sprite writes
broodings from the burrow

June 12, 2021


mid-june weekend planning
posted by soe 1:42 am

It’s been a crummy workweek, with one coworker leaving and the news that my boss is being switched into a new position a week after she gets back from vacation, and somehow deadlines don’t ever get crossed off. Volleyball was canceled due to rain. It was ridiculously hot and then ridiculously rainy, and I spent way too much time sitting in my apartment. I worked my butt off to clear enough stuff to be able to keep my laptop closed this weekend (and mostly my remaining colleagues are interested in keeping me sane) and this is how I’m going to spend my time:

  • Spend several hours in the garden. I have some more planting to do. There are peas and greens to be picked. I want to get beans and the last of the plants I picked up in Connecticut into the ground.
  • Go to the farmers market. We’re getting close to the end of strawberry season, but that means cherries, blueberries, and raspberries are on their way in.
  • Swim. While I did bike down to meet my coworker to take her to a goodbye lunch, my only other activity has been swimming. The outdoor pool is only open on weekends for the next few weeks, so I need to get myself moving a little earlier.
  • Knit outside. Tomorrow is Worldwide Knit in Public Day. I have no qualms about knitting pretty much anyplace, but I think my rainbow sock will be super popular in Dupont on Pride Weekend.
  • Pick up holds at two libraries. I didn’t get to either library last weekend, so now I need to get to both this weekend. (One is in Virginia, so it’s less convenient than it might otherwise be.)
  • Buy books. It’s the quarterly member sale at one of my local bookshops.
  • Have a belated birthday happy hour for Rudi at our local watering hole. (It’s also a fancy grocery store and has some tasty food options they make in-house, including a surprisingly good grilled cheese. We also have a gift card from last spring that expires next week, so that’s a nice bonus.)
  • Do laundry. How do I have no clean tshirts?
  • Paint my nails. I keep only thinking of it right before bed.
  • Sleep.

How about you? What are you hoping to get to this weekend? (And lest you worry overmuch about my working too hard, next week I have fun evening activities on three days and maybe plans to go to the beach on Saturday.)

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June 11, 2021


a dip on a hot day, chilling in the park, and reunited
posted by soe 1:01 am

Three beautiful things from my past week:

1. Getting to swim at the outside pool.

2. I take my supper and my book up to the park while Rudi’s on evening Zoom calls. It starts out sweltering, but fades to pleasant.

3. Many of the members of my team at work, staff and contractors, gather at my boss’ house for an afternoon picnic. We all greet each other with relieved hugs.

How about you? What’s been beautiful in your world lately?

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June 10, 2021


how are we a third of the way through the month already unraveling
posted by soe 1:55 am

Arsenic and Rainbows

I finished up print and audio books this week and will complete the toe of my first sock tomorrow.

In the ears, I’ve started Act Your Age, Eve Brown by Talia Hibbert, the third of the Brown sisters trilogy. I’m sad to wrap up their tales, but hold out hope the author will give their grandmother, Gigi, her own book(s).

On paper, I’m about to begin Mia P. Manansala’s Arsenic and Adobo, in which the main character’s life is described on the back cover as swerving from “Nora Ephron romp to an Agatha Christie case.” It’s slightly overdue, but I expect to quickly tear through it. (And our library system doesn’t charge fines, so it’s simply my own guilt over being a bad library citizen I need to overcome.)

Head over to As Kat Knits to see what others are reading and crafting this week.

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June 9, 2021


ten movies
posted by soe 1:05 am

Part of finding a sense of normalcy as the pandemic winds down is to return to things we had to postpone. Rudi and I used to love going to the movies, and, in fact, went to two in the final days before the world shut down in March 2020.

Here are the movies I’m most looking forward to seeing in the cinema:

In the Heights (June)
Black Widow (July)
Hotel Transylvania: Transformania (July)
Respect (August)
Dear Evan Hansen (September)
Come from Away (September)’
The Addams Family 2 (October)
Eternals (November)
West Side Story (December)
Spiderman: No Way Home (December)

How about you? Are you looking forwad to trips to the theater?

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June 8, 2021


top ten authors who made me want to read their whole catalogue
posted by soe 1:46 am

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday from That Artsy Reader Girl invites us to share Books I Loved that Made Me Want More Books Like Them. I couldn’t think of titles that sent me scrambling for read-alikes, but I could come up with a list of books that made me want to read everything its author had written/will write:

  1. Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery (I used to save money for trips to Waldenbooks at the Meriden Square, where I went through all the Anne books and into Montgomery’s other series/standalones.)
  2. The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde (I might not love everything he writes, but I will read it.)
  3. Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell (I recognize this book has some problems with the portrayal of Park, but I loved it.)
  4. The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver (This is another book with some problems in terms of racial interactions, which Kingsolver tried to address in her later Pigs in Heaven. I haven’t reread it in a long time and can’t speak for how it holds up, but I adore it has made me a Kingsolver devotee.)
  5. A Year in Provence by Peter Mayle (Pretty sure it’s time for a reread of this classic tale of home improvement and cultural miscues)
  6. The 13 Clocks by James Thurber (I don’t know how to best categorize Thurber’s works except maybe to say it has a strong moral compass and a witty soul.)
  7. A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle (Another must-read author of my youth. I’ve even read her religious essays.)
  8. When the Sea Turned to Silver by Grace Lin (Her descriptions are pure poetry.)
  9. A Snicker of Magic by Natalie Lloyd (This book conveys such a love of words!)
  10. The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick (I adored his way of telling stories through both words and pictures.)

Other books in this same category include Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds, Booked by Kwame Alexander, and The Sun Is Also a Star by Nicola Yoon.

How about you?

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June 7, 2021


first june weekending
posted by soe 1:56 am

June Sunset

By and large, it was a quiet weekend. I didn’t feel great on Saturday, so I napped in the afternoon, messing up my plans for a productive day. But I felt much better when I got back up in the evening, and Rudi and I took a trip down to the garden to harvest some things that we ended up not eating, followed by a trip to Trader Joe’s to pick up some more things that we ended up not eating. We did eat some things already living in our fridge, though, thereby making room for our new acquisitions. We watched Rudi’s Red Sox beat the Yankees, and then I watched the Mets beat the Padres. I knit and then listened to my audiobook.

This morning I sallied forth to the farmers market. I bought a lot of strawberries and the first zucchini and green beans of the season, as well as a variety of other odds and ends.

I spent the later part of the afternoon at the pool for my first real swim since August 2019. (I’ve been to beaches since then, but either temperatures or rip tides made me decline to do more than dunk myself and then run back to my towel.) It was glorious. I swear the pool was Bahamian blue (or at least what it looks like on tv) and the trees practically glowed green, but that may just have been my joy at some sense of summer normalcy.

I pulled some spring greens out (all the arugula and some of the spinach) and yanked more violet leaves and bunching onions in an effort to find places for all my new plants. A few remain to be planted, which will force me to leave work at a reasonable enough time to spend an hour at the garden early this week. And then Rudi and I watched the Kennedy Center Honors before he retired and I raced the clock to finish my audiobook. (Downloading to your phone is very convenient, until you’re at the last day with more chapters remaining than you’d like before it stops being playable.)

The week ahead holds our baseball seat lottery for the rest of the season, hopefully my volleyball championship, and possibly a belated birthday outing for Rudi.

I hope you have a great start to the week!

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