Monday, August 25, 2025

It's Monday 8/25! What Are You Reading?

Hosted by The Book Date

Life 

Wow, how is it the end of August already? Coming home after almost six weeks on the road has felt like a kind of time warp! I'm very glad to have missed the extreme heat and humidity here for most of the summer (and we lucked out with an unusually cool period the past week). It was so lovely up north, in Montana, Canada, North Dakota, Wisconsin, and Michigan's Upper Peninsula, with highs usually in the 70's and beautifully cool nights.

But, we came home in mid-August, and our calendar still said June! Last week was mostly a hectic catch-up week: finishing the laundry, cleaning, repairing & cleaning the camper, replacing our cracked windshield (a victim of the 6000-mile road trip), catching up on my YouTube channel, and starting to reweed the garden beds that I left beautifully weeded and mulched!


It was also moving week for our son and his girlfriend, who have a new townhouse, which is closer to us than their old apartment. They invited us for dinner last night, and we had a wonderful time: delicious food, a beautiful new home, and great company!

 



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 On Video

 I added 2 last videos to my Montana/Canada Trip Playlist:

Montana Road Trip Days 30-33: Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, Wisconsin - Come along to this beautiful, unique place on Lake Superior. I included some footage of us kayaking through sea caves and on a boat tour at sunset. Stunning scenery!

Montana Road Trip, Days 34-37: Michigan's Upper Peninsula, Cleveland, and Home! - We enjoyed our last days on the road in the gorgeous UP of Michigan, staying overnight lakeside, with a stop in Cleveland to visit old friends and see the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. 


 Friday Reads 8-22-25: Reading for #BigBookSummer and YA'ugust - We're enjoying some great novels!

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 What We're Watching 

 

We finished watching Grosse Pointe Garden Society, and we really enjoyed this dark comedy murder mystery. It's got a great ensemble cast, about a garden club in a wealthy suburb where four of the members get entangled in a grisly murder. In the very first episode, you see the four friends burying someone wrapped in a blanket at the big end-of-season gala, but you don't know who it is or exactly what happened. The show moves back and forth between the past year and the present day, gradually filling in the gaps, not only about the crime but also about each of the main characters and all that leads up to the big night. There are plenty of red herrings and lots of suspense, but also great character development, and we enjoyed it.

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 What We're Reading

  Remember that Big Book Summer ends on September 1! If you're participating, you can (if you want to) update what Big Books you read in our Goodreads or Storygraph groups or on your blog or YouTube channel. 

 I am loving The Love Songs of WEB Du Bois by HonorĂ©e Fanonne Jeffers, a book I have wanted to read since its release in 2021. In fact, it was THE hot book of Big Book Summer a few years ago. At 816 pages, it definitely qualifies! It's my neighborhood book group's pick for our September book. It's a complex retracing of a woman's (Ailey Pearl Garfield) heritage and ancestors, starting with a Creek woman in the 1600's, a mixed-race Black man, and a Scottish immigrant in what will become Georgia, eventually mixing in other Native Americans, a girl stolen from Ghana and sold into slavery, and many others. There are threads of the story that started in the 1600's and in the 1970's that are each moving forward and gradually filling in the blanks. The writing is beautiful (Jeffers is a poet), and the characters are vivid and engaging. It's absolutely compelling and immersive; I've been staying up much too late each night reading! I'm pretty certain I won't finish it by September 1, to count for Big Book Summer, but I'm glad to finally be reading this highly acclaimed novel.

 

 On audio, I finally finished The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky! I started it at the beginning of June, though I didn't have time to listen much on our trip. It's a character study of three Russian brothers and their scoundrel father who abandoned them as children. The novel includes a murder mystery and courtroom drama, though the murder doesn't occur until about 2/3 of the way through, so it's a long set-up. Readers know that the accused brother did not actually kill their father but not who the real killer is. It's very long, very dense, and has lots of tangents (to build the characters), but I'm glad to have finally read a Dostoevsky novel. 

 

After finishing that, I jumped into another very BIG book on audio, The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese. This is another highly acclaimed novel that was a very popular Big Book Summer pick a few years ago. I enjoyed his Cutting for Stone. This novel is set mostly in India and follows multiple characters, beginning in 1900. It's a complex story of places and times and people, following one Indian family, a Scottish doctor in India, and other characters. Interestingly (and probably because I started them within days of each other), I am seeing parallels to  The Love Songs of WEB Du Bois, tracing family history, going back more than a century, addressing issues like slavery and the caste system, and with deep emotional depth and character development. I sometimes struggle with keeping track of the Indian names on audio, but I am fully engrossed in the story and enjoying it.

 

My husband finished The Road to Roswell by Connie Willis (and enjoyed it) and is now reading The Splinter Effect by Andrew Ludington, a book I gave him for Father's Day. I chose this time travel thriller based solely on the shelf tag and recommendation of a Northshire Bookstore bookseller while I was at Booktopia in May. It's about an archeologist who time travels in order to study various places and buildings when they were built and/or used. He lost both an artifact and his mentee in time, and the story revolves around that. It sounds great to me, and I'm sure I will be reading it myself!

 

Our son, 31, finished rereading the Night Angel trilogy by Brent Weeks, an old favorite of his, in preparation for the latest book. He is now reading the surprise 4th book (it was supposed to be a trilogy), Night Angel Nemesis 

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What Are You Reading Monday is hosted by Kathryn at Book Date, so head over and check out her blog and join the Monday fun! You can also participate in a kid/teen/YA version hosted by Unleashing Readers.

You can follow me on:
 

  What are you and your family reading this week?    

Monday, August 18, 2025

It's Monday 8/18! What Are You Reading?

Hosted by The Book Date

Life 

I'm Back! 

After 37 days on the road with our camper, 6000+ miles, 13 U.S. states and 2 Canadian provinces, 7 national park properties (U.S. and Canada), and many state parks, we returned home last Wednesday night.

It was an amazing trip, and we saw and experienced so many incredible places. The grandeur and natural beauty were quite literally breathtaking and filled us with awe. We enjoyed towering mountains, thick forests, peaceful lakes and waterfront campsites, thundering rivers and waterfalls, gorgeous rock formations, and so much wildlife! 

I posted a few select photos in some Monday posts here (the first few days of the trip, the next few weeks, and the final week). After that post last week, we stayed with old friends (almost 40 years of friendship) in Cleveland for a couple of nights. It was wonderful to see them again, and while my husband finally got to golf, my friend and I and her daughter went to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. It was wonderful to see them again, reconnect, catch-up, reminisce, and laugh together! There's nothing like good friends and shared history.


 

The best way to see highlights of our trip is through the videos on my YouTube channel, both Shorts (1-3 minutes) and longer vlogs. It’s impossible to capture the stunning beauty and grandeur of these unique places in photos, but videos do a better job. You get a better idea of the stunning beauty we saw (and get to see some bears and other wildlife up close). Here the full playlist of videos from our trip, including both vlogs and shorts, so you can choose which places you'd like to see more of.


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 On Video

Besides all the travel videos, I got back in the swing of things with a catch-up reading video last week - 

Currently Reading: July Reading Wrap-Up & Friday Reads: Includes a quick recap of what we read while we were away, what my husband and I are currently reading and listening to, and updates on Big Book Summer, YA'ugust, and Summer Book Bingo.

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 What We're Watching 

 

Nobody - After lots of exhausting unpacking and laundry in horrible heat (why is it so hot and humid here?!), my husband and I relaxed Saturday evening with a movie. We'd been seeing interviews with Bob Odenkirk about his new action movie, Nobody 2, and since we never saw the first one, we decided to catch up. He plays an average guy, in a boring job, stuck in a routine (aka rut) who has a wife and two kids. There are hints that he maybe has a secret past. When his house gets robbed and he takes revenge, the bad guys (some REALLY bad guys) come after his family, and we find out who he really is/was. My husband described it as John Wick meets Home Alone, and that's a pretty apt description! I didn't watch the movie when it first came out because I thought it looked too violent for my taste. And it is ... though it was also pretty entertaining, since it has a sense of humor, and we both like Odenkirk.  

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 What We're Reading

  Remember that Big Book Summer runs until September 1, so you can still squeeze in a 400+ page book to join the fun! Details at the link. 

 

I finished reading Thunderhead by Neal Schusterman, book 2 in his Arc of a Scythe trilogy, for both Big Book Summer and YA'ugust (an event hosted on Booktube that anyone can join). He's a favorite author in our family. This is an outstanding dystopian series, set over 200 years in the future, where death has been eradicated with technology. Some people are trained as scythes, to kill others in a humane way to control population growth, according to old "mortal time" actuarial data. The AI that rules this world is known as the Thunderhead. In the first book, Scythe (my review at the link), two sixteen-year-olds named Citra and Rowan are chosen to be scythe apprentices and trained. Here, corruption among the scythes has worsened, and Citra and Rowan each have very different approaches to addressing it. While the Thunderhead is unable to interfere with scythes in any way, it has its own plan to curb the growing corruption and save humankind. It's another excellent, unique, and suspenseful novel, though the parallels to our own world are disturbing (as the best dystopian works are). I talk more about the novel in this 3-minute video.

 

Now, I have started reading The Love Songs of WEB Du Bois by HonorĂ©e Fanonne Jeffers, a book I have wanted to read since its release in 2021. In fact, it was THE hot book of Big Book Summer a few years ago. At 816 pages, it definitely qualifies! It's my neighborhood book group's pick for our September book. It's excellent so far, a complex retracing of a woman's heritage and ancestors, starting with a Creek woman in the 1600's, a mixed-race Black man, and a Scottish immigrant in what will become Georgia. So far, there are threads of the story that started in the 1600's and in the 1970's that are each moving forward and gradually filling in the blanks. The writing is beautiful (Jeffers is a poet), and the characters are vivid and engaging. I'm enjoying it so far. I'm pretty certain I won't finish it by September 1, to count for Big Book Summer, but I'm glad to finally be reading this highly acclaimed novel.

 

 My husband is almost finished with The Road to Roswell by Connie Willis, a book I enjoyed back in May. It's about a young woman named Francie who is kidnapped by an alien (in a car, not a spaceship), while in Roswell, NM, for the alien-themed wedding of her college roommate. It is somewhat farcical but also has plenty of heart and a lot of suspense. It's just a fun read! Here's my 2-minute review.

 

On audio, I am still listening to The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky! I started it at the beginning of June, and I am (finally) up to the epilogue. It's essentially a murder mystery and courtroom drama (though the murder doesn't occur until about 2/3 of the way through, so it's a long set-up). Readers know that the accused brother did not actually kill their father but not who the real killer is. I, unfortunately, saw a spoiler at the very beginning while trying to get the characters' names straight, though I'm still curious to see how that information will be revealed to the reader. It's very long, very dense, and has lots of tangents (to build the characters), but I'm glad to have finally read a Dostoevsky novel. I would have finished it a month ago if not for our trip, when I didn't have any audio time to myself.

 

My husband and I finished our trip but not (yet) our last audio, 61 Hours by Lee Child, one of the older novels in the Jack Reacher series. My husband has read the whole series but didn't remember the details. I can see why he likes this series: it has a sort of subtle, snarky sense of humor that makes it very entertaining. Plus, I like the main character from watching the Reacher TV series. Believe it or not, we leave again in a week and a half, for a trip to North Carolina for a family event, so we'll finish it then.

 

We talked to our son this weekend on his 31st birthday (how is that possible??). He has finally finished rereading the Night Angel trilogy by Brent Weeks, an old favorite of his, in preparation for the latest book. He finished rereading book 1, The Way of Shadows; book 2, The Shadow's Way; and finally, book 3, Beyond the Shadows. He is now ready to read the surprise 4th book (it was supposed to be a trilogy), Night Angel Nemesis 

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What Are You Reading Monday is hosted by Kathryn at Book Date, so head over and check out her blog and join the Monday fun! You can also participate in a kid/teen/YA version hosted by Unleashing Readers.

You can follow me on:
 

  What are you and your family reading this week?