Saturday, January 11, 2025

Winter: how it's going

WINTER: HOW IT STARTED

This winter started off with a bang, or, should I say, a slow slog through the snowstorm on Dec 21st. 

Our lemon cypress Christmas tree


We had a lovely Christmas & Hanukkah with all of the Common Household [Adult] Children visiting.  Then an equally lovely visit with extended family after Christmas, during which only some of us got sick.  

The full hanukkiah on Jan 1, 2025

WINTER: HOW IT'S GOING

It’s been c-c-cold since then.  I don’t like being cold, but I am actually grateful. It’s supposed to be cold outside right now.  And, as Adam Gopnik wrote in Winter: Five Windows on the Season (the best essays ever written about winter, in my opinion), we can appreciate winter when we have central heating.  

…nobody knows the names of the men who, in the first decades of the nineteenth century, invented central heating, and particularly steam heating by radiating pipes. Let us name them now: they included Thomas Tredgold and H. R. Robertson and an immigrant genius of central heating, the French engineer F. W. Chabannes (a Russian,

Franz San Galli, would soon invent the radiator).


After that first official day of winter, we haven’t had much snow all at once; it came in little spurts.  Yet the Snow Fairy, (that is, me) quickly tired of shoveling.  For several days in a row, I just shoveled one side of the front walk, and only did that so I could get the mail.  There was nothing good in the mail.

The Snow Fairy's lazy shoveling of
the driveway was not appreciated
enough, in my opinion. I mean, the
snow was not that deep in the first place.



This morning there was about an inch of new snow, and because the Common Household Husband shoveled the driveway, I had enough energy to fully shovel the front walk.  The CHH remarked, “Oh, look! It’s bilateral shoveling of the walk this time!”  

I shoveled it completely.
But it's just going to snow some more.



Now we’ve got a total of 4 inches of snow on the deck, where no one shovels and no creatures walk through.



I have been half-heartedly going through the 10-inch high pile of papers that, in September, I dumped from my desk into a box, and didn’t look at until now.  I’ve reduced it to about 7 inches.  Still higher than the height of the snow!  In the process I found an important and beneficial church communication; in August there was something good in the mail, but I didn’t know it.  The 3 inches of papers also contained some very sad notes from after my aunt died. 


This coming Monday is National Clean Off Your Desk day.  If and when that happens, it will be cause for celebration in the Common Household.  


I have begun to ease into reading national news again, although there is not much encouraging to be seen there.  And I have ventured to call my US Senators a few times, not because I expect to change their minds, but because the right thing to do is to speak truth to power.  And because I believe it is important to keep our “citizenship muscles” in shape as best we can.  Politically I feel like we are now in an “always winter, never Christmas” era.  


But let’s not succumb to the temptation of the turkish delight. There is real and important political work to be done at the local political level this year.  We have municipal, school board, and judicial elections.  And the positions of Judge of Election and Inspector of Election will be on the ballot.  


At church they once again passed out “star words” on the Sunday just before Epiphany.  I have doubts about it as a spiritual practice, but it works for some people, and as I have said before, I like shiny things.  The word I received this year is “Rest”.  Seems like the wrong time for me to rest, as I have umpteen church stats to compile before February, an estate to wrap up, and local elections, not to mention paid work.  But maybe it’s another meaning of “Rest” as in, the remainder.  Those who have been set aside, who are not getting attention. 


Here’s hoping the rest of winter is not too cold, and it only snows when we all can be inside looking out of the window of heated dwellings. Now, to the rest of that stack of papers.


Remind me later to tell you about
this recipe, which has become
a favorite of the entire family.





Wednesday, January 1, 2025

Favorite Books read in 2024



This was a year which required the reading of 9 (!) books in the Scotland Street series by Alexander McCall Smith, due to Everything.  And several audiobooks, due to eye surgery. And 13 children’s/young adult lit, due to both.  Two of my reads had the same main title (before the subtitle):  “Undue Burden”, due to the assault on reproductive rights.  Three of my reads this year prominently featured elephants, due to completely nonpolitical happenstance.  


I read 81 books/short stories in 2024.  Here’s what I rated excellent, and very good.



Excellent Fiction

Four of these items are children’s lit.  


Lust, Caution: The Story By Eileen Chang. Translated by Julia Lovell.  68 pages.  1978.  Transl 2007.  Exquisite writing.    As Melissa said in her comment on the December First Lines post, it’s a wonder that the writing can be so stellar in translation.  This is not a happy-go-lucky story. 


Ferris, by Kate DiCamillo.  240 pages. 2024. Children’s lit.

I entered this in my Storygraph, but I completely forgot to list it on the blog in First Lines July 2024 edition.


The Overcoat by Nikolai Gogol (a short story). 1842.  (Second reading, but the first reading was so long ago.)


The Bedridden Pirates (a short story) by The Common Household Younger Daughter. 7 pages. 2024; unpublished. I will admit I am a biased reader on this one.


The Sword in the Stone, by T.H. White, (abridged; Junior Classics for 7-12 year olds).  Audiobook released 2008. Naxos Audiobooks, narrated by Neville Jason. 


The Bullet That Missed By Richard Osman. 2022.  Just another in the series of these murder mysteries, but I found this one more poignant than the previous ones.


Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling.  Audiobook read by Geoffrey Palmer.   This is on my “excellent” list because of the narrator.  I’ve read it multiple times but this is the first time I’ve listened to an audio recording.


Pink and Say By Patricia Polacco.  1994.  Picture book (children’s lit).





Excellent Nonfiction

Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI, by David Grann.  2017.


Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make History by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich. 2007.


(I also re-read World of Wonders by Aimee Nezhukumatathil with Fumi Nakamura (Illustrator) which I rated Excellent last year. 184 pages. 2020.)


David Grann’s writing just carries the story. I hope to read more by him.  Thatcher Ulrich is more difficult to read, but I appreciate her chosen topics and just find it wild to read an author who is a Mormon feminist.  World of Wonders I highly recommend again.



And some others I found quite enjoyable and/or thought-provoking


Fiction

Fences, the play by August Wilson.  119 pages.  1986.


Tom Lake, by Ann Patchett. 312 pages. 2023.


Nervous Conditions By  Tsitsi Dangarembga. 204 pages (my print copy has 298 pages). 1988.


The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax (Mrs. Pollifax #1) By Dorothy Gilman. 208 pages. 1966


The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra (Baby Ganesh Agency Investigation #1)

By Vaseem Khan.  320 pages. 2015.


Jitney (The Century Cycle #8), the play by August Wilson. 76 pages. First performed 1982.  


The Book Woman’s Daughter (2nd in a series) by Kim Michele Richardson. 338 pages.  2022.


The Revolving Door of Life (44 Scotland Street Series #10). By Alexander McCall Smith. 281 pages. 2015



Nonfiction

First Principles: What America's Founders Learned from the Greeks and Romans and How That Shaped Our Country, by Thomas E. Ricks.  416 pages.  2020.


Rebel Cinderella: From Rags to Riches to Radical, the Epic Journey of Rose Pastor Stokes by Adam Hochschild.  320 pages. 2020.


Congratulations, The Best Is Over! By R. Eric Thomas. 240 pages. 2023.


Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy by Anne Lamott. 192 pages. 2017.


Undue Burden: Life and Death Decisions in Post-Roe America, by Shefali Luthra.  291 pages of text. 2024.


Undue Burden: A Black, Woman Physician on Being Christian and Pro-Abortion in the Reproductive Justice Movement, by Deshawn Taylor. 204 pages. 2023.


More Than I Imagined: What a Black Man Discovered About the White Mother He Never Knew, by John Blake. 240 pages. 2023.


When in French: Love in a Second Language By Lauren Collins. 256 pages.  2016


A Midwife's Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard, Based on Her Diary, 1785-1812 by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich.   464 pages (main text is about 400 pages).  1990.  Pulitzer Prize winner in 1991 in the History category.


Beaten Down, Worked Up: The Past, Present, and Future of American Labor By Steven Greenhouse.  416 pages. 2019.


Lincoln's Last Trial: The Murder Case That Propelled Him to the Presidency.  By Dan Abrams, David Fisher.  320 pages. 2018.


Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America By Heather Cox Richardson. 304 pages. 2023.




Some repeat readings

Books I appreciated reading again:


The Overcoat by Nikolai Gogol (a short story). 49 pages. 1842.  


World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments

Aimee Nezhukumatathil with Fumi Nakamura (Illustrator). 184 pages. 2020.


Pink and Say By Patricia Polacco. 48 pages. 1994.  Picture book (children’s lit).

Not an easy topic for kids nor for adults.


The Return of the Prodigal Son:  A Story of Homecoming, by Henri J.M. Nouwen. 162 pages. 1992. Reading for church Lenten study group.  The first time I read it was a very long time ago.


The Sword in the Stone, by T.H. White, (abridged; Junior Classics for 7-12 year olds).  Audiobook released 2008.  Naxos Audiobooks, narrated by Neville Jason.  4 hours?  6 hours? 


Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling.  Unabridged.  Audiobook read by Geoffrey Palmer.   3 hours, 27 minutes • Written text first pub 1902 (editions).  Audiobook released in 2005  by Naxos Junior Classics.  As noted above, this is a completely charming narration by Geoffrey Palmer. 


But I did not enjoy re-reading this:

Mary Poppins By P.L. Travers with Sophie Thompson (Narrator)~ 4 hours. 1934. Publisher: Blackstone Audiobooks 2013. Print version 208 pages or so.




My top 5 genres, from thestorygraph.com


That says: Historical, mystery, history, middle grade, and contemporary.  



Top authors

I don’t know why it says I read 2 Kate DiCamillo books in 2024.  When I click on it, it only lists one book.


Keep your eyes open, readers.
Looks like wild times ahead.




Tuesday, December 31, 2024

First Lines: December 2024 edition

Pittsburgh.
City of steel.
City of bridges.


Below are the first lines of the books I finished reading in December, and two I did not finish.

 

 

Book 1

1. Moving Can Be Good For You

Matthew had read somewhere – in one of those hoary lists with which newspapers and magazines fill their columns on quiet days – that moving house was one of the most stressful of life’s experiences – even if not quite as disturbing as being the victim of an armed robbery or being elected president, nemine contradicente, of an unstable South American republic.

 

 

Book 2

Richard Ainsworth was out of his depth and out of his comfort zone.

 

 

Book 3

It’s a drizzly Sunday morning, the day after my twelfth birthday, and my family – such as it is – has arrived at Swallowtail Island in the western end of Lake Erie.

 

 

Book 4

When Sheldon Russell Curtis told this story to his daughter, Rosa, she kept every word in her heart and was to retell it many times over in her long lifetime.

 


Book 5

Thousands of people came to New York City on 24 May 1883 to observe the formal opening of the Brooklyn Bridge.

 

 

Book 6

Not very long ago and not very far away, there once was and still is an invisible place right here with us.


 

Book 7 

There was a buzz of excitement when I arrived at my Harvard office at 78 Mt. Auburn Street one June morning in 1972.


 

Did not finish #1

two phone calls and a funeral

Two years after my mother died, my father fell in love with a glamorous blond Ukrainian divorcee.  He was eighty-four and she was thirty-six.



Did not finish #2

“Sprinkles, no!” Lexy hissed at her dog, who was wriggling through the gap in the backyard fence.




The titles and authors revealed:

 

Book 1

The Revolving Door of Life (44 Scotland Street Series #10)

Alexander McCall Smith

281 pages • first published 2015


Our seven-year-old hero gets a bit of a reprieve from some of the usual stresses in his life, a new character is introduced, and there is a more in-depth analysis of the inner workings of the Association of Scottish Nudists. 


I am soooo grateful for this series.  


A note on the first line:  nemine contradicente is an archaic legal term that means “by consensus” , “with no one dissenting.”  I had to look that up.

 

 

Book 2

Death and Fromage (A Follet Valley Mystery series #2)

By Ian Moore

320 pages • first published 2022


I was desperate for a light mystery, and this was on the library’s available list of kindle downloads.  The author is a British comedian.  This is the second book I have read this year which featured cheese prominently.   Also, there are chickens.  


The characters’ names, oy!  One chef’s surname is Grosmallard, which I translated in my head every time as “Fat Duck.”  (I was annoyed at myself because I wasn’t sure whether to pronounce the “s”.)  And another chef is named Guy Garçon, which means “guy boy.”  (When I learned French, we were taught that the way to summon the waitstaff in a French restaurant was to proclaim, “Garçon,!” I googled this and found, thankfully, that there are now gender-neutral words to use.)  


There are some ludicrous situations which were amusing, but I did not like the characters overmuch.  I kept reading this book mainly for the descriptions of food.  


The name of the French town where the cheese-related murder takes place is “Saint-Sauver” which annoyed me because I kept thinking of La Cathédrale Saint-Sauveur (with a “u”), the cathedral in the town of Aix-en-Provence, where I lived for a few months.  And there are 40+ towns in France and Canada named Saint-Sauveur.  I suppose the author would have been sued if he had added the “u”.  


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aix_Cathedral


 

Book 3

The Swallowtail Legacy: Wreck at Ada's Reef

(The Swallowtail Legacy series #1).  Y.A. lit.

By Michael D. Beil

311 pages • first published 2022


I liked the characters, the setting and the writing.  This book fit the bill for the type of mystery I was seeking.  It is set in current times but reaches into the past to examine a suspicious event.


 

Book 4

Pink and Say

By Patricia Polacco

48 pages • Published 1994.  Picture book (children’s lit).


A poignant tale of compassion, sadness, injustice and honor.  It takes place during the US Civil War.  One interesting aspect is that the Black man knows how to read, and the White man doesn’t.  This book gives the reader, whether young or adult, a lot to think about.  


I borrowed it from the library because in October my daughter referenced it when she helped me make the decision to attend an event where I would have the chance to possibly shake the hand of a very consequential person (I did go to the event, but I did not shake that person’s hand, and I am okay with that.  I was very happy to just be there in the presence of this august person.)

 


Book 5

The Battle For Homestead, 1880-1892: Politics, Culture, and Steel

By Paul Krause

584 pages (361 pages of text, excluding Appendices, notes, index, photos) • first published 1992.


Link to book description at U Pitt Press:  https://upittpress.org/authors/paul-krause/

This book is quite good, and I learned a lot.  The events described echo to this day.  I saw strong parallels between some people described in the book and some prominent rich people today.  


That said, it was slow going, which could be either due to my reduced concentration level, or the writing/topic or maybe that’s just the reading speed for a proper history book.  I got confused about the various labor strikes, not realizing until the author stated half-way through that there was a big geographical difference between Pittsburgh and Homestead (a vast 6 miles apart, but very close to each other these days) that had an effect on the outcome of labor strikes and management lockouts.


The Kindle version which I got from the library is rife with typos.  


The names of the rich people, who also managed the political machine in the area, endure to this day.  Christopher Magee was the Pittsburgh city treasurer and political “boss” of the area (Magee Hospital, where some of the Common Household kids were born; Magee named it after his dear mother). William Flinn was owner of  a large construction company and chair of the Pittsburgh Republican party (William Flinn Highway, a.k.a Route 8, a road I drive on frequently). And of course, Andrew Carnegie, immigrant from Scotland who owned large steel mill operations (he has numerous libraries, a university, a town, and other stuff named after him).  Tellingly, I was unfamiliar with the names of the labor leaders, and to my knowledge nothing is named after them; for example: John McLuckie, Thomas W. “Beeswax” Taylor, Thomas Armstrong.  McLuckie had to leave the US - the text says “he was last seen in 1901 in Mexico, where he worked as a miner and well driver.” (page 4)


Local politics was rife with favoritism, political machines, and graft.  


Then there is Philander Knox (1953-1921).  He was a lawyer, counsel for Carnegie’s companies, and eventually a US Senator, Attorney General, Secretary of State.  He was the Michael Cohen of his day:  “He provided more than just expert advice; he functioned as a field lieutenant who could handle unseemly details in utter confidence while simultaneously maintaining a gentlemanly public posture.”   At the suggestion of Andrew Carnegie and his evil twin Henry Frick, Knox was appointed Secretary of State (1909-1913 under President Taft; the book says that Knox was the one who actually directed the Taft Administration).  During his tenure the US dominated the so-called “banana republics” in Central America, a policy which still affects all our lives today. 


The book takes Thomas “Beeswax” Taylor and some other labor leaders to task for abandoning the labor movement and becoming an entrepreneur, real estate salesman.  But just how much did he earn at those endeavors?  Did Taylor oppress other workers the way his compatriot Andrew Carnegie did?  How many children did Beeswax Taylor have, that he had to support?  I found nothing on the internet about Beeswax Taylor, other than references to this book, and to tailor’s beeswax.  I can’t imagine Taylor ended up with vast wealth earned on the backs of workers, the way Carnegie did.


Gingerbread depiction of
Pittsburgh, the City of Bridges.  2023.

 


Book 6

The Secret Book of Flora Lea

By Patti Callahan Henry

368 pages • first pub 2023

For book club.


Started slow.  When it got to the chapter describing the bonfire, I got more interested but I can't say why.  The premise of the novel is that the stories we tell ourselves (about a fantasy world or about ourselves) can either help or hinder us in managing our lives.  I believe that, but maybe the point was overblown.  I felt very sorry for Barnaby.  I thought he deserved better.  There is much tea drinking, which I always appreciate in a novel.  This one has an over-the-top happy ending, which is just the type of ending that I needed to read right now.

 

 

Book 7

An Unfinished Love Story: A Personal History of the 1960s

By Doris Kearns Goodwin

496 pages (405 pages of actual text) • first pub 2024.


I thought this memoir/historical look back was interesting. Kearns Goodwin is a very good writer.  I have really appreciated two other books of hers - No Ordinary Time, and Team of Rivals.  The most fascinating parts of this one, to me, were the incident with Che Guevara, and the meeting with the Civil Rights leaders.  The description of the Democratic Convention of 1968 was gripping.  Some parts were slower going.  I was compelled to finish it because I waited for a long time to get it on kindle from the library, and I had only a few days left before it would be snatched away.  


 

Did not finish #1

A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian - By Marina Lewycka

326 pages • first pub 2005

Billed as hilarious, but I wasn’t in the mood for it in December 2024, partly because of what is likely to happen to Ukraine, but mostly because I did not need to read about nasty battles between siblings.



Did not finish #2 

Killer Cupcakes (Lexy Baker series #1)

By Leighann Dobbs

146 pages • first pub 2012

Murder mystery about as light as cupcake icing.  The dog is named “ Sprinkles” and therefore I just could not continue.