Sunday, April 30, 2023

A Flair for Flip Flops

A Flair for Flip-Flops (the Sadie Kramer Flair Mysteries Book 5) by Deborah Garner
Read April 2023


This is just a fun cozy mystery series book - doesn’t require deep thought, but is always an entertaining quick read.  I get a kick out of the main character, Sadie Kramer.  She is a larger than life personality who carries her dog, Coco, with her everywhere she goes - in her handbag.  She dresses loud and proud and embraces both her age and her (larger) body.  She enjoys a nice glass of wine and shopping wherever she goes.  Although she is a boutique owner from San Fransisco, she is often on the road - traveling from California wine country to New Orleans and beyond.  And she always encounters a murder in her travels.  The writing is good enough that I don’t always guess ‘who dun it’ but even if I do, it does not diminish the pleasure of the read.  So if you are looking for a quick and easy read - fun cozy mystery - I recommend this series.  The first book in this series is entitled A Flair for Chardonnay. 


I have also really enjoyed her Paige MacKenzie mystery series which begins with Above the Bridge.  In this series Paige is a newspaper woman who travels to western towns to write human interest or historic stories of interest.  This means the books take place in some of my favorite locations including Wyoming, Montana, New Mexico, Colorado, etc.  These mysteries are pretty well written and engaging - and definitely highlight the various locales as part of the story.  (which I really like)  The author even created an entire Christmas story series out of a cafe set in the 2nd book of the mystery series. 


For this kind of easy reading cozy mystery series, Deborah Garner is one of my favorites. 



I don't usually highlight anything in cozy mysteries, but this line jumped out at me.  :D 


Calories love company, I always say. 





We Are Not Like Them

We Are Not Like Them by Christine Pride and Jo Piazza
Read April 2023 - Zoom Reading Circle


Wow, this is quite a book.  It provides powerful commentary on race through the voices of two women, lifelong best friends. Jen is white, daughter of a rough and tumble single mom, did not go to college and is married to a Philadelphia cop, Kevin.  Riley (born Leroya) is black, college educated, and a rising star Philadelphia television journalist who comes from a large and loving family.  The book opens with a police shooting of an unarmed black teenager, by Jen’s husband and his partner.  As the racial implications of that shooting reverberate through the city, the two friends find their friendship has larger cracks in it than they perhaps realized. 

This book is written in both their voices, which I found quite powerful. I went into the book assuming I would be staunchly on one side and yet found that the voice for each character was compelling in its anguish, love, fear and loss.  This book really resonated with me as a slow dissolution of a long-time much-treasured friendship... with someone who maybe you can’t really be that kind of friend with after all?  What makes friendship possible?  Or really, what finally makes friendship IMpossible.  At what point do bone-deep differences finally break something apart for good. 


I have my own thoughts about this kind of thing since a friendship that was so vital to me eroded and then finally disappeared during the pandemic.  Not the same, but the same in some ways. I could really feel for Jen and her complete lack of understanding about why there was this distance.  And I could completely feel Riley’s anger when Jen was oblivious about the depth of the problem and the fact that things would never just ‘go back to normal’.  The world (and they) had changed.  


I also thought the book did a great job of challenging some cliched stereotypes... Jen, the white girl has the hard-scrabble Mom who didn’t do such a great job of raising her - which led to Jen finding comfort, and a family she could consider her own, in Riley’s family.  Riley grew up in a loving and stable home filled with reminders and admonitions to ‘be all that you were born to be’ - with a photo of Martin Luther King Jr. on the wall and stories of personal pain from systemic racism both shared and hidden. Riley fought against being called ‘uppity’ for her (and her family’s) determination that she would go to college and succeed. In spite of her success, her parents are still facing foreclosure on their home that has been in the family for generations - due mostly to tax increases brought on by white flight from the city to the suburbs.  So many themes of systemic racism and how it truly impacts lives throughout this book.  


The two authors, Christine Pride and Jo Piazza, are also white and black and so brought  such heart to the voices of Jen and Riley.  I really appreciated this book so much... I learned from it, enjoyed it, and am excited to see these two authors have another book coming out soon.  I plan to read it for sure.  The combination of the authors voices and perspectives provides a great reading experience.


Now that I have finished it I will say that I can’t stop thinking about this book.  It was so good.  The friendship may not dissolve but it certainly leaves things open that the future will look different in many ways.  Nothing stays the same... this we know.  And in many cases, even if it hurts, it is for the best.  


Our Book Club rated it a 3.9.   I would rate it a 4 to a 4.5



Here are some of my highlights from this book...


That's the problem. I don't have the words. It's hard to pinpoint, let alone describe exactly what's going on between us - this weird, unspoken rift. The longer we go without talking, the stranger it all feels, like we're in an invisible fight and neither of us understands the rules. 


The longer you let something go, the easier it is to stay silent, and the silence is where the resentment starts to fester and rot. 


It's a paradox, loving someone precisely because you know them so well, inside and out, and at the same time nursing a tiny fantasy that they can be different in the specific ways you want them to be. 


Maybe it's what we all want from the people we love: to be seen for exactly who we are. It was a simple realization, so why did it feel like such a miracle?


Even though she's still the first person I want to tell when something good or happy happens, that's not where we are right now. I'm still not sure whether we'll ever get back to that exact place. 



And the two quotes at the beginning of the book really struck me as well... 


The only trick of friendship, I think, is to find people that are better than you are - not smarter, not cooler, but kinder, and more generous and more forgiving - and then to appreciate them for what they can teach you, and to try to listen when they tell you something about yourself, no matter how bad - or good - it might be, and to trust them, which is the hardest thing of all.  But the best, as well.  

            A Little Life, Hanya Yanagihara


Maybe she and I failed each other by allowing each other the freedom to be ourselves, and maybe that was the inevitable consequence of true friendship. 

            Trouble, Kate Christenson





Puzzle #28 - White Mountain - Cafe on the Water - 1000 pieces

Puzzle #28 of 2023
Finished April 30, 2023


Good old White Mountain. They are always like 'coming home'.  Just barely got the border done - not feeling so great.  this one may take awhile if I am sick this week.





Wow.  So I started this puzzle way back on April 3 and just got the border (mostly) done.  It has sat there ever since - until tonight (April 19) when I finally had time to sit back down and work on it a bit.  What a couple of weeks we have had!  It is a fun puzzle.  Got the greens going first (because of course I love green) then decided to do the sky next.  Crazy, but it is a clear section.  Will finish that up next time.  Nice to be back puzzling.  White Mountain is always good.




Paired with 2021 Paolo Scavino Italian white blend

a very nice wine to go with the 'Cafe on the Water' 

So I began this on April 3... then was sick and didn't get back to it until April 19-20.  Then... life including our new grandson being born happened!  And now I am sick again (because of course I am).  But that at least means that today I finally had the time to sit down and finish this puzzle!  It took all month to do it - but not because I was actually working on it!  I just never could get around to it.  A very fun and engaging puzzle, though.  Typical white mountain quality with good sturdy pieces that are a nice size to handle in your hand, colorful and fun image, and enough challenge to keep you interested, but not frustrated.  Will hope that May brings a bit more puzzling time to my life... ;)







Puzzle #28 of 2023
Finished April 30, 2023

Monday, April 3, 2023

Puzzle #27 - Cavallini & Co - Vintage Travel - 1000 pieces

Puzzle #27 of 2023
Finished on April 3, 2023

Very enjoyable puzzle.  These are different and I do like them.  I will say that the pieces do not stay together well at all... they just kind of lay there so they get jostled easily.  Also, I really don't like the portrait view because it is just too far 'up there' to reach well.  I have to stand up and crouch over and it hurts my back.  I should have gotten out my Christmas present of the puzzle caddy that turns, but that seemed like too much trouble.  :D  Should have done it.  Will try to remember next time.  :)  Instead I used this other puzzle mat which worked well for the size, but I don't like that it grips the pieces so hard.  Sometimes just trying to get two pieces to connect it would pull apart the whole puzzle. (back to pieces that sit so loosely together).  Anyway, great fun and love the puzzle.  Not difficult and fun to look at as you put it together.  But I wish it wasn't portrait view and I wish the pieces stayed together better.  I do love having the poster.  The round canister is unique and fun and stands out, but not sure it serves any good purpose - and it is harder to store than boxes. But it is cute!  :)   Did have one piece that was pretty damaged - to the point that it really wouldn't fit in where it was supposed to go.  So I just laid it there.  And then I ended up having 2 extra pieces that didn't go anywhere... go figure.




2020 Coppo Gavi La Rocca

I am really enjoying Cortese wine lately.
Went perfectly with this Vintage Travel puzzle.  :D 






this is the damaged piece



fun to look at all the vintage travel posters




Puzzle #27 of 2023
Finished on April 3, 2023

Saturday, April 1, 2023

Puzzle #26 - Surelox - 1940's Breakfast Nook - 500 pieces

Puzzle #26 of 2023
Finished on April 1, 2023


Very fun puzzle.  Tiny!  But very fun.  LOVE all the green (my favorite color).  Just enough challenge but not frustrating.  A pretty puzzle.  Quick and fun.  The last bit to be completed was the wallpaper along the top.









Puzzle #26 of 2023
Finished on April 1, 2023