Sunday Bookends: wrapping up Christmas — but not right away, family outings, mystery books, and

It’s time for our Sunday morning chat. On Sundays, I ramble about what’s been going on, what the rest of the family and I have been reading and watching, and what I’ve been writing. Some weeks I share what I am listening to.

This week I’m joining up with Kimba at Caffeinated Reviewer, Deb at Readerbuzz, and Kathyrn at The Book Date.


What’s Been Occurring

Welcome to my last Sunday Bookends for 2023. Crazy, isn’t it? Tomorrow it will be 2024.

2023 flew by for us in some ways and dragged in others.

This past week we ended the year with a lot of family time.

It was Christmas Eve and Christmas Day at my parents and two family days and a lot of relaxing together and watching movies.

Today and tomorrow will be more relaxing and then it will be back to school for the kids and I on Tuesday.

I wrote a bit about our last week in my post yesterday if you would like to catch up.

I was watching a video by Darling Desi on YouTube yesterday and she talked about how many years ago in our country we used to celebrate the Christmas season until January 6 and that we should give ourselves permission to do that if we want to. So this week I’m giving myself permission to continue celebrating Christmas with Christmas movies and books that I didn’t get to in the month of December.

I started watching It’s A Wonderful Life last night so I can watch some of my favorite scenes and before bed I read from a vintage Christmas book.

What I’m/We’re Reading

I didn’t read a ton on my break but I did read some. I finished Christmas in Abasorka County by Craig Johnson and made progress on Southern Snow by B.R. Goodwin.

The one by Craig Johnson is a small collection of short stories featuring Sheriff Walt Longmire from his Longmire Mysteries series.

 I should have Southern Snow finished this week. I am not taking so long to read it because it is bad. I just stopped reading it to read some other Christmassy-themed books like the collection of vintage Christmas stories, the Johnson one, and a few chapters of Little Women, which I am making my way through slowly. Southern Snow does feature Christmas but I believe it can be read any time of the year.

Early last week I started an ARC by Kristen Perrin called How To Solve Your Own Murder and I was hooked and am blazing through it.

 For those who like clean reads – this is clean so far but I’m only on chapter 10. There has been one swear word and it could get worse as things get intense, but I’m not sure. In other words, if you usually read Christian or clean fiction like me – just be warned that this is not listed in those categories.

I’ve also started Dysfunction Junction by Robin W. Pearson, which is another ARC read. The book releases February 6.

In January I’m focusing on cozy like I did in December so I hope to read some more cozy mysteries, including The Cat Who Went Into The Closet which my husband ordered for me and a couple of Nancy Drew books.

I’m also reading A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens with The Boy for English.

Little Miss and I have been listening to The Best Christmas Pageant Ever but I’m trying to get her to let me read her The Borrowers at night before bed.

We will be back to reading a history-related book for school on Tuesday, but I’m not sure which one yet.

The Husband is reading John Connolly books because Connolly has just put up his entire catalog on Kindle Unlimited. If that isn’t a sign of things to come in the publishing industry I don’t know what is. That means his ebooks are exclusively only on Amazon and he’s a NY Times Best Seller. They cannot be purchased anywhere else for 90 days. Interesting.

Also interesting is that the book we downloaded, The Furries: A Charlie Park Book begins in the town my husband and I lived in for 20 years for me and more than 20 for him. It is the town he now drives through to go to his second job because the towns up there all run together. The Furries is actually two books in one and the first one that mentions the town is The Sisters Strange.

 It’s so bizarre to see the town in the book because it is truly a tiny little area essentially in the middle of nowhere. There are about 3,200 people in the town he’s talking about and maybe 13,000 altogether in the three towns that run together. I may be off on that number – I didn’t check the census but it is definitely under 30,000 these days.

I’m very curious now to know how Connolly knew about it or his connection to the area. He even writes about the flood we went through there in 2011. Thankfully it did not hit our home since we were at a higher elevation but it did flood the historic and business district of the town. I was working for the newspaper at the time and took photographs of the destruction but almost forgot to take them because I was just standing on the hill looking down into the rest of the flooded town in shock.

I’d also love to know if any of his characters are based on any real-life residents. I wouldn’t be surprised in the least if they were. I don’t know that Connolly’s books are my cup of tea but after reading the first chapter I am hooked and if he goes back to Athens in this book, I know I will be trying to see which characters might be based on people I know from there.

In an interview with a Maine television station, Connolly said he wrote this mainly in lockdown during the pandemic so he was mainly in Ireland at the time (which is where he is originally from). This makes the book partly taking place in Athens that much more interesting to me. He also released the book in chapters like I have done on my blog. Maybe Mr. Connolly saw my blog and copied me. *wink* Ha. Ha.

What We watched/are Watching

I watched a ton of Christmas-themed shows and movies since I last posted a Sunday Bookends.

A Christmas Carol from 1938

White Christmas

Elf (for the second time)

Trading Christmas

A Biltmore Christmas

A Christmas Story

A half of The Man Invented Christmas (need to get back to it)

Half of Blithe Spirit (need to finish it when The Husband is home from work)

The Christmas special from last year of All Creatures Great and Small

The Little House on the Prairie Christmas special

A Christmas episode from M.A.S.H.

We also watched a couple other episodes of M.A.S.H., a couple episodes of Miss Scarlet and The Duke, the first episode of C.B. Strike (based on the books by Robert Gailbraith. I read the first one and enjoyed it even though it was dark and full of obscenities – just a warning for anyone who might try it), a lot of Newhart, Forgotten Way Farms, Darling Desi, Doctor Quinn Medicine Women, and The Pioneer Woman.

I probably watched some other things as well but it has been two weeks so I’m not sure.

What I’m Writing

I’m working on my book Cassie and blathered on about a bunch of movies and other stuff here on the blog.

Next week I will be writing about the movie Persuasion to kick off Jane Austen January. Erin from Still Life, With Cracker Crumbs and I will be starting buddy watches of movie adaptations of Jane movies January 11. We have started a link up that you can access through the menu at the top of my page.

If you want to read more about the feature you can see my post here: https://lisahoweler.com/2023/12/28/getting-ready-for-jane-austen-january/

The movies we will be watching include:

Sense and Sensibility – 1995 (January 11th)

Pride and Prejudice -2005 (January 18th)

Emma – 1996 (January 25th)

Miss Austen Regrets (February 1)

On the blog recently I shared:

What I’m Listening To

I listened to Shepherd’s Abiding by Jan Karon before and during Christmas week.

I have also been listening to a collection of audio productions of Jane Austen’s books on Audible and plan to start Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry on audible at some point, but probably not until February because I’ll be listening to the Jane Austen for Jane Austen January.

Photos from this week

Christmas:

Local light display:


Fun outing:

Now it’s your turn. What have you been doing, watching, reading, listening to or writing? Let me know in the comments or leave a blog post link if you also write a weekly update like this.


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13 thoughts on “Sunday Bookends: wrapping up Christmas — but not right away, family outings, mystery books, and

  1. I love the idea of extending Christmas until January 6. I shall have to do this anyway since my husband went on a rescue mission to your part of the country this week. My brother broke his leg in Pennsylvania while on vacation, and my husband flew up there to help him and his wife drive back home to East Texas. Thank goodness for no snow or ice.

    The photos are beautiful, as always, thoughtful, reflective. I look forward to hearing more about A Tale of Two Cities which thus far in my life has been a fail for me. Maybe I will try again this year.

    And your Jane Austen movie event sounds delightful.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I actually gasped when I saw that blue checked tablecloth with the snowflakes! I used to have one, but I donated it when we moved about nine years ago! We had a beautiful ash tree in our front yard there. It was a male tree and got gall. We were treating it for that, and it was recovering. The people who bought our house just cut the tree down (along with about 70 others). What a beautiful way to commemorate a tree.

    We have been watching Last Tango in Fairfax (I think that’s the name). It’s a British show with Derek Jacoby. I’ve been reading Sense and Sensibility. Now, I remember why I don’t enjoy Jane Austen…why write a sentence with five words when you can use twenty-five!

    We took down all the Christmas decorations over the last two days. I don’t usually take them down so quickly, but I was ready to reclaim the peaceful nature of the rooms. I do miss the lights on the trees. Tomorrow, all the bins will go into the basement aka the crawl space!

    Have a wonderful week, Lisa!

    https://marshainthemiddle.com/

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