Thursday, April 30, 2026
April 2026 Cookbook Reviews
April 2026 Reviews
I was really impressed with how Dalton followed her instincts with the hare since there is very little information about raising or caring for a wild hare. And because of her time with the hare, she also starts to be more aware of her surroundings - other wild animals, other hares, all the inherent dangers of the wild, and how she can make her land more wildlife friendly. She also talks about the damage of industrial agriculture and how much of the English countryside has changed, eliminating so much of the areas wildlife need to survive.
This book is beautifully written and I was so jealous of this amazing experience Dalton had with her hare. It was unique in that the hare was never a pet - never even named. But still they so obviously bonded. What an amazing experience. I'm grateful she wrote this book to share her experience with the rest of us. Highly recommend this one!
Some quotes I liked:
"On average, only a quarter of all leverets reach adulthood, and sometimes, many fewer. One study of hares found, in a single breeding season, a 50 per cent mortality rate among leverets in their first twenty-eight days. It identified leveret mortality related to farming activity as the single greatest reason for the precipitous fall in the brown hare population. For all these reasons, it is considered rare for a hare to live more than three or four years in the wild, and a hare's lifespan is often no longer than a year, a fate it was painful to imagine for the leveret beside me." (p. 59)
"I was moved by the leveret's dignity, the sense of well-being and calm it spread, and the simplicity of its life. The life of a hare at ease is one of basking, rolling, resting, drowsing and dreaming, and living in the moment. A hare leaves behind it nothing more than a patch of flattened grass, little larger than a human footprint, soon lifted by the wind and erased altogether. The leveret's calm and orderly existence challenged my priorities and woke up my senses." (p. 130)
"Since that first day when I found her it has felt as if a spell was cast over this corner of the earth, and me within it. I have stepped out of my usual life and had the privilege of an experience out of the ordinary. Had it not been for the unique circumstances of the pandemic, I would never have come across the hare, and my life would have continued along its familiar grooves. How glad I am now that I did not leave for the city the moment it became possible. I am grateful for every additional day that I gazed out of the window. If I had gone, I would not have seen the leverets born. I would not have built the relationship I formed around the hare, with other people and with this patch of land, and felt this unexpected, uncomplicated joy, and learnt not to tamp down the emotions it generates in me." (p. 272)
Some quotes I liked:
"...unlike nearly every other mammal on Earth, killer whale females outlive menopause, which means old granny orcas are still out there swimming around well past their ability to reproduce. And scientists hypothesize that this strategy has evolved to allow orca societies, which are female-led, to benefit from all the knowledge accumulated by the older generation. Literally, orca grandchildren have a better chance of surviving to adulthood when their pod still has its grandma." (p. 95)
"...the axolotl is unlike most other creatures on this planet, in that these giant salamanders possess the nearly magical power of regeneration. Gills, feet, legs, tails, hearts, even pieces of the axolotl's own spinal cord and brain - you name it, and the axo can rebuild it." (p. 179)
I was surprised by the lifespans of several animals in the book:
Manatees - 60 years
California Condor - 60 years
American Alligator - 80 years
Hellbender - 25 years
Alligator Gar - 100 years
Freshwater Mussels - 150 years
Note: there is an Unsolved Mysteries episode about the Bradford Bishop murders - story covered on p. 280
I also did not know that south Florida (including the Everglades) is the only place in the world where both alligators and crocodiles can be found together. (p. 261)
Some quotes I liked:
"It may seem weird that fully grown adults would continue to love games that are overtly and unashamedly family-friendly, but for some Nintendo fans that's the point: Nintendo represents an uncomplicatedly fun approach to video games, a bridge back to the simple joy and excitement of childhood play in a world that's increasingly pressured and fraught." (p. 5)
"There's another reason why Metroid is a historically significant part of Nintendo's canon. Players who completed the first Metroid game in 1986 were greeted with a surprise after the end credits, when the orange-suited space warrior they've been controlling throughout removes her helmet to reveal a head of long, blonde hair. Samus Aran was one of the first-ever female video game protagonists, at a time when female characters in video games - if they appeared at all - were usually either damsels in need to rescue or, later, sex objects designed primarily for the assumed male gaze of the player." (p. 103)
"I have always thought of Nintendo as an entertainment company rather than a tech company, but in reality, like all video game developers, it is both. But as a tech company, Nintendo is even more of a maverick. If the mantra of Silicon Valley has been to move fast and break things, Nintendo behaves in almost the opposite way. It moves slowly and takes care to preserve things: its own history and, most important, its sense of fun." (p. 252-53)
Some quotes I liked:
"Holding up miraculous transformation stories as if they are formulas turns the burden for the marriage on its head. While one spouse may be doing something to destroy the very fabric of the marriage, it now becomes the fault of the spouse who wants the marriage to work because if they just prayed harder, forgave more, or had more sex, the supposedly things would change. Tremendous destruction has been wrought by this faulty theology based on a faulty reading of Scripture that values the institution of marriage over the people within that marriage." (p. 39)
"Marriage doesn't need to be a huge slog you endure until one of you dies. If you put in the work and build on solid relationship principles, like the ones we've shared here, marriage can and should be what makes life easier to handle because there are two of you sharing the load. Instead of saying, 'Marriage is hard,' we'd phrase it as 'Life is hard. But marriage is meant to make it easier!'" (p. 215)
Some quotes I liked:
"In addition to designing memorable covers, typography, and interior layouts, he was instrumental in launching the careers of many emerging artists and designers, including the celebrated picture book artist Eric Carle, who considered him a mentor and lifelong friend." (p. 23)
"After decades of satisfying clients' and employers' demands, he longed to reclaim the sense of wonder that had made him fall in love with art as a child. Surprisingly, considering how it all turned out, making art for children was not, at the outset, on the menu of this new creative adventure; but the 'little miracle' changed that. From 1959 to 1994, Lionni published a new picture book nearly every year; in some years, he published two." (p. 91)
[In 1997] "Vivian G. Paley was a kindergarten teacher nearing retirement at the University of Chicago's progressive Laboratory Schools when it occurred to her to design and implement an immersive Leo Lionni curriculum for her final group of five-year-olds. Throughout their year of play and study together, Paley and the children not only shared Lionni's books in the traditional, story-hour way but also made drawings, painted posters, mounted plays, and composed new stories inspired by the books, and engaged in free-flowing, often surprisingly sophisticated discussions about the questions the books raised for them. Upon her retirement, Paley described all this in a memoir, The Girl with the Brown Crayon." (p. 124)
Thursday, April 2, 2026
March 2026 Reviews
I'm really curious what David's in-laws and wife think of this book. This doesn't seem like it will help his relationship with Matt much. I wish there had been a few pictures included of some of the breaks they surfed. David is a good writer and funny but he came across very condescending and smug.
The writing is sparse, but Mandel does a great job of conveying a lot with a few words. The main theme I noticed through the writing is the morality or lack thereof in relation to time travel and technology. Gaspery and his sister Zoey are very interesting characters and I do wish there had been more of Zoey's back story included. This book reminded me of Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro in regard to the issues explored around technology and the ramifications on humans. This was an interesting book but left a lot of unanswered questions. I haven't read any of her previous books so I don't have anything to compare to. I didn't love this one, but it was interesting enough that I would consider reading another one of her books in the future.
Some quotes I liked:
[From his book about Typhoid Mary] "I'm a chef, and what interests me is the story of a proud cook - a reasonably capable one by all accounts - who at the outset, at least, found herself utterly screwed by forces she neither understood nor had the ability to control. I'm interested in a tormented loner, a woman in a male world, in hostile territory, frequently on the run. And I'm interested in denial - the ways that Mary, and many of us, find to avoid the obvious, the lies we tell ourselves to get through the day, the things we do and say so that we can go on, drag our aching carcasses out of bed each day, climb into our clothes, and once again set out for work, often in kitchens where the smell, the surroundings, the ruling regime oppress us." (p. 248)
"Even more despised than the Brunch People are the vegetarians. Serious cooks regard these members of the dining public - and their Hezbollah-like splinter faction, the vegans - as enemies of everything that's good and decent in the human spirit. To live life without veal or chicken stock, fish cheeks, sausages, cheese, or organ meats is treasonous." (p. 469)
This book started off VERY slow. If not for my book club I would have put it down after the first section. It really didn't get very interesting until about halfway through. Elaheh's mother was AWFUL but toward the end she and Elaheh have a more honest conversation about the past and she redeems herself a little. I loved Homa, but in the end her character seemed more far-fetched. Overall, it was good once you got past the slow, superficial sections. I know my book club will LOVE this one.
This book started out SO SLOW. I honestly skimmed the first 1/3 before it started getting better. Patchett's writing is great but the storyline didn't have much going on for a long time. It did get better and Patchett does a great job of Lara's character and how she tells and relives her story and time with Peter Duke. I especially liked how the book ended (not giving anything away).
February 2026 Cookbook Reviews
February 2026 Reviews
Some particularly awful quotes:
[Jeanine Rowder's diabolical plot "Imagine having an endless reservoir of magic at the govenment's command. Why continue to fight the good fight when we can just as easily place our will upon the world with a gentle hand and a well-placed threat to the Devil himself? Never again will we be questioned for our actions, not when every magical being is under government control through the Antichrist." (p. 284) [Honestly, this doesn't seem that far off from what's currently happening with US government, I wouldn't be surprised if some of these people have sold their souls to the Devil.]
[Linus] "'I think that's quite enough. I can't believe I'm going to say this, but we might need to consider removing all Bibles from the island. Too many things in its pages children should not have access to.' Lucy's eyes filled with red as he pulled his head away. 'We could have a good old-fashioned book burning.' 'Something to consider,' Linus agreed." (p. 349)
Some of my favorite quotes:
"The South, like chiggers and divinity candy, is everlasting. It will always be, though it will not always be as we remember...Preachers who thrust ragged Bibles at bare rafters now shout politics from the pulpit. Civility, towards even those with whom we do not agree, is an heirloom. Quilts, the kind made for warmth instead of cash, are a thing of antiquity, their patterns a mystery slowly fading in an old woman's eyes. Young men can play 5,000 video games but cannot sharpen a pocket knife...Then I see my brother Mark in his garden, and know that not everything must fade away." (p. 22-23)
"I try not to repeat Southern cliches. No one, for instance, should eat a hamburger in a bun made from Krispy Kreme Doughnuts. But grease is good. It has shortened many lives, probably my own, but is a life of rice cakes really life, or just passing time?" (p. 43)
"I know, nostalgia is a veil, a piece of colored glass. I know. But I had a fried grouper sandwich and onion rings for breakfast. Other people were staring at shredded wheat, and hoping to live forever. But I bet forever is a long time with shredded wheat." (p. 98)
"You see, I have always been just a little ashamed of being a writer. To my people, it is not serious work, not something a real man would do. On airplanes, it seemed I always sat next to an oil driller, or a welder on the pipeline. When I told them I was a writer, they looked at me like I cut out paper dolls for a living." (p. 114)
"I knew, the day I saw my first pair of skinny jeans on a man, that I no longer have any place in this world, and should probably just go live by myself in a hole in the ground." (p. 124)
"I know that the world of reading has forever changed, that, in this cold winter, many people who love a good book will embrace one that runs on batteries. I know that many of you woke up Christmas morning to find that Santa graced your house with an iPad, or a Kindle, or a Nook or some other plastic thing that will hold a whole library on a doodad the size of a guitar pick. Some of you may be reading one of my books or stories on one today, which is, of course, perfectly all right, and even a sign of high intelligence. Someday, I may have to read The Grapes of Wrath on the side of a toaster myself. I am hopeful when young people say, 'I read you on the Kindle,' because it means they are at least reading, and reading me, which means my writing life is somehow welcome in whatever frightening future awaits." (p. 168-169)
The article "Long Time Coming" on pages 238 - 247 about the first African-American head football coach in the Southeastern Conference at Mississippi State was amazing and probably the best chapter/story in this whole book.
Thursday, February 19, 2026
January 2026 Cookbook Reviews
January 2026 Reviews
Every page of this book is quoteable, but here a few that stood out even more:
"Most people think ants are strong for their size, but earthworms are arguably the ultimate strength creature. Weighing only 1/30th of an ounce, they routinely move 2 ounce stones, equivalent of a 150-pound person moving a 9,000 pound stone." (p. 57)
"The point here is to enjoy your homestead more than seeing it as something to conquer in a week. Emotional energy drives physical energy, and if we're constantly depressed because we feel like our pace is not fast enough, we'll miss the greatest joy of homesteading, which is seeing progress toward unorthodoxy. The homestead tribe is one that bucks every accepted norm in society." (p. 157-158) [This is my all time favorite Joel Salatin quote - are you progressing toward unorthodoxy?]
"When our minds become preoccupied with societal disturbance and worry, a walk amidst our handiwork is a balm for the soul. A change here, a new activity there, and suddenly the landscape responds with a tree, a mushroom, a luxuriant patch of red clover. The landscape carries on." (p. 230)
I had never heard of this book but it was listed in a recent book I read, World of Wonders that compiled 80 children's books that have had a lasting impact on readers. The Mouse and His Child was written in 1967 and is an odd book. It almost reminded me of a combination of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and The Velveteen Rabbit but with tin toys and animals living in and around a dump. I'm not sure what children would make of this one. There are some interesting storylines and the hope the Mouse Child has and Manny Rat's turn from evil to good are the two best parts for me. It is an odd book but I am glad that I read it.
Some quotes I liked:
"The animals and birds paid their acorns, beechnuts, seeds, and grubs, along with turnips and dead beetles saved for the occasion, and were ushered by the starlings to their places, where they combined sniffs, growls, whines, and twitters in the general murmur of an audience waiting for an entertainment to begin." (p. 82)
[Inside Muskrat's den] "A little group of firefly students had lit up when the muskrat's familiar step was heard in the tunnel, and now they said in unison, 'Good morning, sir.' Devoted followers who had outstayed the summer, they lived in a glass jar in a corner, and their dormitory cast its pale and blinking glow on the clutter all around them." (p. 108)
"The elephant was completely overwhelmed. Until now she had thought only of herself and the injustice done her; the child and the father had been nothing to her. But now into her one glass eye there rushed a picture in its wholeness of the foggy day, the steaming snow, the black trees, the tired father, the tiny, lost, and hopeful child. A world of love and pain was printed on her vision, never to be gone again." (p. 127-128)
"The house's character had changed much with the fire that had wrecked it and the several stages of reconstruction that renewed it; phoenixlike, the place seemed reborn of itself." (p. 211)
I had never heard of this book but it was listed in a recent book I read, World of Wonders that compiled 80 children's books that have had a lasting impact on readers. I had also never seen a wordless graphic novel before. I love wordless picture books, but this is my first wordless graphic novel. I can definitely see why this was included in World of Wonders.
The book was interesting, particularly the sections that talked about the Roman culture of that day. I do agree with some of the reviews I read that this does read almost like a thesis and is very scholarly and not a super easy read especially if you're not somewhat versed on this subject and the Bible overall. I'm a staunch egalitarian and to me it's obvious in how Jesus interacted with women (and the fact that He DID interact with women at all) that He doesn't view women as lesser or beneath men. And again, the fact that women are mentioned at all in the New Testament shows that they were involved and in more than just cooking and childcare. Gupta brings up some good points and it's definitely worth thinking about for any Christian how much interpretation there is when translating the Bible into English or other languages from the original. Overall, I liked the book but I think it probably has a more narrow audience.
Some quotes I liked:
"Sometimes the question is raised whether God used Deborah only because there were no men available, or because Barak had weak faith. But if we look at the judges as a whole, especially Gideon and Samson, it is clear that they were not chosen for their virtue or strong faith." (p. 14)
"Another important conversation Jesus has with a woman happens at the Sycharian well in Samaria. In popular modern reflections on this story, this unnamed Samaritan woman is often depicted as a sexually immoral person that Jesus calls out. But that is read into the text; nothing like that is ever stated in John...They get into the topic of her family life. She has had five husbands and now does not live with a husband. In our modern minds, we quickly jump to her having a string of divorces and is now shacking up with yet another man. But another scenario is possible, even more probable. Her husbands have died, not uncommon in a world with high mortality, and she very well could be living with her brother or another male relative. In that case, Jesus was not calling her out on her promiscuity; he was attentive to her hard life." (p. 59-60)
Saturday, February 14, 2026
2025 Year of Reading
In 2025 I read 70 books (goal was 75 so I got close) and 32 cookbooks. Here are my Top 10, Top 5 Cookbooks, and Worst 5:
Top 10 Books Read in 2025
When Southern Women Cook by America's Test Kitchen
Becoming the Pastor's Wife by Beth Allison Barr
A Life in the Garden by Barbara Damrosch
Dodge County, Incorporated by Sonja Trom Eayrs
Sociopath by Patric Gagne
Seeking Shelter by Jeff Hobbs
The Secret History of the Rape Kit by Pagan Kennedy
Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver
We All Live Here by Jojo Moyes
The Owl Handbook by John Sheway
Top 5 Cookbooks
When Southern Women Cook by America's Test Kitchen
Preserving the Seasons by Holly Capella
The Garlic Companion by Kristin Graves
3 Doughs, 60 Recipes by Lacey Ostermann
The Cook's Garden by Kevin West
Worst 5 Books of 2025
End of Story by A.J. Finn
Spare by Prince Harry
Portrait of a Thief by Grace Li
Lula Dean's Little Library of Banned Books by Kirsten Miller
Care and Feeding by Laurie Woolever
December 2025 Reviews
Some quotes I liked:
"Murphy-Geiss quotes the aphorism that 'marriage is as much a requirement for Protestant ministry as celibacy is for the Catholic priesthood.' She also cites a 2008 finding that 94 percent of 'all Protestant clergy in the United States are married, and, unlike most other professions, the pastor's family is often involved in his/her work.' And marriage seems to be on the rise for Protestant clergy, as a 2017 Barna Group study found that 96 percent were married. These trends and persistent attitudes mean that the pastor's role is by design a two-person job in which only one person receives a salary, title, and official position. For a pastor's wife, especially one in the American evangelical tradition, the very nature of her husband's calling presumes her supportive and unpaid labor. He literally can't do it without her." (p. xiv - xv)
"We have taken a position [pastor's wife] never mentioned directly in Scripture and turned it into the highest ministry calling for contemporary evangelical women, allowing it to supplant other ministry roles. We have pressured women who do not feel called to ministry into ministry service because of their husbands' vocations. We have told women that their best path to ministry is literally to follow behind men." (p. 21)
"The problem isn't what these women were doing. The problem is what we call the work these women were doing. Milburga's world called her an abbess. Bertha Smith's world called her a missionary. Kathy Hoppe's world called her a minister's wife. I can't help but thinking about Elizabeth Marvel's words about women's ordination in the modern global church. 'Ordination has less to do with what an individual can or cannot do in the church,' she writes, 'and more to do with the power or prestige assigned to their position while doing it.' I think she is right. History suggests that ordination has less to do with the work of ministry and more to do with how that work is recognized." (p. 66-67)
"[Elizabeth] Flower's book Into the Pulpit provides an in-depth analysis of the SBC [Southern Baptist Convention] gender wars and their connection to broader American culture. In her chapter focused on the 1970s, Flowers shows how SBC concerns about female autonomy and independent leadership roles coincided with increasing agency for women...it was only in the 1960s and '70s that women in the US gained legal protections against wage discrimination, credit discrimination, sexual harassment, and gender discrimination within the workplace. They also gained legal access to birth control and abortion." (p. 138)
While it's clear in the book description that this book is satire, I did not like it. I'm a public librarian so obviously I'm against book banning. And I get that most of the characters were purposely caricatures, but the heavy handedness of the message got old FAST. I mean how many times was it mentioned that Lula Dean had orange hair - COME ON. It was also unnecessarily vulgar in my opinion. And there were WAY too many characters. She could have cut the character list in half and still almost had too many. I do think book banning is a topic worth discussing, but no one on "the other side" of this issue would read this book and change their mind. I did like the DNA storyline of the Black family finding out they were ancestors of the town Confederate hero - that was well done and brought up a known issue in a more natural way. Overall, I didn't like it at all. The writing was good and despite not really liking it I did want to find out what happened in the end with everyone. But I wouldn't recommend this one.
The plot of this book is based on real historical events - two giraffes that survive a hurricane and are driven across the US to the San Diego Zoo. The rest of the story and the characters are built around this event. I liked all three main characters and in the beginning I was really liking the book. But it was somehow both monotonous and ridiculously over the top at the same time. Every day was get up tend the giraffes, stop, run into some trouble, get out of said trouble, stop for the night and then rinse and repeat the next day. Yes, I can imagine there would be trouble along the way and some of the trouble they encounter seems likely. Some of the trouble was so ridiculous that it seemed a stretch even for fiction. The further the book went the more ridiculous a lot of stuff became until I wasn't really liking the book anymore. I think this could have been an amazing book but it was a little too Kristin Hannah-eque for me - like every possible thing that could go wrong for these people and the giraffes did over and over. I would have quit reading if not for my book club reading this one.
I agree with some of the reviews that I read that the book is a little repetitive. Each chapter tells the story of someone who's been conned that Walton helped and part of his own story of being conned by Mair Smyth. So there is a lot of reiteration around the red flags in each chapter. And honestly, any one of the red flags he talks about alone wouldn't be enough to be suspicious. But these red flags together or combined with other gut feelings or logic-defying situations could point to a con artist. The biggest downfall of honest people is that you assume other people are honest as well - and con artists count on that. This book wasn't amazing, but it was interesting and I definitely admire the lengths Walton went to to get Mair Smyth prosecuted and to help other victims.
Some quotes I liked:
[Black Beauty by Anna Sewell] "One Texas cowpuncher arraigned for ill-treating his pony would be sentenced to one month's imprisonment where he was required to read the story three times." (p. 34-35)
[Mary Poppins by P.L. Travers] "P.L. Travers fought hard against the changes to her story that she saw in the Disney film - ultimately, she lost. She was so unhappy with the way she and her novel were treated that she ruled out any further adaptations." (p. 94) [There were 8 books in the Mary Poppins series]
[Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl] "In 2023, four years after Dahl's death, Puffin books announced that they would be revising all of his texts to eliminate derogatory words and passages. In the new version of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Augustus Gloop is now described as 'enormous' rather than 'fat,' and the Oompa-Loompas go from being 'tiny' to 'small.' Elsewhere, references to glass eyes, ugliness, old age, disability, and other potentially sensitive topics were removed or altered. Arguments about censorship swiftly broke out, even getting as far as the U.K.'s House of Commons. But Puffin Books' decision to re-issue the original texts in The Roald Dahl Classic Collection finally left readers free to choose whichever version they wanted." (p. 159)
[A quote from the text of Watership Down by Richard Adams] "Animals don't behave like men," he said. "If they have to fight, they fight; and if they have to kill they kill. But they don't sit down and set their wits to work to devise ways of spoiling other creatures' lives and hurting them. They have dignity and animality." (p. 173)
[The Neverending Story by Michael Ende] "Michael Ende disliked the 1984 film adaptation of his novel so intensely that he launched legal action that delayed the release of the sequel until 1990." (p. 184)
[The Story of a Seagull and the Cat Who Taught Her to Fly by Luis Sepulveda] "In Sepulveda's imagination, cats not only understand the language of humans but can speak it - though it's the ultimate taboo to let humans in on that little secret...'Cats were aware, of course, of the sad fate of the dolphins, who had displayed their intelligence to humans who had in turn condemned the dolphins to acting like clowns in aquatic spectacles.'" (p. 206)