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Life
We just arrived back home from a lovely weekend spent with our sons and one girlfriend at a rented lake house. This has become an annual tradition for us in the fall, one that we all enjoy. It was wonderfully relaxing, and the time spent together in such a beautiful place is always fun and comforting. We ate meals together, read books, enjoyed the stunning view, played games, talked, and laughed--lots of laughter! Our sons are now 26 and 30 and live busy lives of their own, and we are so grateful for this quiet time together and our shared family history.
My husband & I waiting for the "kids" to arrive Friday! |
Kayaking on a beautiful fall day |
Fall colors were past prime in northern NJ but still pretty |
Our son on a paddleboard & my husband kayaking |
Our son chilling on the paddleboard |
Perfect reading spot in the sunshine! |
Our family |
Sitting around the firepit |
Sunrise (which I rarely see but I woke too early!) |
View from my bedroom! |
Reading on the sunny dock |
We carved pumpkins Sunday! |
Gorgeous sunset from the upstairs balcony |
Cloudy this morning but still beautiful - hard to say goodbye! |
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Travel & Camping Vlog: Killens Pond State Park, DE - come along on our recent camping trip, with lots of peaceful nature videos and a peak into our new-to-us camper.
Friday Reads 10-25-24 & Some Halloween Fun - decorated & dressed up for Halloween, as I share some books I've recently enjoyed that fit the season.
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Most of our reading has been for the RIP (Readers Imbibing Peril) event.
I finished reading November Road by Lou Berney, a road trip thriller I gave my husband last year after reading great reviews from Stephen King and others (and it won multiple awards). In 1963, Frank Guidry works for a crime boss in New Orleans and feels good about the status he has achieved in the organization ... until he realizes the boss wants him dead. In Oklahoma, Charlotte makes a sudden decision after Sunday dinner with her in-laws and afterward, her husband once again makes an excuse to go to a bar. She quickly packs up herself and their two daughters, seven and eight years old, and heads west toward California. Eventually, Frank's path as he flees the assassin sent to kill him intersects with Charlotte and the girls. We also get the assassin's perspective. It's twisty and suspenseful but also features in-depth characters, great settings, a touch of romance, and even a sense of humor. The ending was just right, and I really enjoyed it!
I got a wonderful surprise in the mail last week that I wanted to read right away: Not Quite a Ghost by Anne Ursu, a middle-grade spooky thriller with a twist from a favorite author and a virtual friend for almost the last 20 years. The main character, 11-year-old Violet, is going through a lot of changes in her life. Her family has just moved out of their old too-small house into an older house that needs some work, and Violet ends up in the creepy, ugly attic bedroom. She's also starting middle school, where her closest friends suddenly seem to change and to want a bigger friend group. Then, in the first weeks of school, Violet gets sick ... and she doesn't get better. Sometimes she feels OK and tries to act normal, leading some friends to think she's faking, and other times, her body just won't work and she can't get out of bed. Spending a lot of time in the attic bedroom, Violet begins to see strange things in the weird wallpaper and suspect that she's not alone. She calls on a new friend, who's been researching ghosts, to help her, but is there anything they can do? I loved this spooky, suspenseful novel full of heart and humor so much that I'm going to break my new rule and write a full review of it, so look for that later this week!
I just finished listening to a classic mystery, Arsene Lupin versus Herlock Sholmes by Maurice Leblanc, first translated into English in 1910. Read that title closely because the first few times I saw it, my brain read what it thought it should be instead of what was written! My husband and I have watched the Lupin series on Netflix, so I knew who this classic French literature character was: a gentleman thief who constantly outwits law enforcement. Here, in a series of interrelated stories, he pulls off several heists and ends up going up against the famous English detective (the author must not have been allowed to use the real name but there is even a tongue-in-cheek reference to Arthur Conan Doyle here!). It's intriguing and clever, and I enjoyed listening to it.
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