Book recommendations always perk my interest, so I’m sharing favorites from 2023 here with ya’ll. I read (listened to) only thirty-one this year. But I did have some memorable ones I’d highly suggest.

Number one on a list of great reading has to be How to Keep House While Drowning by KC Davis. A gentle approach to cleaning and organizing as well as self care. I’ll be reading this at least once a year for the rest of my life.
Coming in at number two: Lovely War by Julie Berry (intertwined WWI love stories told by the Gods, excellent writing, compelling.)
Third best: The Midnight Library by Matt Haig (Woman tries on different lives searching for a better one)
Brandon Sanderson peppered my list more than I’d have thought. It’s great writing that I can share with my 12 year old grand daughter, but still intelligent and engaging.
- Yumi and the Nightmare Painter by Brandon Sanderson (two people “trade places” and conquer a mutual enemy)
- The Emperor’s Soul by Brandon Sanderson (a forger creates a new soul for an emperor and creates many other intrigues as well)
- Tress of the Emerald Sea by Brandon Sanderson (fun female pirate story set in a weird world)
- The Sunlit Man by Brandon Sanderson (fast moving jump into more of the amazing omniverse)
Two out of a series of three sci-fi books caught my attention. The third one had a narration shift that my head couldn’t get around, so I didn’t listen to the third one. I might still hard copy read it to come full circle on the storyline.
- Sleeping Giants by Sylvian Neuvel (Parts of a 3000 yr old giant robot discovered, intrigue and drama ensue, part 1 of 3 books)
- Waking Gods by Sylvian Neuvel (Second installment of giant robot story, more robots show up)
For a dose of reality or history these hit hard and made a dent in my psyche.
- No Promises in the Wind by Irene Hunt (adventures and travails of young boys leaving home during the depression)
- A Brilliant Night of Stars and Ice by Rebecca Connolly (historical fiction, the Carpathia rescue of Titanic survivors)
- The Elephant Whisperer by Lawrence Anthony (non-fiction account of an African nature preserve and its elephants)
- The Slow March of Light by Heather B. Moore (Bob Inama in East Berlin prison based on actual events/fiction, good read)
Reading recommended by grandkids or appropriate to read aloud to children.
- Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm by Kate Douglas Wiggin (a girls travails when she moves in with her spinster aunts, written before Anne of Green Gables)
- Wish by Barbara O’Connor (sweet story of a 10 year old girl and her wish for a real family)
- The Green Door by Stefan Gannon (Sweet tales of two children growing up midcentury England)
- Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis (a depression era orphan searches for his dad, surprise twist)
Miscellaneous reads very deserving of attention, book clubs, or getting lost in another time and place.
- Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus (1950s female chemist becomes a TV chef on her way to credibility) The book will be better than anything on streaming services.
- Unsheltered by Barbara Kingsolver (two stories of families on the same property in a town 100 years apart)
- Book Woman’s Daughter by Kim Michelle Richardson (sequel to mountain librarian, beautiful descriptive writing)
- Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt (young man searches for family in a quirky small town; Octopus helps)
- The Lonely Hearts Book Club by Lucy Gilmore (surprising friendships among quirky characters centered around a grouch)
- The Nature of Fragile Things by Susan Meissner (the results of a bigamist’s life, told from one wife’s perspective)
If you have any books you’d recommend, I’d love to hear about them.
Here’s wishing you another wonderful year of quality time spent with words.

As a young girl my mother used to let me sit beside her on the piano bench as she played music from My Picture book of Songs with its charming drawings and seasonal themes. We sang of big black choo choo trains, puppies next door, aeroplanes flying, whirly, twirly leaves and dozens of other sweet topics. That song book still exists sans the yellow cover, having miraculously survived a housefire and six other children loving its pages with pencil and crayon. The cellophane tape mom had carefully applied now scars the ragged-edged pages.

The degree isn’t simply for me to brag about, or for you to have some piece of paper to hang on the wall. The college degree has always been about the doors it can open for you, the opportunities it can make available and the freedom it can potentially provide. It can save you from a lifetime of back-breaking physical work. It can give you peace of mind and a fallback position. That’s what I really wanted for you. Now that you have those degrees, your own dreams are more within reach.
There are people who know me that could testify that I can carry on actual conversations. I’m often coherent and almost intelligent. It’s true that I’m more comfortable listening, although there’s usually an unspoken dialogue running in my head that’s witty and brilliantly spot on. It’s just that the connection between my brain and my mouth seems to be defective somehow.
I used to be awake before the birds or the worms. Before the sun even thought about showing its face I was up and going full speed ahead. I’d be typing away on my keyboard, or climbing onto the saddle of my bicycle, or out doing yard work long before most people rolled over to slam the snooze button for the first time.
This year has been different, seriously. The sun sets at some dumb hour like five-thirty when it used to set at seven. And mornings take an eternity to arrive. I just don’t understand.
I know you have each faced down some hard things in life, even as young as you are. I know the road has been broken and has worn down countless pairs of shoes for some of you. I know you’ve felt swallowed up and beaten down. I would take and carry it away from you if I could. But motherhood has its limitations.
I pray you taste as many as you can, as often as you can. I hope you love, often and deeply, and with wild abandon. I hope you occasionally have the chance to sit under the tree and savor the smells and sounds.
A funeral, a birth, a reunion, a contract, another birth, an illness, a visit, more visits, a hospital stay, a conference or two, grandbaby sitting, visits, a 60th anniversary celebration, more visits, oh, and an eclipse. That briefly sums up most of the reasons for my going and going and going. A few times I stayed put. Six weeks were the longest I stayed anywhere and even there I left and returned on short stints.
eturned I was anxious to leave again. The emptiness of a vacant house can wear on a person. And by vacant, I mean empty of people, not things.
I drove a few times to my far off destination. A debate still runs in my head if road trip or air trip is more comfortable, emotionally and physically. Eleven hours in a car can race by if you have an engaging audio book to keep your mind occupied.




In the meantime, I guess I could be more tolerant of my neighbor’s late night stereo blasting. At least it’s not some vehicle from Mad Max showing up at my doorstep, right?



