1.23.2026

miniature griffins could be the next big trend in exotic pets

MindPlay Friday
More accurate than a Buzzfeed quiz; less accurate than your therapist’s raised eyebrow.๐Ÿคจ
 
๐Ÿฆฅ Which Exotic Pet Matches Your Spirit? ๐ŸŒ
 
Not for owning—
just for personality matching. 
Let’s meet your inner creature.

Q1. How do you move through the world?
    A. Quietly
    B. With curiosity
    C. With precision    
    D. With flair
 
Q2. What’s your social style?
    A. One-on-one
    B. Friendly explorer
    C. Selective    
    D. Chaotic good
 
Q3. Favorite type of environment:
    A. Calm
    B. Warm + lively
    C. Structured    
    D. Vibrant
 
Q4. Your energy level?
    A. Low but steady
    B. Moderately adventurous
    C. Focused    
    D. Up and down
 
Q5. Your charm type:
    A. Subtle
    B. Friendly
    C. Mysterious    
    D. Unexpected
 
Results in the comments!
 
[quiz generated by chatGPT; the title quotation is by Seanan McGuire, from Pocket Apocalypse]

1.22.2026

go and do your thing. Make us proud!

Book Review 
 
Rating * * * * 
 
 
Author: Julia London
 
Published: this novel was published in 2025 (!); I listened to the unabridged audiobook (Dreamscape Media; read by Amy McFadden; 10 hours) 
 
What is the story? 
A charming holiday romance that follows single mom Amy Casey as she escapes to a lakeside cottage to focus on her art. Her plans take an unexpected turn when she discovers that professional golfer Harrison Neely, who is recovering from an injury, has also rented the same house. As a snowstorm traps them together, their initial friction evolves into a deeper connection, allowing both to confront their pasts and rediscover the joy of love during the enchanting holiday season. --from various sources 
What type of language does it use—technical, complex, standard, or colloquial? standard
 
Does the level of language make it easy or difficult for the reader to follow? this is an engaging read, easy to follow
 
Did you like this book? yep, quite a bit
 
If you could change something, what would it be? there is a degree of external tension caused by a related group of people that seems to go on for too long. The mild acceptance of that chaos dimmed my admiration of the main characters, and made the eventual resolution of the conflict less powerful. 
 
What were your favourite parts? much like in the great Jennifer Crusie's books, there's just something about a sweet, slightly doofy dog to pull a romance along
 
Who stands out, among the characters? Harrison, the golfer, was most compelling for me. He's many-layered, not (just) living a life of pampering and ease. I also thought his openness and acceptance were genuinely revealed.
 
What is your recommendation? nice, mild, almost unobjectionable book, easy to read and causing no angst
 
5 adjectives you would use to describe this text: funny, engaging, thoughtful, inspiring, different 
 
[book review template 5 adapted from here; the title quotation is from the book]

1.21.2026

dissolves or doubles

Words especially 
are subject to 
the chemistry 
of death: it is 
an acid bath 
which dissolves 
or doubles 
their strength. 
Sentiments 
which pleased 
drift down 
as sediment; 
iron trees 
grow from filament. 

1.20.2026

it's not stupid to want to put on a pretty dress and feel beautiful for a night

1. If you had to eliminate one emotion from your life, which would it be? 
    fear

2. If you could have done one thing with one of your teachers, what would it be, and with whom?
    this question made me laugh, hard. I had an English prof that haunted my dreams, in a good way. He appears in my answers here.
go Hurons!
    To be full serious and above-board, though, I will say that I would have liked to have tried to write an article with my grad school mentor. He is a prolific writer, a brilliant teacher, and very well known in the field. It would have been an incredible boon to my career. (He retired as senior historian at a major Second World War museum.)

    For that matter, do have done the same with my softer/kinder grad school hero might've been even better. He's a more basically decent person, and the experience would have been rewarding and fun. (He remains a full professor at the school where I knew him.)

3. If you had to name the most difficult goodbye you've ever said, what would it be? 
goodbye
    if I can make it broad, I would choose The Flatland, in general. Leaving my life there broke me, in certain ways that can never heal.

    If it has to be a person, it's Chris. He was proud of me, and glad for me, and as sad as I was. The hug, in the parking lot of Cabana Charley's, lasted so long. We didn't want to let go. 
    If it's any goodbye...then it's the boy kitties I've loved and lost. 

4. If you could remove one marking from your skin, which one would it be?     
how bad could it be?
    besides the tattoos (sigh), it's a cherry angioma just below my left collarbone. It's almost but not quite out of my visual range, so I can just barely see it, and it looks like a bug, and I've tried to scratch it off ten billion times. They aren't inherently dangerous, but the scratching can cause (relatively) profuse bleeding. I want that thing
gone. 

5. If you could have won a single thing you tried for in your lifetime but didn't win, what would it be? 
    the local library job would have been nice. It's a not-funny joke that to get a job in that field anymore, you have to know people or bump someone off. Alas.
    
6. If you could live in a past era just so you could wear the clothes in fashion at the time, when would it be? 
    1950s
pretty

7. If you could suddenly be irresistibly charming for one day only, what would you do? 
    negotiate a car loan, a raise, and a date with the 2 O'Clock Man

 [from If2: 500 New Questions for the game of life; the title quotation is by Stephanie Perkins, from Lola and the Boy Next Door]

1.19.2026

you peep pretty loud for a chick that can't even find its own worms

Average rating: 6.4

A Very Vintage Christmas (2019) - "Dodie (Tia Mowry-Hardrict) is a hopeless
A Very Vintage Christmas (2019)
romantic, just like the pieces in her vintage antique shop. When Dodie finds a hidden box full of romantic trinkets, she makes it her mission to deliver it to its rightful owner. Following the address, she manages to persuade the handsome but reluctant new tenant, Edward (Jesse Hutch), to help her with her search." 
length: 1h, 27m  |  source: streamed on TubiTV  |  directed by Paul A. Kaufman  |  why I watched: typical Christmas season curiosity and hope for a rare Hallmark-adjacent movie win
IMDb: 6.1/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: N/A% / 29% Audience  |  my IMDb: 3/10  |  MPAA: TV-G
tone & texture: warm, crisp & modern
my notes: insultingly facile, this is a community theater-level show. Mowry-Hardrict phones it in, and Hutch is clearly just the eye-candy. When the most interesting character is the waitress at the diner....
themes: love, hope
overall: not recommended

Christmas in Connecticut (1945) - "A romantic comedy about Elizabeth
Christmas in Connecticut (1945)
Lane, a New York magazine writer who pretends to be a perfect farm wife for her popular column. When her publisher insists she host a Christmas dinner for a war hero who admires her recipes, she must navigate the chaos of her deception while falling in love with him." 
length: 1h, 41m  |  source: streamed on Amazon Prime (purchased)  |  directed by Peter Godfrey  |  why I watched: I've seen it, though I've not reviewed before
IMDb: 7.3/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 89% / 76% Audience  |  my IMDb: 7/10  |  MPAA: Approved
tone & texture: warm, classic Hollywood polish
notable quote: "I'm not in the flipping mood this morning, Mr. Yardley."
my notes: Barbara Stanwyck's Elizabeth is what they used to call 'plucky'. She's smart, working from a disadvantage, and creative. She has good friends, especially Felix Bassenak (S.Z. Sakall), who will go out of their way for her. It is fun to watch her wriggle her way out of some self-made messes - and, of course, to have her unexpected Christmas romance. 
themes: love, found family
overall:  recommended
 
Tokyo Godfathers {Tรดkyรด goddofรขzรขzu} (2003) - "An animated film about
Tokyo Godfathers {Tรดkyรด goddofรขzรขzu} (2003)
three homeless individuals—an alcoholic named Gin, a transgender woman named Hana, and a teenage runaway named Miyuki—who discover an abandoned baby on Christmas Eve. They embark on a journey through Tokyo to find the baby's parents, confronting their own pasts and forming a makeshift family along the way." 
length: 1h, 32m  |  source: streamed on TubiTV  |  directed by Shรดgo Furuya, Satoshi Kan  |  why I watched: it was recommended due to my interests in Asian cinema and Christmas-season movies
IMDb: 7.8/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 92% / 91% Audience  |  my IMDb: 8/10  |  MPAA: PG-13
tone & texture: cynical, absurd/surreal
notable quote: "My kind of man is slender, middle-aged, tan, with a divine square-back haircut and a lower town accent, who says 'Ah what the hell' when I don't quite have the cab fare."
my notes: this is one weird f'ing film. I'm not into anime, which obviously skews my perceptions. 
    The story is very holiday-ish, even if it's not "about" Christmas. The way the characters go about it is, uhm, untraditional (as are the characters themselves). It is quite violent and generally upsetting, though the payoff is big and feels earned. This one is definitely not for everyone, and I hope to never see it again. It was well-made, though, and crafted at such a high level, that I have to rate it pretty high. 
themes: redemption, found family
overall: strongly recommended
 
Angel on my Shoulder (1946) - "Gangster Eddie Kagle finally gets out of
Angel on my Shoulder (1946)
prison but is promptly killed by his partner and ends up in Hell. The surprisingly suave Devil offers him a chance to return to Earth, but in the body of an honest judge. The Devil intends to ruin the judge's reputation. However, Kagle's experiences lead him to question his past and seek redemption instead."
length: 1h, 40m  |  source: streamed on Amazon Prime  |  directed by Archie Mayo  |  why I watched: Christmas with my parents = find a mutually-agreeable movie
IMDb: 6.8/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: N/A% / 64% Audience  |  my IMDb: 6/10  |  MPAA: Approved
tone & texture: gritty, noir shadows
notable quote: "'Some folks are rather reluctant to cast their votes for lunatics.' 
    'I hadn't noticed.'"
my notes: ranks in the top five strangest movies I've seen, despite the straightforward plot. Paul Muni plays Eddie as a coarse and unappealing thug (see also: every Muni role, ever). Anne Baxter plays the judge's fiancรฉe, Barbara. She brings real warmth and humanity to this otherwise unapproachable, bizarre story. This is heavy-message noir.
themes: redemption
overall:  recommended for the curious

Naughty & Nice (2014) - "A cynical radio host is banished from Los
Naughty & Nice (2014)
Angeles to rural Colorado, where he is assigned to co-host with a hopeless romantic. Their initial on-air conflict leads to a budding relationship that captures the interest of the entire town." 
length: 1h, 28m  |  source: streamed on PlutoTV  |  directed by Sam Irvin  |  why I watched: after the last one, I wanted a sure win (previously reviewed here)
IMDb: 5.9/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: N/A% / 46% Audience  |  my IMDb: 8/10  |  MPAA: TV-PG
tone & texture: warm, soft & naturalistic
my notes: I've got a soft spot for this one, which hits at the intersection of sweet and snarky. The goofy, slightly creepy sidekick is the best part.
themes: love, transformation, identity
overall:  recommended

[the title quotation is from Tokyo Godfathers]

1.18.2026

the days go by I can feel them flyin' Like a hand out the window As the cars go by

Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone, 
Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone, 
Silence the pianos and with muffled drum 
Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come. 

 Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead 
Scribbling on the sky the message ‘He is Dead’. 
Put crepe bows round the white necks of the public doves, 
Let the traffic policemen wear black cotton gloves. 

 He was my North, my South, my East and West, 
My working week and my Sunday rest, 
My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song; 
I thought that love would last forever: I was wrong. 

 The stars are not wanted now; put out every one, 
Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun, 
Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood; 
For nothing now can ever come to any good. 




Reading. Always a book nearby. 
 
Sitting on the floor at her knee, weeping. Her gentle presence neither encouraging nor judging the tears, but just being there with me.
 
Driving to the next state over, to help the son move house.
 
Book recommendations, including Martin Sloane (which made her literally chuck it at the wall after the last page, exactly like I had done when I read it). 
 
Redecorating, all in green.
 
A visit to the far-west suburbs to buy a couple of gifts - I particularly remember picking out earrings - before my trip to Dallas to Meet a Man.
 
Medical appointments. Surgeries. Recovery. Pain. Perseverance. Faith. Strength. Selflessness. Fortitude.
 
Review journals, paperclips, and endless notes of books to buy.
 
Practically pinning her to the chair to watch The Princess Bride for the first time. She was so reluctant to watch a movie she thought would be dumb, but ended up loving.
 
Driving around in the evening (turning to late night), talking ourselves hoarse, laughing a lot and crying a little. Nearly running out of gas until I finally limped into a lit (but unmanned) station, thank goodness for pay-at-the-pump.
 
The trip of a lifetime, to the left coast, for a wedding.
 
Not "long-suffering." Not "always positive." Not "uncomplaining." A real, whole, full, flawed, feeling person.
 
Pizza delivery. Stuffed green peppers. Chicken-on-a-Plate. 
 
Phone calls.
 
Texts. 
 
Late-night talks.
 
The kitties.
 
Hair-twirling snarkiness that would shock almost anyone else (who could believe such a thing of the saintly Fluffy?)
 
Homemade sloppy joes, every time I moved house (and there were so many moves!), because she "couldn't really help."
 
Cards and letters in the most beautiful (and distinctive) handwriting.
 
Scones, tea. Quiet Sunday mornings.
 
Sympathy. Empathy. Grace. Friendship. Love.

 [the title quotation is by Keith Urban, from "Days Go By"]

1.17.2026

for a moment no one there succeeded

Her dealer, who handled successful artists, 
    was a successful dealer, 
and his Christmas party, too, was a success: 

we all knew it, for weren't we all there? 
    And the successful artist 
being handled in her eighth decade knew it 

too, although she was so old and had been so 
    unsuccessful for so long 
that she seemed to pay no mind to anyone. 

She sat quite still, her rosy scalp glistening 
    through her rather thin white hair, 
and gave no sign of hearing, or ignoring, 

any of our successful conversations. 
    Above the chair she sat in 
(like a furnished bone) loomed the decorative 

focus of the long room which had been handled 
    by a successful designer 
of skeletal interiors: a Roman male, 

oversize and barely under overweight, 
    every muscle equally 
successful—classically nude but not 

in the least naked as any man would be. 
    And as the talk continued 
Alice Neel leaned back and looked up into 

the forking limbs above her head, a pure 
    pelvic arch indeed denuded 
of the usual embellishment, so that 

all that met her eye was a shadowed empty 
    socket, the mere embouchure 
where once unstinting paraphernalia 

must have lodged. "Very fragile things, penises," 
    she mused, and for a moment 
no one there succeeded in saying a word.

1.16.2026

that bowl of soup—it was dearer than freedom, dearer than life itself, past, present, and future

MindPlay Friday
More accurate than a Buzzfeed quiz; less accurate than your therapist’s raised eyebrow.๐Ÿคจ
 
๐Ÿœ What Soup Are You? ๐Ÿฒ  
Every soup has a personality. 
Simmer it down and discover your essence.

Q1. How do you handle stress?
    A. Quiet endurance
    B. Warm reassurance
    C. Sharp focus    
    D. Comic relief
 
Q2. Choose a vessel:
    A. Simple ceramic bowl
    B. Vintage mug
    C. Stainless steel thermos    
    D. Anything mismatched
 
Q3. A friend calls you because they’re sad. You…
    A. Listen deeply
    B. Offer comfort
    C. Problem-solve    
    D. Distract with humor
 
Q4. Pick a spice mood.
    A. Mild
    B. Savory
    C. Bold    
    D. A little chaotic
 
Q5. Late-night craving?
    A. Broth
    B. Grilled cheese
    C. Leftovers    
    D. Ice cream
 
Results in the comments! 

[quiz generated by chatGPT; the title quotation is by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, from One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich]

1.15.2026

a living dead man. That is what I have been for some time now

Book Review 
 
Rating  * * * * 
 
 
 
Published: this novel was published in 2010; I listened to the unabridged audiobook (Blackstone Audio, Inc.; read by Stefan Rudnicki; 7 hours) 
 
What is the story? 
    Journal of the Gun Years by Richard Matheson is a gritty Western novel told through the discovered journals of marshal Clay Halser, a Civil War veteran whose legend as the “Hero of the Plains” grew across the post-war frontier.
    After a violent card-game incident forces him to flee his hometown, Clay drifts into the chaotic world of cow towns, stagecoach robberies, range wars, and saloon shoot-outs. Over time he earns a fearsome reputation as both outlaw and lawman, his steady nerve and quick draw propelling him from one violent episode to the next.
    Matheson uses Halser’s own journal entries to deconstruct the myth of the gunslinger, showing how fame and legend can warp a man’s sense of identity and doom him to a lonely, troubled end. It’s as much an emotional descent as a chronicle of frontier life—vivid, raw, and reflective on the cost of living by the gun.
 —compiled from various sources 
What type of language does it use—technical, complex, standard, or colloquial? colloquial, transitioning gradually into standard (as Clay Halser's facility with language grows)
 
Does the level of language make it easy or difficult for the reader to follow? there are moments in the first section that are just a bit hard to follow, but it smoothes out pretty quickly, and the audio version is always easier to follow.
 
Did you like this book? I did! It's way outside my typical subjects and genres, but that's not such a bad thing. It kept me entertained, and thinking about the real life of a gunfighter, as I decorated for Christmas.
 
What were your favourite parts? the most decisive battle in the story comes on calmly and quietly, but packs such a punch that I gasped aloud. It was brilliantly written and staged for maximum impact. I'm still impressed by the complications.
 
What is your recommendation? if you have even the slightest inkling toward Westerns, this is a very good one
 
5 adjectives you would use to describe this text: refreshing, violent, tender, surprising, powerful
 
[book review template 5 adapted from here; the title quotation is from the book]

1.14.2026

and suddenly a line rings out

I don't need martial hosts arrayed in odes 
And the charm of ornamental elegies. 
For me, everything in poetry should be out of place, 
Not what people think it is. 

If only you knew from what rubbish 
Poetry grows, knowing no shame, 
Like a yellow dandelion by the fence, 
Like burdock and goosefoot. 

An angry cry, fresh smell of tar, 
Mysterious mold on the wall... 
And suddenly a line rings out, lively, tender, 
To my delight and yours. 

 [Anna Akhmatova {1889-1966} "2" from ‘Secrets of the Craft’, in The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova]

1.13.2026

if you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need

2 What was a childhood fear you haven't talked about? 
    I used to worry that I would inadvertently uncover secrets I didn't want to know. This was a low-level worry based on something like finding a stash of Christmas presents, and then needing to pretend that I didn't know what was coming. I'm a terrible liar about stuff like this, and my not-poker-face gives up the game right away. 

3 What’s a project you’re proud of that not many people know about? 
    keeping track of the movies I've seen and what I thought of them, so I don't rewatch what I don't like and thus waste the opportunity to watch something that I do (or might) like instead

4 Describe the circumstances around one secret you’ve kept.
    I commissioned a custom ring for my then-spouse. This is maybe the first time I've thought of that since the divorce. It was a great gift. It also took forEVER to pay for it. I had to save money on the sly (we were making so little money then, that alone was a big deal) and then sneak it to the jewelry store to make payments—and I had it made in my hometown, which was 550 miles from where we were living. A dear friend of mine from college designed and made the ring, which made it even more special to both of us. It was beautiful, and he loved it and wore it every day. That was a big secret.  

5 What’s something you’re glad your family doesn’t know about you? 
    ahh, almost anything from four years of college or the first several years after my marriage ended. I wasn't murdering and pillaging, but there was widespread misbehavior that I'd rather not have associated with my good name. 

6 What’s the best lunch you’ve ever had at work? 
    contemplating this brought up lots of memories, but most of them were not work-related and some of them were not good. Example of the first: lunch with a library colleague after I'd moved away, when she and her family happened to be in the town where I live now. It was brief and casual, and exactly what I needed to feel like I was still connected to my old life. Example of the latter: my boss at the library invited me out to lunch. She wanted to strategize some project or other. We went to the pub, two blocks' walk. When the bill came, she "discovered" that she hadn't brought her purse; could I pick up the check? She'd pay me back. Needless to say, she never paid me back. And when she tried to do that again, I (surprise!) had "forgotten" my purse as well. I offered to stay at the restaurant while she brought back the money. Crazy brat.

7 What’s your favorite memory from any team-building activity? 
    we had regular team-building events at the library. Dumb games and programs, mostly, that were generally disdained except as an excuse to do something different for a whole day. 
    I always loved doing those with Fluffy and Mumbler. Each of them had a unique perspective on the library and our jobs there, and kept me entertained and sane, as much as possible. I miss them both.

8 Which conference or professional event did you enjoy the most and why? 
    my swearing-in ceremony was a surprisingly big deal. I hadn't expected to be moved by it. My family made a bigger deal about graduations, but that was really the experience that felt transformative.

 [from here, divided and adapted; the title quotation is from Cicero]

1.12.2026

you drive me crazy! / Joy to the world

Average rating: 8.667 (or, absent the specials, 7.5)

How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (1966) - "Bitter and hateful, the Grinch is
How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (1966)
irritated at the thought of the nearby village having a happy time celebrating Christmas. So disguised as Santa Claus, with his dog made to look like a reindeer, he raids the village to steal all the Christmas things. The village is sure to have a sad Christmas this year." 
length: 26m  |  source: my DVD  |  directed by Chuck Jones, Ben Washam  |  why I watched: it's an every-year kind of thing (previously reviewed here)
IMDb: 8.3/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 100% / 94% Audience  |  my IMDb: 10/10  |  MPAA: G
tone & texture: playful, high-color stylized
notable quote: "Fah-who-forays, Dah-who-dorays
    Welcome, Christmas, bring your light
    Fah-who forays, Dah-who-dorays
every Who down in Whoville
    Welcome in the cold, dark night
    Welcome Christmas, Fah-who-ramus
    Welcome Christmas, Dah-who-damus
    Welcome Christmas, while we stand
    Heart to heart, and hand in hand"
my notes: if this isn't the best (cinematic) Christmas story, then I missed the memo.
themes: redemption, found family
overall: most highly recommended

Enchantment (1948) - "Uncle Rollo finally retires to the house he
Enchantment (1948)
was brought up in. Lost in thoughts of his lost love, Lark, he does not want to be disturbed in his last days. However, the appearance of his niece and her subsequent romance with a soldier causes him to reevaluate his life and offer some advice so the young couple don't make the same mistake he did all those years ago." 
length: 1h, 40m  |  source: Amazon Prime Video  |  directed by Irving Reis  |  why I watched: Thanksgiving at my parents' house means watching a movie (previously reviewed here)
IMDb: 7.2/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: N/A% / 72% Audience  |  my IMDb: 8/10  |  MPAA: Approved
tone & texture: tender, lush & romantic
notable quote: "If I were you, I'd go and find him. Don't cheat yourself of love the way I did. Listen to me! Don't stop to bargain for happiness, for in one wasted moment, a door may close, a ship may sail, a train may leave, a man may die. Go after him or make your mind you'll never see him again."
my notes: two wonderful movies in one. The first time I saw it, I was captivated by Lark's story. This second time, I saw the more modern couple in a different light. Romantic and gently fun, and with a great villain. 
themes: love, courage
overall:  recommended
 
A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving (1973) - "This annual special follows
A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving (1973)
Charlie Brown as he prepares for Thanksgiving dinner, initially planning to go to his grandmother's house. However, Peppermint Patty invites herself and her friends to the house, leading him to enlist Snoopy and Woodstock to help create a makeshift Thanksgiving feast, which includes toast and popcorn, rather than the traditional turkey."
length: 25m  |  source: my DVD  |  directed by Bill Melendez, Phil Roman |  why I watched: it's a turkey-day staple (previously reviewed here)
IMDb: 7.7/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 67% / 76% Audience  |  my IMDb: 10/10  |  MPAA: TV-G
tone & texture: tender, soft & naturalistic
notable quote: "'I can't cook a Thanksgiving dinner. All I can make is cold cereal and maybe toast.' 
    'That's right. I've seen you make toast. You can't butter it, but maybe we can help you. Snoopy, you go out to the garage and make a table we can set up in the backyard."
my notes: some things just feel like home for me, and this special is one of them. 
themes: found family
overall: most strongly recommended

Under the Tuscan Sun (2003) - "Frances Mayes is a 35-year-old San Francisco
Under the Tuscan Sun (2003)
writer whose perfect life has just taken an unexpected detour. Her recent divorce has left her with terminal writer's block and extremely depressed, and her best friend, Patti, is beginning to think she might never recover. Frances decides to take a break and she buys a villa in the beautiful Tuscan countryside and decides to begin anew. Restoring her new home, she eventually finds the fulfillment she was searching for, including love."
length: 1h, 53m  |  source: my DVD  |  directed by Audrey Wells  |  why I watched: I'd seen it before but hadn't reviewed
IMDb: 6.8/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 62% / 78% Audience  |  my IMDb: 7/10  |  MPAA: PG-13
tone & texture: warm, lush & romantic
notable quote: "Signora. Please stop being so sad. If you continue like this, I will be forced to make love to you. And I've never been unfaithful to my wife."
my notes: this is a light movie, warm and open and delightful (well, except the chunks that are sad). It's the sort of thing that, in the throes, makes me want to dye my hair red, trade in the SUV on a convertible, and learn Italian.    
    Once that all wears off, though, it just feels like a decent way to have spent a couple of hours but not a life-changing experience (for me). 
themes: transformation, found family, love
overall:  recommended

A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965) - "Charlie Brown feels depressed during the
A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965)
holiday season, due to its commercialism. He takes on the role of director for a Christmas play, but struggles with his friends' lack of cooperation and their mockery of his choice of a small, sad Christmas tree, which ultimately leads to a heartwarming realization about the true meaning of Christmas."
length: 25m  |  source: my DVD  |  directed by Bill Melendez  |  why I watched: it is required by Christmas law (previously reviewed here)
IMDb: 8.3/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 86% / 92% Audience  |  my IMDb: 10/10  |  MPAA: TV-G
tone & texture: tender, soft & naturalistic
notable quote: "Rats. Nobody sent me a Christmas card today. I almost wish there weren't a holiday season. I know nobody likes me. Why do we have to have a holiday season to emphasize it?"
my notes: hope
themes: the Peanuts gang are bullies and jerks, but in the end they really come around. I'm such a sap for this stuff.
overall: completely recommended

It's Christmastime Again, Charlie Brown (1992) - "The Peanuts gang
It's Christmastime Again, Charlie Brown (1992)
preparing for the holidays through various storylines, including Charlie Brown's attempts to sell Christmas wreaths, Sally's nerves about a school play, and Peppermint Patty's struggles with her book report."
length: 23m  |  source: my DVD  |  directed by Bill Melendez  |  why I watched: it's on the DVD with the standard special, and I just let it run to see what this one was all about
IMDb: 6.8/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: N/A% / 70% Audience  |  my IMDb: 7/10  |  MPAA: TV-G
tone & texture: warm, soft & naturalistic
notable quote: "Duck, sir. Easter is coming."
my notes: less a story than an overlapping group of situations, this certainly doesn't have the magic of the original special. Still, it has some good moments and is an unoffensive way to spend a half hour over the holidays. 
themes: chaos v. order
overall:  recommended
 
[the title quotation is from It's Christmastime Again, Charlie Brown]

1.11.2026

he who establishes his argument by noise and command, shows that his reason is weak

1 How frequently do you purchase lottery tickets or mail in sweepstakes registrations?
 Have you ever won anything from them? 
winner winner, duck dinner
    I don't often buy them, but I am given lottery tickets now and then. As long as it's within appropriate limits, it's a little purchase of fun and hope, not a problem. I've won as much as $200 on a scratch ticket a few times.
    Sweepstakes registrations are not my thing. I've done it in the past, winning a bunch of stuff (including a very nice Montblanc pen). There have also been a few skill-based contests, back when that was popular. (My biggest win was a standing golf bag.) Those sorts of things are counterproductive, though, since it opens the floodgates of junk mail and widely disseminates one's contact information. In an era where privacy is a myth and personal security is tenuous, it makes sense to lock down as much as possible.

2 Are you a hugger or a non-hugger? 
    I am a hugger for sure, though I'm extremely selective about the recipients. Maybe it was the pandemic, or possibly the accumulated interpersonal and psychological upsets that have come from and since that time—but something's made me far less eager or even willing to so much as touch another person. 
    Among the all-time great hugs ever, I've written about one (Two O'Clock Man and perfection) and thought a lot about the other. I had a dear friend who was somewhat long-distance, but who happened to be in the area and available for a few hours. We enjoyed a lovely, leisurely meal at the steakhouse (ironic, given his vegetarianism, that it was his choice). He drove me home, we said our goodbyes, then hugged. It was an outstanding hug, 10/10, and went on far longer than the typical embrace. It felt intimate, not sexual, and warm. It was also startling, and we were both a little bashful afterward. Great hug.

3 What inspires you to write? 
writing IS the hardest thing ever
    good question. Sometimes it's inspiration, other times it's desperation. Sometimes it's pro-mental health, other times it's bad mental health. Guilt. Procrastination. Fun, joy. Distraction. Disengagement. Nostalgia. Sometimes there's no inspiration at all, just force of will. 


4 When you find yourself in an argument, do you prefer to leave and resolve it later or stay and settle it right away? 
    y'know, I'm just not a fan of arguments. I don't think they are "necessary" or "helpful" or "appropriate" (very often). The mere fact of argument makes me uncomfortable and unhappy. 
    That doesn't mean I'm Pollyanna. Of course there will be times when any two people disagree. But, in the spirit in which this question is intended, I think it does WAY more harm than good. 
pointless arguing, anyone?
    Anyway, somewhere between A. Stay and fight it out, or B. Leave and settle it later, there's a middle ground (let's call it Greenland) where you say what needs to be said at the time but stop before it blows up, and then take some time by yourself to take a breath and calm down before addressing it again. 

    I've had some experience arguing with someone who pushed and pushed and pushed, and took my need for space as immaturity or denial. That led to some profoundly regrettable stuff being said and a lot of time wasted, angry as Hell. 

5 What's your preference: motorcycle, dirt bike, moped, mountain bike, racing bike, scooter, or unicycle?
    I might ride a moped or scooter in an emergency. The rest of it ain't gonna happen.
 

6 What nightmare woke you up in a panic? 
    the Glenn Ford film Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1962; reviewed here) came back in weird, distressing dreams for the week or so after I watched it. Melodramatic and loud, the nightmares were a chaotic frenzy of pointless activity (and some dancing), all with people wearing way too much makeup.

7 If you could write a best-selling book, what would you write about? 
    my thinly-veiled autobiography, please

 [from The Complete Book of Questions : 1001 Conversation Starters for Any Occasion; the title quotation is from Michel de Montaigne]