Thursday, December 18, 2025

A Determined Weekly Link Round-Up

 



Why is this round-up determined? Because I've been waging war against bees that insist on trying to commandeer the hummingbird feeders. It's not really war because I don't want to hurt the bees, but I don't want them chasing away the hummingbirds. Bee stings can kill hummingbirds, and I definitely don't want that!

Found Image

I've switched the type of feeders to one that bees can't get to the sugar water, but they are persistent little beggars and keep trying to find a way to get at it. And they're also jealous because-- since they can't get at the sugar water, they've been chasing away the hummers. I've got a spray that's supposed to be a deterrent yet safe for all. I took a look at the feeder awhile ago, and there were no bees on it. If they have finally given up when I've finished this post, I won't have to use the spray. Come on, guys, go someplace else!

Virtual holiday hugs to you all-- especially to those, like me, who may need a bit more cheer.

Enjoy the links!


Books & Other Interesting Tidbits

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • A newly discovered mantis species dances like a snake to avoid death after sex.
  • These owls took a free vacation on a cruise ship, but they'll soon be heading home.
  • Beavers are dam good for biodiversity, bringing bats, butterflies, and other critters to their neighborhoods.
  • Wild horses return to the Golden Steppe.
  • More than 2,000 golden retrievers gather in an Argentina park in an attempt to break a world record.
  • Inspired by bird feathers, this new "ultrablack" fabric absorbs nearly all the light that hits it.



►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, December 16, 2025

A Casa Kittling Christmas

Why is it that time never flies when you want it to and does when you don't? Typical! I'd better stop complaining and start sharing the Christmas decorations I put up this year. 

In large part, my ability to decorate this year is due to all the hard work my English nieces put in. Nothing like being out in the blazing heat of Arizona in June, going through the contents of two sheds and ensuring that all the Christmas decorations are in the shed that their mobility-challenged aunt can get into! Bless 'em all-- Karen, Daisy, and Suzanne. They are treasures, each and every one.

Let's get to the decorations!


At the front door. Denis's jacket and Royal Navy submariner cap are hanging on a hook.


The craft room. I could've cropped out the light, but it reminds me of Denis. Denis couldn't deal with low light, and every light fixture he installed was bright enough to bring in planes for a landing. 😄


Mom's carolers that she made in 1965.


Santas and mistletoe


Snowpeople and friends


The second caroler set my mother made in the 60s.


This snow couple dates from the 1960s.


This little guy plays my favorite Christmas song. I had to replace the battery because his singing was getting a bit s-l-o-w.


A cozy place to relax with a good book.


Denis's recliner with the Santa pillow. The fiber optic tree was 40 years old and died a few days ago. I had to dive into my coffers and find something to replace it.


I replaced it with teapots and a nutcracker.


My acachirpa choir and the "proper robin" table runner.


Snowmen decorating the knitting tree.


The kitchen

I think this was Denis's favorite ornament-- and one of mine, too. It always makes me smile.



Virtual holiday hugs to you all!  To those who feel that they haven't really accomplished anything in the past year, remember-- sometimes the very best accomplishment is that you survived. 

Tuesday, December 09, 2025

A Busy, Busy, Busy Weekly Link Round-Up

 


I've been buzzing around here like a blue-arsed fly, as Denis would say-- and yes, that's a common phrase in the UK (at least in the north). I unloaded Christmas decorations from the shed and dragged them into the house, then spent the weekend decorating and hauling the empty containers back into the shed. One thing I learned from this is that I need to do another purge of my Christmas decorations, but that's going to wait until Daisy and Suzanne come to visit in the spring.

There's something about having the house decorated for the holidays that never fails to lift my spirits, so it's a good thing I had them up when there was a six-hour power outage one day. I snuggled up in my Christmas afghan, read my Kindle, and didn't mind all that much that I was in a cold, gloomy house. Special people "just peeking in" to see how I'm doing have brightened my spirits, too. I am so fortunate to have them in my life.

This will be another busy week with all the usual chores as well as my mammogram and my visit to the wound care clinic. Which reminds me... I'd better get out my Christmas sweater to wear for my appointments. And my jingle bell earrings! 

Holiday cheer from a messy desk

As I get out and about for my appointments, it will be front and center in my mind that not everyone is going to be experiencing a happy holiday season. I will not only be wearing my Christmas sweater and jingle bell earrings, I will also be wearing a smile and-- more importantly-- being kind to all those I meet.

Enjoy the links!


►Books & Other Interesting Tidbits◄

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄


►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄



►The Wanderer◄

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • Meet four women astronauts from across NASA's history.
  • Sydney-based baker Macey Nemer creates edible flower bouquets made entirely of hand-piped buttercream cupcakes (and they are gorgeous).
  • College students Marta Bernardino and Sebastião Mendonça are building a robot to replant burned forests.
  • Just as the Italian art of glassblowing was on the verge of shattering, craftsman Antonio Salviati in Murano emerged to revive it.
  • The hidden history of women game designers.
  • Famed street photographer Lee Friedlander chronicled what Christmas looks like across America over the course of decades.
  • With his sculptures full of natural splendor, artist Truman Lowe could make wood look like water.
  • Althea Gibson: Rising above bias to become the first African American Grand Slam champion.

►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!

Sunday, December 07, 2025

The Sea Captain's Wife by Tilar J. Mazzeo

 
First Line from Prologue: This story begins in another place, another time, in a world of which only fragments remain.

1856. Both from seafaring families, Captain Joshua Patten and his wife, Mary Ann, dreamed of making their fortune, buying a farm in Maine, and building a family. They'd already made their first clipper ship voyage around the world, and if they could win the race to San Francisco this year, that dream could come true. The young couple thought that the only thing that stood in their way was traversing the most treacherous waters in the world at the tip of South America.

As their ship, Neptune's Car, neared the Cape, the weather worsened, and Joshua fell deathly ill. Confined to his bunk, the ship was in real danger, not only from the weather but from the treacherous first mate, locked in the brig for insubordination and now agitating for mutiny. 

Nineteen-year-old Mary Ann Patten convinced the crew to support her, and together they survived a gale that lasted eighteen days, making it through Drake's Passage and on to San Francisco, a city still in the throes of the Gold Rush.

~

Here's yet another story of an incredible woman who had become lost to history. The Sea Captain's Wife is a fascinating story, although the book did have its problems. 

For one thing, the author spent so much time telling us about the couple's ancestry that my eyes kept glazing over. In my mind, I was shouting, "Enough already-- get to the mutiny!" Indeed, the absolute best part of the book describes the voyage of Neptune's Car through Drake's Passage and around Cape Horn, and I would love to wax poetic about just what nineteen-year-old Mary Ann Patten did, but I'm leaving it up to you to find out. A young girl, traveling aboard a clipper ship in an age when women aboard ships were frowned upon. A young girl whose husband was at death's door. A young girl who somehow managed to convince a crew of hardened sailors to believe that she could guide them through the most deadly waters in the world. It is the stuff of dreams.

Once back home in New England, Mary Ann became the world's darling, and this acclaim helped her through some very tough times; however, few records remain of her life after that voyage, and the book felt as though it ran out of steam and stuttered to a stop.

I applaud the author for all the research she did. (For example, she filled in the gaps in explaining how sea captains could become filthy rich.) It's not her fault that Mary Ann's story faded into obscurity once she was out of the limelight. But her story should be told and remembered. I only scratched the surface of what Mary Ann had to contend with during that voyage. All in all, I think The Sea Captain's Wife would be better told as a novel of historical fiction. Even thinking of Mary Ann Patten's story being told in that manner makes my eyes light up with joy. What a book that would be!

The Sea Captain's Wife: A True Story of Mutiny, Love and Adventure at the Bottom of the World
eISBN: 97812500352590
St. Martin's Press © 2025
eBook, 274 pages

Non-Fiction
Rating: C+
Source: Net Galley

Saturday, December 06, 2025

Silent Bones by Val McDermid

 
First Line: New Year's Eve, 2013. She'd never imagined a Hogmanay thrash like this, never mind that she'd be invited to it.

When a landslide on a motorway uncovers a skeleton, DCI Karen Pirie, head of Police Scotland's Historic Cases Unit, finds herself and her team investigating the death of investigative journalist Sam Nimmo.

Nimmo had been the prime suspect in the murder of his girlfriend when he disappeared. Was his death revenge for killing his girlfriend? Or was he investigating something worth killing over? In the meantime, the supposedly accidental death of a hotel manager has raised an allegation of murder. 

Now Karen and her team have a series of puzzles that will test them to their limits.

~

Val McDermid's Karen Pirie series is right at the top of my list of favorites. I've consistently rated these books highly-- either as Best Reads of the Year or as "A's." Although I do have to say that this latest entry, Silent Bones, felt a bit lackluster, a lackluster McDermid novel is still better than most writers' best. 

One of the reasons why McDermid's writing is so strong is due to the cast of characters she creates. Karen and her team of Daisy and Jason are interesting people, and not only do I enjoy keeping up with their private lives, but the way the team has come together is fascinating. Jason, in particular, was originally treated as if he were a joke, but with Karen's guidance, he's become much stronger and is a valuable member of the team. 

The plot of Silent Bones centers on a group of the well-heeled and entitled who think the rules do not apply to them. My patience wears thin with those types of people, and the only new character in this book that I took a shine to was Folasade Cusack. Her comment about an industrial hoover made me snort tea up my nose. Yes, I definitely wouldn't mind seeing her again!

As I said earlier, the plot of Silent Bones didn't really grab me, but any time spent with Karen, Daisy, and Jason is time well spent indeed. I look forward to the next book in the series.

Silent Bones by Val McDermid
eISBN: 9780802164407
Atlantic Crime © 2025
eBook, 432 pages

Police Procedural, #8 Karen Pirie
Rating: B
Source: Net Galley

Monday, November 24, 2025

Taking This Week Off to Count My Blessings


 
I'm posting this early because I've decided to take the week off to relax and to count my blessings. 

That may sound odd, since I did lose Denis in June, but he brought so much to my life that I can't be anything else but thankful to have had him as my love, my companion, and my best friend. 

And, if anything, this year has shown me what wonderful family and friends I have. See? So much to be thankful for that I don't even need to mention material things.

Blessings (and Hugs) to all of you. You, too, are an important part of my life.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

A Coming Out of the Fog Weekly Link Round-Up

 


I'm sitting here on a Tuesday afternoon, looking out the window to watch clouds scudding across the sky. We're in between periods of rain here in Phoenix. Light rain, which will soak in, thankfully. The weather is reminding me of UK forecasts with its "sunny intervals." We Americans just say "partly cloudy," but there's something more cheerful in the UK terminology.

I feel as though I'm slowly coming out of a tremendous fogbank. I'd stopped knitting for weeks. Now I have three different projects on the go. The new home health company I'm dealing with is providing 95% of the supplies for my leg which is a complete turnaround from the old company that was shackled by my insurance company to the point where all my needed supplies were out of my own pocket. Believe you me, I'm appreciating the money I'll be saving! And... I no longer hesitate to sit at the computer since it's not an instrument of torture now that I've finally sorted out Denis's affairs.

I still haven't made a move about Christmas decorations. Probably because they're all in a shed outside, and who wants to drag them into the house in the rain? Not I!

The only way I have yet to come out of my fogbank is in my reading. My reading has slowed to what is for me a crawl. We shall see what happens because I'm still slowly readjusting my routine.


My thoughts are with anyone else who's been experiencing fogbanks of their own. May you start having those sunny intervals and then full-blown sunshine. 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◄
  • Artist Percy Lam immortalizes Hong Kong's neon signs, one stitch at a time.
  • How Michael Connelly keeps The Lincoln Lawyer series fresh.
  • Ship stewardess Ella Sheldon, the lonely diarist of the high seas.
  • Who was Molly Pitcher? Exploring the Revolutionary War icon.
  • Artist Edvard Munch was haunted by physical and mental illnesses, but he was also fascinated by them.
  • At 107 years old, neuroscientist Brenda Milner is still unlocking the mysteries of the brain.
  • The Coast Guard's most potent weapon during Prohibition? Codebreaker Elizebeth Friedman.

►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!

Monday, November 17, 2025

At Midnight Comes the Cry by Julia Spencer-Fleming

 
First Line: The trouble started, as it so often does, behind the manure spreader.

Reverend Clare Fergusson and her husband, Russ van Alstyne (newly resigned from his position as chief of police), have plans to celebrate the perfect Christmas with their baby boy, Ethan. Those plans come to a screeching halt when white supremacists crash a beloved holiday parade. In no time at all, they find themselves yanked into a world of militias and murder.

Others are also drawn into this mess, including single mother and police officer Hadley Knox. She's worrying about her former partner, Kevin Flynn, who's taken leave from the Syracuse Police Department and then disappeared. 

Add to this a novice lawyer on an off-the-books investigation and a missing park service ranger, and it's plain to see that it's going to take a lot of work to have a Christmas that's merry and bright in Millers Kill, New York.

~

It is so good to have Clare Fergusson and Russ van Alstyne back! I have really missed Julia Spencer-Fleming's series, and it's wonderful to see that At Midnight Comes the Cry brings these beloved characters roaring back at full strength.

Although I have to admit that I'm sick to death of white supremacists in the news and really don't want to have them taking center stage in my fiction, the storyline is strong, and with Clare Fergusson in charge, it's not going to be the "same old, same old." 

For longtime fans, there's plenty of catching up to do with the author's wonderful cast of characters. We get to see Clare and Russ with their baby, and Hadley worrying about Kevin Flynn. A novice lawyer is going off the reservation from the state Attorney General's Office, and a forest ranger is looking for his missing uncle. Clare and Russ work together like a well-oiled machine in the hair-raising climactic scenes, too. (Of course!)

I haven't read anything about the fate of this series, but there is something mentioned at the end that makes me wonder if this is the last time we'll see Clare and Russ. If so, they end on a high note... and I'll miss them. 

At Midnight Comes the Cry by Julia Spencer-Fleming
eISBN: 9781250022677
Minotaur Books © 2025
eBook, 320 pages

Police Procedural, #10 Fergusson/Van Alstyne
Rating: A+
Source: Net Galley