Friday, October 31, 2025

Nonfiction November Week 1: My Year in Nonfiction (so far)


It's time for Nonfiction November! The link takes you to a blog post that explains what it's all about, who the hosts are, and the topics for each week.

Although I participate in Nonfiction November every year, it's been years since I had time to do the weekly posts, so I'll give it a try!

This week's topic is Your Year in Nonfiction:

 "Celebrate your year of nonfiction. What books have you read? What were your favorites? Have you had a favorite topic? Is there a topic you want to read about more? What are you hoping to get out of participating in Nonfiction November?"

This is pretty easy for me since I read most of my nonfiction for the year during November, when I devote the whole month to reading (and listening to) nonfiction. So, that's what I hope to get out of the event, as always!

But I did read a few nonfiction books earlier this year. According to my 2025 Reading Challenges page, I'm participating in the 2025 Nonfiction Reader Challenge hosted by Book'd Out and have so far read: 

  • Wintering by Katherine May
  • Claudette Colvin and Rosa Parks: Civil Rights Heroes by Tracey Baptiste and Shauna J. Grant
  • Between Two Kingdoms: A Memoir of a Life Interrupted by Suleika Jaouad 
  •  

    Yes, that's it! The first and third were both memoirs, dealing with mental and physical health. The second on that list is a middle-grade history book, in a series (History Comics) that is excellent. In past years, I enjoyed a couple of others in that series and another one on the history of our National Parks (all links go to my reviews).

    Of these, I enjoyed them all and tabbed SO many quotes from Wintering, but I think my favorite so far was Between Two Kingdoms because she so beautifully captured the experience of chronic illness and living in a world so different than what the rest of humanity is living. And bonus: the memoir includes a great road trip, too! It was outstanding on audio. 

    Do you read much nonfiction?

    What types of nonfiction do you enjoy?

    How many nonfiction books have you read so far this year?

      Let me know in the comments below!

    Monday, October 27, 2025

    It's Monday 10/27! What Are You Reading?


    Hosted by The Book Date

    Life

    I had a quiet week at home last week and am still struggling with a relapse of my chronic illness, though last week wasn't as bad as the previous month. The big news is that I've started a new, experimental treatment for my immune disorder that has given me hope of a better future for the first time in decades. When I talked to my ME/CFS specialist recently, she said that she and the other doctors (there are only about a dozen specialists in the US, but they all work cooperatively together) have been seeing good results from microdosing of the new GLP-1 weight loss medications. They have a strong anti-inflammatory effect and have been shown to help normalize immune function in those with immune disorders. So, I'm trying it!

    The medical field noticed that autoimmune patients taking GLP-1's sometimes saw huge improvements in their diseases, even if they didn't lose much weight. The microdosing reduces side effects (and I really don't want to lose any weight, since I lost about 25 pounds a couple of years ago due to treating thyroid dysfunction). The day after my first dose was the best I've felt in months, with no immune symptoms at all. This weekend (and today), I still had/have flu-like aches, but my energy has been good. I just took my 3rd dose this morning (and last week, I started on half a microdose!), so we'll see. I am feeling cautiously optimistic but am trying not to indulge too much in "what if" fantasies! After all, I've had this very limiting disease for almost 24 years now. We'll see ...

    Fall foliage is just about at its peak here in northern Delaware, so I've been enjoying the views from our windows and back deck and around our neighborhood. And I made a trip to Trader Joe's on Friday, for the first time in months, so that was exciting!

     

    From our back deck

    View from my bedroom window




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     On Video

     Perfection of Reading Booktube Tag - This was a unique, interesting tag with questions related to Buddhist virtues (the "six perfections") and how they might relate to books I have enjoyed. I found myself thinking of books that I don't often discuss on my channel, so this was a fun one!

    Chronic Illness Vlog: Seasonal Fall/Winter Relapse & Trying a New Treatment for ME/CFS and Long-COVID - If you're interested in more details about my current (and annual) relapse and the new treatment I am trying, you can check out this recent vlog I posted last week. 

    Friday Reads: Psychological Thriller, Paranormal Suspense & Ghost Stories! - My weekly reading update of what my family and I have been reading, including lots of spooky short stories!

    __________

     What We're Watching

     

    Tracker is back for its third season! My husband and I love this time of year when our favorite shows on network TV come back with new seasons. One of those is Tracker, starring Justin Hartley as Colter Shaw, a loner who travels across the nation to find missing people. This latest season kicks off with an episode that digs even deeper into Colter's own family history and difficult upbringing, all while Colter manages to find another missing person. We love this show for its mix of drama, suspense, intriguing cases, and travel across the U.S. You can read my review and watch a trailer for season 1 here.  

    __________

     What We're Reading

     I finished reading The Housemaid by Freida McFadden for my neighborhood book group last week. Millie has just gotten out of prison and is struggling to find a job, until wealthy Nina hires her as a live-in housekeeper. The tension is high from the first pages, since a prologue tells you there’s a dead body in the attic, and Nina treats Millie horribly from day one. It was a very propulsive story, and I’ve enjoyed it. But I predicted several of the biggest twists before they were revealed … and I never do that! My husband is the one who usually guesses what will happen (in books and movies, too - it’s annoying!), and I am normally taken completely by surprise by mystery, suspense, and thriller novels. At book group, several other people said they also knew what was coming, and some commented that the novel was poorly written. In all, our average rating was 6, with ratings varying from 2 to 10! We had a very wide range of opinions on this one. From my perspective, it's a fun, fast read but there are certainly better thrillers out there. 

     

    Now, I have moved onto an unusual pick for me, The Sirens by Emilia Hart. It has some fantasy elements, which aren't usually my thing, so I normally wouldn't have picked it up on my own. But, one of the booksellers at Northshire Books (hosts of Booktopia that I attend every year) raved about it at the event this year, other friends of mine from Booktopia enjoyed it, and then I received it in a book subscription box that my son sent me. I'm glad I gave it a try! In Australia in 2019, Lucy wakes up in her college dorm to find that she's in someone else's room, choking a fellow student, with no memory of how she got there. She's never sleepwalked before, but her older sister used to, so Lucy flees to where her sister, Jess, is now living. Jess isn't home, but Lucy goes into her place, an old rundown house on a cliff in a small seaside town that Lucy has heard of before, in the true crime podcasts she listens to. There's been a string of missing men in the town, going back decades. Besides the sleepwalking, Lucy has also begun to have vivid dreams, where she is a young girl named Mary, trapped in the hold of a ship with her sister, Eliza, and 80 other women convicts, being transported to Australia. The dreams continue and intensify, along with the nighttime rambles, as Lucy reads her sister's diary and learns stunning things she never knew. It's a complex story of these two pairs of sisters, separated by over 200 years, and so far, the fantasy elements are sort of paranormal, which I actually really like. I'm enjoying it so far, and it's a very compelling narrative that is keeping me engrossed.

     

    On audio, I'm listening to White Smoke by Tiffany D. Jackson, a YA novel that is perfect for spooky season, the R.I.P. event, and the Book Cougars podcast's year of reading ghost stories! Teen Marigold and her blended family have just moved from California to a large Midwestern city after her mother won an artist's residency grant. Their newly renovated house is in the middle of a street of empty, dilapidated houses. As Marigold, her younger brother Sam, and their bratty step-sister Piper try to settle into their new home, strange things begin to happen. Doors and cupboards open by themselves, things go missing, footsteps and other strange sounds can be heard, and more. Even some of the construction workers refuse to enter their house! Marigold suffers from severe anxiety, and her new surroundings aren't helping. This novel combines real-life issues like mental health, gentrification, drug use, and class issues with spooky haunted house elements. I'm loving it so far!

     

    My husband, Ken, is now reading Run by Blake Crouch, another book I gave him for his birthday by one of our favorite authors. We both love Crouch's more recent sci fi thrillers, including Dark Matter (my favorite!), Recursion, and Upgrade, so we've been reading some of his earlier novels. Run was an early novel that he self-published when he wasn't happy with how his novels were doing with traditional publishing, and it renewed his fledgling writing career. It's an apocalyptic thriller about a man and his family on the run. Ken says it is very gripping and hard to put down!

     

    Our son, 31, finished reading A Crown for Cold Silver by Alex Marshall, a fantasy novel. He said last weekend that he hasn't had a chance to start a new book. I'm sure he's started one by now, but I haven't had a chance to catch up with him. I'll have an update by next week!

     __________

    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, October 20, 2025

    It’s Monday 10/20! What Are You Reading?

    Hosted by The Book Date

    Life

    I spent much of last week still on the couch, resting through my chronic illness relapse. That paid off, and my symptoms weren’t quite as bad for the weekend.

    It was our annual fall lake house weekend with our sons and their girlfriends (though just one could make it this time). We look forward to this quiet, relaxing time together, just us, every year.

    I rented a house on Lake Hopatcong in New Jersey, and it was a beautiful home with fantastic outdoor spaces.

     

    Great views from my bedroom!

    We got out on the water for a bit but mostly just relaxed, played games, shared meals, had campfires, and talked and laughed together. I love this time together and already miss everyone (we just got home).

     

    There was still a lot of green in the trees, but we did see some pretty fall colors there:

     

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     On Video
     
     Delta Lake State Park, NY: Camping & Kayaking on Beautiful Fall Days - The last of my 3 short travel vlogs from our recent trip to New York State
     
    Weekly Reading Update: Spooky & Suspenseful Fall Books! - a quick update before we left for the weekend, on the books we've been reading, as well as three collections of short stories I'm reading.

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     What We're Reading
     
     
    I finished The Splinter Effect by Andrew Ludington, a thriller I gave my husband for Father's Day that he recently enjoyed. It's about a time-traveling archeologist named Rabbit Ward who goes back in time to save valuable artifacts that would otherwise be lost. As the novel opens, Rabbit is at the Library of Alexandria during the Roman invasion of Egypt and the fire that devastated much of the library. His mission is to save six scrolls containing plays by Sophocles that were destroyed that day. A female thief (also a time traveler) who has been foiling his missions lately ends up with three of the plays. Aside from these recent failures, Rabbit is haunted by the biggest mistake of his career: twenty years ago, he lost the menorah of the Second Temple ... and his young mentee. He manages to fund a trip to 535 Constantinople to try to retrieve the menorah, but it's going to be his most challenging assignment yet. I expected fast-paced thriller action and my favorite kind of time-travel twistiness (and it has all that!), but what surprised me about this novel is the fascinating historical detail. I loved it, though I kept setting my book aside to look up pictures and details on my iPad!  

     

    I’ve almost finished reading The Housemaid by Freida McFadden for my neighborhood book group this week. I’ve been hearing so much about this thriller for years, so I’m glad to finally be reading it. Millie has just gotten out of prison and is struggling to find a job, until wealthy Nina hires her as a live-in housekeeper. The tension is high from the first pages, since a prologue tells you there’s a dead body in the attic, and Nina treats Millie horribly from day one. It’s been a very propulsive story, and I’ve enjoyed it. But I predicted several of the biggest twists before they were revealed … and I never do that! My husband is the one who usually guesses what will happen (in books and movies, too - it’s annoying!), and I am normally taken completely by surprise by mystery, suspense, and thriller novels. It was fun this weekend because my son’s girlfriend already read it, so I could talk to her about it.

     

    On audio, I finished listening to a fabulous YA novel, Best of All Worlds by Kenneth Oppel. When my son was in middle-school, he and I enjoyed Oppel's novels like Silverwing and its sequels and Airborn (winner of the Printz Honor in 2005). This new novel is truly unique, a survival thriller with some surprising twists. Thirteen-year-old Xavier reluctantly accompanies his dad and his dad's new wife, Nia, to the family cabin at the lake for a weekend, leaving his mother and older brother behind. The three of them wake up the next morning at the cabin to find that the lake is gone, and the cabin has somehow been transported someplace entirely different, seemingly in the middle of a small farm. The cabin hasn't changed, but everything around them has, and there are no roads or other people. Exploring over the next few days shows they are in a dome with no way out. Oh, and Nia is very pregnant. As the family settles into their new life and learns how to survive, they wonder where they are and who is responsible for putting them there. This novel is so compelling that I listened to it in record time, plugging in my earbuds  every spare moment! Mysterious, suspenseful, and twisty with lots of surprises.

     

    My husband, Ken, is now reading The Spider by Lars Kepler, a husband and wife team (which I didn't realize before), that I gave him for Father's Day. It's the 9th book in their Detective Joona Linna series (oops, sorry honey, I didn't realize that!). In this Swedish thriller, the detective is after a serial killer. I'd heard good things about the author(s), so I thought he'd like it.

     

    Our son, 31, finished reading A Crown for Cold Silver by Alex Marshall, a fantasy novel. He said this weekend that he hasn't had a chance to start a new book, and he forgot to bring one with him. Instead, he was enjoying a Age of Empires game on his Switch during quiet moments this weekend. 

     __________

    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?