Fiction Friday: Gladwynn Grant Gets Her Footing Chapters 9 and 10

Welcome to a serial fiction series of my book Gladwynn Grant Gets Her Footing, a light cozy mystery.

You will be able to read chapters of this book each Friday. You can also find a list of chapters HERE.

If you don’t want to wait for the next installment or click through each chapter, and would instead like to read the book in full, you can purchase the book in paperback ($12.99) or ebook ($2.99) on Amazon and Barnes and Noble and now on Kobo in their Kobo Plus program.


Chapter 9

Gladwynn hadn’t been inside the Covenant Heart Church since her grandfather’s funeral. She’d made every excuse possible to avoid it, but this morning she’d known she couldn’t put it off any longer. If she was going to be living in Brookstone, she needed a home church and she couldn’t imagine attending anywhere other than where her grandfather had served for 50 years.

The church looked the same as it always had with its mahogany columns, high ceilings, tall stained-glass windows, and ornate chandeliers. Even the wooden pews that had probably been built and installed sometime in the 1950s were the same, though they now featured blue cushions to make sitting more comfortable.

Sunlight streamed across the sanctuary, falling on the people greeting each other as they sat. At the front of the church, the pulpit where her grandfather used to preach looked smaller than it used to somehow.

The church as a whole looked smaller in some ways, which was probably because she had so many memories of being in the church when she was a young child. Everything looks bigger when you’re a child.

She followed Lucinda to the front of the church, to the pew where they’d always sat as a family when she was young. The man who approached her and Lucinda was young, maybe 30, with short blond hair combed neatly across his forehead like he was about to pose for a professional headshot photo. He was the epitome of the term baby face with his smooth-shaven jawline and Hollywood-star smile.

He held his hands out to Lucinda, taking both of hers in his. “Lucinda, so lovely to see you this morning. You’re looking wonderful.” His attention turned to Gladwynn. “Is this the granddaughter you’ve been telling us about?”

His accent was thick. Irish. It suddenly clicked for Gladwynn who he was. She hadn’t recognized him not in uniform and all cleaned up, but it was the firefighter from Ellory Brooks’s accident. The one who had kept her from falling.

Lucinda’s face beamed. “It certainly is.” She turned to Gladwynn. “Gladwynn, this is our pastor, Luke Callahan. Luke, this is my granddaughter Gladwynn.”

Gladwynn took his hand, and he clasped his other hand around hers. “Ah, so we meet again. A pleasure to officially meet you, Gladwynn. Your grandmother has been so excited about you coming to stay with her. Are you settling in well?”

For a moment, staring into his bright blue eyes, Gladwynn forgot she was supposed to answer. She didn’t detect insincerity in his greeting, which made him even harder to look away from.

“Yes,” she answered after a few seconds delay. “I am. It’s nice to be back – to be here this morning.”

He let go of her hand, still smiling. “Well, I’m glad you could make it and that you’re wearing sensible shoes this time.” He winked and took a step back. “I’d better get going and get this service started or we’ll be here well past lunch and the congregation gets grumpy if that happens.” He turned to head to the pulpit, quickly shaking a couple more hands on his way up.

Lucinda looked at her. “You two have met before?”

“He was at the accident the other night. He kept me from falling on the ice.”

“He’s unmarried,” Lucinda said as she sat.

Gladwynn scowled. “Grandma, really? We’re in church.”

“Don’t get all excited. I’m not talking about him for you. He’s already got someone he’s courting, shall we say? The new young library director. They’re so cute together. Her name is Summer. Like the season. That’s a thing anymore, to name your children after seasons and flowers.”

“Weren’t there like a thousand girls named Rose or Daisy when you were growing up? It’s not that new of a trend.”

“I suppose that’s a point.”

Gladwynn watched with interest as several people stepped on stage, including someone who slid behind a clear plastic enclosure at a drum set. One man picked up a guitar and another a bass while a man with his hair in a ponytail sat at the piano.

This was different from when her grandfather had been the pastor. Back then, there had been a pianist who also doubled as an organist and maybe someone with an acoustic guitar.

Luke welcomed everyone with his lilting accent and his charming smile. Then the music began. Gladwynn couldn’t wait to ask Lucinda how someone with an accent like him had ended up in little Brookstone.

Gladwynn had a hard time not thinking of a British sitcom she’d watched as Luke gave the sermon but did her best to focus on his message and not his linguistics. She glanced around the sanctuary to see if she recognized anyone from when she used to visit in the summer. She didn’t, but she did recognize two of the firefighters she’d seen at the accident and Justin, the fire chief. Next to Justin was a blond woman with her hair pulled back in a long braid, and next to her was a line of children. Gladwynn counted five of them.

When the sermon was over, she stood with Lucinda, realizing quickly that getting out of the church was going to take a long time. They were stopped every few seconds by someone who wanted to hug Lucinda or tell her about their new grandchild or update her on how a family member they’d been praying for was doing. Each time they were stopped, Lucinda would introduce Gladwynn, which required smiling and a level of extrovert behavior she was not accustomed to.

There was something much different about forcing herself to talk to someone to gather information from them for a story than talking to someone for no other reason than chit-chatting. The one she got paid for and could push herself through. The other was excruciatingly uncomfortable and it made her want to run home and bury herself under a quilt.

She pushed through for the sake of Lucinda, though, imagining that running screaming from the sanctuary would definitely create a scene that wouldn’t be easy for either of their reputations to recover from.

Half an hour later, the warm sun was her reward for her resilience. Standing on the top step outside the church, she breathed in deeply and enjoyed the warmth for a brief second until her brain kicked into gear and alerted her that the air was still cold and stinging any skin exposed, especially her cheeks.

Lucinda leaned close to her, pulling on a pair of gloves. “I hope you don’t mind, but I invited Pastor Callahan over for lunch today.”

Gladwynn looked over her shoulder, confused. “When? While we were in there? I never saw you talk to him.”

Lucinda started down the steps. “I asked him when you rushed off to the bathroom. You know, the moment your social barometer got too high.”

Her grandmother really did know her better than almost anyone.

“That meter is still a bit full,” she said as she walked down the steps. “I hope I can muster up some more outgoing personality this afternoon.”

Lucinda patted her on the back. “Oh, you’ll be fine. Just pretend you’re interviewing him for the paper.”

Gladwynn may have taken her grandmother a little too literally an hour later when she found herself sitting across from Pastor Blue Eyes with A Captivating Irish Accent and asked him what part of Ireland he was from and how he’d come to live in Brookstone.

“I’m from Northern Ireland, actually. Grew up in a little town just outside Belfast. My family moved to southern Pennsylvania when I was in high school. My father had family living outside of Philadelphia and after he lost his job as a worker in the local factory, his cousin offered him a job at his construction company. I finished my high school career here, and moved back to Northern Ireland for a time to figure out what my calling in life was. Then when I felt like God was telling me to go into the ministry, I returned to the States to attend seminary.”

“And to also volunteer for local fire departments?”

He grinned. “Yes, and to volunteer for local fire departments. I like to serve whatever community I’m living in as well as I can.”

Lucinda set a bowl of mashed potatoes in the center of the table.

“Grandma, I really wish you would let me help you.”

Lucinda waved her off. “Sit. Chat. Enjoy the downtime. I’m almost done here and besides I’m making you wash the dishes later.”

“Your grandmother says you used to work at a college library,” Luke said as Lucinda disappeared back through the swinging door into the kitchen.

“Yes. For about six years. Right out of college until a few months ago.”

“And now you’re working for the Beacon.”

“Yes.”

She inwardly cringed at her apparent inability to communicate like a normal person. All she could manage to offer was the bare minimum. She’d completely lost the art of conversation somewhere over the years.

“Before I went into the seminary, I thought about going into journalism, actually. I guess we are both in the people business, though. In different ways.”

Gladwynn laughed. “Yes, definitely in different ways.”

Was that all she could say? Good grief. This was so embarrassing.

She cleared her throat, desperate to not be so awkward. “And how long have you been with the church?”

He flashed a broad smile, his teeth so white and perfect it was a little unsettling. “About three years, but in some ways, it feels longer. Not for a bad reason, but because I feel like I’ve always been here in some ways. You ever hear people say that when they moved somewhere it just felt like home? That’s how this county has been for me. The hillsides even remind me of Northern Ireland.”

She knew exactly what he was talking about. Coming back to Brookstone had felt a lot like coming home for her too.

Lucinda came in with the platter full of roast and carrots and set it in the center of the table before finally sitting. Gladwynn was relieved someone else could help carry on the conversation.

Lucinda did carry it on too, asking him what was needed for an upcoming potluck and what she should bring for the Easter breakfast, how his parents were doing (because she’d so enjoyed their company when they came to visit last summer), if he’d enjoyed his fishing trip to Canada (did he catch any bass?), and if he’d like some more seeds for his garden (because he’d come to her with questions about what he should plant).

Gladwynn’s head was spinning by the time dinner was finished and though she’d enjoyed the company and the conversation, she was ready for a long nap. Lucinda, however, suggested they sit in the sunroom for some dessert and coffee.

Luke gravitated toward the combination record and CD player Gladwynn had brought with her. The records she brought were stacked underneath it in a record holder. Luke stooped to look through them, his face lighting up as he pulled out an album by jazz duo Rachael and Vilray.

“I’ve heard these guys are great. Do you listen to them?”

Gladwynn sat sideways in the chair, hanging her legs over the arms briefly until she remembered she was wearing a skirt. She quickly sat up with her legs over the front of the chair at the exact moment Luke turned around with the record in his hand.

“Yes, actually.” She winked. “That’s why it’s there.”

Gladwynn noticed immediately that her teasing comment had thrown off his usual confidence.

Red flushed along his cheeks. “Of course. I don’t know why I asked that.” He pointed at the record player. “May I?”

Gladwynn gestured toward the player. “Help yourself.”

Lucinda came in with a tray filled with plates of apple pie and cups of coffee. She sat it down on a small table as a smooth melody filtered through the speakers.

Luke was smiling as he sat on a wicker chair across from Gladwynn. “When I was growing up in Northern Ireland, there was this little record store in our little town that had imported a bunch of records from the States. They had a record player for sale, and I saved up to get it by working on a neighbor’s farm. I shoveled a lot of manure for that record player while everyone else was saving up for MP3 players. The first album I bought after I got it was Miles Davis’s Kind of Blue. I played that album until it warped.”

Gladwynn shared with him her love for that same album and for Harry Connick Jr. as well as any music from the 1940s through the 1960s. He asked her if she also liked movies from the 40s.

“And from the ‘30s and ‘50s as well,” she answered. “Just about anything that’s in black and white.”

“Who’s your favorite actor from those days of black-and-white movies?”

Gladwynn pushed a hand through her hair and laughed softly. “That’s like being asked to pick a favorite child–if I were a mother. I mean, I absolutely love Bogart, of course, but for looks, I’d go with either Clark Gable or Cary Grant.”

Luke scoffed. “Eh, Gable. So overrated. What about the women?”

“Lauren Bacall, Myrna Loy, and Katharine Hepburn.”

Gladwynn glanced at her grandmother as Luke listed off his favorite actresses, then asked her about what movies she had or hadn’t seen.

Lucinda was sipping from a flower-covered teacup, a small smirk pulling at her mouth. It was an expression Gladwynn didn’t appreciate at all.

She set her own teacup down and cleared her throat. “I really hate to be rude, but I have a couple of things I need to do to get ready for work tomorrow.” She stood. “It was so nice meeting you, Pastor Callahan.”

He stood quickly. “It was nice to meet you as well and please, call me Luke. I should be going too. I have a meeting with the board tomorrow afternoon and I have some paperwork I need to put together for them.” He looked at Lucinda. “Thank you so much for the invite. It was very nice not to have to eat my burned cooking today.”

Lucinda laughed and shook her head. “Oh, I’m sure you don’t burn everything, but I was glad to offer you a homecooked meal.”

Gladwynn gestured toward the front door. “Let me walk you to the door.”

After she and Luke had said their perfunctory goodbyes, complete with him saying he hoped he would see her again in church next Sunday, she returned to the sunroom with a deep scowl. She cocked one leg out to the side and folded her arms across her chest.

“What was that smirk all about?”

Lucinda looked up innocently as she finished her tea. “Smirk? What do you mean?”

“I saw you smirk when Luke and I were talking. I thought you said you weren’t trying to fix me up with your pastor.”

Lucinda stood and gathered the cups. “I don’t remember having any such conversation with you. All I said was he was unmarried and that he had been seen courting Summer Bloomfield.”

Summer Bloomfield? That was her full name?

“Which implies that he’s already taken and that the former pastor’s wife shouldn’t be trying to set her granddaughter up with him.”

Lucinda straightened, holding the tray. “Gladwynn Grant, you certainly do like to accuse me of the strangest things. I invited my pastor here simply to be kind. I had no idea that you and he would hit it off so well. Now why don’t you go on and do whatever you claimed you had to do to get ready for work tomorrow and I’ll clean up.” She continued toward the kitchen, pausing briefly to look over her shoulder and offer a sweet smile.

Gladwynn rubbed her hand across her forehead and down her cheek. “Oh, Lucinda Grant. Whatever am I going to do with you?”

Chapter 10

The more she thought about it, the more Gladwynn began to wonder if someone really had messed with Ellory Brooks’ car that night.

If so, why?

She couldn’t imagine that people did stuff like that in real life. Those kinds of things were reserved for movies and books.

Stirring honey into her tea, she wondered if there was any connection to Ellory’s accident and the threats that Daryl had received. She couldn’t see any way the two incidents would be related, but the possibility was there. He had let her see the letter before she’d written the story and thankfully, the visit had been brief after she’d been interrupted by a phone call from the children’s librarian looking for a photo of story hour the next day.

The letter had been typed with no signature, which didn’t offer much clue as to the author of it. It had even been mailed from out of the area.

She’d made a copy of it and slid it in her filing cabinet in a folder marked Birchwood.

Daryl:

You’re not very good at keeping promises, are you?

You made a promise you couldn’t keep and now you’ll pay.

Sell that property to the development company and you’ll pay an even higher price.

You’re being watched.

Thinking of the story she’d written about the letter made her think about what she’d overheard Vince Giordano saying the other day about the story being completely inaccurate. Which story did he mean and what did he mean by “inaccurate”? That bothered her because she’d co-written the first story with Laurel after attending the meeting and the second one by herself. If he’d had an issue with either story, he could have contacted her or Laurel and let them know.

Gladwynn rolled her chair behind Laurel’s and dropped her voice to a whisper. “I’m thinking about bypassing the police and asking Ellory Brooks herself about the accident. What do you think?”

Laurel swiveled her chair around, sliding a pencil behind her ear. “Go for it. Is she still in the hospital? If she’s not in the ICU, I’m sure you can get in. If she says she doesn’t know what she was talking about, she was looped out of her head, or she doesn’t really know, then at least you tried.”

Gladwynn knew she should probably run her idea behind Liam before pursuing it, but she didn’t want to get his hopes up. There might be nothing to the story and she might as well find out now. He’d already told her he wanted a story about Ellory’s husband’s accusations and if she couldn’t get it from the state police, she’d have to find another way.

She had a feeling Ellory, or at least Ellory’s husband would be more than willing to talk to her. If her husband called the editor of the local newspaper, it was clear he wanted the situation to be brought to light.

Brookstone Memorial was a one-story building on the upper end of town. It had been built a few years ago but it was still one of the smallest hospitals that Gladwynn had ever seen.

The receptionist at the front desk asked if she was family when she asked to see Ellory. After she said she wasn’t, the woman said she’d call the room before allowing her to go back.

“Mr. Brooks said to send you back,” the woman said a few minutes later. “She’s in room 123.”

A short man with light brown hair swept over a possible bald spot met her in the hallway. “Miss Grant, I’m Marvin Brooks, Ellory’s husband. She’s recovering, but she said she’s up to talking to you. I’m just hoping we can keep this brief, so we don’t tire her out too much. Also, maybe don’t tell her I told you I suggested we keep it brief so she doesn’t get annoyed with me.” He flashed a good-natured smile at her after the last comment.

“I can totally keep the conversation brief,” she said. “I really only have a couple of quick questions about her accident.”

Marvin motioned for her to step inside the room. “About her brakes being messed with, right?”

Gladwynn stepped past him into the room, looking over her shoulder as she walked. “Does she really think they were messed with?”

A woman’s voice answered. “Yes, I do.”

Gladwynn’s brow dipped as she looked at a small woman with graying brown hair sitting in the hospital bed. “Why do you think that?”

Ellory’s response was matter of fact. “Because my brother is our mechanic, and he had checked those brakes only two weeks ago.”

Marvin added, “This wouldn’t have happened if Ellory had taken the sedan like I told her to. That can’t happen in newer cars anymore with the way they are built. She wanted to take the Mustang, though, so –”

Ellory scoffed. “Oh, I see. I brought this on myself for wanting to drive the car that you had refurbished for me. Excuse me for being touched that you fixed the car up for me.”

Marvin sighed. “I’m just saying, it wasn’t really the best night weatherwise to be driving it, so . . .”

“So, I made a mistake.” Ellory’s voice was cold and sharp. “Do you think I should be punished for that?”

Marvin tipped his head down and cleared his throat. “Of course not, honey. I’m just frustrated with all of this and–”

Ellory’s voice softened. “I am too. You know that. I mean, who would want to damage my brakes? Even if it hadn’t been snowing that night, I might have still wrecked the car.”

Marvin looked at Gladwynn as if he just remembered she was still there. “It has something to do with Stabler’s property. I’m sure of it. There are a lot of people out in Birchwood who don’t want that land sold. They think it should go to the township for the fire hall.”

“What do you have to do with it, though?” Gladwynn asked Ellory.

“Marvin’s overthinking this. I’m the chairperson for the county planning board. Maybe people think I have more control over the decision of what is allowed at that location than I do. I’m not sure.”

Gladwynn pulled out her notebook. “And you work at the bank too, right?”

Ellory winced as she tried to push herself up straighter. “Yes, but I can’t imagine what that would have to do with anything.” She paused and touched a hand to the collar around her neck. “I did talk with someone from the developmental company about the potential sale, but it was Colleen Harris who showed the representatives the land. She’s with the county progress authority.” She laughed softly. “A lot of people say we look alike. Maybe someone mixed us up.”

Gladwynn looked up from her notepad. “What are the police saying about the brakes?”

Marvin sat down in a chair next to his wife’s bed and leaned back, propping his arm on the railing. “The trooper just says they are investigating, and they’ll let us know when they know more.”

“Which trooper?”

“Trooper Tanner Kinney He’s a good guy,” Ellory said. “I’m sure he’ll look into it. His mother and I went to school together.” She leaned her head back against the pillow and closed her eyes. “I’m sorry. I seem to just give out of energy out of the blue some days.”

Gladwynn jotted down the trooper’s name, even though she knew who he was and that he’d most likely not give her much information – the same way he had the last two times she’d tried to speak to him. “I’m sure you do after all you’ve been through. I should go and let you rest.”

She closed her notebook and stood. “I hope you feel better soon.”

Ellory opened her eyes again, her eyelids heavy. “What are you doing to do with this information?”

That was a very good question. “I don’t know yet, honestly. I’ll run it by my editor and see what he says we should do with this.” She slid her pen into her coat pocket. “Right now, we don’t have proof that anything criminal happened, but I’ll see what else I can find out.”

Back in the car, she thought about Ellory’s question. What was she going to do with the information, even if Liam approved of her using it? She couldn’t run with a story without proof.

For right now, she’d better sit on the information and see what else she learned by talking to a few more people, including Colleen Harris.

Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot: Come Join Us!

Welcome to the Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot where we offer a place for bloggers to link up and get a fresh set of eyes on their posts. We also feature one blog a week, letting our readers know about the blog and providing a link so readers can learn more about them.

Look for the post to go live about 9:30 PM EST on Thursdays.

We’ve had a slow week here, which I don’t think is a bad thing. Some more sun than normal a couple of days but as I am writing this it is very gloomy, dark, and rainy out. Tomorrow we are back into some colder temps and Sunday looks to be horrible with a  high only of 26 but I am hopeful that our very, very cold temperatures are behind us as we move toward Spring.

I read a lot this week, trying to finish two books from my winter TBR because, for me, Spring starts March 1, even if it isn’t officially spring.

Let’s move on to introducing our hosts this week:

Marsha from Marsha in the Middle started blogging in 2021 as an exercise in increasing her neuroplasticity.  Oh, who are we kidding?  Marsha started blogging because she loves clothes, and she loves to talk or, in this case, write!  

Melynda from Scratch Made Food! & DIY Homemade Household  – The name says it all, we homestead in East Texas, with three generations sharing this land. I cook and bake from scratch, between gardening and running after the chickens, and knitting! 

Lisa from Boondock Ramblings shares about the fiction she writes and reads, her faith, homeschooling, photography and more. 

Sue from Women Living Well After 50 started blogging in 2015 and writes about living an active and healthy lifestyle, fashion, book reviews and her podcast and enjoying life as a woman over 50.  She invites you to join her living life in full bloom.

We would love to have additional Co-Hosts to share in the creativity and fun! If you think this would be a good fit for you and you like having fun (come on, who doesn’t!) while still being creative, drop one of us an email and someone will get back with you!

WTJR will be highlighting a different blogger each week this year! We invite you to stop by their blog, take a look around and say hello! This week we are spotlighting Cat’s Wire!

I love Cat’s posts about her cats, old movies, her beading, books, and so much more. She and I sometimes watch the same movies and chat about them through our blog posts and blogs. We’ve also chatted through the Crafternoon zoom calls that Erin from Still Life, With Cracker Crumbs and I have.

Here is a little about her from her about section: Bookworm, movie fan, crazy cat lady, armed with wire, cabs, and beads!

I hope you will take the time to check out her blog.

And now on to my highlights from our links for this week:

|| Winter Skin Care Over 40 by Doused in Pink ||

|| What are you imagining? by A New Lens ||

|| The Queens of Crime and More by Cat’s Wire ||

Thank you so much for joining us for our link-up! Please remember that this is a link-up where you can share posts from the previous week or posts from weeks, months, or years ago. All we ask is that they be “family-friendly”.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter
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Saturday Afternoon Chat: Remembering the times I had to drive in the snow and hated it

This week we were surprised by snow and unfortunately it wasn’t a pleasant surprise since I was driving in it at the time. I thought it was merely going to be flurries, but oh no…it started sticking. Driving with snow on the road? No. that’s not something I do. Like ever anymore.

But there I was driving to my parents to return their car to them, thinking the entire seven minute drive that it really wasn’t as slippery as it probably was. You ever ask yourself, “Why are people out in this?” when the weather is bad?

I am normally one of those people who ask that, not one who is driving in it but I just kept thinking the snow would stop and the road would clear up.

I made it to my parents with white knuckles. The plan was for my husband to pick me up on his way home from work but Dad decided he’d better drive me home so my husband didn’t get our car, which doesn’t have great tires, stuck on my parents’ dirt road.

Honestly, I think Dad was excited to be needed and get out in that snow. He loves driving in the snow. That’s crazy to me. On the way back to my house he said, “If there isn’t six inches on the road it doesn’t bother me.”

We made it back to my house fine and Dad made it back to his house as well. Another inch or so fell that night and The Boy didn’t have to go to school the next morning.

While I don’t usually drive in snow at all, there was two other times I had to do it — both while working for newspapers.

The first time I was working at the local daily newspaper and when I left work the roads were covered. I was nervous but started inching my way the 15 miles to  home. There was one hill I was very worried about and I did well going up it but was nervous going down. There was a line of cars behind me but only one of them seemed annoyed by me going slow. Everyone else was also going slow since there was maybe three inches of white slush covering the roads. Well, almost everyone. One driver of a pickup truck decided he needed to get by us so he passed a couple of cars.

I might have muttered something like, “You idiot,” as he went by.

Several feet in front of me he fishtailed but was able to gain control again.

“See!” I shouted at my windshield. “There’s a reason we’re all going slow!”

He ended up having to drive slowly all the way to the area called The Valley where we lived.

The other time I was stuck in snow was, again, coming home from a newspaper job. This time I was working in New York State, about 50-minutes from our apartment at the time.

I kept asking to go home but the editor wanted me to finish a couple of things. He finally allowed me and by then the main highway was covered in snow and ice. There are two lanes going east and two going west on this highway and I was going east to get home. I was not going very fast and no one was passing me because it was that snow with a layer of ice on top.

At one point I hit some of that ice and my car started to spin until I was all the way around facing the oncoming cars. Thank God I didn’t go into panic mode, causing my brain to freeze up. Instead, I ripped the car into reverse and backed it into the median and waited for the other cars to pass me before trying again.

A 50-minute drive took probably 90-minutes that day, but I was so glad to be home.

All this being said, I am really looking forward to some temps in the 40s this upcoming week where we live. Even a couple days of sun would be so nice.

Other than my driving adventure, we didn’t do too much else this week. I did take Little Miss to Kid’s Club at a local church on Wednesday and it was nice to get out of the house a little bit.

I’m not sure if I shared this photograph of a bald eagle eating a rabbit that The Husband took a couple of weeks ago on here or not. I’m going with not.

He took this shot with his iPhone. The eagle was close to the edge of the road, and I am so excited that Little Miss was able to get a look at it because she often misses the wildlife we see.

How was your week last week?

Do anything fun or interesting? What teas are you drinking this day if you are a tea drinker? Let me know in the comments.

Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot: Come Link Up With Us!

Welcome to the Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot where we offer a place for bloggers to link up and get a fresh set of eyes on their posts. We also feature one blog a week, letting our readers know about the blog and providing a link so readers can learn more about them.

Look for the post to go live about 9:30 PM EST on Thursdays.

I think weather forecasters have just given up on trying to figure out our weather in Pennsylvania. Today we were told we’d have some sun but instead we got half an inch of snow and me driving to my parents with white knuckles. I had borrowed their car and was taking it back with plans for my husband to pick me up after work. My dad ended up driving me back because the tires are better on his car and he didn’t want my husband to get stuck on their dirt road. So, we headed back with Dad driving because I honestly think he loves driving in snow. I, however, hate it and don’t want to drive at all the rest of this winter – especially if these unexpected snow events are going to happen.

Anyhow….on to introducing your hosts for Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot!

Marsha from Marsha in the Middle started blogging in 2021 as an exercise in increasing her neuroplasticity.  Oh, who are we kidding?  Marsha started blogging because she loves clothes, and she loves to talk or, in this case, write!  

Melynda from Scratch Made Food! & DIY Homemade Household  – The name says it all, we homestead in East Texas, with three generations sharing this land. I cook and bake from scratch, between gardening and running after the chickens, and knitting! 

Lisa from Boondock Ramblings shares about the fiction she writes and reads, her faith, homeschooling, photography and more. 

Sue from Women Living Well After 50 started blogging in 2015 and writes about living an active and healthy lifestyle, fashion, book reviews and her podcast and enjoying life as a woman over 50.  She invites you to join her living life in full bloom.


We would love to have additional Co-Hosts to share in the creativity and fun! If you think this would be a good fit for you and you like having fun (come on, who doesn’t!) while still being creative, drop one of us an email and someone will get back with you!

WTJR will be highlighting a different blogger each week this year! We invite you to stop by their blog, take a look around and say hello! This week we are spotlighting Style Yourself Confident.

Pamela says about her blog, “Hi – I’m Pamela thank you so much for visiting my corner of the Internet.

This website is about LOOKING GOOD and FEELING GOOD about yourself, whatever your age shape or size!

Although most women will tell you that looking good and feeling good generally go hand in hand, each of us has a different agenda for what makes that happen. 

Many years ago, I trained as an Image Consultant but I’ve always been reluctant to use the title because it’s so pretentious. We’re overdosed with patronizing makeover shows on TV which have nothing whatsoever to do with real life!

The world as a whole often regards the older woman as invisible but it’s easy to take back control of the way you look and feel with a little fun, flexibility and plain old fashioned common sense. 

Let me help you discover a little about the COLORS and SHAPES that nature designed for you because it’s never too late to discover STYLE CONFIDENCE!”

Thank you for being part of the Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot, Pamela!

Now for my highlights this week:

|| Reading is a discount ticket to everywhere by Where The Wild Things Are||

|| Ideas for Styling Stripes and Spots by Is This Mutton ||

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

|| Outfit Inspiration With a Neutral Long Cardigan by Chez Mireille Fashion Travel Mom ||

Thank you so much for joining us for our link-up! Please remember that this is a link-up where you can share posts from the previous week or posts from weeks, months, or years ago. All we ask is that they be “family-friendly”.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter
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Classic movie impressions: The Stranger (1946)

A few weeks ago, my husband suggested we watch an Orson Welles movie. Since I’ve liked other movies by and starring Orson, I agreed to it.

The Stranger was released in 1946 and tells the story of a war crimes investigator who tracks a high-ranking Nazi fugitive to a small Connecticut town.

Welles both directed and co-wrote the film but was uncredited for the writing, which was most likely part of the many concessions he made for the opportunity to direct it. This is a movie that some call his most conventional. It’s also one he wasn’t as fond of because so many changes were made to the final cut without his consultation.

The movie stars Welles, Edward G. Robinson, and Loretta Young.

The creepy undertone throughout the entire movie left me always waiting for the other shoe to drop.

Nazi fugitive, Franz Kindler (Welles), has done his best to assimilate into American society. He’s even about to marry the daughter of a justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.

Edward G. Robinson, playing war crimes investigator Mr. Wilson, follows one of the recently released followers of Kindler to the town, hoping he’ll lead him to Kindler. The man suddenly disappears though, and Wilson is certain he’s been murdered by Kindler, but still doesn’t know who Kindler actually is. Only that he is somewhere in the town.

We the viewer, know all along what happened to the man and who made it  It happens about 15 minutes into the movie, but Robinson has to spend much of the movie trying to figure it out and once he does figure it out, he spends the rest of the movie trying to make Kindler admit who he really is. The only thing Robinson’s character really knows when he comes to the town is that Kindler had an almost unhealth obsession with old clocks.

It’s a fantastic, stressful game of cat and mouse that had me literally biting my nails part of the time.

The music of the movie is very interesting – mixing in a creepy violin-based humming, with happier melodies to try to show the contrast between an innocent, happy world being infiltrated by pure evil.

It always amazes me how quickly movies were made back then. Filming for this movie took place from September to November of 1945 and was released July 2, 1946.

Originally the film was going to be directed by John Husten, but he entered the military and Welles begged producer Sam Spiegel (also called S.P. Eagle at the time) to let him direct the film. Spiegel agreed as long as Welles agreed to several concessions and to be let go as director if he stepped out of those perimeters. Welles would still have to continue on as the lead actor, even if he was let go as director, however.  

Welles agreed. He needed the job if he wanted to continue in Hollywood. Five years earlier Welles had been essentially backlisted with the release of Citizen Kane, which won 9 Academy Awards, including Best Director, Best Movie, and Best Actor for Welles. This should have made Welles a sought-after director and actor. Citizen Kane was based on the life of one of the most powerful men in the world at the time — William Randolph Hearst, a newspaper publisher and owner — though and Hearst wasn’t happy. In fact, he was furious. He made life very difficult for Welles and anyone else associated with the making of the movie, which is now considered the greatest movie all time thanks to its innovative filmmaking techniques, complex story, and influential impact on cinema history.

“In September 1945 Welles and his wife Rita Hayworth signed a guarantee that Welles would owe International Pictures any of his earnings, from any source, above $50,000 a year if he did not meet his contractual obligations,” an article on Wikipedia states. “He also agreed to defer to the studio in any creative dispute.”

This became a challenge when Editor Ernest J. Nims was given the power to cut any material he considered extraneous from the script before shooting began.

“He was the great supercutter,” Welles said, “who believed that nothing should be in a movie that did not advance the story. And since most of the good stuff in my movies doesn’t advance the story at all, you can imagine what a nemesis he was to me.”

Reading about all the cuts that were made from the script, and the final product helps me to understand why this movie feels so choppy at times. It feels like elements that would have helped to explain some of the plot better are missing.

What is really missing is building up Welles’ character and helping the viewer get to know who he is. As I read online, I found out that there were scenes removed from the beginning of the movie that would have given us more character development for Welles’ character.

I feel like Nims really overdid things and should probably be ashamed of chopping up Welles’ work.

I also thought that it was interesting that Welles wanted a female actress to portray the investigator.

“I thought it would be much more interesting to have a spinster lady on the heels of this Nazi,” Welles said. 

Welles would later say in interviews that nothing of The Stranger was his in the end. Biographer Frank Brady disagrees, “Welles has said, since the making of The Stranger—which he completed one day before schedule and under budget—that nothing in the film was his, this despite the fact that the unmistakable Wellesian moods, shadows, acute angles, and depth-of-focus shots are pervasive. Within the film is a second film, another Wellesian touch, consisting of snatches of documentary footage showing Nazi atrocities.”

One unique aspect of The Stranger is that it was the first commercial film to use documentary footage from the Nazi concentration camps.

Welles viewed Nazi Concentration Camps (1945), a film used as evidence in the Nuremberg Trials in early May 1945 as a correspondent and discussion moderator at the United Nations Conference on International Organization

One thing I didn’t remember until reading about it this week was that in the 1940s, many in the world simply couldn’t accept that the concentration camps were real.

Welles wrote about the footage in a column for the New York Post:

“No, you must not miss the newsreels. They make a point this week no man can miss: The war has strewn the world with corpses, none of them very nice to look at. The thought of death is never pretty but the newsreels testify to the fact of quite another sort of death, quite another level of decay. This is a putrefaction of the soul, a perfect spiritual garbage. For some years now we have been calling it Fascism. The stench is unendurable.”

Though the studio did not think The Stranger would be a success, it actually was and right out of the gate too. It cost $1 million to make and earned $2.25 million in U.S. rentals in its first six months. Fifteen months later had grossed $3.2 million.

I very much enjoyed the film, but I do wish that Kindler’s German accent would have come back as soon as his cover was blown. Having him keep the American accent he’s been using to keep his cover, even when under pressure, seemed unrealistic to me.

Despite that small issue, Welles is so deliciously evil in this. His excuses for his crimes against humanity were presented with a lecherous smile that sent shivers down my spine. The tension throughout the film is extreme. I never knew when Kindler would finally snap and reveal himself or worse — kill someone to keep his identity secret.

I found this one on YouTube for free, but it is also streaming in better quality on several streaming sites, including Amazon Prime.

Have you ever watched this one? What did you think?

Sunday Bookends: More cold weather and switching back and forth between books

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.

The weather is so cold in our area that we are doing our best to conserve heating oil by dressing in layers, wrapping ourselves in blankets, and using microwavable rice packs to warm our feet and laps. This might sound dystopian to some, but I have actually been having fun with it and enjoying my little blanket nests and my warm rice packs. Check back after our planned arctic cold snap this week and see if I still see this all as an adventure. Of course, my attitude will also plan on whether or not I need to go out in the cold on any of the days that the weather is supposed to be so cold.

I talked a little about what else has been going on in our world in my Saturday Afternoon Chat yesterday.

I’ve been switching between The Tuesday Night Club (Miss Marple) by Agatha Christie and Every Living Thing by James Herriot.

I read Miss Marple during the day, usually, and James Herriot right before bed.

I am enjoying them both, but Herriot’s a bit better. Both are a collection of short stories with some connections, such as characters. I am not a huge fan of Christie’s writing style at times and this format, which involves people sitting around and telling each other stories, is a bit dry to me. The stories are good but it does get repetitive for every story to feature someone telling a story they supposedly don’t have an ending to, Miss Marple to solve the case, and then the person telling the story to go, “Actually, I do know what really happened. Let me tell you.”

It’s all a bit tedious but there are some humorous moments and quotes from Miss Marple so I am pushing through.

I also just started Nancy Drew: The Sign of the Twisted Candles by Carolyn Keene.

I am itching for a good novel after these two, which I will finish this week, so I am planning to start A Fatal Footnote by Margaret Loudon, which is a cozy mystery.

I am listening to Frankenstein while doing my dishes.

Little Miss and I are also reading Sign of the Beaver by Elizabeth George Speare.

She is reading (here and there) Harry Potter: Prisoner of Azkaban.

The Husband is reading Starter Villain by John Scalzi.

This past week The Husband and I watched the first part of Going Postal on Peacock. I watched a lot of Victorian Farm and more All Creatures Great And Small (even going back to the beginning for fun).

I also watched Angels Over Broadway from 1940.

Last week on the blog I shared:

Now It’s Your Turn!

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.


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.


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In addition to my blog, I write fiction, and you can learn more about my books here: https://lisahoweler.com/my-books-2/


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Book Review: Christy by Catherine Marshall

Christy by Catherine Marshall is a very dense book. It is full of life lessons weaved between poetic prose and hard realities of life in the Smoky Mountains in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Following the story of fictional 19-year-old Christy Huddleston, the book is fiction but based, very loosely, on the real-life experience of Marshall’s mother, Leonora Whitaker Wood.

The CBS series, Christy, starring Kellie Martin, and a couple of made-for-TV movies were based on the book. I watched the show in the 1990s but had never read the book. I didn’t even know the TV-movies existed until I was doing research for this post.

In both the show and the book, Christy travels to a small mission in the mountains of Tennessee from her home in Ashville, North Carolina to teach in a school full of mountain children who have very little material items but a lot of heart and heartache.

The small area where these children and their families are from is called Cutter Gap. The fictional area isn’t really a town since it is only a collection of cabins scattered across the mountains and through the woods, but there is a fiction town called El Pano, located near it. The families in Cutter Gap are poor, uneducated, and fighting for their lives against disease and judgment.

Christy arrives at the mission after listening to the mission founder speak about it and begins her work with Miss Alice Henderson, a Quaker woman, and Pastor David Grantland, a minister who has been assigned to the school.

Once she arrives she meets other colorful members of the community — Dr. Neil McNeil, resident Ruby Mae, and resident Fairlight Spencer (who becomes her best friend), as well as other colorful (shall we say) characters. She also begins to learn more about the history of the area, the hardships they have faced since the 1700s, and the way some of the men feel they have to take a criminal route in life to scrape out a living.

There is a lot of beauty mixed in with some very ugly tales within the 500 pages of Christy. I marked up a lot of the book to remember parts of it later. Even though I found parts of the faith message of the book contradictory and a little confusing at times, there were many parts that were extremely thought-provoking and moving to me.

Most of what I underlined in the book were quotes by Miss Alice, who was my favorite character in the book besides Fairlight Spencer. In the beginning of the book, I found it hard to connect Christy who was very hard-headed and brash at times. She came to the mission with head knowledge of God but not heart knowledge of him.

I couldn’t stand David Grantland through most of the book and wasn’t sure what to make of Neil McNeil.

I wanted to shake Christy a couple of times throughout the book and tell her not to rush into dangerous situations. Toward the end of the book, though, when she truly struggled with the faith that she had only really found since working at the mission, I related to her immensely. So much of what happened to the people she’d come to love in Cutter Gap seemed so cruel to me. Even though the book was fiction, I found myself questioning the goodness of God, thinking about some similar cruel situations of those I’ve known over the years. It’s something I had to sit and wrestle with mental and spiritually in the moments, hours, and days after finishing the book. In many ways I am still struggling with these questions about God and the goodness I sometimes don’t see.

Some of the sections I underlined in the book included:

“Evil is real – and powerful. It has to be fought, not explained away, not fled. And God is against evil all the way. So each of us has to decide where WE stand, how we’re going to live OUR lives. We can try to persuade ourselves that evil doesn’t exist; live for ourselves and wink at evil. We can say that it isn’t so bad after all, maybe even try to call it fun by clothing it in silks and velvets. We can compromise with it, keep quiet about it and say it’s none of our business. Or we can work on God’s side, listen for His orders on strategy against the evil, no matter how horrible it is, and know that He can transform it.”


“What do you do when strength is called for and you have no strength? You evoke a power beyond your own and use stamina you did not know you had. You open your eyes in the morning grateful that you can see the sunlight of yet another day. You draw yourself to the edge of the bed and then put one foot in front of the other and keep going. You weep with those who gently close the eyes of the dead, and somehow, from the salt of your tears, comes endurance for them and for you. You pour out that resurgence to minister to the living.”


“I’d long since learned that no difference in viewpoint should ever be allowed to cause the least break in love. Indeed, it cannot, if it’s real love.
…But relationships can be kept intact without compromising one’s own beliefs. And if we do not keep them intact, but give up and allow the chasm, we’re breaking the second greatest commandment.”



“The secret of her calm seemed to be that she was not trying to prove anything. She was—that was all. And her stance toward life seemed to say: God is—and that is enough.”

This was one of the few books I’ve read that I became completely immersed in when I read it. Everything around me disappeared – the language and descriptions were so vivid. I could see the mountains, picture the cabins and the people, and sometimes even smell, sadly, the smells.

It took me a little over a month to read through the book because it was so dense. I felt like I really got to know the characters that way and this was both a good and a bad thing.

It was a bad thing because, toward the end, some of the events hit me so hard and left me on my couch on a cold Sunday afternoon with a warm fire in our woodstove burning and me crying until my sides hurt.

I like to be immersed in books but at that moment I thought that maybe I wouldn’t like to be so immersed if it was going to be this painful to continue to read on.

I won’t give away too much but there was a death in the book that I could not make sense of in the least. Much of the book seemed to want the reader to see that there was hope still available, even in the midst of darkness, anger, and sadness, but when we had almost reached the end it was like that message was yanked out from under us with such a ferociousness that it made my head spin.

When I was reading the book, I was thinking, “Wow. There are so many deep messages about our relationship with God in this book” but then I was like, “But there were some really theological muddy waters in this book and I’m not sure how I feel about that.”

There was a lot of talk about superstitions and instead of dispelling them by saying God is in control, there were times the characters tried to explain it away by science or simply telling the mountain people that their beliefs were faulty. There is little to no mention of Jesus in this book. Yet this book is marketed as a great Christian book. That confuses me a little. Still, the story, overall, was very compelling, interesting, and realistic (maybe a bit too realistic).

I saw a review of this after I read it that tagged the book as being “heartfelt” and “family-friendly.”

The book was NOT family-friendly. There are discussions of rape, abuse, murder, molestation, and many other disturbing and triggering topics. There are not, however, extremely graphic descriptions of these subjects.

There are times this book seems to push that there is truth in superstition, even though, I’m sure that’s not what the author, a well-known Christian author, meant to do.

In the end, Christy was a painfully beautiful book that wrung me out emotionally. It challenged my thinking, built me up, tore me down again, and left me with a glimmer of hope that Christy and the people of Cutter Gap found some joy and happiness beyond the time frame addressed within the book’s pages.

I would be remiss if I did not mention that the ending of this book is very open-ended and, to me, somewhat abrupt. It does not answer all of the reader’s questions. Or it didn’t answer some of my questions at least. It left me with a bit of mystery and with a strong desire for a sequel.


Many commenters have been telling me there are issues with commenting on WordPress. If you can’t comment, but want to, please feel free to hit the contact link at the top of the page.

In addition to my blog, I write fiction, and you can learn more about my books here: https://lisahoweler.com/my-books-2/

You can also support my writing for $3 a month at my Patreon here: https://patreon.com/LisaHoweler.

If you like my content you can subscribe to my posts for free or support my writing right here on WordPress for $3 a month. Later in 2025 I will be offering exclusive posts for paid subscribers.

Sunday Bookends: He wasn’t even listening and already a DNF book



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.


The other day I became overwhelmed with worry that I have failed my son, the high school senior. Like maybe I didn’t teach him enough or well enough during our six years of homeschooling. The last two years have been tough. He’s had senioritis both of those years. He’s so ready to be done with high school. Getting him to do his schoolwork has been torture.

I went to him a couple of nights ago while he was preparing his dinner plate and felt very overcome with emotions. I apologized to him and told him I hoped I had taught him what he needed for the future.  I told him that I did my best but sometimes it was hard when he didn’t seem interested in learning so I would try to back off and let  him explore the subjects he was really interested in. Maybe that was the wrong thing to do, I told him. Maybe I should have been  more strict or —

I looked at him and my kid has this dumb grin on his face.

I’m practically crying and he’s grinning at me? What’s this about?

He’s not really looking at me either. So —

He laughs this really stupid laugh , looks up at me, and his smile fades. “What?” he asks. “What’s going on? Why do you look like you’re going to cry?”

That’s when I remember that my son’s long hair covers his ears and in his ears are probably  . . . Yes. Earbuds.

He’s been listening to a podcast the entire time and didn’t hear even one part of my lamenting speech.

“Were you saying something serious?” he asks. “What happened?”

I fill him in briefly and he laughs another stupid laugh and sas, “I was totally not listening at all.”

Apparently he isn’t really concerned that I might have screwed up as a parent so I suppose I shouldn’t be either.

I told him not to worry about it and walked back into the living room shaking my head. Sheehs. Kids. *wink*

Did I write last week that I decided not to finish The Definitive Oral Biography of Anthony Bourdain? I could go back and look, I suppose, or I could just run the risk of repeating it. I’ll run the risk.

So, yes, I DNF’d that book on Anthony Bourdain. I was terribly bored and a few chapters in I realized that reading broken up tidbits of people’s memories of Anthony wasn’t very interesting. There really wasn’t a story to the book. It was more like random memories and thoughts and interviews just tossed together in written form. If it had been filmed and I had been watching it, I might have been a little more interested, but this simply did not hold my attention.

I did enjoy reading Kitchen Confidential by Anthony himself — even though I didn’t enjoy aspects of it (how many times did he need to share the crude nicknames he had for his co-workers or how many times he shot up or snorted something before going to work on the line at well-known restaurants?). I did not enjoy reading how others met him or what interactions they had with him as much.

Anyhow, moving on to my current reads. I am reading The Tuesday Night Club, a series of short stories with Miss Marple, by Agatha Christie.

I also decided I needed something sweet and light one night this past week and got caught up in Every Living Thing by James Herriot, so I am also reading that. I absolutely love the sweet and interesting stories in his books but this one, where he is now older with children, is especially endearing.

I am listening to Frankenstein but I keep getting distracted so I may switch to actually reading it. I do enjoy Dan Stevens narration.

Little Miss is getting close to the end of Harry Potter: The Prisoner of Azkaban.

The Boy is listening to Frankenstein. Okay, he isn’t, but he will be soon because even though I am “making” him do it for school he does actually want to read it.

This week I watched The Exile with Douglas Fairbanks Jr., The Victorian Farm, All Creatures Great and Small, and a couple episodes of The Dick VanDyke Show.

Up next in my Winter of Fairbanks Jr. movie marathon was supposed to be Chase a Crooked Shadow but I can’t find it streaming anywhere. I did find it on DVD and do plan to order it because it looks good from the trailer I found. Anyhow, I am switching to Angels Over Broadway, which I found on YouTube, for this week.

I really swear I checked some of these before I put them on the list and I swear that they were streaming but now they are not. I will update any of the movies I can’t find streaming in my Winter of Fairbanks Jr. post this week.

So far it looks like the rest are on Amazon, Hulu, or other streaming services.

I found the Sun Never Sets here: https://archive.org/details/sun.-never.-sets.-1939

I guess Fairbanks Jr. wasn’t in a ton of super popular movies because they are not easy to find.

Gladwynn Grant Shakes the Family Tree is out on Amazon and Barnes and Noble: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DW1VCWDD

Last week on the blog I shared:

I am listening to Frankenstein, narrated by Dan Stevens, but I have a hard time focusing on it so we will see how that goes. I may have to switch back to the book again.

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.


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

Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot!

Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot February 6

Welcome to the Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot where we offer a place for bloggers to link up and get a fresh set of eyes on their posts. We also feature one blog a week, letting our readers know about the blog and providing a link so readers can learn more about them.

Look for the post to go live about 9:30 PM EST on Thursdays.

I hope that you will look through the links and click on some and find a new blogger or two to follow. First, I’ll introduce you to our hosts:

Marsha from Marsha in the Middle started blogging in 2021 as an exercise in increasing her neuroplasticity.  Oh, who are we kidding?  Marsha started blogging because she loves clothes, and she loves to talk or, in this case, write!  

Melynda from Scratch Made Food! & DIY Homemade Household  – The name says it all, we homestead in East Texas, with three generations sharing this land. I cook and bake from scratch, between gardening and running after the chickens, and knitting! 

Lisa from Boondock Ramblings shares about the fiction she writes and reads, her faith, homeschooling, photography and more. 

Sue from Women Living Well After 50 started blogging in 2015 and writes about living an active and healthy lifestyle, fashion, book reviews and her podcast and enjoying life as a woman over 50.  She invites you to join her living life in full bloom.


We would love to have additional Co-Hosts to share in the creativity and fun! If you think this would be a good fit for you and you like having fun (come on, who doesn’t!) while still being creative, drop one of us an email and someone will get back with you!

WTJR will be highlighting a different blogger each week this year! We invite you to stop by their blog, take a look around and say hello! This week we are spotlighting Mummabstylish!!

A little about the Mummabstylish blog:

I’m Jacqui a 59 year old fashion and lifestyle blogger.  I’ve been married to my soul mate David who I met over 40 years ago at college!  I’m a mum of five children, three girls and two boys have 7 grand-kids who keep me very busy.

I started Mummabstylish back in 2016.  I reached a time in my life where I felt I’d lost my way in life.  The kids didn’t ‘need’ me anymore and although I help my husband at work don’t have a role anymore.

It’s important to me that I keep myself available for David and the family, but I still needed to find my place in the world!

So I started blogging.  I looked into what fashions & styles I should be wearing at my age, but soon realised it’s quite the opposite, there are no set rules as to what you should wear at any stage of your life and basically learnt you should wear what you feel good in and like.  

Thank you for linking up to Weekend Traffic Jam Reboot, Jacqui!

Some posts that caught my eye this week:

|| Upcycled Tea Towel Becomes Sweet Valentine Wreath by The Apple Street Cottage ||

|| Random Saturday Cookbooks Part I by Cat’s Wire ||

|| So Many Diversions by A New Lens ||



|| Fountain Paint Pot, Lake Hotel and Cabins, and Hayden Valley in Yellowstone National Park by Amy’s Creative Pursuits ||



Thank you so much for joining us for our link-up! Please remember that this is a link-up where you can share posts from the previous week or posts from weeks, months, or years ago. All we ask is that they be “family-friendly”.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter
https://fresh.inlinkz.com/js/widget/load.js?id=c0efdbe6b4add43dd7ef