Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Ear Defenders Should Be Included with Admission

When I was a child, my widowed mother raised me on a couple of paltry pensions and her job as the village librarian. Money was scarce, but Mom wanted to open the world to me, so she scraped up the money to subscribe to a couple of series of Time-Life books. I loved getting those books! They were beautifully illustrated and so informative. The volume on Pompeii fascinated me, and when I learned that Pompeii: The Exhibition was going to be at the Arizona Science Center while Suzanne and Daisy were here, I was hoping they would say yes when I asked them if they wanted to go. They did, so off we went.

We hadn't been to the Arizona Science Center before so we were eager to explore. Unfortunately, the place was heaving with children who all seemed to feel the need to scream at the tops of their lungs. The noise was deafening. Ear-splitting. Headache-inducing. Fortunately, the Pompeii exhibit was worth the pain.

At the beginning of the exhibit. It's mind-boggling to think of how old these pieces are.

Bronze keys, 1st century C.E.-- Found in one of Pompeii's largest and most luxurious homes, these keys opened complex locks adapted by Roman engineers from Egyptian pin locks. Although only able to open and lock from one side, these innovative locks secured the home and kept residents safe.

Money box and coins

Daisy's photo

Daisy's photo

Daisy's photo


Can you believe a loaf of bread survived?!?

Suzanne watching one of the videos.

Glirarium, terracotta, 1st century C.E.-- Dormice, considered a great delicacy by Roman gourmets who consumed them as savory snacks, were caged, raised, and fattened up in a glirarium. Its interior spiral shelves, two food tanks, and multiple air holes, encouraged captive dormice to eat, sleep, and eat some more.

Did you know that one of my favorite movies is Spartacus? (The Kirk Douglas version.)


The explanation for how the archaeologists were able to make these casts of victims was fascinating-- and this one even has his teeth!


Cast of a guard dog. I remember seeing a photo of this in one of those Time-Life books when I was about ten, so it was a bit of a thrill to see the actual cast. Looking at all those casts of victims was very sobering.

Once we were through the exhibit and could no longer stand the noise, there was still time before the Dial-a-Ride bus was due to pick us up, so we went for a wander. The Arizona Science Center is in the middle of downtown Phoenix.

The Rosson House was a short walk away in Heritage Square.


Daisy and Suzanne in front of the Rosson House. It wasn't open, so they couldn't go in.

From the Rosson House Memorial Rose Garden.

From the Rosson House Memorial Rose Garden.


We really did enjoy our outing-- so many fascinating and/or beautiful things to see-- even if the first thing we did when we got home was open a bottle of aspirin!

Thursday, May 07, 2026

A Pinwheels and Smiles Weekly Link Round-Up

 


It's time to share a little secret with you: I love pinwheels. I've loved pinwheels since I was five years old. When I was five, I had the ring finger on my left hand shut and locked in a car door. (Don't ask me how. You wouldn't believe the things that happened to me when I was a kid.) Due to negligence on the local doctor's part, I had to go to the big city doctor for some rather unpleasant procedures. On one such trip, I was more reluctant than usual, so Mom promised me a present if I was good. I was, and the present I picked was a blue pinwheel. I stuck that thing out of the car window all the way home. It made me smile and forget about that doctor's visit.

I removed the headrest on my scooter and put a pinwheel in one of the holes. I love to hear that thing whirring behind my head when I'm out and about. What surprised me is other people's reactions to it. Talk about compliments and smiles! I guess pinwheels make many of us feel like children again, and those smiles certainly lift my own spirits.

I now seem to be collecting an assortment of them. Here's a photo of ones that I got while my nieces were here.



Do pinwheels make you smile, too? Virtual hugs to you all!

Enjoy the links!


Books & Other Interesting Tidbits

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄
  • See the largest Viking Age hoard ever found in Norway. At nearly 3,000 coins and counting, the cache is a once-in-a-lifetime find.
  • This souvenir bowl may have commemorated an ancient Roman soldier's service at Hadrian's Wall. It was discovered on a Spanish farm 1,900 years later.
  • This man fled Pompeii as Mount Vesuvius erupted. Archaeologists found him 2,000 years later, holding a bowl to protect his head and a lamp to light his way.
  • Dead bodies filled a mass grave when the first plague pandemic struck this early medieval city. New research explores the identity of the victims.
  • In a graveyard of shipwrecks between Europe and Africa, archaeologists discovered vessels doomed over thousands of years.
  • Tudor Heart: a Renaissance gold necklace featuring a French-English pun on the love between Henry VIII and his first wife, Katherine of Aragon.

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • City birds appear to like men more than women, but experts have no idea why.
  • What did dogs mean to the ancient Maya? Scientists are unlocking new clues.
  • Some polar bears are adapting to their melting habitat. Will it be enough to save the iconic species?
  • The endangered proboscis monkey is easily identifiable by one physical trait: it's supersized schnoz.
  • These rotund and "charmingly goofy" birds are delighting New Yorkers and dancing on social media. What is the American woodcock?
  • Cinco the jaguar has expanded his territory across southern Arizona.



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!

Sunday, May 03, 2026

The Teacher by Tim Sullivan

 
First Line: The victim's head was at a grotesque and unnatural angle to his body, which lay crumpled like a pile of laundry that had been thrown down the narrow staircase.

Others may think the dead man fell down the stairs and broke his neck, but Detective Sergeant George Cross thinks the stab wound on the elderly schoolteacher's body says differently.

As Cross investigates, he quickly learns that the victim, Alistair Moreton, made life hell for his neighbors and former pupils, so the suspect list is a long one. But every victim deserves justice, so Cross will not rest until he identifies the killer.

~

I may be reading much less than I have in previous years, but one thing is for certain: when the ones I do read are of the high quality of Tim Sullivan's George Cross series, I'm not going to complain. In The Teacher, Sullivan livens things up quite a bit by having Cross's usual partner, DS Josie Ottey, taking time off to move into her new house. He doesn't realize how much he's going to miss her until DI Warner joins the squad. Warner goes out of his way to aggravate Cross, and it's so much fun to watch Cross learn how to deal with him. Warner isn't much liked by anyone else in the squad either, one person even telling him, "He [Cross] is Sherlock Holmes to your Inspector Clouseau."

But Warner isn't the only worrisome item on George's list. His family life is steadily becoming more complicated, and he didn't realize how much he depended on DS Ottey to help guide him through the minefields of human interaction until she took this time off. This cast of characters is superb, and Sullivan certainly knows how to keep it fresh. Even DCI Carson-- normally a figure of fun-- is showing readers that he's not just a buffoon.

If you love strong mysteries that are fun to solve, and-- especially-- if you love characters who grow and begin to feel like friends and family, you simply have to start reading this series. Due to the character development, I urge you to start with the first book, The Dentist. You're in for such a treat that I'm almost jealous.

The Teacher by Tim Sullivan
eISBN: 9780802167767
Atlantic Crime © 2026
eBook, 387 pages

Police Procedural, #6 DS George Cross
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley

Thursday, April 30, 2026

The Spending $ Like I Had It Weekly Link Round-Up

 


I've been having one of those spells that we all have: large expenses cropping up like weeds and all demanding attention RIGHT NOW. Loads of fun, aren't they? (I know I'm preaching to the choir.)

At the beginning of the year, it dawned on me to check on our homeowners' insurance. Denis had taken care of it since we were first married, and the last time I'd had anything to do with it, it had been included in the mortgage. Good thing I checked! 

The insurance company had me do a DIY home inspection and then demanded that I do two things. One, I'd already done. ($$$) This second one was even more expensive: a new electrical panel. ($$$$$) I know it needs to be done, but what entity informed the insurance company and all these other places that I just won an obscene amount of money in the lottery? I wish I had! Ah well... cope and adjust.

The weather has been absolutely gorgeous. I really need to plan a visit to the Desert Botanical Garden. But before I head to the link corral, I'll share this photo with you...



Suzanne inadvertently left a pair of slippers behind. Every time I see them, I expect her to come walking through the kitchen door. *sigh*

Virtual hugs to you all. Enjoy the links!


Books & Other Interesting Tidbits

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • See the 1-in-50-million split-color lobster caught off the coast of Massachusetts. It's carrying two sets of genetic information.
  • A rare "cloud jaguar" was spotted in the Honduran mountains for the first time in a decade, representing a win for conservationists.
  • Gibraltar's famous monkeys are eating dirt, likely to alleviate stomach aches from munching on tourists' junk food.
  • "Robo-bunnies" are the newest weapon in the fight against invasive Burmese pythons in Florida.
  • Meet these delightful bookshop cats (and one dog).
  • Platypus hair shares a puzzling feature with bird feathers, adding to the egg-laying mammal's list of unusual characteristics. 



►The Wanderer◄

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • Lauren Weisberger's life after The Devil Wears Prada.
  • Eccentric tycoon Charles Vance Miller left a fortune to the winner of a baby-making contest. The Great Stork Derby divided Canadians during the Great Depression.
  • Just Wilde about hair.
  • Meet entomologist and wildlife photographer Mark Moffett, zooming in on the weird and wonderful world of ants.
  • Jeopardy! winner Tom Nissley champions books.
  • Quaker Lydia Darragh eavesdropped on British soldiers plotting a surprise attack-- and surreptitiously warned George Washington.

►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, April 27, 2026

Family Treasures in the Desert

As promised, I'm starting to share some of the many photos I took while two of my UK nieces were visiting.

Let's begin with what I call day-to-day stuff.


Suzanne peeking around the corner to check on Windy the hummingbird.


This shed used to be stuffed to the gunwales until the three of us got to work!


They were in the pool every day.


In a local park. Denis's motto, "Growing old is mandatory, growing up is optional" seems to run in the family. 😄


Waiting for me at the wound care clinic and delighting the receptionist with their accents. 


Waiting in line with me at the Social Security office. Not many tourists get to do these things. 😉


Hanging a small solar fountain that the hummingbirds have fallen in love with.


Installing solar wind spinners that were Christmas and birthday gifts.


A birthday milkshake.


Daisy completed the Moon Valley Park 5K Pirate Run.


We set up an assembly line to make needlepoint baskets.


Suzanne's basket


Daisy's basket. There are three more to come. I broke my needle midway through the third and had to wait for an emergency shipment-- and my fingers to recover!


Decorating the Cinco de Mayo tree.


Daisy did her second ride along with Fire Station 18. She's in the center wearing her NHS uniform.


This time she got to slide down the pole. 😊


On the plane back to the UK. 😭



Well, this is the first batch of pictures. You'll be seeing more in the near future!

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

A Glorious 22 Days Weekly Link Round-Up

 


It's amazing how quickly three weeks can fly by when two of my family treasures are visiting. Suzanne and Daisy brightened my life with their presence, their love, and their caring. I didn't want to see them leave. 

We accomplished a lot in the time they were here, and we managed to have some fun outings, too. I can hear you asking, and the answer is yes, I will be sharing photos in the near future. My two nieces got to see some places that aren't usual tourist stops, like my doctor's office and the Social Security Administration office, but we also did a lot of fun things. You'll have to wait for the photographic proof.

In the mean time, I will share the photo the Uber driver took of the three of us on the evening Suzanne and Daisy left. 



I miss them.

But enough of that. Enjoy the links!


Books & Other Interesting Tidbits

►Channeling My Inner Indiana Jones◄
  • This medieval castle sits atop a prehistoric time capsule. New excavations could reveal the history of Neanderthals in Britain.
  • The Titanic carried 3,500 life jackets, but almost all of them have been lost to history. This one just sold at auction for nearly $1 million.
  • In times of trouble, the Maya rejected divine kingship. This newly discovered public building reveals how the transition to shared power unfolded.
  • A pirate shipwreck off the coast of Cape Cod sets the historical record straight on West African gold.
  • Archaeologists discovered a perfectly circular ancient Egyptian temple that may have been used for sacred water rituals.
  • Take a look at a 4,500-year-old ancient Egyptian funeral "gown" that was in vogue during the Old Kingdom.

►Channeling My Inner Elly May Clampett◄
  • Scientists found 5.6 million burrowing bees beneath a cemetery in New York. The group is one of the largest on record.
  • An endangered ocelot has traversed 4 Sky Islands in southeastern Arizona, setting a record and inspiring conservation efforts.
  • Large invasive rodents called nutria are wreaking havoc in California. New research suggests someone deliberately introduced them.
  • In the 1990s, a dog named Wishbone taught kids about Shakespeare and Homer. A new documentary tells his tale-- from his backflips to his historical hats.
  • Does your cat always leave behind a half-full bowl of food? New research points to why our furry friends can be such picky eaters.
  • European hedgehogs' hearing might be attuned to ultrasonic sounds. The discovery could help scientists save the declining species.



►The Wanderer◄

►Fascinating Folk◄
  • After poet John Keats' love story was cut short, his letters mysteriously disappeared-- until rare book dealers acted on a hunch.
  • In the parlors of Black bibliophiles: how Arturo Schomburg built a library and made history.
  • Born to a family of sharecroppers, topiary artist Pearl Fryar overcame discrimination to become the "Picasso of Plants."
  • Jane Harper on Australian crime fiction, settings, and crafting slow-burn suspense.
  • Punjabi Princess Sophia Duleep Singh fought for women's suffrage and sheltered refugees during World War II. A goddaughter of Queen Victoria, she rejected British Imperialism.
  • What knitting has taught author Miranda Shulman about writing.

►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!