Good Dog. Stay.

“There came a time when a scrap thrown in his direction usually bounced unseen off his head. Yet put a pork roast in the oven, and the guy still breathed as audibly as an obscene caller. The eyes and ears may have gone, but the nose was eternal. And the tail. The tail still wagged, albeit at half-staff. When it stops, I thought more than once, then we’ll know.” 

Our sweet golden has cancer. It's taken me over a week to say those words out loud without crying. Truth is, I'm tearing up now. To know Scout, is to love him. He's won over even our most dog-adverse, fur-loathing friends with his lovable quirks and sweet disposition. There's not an ounce of guard dog in him. Rub his big belly and he'll give you the world...or at least all our household goods. He was the only pick left of the litter when Matt arrived at the breeder's—passed over by perfection-seeking buyers because of a single white paw marring his otherwise pure-golden coat. God bless that snowy paw.

Eleven years and a month. That's how long he's been ours. His vet choked up over the words "two to six months to live;" we openly wept. It's hard to remember life around here before Scout. Heartbreakingly harder to imagine it without him again one day all-too soon. Blood tests give us hope he'll be here closer to the six months than the two, and we've determined to make his last some of his best. Where walking him sometimes seemed a chore, now it feels like a privilege. Funny thing, perspective.

Over the years I've given Good Dog. Stay. to friends who've lost, or are near losing, their beloved pups. Giving books that lift always feels right. Now it's my turn. So I'm dusting off my copy that's been waiting on the shelf and once again losing myself in Anna Quindlen's beautiful tribute to her own Scout, named Beau. She's a kindred spirit, that Anna. Her healing words will begin mending this fellow dog-lover's broken heart. They'll give me strength so that when his medicine stops working and his tail stops wagging, I'll know too.

Posted by Rachel

The Top 3 Books on my TBR Pile

"I like best to have one book in my hand, and a stack of others on the floor beside me, so as to know the supply of poppy and mandragora will not run out before the small hours." —Dorothy Parker

Me too, Dorothy. Add one in my purse and two or three in my Audible queue, and I'm a happy girl indeed. This year, I've resolved to read more and watch the news less. Seems like a surefire ticket to sanity. My current stack has me thinking 2017 is gonna be all right. We're all due for a good one, aren't we?  

What better way to start the year off right than with good reads? Our book club selection, Far From the Madding Crowdhas me enchanted at 119 pages in. Next up: The Orphan Keeper. Finally. Which I'll try not to race through too fast just to get to the reads below cuz I'm itchin to crack 'em open. I may have to resort to reading two or three (or all) at once. Desperate times call for desperate measures.

 Here's to a happier new year filled with the hope of good books.

This was just one of the delightful surprises in my Christmas package from Tray. With her spotless track record for picking great reads, this is sure to be a winner. One reviewer wrote of Bone Gap: "It is a rare book that sits comfortably on the shelf with the works of Twain, McCullers, Conroy, Stephen King, and D'Aulaires' Greek Myths—rarer still that a novel combines elements of these authors together." Sold.

The Snow Child was one of my favorite reads of 2015 (also a gift from Tray—do you see a pattern developing?). So when I saw Eowyn Ivey has spun another tale, you bet I snatched it right up. From the sound of this review of To the Bright Edge of the World, I won't be disappointed: "Ivey not only makes [this novel] work, she makes it work magnificently...The Snow Child (a lovely retelling of an old Russian folk tale), was a runaway hit, an international best seller, and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Her second work is even better.”

Not much of a science gal...okay, not one at all. No matter, the reviews all tell me that I'll still love Lab Girl. It's on just about every list of best memoirs of 2016, but Ann Patchett is the one who convinced me to give it a whirl: “Some people are great writers, while other people live lives of adventure and importance. Almost no one does both. Hope Jahren does both. She makes me wish I’d been a scientist.” 

Posted by Rachel

This is Good News

"All those captured as children and returned were restless and hungry for some spiritual solace, abandoned by two cultures, dark shooting stars lost in the outer heavens."

Look out Ove, someone new is working his way into my little-old-man-lovin heart. He's 71-year-old Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd, a widow, who's a bit less (okay, maybe a lot less) curmudgeonly. He says things like "stop speaking in exclamation points" and "[they'd] of had a galvanized tin hissy, one apiece" and he's as adorable as he is set in his ways. Living in post-Civil War Texas, Captain Kidd travels alone to remote towns where he gives live newspaper readings to folks hungry for news of the world.

His solitary life is upended when he agrees to deliver a rescued orphan to her distant relatives near San Antonio (a 400-mile journey). Ten-year-old Johana, kidnapped at age six by a Kiowa Indian tribe when they killed her parents, doesn't feel rescued. Instead she feels as though she's been ripped from the only family she knows and thrust into a white man's world she wants no part of.  As she and the captain navigate their way across unsettled territories as well as language and cultural barriers, they leave us all a little better for having come along for the ride.

If you're an Ivan Doig or Norman Maclean fan, I think you'll really like News of the World. It's a lovely little book (just over 200 pages) of historical fiction. I found it a bit slow at first, but that could be because I read it during the height of Christmas madness—not many books can stand up to that level of exhaustion. Before long though, I started craving its pages more than sleep, especially during a shooting scene that had me on the edge of my seat both in fear and fits of laughter. Paulette Jiles has found a fan in me.

Posted by Rachel

Snowglobe World

I wonder if the snow loves the trees and fields, that it kisses them so gently? And then it covers them up snug, you know, with a white quilt; and perhaps it says, "Go to sleep, darlings, till the summer comes again." —Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking-Glass

When it snows, you have two choices: shovel or make snow angels. Sadly, I’ve chosen to shovel.  How else are we gonna get out of the driveway? It’s been snowing unbidden for the past 48 hours. My neighbor thinks shoveling is cathartic.  Snow removal hardly feels like therapy to me. But the chill winter air is invigorating—and a fine blanket of white snowflakes, God’s most fragile creations, always inspires wonder. British sculptor/photographer Andy Goldsworth believes that “snow provokes responses that reach right back to childhood.” Maybe that’s what has me thinking about some of my favorite children’s snow stories?

If the powder continues to fall soundlessly through the night, I’ll plug in the Cocomotion Hot Chocolate maker when morning arrives.  Me and the kids will have a cup of the salted caramel kind and these are the books I’ll pull from the shelf to celebrate our world clad with radiance.  

The Snowy Day by Ezra Keats

Peter’s adventures will make you anxious to pull on the mittens, hat, and down coat to experience the sheer joy of playing in the snow. Guaranteed.

Toot & Puddle: Let It Snow by Holly Hobbie

Is there a more winning combination?  Holly Hobbie’s lovable characters Toot and Puddle never disappoint.  Throw in the white stuff and you’re bound to arrive at magical. This book will warm you and yours.

The Snowman by Raymond Briggs

This is a family favorite.  The book without words has inordinate charm. We love the video version of Briggs’ boy who imagines flying with the snowman he builds.  In fact, my 21-year-old daughter watched The Snowman this Christmas holiday.  I found myself drawn in—equally mesmerized. 

Posted by Tracy

Hello 2017!

I divide all readers into two classes; those who read to remember and those who read to forget. —William Lyon Phelps

Was anyone else ready to put 2016 to bed?  While I’m normally a sunny girl, Prince and Bowie dying prematurely was pretty heavy.  (If I were a closet George Michael fan, and I’m not saying that I am, that just added insult to injury.) Ali, the greatest, is floatin’ like a butterfly; lawdy, I hope Arnie is nearby. The election was sobering. The aftermath was alarming. Not to mention my sweet mother is struggling with heart health issues. And Rachel’s seriously loveable dog probably has cancer.  That’s a lot for tip-of- the-iceberg stuff, isn’t it? 

Glad you’re here 2017.  I’ve made a few goals because my older self recognizes that I get too ambitious sometimes.  I have yet to set a reading goal for the new year new me.  A close friend of mine, who is as smart as she is kind, decided she was going to read/listen to 100 books this time last year.  As in one zero zero!  She hit the century mark before the ball dropped in Times Square.  But she said she’d probably never attempt it again—too much melted together.  My aging brain immediately understood.  

When asked which of the 100 she loved most, naturally, she had to think about it. With confidence, she eventually answered, "The Great Bridge.”  I had no idea master historian David McCullough spun a dramatic story about the building of the Brooklyn Bridge.  How could I have missed it? Another keeper for my master list. While I haven’t landed on a numeric goal yet, I am going to carve out more time for stories this year. If I’m being honest, stories offset the tip-of-the-iceberg stuff—they may even make me feel a bit like the unsinkable Molly Brown. 

Posted by Tracy

Playing Favorites 2016

“If you have read 6,000 books in your lifetime, or even 600, it's probably because at some level you find 'reality' a bit of a disappointment.” Joe Queenan, One for the Books

Pretty sure you're onto something there, Joe. Books are a reality-weary girl's best friend. They lift, they teach, they comfort and cheer. They are respite on a page. They expand our thinking, challenge our perceptions, and encourage us to be better. At least the best ones do.

Here are the three best books I read in 2016:

Tracy picked When Breath Becomes Air as the top book she was eyeballin' to be a hit in 2016. She was spot on, as usual. That girl does have a knack for picking winners. I want everyone I know to read this beautiful book. Read my review here.

I went in to this one with high expectations after loving Towles first book, Rules of Civility. Thankfully, A Gentleman in Moscow did not disappoint. I loved every glorious line of it. Read my review here.

You'll be making a huge mistake if you skip The War that Saved my Life because it's a children's book. As the great C.S. Lewis said: “A children's story that can only be enjoyed by children is not a good children's story in the slightest.” This is a very good children's story and you should read it. Read my review here.

*To see last year's list click here.

Posted by Rachel

January Book Club Selection

"And at home by the fire, whenever you look up there I shall be—and whenever I look up, there will be you." 

We're back. Let's pretend we've been abroad and out of internet range, shall we? That's far lovelier than the cold hard truth: the holidays kicked our trash. But hey, we're all about new beginnings (new year, new us) so here's to 2017 being the year we become responsible bloggers! Ya'll just sit back and prepare to be dazzled. 

Here's hoping Far From the Madding Crowd will do its fair share of dazzling too. We've been hankering to read it since picking up lovely clothbound editions on our annual beach trip. January feels like the perfect month to stay home by the fire, curled up with a classic, doesn't it? When we're finished, we can all heat some cocoa, pop some corn, and settle in to watch the movie. A happy New Year, indeed.

Posted by Rachel

Winter Soulstice

“Be Still and Know that I am God.”

It’s midnight and the fire has died. Good thing I’ve got my toasty True North socks on—the pair I bought in Park City with my adventure buddy Rachel. What I need now is Buddy the Elf.  Honestly. Then I might find myself making snow angels for two hours, ice skating, eating a whole roll of Tollhouse cookie dough (fast as I can), and more importantly, snuggling. That sounds right nice.  But it doesn’t remotely resemble my life. That’s when I remembered I should be taking Rachel’s advice: I Need a Silent Night.

“The Time of Being Still” could cure what ails me right now.  There’s no way to get a full week of stillness, but I’m going to take today.  My son turns 12 on this Winter Solstice.  We’ll go to his favorites: Five Guys and Nickel City. That’s not all—we’ll watch the BFG because we haven’t yet and we read it together. He’ll demand some corn and a cup o’ root beer and I’ll serve them up. Happily. I’m not gonna worry about work or college essays or wrapping and least of all mailing. Doesn’t sound like the traditional still I know, but when the birthday candles light my boy’s face I’ll fill up on tranquility and a wince of nostalgia. It will make me smile for sure. And then I’ll think of Buddy the Elf: “I just like to smile, smiling’s my favorite.”

Posted by Tracy