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]

1.10.2026

and we waited for spring to make its entrance

This winter took all the repeats. 
April felt like a recapitulation of March, 
a leitmotif of snow running through the forecast, 
sometimes the deceptive cadence 
of a seventy degree day. 
In April, we listened to robins 
singing in the wake of the storm, 
a fugue of chromatic juncos, 
and we waited for spring to make its entrance, 
for the last measure of snow, 
the first note of green in the trees, 
buds blaring open like trombones 
in the fourth movement of a Brahms symphony. 
It seemed like spring would never come, 
and then it came. Winter's white tune 
is taken up by the wild plum, 
and the trees have changed 
their key from gray to golden-green. 
The snow has taught us not to say 
this is the end, but on a day 
like today we know we've begun 
the season's brief modulation into summer. 

 [Rob Hardy, ‘Coda’, from Shelter in Place]

1.09.2026

if you ask me what I came to do in this world, I, an artist, will answer you: I am here to live out loud

MindPlay Friday
More accurate than a Buzzfeed quiz; less accurate than your therapist’s raised eyebrow.๐Ÿคจ
 
๐ŸŽจ What Artist Paints Your Inner Landscape? ๐Ÿ–Œ️ 
Your mood is a museum. 
Let’s find out in whose gallery you belong.

Q1. Your emotional default setting?
    A. Gentle and observant
    B. Dreamy and atmospheric
    C. Intense and structured    
    D. Colorful and unpredictable
 
Q2. Pick a sky.
    A. Foggy morning
    B. Pastel sunset
    C. Stark winter blue    
    D. Neon festival night
 
Q3. Your ideal way to spend an hour:
    A. Journaling
    B. Wandering outside
    C. Organizing your world    
    D. Making something messy
 
Q4. Choose a pattern.
    A. Blurred edges
    B. Flowing shapes
    C. Strong blocks    
    D. Wild streaks
 
Q5. What pulls you into a painting?
    A. Mood
    B. Light
    C. Structure    
    D. Emotion
 
Results in the comments!
 
[quiz generated by chatGPT; the title quotation is from ร‰mile Zola]

1.08.2026

truth will come to light. Murder cannot be hid long

Book Review 
 
Rating * * * * 
 
 
Author: Susie Dent
 
Published: this fiction book was published in 2025; I listened to the  unabridged audiobook (Tantor Media, Inc.; read by Louise Brealey; c.13 hours)
 
What is the story? 
Guilty by Definition is a clever literary mystery that blends wordplay and crime solving. After ten years abroad, lexicographer Martha Thornhill returns to Oxford to work as a senior editor at the fictional Clarendon English Dictionary. Soon after she takes up her post, anonymous, cryptic letter start arriving at the office—each packed with linguistic clues and literary references that point back to the mysterious disappearance of her brilliant older sister, Charlie, a decade earlier.
What type of language does it use—technical, complex, standard, or colloquial? aha! Language is the crux of the whole thing! If you LOVE words, this novel will pull you in, hold you close, and keep you pondering well after the last chapter ends.
 
Did you like this book? yes, very much so
 
If you could change something, what would it be? bring me a sequel, dang it! I'm waiting for the next installment.
 
What were your favourite parts? the narration is terrific. Louise Brealey may be best known in the U.S. in her role as morgue "lab-rat" Molly Hooper in the BBC series Sherlock (starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman). Her facility with the complex dictionary language of this book, as well as with the place-names and other specifics, makes the listening smooth and engaging.
 
Who stands out, among the characters? I was drawn to Martha's youngest colleague, Safi. She is smart (of course), but in a both softer and more intense way than the others in the group. She is most comfortable with expressing emotions, more socially adept, and also clever in a distinct way.  
 
What is your recommendation? it's not for everyone, given the language, and the fact that language makes up such a huge part of it. There were times when I wished I were reading the book myself, because I wanted to go back and look at a word or a paragraph. For lovers of language, though, this is top-notch and highly recommended.  
 
5 adjectives you would use to describe this text: intricate, fun, twisty, erudite, thoughtful
 
[book review template 5 adapted from here; the title quotation is from the novel]

1.07.2026

we're nothing at all without danger

You loved danger. 
Some people think a tough childhood 
marked your palms' dry creekbeds forever, 
and thus your breaking through borders, 
that propensity to gravitate to fringes, holes. 
 
The trucks came from Ireland, from Denmark, to load fish. 
You liked to climb on their tailgates 
and—as they picked up speed—to jump, 
in three, four steps, and hit the dirt. 
 
You picked up old bombs bare-handed, 
come by on the old war front, 
in the underbrush we found the trenches, 
like wounds too deep, unable to heal. 
 
You loved danger, 
and I realize we're nothing at all without danger: 
can't go through a door, go to sea, no lovers. 
Time has passed since those years, 
and today, the eyes of those who predicted your death 
are the eyes of winter-killed finches. 
 
[Kirmen Uribe {1970- }, 'Danger', from Meanwhile Take My Hand, translated from the Basque by Elizabeth Macklin]

1.06.2026

we shared an uncanny connection

judgmental
2. What are you afraid you might be judged for? 
    "afraid" is the wrong word to use; I'm not afraid of these judgments, so much as sensitive to and annoyed by them. 
    • migraines (by nature "all in my head")
    • my job (almost impossible to adequately explain, and seems way more casual, low-stress and unimportant than it can be)
    • natural fingernails (guys are surprisingly quick to criticize something they've never tried to understand)
    • my love for all things solitary 
    • not losing weight/getting more fit/giving a crap about wearing makeup or dressing up
    • my taste in movies, which has shifted so far away from even trying popular Hollywood fare 
 
8. Tell about a moment when you felt intensely attracted to someone, without telling who it was.
swoon!
    
I liked him pretty well already, so this wasn't out of the blue. We met up after work to go for a drive, just wandering around, sharing memories and impressions of stuff we saw, telling stories, getting to know each other in a different way. We were at a stop sign (he was driving). He reached over and tapped my hand, resting on my leg, and said quietly, "I'm glad we're doing this. I really like who you are now." He wasn't pitching it for a reaction, attempting to exchange it for goods or services, or faking. He was telling a truth.
    A man who can do that, who thinks to do it and actually does it, has something inside of him that most people will never get close to. 
 
11. What’s one thing you wish you could tell your younger self about love and relationships? 
    people lie. Sometimes even people you like, or who love you, or with whom you have ferocious chemistry, will lie. That's a fact of life, not a flaw in you, but being a sucker is a weakness when you're not even basically careful.
protect yourself

16. If you were a fictional love story character, who would you be and why? 
romantic...ish
    Marianne Dashwood. She's a romantic idealist, in love with feelings, and easily hurt. Her emotions are not just on her sleeve—they are wrapped around her like a blanket. 

     This isn't who I am now, but it's certainly who I've been in the past, and the most love-story-appropriate version of me.
 
Cold Mountain (2003)
2. Can love bloom on the battlefield? 
    of course, it can. Look at Moonlighting (1985-1989). Look at Hemingway, much of whose work (and whose life) involved that sort of scenario. Doctor Zhivago. From Here to Eternity. Cold Mountain. Gone with the Wind.... Maybe it's not the ideal location for a love story, but it sure does happen. Has happened, anyway.
 
21. What are your non-negotiables in a partnership for the long run? 
long distance love affair
    I'm allowing myself a maximum of three. A partner for me must be:

        • infected by curiosity
        • inherently kind
        • absent any legal, social, or implied romantic relationship with another person
 
17. If you could create a sensory experience that perfectly encapsulates your feelings for someone you've loved, what would it look, sound, smell, taste, and feel like? 
    when I was newly single, I was involved with a guy who lived on the left coast. That experience looked like something represented in the photo directly above. It tasted like raspberry truffles from Chukar Cherries, still my favorite candy. It sounded like Colin Hay's "I Just Don't Think I'll Ever Get Over You." It smelled like a cologne whose name I no longer recall, but whose scent would bring me back to that time in a heartbeat. (Trust me, it's happened.) And it felt like a mix of gradual friendship and fear and lust and mistrust and affinity and even more gradual, grudging, fearful, tentative love.
 
 [from here and adapted; the title quotation is from a blog post called "Patterns", tied in with #17, above]

1.05.2026

for the first time, I felt needed

Average rating: 7.6

The Bishop's Wife (1947)
The Bishop's Wife (1947) - "Dejected by his efforts to raise money to build a cathedral, Bishop Henry Brougham beseeches heaven for guidance, and is visited immediately by Dudley, who claims to be an angel. Henry is skeptical, then annoyed when Dudley ingratiates himself into the household as his assistant—and worse, wins the attention of Henry's long-suffering, kindly wife. When Dudley continues to intervene in Henry's struggles, the bishop decides to challenge it." 
length: 1h, 49m  |  source: streamed on TubiTV  |  directed by Henry Koster  |  why I watched: this is becoming one of my Christmas classics (previously reviewed here)
IMDb: 7.6/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 85% / 81% Audience  |  my IMDb: 9/10  |  MPAA: Approved
tone & texture: warm, classic Hollywood polish
notable quote: "When you want to know about a woman, ask the old men. They know."
my notes: gentle, inspiring, and delicately funny. Cary Grant at his best. 
themes: hope, love
Academy Award winner: Best Sound, Recording—Gordon Sawyer; 4x nominee
overall: highly recommended
 
Flowers of Shanghai (1998)
Flowers of Shanghai {Hai shang hua} (1998) - "In Shanghai in the 1880s there are four elegant brothels (flower houses): each has an auntie (madam), a courtesan in her prime, older servants, and maturing girls in training. The men gather around tables of food, playing drinking games. An opium pipe is at hand. The women live within dark-paneled walls. The atmosphere is stifling, as if Chekhov was in China. The melancholy Wang is Crimson's patron; will he leave her for the younger Jasmin? Emerald schemes to buy her freedom, aided by patron Luo. Pearl, an aging flower, schools the willful Jade, who thinks she has a marriage agreement with young master Zhu. Is she dreaming? Women fade, or connive, or despair." 
length: #1h, 53m  |  source: my DVD  |  directed by Hsaio-hsien Hou  |  why I watched: I'm on a quest to experience different types of Asian cinema (and I'm obsessed by Tony Leung Chiu-wai)
IMDb: 7.3/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 93% / 78% Audience  |  my IMDb: 8/10  |  MPAA: NR
tone & texture: intimate, lush & romantic
notable quote: "Good people wouldn't be in this profession."
my notes: this is a very quiet movie. If you're not interested in thinking and feeling and interpreting, then this is not for you. If you are, though, then you may find it as compelling as I did. Who "owns" whom? Are women's lives as frivolous as they seem, or are men's actually worse? What's the correlation between the genders' attractiveness and appeal? 
themes: power, identity, sacrifice
overall: strongly recommended
 
The Bear (1988)
The Bear {L'ours} (1988) - "A bear cub is left alone, unable to feed or defend itself, when its mother is killed in a rockslide. Eventually, the cub attempts to bond with a male grizzly, which initially ignores it. When the grizzly is pursued by hunters, the cub comes to its aid and wins the grizzly's affection. However, when one of the hunters captures the cub, the grizzly must confront the armed hunters. The tale is told from the cub's perspective." 
length: 1h, 36m  |  source: my DVD  |  directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud  |  why I watched: Tchรฉcky Karyo plays a hunter, and he's one of my favorites
IMDb: 7.7/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 88% / 82% Audience  |  my IMDb: 8/10  |  MPAA: PG
tone & texture: somber, soft & naturalistic
notable quote: "Everyone has a secret side. By God, that's the way it should be."
my notes: well! This was not what I expected, by miles and miles. An adventure story in the Disney model, there's got to be trauma before grace, like veggies before dessert. I was full-on bawling by around 0:15. The movie was profound, gorgeously filmed, and meaningful. 
    My problem with it: Karyo's voice was dubbed over with a very distinct, southern U.S. dialect. Jarring, unappealing, and frustrating, it ruined the experience for me. To be fair, I wouldn't have watched it again anyway (see 0:15), but that vocal change was not cool.
themes: found family, redemption
overall:  recommended with specific reservations

The Bigamist (1953)
The Bigamist (1953) - "Harry and Eve Graham are trying to adopt a baby. The head of the agency senses that Harry is keeping a secret and does some investigating. He soon discovers that Harry has done an unusual amount of traveling from his home in San Francisco to Los Angeles. Harry gets tracked down in LA, where he has a second wife and a baby. Via flashbacks, Harry tells the adoption agent how he ended up in two marriages." 
length: 1h, 20m  |  source: streamed on Fawsome  |  directed by Ida Lupino  |  why I watched: I was in the mood for noir, and this was recommended
IMDb: 6.8/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 73% / 54% Audience  |  my IMDb: 7/10  |  MPAA: Approved
tone & texture: somber, soft & naturalistic
notable quote: "I can't figure out my feelings towards you."
my notes: what a curious movie! Everyone is flawed, but not enough to clearly dislike. The ladies are each appealing, but not enough for one to root for either one. And the fella...he's hardly charismatic or handsome or attractive in any traditional sense. Yet there's something enthralling about this very decorous, gentle shitshow. It's possible to see how it can happen. 
themes: moral ambiguity, identity, power
overall:  recommended

Ocean's Eleven (1960)
Ocean's Eleven (1960) - "Danny Ocean calls on some of his World War II buddies—including Jimmy Foster, Sam Harmon and Josh Howard—to pull off an elaborate New Year's Eve heist at five casinos in Las Vegas. Eleven members of Danny's crew come together to pull off a perfect robbery, but they suffer a series of setbacks when Duke Santos, a former gangster, tries to thwart Ocean's plans to disappear with the money." 
length: 2h, 7m  |  source: my DVD  |  directed by Lewis Milestone  |  why I watched: I'm selling the set, and wanted to get through it one more time before letting it go
IMDb: 6.5/10  |  Rotten Tomatoes: 47% / 81% Audience  |  my IMDb: 6/10  |  MPAA: Approved
tone & texture: playful, classic Hollywood polish
notable quote: "Fifty percent of something is better than one hundred percent of nothin'."
my notes: entertaining, talky, and pretty slick. The bringing-the-gang-back-together phase takes up 4/5 of the film, and the actual heist only that last twenty percent. The guys are a mishmash of cool, oblivious, greedy, smart, conniving, and gorgeous. You're welcome to try and figure out who's who.
themes: loyalty, found family, chaos v. order
overall: mildly recommended
 
[the title quotation is from The Bigamist]

1.04.2026

every move you make opens a whole new world of possibilities

1. What board game could you play endlessly without getting bored? 
Tripoley board
My own set is nowhere near this nice!
    Tripoley or Scrabble. Tripoley is best when played using the insane, bastardized version created by my dad's side of the family. It is loud, sometimes slightly violent, cutthroat, mercenary, and hilarious. And very, very fun.
    Scrabble, I love, but there aren't too many people who will consent to play with me. Not that I'm so brilliant at it—the last few times I played, I lost, and not by a little bit—but the perception is that I'm going to clean the floor with you. Kind of like Trivial Pursuit, where the assumption is that I'll know every single History answer before the question is even completed. That's totally not accurate; most TP History questions are about something other than World War II neutrality, after all. I'm much better at Sports and, surprisingly, Science.
 
2. Which game has caused the biggest family argument? 
    Monopoly, I'd guess. That game is fraught.
    If we move beyond board games, then it's got to be air hockey. The incident mentioned here still rings in my mind when considering the mild-mannered-ness of my opponent in that game.
 
3. Did you ever make up your own games as a kid? 
    no, as a youngest child I cannot imagine that would have been entertained as an option 
 
4. What’s the weirdest or rarest game you own? 
    a version of Monopoly based on my hometown. It's as bizarre as it sounds. 
 
5. If your life were a board game, what would it be called? 
"Warm Places"
     Warm Places. The point would be finding a safe space to land. Players build sanctuaries (and Christmas trees) rather than empires. Cats and friends feel free to sprawl, breathe easier, and be themselves. 

6. Do you prefer strategy games or luck-based ones? 
    strategy 
 
7. Who in your life cheats (or “bends the rules”) the most?
    I seem to recall never losing to my brother, when we played games as children. Surely that's coincidence, right?

[ChatGPT blog meme questions, a set called '๐ŸŽฒ The Board Game & Playtime Meme'; the title quotation is by Matt Haig, from The Midnight Library]

1.03.2026

to be where we are

    Patience is a hard discipline. It is not just waiting until something happens over which we have no control: the arrival of the bus, the end of the rain, the return of a friend, the resolution of a conflict. Patience is not waiting passively until someone else does something. 

    Patience asks us to live the moment to the fullest, to be completely present to the moment, to taste the here and now, to be where we are. When we are impatient, we try to get away from where we are. We behave as if the real thing will happen tomorrow, later, and somewhere else. Be patient and trust that the treasure you are looking for is hidden in the ground on which you stand. 
 
[Henri Nouwen, from Hidden Treasure]

1.02.2026

toast cannot be explained by any rational means. Toast is me. I am toast

MindPlay Friday
More accurate than a Buzzfeed quiz; less accurate than your therapist’s raised eyebrow.๐Ÿคจ
 
๐Ÿž Mindplay Friday: What Should You Eat on Toast? ๐Ÿงˆ 
Let breakfast reveal your essence—one slice at a time.

Q1. Your morning personality:
    A. Slow and soft
    B. Cheerfully practical
    C. Focused and decisive    
    D. Creative and spontaneous
 
Q2. Ideal breakfast setting:
    A. In bed
    B. At the kitchen table
    C. At your desk    
    D. Wandering the house
 
Q3. Your comfort food type:
    A. Mild + simple
    B. Sweet + balanced
    C. Savory protein    
    D. Trendy + bright
 
Q4. Pick a kitchen tool:
    A. Butter knife
    B. Spoon
    C. Chef’s knife    
    D. Avocado masher
 
Q5. Secret breakfast fantasy:
    A. Peace
    B. Nostalgia
    C. Strength    
    D. Color
 
Results in the comments!
 
[quiz generated by chatGPT; the title quotation is by Margaret Atwood, from Oryx and Crake]

1.01.2026

people must have bread! People will grow angry without bread!

Book Review 
 
Rating  * *
 
Title: The Romanov Bride {a Romanov Novel, book 3}
 
 
Published: this fiction book was published in 2008; I listened to the unabridged audiobook (Blackstone Audio, Inc.; read by Stefan Rudnicki and Gabrielle de Cuir; 10 hours) 
 
What is the story? 
The Grand Duchess Elisavyeta's story begins like a fairy tale—a German princess renowned for her beauty and kind heart marries the Grand Duke Sergei of Russia and enters the Romanov's lavish court. Her husband, however, rules his wife as he does Moscow—with a cold, hard fist. And, after a peaceful demonstration becomes a bloodbath, the fires of the revolution link Elisavyeta's destiny to that of Pavel—a young Bolshevik—forever. --from barnesandnoble.com
What type of language does it use—technical, complex, standard, or colloquial? very colloquial. It was not difficult to follow, but neither was it a matter of just accepting what's on the page. 
 
Did you like this book? nope
 
If you could change something, what would it be? I very, very much disliked the voice of the main character, Elisavyeta. Self-centered, emotionally obtuse, and obsessed with her wealth and appearance, she was impossible to like. Worse, though, she was voiced in a manner both meek and strikingly condescending. I absolutely loathed that character. Rudnicki's presentation of the Pavel sections was at his usual high quality, but could not make up for de Cuir's portrayal of the abominable dishrag.
 
What were your favourite parts? Pavel's casually violent work for the revolution
 
What is your recommendation? read this if you have a high tolerance for tone-deaf, self-loving characters. Or, I suppose, if you liked the first two books in the series.
 
5 adjectives you would use to describe this text: unlikable, agenda-driven, dry, polar, sanctimonious
 
[book review template 5 adapted from here; the title quotation is from another of the authors books, Rasputin's Daughter]