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
I talked a little bit about what’s been occurring yesterday in my Saturday Afternoon Chat. Mainly we’ve been dealing with weird weather of snow and rain and ice and high winds. Today our temps dropped very fast so we will be dealing with arctic temperatures for the whole week. I will be inside the whole week, other than picking our son up at the bus stop (which is our local convenience store) because I don’t want him to have to walk up the hills to our house in the frigid temps.
I also woke up this morning to find out we have a wind advisory again so now it feels like 16 instead of 28. I was on my way to my parents this afternoon (they’re about eight minutes from our house) but when we saw a tree being removed from the bottom of our street and then another one hanging on a line, across the road and almost to the height of our car, I decided we would pick up my son and head back home to wait for the wind advisory to expire before we try again tomorrow.
We might have been fine but looking around seeing trees smashed along the road, limbs broken in the road and evidence of trees having been chainsawed to clear the roadway, we decided to err on the side of caution.
The Husband dropped some homemade soup I was taking off at my parents so they could at least have lunch.
Tomorrow’s temperatures will be frigid but at least we won’t have to be concerned about trees falling on us while battling the cold.
We have a lot of dead ash trees around us so those are ripe for falling down and causing issues. In the summer my daughter and I were at my parents’ swimming in the pool and one fell down behind my parents’ house in the woods. It wasn’t even windy that day. It just fell over. If it can happen without wind then it can definitely happen in 25 to 45 mph wind gusts.
What I’m/We’re Reading
I’m still reading Little Women and Dysfunction Junction. I am enjoying both and like to switch off between them. I will probably finish Dysfunction Junction (by Robin W. Pearson) this week.





After that, I’ll be reading The Cat Who Went Into A Closet and The Bungalow Mystery – a Nancy Drew Mystery.
I am also reading Do The New You By Steven Furtick as a Netgalley read which was perfect timing since our online Bible study is going to be reading it in February.
At night Little Miss and I are reading The Borrowers.
What We watched/are Watching
I watched Northern Exposure over 20 years ago (probably) and started watching it again this week. I don’t remember much of anything about it so it’s like watching it for the first time.
It really was well written and holds up pretty well actually.
I also watched Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice for the Jane Austen January feature I’m doing with Erin from Still Life, With Cracker Crumbs. If you want to join in our link-up to discuss all things Jane (including the books) you can find the link up above.
I watched Miss Scarlet and the Duke last week and will probably watch more today and this week since I will be hiding in the house until the weather gets better.
The Husband and I watched the 1978 version of Death on the Nile. It held up pretty well despite Bette Davis looking like she’d come out of a crypt.
What I’m Writing
I am working on Cassie, which releases in August. I hope to have it finished by February. If you are curious what the book will be about, here is a very loose description:
It’s 1995 and 32-year-old Cassie Mason is an actress who made it big on a sitcom in the mid-1980s but hasn’t been able to find a job since the show ended five years ago.
After being fired by her talent agency, Cassie takes her sister Bridget up on her offer for Cassie to come back to their hometown for an extended visit to unwind and regroup.
While there Cassie finds out her younger sister – the one with the handsome husband and three kids and running a farm – is going to open a café and farm store in the small town they grew up near. Cassie decides to stay long enough to help with the grand opening, though she isn’t sure what she can do since she doesn’t know a thing about cooking like her mom and sister and isn’t great at organizing either.
In fact, Cassie isn’t sure what’s she is good at other than acting. Bridget hasn’t been able to help out at the Berrysville Community center like she’d like to with all that has to be done to open the business so she asks Cassie to fill in for a couple of volunteer opportunities. That’s when Cassie finds out that her sister’s neighbor, Alec, isn’t only a small farmer – he’s also someone who knows how to cook and showcases those talents in a weekly cooking class at the community center.
During her visit home, Cassie struggles to figure out not only where she fits in and feels most at home but also to figure out if acting is all she is meant to do with her life or if there is another way God wants to use her talents.
And God? There’s someone else she needs to learn more about on this break from the career she thought she’d always have.
I’ve also been writing blog posts:
- Saturday Afternoon Chat: Crazy weather and crazy weather and some reading time
- Weekly Traffic Jam Reboot
- Jane Austen January: Sense and Sensibility (limited spoilers)
- `10 on 10: Ten Things I want to accomplish, learn, master or create
- Comfy, Cozy Christmas Link Up Highlights
What I’m Listening To
This week I have been listening to James Herriot’s Treasury for Children but this upcoming week I will be back to listening to A Tale of Two Cities.
Next week I hope to return to sharing blog posts from other bloggers that I enjoyed from the week. I haven’t been reading as many blogs as I would like to and I’m really looking forward to getting back to that this year.
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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I’m not a fan of winter weather and windstorms can be very damaging. I hope the storms settle down for you and you have a lovely week ahead.
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We are still in the throws of arctic cold and today we had more snow – about four inches I think. It will be that way the rest of the week but next week looks better at least.
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I loved The Borrowers when I was a kid and say that I should re-read those books every time I see them mentioned but somehow I never do. Will this be my year? Maybe! 🙂
Snow/ice, wind and trees can be a deadly mix. I think you made the right decision to stay home.
Stay warm!
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Go for it! We are enjoying it so far.
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Sorry to hear about the trees falling. It hasn’t been that windy here. We had snow and now have bone-chilling cold which is keeping me at home. Luckily, I have more than enough to read and listen to. Come see my week here. Happy reading!
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The wind has been so bad! Right now, it’s snowing and -7, but it feels like -27 with the wind. It sucks because I have to go out and shovel soon.
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I am with you; I’d never venture out into weather with the possibility of having trees come down on the road.
Your book sounds intriguing. I enjoy stories where people discover meaning in their lives.
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I might need to binge Northern Exposure again soon.
Stay warm and have a great reading week
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Now I want to binge Northern Exposure. I loved that show! I always thought it was neat Maggie was from Michigan – and not too far from where I live. Lol.
Where are you watching it at?
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I just finished A Tale of Two Cities and loved a lot of it (there were parts I can’t say that about!). I love all things Jane Austen and Little Women and Nancy Drew! And Steven Furtick too! Your book sounds really wonderful as well. Have a great week of reading!
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Thank you! Sounds like we have a lot of the same tastes. Mine are bit all over the place, clearly. Ha! I hope you have a great reading week as well.
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I’ve read a lot of the Lilian Jackson Braun books – a lot of fun. Your weather sounds wild!
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Her books were hit and miss at times and I think they went down hill when she got older, but they are still a comfort read for me. I’ve read a couple where there wasn’t really a mystery – just Qwill wandering around and doing various things in the community, but it was still like coming back home in a way. It’s similar for me with the Mitford series. They aren’t deep plots but they are nice, relaxing reads.
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Agree – very much comfort reading even when not at their best.
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It is absolutely frigid here! Our wind chills are way below zero. Mike is watching some show about tanks. We will finish up A Murder at the End of the World. I don’t know if I recommend it or not. It’s definitely different. I finished We Were Liars today. I haven’t read a book that fast in a long time. Part of it was some of the sentences were three words and took up a line in the book.
I’m actually making one of the recipes from Thrifting Wonderland, but I guess I forgot to add the cherry tomatoes to the list when I ordered groceries. I don’t think it will make that big a difference.
Stay warm, Lisa!
https://marshainthemiddle.com/
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I need to try some of the recipes I’ve seen on blogs too. I’m always behind or too lazy to do it but I hope to get better at that this year.
We Were Liars sounds interesting…with those short sentences. lol.
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