these amazing images.
  • Literary travel ideas for every kind of book lover. 

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • Rollerena, New York's fairy godmother.
  • By signing his name to massive jars, enslaved artist David Drake defied literacy bans in the South. Now, his masterpiece is on view with a famed Paul Revere bowl.
  • Sequoyah, the man who created a written language for the Cherokee, did it so efficiently and elegantly, his peers thought it was magic.
  • Andrea Wulf considers the rare humanity of 18th-century naturalist George Forster.
  • 13 surprising facts about famous naturalist (and one of my heroes), Sir David Attenborough.
  • "I will not comply": librarian Luanne James fights the censorship demands of the Rutherford County library system's board.

►I ♥ Lists◄

That's all for this week! No matter how busy you may be, don't forget that quality Me Time curled up with a good book!

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

A Twist in the River by Stig Abell

 
First Line: There has always been the river.

People disappear all the time, but when a young nurse goes missing on the riverbank, leaving her phone and shoes behind, social media goes into a frenzy. Amateur sleuths flock to the area, each with their own theory.

Then another woman is found in the river, and the signs point to murder. Former detective Jake Jackson came to this rural area looking for peace. Now he's looking for a killer.

~

I have enjoyed Stig Abell's Jake Jackson mysteries from the first (Death Under a Little Sky)-- in particular for their gorgeous descriptions of the landscape and wildlife. A Twist in the River has those same descriptions, so evocative that I feel myself right in the middle of the English countryside.

Jake Jackson's path to this fourth mystery has been a fascinating one. Living off the grid. Making new friends in a rather insular community. His life and the lives of the other characters continue to grow, and the journey is a delight. As Jake searches for a killer, readers learn more about the lives and histories of the locals. Many of them moved to the area for the same reason as Jake: peace and privacy. 

While Jake's investigation progresses, readers can accompany him to his favorite secondhand bookshop to browse the shelves, and they can also try to avoid the hordes of social media influencers and podcasters trying to find content to boost their clicks and likes. It's not easy for Jake to avoid "Detective Dani," who has her own YouTube channel. She's zeroed in on him as the best source for the latest information, and she's so devious and manipulative that she causes friction between Jake and the woman he loves. 

The books in this series are naturally slow to unfold, but this time the pace of A Twist in the River really seemed to drag-- to the point where it bothered me and kept making me want to skim here and there. (I didn't.) But... the landscape is still beautiful. I still want to tuck myself away in the library in Jake's house. And the mystery is still a puzzler. I hope you decide to give this series a try, and if you do, please begin with the first one due to the character development. This is a series that should be savored.

A Twist in the River by Stig Abell
eISBN: 9780063472426
HarperCollins © 2026
eBook, 352 pages

Literary Mystery, #4 Jake Jackson
Rating: B
Source: Net Galley

Last One Out by Jane Harper

 

First Line: He had been here, that was clear from the marks in the dust.

Just a handful of residents remain in Carralon Ridge, once a thriving rural village in New South Wales. For the past ten years, its houses and buildings have been bought up and left to rot by a mining company operating at its borders.

Five years ago, Ro lost her son. Sam vanished while visiting Carralon Ridge during a break from college. Sam loved the town and had been working on an oral history to preserve its legacy before it vanished altogether.

Now, Ro has returned to be with her husband and daughter on the anniversary of Sam's disappearance. Soon, she suspects that something important was overlooked in his case. Nothing can stop Carralon Ridge from dying, but someone wants to make sure that its secrets die with it.

~

Several years ago, my husband and I spent many days searching out and visiting old ghost towns from one end of Arizona to the other. It was lots of fun, a great way to explore the state, and very educational as well. Reading Jane Harper's Last One Out reminded me of those times. 

I felt the dust of Carralon Ridge seep into every pore and crevice of my body. It blurred my vision, and the blazing sun made me want to reach for my sunglasses.  In other words, Harper's setting is superb. Here in Arizona, entire towns have been swallowed whole by mining companies in search of gold and copper, so it was easy for me to visualize this Australian town slowly being put to death.

However, Harper doesn't just give readers an incredibly evocative setting; she populates it with multi-faceted characters. After her son's disappearance, Ro's family fell apart, and when she returns to join her husband, Griff, and daughter, Della, for a remembrance ceremony for Sam, she can't resist revisiting the last places her son was known to visit. As she moves from place to place and talks with the town's remaining inhabitants, readers get to know her-- and them-- and become just as invested in learning the truth of her son's disappearance. 

Harper has proven to be a master of creating settings, characters, and plots that get under my skin. Last One Out is a must-read for those who like to be swept away in the pages of an absorbing story.

Last One Out by Jane Harper
eISBN: 9781250291400
Flatiron Books © 2026
eBook, 336 pages

Standalone Thriller
Rating: A+
Source: Purchased from Amazon.

Thursday, June 18, 2026

An Internal Debate Weekly Link Round-Up

 



Just what am I debating, you ask? Well... it's been about two years since the last time I attended an author event at The Poisoned Pen, and I miss it. The reason why I stopped going was because of Paratransit. Denis and I wound up being stranded on a cold, dark street corner for 2½ hours until the Paratransit bus finally showed up to take us home. Now that I'm "flying solo," I've been even more cautious about taking Paratransit to The Poisoned Pen. But...

There are two upcoming events, one in July and one in August, that I really want to attend. In July, David Heska Wanbli Weiden (Winter Counts) will be there with his new book, Wisdom Corner. In August, British author Tim Sullivan will be here for his book, The Tailor. You've all been reading how crazy I am about his George Cross mysteries. How could I not want to attend this event?


Should I continue to err on the side of caution, or should I gird my loins, cross my fingers, and go?

Virtual hugs to you all. Enjoy the links!


►Books & Other Interesting Tidbits◄

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • The world's rarest great ape was decimated by four days of extreme rain, with 7% of its population lost to a cyclone.
  • Scientists have discovered a 5 million-year-old  whale graveyard stretching for hundreds of miles in the Indian Ocean.
  • Scientists discovered a tiny blue species of octopus by the Galápagos Islands.
  • A released squirrel comes back every day to play with the dog who helped raise him.
  • Rare red-necked ostriches have been introduced in Saudi Arabia to replace birds that went extinct more than eighty years ago.
  • This wild cat is considered "possibly extinct" in Thailand. Researchers just caught it on camera for the first time in thirty years.



►The Wanderer◄

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • Jerry Lawson, an unsung Black developer, unlocked the code to turning a video game console into a virtual living room arcade.
  • When Clarence Birdseye tasted the trout that had been frozen by Inuit fishermen, it changed the way we buy food.
  • A moment of divine inspiration helped Melvil Dewey bring obsessive order to the infinitely disorganized stacks in the library.
  • One of the quietest leaders in the civil rights movement, Ella Baker led by encouraging everyone to get involved.
  • Born in 1810, Margaret Fuller was labeled a child prodigy. She later used her intellect to ask important questions about women's roles in America.
  • During the Revolution, American women fought for freedom, spied on the British, cared for the sick, and fell in love. A new exhibition reveals their rich wartime stories.

►I ♥ Lists◄

That's all for this week! No matter how busy you may be, don't forget that quality Me Time curled up with a good book!


Tuesday, June 16, 2026

A Murder in Springtime by Martin Walker

 
First Line: The young boy's thin arms started to tremble under the strain.

For the first time, Bruno Courrèges must be recused from investigating a murder case when a woman is found dead on his friend Pamela's patio. The victim was new to the area and had taken a job at the local nursing home. There was no time for her to have made enemies or any real friends.

The police assign their rising star rookie, Fabien Panton, to the case, and Bruno is happy for him to take the lead. There are too many distractions for him at the moment: his spluttering relationship with Laura Segret, a film crew that's descended on the Dordogne, and a group of opinionated small business owners in St. Denis.

Unfortunately, Bruno never seems able to catch a break. When Fabien learns that the victim is connected to his own past, Bruno must step in to help solve the crime.

~

I distinctly remember complaining in my last review of a Bruno Chief of Police mystery that the books had been focusing on the investigations and had very little to do with the food and camaraderie that are two of the reasons why I enjoy this series so much. Well, A Murder in Springtime fixes that. 

Although the mystery concerning the woman who was killed is an interesting one, for the most part, it remains in the background so the focus can shift to the preparation of delicious food and sharing it with friends. This made me happy because, since the very first book, the characters have become part of my literary family.

Another focal point that I liked was Bruno's attempt to revitalize his small village of St. Denis. Neighboring towns have stolen away many shoppers and tourists, and St. Denis' markets, shops, and business owners are suffering. Bruno comes up with some very good ideas, but human nature tells us that not everyone is going to be on Bruno's side. 

Speaking of characters, I hope this is the first of many appearances for Fabien Panton, the man sent to St. Denis to investigate the murder. He's quite the personality and fits in well with the others.

Here I am, all caught up again and waiting for Bruno's next case. If you want to be transported to southwestern France, pick up these books. They are so filled with Gallic charm that I read them with a French accent.

A Murder in Springtime by Martin Walker
eISBN: 9798217207978
Alfred A. Knopf © 2026
eBook, 288 pages

Police Procedural, #19 Bruno, Chief of Police
Rating: B
Source: Net Galley

Thursday, June 11, 2026

A Good-bye Godzilla Weekly Link Round-Up

 


Last week, I received a card from a friend that described the days of my electrical panel installation as "Godzilla Days." Rather fitting, I thought, and it reminded me of the summer when I took a short break from college and went back to central Illinois. My best friend, Carol, planned an entire day for us, ending with a sleepover at her house. (Her husband was on National Guard duty.) The afternoon was spent at the movie theatre in Decatur where we watched a movie that had just been released. Has anyone heard of "Jaws"? 😉  Then, popcorn and Pepsi at the ready, we watched the Late Late Show: "Godzilla versus the Smog Monster." Simple pleasures are the best, aren't they? And am I ever glad that, as far as Casa Kittling is concerned, Godzilla has left the building!

I've been asked to make some tissue box covers by another friend, and I've given him four color combinations from which he's to choose three. It will be interesting to see if my guesses match his choices. I'll show them to you now--


Virtual hugs to you all! Enjoy the links!


Books & Other Interesting Tidbits

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄



►The Wanderer◄

►Fascinating Folk◄

►I ♥ Lists◄

That's all for this week! No matter how busy you may be, don't forget that quality Me Time curled up with a good book!

Tuesday, June 09, 2026

The Terrific Trio at the Phoenix Zoo

Just when you were starting to think that there would be no more Suzanne and Daisy photos shared, here I am with our visit to the Phoenix Zoo. Come along with us, no towels needed!



Petting the rays is a lot of fun, although this time, they seemed to love drenching my nieces. That's what I meant about your not needing towels!

These two were having a blast, too.

Nap time for the jaguar.

And the cougar, too.

Prickly pear blossom

Burrowing owls always seem very opinionated.

Three snowy egrets

Wonder if he's related to the AFLAC duck?

Keeping watch over the missus while she sleeps.

Meerkat (Daisy's photo)

The eye of the lion. Now why does that remind me of a song about a tiger?

Daisy feeding the giraffe.

Suzanne feeding the giraffe.

Daisy on camelback.

Suzanne on camelback.

North America's fastest land animal. A pronghorn antelope taking a snooze. (Daisy's photo)

Suzanne at the petting zoo. (Daisy's photo)

Hmmm... there seems to be a ham in this gang of four. He's definitely ready for his closeup!


Thanks for coming along with us on this virtual visit. I hope you enjoyed it!

Thursday, June 04, 2026

An Upcoming Anniversaries Weekly Link Round-Up

 


June will not be melancholy if I have anything to do with it. Denis's birthday is Saturday, and the first anniversary of his death is toward the end of the month. I will admit that I have been having difficulties-- like swearing I just heard him call me from another room-- but I'd not be normal if I didn't. (Although I never have thought I was all that "normal.") 

I haven't been getting out except for doctor appointments. I know I should get out and about-- force myself if necessary-- but I'm just not in the mood for solo outings. Okay-- enough of the Woe Is Me! 

Let me share a Denis Photo with you that always makes me smile. The man never took himself too seriously, and it's a good thing he didn't. We were practically rolling on the floor laughing when he came home from running errands and took a look at the shoes he'd worn all over town...



Virtual hugs to you all! Enjoy the links!


Books & Other Interesting Tidbits

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • Could bug spray attract mosquitoes? Lab insects learned that the smell of DEET would lead them to a tasty treat. (My sandalwood skin lotion is excellent at keeping "skeeters" at bay.) 
  • Four rare Guam kingfisher chicks hatched at a facility in Virginia, making an "incredibly valuable" addition to the small population of extinct-in-the-wild birds.
  • You're guaranteed to spot at least one gorgeous giraffe in each of these 15 images.
  • Daddy Longlegs seem to hunt frogs in South America, revealing the gangly arachnids as overlooked predators.
  • View Australia's wildlife, including kangaroos, koalas, and crocs, with these 15 photographs.
  • Research suggests that these clownfish lose their baby stripes in response to peer pressure.



The Wanderer

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • Ona Judge escaped from slavery while George Washington was busy eating dinner inside Now, a new mural honors her legacy.
  • Born and raised in Philadelphia, Loyalist Mattias Aspden fled to England during the American Revolution. In his absence, the patriots declared him a traitor and seized his property.
  • The forgotten Untouchables of France.
  • Sir David Attenborough has inspired countless scientists. To mark his 100th birthday, here are ten living things they've named after him.
  • Requiem for a brilliant artist: On Tony Stella.
  • Did Cleopatra really die from a snake bite? Here's what history tells us. 


►I ♥ Lists◄

That's all for this week! No matter how busy you may be, don't forget that quality Me Time curled up with a good book!