Sunday Bookends: Sunday Bookends: Dick VanDyke,  Hercule Poirot, and a cat falling off the roof

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 watchingand what I’ve been writing. Some weeks I share what I am listening to. Feel free to link your posts about

I usually mention what I have been watching down below but today I thought I’d mention part of what I’ve been watching here because I have been watching a lot of clips of or interviews with or about Dick VanDyke since yesterday was his 100th birthday and he’s still alive.

When I was a kid, I watched The Dick VanDyke Show on PBS in the evenings after dinner and it became a comfort watch to me. As my mom said last night, The Dick VanDyke Show was something you could watch and know it was just going to be good, clean comedy and fun.

The show still holds up today too. I still watch The Dick VanDyke Show, especially when I am down about something.

In fact, when I am down or sad about something my husband will ask, “What can I do? How about I make a cup of tea and find you a Dick VanDyke episode to watch?” Sometimes he doesn’t even suggest it, he simply turns an episode on and backs away — much like a man might toss a bar of chocolate to a woman on her period and run away.

Of course I have also watched Dick VanDyke in movies like Mary Poppins, but, for me, my memories of him will always circulate around The Dick VanDyke Show.

I loved this interview with him from People Magazine. My brother sent it to me last night and I cried because it was just nice to see him doing so well at his age and hearing all his memories of the various projects he was involved with over the years.

This past week we were plunged into deep cold and also had snow a couple of days which left it hard for me to back out of our steep driveway. Yesterday was my first day out all week and the kids and I took some bean soup to my parents…yes, that bean soup from my post yesterday.

We are facing below freezing temps today, but later in the week temps will rise into the  mid-40s. Why do I give weather reports in my blog posts?! I have no idea, but I always do it.

Our cats aren’t sure what to think of the weather. Somedays they want to go out but within ten minutes they are back at the kitchen window begging to come in.

We had a bit of cabin fever this week so Little Miss took Zooma The Wonder Dog for a walk down the street. Scout decided she wanted to see what was going on but she didn’t last outside long, dashing back inside through our side door when I wasn’t looking.

Since I wasn’t looking, I panicked a bit later when I couldn’t find her in the house and it was getting dark

I feel like I spend most of my days counting fury heads and asking, “Has anyone seen…” whichever cat I haven’t seen for a while.

Cass is our “new cat” who we’ve had since the end of October. He is a he and not a she like we normally thought and we are getting much better at calling him “he” as we get used to that change. We called him “she” for the first month of his life.

Our cat Scout has always been the crazy one, climbing up trees and having to be rescued by the fire company or falling out of them and almost dying, but now Cass is the craziest because we’ve found him on our snowy roof twice this month and twice he stole chicken from the stove or counter when I wasn’t looking.

I discovered him on the roof after a small snowstorm this week when Zooma was barking at him and snow trickled down from the roof as I opened the door. Our son looked out his upstairs window to see if he could bring Cass in but he had already found a way down to the porch so he could come in the door the normal way.

Yesterday, the same thing happened, but this time Cass thought he could climb onto the open door frame and jump down. The only problem was once he got on the narrow door frame he tried to step on our wreathe which kept moving and then panicked. He had no idea how to get off the door frame so eventually our son reached up for him and Cass fell, upside down, into his arms.

I’ve learned to duct tape the knobs on the stove so he won’t hit them with his foot when he thinks he can jump up. I’m also learning not to leave food on the counter that I plan to eat unattended. I hope to break him of these stealing habits soon — probably with a spray bottle, which is how I had to stop Scout from climbing our window screens when we first adopted her.

I’m curious if he will calm down once he is neutered a few days before Christmas.

This is off the subject — I don’t know about any of you have bots on your site or not lately, but I have tons from China and have for about three months. I’ve contacted WordPress but have been told to ignore them unless I start receiving a ton of comments. That’s great, I guess, because right now I get 30,000 fake views a week from China and I’ve heard and read on forums that this happening to a ton of other blogs and sites in the United States.

REMINDERS*: Erin (Still Life, With Cracker Crumbs) and I host a monthly bookish link party called A Good Book and A Cup of Tea.  This link-up is for book and reading posts or anything related to books and reading (even movies based on books!). Each link party will be open for a month. You can find that link up for this month here.

We are also hosting Comfy Cozy Christmas! As Erin said on her blog, “Anything holiday related – any December holiday – at all that strikes your fancy and you write about, please think about sharing on our linky.” You can find the link for that at the top of my page in the menu or here.

Each week, I host the Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot with some great hosts. It goes live Thursday night but you can share any kind of blog posts (family-friendly) there until Tuesday of each week. You can check my recent posts on the sidebar to the right for the most recent link-party.

At the beginning of the week I stayed up past 1 a.m. one night finishing Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier. While I felt it was a bit wordy at times and maybe even a little repetitive with all that comparison by the second Mrs. DeWinter of herself to Rebecca, I really enjoyed it and do think it is as good as so many reviews I have read said it was (that sentence doesn’t make much sense but hopefully you can decipher it.)

Last night I finished Hercule Poirot’s Christmas by Agatha Christie. It was very good, (though a bit rushed)  but I think I’ll look for sweeter reads for the next couple of weeks as we make our way toward Christmas.

Little Miss and I also finished Caddie Woodlawn’s Family (also known from it’s original title Magical Melons).

I will probably read a couple of Christmas short stories by Dickens and L.M. Montgomery, as well as finishing reading A Christmas Carol to Little Miss. I will also read at least part of Shepherd’s Abiding by Jan Karon.

Coming up soon will be a book of short stories by Louis L’Amour, Damsel in Distress by P.G. Woodhouse, and Murder, She Wrote Brandy and Bullets. I’m also hoping to start Glorious Intruder by Joni Eareckson Tada as a slow read. After all that or somewhere in between I want to start The Silver Chair by C.S. Lewis.

This past week I rewatched part of Meet Me In St. Louis, Wartime Christmas, and on YouTube a couple episodes of Real Vintage Dolls House. I started a couple of movies too but have not finished them yet.

I’ll be making a formal announcement later, but I’ll be watching James Cagney movies this winter and I’m looking forward to it because I’ve only ever watched one Cagney movie, so I will probably add one of his movies into my Christmas movie watching this week.

This morning, we watched the first episode of the new season of Shakespeare & Hathaway. It wasn’t as good as the earlier seasons (we skipped Season 4 filmed during “You Know What” because the one episode was just bad beyond bad) but it was nice to see their banter again after a two-year break. We will see how the rest of the season is.

I also watched “my farmer”, Pete, on Just A Few Acres Farm, which I do almost every Sunday after watching online church.

I made a lot of progress on Gladwynn book four this past week. I thought I’d share a little description I put together:

Small town newspaper reporter Gladwynn Grant is not going to get involved in any more mysteries. She’s learned her lesson. The hard way.

Her resolve starts to crumble, though, when someone tries to drop an industrial size light fixture on the Brookstone School District Superintendent during an interview. Was Superintendent Ellerton the intended target, though? Or was it actually Gladwynn herself?

While all this is unfolding her ever-busy grandmother, Lucinda, has been told by her doctor she needs to rest more and run around less while Gladwynn’s sister, Iona, is feeling overwhelmed with her role as a mother of three.

A new friendship between State Police Detective Tanner Kinney and Pastor Luke Callahan, the two men family and friends like to joke are battling for Gladwynn’s affections, has Gladwynn a bit perplexed, but also relieved.

Will Gladwynn be able to help find out if someone wants Superintendent Ellerton out of the picture, all while trying to keep Lucinda resting, Iona from cracking, and everyone in town from spreading rumors about her and one of the men in her life?

Find out in the latest Gladwnn Grant Mystery, Gladwynn Grant Goes Back to School.


If you want to read the previous three books, you can find links at the bottom of the page. They are available as ebooks and paperbacks.

On the blog I shared:

I’ve been listening to Letters From Father Christmas by J.R.R. Tolkien.

The Mystery of Stillness by BettieG’s RA Seasons

Gingerbread and Pear Pudding by Scratch Made Food and DIY Homemade Household

Silent Movies: Christmas Dream by Cat’s Wire

Friday Morning Coffee Catch Up by Still Life, With Cracker Crumbs

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. You can copy my blog graphic to your computer if you want to participate in my link party or you can join the other awesome link ups below.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter
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This post is linked up with The Sunday Post at  Kimba at Caffeinated Reviewer, The Sunday Salon with Deb at Readerbuzz, and Book Date: It’s Monday! What are you reading hosted by Kathyrn at The Book Date. Stacking the Shelves is hosted by Reading Reality.


Hello! Welcome to my blog. I am a blogger, homeschool mom, and I write cozy mysteries.

You can find my Gladwynn Grant Mystery series HERE.

You can also find me on Instagram and YouTube.



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18 thoughts on “Sunday Bookends: Sunday Bookends: Dick VanDyke,  Hercule Poirot, and a cat falling off the roof

  1. Lisa, thank you for sharing your past few days. We survived another episode of winter from Saturday night into Monday morning . . . several inches of snow and an Arctic cold. My wife and I still managed to attend a community choir performance on Sunday afternoon. Despite the wind chill, we were rewarded with an amazing chorus of 100 plus voices.

    Like

  2. I love seeing photos of your new kitty!! And that picture of one of your cats in the snow is beautiful!

    Confession – I never watched Dick Van Dyke. Only Mary Poppins (which I loved, I had the entire movie memorized and still do probably). And I had a crush on Dick Van Dyke’s character in that movie as well.

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  3. I also prefer The Dick Van Dyke show. I love seeing spry older people. Anyone over 80 that can still hold their own is so impressive.

    I enjoyed hearing about your kitties. I thought all cats stole food though. We don’t leave anything on the counter!

    Liked by 1 person

    • I don’t know if I prefer it but it is what I am most familiar with that he was in..and…yeah, maybe I prefer it. Ha!

      Our other cats actually don’t steal food. They are super polite and wait for me to give it to them while they stare holes into my forehead.

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  4. Your snow looks beautiful, but frankly – you can keep it. We don’t get it very often but when we do, it paralyses the country which is only really set up for drizzle. Your cats sound a handful – luckily Amari doesn’t steal food off the counter. And I’m hoping once she’s been spayed and is allowed outside she’ll be less adventurous around the house. I hope you have a great week:)).

    Liked by 1 person

  5. I binged “The Dick van Dyke Show” a year or two ago when I found it on YouTube because I had never seen it. I don’t think I have ever seen him in anything else except “Mary Poppins” which I absolutely hate (the movie, not the books).
    I just finished a “Christmas” book which annoyed me in several ways, but slogged my way through, no idea why.
    Good luck with Cass! I had the same hope about neutering with dem Dekan, but it took about four years for him to calm down (and at the moment he’s so good mostly that I honestly wonder if someone swapped my cat).
    Glad your writing is going well!
    Oh, and thank you for the shoutout, too!

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Pingback: Friday Favorites on Sunday (again) – Speaking of Easy

  7. It’s hard to believe Dick VanDyke is 100! I still think of him as Rob Petrie even though he’s been in so many other shows. I loved that show but could never understand why he took the train to work…that’s what you get when you live in a little bitty town in Indiana! We had a cat named Oscar who scared my daughter by meowing at her window. She had dormer windows, and he was outside yammering to get in. Now, that doesn’t sound like much except this was right after we’d built the house! There were no trees for him to climb. The only thing we could ever figure out was that he’d climbed the fireplace. He truly was the best cat ever. It’s been so cold here, too. It seems like that’s all I ever do is give a weather report on my blog. But, it’s supposed to be 55 on Thursday…so no white Christmas again! I finished Beautiful Ugly which had one of the oddest endings ever. I don’t read Goodreads reviews until I’m finished with a book so I hopped on there to see what others had to say. They were not happy with the ending, either. It was a bad gimmick by the author, I think. I’m now reading Verity. I don’t usually read books by Colleen Hoover, but this one was short and sounded kinda good. We’re watching the Harry Potter cooking show which is kinda corny but still fun.

    Have a fabulous week, Lisa!

    https://marshainthemiddle.com/

    Liked by 1 person

    • That story about the cat was so funny!

      And I think he took the train because New Rochelle is a suburb of New York? I’m not sure about that, though. I’m a country bumpkin. What do I know?

      Books with odd endings can go either way — very cool or very annoying. I don’t read the Goodreads reviews until afterward either. I like to find out what others thought too even if I liked a book.

      Have a great week too, Marsha.

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  8. I have been watching some of those interviews with Dick Van Dyke too. I remember trying to watch when I was little, and not getting it. Lol. But later it became a huge comfort show for us too. It was one of the first DVD sets we splurged on in the early 2000’s! And thank you for the mention for my blog post! That was so kind of you. I hope you all get some of the warm up this week that we are supposed to get! It was just too cold this weekend!

    Liked by 1 person

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