If it’s Thursday, it’s time to reflect back on three beautiful things from the past week:
1. Rudi brought home cherry pie for Pi Day.
2. A college friend who has returned home to the Philippines and I exchange snail mail on an annual basis. He wrote this week to ask if my address was still the same, so I know his missive is on the way and that I should practice deciphering cryptic hieroglyphics in order to be able to read his scrawl.
3. I was in a neighborhood I don’t tend to frequent during the day and stopped in at a stationer/chocolatier, since they were open. The owner invited me to sample one of her handmade brigadeiros (sort of a Brazilian truffle) to encourage me to stop back. (It was walnut and was divine. And I will.)
How about you? What’s been beautiful in your world lately?
Progress on my two main projects — Jasper Fforde’s Early Riser and Smock Madness — continues apace. I’m nearly to mid-foot on the latter and, in the former, our protagonist Charlie (whose gender I decided on page 70 I’d incorrectly assigned at the start of the novel, but whose pronouns I keep ascribing to my original assumption) has gotten stuck in the worst possible region to overwinter due to a fit of retributive pique.
I need to finish a complete pair of Smock Madnesses by late morning on Sunday in order to advance to the next round. I suppose it’s possible, particularly as Rudi is leaving early on Friday, but I’ll chalk it up as unlikely. I need only finish one by that time in order to qualify as a cheerleader and to keep receiving the patterns to knit along with at my glacial pace, which seems a far more plausible — and, frankly, pleasant — outcome.
We watched the film adaptation of The Hate U Give last night, which was perfectly fine (Rudi, who hadn’t read the book, liked it quite a bit), but it paled in comparison to the book. (I sometimes wonder why they bother trying.) It made me want to get started on Angie Thomas’ sophomore novel, On the Come Up, which Rudi gave me for my birthday and which is sitting temptingly on our coffee table just beyond my reach. But first I need to get past the roving gangsters and winter monsters and viral dreams of Wales in order to move on.
I’m also listening to two audiobooks. Questlove’s Creative Quest is what I listen to while I’m watching dishes, because I’ve discovered I’m prone to dozing off if I listen to him on the couch, no matter how interesting I find his thoughts on creativity. The Lady’s Guide to Petticoats and Piracy, a followup to Mackenzi Lee’s The Gentleman’s Guide to Vice and Virtue is much more suited to playing while I knit once I’ve tired of reruns of Agents of SHIELD and Miss Fisher for the night.
Head over to As Kat Knits to see what other people are reading and crafting.
Today’s Top Ten Tuesday topic invites participants to consider some of the one-off books we love that we’d enjoy revisiting. While recognizing that authors may not do kind things with beloved characters once they hit the keyboard again (see To Kill a Mockingbird), then, are ten standalone books I still mostly wish had a sequel (or two):
Eleanor and Park
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
Pride and Prejudice
The Night Circus
The Invention of Hugo Cabret
Travels with Charley
Dear Mrs. Bird
Geekerella
A Snicker of Magic
Wonder Woman: Warbringer
How about you? Are there standalones you’ve read that you wish would suddenly become a series.
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Last week, I shared with a song from one of the cds I bought at our bookstore’s member sale. Today, I thought I’d share a song off the other.
New York City jazz instrumentalist and composer Bobby Sanabria has reimagined the soundtrack to West Side Story by emphasizing and emboldening the Latin American musical roots of story. The bones of Leonard Bernstein’s score is still there, but it’s now more authentically Puerto Rican thanks to the 21-piece Bobby Sanabria Multiverse Big Band.
If you’re familiar at all with the movie or show (and probably even if you aren’t), you’ll know “America.” But maybe this “America” is a more representative one:
If you like what you hear, this mostly instrumental version of West Side Story Reimagined is for sale as both a double cd and as a download. Partial proceeds from the Grammy-nominated album go to the Jazz Foundation of America’s Puerto Rico Relief Fund, so you can really feel good while dancing around your living room or bopping along in your car (although maybe not so much once you get to the ending — SPOILER — of the doomed love story).
[March 23: I was just looking at my calendar and was confused to see an empty spot for the 10th. I’d written a post — what had happened? I don’t know. But here is the post that was scheduled for 1:39 a.m. that day that didn’t publish. -sprite]
Earlier in the week, I was feeling under the weather — mostly just exhausted and irritable. Tonight, Rudi had the same thing, so he went to bed early (a wise move, since he has to be in Pennsylvania at 7 a.m., which his body thinks is 6) and I spent the time working on my sock, watching an episode of Agatha Raisin, and listening to the end of Geekerella.
Next up on audio is either resuming Creative Quest or starting A Boy Called Bat (Kare, did Marshall ever read it and if he did, does he think I’d like it? If he didn’t, no worries…) or Aru Shah and the End of Time. Or, you know, something totally different.
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