sprite writes
broodings from the burrow

April 15, 2021


not-tax day unraveling
posted by soe 1:27 am

Not-Tax Day Unraveling

New things are afoot on both the page and the needles. I have a new stripey sock started, and I’m sure you can see why I’m excited by it. I’ll give you details about the yarn next week; the tag is in one bag, but the yarn was in another, and I don’t feel like hunting right this moment.

I finished Veronica Speedwell and could move on to Charlotte Holmes. This is the most recent in Sherry Thomas’ excellent series, but there’ll be a new installment in the fall. It’s nice when favorite authors publish works in time for birthday and Christmas gifts.

I also wrapped up the audiobook I’d been listening tonight while I was knitting. Tomorrow I’ll be starting up The Bounty, the latest in the Fox and O’Hare heist series by Janet Evanovich and friends (this time Steve Hamilton). I haven’t liked the series as much since she stopped collaborating with Lee Goldberg, but Hamilton is pretty well-respected in his own right, so maybe this will be an improvement on the last book, which she wrote with her son.

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April 13, 2021


top ten books that could be crayon names
posted by soe 1:35 am

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic from That Artsy Reader Girl took me a little while. Our assignment: to share book titles that might make good crayon colors:

  1. The Wonderful O (James Thurber): A bright orange, the color of the first citrus of the winter season
  2. Sucking Eggs (Patricia Nicol): Venom green
  3. Rancid Pansies (James Hamilton-Paterson): Greyish blue-purple
  4. The Vinyl Princess (Yvonne Prinz): Sparkly black
  5. Last Days of Summer (Steve Kluger): Cornflower blue
  6. Dandelion Wine (Ray Bradbury): A pale, clear yellow
  7. Canary (Rachele Alpine): Chartreuse
  8. Vintage Attraction (Charles Blackstone): Dark plum
  9. A Darker Shade of Magic (V.E. Schwab): Dark blood red
  10. The Starless Sea (Erin Morgenstern): Dark midnight blue

How about you? Can you think of any book titles that should be a crayon name?

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April 8, 2021


post-easter unraveling
posted by soe 1:36 am

Post-Easter Unraveling

A couple years ago, Rudi and I found ourselves at the beach on a very breezy day. I didn’t think much of it and enjoyed the day for what it was, reading my library book as usual. Until we got to the end of the day and it was time to pack up, when I went to close my library book and found I couldn’t. So much sand had blown in between the pages as I’d read it that it no longer lay flat. I literally ended up pouring sand out of the plastic cover and shaking out each page before it even remotely resembled something I could return to the library in good faith.

So this week, when faced with a breezy forecast, I brought two books to the beach. One, An Unexpected Peril, was my current read, a new book of which I am the first reader of the library copy. There was a breeze, albeit a gentle one, so I opted to keep it in my bag. Instead, I started Silva Moreno-Garcia’s Gods of Jade and Shadow, which I procured from a Little Free Library sometime in the last year. Set in Mexico in the 1920s, it focuses on a teen girl who accidentally frees a Mayan god from a locked trunk in her grandfather’s room and who then must help him on a quest in order to save her own life. So far, so good.

On the knitting front, I’m down to a handful of rows on my Smock Madness socks, so I decided to pull out Wohin?, the pair of socks I didn’t finish from Sock Madness 2020. I only made it halfway through the heel flap before the world started to shut down and with it my desire to knit. I’ve done nothing more than find the UFO, so I have no info on whether this is the right project to tackle next or not, but I figured I’d at least take a look.

Head to As Kat Knits for the weekly roundup of reading and crafting.

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April 6, 2021


top ten books i’d gladly throw in the ocean
posted by soe 1:30 am

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday list from That Artsy Reader Girl invites us to share books that frustrated us in one way or another. I rarely carry on reading books I hate, so there are plenty of books I’ve let go over the years, but this particular prompt suggests antipathy to me, which means I have to truly resent a book in one way or another, and that means I actually thought it worth carrying on until the end for one reason or another. Here are the nine one-star reads I have recorded on Goodreads, which amounts to “I finished it, but wish I hadn’t”:

  1. Fat Vampire, by Adam Rex
  2. The Elegance of the Hedgehog, by Muriel Barbery
  3. A Walk to Remember, by Nicholas Sparks
  4. The Old Man and the Sea, by Ernest Hemingway
  5. The Pearl, by John Steinbeck
  6. Flowers for Algernon, by Daniel Keyes
  7. Summer People, by Marge Piercy
  8. Needled to Death, by Maggie Sefton
  9. Deck the Halls by Mary Higgins Clark & Carol Higgins Clark

How about you? Do you have any books you want to chuck in the ocean?

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April 1, 2021


unraveled on the first of april
posted by soe 1:18 am

Unraveled

It’s been several weeks worth of days so far this week, so neither the sock nor the book has changed since Sunday.

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March 30, 2021


ten book settings i’d love to live in
posted by soe 1:35 am

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday from That Artsy Reader Girl invites readers to share the book settings where they’d most love to reside. Here are mine:

  1. BookWorld from Jasper Fforde’s Thursday Next books, because then you’d have access to all the bookish settings. Is that cheating?
  2. The Burrow, because despite the ghoul in the attic and the gnomes in the garden, it’s overflowing with love.
  3. Prince Edward Island.
  4. Bandette’s Paris, as depicted by Paul Tobin and Colleen Coover. Because who wouldn’t want to watch films en plein air on a rooftop and then Vespa over to the bookshop or stop for a chocolate bar?
  5. Marsyas Island, where you can find T.J. Klune’s The House on the Cerulean Sea. It’s sunny, it’s filled with forests and gardens, and everyone who lives there knows they are loved unconditionally.
  6. The Scottish Highlands, the setting of Jenny Colgan’s Bookshop on the Corner series
  7. Melbourne in the 1920s, because Phryne Fisher makes it seem super glamorous.
  8. Guernsey, especially when it’s not filled with Nazis.
  9. Midnight Gulch from A Snicker of Magic by Natalie Lloyd, with its ice cream company that lets you eat your feelings
  10. New York City, from every book ever written about it. I have visited NYC and absolutely do not want to live there in real life. But the love letters that authors pen to it, be it Nicola Yoon’s The Sun Is Also a Star or Dash and Lily’s Book of Dares by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan, or Karina Yan Glasser’s Vanderbeekers series makes me want to want to live there.

How about you? What books would you move into today if you could?

Category: books. There is/are 6 Comments.