Friday, March 27, 2026

Five for Friday, Edition #40: The Random Photo Edition

1) The cat is queen of the house. Have we discussed how Zelda has taken over poor Hannah's kennel? 


2) I'm going to get a new office chair! I was actually given a new office chair (see below), but it turns out they sent the wrong chairs and I'm actually going to get one that's fancier than this one, so now you know just as much about the chairs as I do. I had the use of this one for one entire working day (Wednesday). 


3) Library books! As of Saturday, I only had four library books and I was freaking out because that's the number I had when the library closed because of the pandemic and I'm NEVER going to be unprepared for a library shutdown ever again. I immediately ordered more books from the library than I could ever read. 


Where They Last Saw Her by Marcie R. Rendon - currently reading

We Lived on the Horizon by Erika Swyler - I have started this one twice, but it doesn't hold much interest. It gets one more shot and then I'm returning it. 

We'll Prescribe You a Cat by Syou Ishida, translated by E. Madison Shimoda - IRL book club pick. 
 
The Way We All Became The Brady Bunch: How the Canceled Sitcom Became the Beloved Pop Culture Icon We Are Still Talking About Today by Kimberly Potts - I borrowed this to fulfill a Pop Sugar Reading Challenge Prompt, but I'm pretty sure I'm not going to really read it.

Free: A Child and a Country at the End of History by Lea Ypi - This sounds depressing as hell. It might not be a great fit for this time of year.

Bittersweet by Sarah Ockler - Mindless YA? I don't mind if I do.

Welcome to the Hyunam-Dong Bookshop by Hwang Bo-Reum and translated by Shanna Tanj - Cozy Japanese Korean literature? YES! (Thanks to the Anonymous commenter who pointed out this error. I'm sorry. It's not a great mistake to make.)

Alex & Me: How a Scientist and a Parrot Discovered a Hidden World of Animal Intelligence—and Formed a Deep Bond in the Process by Irene M. Pepperberg - It will not surprise anyone that Pepperberg was on an episode of the You're the Expert podcast, would it? 

Running While Black: Finding Freedom in a Sport That Wasn't Built for Us by Alison Mariella Désir - For a Pop Sugar Reading Challenge prompt. I usually despise running/athlete memoirs, but this has a 4.55 Goodreads rating. Surely it's good? (I suspect I will not read this one, either.)

On Looking: Eleven Walks with Expert Eyes by Alexandra Horowitz - This book was cited in Humor Me, so I ordered it immediately. 

By the Sword (Valdemar saga) by Mercedes Lackey - I enjoyed the last installment of Valdemar so much I ordered the next one. 

The next couple of photos are brought to you by me trying to document things that make me laugh.

4) Ted and the Giant Carrot - In this sequel to James and the Giant Peach, we try to figure out why the carrots at our grocery store are the size of melons.

Look at those carrots!

5) This dog. If you are ever driving around my town and you see this dog in the terrace rolling around, just know that she is loved and cared for. I mean, look how clean those teeth are. I laughed so hard at her.

Have you read any of those books? What's on your to-read list next? If you had to pick one of my books to read next, what would you read? 

27 comments:

  1. mbmom113/27/2026

    I've not read any of these books, but I finally got through Spoon River Anthology. Some of them were so pointed and shocking, others had glorious language, and a lot were sad. Not sorry I read it. I just finished The Art of Racing in the Rain ( sort of about a dog- upbeat!) and the Traveling Cat Chronicles ( sort of about a cat! sweet and sad).
    I might try Mercedes Lackey- I have a serious book to read and need something to balance it.

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    1. Spoon River Anthology! SO GOOD! I'm happy to hear I'm not alone in my enjoyment.

      Mercedes Lackey is so hit and miss, but I can't stop until I've made it through!

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    2. Never alone. I love SRA and used to teach it. It's absolutely wonderful every time I read it, no matter how many times.

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  2. Rex loves rolling like that too, the result is that he's constantly filling the house with dry grass. A small price to pay for such joy, if you ask me. OMG the library shutdown. I ended up rereading a lot of my old books, so that was something, I guess.
    I think that carrot has something to prove! Or maybe it IS proving something.

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    1. Yep. Hannah is going to have to get a B-A-T-H this weekend because it's terrible for her skin to roll around in grass, but who is to stop her when she's having so much fun?

      The library shutdown was traumatic. The ebook collection at our library is NOT robust and I don't actually have a lot of books that I own. There's no way I was going to dive into my husband's books! I know it's a privilege because that was such a hard time for people for harder reasons, but it was really hard for me. Never again will I be caught off guard.

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  3. Go Zelda go!!!

    The giant carrot is remarkable, but I want to know if Devonte was on break.

    I haven't read anything in your stash, but I'm glad that you're prepared in case of another apocalypse. I'm kind of adrift in my reading right now, so I think I'm going to head to my bookshelves and do some rereading.

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    1. I haven't seen Devonte in a couple of weeks. I hope he is either on a different shift or has moved on to bigger and better things. I miss Devonte.

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  4. Anonymous3/27/2026

    Hi! I just want to say that I really enjoy reading your blog and don’t want to come across as a jerk, but Welcome to the Hyunam Dong Bookshop is Korean not Japanese. Anyways I definitely want enjoy your book posts and have put some on my TBR list

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    1. Anonymous3/27/2026

      I mean “I definitely enjoy your book posts”

      Delete
    2. Oh, no! You're right. That's a terrible mistake to make. (I just read that book about the Korean divers and how terrible the Japanese treated them and I can imagine all the Korean folks reading this post and getting annoyed. I'll fix it!)

      Delete
  5. I really should make a trip to the library.

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    1. If you aren't as obsessive about books as I am, maybe it's not needed.

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  6. Well this is kind of embarrassing, but I would probably read the Brady Bunch book! I grew up watching that show (and the reruns over and over again for years) and I would probably enjoy it. I'm also intrigued by We'll Prescribe You a Cat, obviously. On that note- of course Zelda is queen of the house!!! Muffin is queen of our house.
    I'm intrigued by that carrot- I mean what does it taste like? For some reason I imagine it tasting bland and un-carrot-like. You might have to buy it and report back.

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    1. I don't think it's embarrassing! I'd probably read a book about Full House or Perfect Strangers! It's just that I don't know if I've actually seen an entire episode of the Brady Bunch! It might not be a great fit for me.

      I suspect the carrot tastes like nothing, too. The larger the vegetable, the less likely they are to be good, I think.

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  7. I just finished "Welcome to the Hyunam Dong Bookshop" and it is very cozy! Having so many backup books is very smart. I read more books on Kindle than physical books, so I don't have the same COVID baggage, but whenever I'm getting on a plane I always download all the books so I can prepare for whatever mood strikes.

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    1. I would LOVE to read entirely on my Kindle, but the ebook collection at our library is not very robust, so I rely on physical books to get me through. I never want to be without books again!

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  8. The carrot photo made me laugh, too; thank you for that!

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    1. You're welcome. I'm here to provide vegetable humor!

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  9. I read “We’ll Prescribe you A Cat”. It was cute until it went a little bonkers for me. Let me know if you figure out what happened at the end.
    I just picked up some holds from the library- My Work by Olga Ravn and The Hand the First Held Mine by Maggie O’Farrell. I have no memory of putting these books on hold. Sometimes I do some late night hold-putting and don’t remember what I did in the morning. I guess it’s my middle age lady version of getting trashed and ending up in a strangers’ bed.

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  10. I’ve been to the Brady Bunch house, so likely I would read that one next. Then maybe Running while Black, though I’m not black and not a runner, it sounds like it could be good. Heck, maybe I will get them from the library and read them. Maybe not though, I’m not really good on Nonfiction. But these two piqued my interest.

    I love the huge carrot and had to show the pictures of Hannah and Zelda to my daughter immediately.

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  11. I’m cracking up over your ‘but I probably won’t read this’ admissions. I grew up on Brady Bunch and I’m trying to wrap my brain around you not seeing a full episode- so funny how we watch what we watch based on our age. Ya know?

    I’d probably read Brady bunch and then the running memoir. What I do would loosely be described as running, but I do enjoy a memoir.

    On our drive to Florida I’ve listened to a memoir called We Were Rich and We Didn’t Know It. I have laughed out loud multiple times while wearing headphones, so Yes- my family is making fun of me Big Time. It is read by a man with an Irish brogue and IMO that has improved the listening experience immensely. Might by my Irish heritage, but I do think most anyone would enjoy it.

    All hail Queen Zelda.

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  12. Add me to the list of people who would read the Brady Bunch book! The carrot photo made me laugh - I'm definitely here for the things that make you laugh!

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  13. These photos are fantastic. THAT CARROT IS HUGE. I love your pets so much, and it is making me giggle to think of Zelda commandeering Hannah's kennel. (Sorry, Hannah.)

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  14. NOTHING conveys pure joy like a happy dog. Whenever I see one, I am immediately uplifted. Hannah would buoy me for days if I saw her IRL like that.

    WTF with that carrot? Please tell me that you bought one! I definitely would have, just to see if it were any good or not. It's probably tough and fibrous, but what a hoot to take it home.

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  15. I so felt your library item. My local library recently changed their hours because of a staffing issue and it's almost impossible for me to get there now (they have no weekend hours and are closing by 4pm most other days). I've been doing bulk pickups of my holds as often as I can because I'm so afraid of running out of reads. PS: Zelda looks oh so happy in that kennel, while Hannah looks oh so happy in a completely different way rolling around! I love it!

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  16. I am often guilty of getting out books from the library and then realizing that it was all very aspirational. But, I tell myself that the more books are checked out the better for the library’s metrics so it’s really just public service. I’ve been in such a reading rut for nearly a year. Sigh. Anyone got any advice for breaking out of a long term reading rut?!?!

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  17. I read and really liked We Lived on the Horizon, but I can see not being in the mood for it, it really takes its time.
    I have a stupid number of library books out and a stupid sub-set of those are so overdue that I am not just suspended but probably Public Enemy Number One at the library (I know you will be horrified by this, I promise to resolve it soon).
    That carrot is NOT right. I would be afraid. I hope your husband washed his hands after touching it, and maybe did a prayer circle or burned some sage.

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