Wednesday, October 22, 2025

A Tempus Fugit Weekly Link Round-Up

 


I've got lots going on today, and if all goes well, I'll be boarding Dial-a-Ride for a trip to the Desert Botanical Garden tomorrow morning. Since my attention is being pulled in multiple directions, I wanted to make sure I got this link round-up posted because I know I won't have time in the next two days.

So...very little chatter before the links. I'll just share a sneak peek at something I'll be sharing next week...


...and add that, as I was reading in bed last night, a fight scene in Lee Goldberg's Killer Thriller made me laugh so loud that I woke up the neighbors' grumpy dog! I hope you are well and happy and have plenty of good books to read. Virtual hugs to you all!

Enjoy the links!


►Books & Other Interesting Tidbits◄

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • Sea otters may be small marine mammals, but their effect on an ecosystem can be huge.
  • Does your dog love chasing a ball? A study suggests that dog toy "addiction" is real.
  • The Asian Golden Cat: the "Feline of many costumes" that plucks birds before eating them.
  • Indian Relay may just be America's most extreme sport.
  • Birds make an alarm call that spans species and continents-- and may offer insight into the evolution of human language.
  • U.S. whale entanglements are on the rise.



►The Wanderer◄
  • You can see the Parthenon without scaffolding for the first time in decades.
  • After the L.A. fires, locals turn to native plants to help shield homes from flames and clean contaminated soil. (Personal Pet Peeve: People who move here to the desert and proceed to turn their property into a clone of where they moved from. This is the desert, not the bleedin' Midwest!)
  • Seven ways to see the world come alive at sunrise.
  • Step away from Peru's Inca Trail to these five lesser-known wonders.
  • Chainsaw-wielding robbers flee the Louvre with priceless jewelry.
  • Get an eyeful of Iceland in these twenty photos that capture its natural beauty.

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • Zelia Nuttall, the globe-trotting scholar who unlocked the secrets of the Aztecs.
  • Artist Iris Scott uses finger painting to evoke a rush of emotion with her fantasy-inspired compositions. (Definitely not your run-of-the-mill finger painting!)
  • William Dampier, the pirate who penned the first English-language guacamole recipe.
  • "You think me a bold cheat" -- Mary Carleton, counterfeit princess.
  • Dan Pelzer kept a meticulous list of all 3,599 books he'd read since 1962. When he died, his family published it online.
  • Martin Couney, the man who ran a carnival attraction that saved thousands of premature babies, wasn't a doctor at all.

►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, October 21, 2025

The Proving Ground by Michael Connelly

 
First Line: To some it's a stage.

Needing a new direction, Mickey Haller has turned to public interest litigation. He's filed a civil lawsuit against an artificial intelligence company whose chatbot told a sixteen-year-old boy that it was okay for him to kill his ex-girlfriend.

As Mickey explores the mostly unregulated and exploding AI business and its lack of training guardrails, he joins up with investigative journalist Jack McEvoy. McEvoy wants to be a fly on the wall during the trial so he can write a book about it. Haller puts McEvoy to work wading through the mountains of printed discovery materials in the case, and McEvoy's digging delivers the reluctant key witness. The witness has every reason to be reluctant. This is a very dangerous case because billions of dollars are at stake, and Mickey Haller will have to come up with a brilliant strategy to defeat the forces of the AI industry lined up against him and his clients.

~

Michael Connelly has done it again-- and with a subject that concerns me more with each passing day. While readers get an update on Harry Bosch as well as being able to see what happened in the Los Angeles area during Covid and the wildfires, Mickey Haller's battle against the artificial intelligence industry takes front and center stage in The Proving Ground.

While Mickey hoped that his switch from criminal law to civil law would be less fraught, this lawsuit soon shows him that civil law is every bit as grimy and dangerous. McEvoy's expertise in digging through endless reams of facts is invaluable, and I enjoyed his inclusion as well as watching the rest of the team do everything they could to bring a heartless business to justice. 

The plot of The Proving Ground is filled with twists and turns, even bringing in a case that Mickey lost years ago. The Lincoln Lawyer anticipates some of those twists and turns, but he gets blindsided by others, and this really keeps readers on their toes. 

As much as I enjoyed the plot and the characters, I think what I learned about artificial intelligence meant even more to me. When I think of AI, I'm often reminded of Jeff Goldblum's character in Jurassic Park when he says, "Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could that they didn't stop to think if they should." Michael Connelly's The Proving Ground is not only excellent entertainment, but it also warns us of a clear and present danger.

The Proving Ground by Michael Connelly
eISBN: 9780316563840
Little, Brown & Company © 2025
eBook, 400 pages

Legal Thriller, #9 Mickey Haller
Rating: A+
Source: Net Galley

Monday, October 20, 2025

The Dentist by Tim Sullivan

 
First Line: The young woman standing in front of him was smiling.

The most successful detective in Bristol's police force is Detective Sergeant George Cross. He's on the autism spectrum, and his single-minded persistence and attention to detail make him difficult to work with, but his 97% conviction rate speaks for itself.

A homeless man's death is dismissed as a random act of violence, but George insists on investigating it further. His determination pays off when he finds a connection to a fifteen-year-old cold case. Despite skepticism from his colleagues, George can be counted on to solve both cases and bring a murderer to justice.




~

Having read high praise of this series from trusted sources, I knew I had to give the first book in the DS George Cross series, The Dentist, a try. Those trusted sources did not steer me wrong. Although crime solvers on the autism spectrum seem to be the flavor of the month, so much so that I've not finished a few books featuring them, Tim Sullivan drew me right into his story.

Part of the reason why The Dentist works so well is that readers get to see George, not only from his own perspective, but also from other characters' viewpoints. His partner, DS Ottey, is both exasperated by and protective of him, and watching brand-new rookie Alice MacKenzie figuring out how to work with him is a treat. George's father, Raymond, is also on hand to provide a little backstory as well as some of the wit and humor that shines throughout this book.

I enjoyed how the mystery unfolded and was anxious to see how George would bring the guilty to justice. This Maigret-loving, church-organ-playing detective has become a character I definitely need to read more about. Bring on the next book!

The Dentist by Tim Sullivan
eISBN: 9780802167101
Atlantic Crime © 2025
eBook, 384 pages

Police Procedural, #1 DS George Cross
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley

Thursday, October 16, 2025

The Best Laid Plans Weekly Link Round-Up

 


We had another storm roar through the Phoenix metro area, and for the first time in over a century, we received five straight days of rain. Fortunately for Casa Kittling, we received five straight days of rain (that flooded the yard, not the pool) but very little wind. Southeast Phoenix wasn't so lucky. There was a microburst in the Tempe/Scottsdale area accompanied by winds in excess of 70 MPH. I've experienced three microbursts here, and, let me tell you, they are very scary and can cause quite a lot of damage. 

I was planning to go to the Desert Botanical Garden this week, but after viewing videos of the damage in the Phoenix Zoo (which had to close for three days for cleanup and repair), I began to wonder if it was wise to go. The Phoenix Zoo is next-door to the Desert Botanical Garden. Then I read that many of the trails in the garden had been flooded. Not wanting to bog down on my scooter, I decided to let everything dry out and go next week.


Some of the damage at the Phoenix Zoo.


As I watched videos of the storm damage, I saw that many of the downed/uprooted trees were either palo verdes or eucalyptus. The eucalyptus trees caused the most damage because of their size. Thinking about those trees at the zoo jogged my memory. When I read Adrian Hyland's The Wiregrass, I learned that Australians called eucalyptus trees "widow makers." Seeing all the damage they've caused in the latest storm here, once again, I am glad that I don't have any of those trees here on the property!

So while I wait for everything to dry out, I continue to work on my clear-out, a shelf and a drawer at a time. I hope you are all safe and well. 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, October 14, 2025

The White Girl by Tony Birch

 
First Line: Odette Brown rose with the sun, as she did each morning.

For thirteen years, Odette Brown has quietly raised her granddaughter, Sissy, on the outskirts of Deane, a small rural Australian town. As far as Odette is concerned, the quieter their lives, the better. Sissy is a fair-skinned Aboriginal child, and welfare authorities remove such children from their families. But Odette's world could be destroyed by the arrival of a cruel-eyed, by-the-book policeman. It's going to take every bit of Odette's courage and cunning to keep her granddaughter out of the hands of the government-backed Sergeant Lowe.

~

I was immediately swept away into the world of Australia's post-colonial past when I began reading Tony Birch's The White Girl. Australia's treatment of the Aborigines mirrors that of the U.S. government's treatment of Native Americans. In Australia, the policy of separating Indigenous children from their families is now referred to as the Stolen Generations, and Odette Brown is desperately trying to keep her granddaughter from vanishing into an uncaring government's maw.

Odette lives on the outskirts of a rural small town where Aborigines are only permitted in town on Saturday mornings between eight and noon when they are allowed to shop at the company store. Tony Birch had me walking down the road, side by side with Odette. He had me worrying about her bright little granddaughter, who was still so naive about the world she lived in. When by-the-book Sergeant Lowe came to town, it soon became apparent that he loved having the power of life or death over people. Birch's writing is so evocative, so powerful, that I not only cared for Odette and Sissy, I not only worried about them, but I became very angry over how they were forced to live.

One passage in particular broke my heart: "The first children of the mission had been buried in nameless unmarked graves...The only indicators of the presence of the children beneath the earth were the wildflowers that revealed themselves each year. The seeds had been sown by mothers."

The White Girl is so incredibly powerful that it will remain with me for a long, long time. Read it.

The White Girl by Tony Birch
eISBN: 9780063213548
Harper Via © 2022
eBook, 272 pages

Historical Fiction, Standalone
Rating: A+
Source: Purchased from Amazon.

Thursday, October 09, 2025

A Reaching for the Bengay Weekly Link Round-Up

 


Since it hasn't quite cooled down enough to head to the Desert Botanical Garden, I've continued my quest to clear out all unwanted/unneeded "stuff" here at Casa Kittling. I'm happy to say that I've managed to take care of all the major areas, and the only things left are minor and easily taken care of. Here's a photo of the latest batch of stuff that was taken away this past Monday. (There are many items behind this front pile that you can't see.)


Most of these items will be donated or recycled. 

I had help with three big items, but the rest I managed to haul outside with many trips back and forth on my scooter. 

Although I'm very pleased with what I've managed to get done, there has been a downside: my right arm and shoulder let me know the error of my ways by becoming extremely sore. I'd never tried it before, but I remembered those TV commercials about Bengay and decided to see if it worked. It does-- and I even like the smell. An added bonus is that it also works on my arthritic hands better than the much more expensive ointment that my doctor recommended. It's not often-- at least in this house-- that cheaper is better. 

Next week looks much more promising for a visit to the Garden. Keep your fingers crossed, and enjoy the links!


►Books & Other Interesting Tidbits◄

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • Five incredible dinosaurs you've probably never heard about. (I have my great-grandfather, Elmer Brown, to thank for my interest in dinosaurs... and my love of the Jurassic Park movies.)
  • Watch these shy, adorable, nocturnal creatures (pine martens) explore their new home after being reintroduced in southwest England. (I love pine martens! Denis and I had one stop by our beach bothy every morning when we were staying in northwest Scotland.)
  • Generations of bearded vultures stashed humans' treasures, including a 650-year-old sandal, in their nests.
  • What energized this Arctic hare to keep going and going and going?
  • The surprising imperial history of the Pekingese dog.
  • A lonely cheetah cub at an Australian zoo now has an unlikely "best friend"-- a puppy.


►The Wanderer◄

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • The strange case of Henrietta Wiley, a wealthy New York heiress and socialite.
  • The Dionne quintuplets captivated the world during the Great Depression, but their fame came at a cost.
  • Two years after Cormac McCarthy's death, rare access to his personal library reveals the man behind the myth.
  • Nathan Hale, the doomed patriot spy, probably never said, "I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country" before his execution.
  • Did enslaved chocolatier Cato help Hercules Mulligan foil a plot to assassinate George Washington?
  • Read the dramatic 17th-century memoirs of Alice Thornton, who wrote four versions of her life story.

►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, October 06, 2025

Mark These Read

 


Welcome to the latest edition of my feeble attempts to catch up on my reviews. These catch-up reviews are going to be short and sweet, but at least you'll have an idea of what pages I've been turning the past few months! (I'll also provide links to Amazon in each title if you want to learn more about any of the books.)

Let's get started!


#1 Prudence Bulstrode cozy mystery
Rating: B

My Thoughts: This mystery revolving around a murder during an English country house shooting party started a bit awkwardly, but soon hit its stride. The author is a celebrity chef, and readers certainly get an insider's look at both celebrity chefs and cooking. 

One thing I liked about Prudence Bulstrode (besides her name!) was the fact that she planned all her sleuthing around the meals she had to prepare for the guests at the country house. So many times, amateur sleuths seem to forget that they have bills to pay and blithely skip away to look for clues. 

Filled with interesting characters, a solid mystery, and plenty of humor, I'll be returning to see what Prudence cooks up next.



Standalone Suspense
Rating: C+

My Thoughts: Having enjoyed Millhiser's book, The Mirror, I looked forward to this tale of a woman with amnesia who finds herself thrown into one of those rich, entitled families that would put a nest of vipers to shame. Unfortunately, I found the book to be pedestrian and lacking suspense.

My advice: Skip this one, but if you like excellent time travel stories, find The Mirror.








Standalone Historical Fiction
Rating: A

My Thoughts: After watching the film, Out of Africa, I read many non-fiction books about that time period in Africa (fascinating!) One of the books that made my all-time favorite books list was Beryl Markham's memoir, West With the Night.

When I began to read Circling the Sun, I immediately fell under the spell of Markham's voice. This woman lived an incredible life, mixing the early days of aviation (she was the first person to fly solo west across the Atlantic), growing up with the Kikuyu in Kenya, African wildlife, and horse racing.

McLain's book is a tale well told, and I'll be reading more of her work.



#1 Martini Club thriller
Rating: A

My Thoughts: Maggie Bird lives in the seaside village of Purity, Maine-- along with several other retired CIA operatives. When Maggie's past rises up, she goes to those friends to take advantage of the more than 100 years of experience they share. 

As Maggie showed me how careful she is with every single move she makes, I was exhausted-- and grateful that I'll never have to live that way. Local police chief Jo Thibodeau is a hoot ("Outmaneuvered by a bunch of old folks"), and I'm looking forward to seeing more of her as well as Maggie's neighbor, Luther Yount, and his granddaughter Callie.

Side note: I've learned more about the state of Maine by reading mysteries!


There you have it-- four more books that I read over the summer. When will I catch up? Your guess is as good as mine!

Have you read any of these? Which ones? What did you think? Did I tempt you with any of them? Inquiring minds would love to know!
 

Thursday, October 02, 2025

The Seven-Year Itch Weekly Link Round-Up

 



I know that some of you probably read the title of this post and mentally pictured Marilyn Monroe standing over a subway grate. (I had a dress like that once, only it was a blue and white print.) However, this time, the seven years has more to do with the weather here in the desert than it does subway grates.

Last week, Phoenix got the most rain it's had in one day in seven years. 1.64 inches of badly needed water fell at Sky Harbor Airport on September 26. (Hey, when your average yearly rainfall total is 7 inches, that 1.64 is a lot of rain!) There was quite a bit of flooding, and I have to admit that I was chewing my fingernails for awhile as the yard became more and more saturated, the water kept running over the curb onto the property, and the levels kept creeping up. Fortunately, Mother Nature smiled on me-- the water came within a gnat's whisker of turning the pool into a mud hole-- but I didn't have to deal with that mess. Whew!

I've told you that I've been decluttering, clearing out, and reorganizing, so I thought I'd share an example. I got the wild idea of finding a shelving unit for the shower stall in the third bathroom that's accessed through the craft room. (It's really more of a "powder room"/"cloak room.") Denis was the primary user of this space, so I included it on my "hit list." Here are Before and After photos of that shelving unit. I can be dangerous when I'm in a Clear Out Mood!


I hope you're all doing fine and well-stocked with good books to read. Virtual hugs to you all. Enjoy the links!


►Books & Other Interesting Tidbits◄

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • What are cats saying when they reach out to touch their humans with their paws?
  • Why do big dogs die young?
  • This invasive vampire fish is helping researchers understand the human nervous system.
  • Chimpanzees consume the equivalent of 2.5 alcoholic drinks per day by eating fermented fruit.
  • A rare  blue-and-green hybrid jay spotted in Texas is the offspring of birds whose lineages split 7 million years ago.
  • The curious case of "Old Thom," an orca traveling alone in the North Atlantic.
  • 15 photographs of bears.



►The Wanderer◄

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • Jane Goodall, legendary primatologist and anthropologist, has died at age 91. National Geographic's most iconic Jane Goodall photos.
  • 17th-century artist Johanna Koerten was once a bigger star than Rembrandt. Why did history forget about her and her peers?
  • How Davy Crockett, the rugged frontiersman killed at the Alamo, became an unlikely American hero.
  • In 1909, Theodore Roosevelt embarked on an ambitious expedition to East Africa. Here's why his trip still matters today.
  • What Jane Austen's possessions reveal about her literary ethos.
  • Breaking barriers and soaring into history: Pittsburgh's "Three Helens" during the Gold Age of Aviation.
  • When Picasso saved Matisse's paintings from the Nazis.

►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!