Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Favorite Comfort Foods & Why (+ Recipes)

 


The Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge is hosted by Long and Short Reviews. They offer this blog hop as a weekly prompt to help you gain new friends and visitors. You don't have to participate every week, but if you decide to post and join the blog hop for a week, Long and Short Reviews asks that you share your link on their weekly post on their website (it will be the top post on the home page each Wednesday morning). The link list remains open for new links for 48 hours. Then visit the other bloggers participating to see what they are talking about that week. Comments are appreciated. 

What a yummy topic for a Wednesday! Today we are talking about comfort foods. We all have them: those foods that makes us feel good and bring about positive memories. So, let's dish about them.

Shepherd's Pie

This delicious comfort food originated from the United Kingdom and Ireland. It is ground meat in gravy with mashed potatoes and vegetables. We grew up only having corn in it, so that is often how I make it. However, this recipe from Simply Recipes gives you a more traditional version of the dish. 

Chicken and Rice Soup

I grew up on Campbell's Chicken Noodle soup, but my husband has always preferred rice. So, this is what has been made in my house for the last 25 years. I usually make my own chicken broth, because store bought ones are too high in sodium. He likes a hearty soup, so though I don't actually add chicken to this soup, I fill it with onions, celery, carrots, and rice. This recipe from Diner at the Zoo is as close to mine as I could find. However, I don't usually cook my rice ahead of time. I might try to do that in the future.  

Baked Macaroni and Cheese

This is a dish I discovered in adulthood. The only mac and cheese I had as a kid came in a skinny blue box with powdered cheese. Honestly, the girls still eat this from time to time. However, if you are looking for a delicious baked macaroni and cheese, this classic recipe from Mueller's fits the bill. Sometimes, I cut up slices of bread and use that as a topping. 

What are some of your favorite comfort foods? 

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: Top Ten Books I Did Not Finish (DNF)



Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.    

Welcome back to Tuesday. This might be a tough one for me. Though I have improved over the years, I still don't like not finishing a book. Mostly, I stop listening to audiobooks that don't capture my attention, but rarely a printed book.


Top Ten Books I Did Not Finish (DNF)


This first one is cheating, because I grabbed the book listed on a site as a Kindle freebie, but I returned it the same day when it wasn't. 


This is just a book I started but then had to break off to continue with my reviewing schedule. I hope to get back to it this year. 


What I read of this book, I enjoyed. Simply don't like the genre enough to read such a big novel. 


These next two are simply because I am horrible about reading books about writing and the writing business. 



I think this was a NetGalley download when it first came out. This book explores Laura and Rose's complicated relationship and their writing partnership. Tried a few times to read it, but couldn't. 


I think this one is simply a great book at the wrong time. I read another book by these authors, but I never seemed to read much more than a few pages of this. Ultimately ended up giving it to the library book sale. 


This is a book I know I will read one day. Benjamin's work is amazing. It's the content that I struggle with. Knowing what this is about, I really need to work up to it. That's the same reason I have started the nonfiction account of the same title by David Laskin three times and have not gotten past the first chapter. 


I wanted to like this book, but I couldn't get into it even after three chapters. The author as narrator didn't help me enjoy it. Most of the reviews are good, so it might be me. 


Honestly, this is what I really work to do with my real estate business. Maybe not as hyperlocal as I could be, but relationship building is a skill of mine. Thought I might gain some new ideas. Some were outdated considering this was published in 2017. Hung in there for a while, but didn't mesh with me. 

Looking forward to visiting your blogs today. 

Sunday, March 23, 2025

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? & Mailbox Monday - Mar 24



It's Monday! What Are You Reading? is a place to meet up and share what you have been, are and about to be reading over the week. It's a great post to organize yourself. It's an opportunity to visit and comment, and er... add to that ever growing TBR pile! So welcome in everyone. This meme started with J Kaye's Blog and then was taken up by Sheila from Book Journey. Sheila then passed it on to Kathryn at the Book Date.   

Happy Monday! Here we are near the end of March, and I have no clue how we got here. I've been so, so much busier than I expected. At least that's a good thing. In addition to my current pending transactions, I have more coming up soon. My meal plans are set for the next three weeks. I've got a short editing project to finalize for a client. I've also been managing our short-term rental in Wilmington, NC. I read today that Southern Living listed Wrightsville Beach (less than 10 mins from our place) as one of its Top 50 Beach Towns for 2025. How exciting! I am also working on opening up my calendar to finish writing the first draft of the novel I started in November. 

In my reading world, nothing much happened last week. I've been working on a Little House on the Prairie related project. 

Photos from the week:


Sunday was Travis' and Dwight's 6th birthday



Some of the REALTOR pins I've accumulated through the years


Stuffed sweet potatoes 

I listen to this book while I am driving. I'm also listening to the Little House on the Prairie: Fifty for 50 Anniversary Podcast. I just had to do it. Not sure how many I will binge on, but I'm enjoying it for now. 


Made a tiny bit of progress on this one. I've just been working late, so it is going slower than I hoped. Wonderful book, though. 


These are next. 










Mailbox Monday is a gathering place for readers to share the books they added to their shelves the previous week. This weekly meme is now hosted by Vicki at I'd Rather Be At The Beach

These two came via email for next month's virtual book tour. 




Upcoming Events
  • Boo's Blue Poo and Goo by Toni Nelson - Mar 27 (Book Blast at TC&TBC)
  • Gitel's Freedom by Iris Mitlin Lav - Date TBD (Review) 
  • The Silver Falcon by David Tindell - Apr 9 (Author Interview)
  • Pineapple Easter Egg by Amy Vansant - Apr 10 (Showcase)
  • The Whispering Witch and Nobody Important by Lee J. Martin - Apr 16 & 17 (Review at TC&TBC)
  • Only in September by Cynthia Flowers - Apr 23 (Book Blast)
  • Stone of Doubt by Margaret Izard - Apr 28 (Interview)
  • Surviving the United Nations by Robert Bruce Adolph - May 9 (First Chapter Review)
  • Freedom Drop & Calypso Blue by Brian Silverman - June 18 (Showcase)
  • Freedom Drop by Brian Silverman - Date TBD (First Chapter Review)
  • Calypso Blue by Brian Silverman - Date TBD (First Chapter Review)


At Christmas Year Round you might be surprised to hear that there was some Christmas in the news this week. What could it be? Check it out here


Nothing new here except announcing the two books I will be reviewing in April.

Laura's Little Houses has been busy. Like I mentioned above, I'm working on a Little House on the Prairie project where I am comparing the books to the television series. Even though Michael Landon didn't bring the books to life exactly the way they were written, he always captured the essence of Laura Ingalls Wilder's stories. And as I've made my way through the books again, it is surprising how much of the books inspired what was brought to life in the show in the earlier seasons. You can read the first three posts at:




That's it for me. I have a busy morning, but should be visiting your blogs this afternoon. 

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Favorite Websites/Podcasts/Blogs

 


The Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge is hosted by Long and Short Reviews. They offer this blog hop as a weekly prompt to help you gain new friends and visitors. You don't have to participate every week, but if you decide to post and join the blog hop for a week, Long and Short Reviews asks that you share your link on their weekly post on their website (it will be the top post on the home page each Wednesday morning). The link list remains open for new links for 48 hours. Then visit the other bloggers participating to see what they are talking about that week. Comments are appreciated. 

Happy Wednesday! We are talking about our favorite websites, podcasts, and blogs this week.

As far as blogs, this is something hard to do. I've been blessed with some many great blogging friends that it would be hard to pick only a handful of favorites. So, I will say thanks to all of you in the blogging community for your support throughout the last 18 years. You have helped grow this blog and been a source of friendly conversation for many years. I also enjoy seeing what you are talking about each week. Thank you from the bottom of my heart! 

So, my attention now goes to websites and podcasts. Unless I'm shopping, I don't visit many websites. I guess my only favorite there would be NaNoWriMo. What can I say, I'm a news and social media junkie otherwise. 

I really don't get into podcasts much, which is odd because I would really like to start one. Whether it be about real estate or books, I don't know, but I feel like it is in my future. Since I spend a lot of time in the car, podcasts seem like a great way to listen to information in snippets. Why don't I listen to more of them?

Some podcasts, I discover and then binge listen, like Christmas Morning and Wilder on the Prairie, but then I wander away and don't listen for months. Nothing to do with the podcasts, just not feeling it at the time. 

Some podcasts are business related, like Bigger Pockets, Real Estate Today, or Coaching Kidlit. I tend to find topics I'm looking for and listen to those certain episodes. 

Other podcasts are ones I should be interested in, but have never really indulged in, like Little House: Fifty for 50, From Plum Creek with Love, and Cabot Coverage. How have I not listened to every one of these episodes? 

What are your thoughts on podcasts? Do you listen to them? How do you listen to them? What are some of your favorites? 


Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: Top Ten Books on My Spring 2025 to-Read List



Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.    

Happy Tuesday! We are talking about the books on our spring reading lists. Always a fun topic. I will be sharing what I need to read, and what I want to read. So, here are the...

Top Ten Books on 
My Spring 2025 to-Read List


Reading now



These two I ordered to add to my Laura Ingalls Wilder collection 


NetGalley read


Have had this on my list since before Christmas


Steven sent this to me right before it came out


The last book in the Left Behind series that I didn't know existed until recently


Didn't win the giveaway, but I still want to read it


Love this series


This came from Thriftbooks with a bunch of others

Monday, March 17, 2025

Interview with J. E. Weiner, Author of The Wretched and Undone

 


J. E. Weiner is a writer and novelist based in Northern California. Her debut novel, The Wretched and Undone, is a searing and genre-bending Southern Gothic tale set in the heart of the Texas Hill Country and inspired by real people and actual events. The book manuscript was named a Killer Nashville Top Pick for 2024 and a Claymore Award Finalist for Best Southern Gothic. 

Weiner’s previous work has appeared in the literary journals Madcap Review, Five Minutes, HerStry, and Chicago Story Press, as well as the recent grit-lit anthology Red-Headed Writing (Cowboy Jamboree Press, 2024). Weiner is a founding member of the Pacific Coast Writers Collective, and while living and writing in blissful exile on the West Coast, her heart remains bound to her childhood home, the Great State of Texas. 

Learn more about J. E. and her writing at her website: www.jeweiner.com

Follow her on social media: Facebook: @J.E.Weiner  | Instagram: @jeweinerauthor

When did you begin writing? 

There is a Russian idiom “to write into the drawer” (zapisat' v yashchik), which, I think, best captures how all of this started. Over the years, I have always kept journals–or really just scraps of paper stuffed into notebooks or desk drawers–capturing strange and humorous encounters, snippets of dialog eavesdropped, and observations formed as a result of chronic people-watching. The idea for this story emerged over time and over many trips to visit family in the Texas Hill Country. I kept telling my husband that someday I wanted to write a novel about Bandera, the self-proclaimed “Cowboy Capital of the World,” and its history. He finally forced my hand, signing me up for a Stanford Continuing Studies course titled “How to Start Your Novel and Keep It Going.” I wrote the first chapter of The Wretched and Undone in the spring of 2018 and haven’t looked back since. 

Do you write during the day, at night, or whenever you can sneak in a few moments? 

With a hectic day job, finding the time and headspace to write has proven to be my greatest challenge. At a moment of particular frustration, I remembered when my mother was writing her Master’s thesis while teaching full-time and raising young children. She would wake up at 4 o’clock in the morning every day and write for two hours before we all woke up, and then use whatever energy she had left in the evenings to edit. I have adopted a variation of that approach. I spend a good part of every weekend writing generatively and editing in the evenings during the week. 

What is this book about? 

The Wretched and Undone is a love letter to the Texas Hill Country. It is a story–as quirky and funny as it is tragic–about a place and time few people beyond the town of Bandera know much about. It is both a hard-nosed telling of brutal truths about a difficult time in American history, lifting up voices often silenced and lessons still not learned from the past, and a poignant saga that explores the tensions between the protection of family and community (found and otherwise) and the struggles of individuals to chart their own paths and reconcile their own fears, joys, failures, and successes. Ultimately, this is the story of the resilience, but not the infallibility of the human spirit. 


What inspired you to write it? 

One icy winter night while visiting my sister on her cattle ranch on the outskirts of Bandera, Texas, she shared the story of a “woman in white” who often came to call, drifting across the fields and hills or imploring sleepy guests for help. That ghost drew me to this story, and the ruggedly beautiful Texas Hill Country drew me to the place. It was only a matter of time until the trained historian in me uncovered the complex and fascinating history of Bandera and the region. The intrepid pioneers who crossed the Atlantic on a cramped steamship and endured a 300-mile trek by oxcart from the Port of Galveston to Bandera on the eve of the American Civil War had no idea what awaited them at the tough and morally ambiguous crossroads in the history of Texas and the United States. Ghosts? Cowboys? Times of troubles? This was a story that needed to be told.

 Was the road to publication smooth sailing or a bumpy ride? 

Bumpy, for sure, as it is for all new writers. The barriers to entry into the traditional book publishing market are nearly impossible to overcome without a perfect alignment of the right agent, the right publishing house contacts, and the right project at the right time. However, with challenges also come opportunities, and the democratization of the publishing industry in recent years has allowed newcomers like me to break through. That said, the bar is also ever-higher in these emerging publishing lanes. There is no lack of great stories that need to be told, but the stories (and the writing) also need to be great. 

What is one piece of advice you would like to share with aspiring authors everywhere? 

I would have waited a beat longer to begin submitting my manuscript. When you type “The End” on the final page of your draft, the reality is it is just the beginning. 

What is up next for you? 

I am on to my next novel, a story inspired by the still-unsolved murder of eight men at Tragedy Tree in Bandera County in 1863. 

Order The Wretched and Undone: Bookshop.org | Amazon | Barnes & Noble

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? & Mailbox Monday



It's Monday! What Are You Reading? is a place to meet up and share what you have been, are and about to be reading over the week. It's a great post to organize yourself. It's an opportunity to visit and comment, and er... add to that ever growing TBR pile! So welcome in everyone. This meme started with J Kaye's Blog and then was taken up by Sheila from Book Journey. Sheila then passed it on to Kathryn at the Book Date.   

Happy Monday! Hope you had a great week. The sun has been shining here, but Sunday was more like tornado weather--warm, drizzly, and windy. My seedlings are growing. Took the Lil' Diva to the first fitting for her wedding dress. And I have been running around selling and showing houses. Not a bad week at all. Also positive news on the literary front, but too early to share yet.  Saw a local production of On Golden Pond this weekend. Just bought tickets for The Wizard of Oz at a different theatre for July. 

Here are a few photos:


Added to the alphabet soup after my name with my ABR designation


Made this yummy butternut squash salad


Theo is enjoying the warmer weather

The only reading I managed was the First Chapter Review of the following romance novel and a short audio book. You can read it here if you missed it. This will be another productive week, but I plan to get some reading done anyway. 



This is a 20 minute short essay. Not sure how I stumbled upon it. 

Started this two weeks ago, so should be continuing with it this week. 


These are next. 








Mailbox Monday is a gathering place for readers to share the books they added to their shelves the previous week. This weekly meme is now hosted by Vicki at I'd Rather Be At The Beach

Found this Kindle freebie thanks to Bookbub.  


October 1870 - Cincinnati born Angelique DeWitt, widowed and caring for her five-year-old daughter, Zina, finds herself scrambling for a place for her and her little girl. About to become homeless and in desperation, Angelique makes a quick decision to become a mail order bride for a man named Thaddeus Billings, a hotel owner in Kansas. But...once they get on their way, Angelique wonders if she has done the right thing, especially when disaster strikes! Terry Cramer has had it rough most of his life. Now divorced and raising his six-year-old son, he has a prosperous farm and steamboat landing on the banks of the Ohio River—thirteen miles south of Louisville. He has everything he needs... except a good woman to love him and help raise his boy. Always too busy to go out looking for a female to court, Terry says one would have to drop onto his lap. Sometimes circumstances work out in strange ways, even because of a broken down old steamboat. You just never know what’s around that next bend in life, do you? If you enjoy a good, clean, old-fashioned romance with lots of history and endearing characters, written like the classic movies of old, then Sweet Love at Honey Landing is for you!


Upcoming Events
  • Boo's Blue Poo and Goo by Toni Nelson - Mar 27 (Book Blast at TC&TBC)
  • Gitel's Freedom by Iris Mitlin Lav - Date TBD (Review) 
  • The Silver Falcon by David Tindell - Apr 9 (Author Interview)
  • Pineapple Easter Egg by Amy Vansant - Apr 10 (Showcase)
  • The Whispering Witch and Nobody Important by Lee J. Martin - Apr 16 & 17 (Review at TC&TBC)
  • Only in September by Cynthia Flowers - Apr 23 (Book Blast)
  • Stone of Doubt by Margaret Izard - Apr 28 (Interview)
  • Surviving the United Nations by Robert Bruce Adolph - May 9 (First Chapter Review)


At Christmas Year Round you will find March Madness and Christmas connections here


I will be posting a writing and goals update before the end of the month at The Children's and Teens' Book Connection. Will likely be shifting some things around. 

That's it from my neck of the woods. Looking forward to checking in with you.