Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Throwback by Maureen Go
I picked this up because it is a YA pick for Reese’s book club and I have very much enjoyed her selections.
Priscilla, a first-generation Korean American and former high school cheerleader, expects her daughter, Sam, to pursue the All-American dream. But Sam isn't interested in the clichéd high school experience; she's a modern Gen Z teen. After a huge argument, Sam is transported back to the '90s alongside a 17-year-old Priscilla. It may be a bit contrived, bed but this time-travel tale brilliantly explores family, identity, and the immigrant experience making it a must-read for teens. There are plenty of LOL-worthy moments as Sam tries to navigate the '90s. However, the most poignant moments occur when Sam realizes how casual racism, cultural differences, and the pressure to meet Halmoni, Sam’s grandmother, and see how her expectations have shaped Priscilla into who she is today.
I didn't enjoy this as much as others that I have read in the past but I would read another book by this author and I did like the time travel aspect in retrospect even though I found it odd at when I was reading it.
Labels:
Book Club Pick,
Book Review,
Fiction,
Reese's Book Club,
Young Adult
Monday, April 13, 2026
If I Had Legs I Would Kick You (2025)
I watched this movie because the actress was nominated for an Academy Award.
It is about the unraveling of Linda, a wry, worn-down mother and therapist played magnificently and unflinchingly by Rose Byrne. I 100% agree with the award going to Jesse Buckley for her work in Hamnet which was incredible but Rose Byrne was my second choice. Like unbandaging a cut too soon, leaving it oozing and throbbing, a red gash for the world to see that you clearly lack self-control, Linda seriously struggles to juggle the mysterious illness of her daughter and the sudden collapse of her literal and metaphorical ceiling, leaving her with no pillars to support her.
There are some very smart things that are said in this movie about shame and hiding things. It's a cautionary tale to do neither. It is better to RIP off the Band-Aid than to leave things unattended to for literally everyone’s sake. Ane lest you think it would take months for things to get this bad, as a mental health professional myself, it can all go bad in a blink of an eye.
Sunday, April 12, 2026
The True True Story of Raja the Gullible by Rabih Alameddine
I picked up this book because it won the National Book Award and interestingly was not listed by the New York Times in their hundred notable books for 2025. I have read one book by this author previously and I have to say upon reflection this book is nothing like that one and yet it they are both equally enjoyable.
It takes place in a tiny Beirut apartment, where sixty-three-year-old Raja and his mother live side by side. He is both a beloved high school philosophy teacher and "the neighborhood homosexual", his words. Raja relishes books, meditative walks, order, and solitude. Zalfa, his octogenarian mother, views her son's desire for privacy as a personal affront. She demands to know every detail of Raja's work life and love life, boundaries be damned. Mother and son are both equally irritating as well as entertaining.
When Raja receives an invite to an all-expenses-paid writing residency in America, the timing couldn't be better. It arrives on the heels of a series of personal and national disasters that have left Raja longing for peace and quiet away from his mother and the heartache of Lebanon. But what at first seems a stroke of good fortune soon leads Raja to recount and relive the very disasters and past betrayals he wishes to forget. With little left unsaid between the sharp-tongued mother and her self-aware son, humor and poignance bring their challenges — close living quarters, difficult family members, financial turmoil, and wartime trauma — into bittersweet perspective.
In summary this
is a vivid story set in Beirut over six decades, that juxtaposes life changing moments from a gay man’s coming of age with the upheaval of a city in perpetual strife.
Saturday, April 11, 2026
The Three Sisters (2025)
There are two stories here for this short animated film that was nominated in that category for the 2026 Academy Awards.
The first is the story itself, told in 2-D animation and perhaps the most whimsical and weird of the five nominees. It imagines the isolated life on an island shared by three sisters when a stranger arrives and changes their day-to-day in unexpected ways. He's a burly sailor and, well, these ladies have been living alone for quite some time, so they find themselves each drawn to him, changing their appearance and doting on him in ways they haven't had a reason to before. It is without dialogue but with plenty of expressive animation, we come to appreciate these three sisters and their desire for more on this little island of theirs. Our dashing interloper is just that, however, and as the women have to face reality, it could be we're all headed for heartbreak.
The second is that the film was submitted under a fictional name. Russian animation director Konstantin Bronzit, who is a celebrated animator from a shunned country may have been seeing if quality is identified or he may have feared he would have been side lines based on his country of origin. Afterall, if there is an anti-Russian documentary on offer, it is more likely than not to win, so he may have a point. In any case, he outed himself before the awards, and this was not a winner--nor was it my first or second choice.
Labels:
Academy Award Nominee,
Animated Movie,
Movie Review
Friday, April 10, 2026
Valiant Ambition by Nathaniel Philbrick
In the vein of "possibly more than you could possibly want to know about a particular person" and yet also learn very close to nothing at all about a subject, this would be the book for you.
The biggest surprise for anyone who picks up this book is that surprisingly little of it describes the interactions between Washington and Arnold, despite the subtitle. Apparently they weren’t that frequent and the two men have very little contact during the first half of the book. Unfortunately for me and anyone who is less than interested meticulously researched historical pageants describing battle after battle in the Revolutionary War, maps and all, there is an abundance of this and not much in the way of summation or analysis.
The author is sympathetic to Arnold's plight, cognizant of his short comings and does a good job drawing an understandable and believable picture of what went right and what went very wrong for him as the war progressed. As to the fate of the American Revolution, there are a number of statements in the prologue that are not backed up within the book, at least to my ear, and overall I was disappointed. I did just read Richard Atkinson's 'The Fate of the Day", which is a far better chronicle of much of this time, so hindered by that.
Do not be daunted by the length of the book--close to half the total pages come after the epilogue. I was reading an e-book, and had to reassure myself it would not last the full 500+ pages.
Labels:
American History,
Book Review,
Non-Fiction
Thursday, April 9, 2026
Viva Verdi! (2024)
This documentary has a song that was nominated for Best Song in the 2026 Academy Awards--which it did not win, but I liked the song far more than the winner.
This is a documentary which
follows the lives of artists after their careers end but not before their lives end. Situated in Milan, the cradle of art, retired opera singers and musicians live together in harmony at Casa Verdi, a neo-Gothic sanctuary commissioned by Giuseppe Verdi in 1898 to honor artists who devoted their lives to music and the arts.
The documentary opens to the soaring strains of La Traviata, the curtains opening to a quotation that captures the spirit of a compassionate humanist devoted music lover: “Among my works, the one I like best is the Home that I’ve built in Milan for accommodating old singers not favored by fortune.” The premise of his deed was simple: during Verdi’s time, there were no pensions for artists; they were sadly left to their own devices. Devoting one’s life to art was therefore a courageous choice, reliant on hard work and luck, and Verdi sought to host all of those who had dared to follow their artistic passions.
The cinematography in Viva Verdi! is both intimate and evocative, capturing the soul of Casa Verdi and its residents with a painterly touch. This visual approach creates a warm and immersive atmosphere that reflects the enduring and unifying brilliance of music, shared across generations.
Through their personal stories, we traverse time, theaters, countries, and librettos. A wide range of nationalities mingle in Casa Verdi, telling intimate chronicles marked by success and ovations, disappointments, loss, and discrimination. Most of all, the film shows how a love for music and performing does not end when the paychecks cease. Even though most of the performers in the film have died by the time it came out, you can see that they were engaged in activies they loved to the end.
Labels:
Academy Award Nominee,
Artist,
Documentary,
Movie Review
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Ramble
This is month three of the Ramble quilt block of the month club. I have really been enjoying Tara Faughnan's instructional videos that go along with this. She is a great teacher, and having taken an in person class with her, heard her key note lecture at QuiltCon, as well as doing this BOM, her personality comes through and that is a good thing. I love the design, and I also love that it is a gentle skill builder. I believe it is billed as an intermediate pattern, and it is I think confident beginner friendly. The end result is more pleasing to me than her quilt Transverse, which was her last sew along.
She points out in the first video that a medallion quilt has some risks associated with it, the first of which is that it is a medallion quilt, so with each layer outward there is a risk that it won't fit. Then she shows you the differences that occur if you sew an exact 1/4" and a scant 1/4" seam, if you press the seams open or to the side, and how quickly those differences add up when you are building in ever increasing outward layers. So the design has some fudge built in to it to allow for that. What a great idea!
Then there is the fabric--I find the need for so many colors to be over kill, but then that is what she is known for--the colors. So maybe all is forgiven except that it is hard to sort and tag them all, and I am positive that by the end there will be design modifications. Already by month three I have some adjustments that have occurred, and the truth be told, I am not that great at following directions, and her written directions are a bit on the sparse side, so that is a perfect storm waiting to happen.
The fabric is from the Windham Artisan fabric line, which has different colored threads in the warp and the weft, which gives it a beautiful depth and feel for a "solid", mostly because it isn't quite that, but oh my goodness, the fraying. If that drives you crazy, pick a different facbric. I have been sewing with Art Gallery Fabric Solids and they are so much the opposite of that!
In any case, this is a bright, fun, and not too hard quilt that I am enjoying putting together, and hanging out virtually and not in real time with Tara Faughnan is icing on the top.
Labels:
Artist,
Fiber Art,
Modern Quilting,
Quilt
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
The Girl Who Cried Pearls (2025)
Pearls are created by animals and are both precious and beautiful. They have been called mermaid's tears--the myths that surround them are the start of this short animated film from Canada that won the Academy Award in 2026 in that category.
This story is told by an old man to his granddaughter, who has an eye for shiny things and who we suppose has pocketed a precious pearl herself. The story begins in his youth in Montreal, when he was a hungry orphan scavenging for food by the docks and sleeping in abandoned buildings. If one could find such a residence adjacent to one that was occupied, he explains, one might feel the heat of the fire through the wall. Naturally, sitting against the wall meant one might also hear what was going on in a house, and he talks about the time when he heard a stepmother repeatedly abusing a lonely girl. At night the girl would cry, and peering through a hole, he saw her tears, made of the purest sorrow, turn to pearls. Acquiring some of these, he took them to a pawnbroker and was paid better than he had ever been before. To get more, however, he was faced with a terrible dilemma--her unhappiness led to wealth for him, and what should he hope for? It is a classic tale of greed, the power of poverty to drive poor decisions, and a surprise ending.
Labels:
Academy Award Nominee,
Animated Movie,
Movie Review
Monday, April 6, 2026
Island Storm by Brian Floca and Sydney Smith
This is a picture book about a storm rolling in, building momentum to a maximum crescendo, and then gradually ebbing. The author was inspired by a storm that he experienced on one of the many islands off the coast of Maine, but it has the look and feel of a Midwest storm as well, where you can see it, feel it, and smell it brewing. The sky changes color in the blink of an eye, the atmosphere crackles with electricity, the rain tumbles down with ferocity, and the sky is black. And then just as suddenly it ebbs and within an hour the sun is out again.
This is about two children who sense that beginning to happen and they purposely go out into it. The illustrations for this are spectacular, and while the author is a gifted illustrator himself, he opted for another, and these illustrations really hit the mark. It is a really well done picture book.
Sunday, April 5, 2026
Diane Warren: Relentless (2025)
This documentary was nominated in the category of Best Song for the 2026 Academy Awards.
It is about Diane Warren, who I had never heard of, but that is on me because she is a powerhouse in the musical world.
She is sixteen-time Academy Award nominee songwriter--though never a winner, she has done quality work for movies. She’s written for more than four hundred and fifty recording artists--she started writing songs when she was a child and by adulthood she was pushing artists to consider singing her songs. She really was relentless in her pursuit of the perfect performer to showcase her work, and that persistence paid of for everyone. She’s penned nine number-one songs and had thirty-three songs on the Billboard Hot 100.
Who is she? She is a loner and never married. She is stuck in her ways; for example, she writes in the same room she has from the beginning. She ownss her childhood home at least partly because it is where she started writing. SHe trusts the same people she has known for her whole life. She is set in her ways and it has served her well. Those hoping to walk away with a greater understanding of her prolific outputcommensurate with her success will do so empty-handed, though not without having been entertained.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)









