The final Top Ten Tuesday topic of 2022 at That Artsy Reader Girl asks us to share the newest additions to our bookshelves. I don’t know that I can come up with the ten most recent precisely, because sometimes I pick up books from Little Free Libraries and forget to note them down, but these all came to live with me in the past six months:
Any Way the Wind Blows by Rainbow Rowell
Scattered Showers by Rainbow Rowell
On Writing by Stephen King
Count Your Lucky Stars by Alexandria Bellefleur
Blanca & Roja by Anna-Marie McLemore
Lark and Kasim Start a Revolution by Kacen Callender
Gaudy Night by Dorothy L. Sayers
Rosie’s Traveling Tea Shoppe by Rebecca Raisin
The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon
The Chilbury Ladies’ Choir by Jennifer Ryan
How about you? What are some of the latest additions to your bookshelves? Have any arrived in the last week?
Happy Christmas Eve! I hope you’re healthy and safe and have heat and power and are able to be with loved ones in real life or over the phone or video chat.
From about the time I was in middle school, my mother would plan elaborate Christmas Eve feasts for after we got back from the evening Christmas Eve service. These dinners continued until after my brother and I graduated from college, although they got earlier so Rudi and I could make it to a midnight candles and carols service at church where we lived.
For the past couple decades, we’ve scaled back so that we do a Christmas Eve buffet while we watch holiday movies. I believe this year it will include Love Actually and Christmas Eve, which Loretta Young’s estate has added to YouTube, should you want to watch one of her (and several other actors’) final roles.
How do you like to spend your Christmas Eve? Perhaps you still need to wrap presents for a couple hours and would like something to listen to while you’re doing it. Here’s the classic New York Public Library recording of Neil Gaiman reading Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol:
Maybe you don’t need to fill that much time. Maybe you’re looking for to watch something quick while you’re waiting for someone else to shower or for a batch of cookies to bake. Here’s First Lady Michelle Obama reading Clement Moore’s “‘Twas the Night Before Christmas”:
And if even that feels like too much time to take, here’s a Christmas song to listen to while you’re getting dressed. It’s Stan Rogers performing, “At Last I’m Ready for Christmas,” and if you’re still running, you might relate:
Whatever your frame of mind now, I hope by tonight you’re ready to curl up in front of a fireplace or a movie or in bed and celebrate.
Category: christmas/holiday season. There is/are Comments Off on virtual advent tour 2022: day 24.
Second, if you did the Christmas carol quiz last week and were hoping for some answers, I’ve posted them in the comments.
Finally, we’re off on an actual tour! Marg at The Adventures of an Intrepid Reader, one of the co-founders of the Virtual Advent Tour, is hosting our penultimate post for this year. She’s on holiday and has taken us to not one but two holiday markets. Head over to see the sights!
Category: christmas/holiday season. There is/are Comments Off on virtual advent tour 2022: day 23.
1. As one of the top teams in the league, we have a bye week for the first week of this season’s playoffs. I complained to two of my friends that that seemed unfair. You’d rather, one asked, that we’d lost games so we could play sooner? Fair point, well made.
2. I signed up for a second night of volleyball thinking I’d be playing with strangers. But as it turns out, two of my teammates want to join me, so we have a little mini group.
3. As always the residents of northern New Jersey who live along the Garden State Parkway did a wonderful job lighting up their homes and neighborhoods for those of us traveling afar. Thank you for making our trip so enjoyable.
Category: three beautiful things. There is/are Comments Off on preference, let’s play together, and kudos, jersey.
When my brother and I were young, we took piano lessons with Mrs. Wheeler, an older lady who lived nearby who also served as the organist for her local church. (Incidentally, Mrs. Wheeler was a popular teacher in our neck of the woods. Her other clients included, all before I personally knew any of them, the older sister of a classmate, the pitcher on my softball team my sophomore year, and most coincidentally, Karen, my dearest BFF, who was amongst the advanced students.)
Twice a year, we’d have a concert in her living room — once in the spring for our parents and once in December, which I think was just for the students and after which she’d serve us refreshments and give us handmade ornaments. (If my parents put any of ours up, I’ll add a photo later today, but I didn’t think of this post idea until after we’d left home, which is where most of mine are.)
But essentially this meant that we started learning our two Christmas carols in mid-November so that we’d have them in good shape for mid-December.
There’s a possibility there’s an old program downstairs in the piano bench, where our sheet music lives, but I don’t want to wake anyone to find out. Since I don’t have any reference materials for the songs we all would have performed and without video confirmation to the contrary, let’s assume the songs we all would have played went something like this:
Karen, this is how you remember it, too, right?
Tomorrow, maybe I’ll sit down and see if I can play something Christmassy if there’s a time when no one’s around.
Did the rest of you have Christmas performances with instrument teachers?