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Stuff and Nonsense

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

June favorites - my summer recommendations

The Shippers by Katherine Center.  St. Martin's Press, 19 May 2026.

JoJo Burton decides that she's spent too much of her life being "bad at love", and decides to overcome her issues during her sister's cruise ship wedding.  

She attempts to change her persona from "girl next door" to "femme fatale", with limited success.  Some of her efforts result in debacles worthy of I Love Lucy, and as on the classic sitcom, are as painful as they are funny.

This is a charming and enjoyable beach/poolside book!



Our Perfect Storm by Carley Fortune.  Berkley Publishing, 5 May 2026.

Ever since Every Summer After was publishing in 2022, reading the latest Carley Fortune book has become a summer ritual for me.  

Frankie's fiancĂ© calls off their wedding a few days beforehand.  Frankie takes it hard, wallowing in her grief until her best friend George whisks her off to the already-booked-and-paid-for honeymoon.

As a Canadian, I appreciate that her books take place in Canada, many in locations I've been to, like Tofino, the location of the not-honeymoon.

The story is deeply absorbing, and difficult to detach from.  This may be Fortune's best work to date.


Meet Me in Paris by Kristin Harmel.  Gallery Books, 28 July 2026.

Through the first several chapters of this book, we meet a disparate group of characters:

- Julia Glover is dying, and brings her daughter Piper to Paris, the city where she lived when she was about the same age that Piper is now.

- Jackson Quick is a faded rock star, whose agent has decided that Europe is the place to relaunch his career, beginning in Paris.

- Henry McGee is in his 90s, and has recently learned that the love of his life, whom he believed was killed during WW II, is still alive.  Despite (or because of?) his age, he makes a pilgrimage to Paris to find her.

- Henry's granddaughter Melody, having moved to Paris years earlier, learns that her French husband is having an affair, and is now confused about her future.

These are only four of the nine people whose paths cross in this fascinating story that shifts between past and present.  

There are moments in this book that bring the reader to tears, but ultimately, it's a feel-good story.


Dolly All the Time by Annabel Monaghan.  G.P. Putnam's Sons, 26 May 2026.

Dolly Brick is a single mother who's talent is looking after people: her son, her dad, her brother.  

When her father has health issues, she and her son move back to her hometown of Whitfield, Rhode Island to take care of the family's seafood business.  Returning from making a delivery on her bicycle, she comes across the scion of the Whitfield family, whose car has a flat tire.

As she changes the tire for him, they're spotted by paparazzi, and soon photos of them are circulating on the internet.  

When Stewart asks her to masquerade as his girlfriend for a while, helpful Dolly agrees.  

Confusion and chaos (and perhaps even actual feelings) ensue.



Thursday, May 7, 2026

Thriller Thursday

The Grapevine (The Lost Highway #1) by Alexandra Sokoloff and Craig Robertson.  Blackstone Publishing, 23 June 2026.


Lou Gomersall’s 19-year-old daughter Abby disappeared a year ago, while driving south on I-5 from the University of California, Berkley.

Even though the police seem to have given up searching for Abby, Lou hasn’t.

She’s been driving through the highways and back roads of Northern California for nearly the whole time, talking to people at truck stops and campsites. 

Certain she can find a pattern if she tries hard enough, Lou has begun tracking other young women who have vanished while driving in the same area.

Lou is nothing if not determined, and during her travels, she finds people who gather information for her.  She even finds a few detectives who are in her corner, though they contend that Lou could be putting herself in danger.

The title comes from a stretch of I-5 in Kern County through the Tejon Pass, with Fort Tejon at the north end and the unincorporated town of Grapevine at the south, and most of the story takes place in the area surrounding The Grapevine.

Lou is intelligent woman, certain of her mission, and though some might call her stubborn rather than persistent, she’s still a sympathetic protagonist.

The story is timely, and riveting, though very intense.  Highly recommended!


Many thanks to Alexandra Sokoloff and NetGalley for providing me with an e-galley to review.

(Cross-posted on my Substack.)

Friday, May 1, 2026

April favorites

The House of Hidden Letters by Izzy Broom. Berkley Publishing, 17 March, 2026.

Skye MacKinnon is desperate for an escape. When she wins a lottery to buy a run-down cottage on a Greek island for only one euro, Skye jumps at the chance to get out of England and start over. As she unlocks the tattered blue door of her whitewashed new cottage, the sun-kissed sea glinting in the bay outside her windows, Skye immediately feels like she’s found her true home.

Skye and the other lottery winners—the first residents in these houses since the 1940s—form a tight-knit group, finding in one another the strong relationships they’d been missing in their own lives. When Skye and local contractor Andreas find a set of mysterious letters, they begin to unravel the history of the prior residents, and the truth about life on Folegandros during World War II.


The Queen of Roses by Julia Kelly.  Gallery Books, 20 October 2026.  (Review to come.)

1960: Frustrated reporter Theresa Johnson’s life changes when she receives a phone call from a Miss Pearce who claims her obituary about one of Pasadena’s last great hoteliers is wildly inaccurate. Seeking the truth, Theresa drives to the mysterious Rosewood House nestled high in the Altadena foothills. Even more intriguing than the house’s beautiful garden is Miss Pearce’s proposal that Theresa help her settle old scores by writing her biography.


1903: Beautiful but haughty, Adele Pearce is reluctant to leave the London Season and her last hope of a proposal. When she arrives in California, she discovers the startling truth of why her mother has called her there: her father has squandered his fortune and Adele must marry a wealthy American to save the family.

Stifled by expectation as Pasadena’s newest doyenne, Adele’s only comfort is Rosewood House and the beautiful garden she creates with the help of taciturn gardener Alexander Macalister. However, as Adele’s feelings for Alex flourish, a fire ignites in the San Gabriel Mountains above Rosewood House, threatening everything Adele holds dear, while in 1960, Miss Pearce learns that history has a terrible habit of repeating itself.


The Grapevine by Alexandra Sokoloff and Craig Robertson.  Blackstone Publishing, 23 June 2026.  (Review to come.)

How far would you go to find your missing child?

Lou Gomersall's going as far as it takes. And there's no turning back.

When her nineteen-year-old daughter Abby disappears, Lou embarks on a reckless road trip in the family RV, scouring the highways and back roads of California. Through desert and mountains, into the woods, and to the ocean's edge.

A year later, the police don't believe Lou's theory that four other missing young women have been taken by the same elusive predator. So, when another college sophomore vanishes, Lou jumps on the fresh trail, enlisting millennial #vanlifers, Gen Z entrepreneurs, boomer RVers, homeless sages, truck stop prostitutes, and everyone in between in her do-or-die mission to rescue Abby …

(Watch for my upcoming review of The Grapevine!)

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Today is Earth Day!



                                    Earth Day    by Jane Yolen

                                        I am the Earth
                                        And the Earth is me.
                                        Each blade of grass,
                                        Each honey tree,
                                        Each bit of mud,
                                        And stick and stone    
                                        Is blood and muscle,
                                        Skin and bone.

                                        And just as I
                                        Need every bit
                                        Of me to make
                                        My body fit,
                                        So Earth needs
                                        Grass and stone and tree
                                        And things that grow here
                                        Naturally.

                                        That’s why we
                                        Celebrate this day.
                                        That’s why across
                                        The world we say:
                                        As long as life,
                                        As dear, as free,
                                        I am the Earth
                                        And the Earth is me. 

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Poem of the day

The Guest House

Rumi
(Translate
d by Coleman Barks)

This being human is a guest house.
Every morning a new arrival.

A joy, a depression, a meanness,
some momentary awareness comes
as an unexpected visitor.

Welcome and entertain them all!
Even if they’re a crowd of sorrows,
who violently sweep your house
empty of its furniture,
still, treat each guest honorably.
He may be clearing you out
for some new delight.

The dark thought, the shame, the malice,
meet them at the door laughing,
and invite them in.

Be grateful for whoever comes,
because each has been sent
as a guide from beyond.



Monday, April 6, 2026

Poem of the Day

 I, Too

By Langston Hughes

I, too, sing America.

I am the darker brother.
They send me to eat in the kitchen
When company comes,
But I laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.

Tomorrow,
I’ll be at the table
When company comes.
Nobody’ll dare
Say to me,
“Eat in the kitchen,”
Then.

Besides,
They’ll see how beautiful I am
And be ashamed—

I, too, am America.


From The Selected Works of Langston Hughes, Knopf Doubleday, 2011.