Thursday, April 30, 2026

First lines: April 2026 edition


Below are the first lines of the books I finished reading in April.  Seven outright books, one short story of note, and one DNF.

 

Book 1

The Three States of Ignorance

Imagine a hypothetical job applicant.  He can’t spell the simplest words, such as “heal” and “tap.”  Confused by geography, he thinks there’s an African country called “Nambia.”  As for American history, he’s under the impression that Andrew Jackson, who died in 1845, was angry about the Civil War, and that Frederick Douglass, who died in 1895, is still alive.


Andrew Jackson, being angry about the Civil War.
Statue in Washington DC, 2017
 

Book 2

Villon-sur-Sarthe, France

July 29, 1714

A girl is running for her life.

The summer air burns at her back, but there are no torches, no angry mobs, only the distant lanterns of the wedding party, the reddish glow of the sun as it breaks against the horizon, cracks and spills across the hills, and the girl runs, skirts tangling in the grass as she surges toward the woods, trying to beat the dying light.

 

 

Book 3

My name is Riad.  In 1980, I was two years old and I was perfect.

 

 

Book 4

The Queen of Mold

This is a true story.

Imagine a New York City apartment at six in the morning.


 

Book 5

The Haunted House 

Nancy Drew began peeling off her garden gloves as she ran up the porch steps and into

the hall to answer the ringing telephone.

 

 

Book 6

At last, on Monday around ten or half past, Sybil Van Antwerp carries the mug of Irish breakfast tea with milk to her desk.

 

 

Book 7

1. Apparent age 32, height 169…

ICPC to PJ Paris Xvzust Krakow vimontra m ghks triv post uv Pietr-le-Letton Bremen vs tyz btolem.


Detective Chief Inspector Maigret of the Flying Squad raised his eyes.  


 

Short Story

It was a time of great and exalting excitement. The country was up in arms, the war was on, in every breast burned the holy fire of patriotism; …



Did not finish

Chapter I: Paris: September, 1792

A surging, seething, murmuring crowd of beings that are human only in name, for to the eye and ear they seem naught but savage creatures, animated by vile passions and by the lust of vengeance and of hate.  The hour, some little time before sunset, and the place, the West Barricade, at the very spot where, a decade later, a proud tyrant raised an undying monument to the nation's glory and his own vanity.

 


The titles and authors revealed:

 

 

Book 1

Profiles in Ignorance: How America's Politicians Got Dumb and Dumber

Andy Borowitz

320 pages • 2022 

nonfiction politics


Andy Borowitz is some kind of brilliant.  In this book (which is not satire but does highlight ridiculousness) he draws the straight line from Reagan all the way through to Trump.  Because he published it in 2022, it ends with hope, acknowledging that US democracy is worn out but still functioning.  He exhorts his readers to do more than just shake our heads at the national news, but to jump in to protect democracy locally. 


There is not one single mention of Epstein in this book.  So it gets only 3 stars instead of 4 from me.  


Quote:

“The braking system of democracy is in ragged condition right now, but it’s still there. The brakes work every time we register to vote and help others do the same.  … The brakes work when we go to town meetings, make our voices heard, and listen to the voices of others.  The brakes work when we organize, fundraise, and canvass.  The brakes work when we march, protest, and vote.  The brakes work when, against the odds, we change one voter’s mind.

We’re the brakes.”


Andy, the odds are much more against us now than they were in 2022. And I’m trying, Andy.  I appreciate that you know how to spell canvass (Google spell-check does not).  

 

 

Book 2

The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue

By V.E. Schwab

511 pages • 2020

For TOS book club

fiction fantasy historical literary


Please don’t take this the wrong way, Addie, but the title should be “The Interminable Life of Addie LaRue”.  This book got lots of praise, and if you loved it, that’s excellent.  It was a slog for me.   I am just not fond of the fantasy genre.  


The focus on identity and memory should be fascinating, but it was just overworked, in my opinion.   I finished the book because the person who tentatively promised to lead the discussion for book club declined, and so I knew I would have to lead.  The Common Household Husband, who likes the fantasy genre, loved this book.  I will admit that, with the discussion, I warmed slightly to the book, and saw some of the merits.  Still rating it 3.0 out of 5, because it needed an editor.


 

Book 3

The Arab of the Future: A Childhood in the Middle East, 1978-1984: A Graphic Memoir (The Arab of the Future #1)

By Riad Sattouf, translated by Sam Taylor

160 pages •first pub 2014

nonfiction, graphic book,  memoir


Well told and well drawn, although the frames and drawing were a bit small for my eyes.  The main lessons I take from this book were ones I already knew intellectually, but the story and art reinforce:  people were and are living in all kinds of terrible circumstances.  Bullies and prejudices exist in all societies.  Dictators cannot stop themselves from plastering their image all over every public space.  Content warning:  the father is a prejudiced jagoff. There are bullies galore, young and old.  So, because of the subject matter, it was not an enjoyable read.


The story does not end with the end of this book – just when the family seems to have resettled in France, the last frames say “Of course, the summer’s not over… You can’t spend your whole life on vacation! The Arab of the future goes to school!”  and then they are getting on a plane again with “To be continued…”  However, my library system does not have the other 3 books in the series so I will not be reading the rest of his story.


—> Grump alert!  —> Here is my major gripe about the phrase “graphic novel”, the term Storygraph uses for this book’s format.  I object.  High school English class taught me that a novel is a particular kind of literature, which excludes memoir.  A novel is fictional, has characters and a plot, through which at least one of the characters develops and changes in some way - a deeper understanding of life, of others. Some change in the character should occur.  The publishers got this one right, putting “Graphic Memoir” right in the subtitle.

 

 

Book 4

Tender at the Bone: Growing Up at the Table

Ruth Reichl

320 pages • 1998

nonfiction food-and-drink memoir


In the author’s note:  “This book is absolutely in the family tradition. Everything here is true, but it may not be entirely factual.”


I read this so that I could read a book by the author selected in Book Club #2.  I could not read the book selected,  The Paris Novel (published 2024), because it portrays ℙ€ dØ ρʮ!Lia in an early chapter.  I have not personally experienced that, but I spend some time every week calling my electeds, furious at their protection of rich and powerful ℙ€ dØ ρʮ!L€s.  (I am fearful of algorithms picking up that word so I’ve font-disguised it, although I have no idea if that actually works.)


For the record, many in the book club did finish The Paris Novel and appreciated it.  Having read this memoir, I can understand how the author developed the characters and plot lines in the novel, at least as far as I read.  


Ruth Reichl is a good writer and I was interested to read about the start of her career in writing about food and cooking.  The memoir includes mouthwatering recipes which I will never make.


Content warning: mental illness and alcoholism.  She grew up in the 1960s so there is plenty of drug use and communal living.

 

 

Book 5

The Hidden Staircase (Nancy Drew Mystery Stories #2)

Carolyn Keene

193 pages • first pub 1930, but I am pretty sure this was the 1957 revision.

fiction middle-grade mystery


Valiant Nancy Drew, a perfectly clad 18-year-old, provides steady leadership in a creaky old house inhabited by worn-out women.  Nancy and her lawyer father are on the side of truth, justice, and the rights of the railroad.  I enjoyed reading this, but I do wish I could easily get ahold of the original 1930s version, so I could get reacquainted with the real Nancy Drew.  


 

Staircase, not quite hidden

Book 6

The Correspondent

By Virginia Evans

304 pages • first pub 2025

fiction contemporary literary


Epistolary novel.  Not my favorite genre/style, but it mostly worked.  The book is immensely popular – the book club scheduled it in January for discussion in May.  


It improved as I progressed with reading, but for me it does not rise to the 4.5 rating on Storygraph.  The way each character dealt with a difficult and grievous event seemed an accurate portrayal of humans. The sadness was tempered with the sometimes outlandish behavior of the central character.  The author deftly shows the increased lack of inhibition as the main character ages.  


The Common Household Husband did not like it, and stopped reading.  He much preferred this month’s book The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, which was fantasy (Book 2 above).



Epistolary election communications:
58 letters to voters which
I sent out on April 25th.



Book 7

Pietr the Latvian (Inspector Maigret #1)

Georges Simenon with David Bellos (Translator)

161 pages • first pub 1931

fiction crime mystery


Older Daughter is reading her way around the world, continent by continent, with a focus this year on Europe.  She read this book for her Belgium entry but did not like it much -judged it to be just a bland police procedural (but probably the first one of its kind!).  I plunged in, because the book is short, Inspector Maigret is famous, and I had never read anything by Simenon.  I thought it was pretty good, although it is violent.  I liked the main character, but am marking the book down for prejudice and antisemitism.


For a book written in the 1930s with such a laconic  main character, it seems to have an excessive number of exclamation points.


An aside: Older Daughter is also reading Marcel Proust’s In Search of Lost Time, for her entry for France.  Despite being a French major, I’ve never read that one either, and I never will.  As Trevor Noah said, Ain’t nobody got time for that.  I did warn her against attempting it, and suggested instead:

The President's Hat  by Antoine Laurain.  2012.   208 pages.

The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery.  2006.   325 pages.

The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.  1943.  

Asterix the Gaul by René Goscinny and Albert Uderzo. 1959.  Comic book.  

The Bald Soprano (La Cantatrice Chauve) a play by Eugène Ionesco. 1952. Theater of the absurd.

Candide, by Voltaire (1759)  Satire.

Cyrano de Bergerac, Edmond Rostand (1897).  Theater.

But my children tend to not listen to me.


Short Story

The War Prayer (short story)

By Mark Twain.

Written in 1905, published posthumously, probably in 1923.  5 pages

Twain withheld it from publication during his lifetime, saying: "Only dead men can tell the truth in this world."

You can read it at this link.


Does not really count as a book, but it is remarkably relevant, so I am including it here.



Did not finish

The Scarlet Pimpernel

By Baroness Emmuska Orczy

182 pages • first pub 1905


This book was mentioned in TWO other books I read last month, so I had to try it.  It didn’t take.  And only partly because I was trying to read it on my tablet, rather than on my kindle.


Author’s full name: Baroness Emma Magdalena Rozália Mária Jozefa Borbála Orczy de Orci. 

23 September 1865 – 12 November 1947. Hungarian-born British novelist and playwright.




Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Reluctant Gardener Strikes Again

Snow-in-summer, May 2015
It was neither snowing, nor summer.
But aren't they pretty!


Sunday the weather was wickedly cold and windy.  So we went to the garden store.  I bought seeds and potting soil, in what will probably prove to be a futile attempt to bring beauty into the world.


Yesterday the weather was nice enough that I did this.


Forget-me-nots, Thyme, and
Black-eyed Susan vine

The Black-eyed Susan vine seeds are
fairly large. 

By contrast, the thyme seeds are tiny.

The fatal flaw in this whole project
may be that I did not throw out the old
dirt but just mixed it with the new dirt.

Then out to the yard.
I set to digging two holes in
our less-than-ideal soil.

Into those holes I put two snow-in-summer
plants.  The existing snow-in-summer 
is at the tip of the trowel in this photo.  It 
is on its last legs, so perhaps it was
foolish to plant new ones in the same spot.

And then I sprayed the 
balloon flower sprouts with
Liquid Fence to keep the #$&*#
deer and rabbits away.



I want to eventually plant more perennials, and my more-experienced-at-gardening friends have suggested:

  • butterfly weed 

  • bee balm 

  • anise hyssop 

  • yarrow

  • allium = ornamental onion


Here are my reasons – first, because all of them claim to be deer- and rabbit-resistant, grow in poor soil, and are heat tolerant.  I plan to place them next to the wall of the house that gets the sun all afternoon.  The downside is the interwebs say they are prone to powdery mildew, a fungal disease.  I don’t want to have to use chemicals. 


Here are more pros:


Butterfly weed:  I want to be nice to the butterflies.  As Ron Weasley said, “Why couldn't it have been 'follow the butterflies'?”


Bee Balm:  It is fun to say.  And I want to be nice to the bees.  As long as they keep their distance and don’t build homes in the walls of the house.


Anise hyssop: Hyssop is biblical.  “Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.”  (Psalm 51:7)  Never mind that Penn State Extension says that anise hyssop (Agastache foeniculum) is not bona fide hyssop (Hyssopus officinalis). 


YarrowI would plant this for the interesting foliage, although the flowers online look charming too.  


AlliumOrnamental Onion is fun to say.  The flowers look like pompoms.




And I am also thinking of Black-eyed Susans because I have always loved them.  


And Bleeding Hearts, because we have had two that came up every spring since we moved to this house, but I think the weeds have finally choked them out.  And I’m hoping they will grow in mostly shade.  I would have bought some on Sunday but the garden store had none in stock.


Do you have a garden?  What are you planting this season?  Do you have any experience with these perennials?


Thursday, April 9, 2026

Slumber Soft Moon Blanket

Moon oversees the football field
October 2015


The astronauts on the Integrity spacecraft are full of wisdom.  More than once they have recognized the fragility of Earth and of human life.  I feel gratitude for the technology that makes it possible for us to see a fraction of what they have seen, and to hear their thoughts as they pilot past the moon.  There have been several mentions of joy.  And togetherness.  And common purpose.

My understanding is that this type of spacecraft is named “Orion” and this particular spacecraft is named “Integrity”. And “Artemis II” is the name of the entire mission.  That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.  


I need there to be some integrity in the universe.


By far the most stunning and emotional photo of the mission is this one.



Saturday April 4th.

CBS News journalist asks:  Do you have a message you'd like to share from space about Easter Sunday?


Astronaut Victor Glover: “You know, I don't have anything prepared. I'm glad you brought that up, though. I think these observances are important, as we are so far from earth and looking back at the beauty of creation. And I think for me one of the really important personal perspectives that I have up here is I can really see earth as one thing. And, you know, when I read the Bible and I look at all of the amazing things that were done for us who were created, you have this amazing place –  this spaceship – you guys are talking to us because we're in a spaceship really far from Earth.  But you're on a spaceship called Earth that was created to give us a place to live in the universe, in the cosmos. I think maybe the distance we are from you makes you think what we're doing is special, but we're the same distance from you.  And I'm trying to tell you, just trust me, you are special.  In all of this emptiness –  this is a whole bunch of nothing this thing we call the universe – you have this oasis, this beautiful place that we get to exist together. I think as we go into Easter Sunday thinking about all the cultures all around the world, whether you celebrate it or not, whether you believe in God or not, this is an opportunity for us to remember where we are, who we are, and that we are the same thing. And that we got to get through this together." 


Imagine that!  Victor Glover is one of only four humans making this extraordinary trip, further than any humans have traveled from our home planet, and he turns it around and says we earthbound humans are special.  


Wednesday April 8th

Astronaut Jeremy Hansen:  “The perspective I launched with was that we live on a fragile planet in the vacuum, in the void of space. We know this from science. We're very fortunate to live on planet Earth. And the other perspective that I've sort of learned from others through life is that our purpose on the planet as humans is to find joy, to find the joy, and lifting each other up, by creating solutions together instead of destroying, and when you see it from out here, it doesn't change it. It just absolutely reaffirms that. It's almost like seeing living proof of it.”



WE KNOW THIS FROM SCIENCE.  That was my awed thought when I saw the solar eclipse on Apr 8, 2024.  The scientists predicted this and it happened exactly as they said it would.  And we were all strangers together experiencing it.  Many types of scientists have worked so that all of us on Earth, strangers together, can see and hear these astronauts.

Cleveland, Ohio, April 8, 2024
pano, before the moment of totality.
Common Household family members at left

Cleveland, Ohio at the moment of totality.
Happened just like science said it would.



The Wall Street Journal reporter asked: How has this trip contributed to the broader Artemis program?


Astronaut Christina Koch:   “... part of our ethos as a crew and our values from the very beginning were that this is a relay race. In fact, we have batons that we bought to symbolize physically that we plan to hand them to the next crew, and every single thing that we do is with them in mind. …. We're always thinking from the perspective as:  what is the next crew going to think about this, how will this help them to succeed?  So, manual piloting the vehicle, making sure that the procedures and the processes for making everything work are all as they should be. Then there's the human side of it. How are our provisions? How are our food? How is the human system working in here?   ….. So both in the vehicle and all in the last three years, we've really just worked to make sure that they are set up for success. And that's all of the teams, not just the crew, but the flight control teams, the mission engineering rooms, the launch teams, everyone. …”


They trained for three years for this mission, which was not the end but the beginning.  They are thinking always of the future.  That's both wisdom and hope.

A journalist asked what it felt like for the 40 minutes when the spacecraft had no communication with earth.  On the far side of the moon.  


Astronaut Reid Wiseman: “... It is amazing to watch your home planet disappear behind the moon.   You could see the atmosphere. You could actually see the terrain in the moon projected across the earth as the earth was eclipsing behind the moon. It was really just an unbelievable sight and then it was gone. It was out of sight and we took a moment here. We had a lot of scientific work to do right there. That was probably the most critical lunar observation for our geology team. But the four of us took a moment. We shared maple cookies that Jeremy had brought and we took about three or four minutes just as a crew to really reflect on where we were and then it was right back into the science.”


Maple cookies on the far side of the moon!


I hope I will always remember the immense privilege I had, on April 8, 2024, to witness with my whole being the total eclipse of the sun, in Cleveland, Ohio.  Now I have seen, via the cameras on Integrity, a total solar eclipse FROM THE FAR SIDE OF THE MOON.  And Youngest Daughter pointed out that I have been alive for two moon missions – Apollo in 1969-1972.  






Thank you, Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and  Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen (Canadian), for bringing to us the sheer beauty of our Earth and our Moon, and the incomprehensibleness of space. 


Edited to add: In my view this mission is a triumph of DEI. Victor Glover is a Black man. Christina Koch is a white woman. Reid Wiseman is a single parent. I don't know if Jeremy Hansen belongs to an indigenous tribe but the internet tells me: "He commissioned an Indigenous-designed patch for his mission to honor Canadian Indigenous peoples." And every unique individual working on the mission on Earth. All of them capable human beings. Go stand in the corner, DEI haters.


I end with two poems by Older Daughter, written when she was around 4 to 6 years old.  


Slumber soft moon blanket

By Older Daughter


Slumber soft moon blanket!

Slumber soft moon blanket.

If I were to catch you

I would sing you my song.

Music is your night.

When I will hold you,

You will be my slumber.

Slumber soft moon blanket!

Slumber soft moon blanket.



The moon is a spy

By Older Daughter


The moon is a spy

With only one eye.

She peeks down at the world

To make sure it’s asleep

Then she dances around like a ballerina.

All night long

The moon sings a song.

When it’s time for the morning,

The sun says, “My turn!”



The spacecraft Integrity has brought us the comfort of our soft moon blanket. Our dancing, singing moon.



The Common Household Son, ~age 2,
photoshopped onto the moon.