Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean

Okay, I read The Library Book by Susan Orlean a few years ago and was obsessed with it. There is a prompt in this year's Pop Sugar Reading Challenge about a book where gardening is central to the plot, so The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean seemed like a great pick to fulfill that prompt based on my past success with Orlean. 


In this book, Orlean follows an eccentric man named John Laroche in his search for an elusive flower called the ghost orchid. Along the way, she learns about the swamps of Florida, the ins and outs of international plant (and animal) smuggling, and how the niche community of orchid growers, buyers, and sellers is absolutely batshit.

Look, Orlean gave it away. She found Laroche to be a character of fascination and interest.

Many things he said were incredible or staggering or cracked or improbable, but they were never boring. The current of his mind and behavior was more riptide than rivulet. I didn’t care all that much whether what he said was true or not; I just found the flow irresistible. (page 33)

I did not. 

Here's why I sort of enjoyed this book. Let's say I wanted to fall asleep VERY QUICKLY. All I had to do was open this book and I would be sound asleep within three pages. Look, I know a lot of people who pay a lot of money on supplements and other sleep aids. Let me suggest that if you are having trouble sleeping, get yourself a copy of this book!

Also, I did find the orchid history and the history of this area of Florida to be somewhat interesting. So. You know. Do what you will this information. 

2/5 stars - zzzzzzz (I found myself yawning AS I WAS WRITING THIS)

Lines of note:

No one knows whether orchids evolved to complement insects or whether the orchids evolved first, or whether somehow these two life forms evolved simultaneously, which might explain how two totally different living things came to depend on each other. The harmony between an orchid and its pollinator is so perfect that it is kind of eerie. Darwin loved studying orchids. In his writings he often described them as “my beloved Orchids” and was so certain that they were the pinnacle of evolutionary transformation that he once wrote that it would be “incredibly monstrous to look at an Orchid as having been created as we now see it.” (page 55)

I guess I just thought Darwin was the bird guy. 

Orchids are one of the few things in the world that can live forever. Cultivated orchids that aren’t killed by their owners can outlive their owners and even generations of owners. Many people who collect orchids designate an orchid heir in their wills, because they know the plants will outlast them. (page 58)

Like parrots!

Each time a hurricane hits Florida, botanists wonder what new orchids might have come in with it. At the moment, they are waiting to see what was blown in by Hurricane Andrew. They will know the answer around the seventh anniversary of the storm, when the seeds that landed will have sprouted and grown. (page 59)

FASCINATING. The world is a crazy place. 

Currently, the international trade in orchids is more than $10 billion a year, and some individual rare plants have sold for more than twenty-five thousand dollars. (page 60)

Egads. And here I am without a single desire to be part of this multi-billion dollar industry. 

Beauty can be painfully tantalizing, but orchids are not simply beautiful. Many are strange-looking or bizarre, and all of them are ugly when they aren’t flowering. They are ancient, intricate living things that have adapted to every environment on earth. They have outlived dinosaurs; they might outlive human beings. They can be hybridized, mutated, crossbred, and cloned. They are at once architectural and fanciful and tough and dainty, a jewel of a flower on a haystack of a plant. (page 63)

This. I want more on this. What orchid has lived since the time of dinosaurs? I need more information!

...a great number of the animals and plants that are brought to Florida are illegal to collect, transport, and trade. The Port of Miami is one of the biggest points of entry for smuggled plants and animals in the country. (page 226)

Huh. Who knew? 

Things I looked up:

Sometimes this kind of story turns out to be something more, some glimpse of life that expands like those Japanese paper balls you drop in water and then after a moment they bloom into flowers (page 5)

Apparently these are magic water blossoms. It seems like it actually might be magic? (Also, I watched these videos too long.)

pink Zairean hot peppers shaped like penises (page 27) - It's called a peter pepper. I don't know if it really looks like that much like a dick? 

chikee huts (page 31) - a traditional open-sided shelter with a palm-thatch roof and a raised cypress wood platform. Developed by the Seminole and Miccosukee tribes of Florida, these highly durable, wind-resistant structures provide natural cooling in humid climates.

sneezeweed (page 32) - large, daisylike, yellow flowering perennial - Sneezeweed flowers in late summer or fall. The common name is based on the former use of its dried leaves in making snuff, inhaled to cause sneezing that would supposedly rid the body of evil spirits. It grows natively across most of the United States, southern Canada, and Central America. It thrives in low, damp environments such as wet prairies, meadows, streambanks, marsh edges, and roadside ditches

pennywort (page 32) - Hydrocotyle, also called floating pennywort, water pennywort, dollar weed, marsh penny, thick-leaved pennywort and white rot, is a genus of prostrate, perennial aquatic or semi-aquatic plants

beauty-berry (page 42) - a woody, deciduous, perennial shrub that produces showy purple fruits in the fall.

yellow-eyed grass (page 42) - a perennial herb that naturally grows in moist environments

camphor weed (page 42) - an aromatic, annual to biennial herbaceous shrub. Its copious blooms consist of bright yellow ray florets and vivid yellow to orange disk florets. 

The great Victorian-era orchid hunter William Arnold drowned on a collecting expedition on the Orinoco River, The orchid hunter Schroeder, a contemporary of Arnold’s, fell to his death while hunting in Sierra Leone. The hunter Falkenberg was also lost, while orchid hunting in Panama. David Bowman died of dysentery in Bogota. The hunter Klabock was murdered in Mexico. Brown was killed in Madagascar. Endres was shot dead in Rio Hacha. Gustave Wallis died of fever in Ecuador. Digance was gunned down by locals in Brazil. Osmers vanished without a trace in Asia. The linguist and plant collector Augustus Margary survived toothache, rheumatism, pleurisy, and dysentery while sailing the Yangtze only to be murdered when he completed his mission and traveled beyond Bhamo. (page 65)

cattleyas (page 69 and then over and over and over again) - a genus of orchids from Costa Rica south to Argentina

Once, just for fun, Paxton and the Bachelor Duke dressed Paxton’s seven-year-old daughter, Annie, in a fairy costume and stood her up on one of the giant lily pads floating in the pond and took a picture. The image of Annie Paxton standing on the lily was a sensation. (page 86) - True story. Here's the photo. 

Photo taken in Adelaide Botanic Gardens 1910, State Library of South Australia

Carl Fisher, a Detroit automobile mogul who came to Florida right after World War I and poured three million cubic yards of sand onto an expanse of mangrove swamp and created Miami Beach. (page 149) - Why didn't she write the book about this guy?

In 1858 Secretary of War Jefferson Davis admitted that the Seminoles had “baffled the energetic efforts of our army to effect their subjugation and removal.” Because they never surrendered, the Florida Seminoles came to refer to themselves as the Unconquered. To this day their descendants have never signed a peace treaty with the United States. (page 255) - The things you learn. I had no idea. 

testicular defect known as cryptorchidism (page 289) - undescended testicle

Hat mentions (why hats?):

Birders used to come from as far away as Cuba and leave with enough plumes to decorate thousands of ladies’ hats (page 41) - See a much better book than this book about thieving in The Feather Thief about this topic. 

four men in sun hats (page 95)

Inspectors have found falcons hidden in milk cartons, parakeets tucked in hair curlers, monkeys under people’s hats. (page 226)

He was wearing droopy camouflage pants, a Miami Hurricanes hat, and a Chicago Blackhawks T-shirt with team logo of an Indian chief. (page 269)

He was wearing a Miami Hurricanes hat, a pair of thin corduroy pants, a flimsy short-sleeved shirt, and aerobics shoes. (page 335)

A hundred years ago plume hunters would come here and gather enough feathers to decorate ten thousand fashionable ladies’ hats. (page 346)

****************

Do you have any orchids? Do you want to? 

Tuesday, June 09, 2026

Dog Show: Poems by Billy Collins

It is clear now that I have a niche poetry interest. It's dogs. I want to read all the poetry collections about dogs. I started with Mary Oliver's Dog Songs (5/5 - no notes). When I heard Billy Collins was releasing Dog Show this year, I immediately put it on hold at the library. 


IT'S PERFECT. Collins writes adorable poems, Pamela Sztybel illustrates wonderful watercolors, and I devoured it up like it was MY JOB.

It helps that Collins is in conversation with Mary Oliver. He quotes her and then writes a poem responding to that quote. I, of course, somehow feel like a genius for knowing that Dog Songs is a thing. Way to make me feel smart, Billy Collins!

I sort of feel like Billy Collins and Mary Oliver are trolling us. Why two dog-themed poetry collections with adorable illustrations? I don't know, but I need them both in my life. 

5/5 stars - no notes

Stanzas of note:
One a bench one afternoon
in a grassy park in Minneapolis
I realized what I liked best
about the dogs of Minneapolis
is that they have no idea they're in Minneapolis
- (From "In Praise of Ignorance," page 9)

So, instead of following your bliss, 
follow around some lighthearted dog.

Surely, it's better than doing nothing,
if anything were better than doing nothing,

which, setting dogs aside for now,
is said to be the best thing one can do
or not do, but in a positive way, forever, amen. 
- (From "The Following Dogs," page 74)

Hat mentions (why hats?):

hat or umbrella (page 3)

birthday hat (page 45)

*****************

Solely based on the watercolors above, which of those dogs:

a) is the naughtiest?

b) is the cuddliest?

c) is the best at agility?

d) would you adopt?

Monday, June 08, 2026

What I Spent: May 2026

As a reminder, my husband pays the "big bills" like mortgage, phone, car, and electricity. I pay for groceries and the pets and that somehow evens things out. But this month the secret is that my husband took the dog to the vet, so that $600 bill went to him instead of me. That felt sneaky and I asked him if he wanted me to pay him back, but he said it was fine. I put money into savings since I didn't have that bill.


Savings ($500, 17.5%) - I mean, look at me go. 

Groceries ($463.57, 16.3%) - Friends, my husband ALSO paid for the Costco trip this month. I am a lucky duck that groceries came in this low. 

Pets ($401.31, 14.1%) - This would have been four digits if not for Dr. BB paying for H's vet appointment. This is food for the girls and a lot of medicine for both of them (Apoquel for H's allergies, probiotic and joint supplement for Zelda Belda). 

Clothing ($366.15, 12.8%) - I am getting my summasummasummatime groove on. I bought some new lightweight tops that are appropriate for work and some new sandals. 

Also, this is the maybe the best purchase I made all month. I bought some sweatbands. I have a permanent anklet that I got with my niece last October. It is not a smooth situation and it has torn up multiple sheets, so I was wearing socks to bed to make sure we didn't have to buy more sheets. Well, I was telling my niece about it/complaining about how I hate wearing socks to bed and she suggested that I buy a sweatband to wear instead. AND IT WORKS. TWEEN GIRLS KNOW THE ANSWERS TO EVERYTHING. 

Gifts ($341.27, 12%) - Birthdays! So many greeting cards! #noregrets

Bills ($285, 10%) - Home/car insurance and water/sewer. 

Personal care ($172.40, 6%) - Haircut, pedicure, makeup. I have said it before and I'll say it again, it takes a lot of work to be an average looking woman.

Cars ($160.81, 5.6%) - Gas twice and new tags for the VW's plates. 

Fitness ($63.30, 2.2%) - Yoga classes through the summer. My regular Tuesday night fitness class doesn't run during the summer, so I sub in yoga on Wednesday nights. 

Eating out ($45, 1.4%) - I had dinner out twice and coffee once. Woot!

Entertainment ($34.31, 1.2%) - Spotify subscription, parking when I was on an adventure in Madison, and I bought an ebook. 

Health ($24.24, <1%) - I'm over here buying masks like it's 2021. We have two friends who are actively being treated for cancer and another who is being treated for a different health condition with chemotherapy. I buy and wear a lot of KN-95s so I can keep them safe. I see A LOT of people in my work and don't want to bring all the bugs I interact with back to my friends. 

*****************

What's a great purchase you made in May? Is it as great as sweatbands that mean you can stop wearing socks to bed?


Thursday, June 04, 2026

Black Cake by Charmaine Wilkerson

We read Black Cake by Charmaine Wilkerson for my IRL book club. 


Benny and Bryron are estranged siblings and when their mother dies, their brought together. At the reading of the will, they listen to a voice message she has left for them, a message that tells a complicated story of their legacy. It's clear that their mother meant for this to bring the brother and sister together, but will it have the opposite effect?

My book club liked it. I thought there were some issues that were a tiny bit farfetched and I'm pretty sure I won't remember much of the plot in another two months, but I learned a lot in this book and thought it was worth a read. 

Lines of note:

Lynette just didn't get it. If you were invited to the White House, you simply went, no matter who was sitting in the Oval Office. Here was another opportunity to advocate for things that mattered. To speak out against cuts in research funding, to push for broader access to quality science education. Here was another chance for a black man to be at the table with the decision makers, instead of flinching from abuse. Instead of standing outside yet another closed door. (page 30)

My husband and I had an interesting conversation about this. I think, generally, I agree that you should go to the White House if you're invited. However, when the current elected official in the White House is a madman who doesn't care about scientific truths or doing what's best for anyone other than himself, it's harder to justify. 

This was the worst trick that nature could play on you, really, to make you a father, to fill your chest with that kind of fear for a child. (page 56)

Fascinating. I feel like I don't read a lot of books about father/child relationships (maybe aside from The Road). 

But Byron had never shared his parents' emotional attachment to the recipe. Tradition, his ma used to say. But whose tradition, exactly? Black cake was essentially a plum pudding handed down to the Caribbeans by colonizers from a cold country. Why claim the recipe of the exploiters as your own? (page 95)

Bryon knows what's up. 

You can look at a person and truly have no idea what they are holding inside. (page 163)

Right? Whenever people are being absolute jerks, I just remember this. 

Things I looked up:

higgler woman (page 50) -  Higglering is a Jamaican term that denotes the informal economic activity of small-scale street vending dating back to the days of slavery.

callaloo (page 168) - a plant used in popular dishes in many Caribbean countries

Hat mentions (why hats?):

curls tucked under a hat (page 131)

Where was her hat? (page 157)

How many times did I count the words "black cake"? 44

**************

Have you ever had Jamaican black cake? Did you know the word higgler?

Wednesday, June 03, 2026

May 2026 Accountability Buddy

Friday, May 1
Day off

Saturday, May 2
45-minute yin yoga

Sunday, May 3
30-minute full body compound strength workout
30-minute yin yoga

Monday, May 4
Stupid unplanned day off. The dog was sick and it sort of upended my entire schedule. 

Tuesday, May 5
45-minute body blast class at the community center after work

I yelled "SHOES" at the end of class and literally EVERY SINGLE PERSON IN THE CLASS came over. I love it. This is probably my largest foot selfie ever.

Wednesday, May 6
15-minute stretch class at lunchtime*
15-minute evening yoga flow - This week has been endless and it's only Wednesday. I needed chill.
20-minute evening yoga stretch - Okay, I wanted to chill, but the full body scan thing does not resonate with me. Be aware. 

Thursday, May 7
30-minute yoga video at the student union

Friday, May 8
15-minute stretch class at lunchtime

Saturday, May 9
30-minute functional full body and core

Sunday, May 10
15-minute dance cardio
15-minute standing ab workout
15-minute full body yoga stretch

Monday, May 11
30-minute yoga video at the student union

Tuesday, May 12
15-minute yin yoga stretches in the middle of the damn work day because all I did was sit at my desk and I was DYING
45-minute body blast class at the community center after work

Wednesday, May 13
15-minute stretch class at lunchtime

Thursday, May 14
30-minute yoga video at the student union

Friday, May 15
15-minute stretch class at lunchtime
5-minute warmup (scam)
27-minute abs and upper body strength training

Saturday, May 16
15-minute dumbbell leg workout

Sunday, May 17
15-minute standing abs workout - This is really good. It's a good balance and shoulder workout, too. 
10-minute foot and ankle mobility
20-minute full body yoga flow

Real talk: A bird pooped on my mat. 


Monday, May 18
45-minute Park Fit class at a local park


Tuesday, May 19
15-minute office break yoga

Wednesday, May 20
15-minute stretch class at lunchtime
15-minute ankle mobility stretches
30-minute total body dumbbell workout

Thursday, May 21
35-minute deep fascia stretch yoga

Friday, May 22
15-minute stretch class at lunchtime
30-minute total body dumbbell workout

Saturday, May 23
30-minute grounding yoga practice

Sunday, May 24
35-minute standing HIIT (no jumping) 
15-minute after workout yoga

Monday, May 25
30-minute no-repeat full body dumbbell workout
15-minute yin yoga (I was going to do the whole 30 minutes, but I got really frustrated with child's pose (it's supposed to be a "resting pose," but it's agony for my bad leg and I try all the modifications, but they don't really get the back stretch I want and I have to admit that I let the frustration win today. I'll try again tomorrow)

Tuesday, May 26
Day off

Wednesday, May 27
15-minute stretch class at lunchtime
40-minute yin yoga for stress - Sometimes you half-ass a workout, you know? 

Thursday, May 28
10-minute upper body dumbbell workout
10-minute standing lower body workout with dumbbells
10-minute standing abs

Friday, May 29
15-minute stretch class at lunchtime
25-minute yin yoga - I'm really getting stressed out over how not in the zone I've been feeling in yoga. Yoga is my go-to happy place and the fact that I can't just sink into these last few practices is really and truly frustrating me. If I don't feel like lifting on a given day, oh well. But I feel like I can always count on yoga. Ugh. I'll keep coming back to the mat until I get back into the groove. 

Saturday, May 30
30-minute no repeat - There's no time to switch out weights in this one, so I had to pause it a lot. Like this really took me 45 minutes to do.
15-minute full body stretch

Sunday, May 31
20-minute walking workout
15-minute standing abs
15-minute yin yoga for legs

*****************
*Our local healthcare organization does free stretch classes virtually three times a week. Sign up here! It's free. It's fun. We regularly talk about candy and what's for lunch. It's a delightful break in the middle of the day. You do not have to have your camera on. She has the classes out there for the rest of the year, so you'd only have to register ONCE. 

*****************
Total: 25/31 (80.6%)days doing thirty minutes or more
Cardio/strength: 16 days
Yoga: 10 days 
Short stretch classes at lunchtime: 7 days
*****************

Did you meet your fitness goals this month? 

Tuesday, June 02, 2026

What I Read: May 2026

5/1: The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion, Vol. 1 (The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion #1) by Beth Brower  (library, 2019) - I know this is a beloved series, but I'm here to tell you that it was a real snooze. Not my type of book. 2.5/5 stars

5/2: Cherry Baby by Rainbow Rowell (library, 2025) - There's a dog. That will make any book better, won't it? 4/5 stars

5/7: Love Lettering by Kate Clayborn (library audiobook narrated by Nicol Zanzarella, 2019) - I stand by my original review. This might be my favorite romance novel ever. 5/5 stars

5/9: Welcome to the Hyunam-Dong Bookshop by Hwang Bo-Reum, narrated by Shanna Tran (library, 2022) - Look, this book was boring, preachy, and made me sort of hate life. Don't read this. What a waste of a good premise. 2.5/5 stars

5/9: American Fantasy by Emma Straub (library, 2026) - This was so readable, but isn't a good book? Whatever, it was fun, I think? 3/5 stars

5/9: One Fell Sweep (Innkeeper Chronicles #3) by Ilona Andrews (library ebook, 2016) - I do find this series to be absolutely charming. There's a killer dog and a smart cat and werewolves and vampires and I think I'm just going to keep reading this series because I like it so much. It's not going to win a Pulitzer, but I don't need it to be a prize winner. 4/5 stars

5/13: On Looking: Eleven Walks with Expert Eyes by Alexandara Horowitz (library, 2013) - This is a good starter for someone who walks the same block over and over and over again (ahem) to look at things through a new lens. 4/5 stars

5/16: Yesteryear by Caro Claire Burke (ebook I own, 2026) - I did not care for this It Book everyone else loves. But I would kill for a tell-all written by Leta Armstrong. 3/5 stars

5/16: We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson (library audiobook narrated by Bernadette Dunne, 1962) - I always want Jackson books to be slightly better. The writing is really good, but there's just something chilly about the writing that means I feel like the author's holding me at a distance. 3/5 stars

5/23: Free: A Child and a Country at the End of History by Lea Ypi (library, 2021) - I don't know. Memoir isn't for me. This girl grew up under Soviet-style socialism and Albania until the turbulent 1990s changed everything in the country. It just wasn't for me. 3/5 stars

5/26: Black Cake by Charmaine Wilkerson (library, 2023) - We read this for my IRL book club. I thought it was a pretty good read, although it wasn't particularly memorable. 4/5 stars

5/28: Platform Decay (Murderbot #8) by Martha Wells (library, 2026) - The early books in this series were such a joy for me. Murderbot was hysterical and there were a lot of lines that made me laugh out loud. As Murderbot develops relationships with humans, they are less sarcastic and misanthropic and I enjoy the series less and less. I'm probably going to stop reading here. 3/5 stars

5/31: The Appeal (The Appeal #1) by Janice Hallet (library, 2022) - Two first-year law students are digging through emails and other documents to try to figure out how a theater company is involved in a death. It was fast-paced, but I was super confused by the transition from the English version to the American (they used dollars for everything, but America was "across the pond" and it made everything kind of confusing). Enjoyable mystery, I thought. 4/5 stars

Total: 13 books (but at least two are really novellas)
Average star rating: 3.46/5 stars

*****************

Did not finish:

Lake Effect by Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney - I was listening on audiobook and, frankly, marriage in peril makes me exceedingly uncomfortable. This is a me problem, but I was raised in a family with domestic violence and when parents are fighting/cheating, I get suuuuuper anxious. DNF at 13%. 

*****************

I'm ready to get slammed because I know Yesteryear and Emma Lion are super beloved. What is a book you don't love that everyone else does? 

Monday, June 01, 2026

May 2026 Photo A Day: Week Four

Saturday, May 23 - Look at this cat!! I can't stand the cuteness.


Sunday, May 24 - It was our anniversary. I forgot about the yearly photo until it was nearly bedtime. We took a selfie. It is horribly unflattering to both of us, but I guess in the interest of keeping this tradition alive, here's a terrible photo.


Monday, May 25 - Two photos that sort of touch on how weird it felt to be "celebrating" Memorial Day today. 

First up, $2.79 for a pint versus $1.50 for a pint is a difference that makes a difference in whether or not I'm going to buy these raspberries. WHAT'S THE PRICE, GROCERY STORE?

Then there's this. If there's never been a sadder execution of patriotism, I haven't seen it. Happy Memorial Day, America.


Tuesday, May 26 - My Tuesday night fitness class has ended for the summer, but we all walked over to our local ice cream stand for some sweet treats. 


Wednesday, May 27 - Tomorrow is our first registration event at work. It's a lot of work on our end and it meant we spent much of the afternoon in one of our academic buildings getting things ready. The theme: random animals. Also, the internet and phones went out for HOURS and we had no idea because we were busy cleaning, writing on whiteboards, and taking photos of random animals.



Thursday, May 28 - Zelda is basically allowed anywhere downstairs except for the table and stove/countertops. Anywhere else? Fine. Guess where I found her when I came out of the shower tonight?



Friday, May 29 - For the last two weeks, we've had to give Hannah this antibiotic that comes in a powder and is really bitter tasting. We have had to do this twice a day. It involves copious amounts of pumpkin and chicken HANDFED TO THE DOG. Today is the last day we have to do this. Now it will be a couple of weeks of once a day and then a couple of weeks of once every other day and then once every two days and then "as needed." 

I wish I could take a photo of Hannah's face as she eats this stuff. (I can't because my hands are covered in pumpkin.) She hates it so much. I haven't been to work on time in weeks because it's taking me twenty minutes to get her to eat two tablespoons of this what I can only imagine is a gross pumpkin mixture. Anyway, here's to only having to do it at dinnertime from now on! I can (maybe?) get to work on time. 


Saturday, May 30 - It's peony time!


Sunday, May 31 - Gratuitous photos of my girls. 

New Hannah habit: Doesn't want to be on a walk, but also doesn't want to come inside when we get to the house, so she just lays down on the driveway. 



Are you familiar with the rescue dog internet meme where they take photos of dogs before and after being told they were good. Here's Hannah's version.

Before:

After "you're such a good girl for eating that yucky pumpkin":



*******************
What flowers are in bloom near you? Could you draw your favorite animal?