Tuesday, June 23, 2026

And What Are YOU Reading?


Sorry for the extremely blurry photo but I couldn't get any closer and wasn't taking much time to try and focus because that little Carolina wren was flitting and flying all over that end of the back porch, hopping from a plant to the top of the ceiling fan to a hanging bird with fishes thing and back to the plant pot and so on and so forth for quite awhile.


Don't look for the bird. She's not in that picture. That's just the hanging bird and fishes thing. 
I suppose it's time for a second nesting for the wrens. Whoa. I just read that wrens can raise up to four different broods a year so it could be the third or fourth. I have one little couple who always seem to want to nest on this porch but they simply cannot due to Maurice. 
Wouldn't be prudent. 
Still, they come right in the cat entrance and remind me so much of a couple looking at a new house to potentially buy. I pretend I'm the realtor and tell them, "Oh, babies, no. This is not the house for you." They don't believe me though. I can't tell you how much nesting material I pulled out of that plant pot this spring. Those birds are definitely energetic and industrious.  


You see that pathetic canning effort? Three pints of dilly beans and three quarts and a pint of just plain green beans. That's about all I got done today and I'm far more exhausted after that than I was yesterday after doing that yard work. I really wanted to get every bean I could in a state of preservation because the vines are looking really shitty and the beans aren't getting fat the way they were and I just don't know what's going on. But honestly- if I've gotten about all I'm going to get- that is fine. 
I've about reached my canning limit anyway. 
I stood up in the kitchen with two different bowls to snap into, one for pickling, one for regular canning. I had pretty strict criteria about which beans went into each bowl and that went pretty fast but not that fast. I stood there so long my back started aching and my left hand went numb which is what happens when I do a repetitive task with it. I broke that wrist many years ago and I'll be paying for falling off that roof for the rest of my life. 
And of course pickling requires one type of canning, the plain green beans, another. One involving the kettle, one involving the pressure canner. I am sure I have discussed this enough and who cares anyway?

But I got it done and I suppose I feel a bit of satisfaction about that but the thrill is sort of gone. I have to tell you though that I cooked some fresh green beans out of the garden and I have not yet become anywhere near tired of them. Nor has Mr. Moon.

While I worked in the kitchen, I was listening to the audio version of "The Other Bennet Sister". The damn thing's over eighteen hours long and I only have about half an hour left and I have to say, "Thank you, Jesus."
I thought the book would be more strong-women forward than it is. I guess that the Miss Bennet in the book has a few radical (for the times) ideas but it's not like she's a suffragette or anything. I don't think she'd ever burn her corset. And the plot is just so hackneyed and cliche'd and stereotypical and, and, and.
I'll stop now. 
I've been having a hard time finding books I want to read or listen to for various reasons. Some because they are poorly written to the point where I cannot deal with them, some because I have no interest in the characters, some because they're about issues I simply don't have the bandwidth to deal with in a literary way. 
For example: I downloaded Elizabeth Gilbert's "All the Way to the River: Love, Loss, and Liberation" knowing that it was going to be a tough book to listen to. But I was going to give it a shot. I hadn't gotten a tenth of the way through it until I said, "Nope," and returned it early. I have read books by Elizabeth Gilbert that I admire greatly. Okay, not really books in the plural but book which was "The Signature of All Things". 
The whole "Eat, Pray, Love" situation was a little too much for me. Eating and Loving are absolutely fine but throw in praying and I'm outta here. Of course there were other reasons I was rubbed the wrong way by it but that was a big one. 
So when "All the Way to the River..." started with Gilbert's dead lover coming back in a way that felt literal and quite real to her and started telling her how incredibly proud she was of Gilbert for her years of sobriety and that she would be waiting for her at the river when she died, I was just like...
Sure.
The other book I don't think I'm going to read is "Nobody's Girl. A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice" by Virginia Giuffre. The book was published posthumously because after she wrote it, she died by suicide. 
I got the book at the library, I thought I could read it. I went to open it and I realized that the things I was going to read in it would enrage me to the point where it would affect my relationships, my mental health, and my ability to function. 
My rage about the men who abused her and who walk free and hold the highest offices in the nation is already dialed up to eleven. 

So bottom line is, I'm not finding anything that is really holding my interest or inspiring me with one exception which is the book I'm reading with my eyes right now, entitled "Marrying the Ketchups" by Jennifer Close and I'm not far enough into it to really have a true opinion of it but I will say that it has some of the best lines in it I've read in a very long time. 

So all is not lost. 

Here's what the Seminole pumpkins are doing right now. 

 



Taking over the world and not one dang bloom yet. 

Finally, for a very short video which I feel represents Florida as well as anything I've ever seen, go HERE.
Thank you, dear Rachel. 
If the link doesn't work for you, I really don't know what to say. I am struggling with technology at the moment. 
I hope it does, though. 

Love...Ms. Moon



 

56 comments:

  1. What I'm reading:
    https://www.gailgodwin.com/book-excerpt.php?isbn13=9781632867049
    I'd like to send Donnie Diaper a lubber grasshopper. Eat hardy, fucker.
    Paranormal John

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    1. A lubber grasshopper and one of those baby gators' mamas.

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  2. The Calamity Club!

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    1. I've seen that. Are you enjoying it?

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    2. Storytelling at its very best. Book is 643 pages long and too heavy for me to lift, which is generally the kiss of death. HIGHLY recommend the audio edition. So well done. A friend thought a couple of characters were a bit cartoony. Maybe, I don’t know (or care). It’s a mighty fine story.

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    3. Just put it on hold as an audio book.

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  3. Reading is such a personal choice, but I would like to recommend Went to London, Took the Dog by Nina Stibbe. It's a true story, in the form of a diary, which suits me as I have the attention span of a gnat. Colorful language so not for gentle readers.

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    1. Reading is SUCH a personal thing, isn't it? That looks like a good book. Colorful language? Hold my beer!

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  4. My friends. Fredrick bakman. Beautiful story.

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    1. I have put that on hold as an audio book from the library.

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  5. Dennis bought Nobodies Girl when it came out. I did not even crack it open but he read it. He was not effected.
    Your canning always looks so perfect ! I have failed hard @ canning except for strawberries. They are thee easiest and in mid winter it is like opening a jar of June.
    Carol's suggestion sounds like a book I would want to read for sure- two of my favorite things. besides baby alligators playing with bugs...you need baby alligators in your garden.

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    1. Dennis wasn't affected at all reading Nobody's Girl? That's hard to fathom.
      My mother used to make strawberry jam. It was good.
      I think Carol's suggestion is perfect for you.
      I do need baby alligators in my garden. But just for a day or two and then they need to get back to where they once belonged.

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  6. The Magician's Assistant by Ann Patchett is really good.

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    1. I didn't really enjoy that one so much. There are other books by her that I have very much liked though.

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  7. Absolutely agree with you regarding you recent reading list. The Other Bennett Sister was just Pride and Prejudice on rewind with a bit more Mary Bennett mixed in. The Gilbert book...same feeling over here but I did appreciate her Ted talk describing helping her very feisty lover/companion die with grace and compassion. I'm at a loss for books right now after reading a bunch of historical biographies so I recently cued up, believe it or not, Little Women. Rather tedious in some parts but delightful otherwise. Go figure.

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    1. You have it exactly right about The Other Bennett Sister.
      When Gilbert began describing her lover, I couldn't get into it. I don't care how charming and wonderful she'd been, the things she did and the way she treated people sounds terrible.
      Little Women? I think I'm about ready for a reread of that. I was just thinking of the book the other day.

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  8. Thank you to Rachel, that was cute to watch. Wrens can raise 3-4 broods a year? busy little beavers aren't they?
    As for the beans, the thrill of canning would be gone for me after the second or third batch and you have done how many?
    Your disappointment with books is why I read fiction. I don't care for real life tales and troubles of people I don't know spread over many hours. give me a stack of fictional murder mysteries any day. Throw in a few Nora Roberts romances, Janet Evanovich comedies and all is good in my world.

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    1. I take it that raising a nest full of wren babies is not a drawn-out affair. Still, that's a lot of parenting. How do the mama and daddy remember all their names?
      Mmmm. Well, sometimes reading the memoirs and autobiographies and biographies of people can be incredibly inspiring. And not necessarily because they went through hell and came back to thrive. Sometimes it's just a matter of learning how many different ways there are to live and be. I do enjoy some of them for sure.
      I have a hard time with truly "light" literature. I like a good mystery and/or romance myself but without a very talented author, they all seem to run together in my head. Especially the ones written by the authors who seem to crank out a new book every six months. But I respect those authors too.

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  9. That Carolina wren photo is just great. It captures their personality perfectly.

    Here are a few (mostly lesser-known) books we classify as Good Reads:
    West With Giraffes, by Lynda Rutledge. During the Depression, the head animal keeper of the San Diego Zoo drove a truck carrying a giraffe from the east coast to California. It’s a true story, but only local news clippings remain, so the author imagined what could have happened along the way.

    Flyfishing Through The Midlife Crisis, by Howell Raines. Much more than fly fishing, and much more than a midlife crisis. Howell Raines is a superlative storyteller.

    This Is Happiness , by Niall Williams
    This novel describes the summer electricity is brought to a remote Irish parish. It’s a small, poignant coming-of-age story, told with the full glory of Irish wordsmithing.

    The Rosie Project , by Graeme Simsion
    A socially challenged professor decides to look for a wife in a very logical way. Things do not go as planned.

    Etta and Otto and Russell and James : a novel, by Emma Hooper. Octogenarian Etta sets out to walk to the Atlantic ocean—only 3,000 miles from her home on the Saskatchewan prairies—leaving a note on the table for her husband Otto. Russell and James are integral to the story too.

    Chris from Boise

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    1. Ooh. These sound good. I have got to somehow bookmark this post so I can come back and reread the comment suggestions. I suppose I could print it. That would work best for me.
      Thanks!

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  10. I have Virginia Giuffre's book waiting on Audible but I don't know if I'll be able to read it. I hear it's horrendous!!!! Those poor girls (and probably boys and younger children)!!!!! I've just finished Lie Down With Lions by Ken Follett. It's been ages since I read anything by him but it was one of the better ones I've picked up recently!

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    1. I don't think I've ever read more than three books by Follett if that. Not sure how that's happened.

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  11. Will click the link when I’m home. What am I reading? “Bless Our Hearts.”

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  12. Thanks for the book non-recommendations. I know I can't read some books that are either too bland, or too violent. The proper English romances have passed my interests. I somehow don't mind murder mysteries, since I know the mystery will be solved by the end. Good endings are always my choices. And non-fiction needs to stimulate the brain.

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    1. I like your take on the books you like. Do you enjoy the detective novels of Kate Atkinson? I think they are so very well written. I also like the ones by Tana French.

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  13. I've been a good book dry spell lately (mirroring our weather), struggling to finish things I start (an old habit I'm working on breaking). No bandwidth for anything challenging, certainly not Ms. Giuffre's book! Instead I tend toward light things (most recently "How to Read a Book", author's name forgotten - a bit on the sweet side but it wiled away some hours during our recent blessed rain (almost 2 inches! We've moved from Severe Drought to just Drought Conditions!). Your canned beans are pretty.

    Cheers, Ceci

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    1. Sometimes we just want to read for entertainment and relaxation. And that is fine.
      I hope you get more rain!

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  14. It IS the most Florida video. I'm glad folks are enjoying it. When I showed it to Hank and he said "That's either a giant lubber or a tiny gator." To which I replied, "Both."

    On the reading front, I, too have been in a slump. Last summer I read a book called "The Liar's Dictionary," which was quick and nothing majorly WOW, but it was cute. It goes back and forth between stories of two folks that work as lexicographers for the same dictionary, one a guy in the Victorian period, and one, a modern gal. You might enjoy it.

    -Rachel

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    1. The Liar's Dictionary- Noted! Thank you. And again- thanks for the gator/lubber video. Who in the world would have thought that happened?

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  15. I have a huge to be read pile. The last few things I read from it are”How to be okay when is ok” by Jenny Lawson, excellent advice given with her humor. I also enjoyed the series “The Kamogawa food detectives” by Hisashi Kashiwai . It really is a charming series, where the detective tries to recreate dishes that are associated with their client’s memories.
    Xoxo
    Barbara

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    1. That should read “How to okay when nothing is Ok”

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    2. Jenny Lawson is not a bad writer. I'll have to check that out. The Kashiwai series sounds good too.

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  16. I can't seem to find anything new to read that I like these days. I keep going back to old favorites. I'm not sure if all the new books I pick just suck or if it's me (probably it's me). I keep reaching for my comfort reads.

    I wouldn't even attempt Nobody's Girl. The fury I would feel might just push me right over the edge given how much I struggle already with this dystopian hellhole our country has become. These abusers and pedophiles are monsters and they're running everything at the moment. Some days I just despair.

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    1. That's what I keep thinking- it must be me! But perhaps after an entire lifetime of reading we have become more and more picky about what we want to read.
      I think most days we despair. At least for awhile. How could we not? "Dystopian hellhole" is a perfect description.

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  17. ok how big are those geogia thumpers??? or are the bebe alligators really that small???? either way, jeeeeeesh!! hope all is well! xxalainaxx

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    1. Both. The thumpers are like 2 1/2 inches long which is a ginormous grasshopper but those are very young gators.
      All is well here. How about you and your sweetie?

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  18. also I can;t read the nobody's girl yet..... maybe if they ever prosecute the men that were involved .... be gentle to yourself today xxalainaxx

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    1. Oh, thank you. Maybe we should ALL read the book and use our fury to rise up and get something done about all the horror that has been wreaked by this (mostly) men. That would be the best reason to read it that I can think of.

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  19. I've started "Nobody's Girl" but can only read a chapter or two because the type is so small, my eyes just can't take the strain! I don't know if I'll ever get all the way through it!

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    1. I haven't even looked at the type in the copy I have.

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  20. I mostly read mysteries. I read a lot but I can't always remember all of the names of the ones I liked.

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    1. Hell, I can't even remember the plots of the books I've liked.

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  21. Nothing much worse than finding it difficult to read. Most fiction doesn't work for me anymore, except for mysteries (and I almost always skip to the end before I get too worried about any of the characters), I live in a retirement community (don't ever do that); lots of ex-military here, and I find quite a few WWII books in our library; those interest me lately, for some reason.

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    1. I do like the WW II books about the women who were part of the war doing jobs that were often highly secret. I'm sure you've read Kate Atkinson's "Time After Time" and "A God in Ruins". If not, give them a try.

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  22. I really like that wren. In my daughter's house fantails or piwakawkaka, tiny noisy birds, regularly fly in and out trying to start theire nests, not good because of the cat, so they must be discouraged on a daily basis.
    Birds are my mother visiting me.
    I just started listening to "Yesteryear" (Caro Claire Burke) and I am all confused but will persevere, I think.

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    1. Yes. I've had these wrens start nests in my china cabinet (they do love a bowl) and on a shelf with lots of books and papers. I feel so sad when I tell them they cannot do this. I would love for a nest full of baby birds to be born and raised in my kitchen.
      Some books are just dang hard to figure out. "Life After Life" was like that for me but the second time I read it, I knew what was what and just let it flow as it should.

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  23. I love the little wrens. They try to nest in my garage every year and one even started building a nest in my house. They usually build a nest in the barn too.

    And all that above is why I only read fiction. I want to be entertained by a good story, not someone's trauma. I just finished a book by a male writer with all male characters except for brief mentions of their wives solving whatever crime or mystery. Simplistic writing from a too prolific author. Won't read any more of his, typical male writer. Also why I mostly read women authors. Currently just started A Box Full Of Darkness by Simone St. James and have Thief Of Night by Holly Black waiting.

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    1. See above about my wrens-in-the-house experiences. They are persistent and stubborn, aren't they?
      Simplistic writing from a too prolific author. Yes. Or actually, no. No thank you. Formulaic in an ever more boring way.

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  24. Today’s blog is why I visit , you are an earth mother

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    1. Oh, John. I'm just an old hippie. But thank you.

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  25. I'm currently racing through Anne Tyler's Three days in June, and enjoying it.Just finished the novel Endling by Maria Reva- Endangered snails and Ukranian brides and feminism.And of course ,the war in Ukraine Something different. Chloe Dalton- Raising Hare -a gentle tale about a hare in England. Knapp, F: The names. A novel about how the choice of a name or how you are brought up might influence your life. Charlotte Wood- The weekend. Aussie book about a group of aging women friends spend a weekend together.How different people handle aging.I see someone mentioned Niall Williams- This is happiness and Time of the child.Lyrical , wordy Irish stories- lovely.I am waiting to read Arundahti Roy's biography of her mother.: Mother Mary Comes to me. Maybe some of these will appeal to you.

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    1. You know, I honestly think I read that Anne Tyler book. It's her latest, right? If I did read it, I don't remember much about it. Her latest books seem to pale in comparison to me to her earlier ones when she was full of spark and ginger.
      Thank you for all of the recommendations. I think I'm going to print these comments out. "Mother Mary Comes to Me" sounds right up my alley. Also, perhaps, the Niall Williams ones.

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  26. I am exploring author, Jody Brettkelly. She wrote a blog many years ago and I followed her. She is writing a series of rom coms.
    I am also reading, Honest Aging by Rosemary Leipzig. She shares many good recommendations regarding health, aging and medical care practices with a focus on women.

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    1. Never heard of Jody. Will have to check her out.
      And I think I should probably read the Honest Aging book. Lord knows I need some guidance. Thanks.

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  27. I usually blog about what I'm reading and how it's going. I always have two or more books going. Currently a set of Victorian mystery short stories and The Boleyn Traitor, a historical novel set in Tudor times.

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Tell me, sweeties. Tell me what you think.