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Cleaning up book club lists for January to April

The PolyBlog
May 21 2026

In my last post, I noted that I’m monitoring 40+ book clubs for “new to me” titles to consider putting on my TBR pile. There is an inherent challenge that I’m saying yes or maybe to between 15-20% of the titles, which is WAY MORE BOOKS THAN I CAN READ. I’ll have to trim those down.

In the meantime, I realized that the various book club announcements are not set for the first of the month for every club. Some don’t even announce on a schedule — just randomly, some day during the month. That triggers my OCD and analytical annoyance genes. Which means when I review, say, the books for January, not all the books are out. And then I do February, and might miss late announcements from January when I only review the February announcements. And so on for each subsequent month. I can miss titles.

I say to myself (while rubbing my hands together with an evil laugh), I can use AI to go back and find those gaps so I don’t have to worry about it myself. Here are the books I missed earlier this year.

Backfill: The lost books of the month club

Total: 89 rows across January-April that never appeared on a monthly options post. Poly mix: 9 YES, 20 MAYBE, 60 NO. Oh, look, I’m almost to a full third. Sigh.

January 2026

27 rows

YES:

  • The Briar Club, Kate Quinn

MAYBE:

  • Zed Moonstein Makes a Friend, Lance Rubin
  • Bonded By Thorns, Elizabeth Helen
  • Anxious People, Fredrik Backman
  • Crow Mary, Kathleen Grissom
Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousThe Hitch, Sara LevineAunt babysits nephew claiming dead corgi’s soul possesses himNO
BBC Radio 2The Poet Empress, Shen TaoFamine-village girl wields forbidden poetry magic in Azalea Dynasty palaceNO
BelletristLost Lambs, Madeline CashDysfunctional family pulled into billionaire criminal conspiracy by paranoid teenNO
Black Men ReadReel, Kennedy RyanDirector and rising actress romance during prestige Black history film productionNO
Everyday ReadingThe Briar Club, Kate QuinnBoarding-house women bond around widow during McCarthy-era WashingtonYES
Good HousekeepingLost Lambs, Madeline CashDysfunctional family pulled into billionaire criminal conspiracy by paranoid teenNO
Good Morning America – AdultSkylark, Paula McLainDual timeline Paris: 1664 asylum prisoner and 1942 Nazi resister psychiatristNO
Good Morning America – Young AdultThe Swan’s Daughter, Roshani ChokshiTruth-singing swan helps prince judge brides in fairytale courtNO
Jack CarrThe Most Dangerous Game, Richard ConnellHunter becomes prey on a deranged general’s islandNO
JeselnikThe Getaway, Jim ThompsonHeist-gone-wrong couple flees law toward mythical Mexican refuge El ReyNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionThe Art Spy, Michelle YoungFrench art curator spied on Nazi looting at Jeu de Paume museumNO
Library ScienceHamnet, Maggie O’FarrellAgnes, Shakespeare’s wife, loses son Hamnet to plague in Elizabethan StratfordNO
Make Sure You’re Around After You’ve Gone, David LoweryGhost stories anthology curated and introduced by filmmaker David LoweryNO
Main Street Reads – BanterAmity, Nathan HarrisEmancipated siblings journey to reunite while pursued through post-Civil War MexicoNO
Main Street Reads – KidsZed Moonstein Makes a Friend, Lance RubinLonely boy creates AI best friend with unintended consequences in MonoTownMAYBE
Main Street Reads – RomanceBonded By Thorns, Elizabeth HelenBookworm bargains with four cursed fae princes in Beauty-and-the-Beast retellingMAYBE
Main Street Reads – ThrillerHaven’t Killed in Years, Amy K. GreenSerial killer’s hidden daughter stalked by copycat leaving body parts on doorstepNO
Mocha Girls ReadAnxious People, Fredrik BackmanFailed bank robber takes apartment-viewing hostages, secrets and lives intertwineMAYBE
Natalie PortmanStrange Pictures, UketsuNine childlike sketches hold clues to interconnected Japanese murder mysteriesNO
Read with JennaHomeschooled, Stefan Merrill BlockMemoir of isolation under unconventional Texas mother’s unregulated homeschoolNO
ReeseThe First Time I Saw Him, Laura DaveSequel: Hannah and stepdaughter Bailey on the run again as Owen reappearsNO
Service 95Night People, Mark RonsonMemoir of Mark Ronson’s ’90s New York DJ years before fameNO
StacksGirl on Girl, Sophie GilbertHow early-aughts pop culture turned millennial women against themselves and each otherNO
Sunriver – FictionCrow Mary, Kathleen GrissomInspired by true story of Crow woman who saved Nakota women from massacreMAYBE
Sunriver – MysteryReturn to Sender, Craig JohnsonWalt Longmire goes undercover as mail carrier to find missing colleague linked to cultNO
TeaTimeThe Bell Jar, Sylvia PlathEsther Greenwood’s mental breakdown and psychiatric treatment in 1950s New YorkNO
Zibby’sThe Gallagher Place, Julie DoarFamily-secrets: Marlowe returns to Dutchess County land for old unsolved murderNO

February 2026

6 rows

YES:

(none)

MAYBE:

  • Six Days of the Condor, James Grady
Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
BBC Radio 2Keeper of Lost Children, Sadeqa JohnsonPost-WWII Germany: three interconnected lives tied to real Brown Baby PlanNO
Saoirse, Charleen HurtubiseAmerican in Donegal hides stolen identity; art-world fame threatens to expose herNO
Witch Trial, Harriet TyceEdinburgh jury trial of two teen girls claiming witchcraft for classmate’s murderNO
Jack CarrSix Days of the Condor, James GradyCIA analyst survives office massacre, runs from his own agencyMAYBE
Mocha Girls ReadRhythm and Design, LongTempleBlack romance β€” architect + gospel musician find love grounded in faithNO
ReeseIn Her Defense, Philippa MalickaLibel trial β€” TV star’s daughter, predatory therapist, and the witness who knowsNO

March 2026

4 rows

YES:

  • Deviant, Callie Hart

MAYBE:

(none)

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
Jack CarrThe Day of the Jackal, Frederick ForsythAnonymous assassin meticulously plans to kill Charles de Gaulle.NO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionAntisemitism, an American Tradition, Pamela S. NadellHistory from New Amsterdam to presentNO
Main Street Reads – RomanceDeviant, Callie HartLow-level mobster draws the line at trafficking in girls, with spiceYES
PBS BooksSalvation of a Forsyte, John GalsworthyDying Forsyte recalls his one chance at loveNO

April 2026

Yeah, there were huge gaps in my April list. I don’t know what happened there. Oh, wait, yes, I do. The gaps were about why I started this list. I wanted to see which books people were reading that I hadn’t heard of before. The ones that perhaps didn’t make the bestseller lists. And yet I realized I hadn’t checked whether the lists overlapped. So, I added Globe and Mail, NYT, and Indie bestseller lists. 42 new rows from bestseller lists. A gap of a different sort.

52 rows

YES:

  • The Summer Guests, Tess Gerritsen
  • The Astral Library, Kate Quinn
  • The Night We Met, Abby Jimenez
  • Between Two Fires, Christopher Buehlman
  • A World Appears, Michael Pollan
  • How to Be Okay When Nothing Is Okay, Jenny Lawson
  • Red Rising, Pierce Brown

MAYBE:

  • The Names, Florence Knapp
  • We Are All Guilty Here, Karin Slaughter
  • Gone Before Goodbye, Reese Witherspoon; Harlan Coben
  • Saint of Thieves, Dana Haynes
  • The Simple Guide to ADHD Regulation, Jenna Free
  • Carl’s Doomsday Scenario, Matt Dinniman
  • Starside, Alex Aster
  • The Keeper, Tana French
  • The Gales of November, John U. Bacon
  • Dungeon Crawler Carl, Matt Dinniman
  • The God of the Woods, Liz Moore
  • A Walk in the Park, Kevin Fedarko
  • The Dungeon Anarchist’s Cookbook, Matt Dinniman
  • If Only I Had Told Her, Laura Nowlin
  • The Sun and the Starmaker, Rachel Griffin
Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
BBC Radio 2Love Lane, Patrick GaleAging Canadian homesteader reconnects with his English family across generationsNO
Book of the MonthPorcupines, Fran FabriczkiHungarian single mother + daughter chase American Dream after Berlin Wall fallNO
PBS BooksWilding, Isabella TreeCouple rewilds Sussex farm; native species return in abundanceNO
PolyWogg – To be readVillette, Charlotte BronteLucy Snowe teaches at French boarding school, confronting love and isolationNO
Richard & JudyThe Names, Florence KnappThree alternating timelines for one boy based on the name his battered mother choseMAYBE
We Are All Guilty Here, Karin SlaughterTwo teenage girls vanish in small town; officer faces personal costMAYBE
The Cove, L.J. RossTrauma survivor flees to Cornish bookshop, gets pulled into local murderNO
The Summer Guests, Tess GerritsenRetired CIA agents in Maine investigate missing summer-tourist teenagerYES
Deadline, Steph McGovernTV reporter’s family kidnapped mid-live-interview by political conspiratorsNO
Gone Before Goodbye, Reese Witherspoon; Harlan CobenDisgraced combat surgeon takes secret job, becomes fugitive when patient vanishesMAYBE
Sunriver – FictionSupersonic, Thomas KohnstammHistory of a Seattle neighbourhood through the yearsNO
Sunriver – MysterySaint of Thieves, Dana HaynesOrganized vigilante team take on the bad guysMAYBE
Globe & Mail – Canadian NFEven the Good Girls Will Cry, Melissa Auf der MaurBassist’s rock historyNO
Lessons From a Lifetime, David Suzuki; Ian HaningtonSuzuki retrospectiveNO
Miracle, Michael Calvin; Naftali SchiffKids who survived AuschwitzNO
Out of the Sky, Matti FriedmanWWII Jewish parachutists drop into Nazi Europe; Hannah Senesh’s missionNO
The Simple Guide to ADHD Regulation, Jenna FreeTips, tools for ADHD adultsMAYBE
Globe & Mail – Hardcover FictionCarl’s Doomsday Scenario, Matt DinnimanCarl and Donut survive level two of the alien-run dungeon reality showMAYBE
Judge Stone, James Patterson; Viola DavisAlabama judge oversees doctor’s felony trial after abortion on raped teenNO
My Husband’s Wife, Alice FeeneyArtist returns home to find another woman claiming her husband and lifeNO
The Astral Library, Kate QuinnLibrary with portals into beloved novelsYES
The Night We Met, Abby JimenezRight person, wrong timeYES
Indie Bestsellers – Hardcover FictionBetween Two Fires, Christopher BuehlmanBlack Death France: knight escorts orphan girl through supernatural apocalypseYES
Starside, Alex AsterMagic has to be claimed, not inheritedMAYBE
The Keeper, Tana FrenchOld Irish feud and murdered girlMAYBE
Indie Bestsellers – Hardcover NFA World Appears, Michael PollanThe nature of consciousnessYES
How to Be Okay When Nothing Is Okay, Jenny LawsonLawson’s tips and tricks for mental illnessYES
One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This, Omar El AkkadRapidly changing worldNO
The Best Dog in the World, Alice (ed.) HoffmanWriters and their dogsNO
The Gales of November, John U. BaconThe wreck of the Edmund FitzgeraldMAYBE
Indie Bestsellers – Trade PB FictionDungeon Crawler Carl, Matt DinnimanCoast Guard vet and cat navigate alien-run dungeon reality showMAYBE
Game On, Navessa AllenEnemies to lovers, dark romanceNO
I Who Have Never Known Men, Jacqueline HarpmanWomen imprisoned undergroundNO
Red Rising, Pierce BrownMiner on Mars starts revolutionYES
The God of the Woods, Liz MooreKids disappear years apart at summer campMAYBE
Indie Bestsellers – Trade PB NFA Walk in the Park, Kevin FedarkoWalk length of Grand CanyonMAYBE
Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall KimmererBotany and Indigenous teachingsNO
I’m Glad My Mom Died, Jennette McCurdyiCarly star’s memoir of overbearing mother and child-actor traumaNO
On Tyranny, Timothy SnyderResisting authoritarianismNO
Raising Hare, Chloe DaltonRelationship with natureNO
The Art Thief, Michael FinkelStealing art prolificallyNO
The Demon of Unrest, Erik LarsonBiography before Civil WarNO
NYT Bestsellers – Hardcover FictionThe Dungeon Anarchist’s Cookbook, Matt DinnimanCarl and Donut face a subway system packed with monstersMAYBE
NYT Bestsellers – Hardcover NFStand, Cory BookerPolitical call to actionNO
Stripped Down, Bunnie XOPodcast rags to riches storyNO
The Anxious Generation, Jonathan HaidtSmartphones and kids mental healthNO
You with the Sad Eyes, Christina ApplegateMemoir of acting career and adjusting to multiple sclerosisNO
NYT Bestsellers – YA HardcoverA Stage Set for Villains, Shannon J. SpannCursed teen infiltrates Playhouse of immortal Players in deadly competitionNO
Divine Rivals, Rebecca RossRival journalists in magic realmNO
If Only I Had Told Her, Laura NowlinRoad not takenMAYBE
The Sun and the Starmaker, Rachel GriffinElemental magic with girl leadMAYBE
Wings of Starlight, Allison SaftEnemies to lovers and a forbidden bondNO

Okay, now it’s time for May. I’m sure I showed WAY more rigour, right? RIGHT????

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Book clubs — Missed books in 2025

The PolyBlog
May 21 2026

I mentioned earlier that I have a list of 40+ book clubs that I’m monitoring for “new to me” books to consider for my To Be Read (TBR) pile. I went through all of 2025, made a list of ones that interested me, and posted it. But it wasn’t the best of lists. I didn’t do a great job curating; I didn’t even check every club that I ended up including later, and I wanted a complete “database” of all the options. So, since I decided to build the Excel sheet with the help of Claude AI, I might as well share the list of books and results for 2025 that I missed the first time around. These are just the ones that I didn’t say yes to the first time — either I said NO but didn’t mention it, or I hadn’t rated them yet. Previous posts and my Reading Challenge have the other 2025 books I said yes to before.

2025: The 324 books that slipped off my lilypad

Total: 324 rows across 12 months with 29 YES, 62 MAYBE, 233 NO. I’m sure no one will snicker at me because I am quietly adding 91 books to my TBR pile without fanfare. #HoardingFrog

YES:

  • The White Octopus Hotel, Alexandra Bell
  • The Motherload, Sarah Hoover
  • Searches, Vauhini Vara
  • Lightbreakers, Aja Gabel
  • Immaculate Conception, Ling Ling Huang
  • Sisters in the Wind, Angeline Boulley
  • The Women, Kristin Hannah x 3
  • The Brotherhood of the Rose, David Morrell
  • The Fraternity of the Stone, David Morrell
  • The League of Night and Fog, David Morrell
  • Point of Impact, Stephen Hunter
  • Exit Strategy, Lee Child; Andrew Child
  • Chutzpah Girls, Julie Silverstein; Tami Schlossberg Pruwer
  • Firekeeper’s Daughter, Angeline Boulley
  • Turtle Island, Sean Sherman
  • Bridget Jones’s Diary, Helen Fielding
  • The Girl Next Door, Rachel Meredith
  • Only Way Out, Tod Goldberg
  • The Gun Man Jackson Swagger, Stephen Hunter
  • Murder Takes a Vacation, Laura Lippman
  • Witches of Dubious Origin, Jenn McKinlay
  • Crooks, Lou Berney
  • The Librarians, Sherry Thomas
  • A Forty Year Kiss, Nickolas Butler
  • The Phoenix Pencil Company, Allison King
  • Grief is the Thing with Feathers, Max Porter
  • The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams

MAYBE:

  • Twist, Colum McCann
  • Under the Same Stars, Libba Bray
  • There’s Always Next Year, George M. Johnson; Leah Johnson
  • An Inside Job, Daniel Silva
  • The Secret of Secrets, Dan Brown
  • The Tin Men, Alex DeMille; Nelson DeMille
  • Saving Five, Amanda Nguyen
  • A Different Kind of Power, Jacinda Ardern
  • The Bone Thief, Vanessa Lillie
  • A New Earth, Eckhart Tolle
  • The Emperor of Gladness, Ocean Vuong
  • Black Cake, Charmaine Wilkerson
  • Good Dirt, Charmaine Wilkerson
  • The Thursday Murder Club, Richard Osman
  • The Launch Date, Annabelle Slator
  • Courtroom Drama, Neely Tubati Alexander
  • Last Night Was Fun, Holly Michelle
  • Friends to Lovers, Sally Blakely
  • And Then There Was the One, Martha Waters
  • The Marriage Method, Mimi Matthews
  • Saint of the Narrows Street, William Boyle
  • Hang On St Christopher, Adrian McKinty
  • The Get Off, Christa Faust
  • The Night in the City, Michael McGarrity
  • The Medusa Protocol, Rob Hart
  • The Gorgon of Los Feliz, Nolan Knight
  • The Red Scare Murders, Con Lehane
  • The Stolen Queen, Fiona Davis
  • The Four Queens of Crime, Rosanne Limoncelli
  • With a Vengeance, Riley Sager
  • The Secret Sharers, Xiaolong Qiu
  • Famous Last Words, Gillian McAllister x 2
  • Murder at Gulls Nest, Jess Kidd
  • The Dentist, Tim Sullivan
  • Miss Winter in the Library with a Knife, Martin Edwards
  • Cover Art, Vanessa Westermann
  • An Amateur Sleuth’s Guide to Murder, Lynn Cahoon
  • Saltwater, Katy Hays
  • You Belong Here, Megan Miranda
  • Dead Money, Jakob Kerr
  • This is Not a Game, Kelly Mullen
  • The Library of Lost Dollhouses, Elise Hooper
  • The English Masterpiece, Katherine Reay
  • The Witch’s Orchard, Archer Sullivan
  • The Harvey Girls, Juliette Fay
  • The Confessions, Paul Bradley Carr
  • Holy Island, L.J. Ross
  • The Names, Florence Knapp
  • A Family Matter, Claire Lynch
  • The Irish Goodbye, Heather Aimee O’Neill
  • Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen
  • Before I Forget, Tory Henwood Hoen
  • Isola, Allegra Goodman
  • You Are Here, David Nicholls
  • Dead Simple, Peter James
  • Don’t Believe a Word, Susan Lewis
  • Marble Hall Murders, Anthony Horowitz
  • The Satsuma Complex, Bob Mortimer
  • The Shortlist, Andrew Raymond
  • The Lucky Winners, K.L. Slater
  • Thirst Trap, Grainne O’Hare

January 2025

22 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousPrivate Rites, Julia ArmfieldThree sisters navigate inheritance and identity in a flooded Britain.NO
BelletristThe Motherload, Sarah HooverHonest motherhood memoir exposing the myth of immediate maternal joyYES
Jack CarrThe Brotherhood of the Rose, David MorrellTwo orphans raised by a CIA handler as elite assassins, betrayed by their ownYES
The Fraternity of the Stone, David MorrellBlack-ops assassin in monastic hiding for 6 years pulled back into the fieldYES
The League of Night and Fog, David MorrellElderly former Nazis disappearing β€” Saul and Drew investigate a buried WWII conspiracyYES
Jewish Book Council – FictionThe Trade Off, Samantha Greene WoodruffBrilliant Jewish twin secretly drives her brother’s 1920s Wall Street careerNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionNot From Here, Leah LaxLibrettist gathers immigrant stories, interweaves them with her Jewish family’s pastNO
Library ScienceSet My Heart on Fire, Izumi SuzukiSemi-autobiographical novel of 1970s Tokyo’s underground music sceneNO
Mocha Girls ReadYou Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty, Akwaeke EmeziGrieving widow falls for off-limits man during tropical-island summerNO
Natalie PortmanSaving Time, Jenny OdellPhilosophical cultural critique of productivity culture and clock timeNO
Native AmericanFirekeeper’s Daughter, Angeline BoulleyBiracial Ojibwe teen goes undercover for FBI after witnessing murderYES
Oprah 2.0A New Earth, Eckhart TolleSpiritual guide on transcending ego for personal and global awakeningMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – BritishBeautiful Ugly, Alice FeeneyBestselling author seeks answers on remote Scottish island after wife vanishesNO
Poisoned Pen – CozyThe Case of the Missing Maid, Rob OslerQueer female detective investigates a missing maid case in 1898 ChicagoNO
Poisoned Pen – CrimeHead Cases, John McMahonFBI cold-case unit pursues serial killer linked to its lead agent’s pastNO
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalThe Stolen Queen, Fiona DavisMet curator’s Egypt past resurfaces after Met Gala artifact theftMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – MysterySweet Fury, Sash BischoffActress preparing feminist Tender Is the Night adaptation unravels in therapyNO
The Good Liars, Anita FrankHousekeeper at 1920s English manor confronts missing-boy mystery and supernatural secretsNO
Poisoned Pen – NoirKarma Doll, Jonathan AmesBuddhist detective on a Mexican beach gets framed for murderNO
Poisoned Pen – RomanceShattering Dawn, Jayne Ann KrentzStalker mystery and psychic abilities draw together two suspicious investigatorsNO
Reader’s DigestThe Lotus Shoes, Jane YangFoot-bound slave and her aristocratic mistress in 1800s Qing-dynasty ChinaNO
TeaTimeLetters to a Young Poet, Rainer Maria RilkeRilke’s letters of advice to a young aspiring poetNO

February 2025

35 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
Barnes & NobleThis Is a Love Story, Jessica SofferFifty-year New York marriage recalled as artist wife is dyingNO
BBC Radio 2Human, Animal, Seth InsuaDairy farmer’s family unravels when activists target their farmNO
Nesting, Roisin O’DonnellDublin mother flees coercive husband into Ireland’s housing crisisNO
BelletristThe Mystery Guest, Gregoire BouillierFrench autofiction: ex-lover calls with a birthday party invitationNO
Black Men ReadNeighbors and Other Stories, Diane OliverPosthumous debut: 1960s Black American lives under Jim CrowNO
Good HousekeepingConfessions, Catherine AireyThree generations of Irish women, NYC to Donegal, family secretsNO
Good Morning America – AdultJunie, Erin Crosby EckstineEnslaved teen on Alabama plantation awakens her sister’s ghost as Civil War loomsNO
Good Morning America – Young AdultUnder the Same Stars, Libba BrayThree timelines connected by a German oak tree, Nazi era to todayMAYBE
Jack CarrThe JFK Conspiracy, Brad Meltzer; Josh Mensch1960 assassination plot against President-elect Kennedy and the Secret Service agent who foiled itNO
Jewish Book Council – FictionThe Last Dekrepitzer, Howard LangerHasidic Holocaust survivor’s journey from Poland to Mississippi to HarlemNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionThe In-Betweens, Davon LoebEssay memoir of growing up biracial in a Jewish-Protestant familyNO
Library ScienceThe Wickedest, Caleb FemiOne-night poetry sequence at a London house partyNO
Mindy’s Book StudioThe Rules of Fortune, Danielle PrescodDaughter investigates her billionaire father’s empire after his deathNO
Mocha Girls ReadSeven Days in June, Tia WilliamsBlack writers reunite after fifteen years for one Brooklyn weekNO
Natalie PortmanThe Coin, Yasmin ZaherPalestinian woman in NYC unravels through Birkin scams and obsessive purityNO
Oprah 2.0Dream State, Eric PuchnerLove-triangle aftershocks span fifty years against a warming Montana backdropNO
PBS BooksBlack Cake, Charmaine WilkersonEstranged siblings learn mother’s hidden Caribbean murder-suspect past via recorded inheritanceMAYBE
Good Dirt, Charmaine WilkersonJilted Black heiress flees to France after a tragedy tied to family heirloomMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – BritishThe Wolf Tree, Laura McCluskeyDetectives investigate a suspicious death on a hostile Scottish islandNO
Poisoned Pen – CrimeThe Oligarch’s Daughter, Joseph FinderEx-Wall Streeter flees Russian operatives after marrying an oligarch’s daughterNO
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalFagin the Thief, Allison EpsteinDickensian London origin story for Oliver Twist’s Jewish villain FaginNO
Poisoned Pen – MysteryDead Money, Jakob KerrSilicon Valley fixer joins FBI investigation of tech CEO’s murderMAYBE
A Forty Year Kiss, Nickolas ButlerTwo Wisconsin ex-spouses reconnect forty years after their early breakupYES
Delayed Rays of a Star, Amanda Lee KoeThree twentieth-century film legends’ lives traced from a 1928 Berlin photographNO
Poisoned Pen – NoirSaint of the Narrows Street, William BoyleItalian American sisters bury a body, hide the secret eighteen yearsMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – RomanceThe Launch Date, Annabelle SlatorRival coworkers test a new IRL dating app togetherMAYBE
Read with JennaThis Is a Love Story, Jessica SofferFifty-year New York marriage recalled as artist wife is dyingNO
Reader’s DigestEddie Winston Is Looking for Love, Marianne CroninNever-kissed 90-year-old Eddie searches for first love through a charity shop’s donationsNO
ReeseIsola, Allegra GoodmanSixteenth-century French noblewoman marooned on a Gulf of St. Lawrence island after forbidden shipboard romanceMAYBE
Richard & JudyThe Women, Kristin HannahIdealistic young nurse serves in Vietnam War, returns home to indifferenceYES
First Wife’s Shadow, Adele ParksDomestic-noir twist: rich woman, widower husband, his perfect dead first wifeNO
My Favourite Mistake, Marian KeyesWalsh sister Anna returns to Ireland: perimenopause, retreat job, family chaosNO
One of the Good Guys, Araminta HallSelf-described ‘good guy’ suspect when women’s-rights activists disappear in coastal townNO
Redemption, Jack JordanMother plans revenge on the hit-and-run driver who killed her sonNO
TeaTimeThe Lamb, Lucy RoseFolk horror; cannibal mother and daughter in Cumbrian woodsNO

March 2025

26 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
Barnes & NobleBroken Country, Clare Leslie HallFirst love returns to 1960s Dorset farm with fatal consequencesNO
BBC Radio 2Fundamentally, Nussaibah YounisBritish academic deradicalizes ISIS women in Iraq, mirrors herselfNO
BelletristThe Strange Case of Jane O., Karen Thompson WalkerNew mother’s amnesia and hallucinations spiral into psychiatric mysteryNO
Jack CarrFearless, Eric BlehmBiography of Navy SEAL Team Six operator Adam Brown β€” addiction, faith, sacrificeNO
Jewish Book Council – FictionWe Would Never, Tova MirvisMother becomes prime suspect in ex-husband’s murder amid bitter divorceNO
Jewish Book Council – Nonfiction10/7, Lee Yaron100 firsthand stories of October 7 Hamas attack on IsraelNO
Library ScienceEarly Thirties, Josh DuboffTwo thirtysomething best friends grow apart in New YorkNO
Mocha Girls ReadFinding Me, Viola DavisDavis’s memoir: poverty in Rhode Island to Oscar in HollywoodNO
Natalie PortmanSaving Five, Amanda NguyenSexual assault survivor’s fight to pass the Survivors’ Bill of RightsMAYBE
Native AmericanSisters of the Lost Nation, Nick MedinaIndigenous teen hunts for missing girls amid horror and violenceNO
Oprah 2.0The Tell, Amy GriffinFounder’s memoir of recovering repressed childhood abuse through psychedelic therapyNO
PBS BooksThe Women, Kristin HannahIdealistic young nurse serves in Vietnam War, returns home to indifferenceYES
Poisoned Pen – BritishFamous Last Words, Gillian McAllisterNew mom learns her husband is the gunman in a London hostage siegeMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – CozyThe Big Fix, Holly JamesBookish professor flees henchmen after a murder at an estate saleNO
Poisoned Pen – CrimeSaltwater, Katy HaysDaughter investigates her mother’s mysterious Capri cliff death thirty years laterMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalThe Four Queens of Crime, Rosanne LimoncelliReal Golden Age crime writers solve a real-life 1938 country house murderMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – MysteryBroken Country, Clare Leslie HallFirst love returns to 1960s Dorset farm with fatal consequencesNO
Glamorous Notions, Megan ChanceCostume designer hides past Roman entanglements while reinventing herself in HollywoodNO
Poisoned Pen – NoirHang On St Christopher, Adrian McKinty1992 Belfast detective probes carjacking that killed an IRA assassinMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – RomanceThe Lady Sparks a Flame, Elizabeth EverettComplicated heroine with a traumatic past finds redemptive Victorian romanceNO
ReeseBroken Country, Clare Leslie HallFirst love returns to 1960s Dorset farm with fatal consequencesNO
Richard & JudyPrecipice, Robert HarrisPM Asquith’s WWI-eve love letters to Venetia Stanley jeopardize state secretsNO
The Missing Family, Tim WeaverThree vanish in seconds from a Dartmoor lake boat; investigator hunts truthNO
What Have You Done?, Shari LapenaVermont teen murdered in a hayfield: sleepy small town, many suspectsNO
Service 95There There, Tommy OrangeTwelve Native lives converge at the Big Oakland PowwowNO
TeaTimeLoca, Alejandro HerediaTwo Afro-Dominican best friends remake their lives in 1990s NYCNO

April 2025

27 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
BBC Radio 2Ordinary Saints, Niamh Ni MhaoileoinQueer Irish woman confronts brother’s potential canonization as Catholic saintNO
Who Wants to Live Forever, Hanna Thomas UoseCouple split when miracle drug offers indefinite human lifespanNO
BelletristSearches, Vauhini VaraPulitzer finalist’s memoir-essays on AI, tech capitalism, and sister’s deathYES
Good Morning America – AdultThe Sirens, Emilia HartSisters across two centuries bound by the sea and strange transformationsNO
Good Morning America – Young AdultWatch Me, Tahereh MafiJames Anderson infiltrates Ark Island, the last refuge of The Reestablishment, ten years after its fallNO
Jack CarrThe Unvanquished, Patrick K. O’DonnellCivil War shadow war: Lincoln’s Jessie Scouts hunt Confederate Mosby’s RangersNO
Jewish Book Council – FictionSons and Daughters, Chaim Grade1930s Polish shtetl rabbi’s family confronts modernity and impending HolocaustNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionHow to Share an Egg, Bonny ReichertFood memoir tracing intergenerational Holocaust trauma through Polish cookingNO
Mocha Girls ReadDeath of the Author, Nnedi OkoraforDisabled Nigerian-American writer pens sci-fi epic that transforms her lifeNO
Natalie PortmanAutocracy, Inc., Anne ApplebaumNetworks of modern autocrats: kleptocracy, surveillance, propaganda across bordersNO
Native AmericanWashing My Mother’s Body, Joy HarjoIllustrated standalone of Harjo’s elegy on washing her mother’s bodyNO
Oprah 2.0Matriarch, Tina KnowlesBeyoncΓ©’s mother on her Galveston roots, Knowles marriage, and self-reinventionNO
PBS BooksMiss Austen, Gill HornbyCassandra Austen in 1840 protects sister Jane’s literary legacy from posthumous exposureNO
Poisoned Pen – BritishMurder at Gulls Nest, Jess KiddFormer nun investigates missing pen pal’s disappearance at a 1950s boardinghouseMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – CozyThe Maid’s Secret, Nita ProseHotel maid investigates an art heist connected to her grandmother’s hidden pastNO
Poisoned Pen – CrimeThe Museum Detective, Maha Khan PhillipsKarachi archaeologist authenticates a mysterious mummy while seeking her missing nieceNO
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalThe Girl from Greenwich Street, Lauren WilligHamilton and Burr defend an accused in America’s first murder trialNO
Poisoned Pen – MysteryThe Story She Left Behind, Patti Callahan HenryDaughter crosses Atlantic in 1952 chasing her vanished author-mother’s lost invented languageNO
This is Not a Game, Kelly MullenGrandmother and game-designer granddaughter sleuth locked-room mansion murders during stormMAYBE
The Indigo Girl, Natasha Boyd1740s teen pioneers indigo cultivation on father’s South Carolina plantationNO
Poisoned Pen – NoirThe Get Off, Christa FaustEx-pornstar fugitive flees pregnant onto rodeo circuit after botched revenge hitMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – RomanceGold Coast Adventure, Nana MaloneGhanaian American heiress torn between arranged marriage and earlier loveNO
Read with JennaHeartwood, Amity GaigeMissing Appalachian Trail hiker; three women’s perspectives on a desperate Maine searchNO
Reader’s DigestThe Story She Left Behind, Patti Callahan HenryDaughter crosses Atlantic in 1952 chasing her vanished author-mother’s lost invented languageNO
ReeseAll That Life Can Afford, Emily EverettAmerican grad student in London hides her working-class roots while drawn into a wealthy family’s Saint-Tropez worldNO
Service 95Grief is the Thing with Feathers, Max PorterLondon father and sons grieve dead mother; mythic Crow visitsYES
TeaTimeThe Antidote, Karen RussellDust Bowl Nebraska town reckons with buried violence and memoryNO

May 2025

25 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousMy Documents, Kevin NguyenFour cousins interned by US after attacksNO
BBC Radio 2The Book of Guilt, Catherine ChidgeyAlternate-history 1979 England: triplet boys at sinister state orphanageNO
BelletristTwist, Colum McCannIrish journalist repairs deep-sea internet cables off West AfricaMAYBE
Good HousekeepingImmaculate Conception, Ling Ling HuangArt-school friends, mind-merging tech, toxic obsessionYES
Good Morning America – AdultThe Original Daughter, Jemimah WeiSingapore sisters torn apart by ambition and family secrets in turn-of-millennium BedokNO
I Care About BooksThe Women, Kristin HannahIdealistic young nurse serves in Vietnam War, returns home to indifferenceYES
Jack CarrGates of Fire, Steven PressfieldSpartan Thermopylae from a captured helot’s perspectiveNO
Jewish Book Council – FictionMrs. Lilienblum’s Cloud Factory, Iddo GefenIsraeli family builds tech startup around eccentric mother’s cloud-making desert inventionNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionChutzpah Girls, Julie Silverstein; Tami Schlossberg PruwerIllustrated bedtime book: 100 mini-biographies of daring Jewish womenYES
Mindy’s Book StudioWhen Stars Align, Melissa de la CruzThree former teen Hollywood stars reunite after a decadeNO
Natalie PortmanConsider Yourself Kissed, Jessica StanleyDecade-long literary romance set against London politics and motherhoodNO
Native AmericanMedicine River, Mary Annette PemberOjibwe journalist traces Indian boarding schools’ legacy through mother’s experienceNO
Oprah 2.0The Emperor of Gladness, Ocean VuongSuicidal Vietnamese-American teen becomes caretaker for elderly widow with dementiaMAYBE
PBS BooksWe All Live Here, Jojo MoyesDivorced mom’s life unravels when both stepdad and absent bio-dad move inNO
Poisoned Pen – BritishDeath at the White Hart, Chris ChibnallDetective probes a ritualistically staged murder in a picturesque Dorset villageNO
Poisoned Pen – CozyCover Art, Vanessa WestermannArtist’s lakeside pop-up gallery is disrupted by murder via poisoned chocolatesMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – CrimeThis Book Will Bury Me, Ashley WinsteadOnline amateur sleuths’ hunt for an elusive killer goes terribly wrongNO
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalA Death on Corfu, Emily Sullivan1898 Corfu widow investigates murder of local maid with visiting authorNO
Poisoned Pen – MysteryHeartwood, Amity GaigeMissing Appalachian Trail hiker; three women’s perspectives on a desperate Maine searchNO
The Library of Lost Dollhouses, Elise HooperLibrary curator uncovers century-spanning secrets hidden inside historic dollhousesMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – NoirThe Night in the City, Michael McGarrity1950s NYC ADA accused of strangling his socialite ex-loverMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – RomanceCourtroom Drama, Neely Tubati AlexanderJury duty for reality-TV murder trial sparks juror-box romanceMAYBE
Read with JennaThe Names, Florence KnappThree alternating timelines for one boy based on the name his battered mother choseMAYBE
Reader’s DigestVera Wong’s Guide to Snooping (on a Dead Man), Jesse Q. SutantoCozy mystery sequel: Vera Wong investigates a dead influencer with no real identityNO
Service 95Still Born, Guadalupe NettelTwo Mexico City friends navigate motherhood from opposite endsNO

June 2025

33 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousMarsha, TourmalineFirst definitive biography of Black trans activist Marsha P. JohnsonNO
Barnes & NobleThe Listeners, Maggie Stiefvater1942 West Virginia luxury hotel hosts interned Axis diplomatsNO
BBC Radio 2The Rush, Beth LewisThree women’s fates collide during 1898 Klondike Gold Rush murderNO
BelletristLush, Rochelle Dowden-LordWine industry insiders’ secrets spill at a French vineyardNO
Black Men ReadDon’t Cry for Me, Daniel BlackDying Black father writes letters to his estranged gay sonNO
Good Morning America – Young AdultTime After Time, Mikki DaughtrySapphic romance across two centuries, Victorian England to presentNO
I Care About BooksErasure, Percival EverettBlack novelist parodies ghetto fiction and the parody becomes a hitNO
Jack CarrPoint of Impact, Stephen HunterRetired Marine sniper drawn out of solitude into a presidential assassination conspiracyYES
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionKissing Girls on Shabbat, Sara GlassMemoir of leaving Gur Hasidic sect to embrace queer identityNO
Late ShowOrbital, Samantha HarveySix astronauts on the ISS, sixteen orbits, twenty-four hoursNO
Library ScienceBonjour Tristesse, Francoise SaganSeventeen-year-old’s jealous summer scheming on the French RivieraNO
Mocha Girls ReadA Good Cry, Nikki GiovanniPoet Nikki Giovanni reflects on aging, family, and her grandparentsNO
Natalie PortmanThe English Understand Wool, Helen DeWittOrphaned Marrakech-raised heiress versus a publishing giant pushing a trauma memoirNO
Native AmericanBad Cree, Jessica JohnsCree woman’s grief dreams turn deadly when she returns homeNO
Oprah 2.0The River Is Waiting, Wally LambGrieving father seeks redemption in prison after a fatal addiction-driven mistakeNO
Poisoned Pen – BritishA Novel Murder, E.C. NevinAuthor investigates a literary agent’s murder at a crime fiction festivalNO
Poisoned Pen – CozyMurder Takes a Vacation, Laura LippmanWidowed former PI stumbles into murder on a Paris Seine cruiseYES
Poisoned Pen – CrimeDon’t Tell Me How to Die, Marshall KarpTerminally ill woman hunts for her family’s perfect replacement before she diesNO
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalWith a Vengeance, Riley Sager1954 luxury train: woman lures her family’s destroyers for vengeanceMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – MysteryWelcome to Murder Week, Karen DukessThree Americans solve staged English village murder mystery while uncovering family secretsNO
The Martha’s Vineyard Beach and Book Club, Martha Hall KellyTwo WWII Martha’s Vineyard sisters launch a wartime book club; 2016 dual timelineNO
The Girls of Good Fortune, Kristina McMorris1888 Portland woman with hidden Chinese heritage unravels Chinatown abduction and massacreNO
Poisoned Pen – NoirThe Medusa Protocol, Rob HartReformed assassin captured by mysterious doctor probing her memoriesMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – RomanceWhen Javi Dumped Mari, Mia SosaBest friend learns of Mari’s engagement weeks before her weddingNO
Read with JennaA Family Matter, Claire LynchDying father reveals lifelong secret about late wife’s same-sex love to his daughterMAYBE
ReeseThe Phoenix Pencil Company, Allison KingGranddaughter uncovers her grandmother’s WWII Shanghai past involving a magical pencil-reforging family power forced into espionageYES
Richard & JudyDo Not Disturb, Freida McFaddenSnowstorm forces fugitive into a Hitchcock-homage motel with a dark pastNO
Famous Last Words, Gillian McAllisterNew mom learns her husband is the gunman in a London hostage siegeMAYBE
The Daughter, T.M. LoganMother searches dark London for daughter who vanished from universityNO
The Hidden Girl, Lucinda RileyYorkshire model rises in NYC; the Delancey family hides Holocaust-era secretsNO
You Are Here, David NichollsCoast-to-coast English hike pairs an adrift teacher and a reclusive divorceeMAYBE
Service 95Widow Basquiat, Jennifer ClementMemoir of Basquiat through his lover Suzanne MalloukNO
TeaTimeFlashlight, Susan ChoiFather vanishes from a beach; family unravels across decadesNO

July 2025

20 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousGreat Black Hope, Rob FranklinDrug arrest and friend’s death send queer Black grad spiralingNO
BelletristNotes on Infinity, Austin TaylorHarvard biotech startup and love affair spiral into scandalNO
Good Morning America – Young AdultThe Nightblood Prince, Molly X. ChangProphesied empress-to-be in Chinese-inspired empire fights fate between two princesNO
Late ShowThe Director / Lichtspiel, Daniel KehlmannDirector G.W. Pabst, trapped in Nazi Germany, makes films for GoebbelsNO
Mocha Girls ReadThe Reformatory, Tananarive Due12-year-old Black boy faces ghosts and abuse at 1950 Florida reformatoryNO
Natalie PortmanA Different Kind of Power, Jacinda ArdernFormer NZ PM on empathetic leadership through Christchurch, COVID, and motherhoodMAYBE
Native AmericanProject 562, Matika WilburPhoto-portraits and interviews from all 562 federally recognized US tribal nationsNO
Oprah 2.0Culpability, Bruce HolsingerSelf-driving car crash forces a family to reckon with AI culpabilityNO
PBS BooksLessons in Chemistry, Bonnie Garmus1960s chemist pushed out of science becomes cooking-show host teaching housewives chemistryNO
Poisoned Pen – BritishThe White Crow, Michael RobothamPolice officer investigates a violent home invasion linked to her gangster fatherNO
Poisoned Pen – CozyAn Amateur Sleuth’s Guide to Murder, Lynn CahoonAuthor’s assistant investigates a literary agent’s murder on Bainbridge IslandMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – CrimeCold Burn, A.J. LandauPark Service agent and FBI investigate deaths in Alaska and the EvergladesNO
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalThe Listeners, Maggie Stiefvater1942 West Virginia luxury hotel hosts interned Axis diplomatsNO
Poisoned Pen – MysteryWe Don’t Talk about Carol, Kristen L. BerryJournalist unearths family secret tied to 1960s missing North Carolina Black girlsNO
The English Masterpiece, Katherine Reay1970s London art consultant questions a Picasso, sparking forgery scandalMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – NoirFlorida Palms, Joe Pan2009 Florida teens become drug runners during the recessionNO
Poisoned Pen – RomanceLast Night Was Fun, Holly MichelleWrong-number text flirtation between rivals competing for baseball-team promotionMAYBE
ReeseSpectacular Things, Beck Dorey-SteinTwo close sisters in small-town Maine grapple with their mother’s secrets and the cost of one’s soccer-stardom dreamsNO
Service 95Small Boat, Vincent DelecroixFrench radio operator’s account of fatal Channel migrant disasterNO
TeaTimeThe Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas AdamsEarthman hitchhikes across the galaxy after Earth is demolishedYES

August 2025

25 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousNice Girls Don’t Win, Parvati ShallowMemoir of Survivor winnerNO
Barnes & NobleSongs for Other People’s Weddings, Jens Lekman; David LevithanWedding singer’s own relationship frays while writing love songsNO
BelletristHow to Lose Your Mother, Molly Jong-FastReckoning with a famous, elusive mother fading into dementiaNO
Black Men ReadThat’s How They Get You, Damon YoungAll-star Black humor anthology edited by Damon YoungNO
Jack CarrAn Inside Job, Daniel SilvaAllon investigates a Leonardo stolen from the Vatican Museums after a Venice murderMAYBE
Jewish Book Council – FictionSisters of Fortune, Esther ChehebarThree Syrian Jewish sisters in Brooklyn navigate love and traditionNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionFear No Pharaoh, Richard KreitnerSix American Jews and the Civil War-era slavery debateNO
Late ShowA Marriage at Sea, Sophie ElmhirstWhale wrecks a couple’s boat; 118 days adrift in the PacificNO
Native AmericanThe El, Theodore C. Van Alst Jr.Indigenous teen gang members ride the El across 1979 ChicagoNO
Oprah 2.0Bridge of Sighs, Richard RussoTwo boyhood friends across small-town New York and expatriate VeniceNO
PBS BooksBridget Jones’s Diary, Helen FieldingThirtysomething London singleton’s year of dating disasters, calorie counts, and Mark DarcyYES
Poisoned Pen – BritishThe Good Liar, Denise MinaForensic scientist learns her evidence in a famous murder conviction was junkNO
Poisoned Pen – CozyJust Another Dead Author, Katarina BivaldMystery author investigates a literary titan’s death at a French retreatNO
Poisoned Pen – CrimeYou Belong Here, Megan MirandaMother’s college tragedy resurfaces when her daughter enrolls at the same schoolMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalDeparture 37, Scott CarsonPilots refuse to fly after dead mothers’ phone callsNO
Poisoned Pen – MysteryThe Witch’s Orchard, Archer SullivanAppalachian PI revisits cold case of three vanished girls and witch folkloreMAYBE
Full Bloom, Francesca SerritellaMysterious perfume transforms NYC lighting designer as buried fire trauma resurfacesNO
The Harvey Girls, Juliette FayTwo 1926 women on the run hide as Harvey Girls railroad waitressesMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – Noir13 Hillcrest Drive, Gerald PetievichHollywood publicist’s deadly money drop reveals Beverly Hills elite’s dark secretsNO
Poisoned Pen – RomanceFriends to Lovers, Sally BlakelyChildhood best friends reunite at her sister’s wedding after ruined friendshipMAYBE
Read with JennaMy Other Heart, Emma Nanami StrennerVietnamese mother’s vanished toddler and two Asian-American teen friends searching for identityNO
Reader’s DigestThe Glassmaker, Tracy ChevalierOrsola Rosso’s Murano glassmaking family endures five centuries of Venetian historyNO
ReeseOnce Upon a Time in Dollywood, Ashley JordanGrieving playwright escapes to Tennessee mountains, falls for single-dad neighborNO
Service 95This House of Grief, Helen GarnerAustralian writer covers father’s murder trial of three drowned sonsNO
TeaTimeMake Your Way Home, Carrie R. MooreEleven stories: Black Southern lives reckoning with home and historyNO

September 2025

36 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousResting Bitch Face, Taylor ByasPoetry collection on Black female subjectivity, art, and the gazeNO
Barnes & NobleBuckeye, Patrick RyanTwo Ohio families’ intertwined secrets from WWII through VietnamNO
BBC Radio 2A Splintering, Dur e Aziz AmnaPakistani village woman’s burning ambition to escape into urban wealthNO
The Two Roberts, Damian BarrReal Scottish queer painters’ lives and love from 1933 onwardsNO
BelletristFinding Grace, Loretta RothschildWhen secrets surface, two women’s paths become dangerously intertwinedNO
Black Men ReadGrant Park, Leonard Pitts Jr.Race, terrorism, and the eve of Obama’s 2008 electionNO
Good HousekeepingMy Other Heart, Emma Nanami StrennerVietnamese mother’s vanished toddler and two Asian-American teen friends searching for identityNO
Good Morning America – Young AdultSisters in the Wind, Angeline BoulleyOjibwe foster teen on the run learns about the sister and family she never knew existedYES
I Care About BooksThe Poisonwood Bible, Barbara KingsolverBaptist missionary family in 1959 Belgian Congo, told by wife and four daughtersNO
Jack CarrThe Secret of Secrets, Dan BrownLangdon races through Prague to save Katherine Solomon and the secret of human consciousnessMAYBE
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionChildren of the Book, Ilana KurshanMother of five reflects on reading with her children in JerusalemNO
Late ShowPeople Like Us, Jason MottTwo Black writers’ stories merge against American gun violenceNO
Library ScienceThe Post Office Girl, Stefan ZweigPost-WWI Austria: post office clerk plucked into wealth, then droppedNO
Mocha Girls ReadFearless and Free, Josephine BakerIconic dancer-spy’s dictated memoir of Paris, war, and stardomNO
Natalie PortmanNo Straight Road Takes You There, Rebecca SolnitEssays on climate, women’s rights, democracy, and indirect paths of changeNO
Native AmericanNever Whistle at Night, Shane Hawk; Theodore C. Van Alst Jr.Twenty-six Indigenous authors’ horror stories on tradition, ghosts, and folkloreNO
Oprah 2.0All the Way to the River, Elizabeth GilbertMemoir of addictive love with her late best friend Rayya EliasNO
PBS BooksMexican Gothic, Silvia Moreno-Garcia1950s Mexican socialite confronts ancestral horrors in cousin’s haunted Anglo-colonial mountain mansionNO
The Bewitching, Silvia Moreno-GarciaThree women across three eras face witches in New England and rural MexicoNO
Poisoned Pen – BritishDeath in the Countryside, Maria MalonePolice sergeant and her spaniel investigate a missing wife in rural YorkshireNO
Poisoned Pen – CozyMrs. Christie at the Mystery Guild Library, Amanda ChapmanBook conservator and ‘Mrs. Christie’ team up to solve a Manhattan murderNO
Poisoned Pen – CrimeCrooks, Lou BerneyFour-decade saga of the Mercurio crime family pursuing the American dreamYES
Poisoned Pen – MysteryThe Glass Eel, J.J. ViertelMaine island thriller of black-market glass-eel poaching, addiction, and ecological noirNO
Under the Stars, Beatriz Williams1846 Atlantic steamship disaster echoes through modern Winthrop Island family reckoningNO
The Moon in the Mango Tree, Pamela Binnings Ewen1920s American opera singer follows missionary husband to Siam, sacrificing her careerNO
Poisoned Pen – NoirThe Gorgon of Los Feliz, Nolan KnightWelfare-kid grifter turns gumshoe across L.A., Vegas, Mojave underworldMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – RomanceThe Girl Next Door, Rachel MeredithReporter goes undercover to expose anonymous author of sapphic bestsellerYES
Read with JennaBuckeye, Patrick RyanTwo Ohio families’ intertwined secrets from WWII through VietnamNO
ReeseTo the Moon and Back, Eliana RamageFirst Cherokee astronaut’s ambition strains bonds with sister, mother, loverNO
Richard & JudyDead Simple, Peter JamesGroom buried alive in stag-night prank; the friends who know are deadMAYBE
Don’t Believe a Word, Susan LewisChristy Ward’s true-crime podcast investigates whether Sadie was stolen as a babyMAYBE
Marble Hall Murders, Anthony HorowitzSusan Ryeland reads a manuscript that encodes clues to a 20-year-old poisoningMAYBE
The Satsuma Complex, Bob MortimerLegal assistant chases vanished pub girl ‘Satsuma’ through South LondonMAYBE
The Shortlist, Andrew RaymondGlasgow DCI investigates a crime novelist’s murder at a Highland writers’ festivalMAYBE
Service 95The Trees, Percival EverettMississippi murders satirically reckon with America’s lynching legacyNO
TeaTimeThe Dilemmas of Working Women, Fumio YamamotoFive stories of Japanese women navigating work, illness, and marriageNO

October 2025

27 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousThe Wilderness, Angela FlournoyFive Black women navigate twenty years of friendship and midlifeNO
BBC Radio 2Artificial Wisdom, Thomas R. WeaverAI vs. ex-president in 2050 election amid climate apocalypseNO
BelletristWill There Ever Be Another You, Patricia LockwoodPandemic-era woman’s mind unravels under a mystifying chronic illnessNO
Black Men ReadOut There Screaming, Jordan (ed.) Peele; John Joseph (ed.) AdamsAll-new Black horror short stories edited by Jordan PeeleNO
Good HousekeepingWorkhorse, Caroline PalmerEditorial assistant claws her way up at a NYC fashion magazine in 2001NO
Good Morning America – Young AdultFake Skating, Lynn PainterChildhood sweethearts reunited in hockey-mad Minnesota for a fake-dating arrangementNO
I Care About BooksSlaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut Jr.POW witness to Dresden firebombing comes “unstuck in time”NO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionHostage, Eli SharabiIsraeli survivor’s memoir of 491 days in Hamas captivityNO
Late ShowWhat We Can Know, Ian McEwan2014 lost poem; 2119 academic in climate-shrunken Britain pieces it togetherNO
Library ScienceNymph, Stephanie LaCavaDaughter of assassins swerves love and courts an early deathNO
Mindy’s Book StudioI’ll Follow You, Charlene WangTwo friends share a viral social media persona that brings fame, danger and toxicityNO
Mocha Girls ReadRing Shout, P. Djeli ClarkBlack women monster-slayers hunt KKK demons in 1922 GeorgiaNO
Native AmericanI Am My Name, Na’kuset; Judith HendersonCree Sixties Scoop survivor’s picture-book journey to finding her familyNO
Oprah 2.0A Guardian and a Thief, Megha MajumdarTwo Kolkata families clash over stolen visas in climate-ravaged near-futureNO
PBS BooksThe Thursday Murder Club, Richard OsmanFour British retirees in a luxury retirement village solve a present-day murderMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – BritishBog Queen, Anna NorthForensic anthropologist’s bog-body discovery unearths an Iron Age druid’s storyNO
Poisoned Pen – CozyWitches of Dubious Origin, Jenn McKinlayLibrarian discovers she’s the last descendant of a family of witchesYES
Poisoned Pen – CrimeThe Librarians, Sherry ThomasFour quirky librarians band together when murder hits their Austin libraryYES
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalThe Gun Man Jackson Swagger, Stephen Hunter1890s Arizona Civil War vet sharpshooter investigates suspicious cowboy deathYES
Poisoned Pen – MysteryThe Confessions, Paul Bradley CarrWorld’s AI supercomputer goes offline; mass-mailed letters expose humanity’s darkest secretsMAYBE
Widow’s Point, Richard ChizmarCursed Nova Scotia lighthouse traps doomed thrill-seekers across 2017 and 2025 hauntingsNO
Midnight Burning, Paul Levine1937 Hollywood: Einstein and Chaplin fight Nazi insurrection with LAPD’s first Black female officerNO
Poisoned Pen – NoirWhat About the Bodies, Ken JaworowskiThree desperate lives collide in a rust-belt town through accidental violenceNO
Poisoned Pen – RomanceAnd Then There Was the One, Martha Waters1930s English village sleuth investigates a suspicious council chairman deathMAYBE
Read with JennaThe Irish Goodbye, Heather Aimee O’NeillThree adult sisters reunite over Thanksgiving; brother’s old boating tragedy still haunts the familyMAYBE
Service 95Flesh, David SzalayDetached Hungarian IstvΓ‘n’s life from housing estate to London eliteNO
TeaTimeThe Wilderness, Angela FlournoyFive Black women navigate twenty years of friendship and midlifeNO

November 2025

22 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousWe Survived the Night, Julian Brave NoiseCatIndigenous memoir, journalism, and Coyote storytelling on contemporary Native lifeNO
BBC Radio 2The Eleventh Hour, Salman RushdieFive Rushdie stories on mortality across India, England, AmericaNO
BelletristSimultaneous, Eric HeissererHomeland agent and therapist discover past-life patterns behind serial killingsNO
Black Men ReadIsaac’s Song, Daniel BlackGay Black man processes father’s legacy in 1980s ChicagoNO
Good Morning America – AdultWreck, Catherine NewmanAnxious mom Rocky’s life upended by a local fatal accident and a mystery spreading rashNO
Good Morning America – Young AdultColdwire, Chloe GongCyberpunk dystopia where the wealthy live in virtual upcountry while the poor rot in downcountryNO
Jack CarrExit Strategy, Lee Child; Andrew ChildReacher follows a stranger’s plea-for-help note into a Baltimore conspiracyYES
Jewish Book Council – FictionI Wanted to Be Wonderful, Lihi LapidTwo intertwined stories of early marriage and motherhood, one autobiographicalNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionHeart of a Stranger, Angela BuchdahlFirst Asian American rabbi’s memoir on identity, faith, and belongingNO
Late ShowThis Is Happiness, Niall WilliamsComing-of-age in 1950s Ireland as electricity arrives in a Clare villageNO
Mocha Girls ReadBlack AF History, Michael HarriotComedic, incisive retelling of American history centered on Black experienceNO
Natalie PortmanFather Figure, Emma ForrestScholarship student’s dangerous entanglement with classmate’s wealthy, haunted fatherNO
Native AmericanTurtle Island, Sean ShermanOglala Lakota chef’s regional cookbook of Indigenous North American foodsYES
PBS BooksAmerica’s First Daughter, Stephanie Dray; Laura KamoieThomas Jefferson’s daughter Patsy shapes her father’s legacy from Paris to MonticelloNO
My Dear Hamilton, Stephanie Dray; Laura KamoieEliza Schuyler Hamilton’s life as patriot, wife, and widow preserving Alexander’s legacyNO
Poisoned Pen – BritishThe Dentist, Tim SullivanBristol detective on the autism spectrum investigates a homeless man’s stranglingMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – CozyThe Botanist’s Assistant, Peggy TownsendLab assistant investigates her botanist boss’s suspicious death at a universityNO
Poisoned Pen – MysteryThe First Witch of Boston, Andrea Catalano1648 Boston: midwife Maggie Jones becomes Massachusetts Bay Colony’s first woman hanged as witchNO
Poisoned Pen – NoirThe Red Scare Murders, Con Lehane1950s blacklisted PI fights to save innocent Black man from executionMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – RomanceChristmas People, Iva-Marie PalmerCynical screenwriter wakes inside a Hallmark Christmas movie of her hometownNO
Read with JennaCursed Daughters, Oyinkan BraithwaiteLagos woman fights family curse and belief in cousin’s reincarnationNO
Service 95The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret AtwoodAtwood’s dystopian Gilead: women enslaved as forced surrogatesNO

December 2025

26 rows

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousCursed Daughters, Oyinkan BraithwaiteLagos woman fights family curse and belief in cousin’s reincarnationNO
BBC Radio 2The Merge, Grace WalkerDaughter merges consciousness with Alzheimer’s mother in dystopian futureNO
The White Octopus Hotel, Alexandra BellTime-travel romance through magical 1935 Swiss Alps hotelYES
BelletristLightbreakers, Aja GabelGrief and time travel: physicist tries to relive memories of his dead daughterYES
Good Morning America – Young AdultThere’s Always Next Year, George M. Johnson; Leah JohnsonYA holiday romcom β€” New Year’s Eve catastrophe, dual POV, two love stories in a small townMAYBE
Jack CarrThe Tin Men, Alex DeMille; Nelson DeMilleArmy CID agents investigate murder at a Mojave AI/robot warfare baseMAYBE
Jewish Book Council – FictionHunting in America, Tehila HakimiIsraeli woman on US tech assignment becomes hunter, predator, and preyNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionBeyond Dispute, Daniel TaubIsraeli diplomat draws on Talmud for art of constructive disagreementNO
Late ShowBeasts of the Sea, Iida TurpeinenSteller’s sea cow from 1741 discovery to extinction to museum restorationNO
Mocha Girls ReadSpilling the Tea, Brenda Jackson90-something matriarch plays matchmaker for injured veteran great-grandsonNO
Native AmericanThe Bone Thief, Vanessa LillieBIA archaeologist hunts stolen ancestral remains amid Native teen’s disappearanceMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – BritishMiss Winter in the Library with a Knife, Martin EdwardsSix contestants compete in a Cluedo-style Christmas murder mystery in YorkshireMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – CozyThe Snow Lies Deep, Paula MunierEx-MP and her retired bomb-sniffing dog investigate a Vermont Christmas murderNO
Poisoned Pen – CrimeEverybody Wants to Rule the World, Ace Atkins1985 teen suspects his mom’s new boyfriend is a KGB spyNO
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalThe Secret Sharers, Xiaolong QiuRetired Shanghai inspector helps locate a wealthy woman’s missing past loverMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – MysteryWreck, Catherine NewmanAnxious mom Rocky’s life upended by a local fatal accident and a mystery spreading rashNO
Blood and Treasure, Ryan PoteSabotaged ISS and ancient Ark of the Covenant collide for ex-Navy treasure hunter Ethan CainNO
Holy Island, L.J. RossTidal Lindisfarne murder pulls sabbatical DCI Maxwell Ryan back into pagan-ritual investigationMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – NoirOnly Way Out, Tod GoldbergCrooked cop pockets a dead thief’s millions, then the family arrivesYES
Poisoned Pen – RomanceThe Marriage Method, Mimi MatthewsSchoolteacher marries newspaperman amid Victorian conspiracy and murder investigationMAYBE
Read with JennaPride and Prejudice, Jane AustenRegency comedy of manners: Elizabeth Bennet’s wit meets Mr Darcy’s prideMAYBE
Reader’s DigestBefore I Forget, Tory Henwood HoenStalled 26-year-old daughter caregives her Alzheimer’s-stricken father at his Adirondack lake houseMAYBE
ReeseThe Heir Apparent, Rebecca ArmitagePrincess in Australian exile inherits British throne, must choose duty or loveNO
Richard & JudyMe and Mr. Darcy, Alexandra PotterRomantic on a Jane Austen tour bus meets the real Mr. DarcyNO
The Lucky Winners, K.L. SlaterCash-strapped couple wins national dream-house raffle; their prize becomes a nightmareMAYBE
TeaTimeThirst Trap, Grainne O’HareThree Belfast friends grieve a fourth as they approach thirtyMAYBE

And that’s a wrap on my retroactive curation. I hope you find some of the books in there intriguing enough to try, too!

My next post will clean up any gaps from January to April. πŸ™‚

Posted in Book Reviews | Leave a reply

Leveling up: Memes, postcards and flashcards

The PolyBlog
May 13 2026

So, I have two giant premises working against me here:

  1. My blogs are very heavily geared towards words.
  2. I am not, by nature, a visually creative person.

Yet, every guru on anything web-related has said the same thing for the last fifteen years — that blogs and posts are only successful with eye candy. I’ve played with the formats of posts over the years in certain categories, trying to get them to a set format that I could perhaps turn into infographics or memes or postcards, oh my!

As I near retirement, and will be spending even more time writing and blogging, I decided to do a formal review of different categories to see how I could up my game.

Reviews

On my website, I have reviews of books, movies, TV episodes and seasons, and music, plus I have dabbled with the idea of reviewing podcasts. Highly text-based, maybe a visual in terms of something to identify the product — a book cover, a movie poster, a still from the TV episode, cover art from the album. But most visuals that are “out there in the world” are about the size of a 4×6″ photograph or postcard. Once you get past a few lines or a couple of headings, the text starts to get so small as to be unwieldy. All of my reviews are longer than that.

Book reviews are the most well-defined review type for me in my blog, with over 300 on file. I include a title with a rating, the year it was published, and the year of the review. Then, for the detailed review, I include a basic plot/premise, what I liked and didn’t like, any disclosure, and a one-line finishing line. I have also included images of the covers of the books. I could fit about 20% of my reviews on a postcard-sized layout, and that’s assuming my review is REALLY short. Most of them are not.

Looking at what else is out there, most alternatives take ONE of those elements and make it large. The cover, the text (200 words), half/half (text is about 40 words), carousels (strong hook on first card, maximum 3 cards for maintaining interest), or a thumbs up / thumbs down vibe. Or just the rating, sitting centre-stage (like for music reviews). Essentially, the real “outcome” of the comparison process is to realize that I can do three things:

  • Make a consistent format and stick to it;
  • If text doesn’t fit, make it fit OR treat it like a teaser to the website; and/or,
  • Decide how to handle the “branding elements” (ratings format, graphics for the book cover) which is often either consistent with the original cover or uniquely and consistently rebranded (cropping, recoloured, whatever).

I want to design “something”, likely with the cover embedded somehow. Maybe a frog-themed “presentation”.

I came up with a simple background, added the main parts of my book reviews, designed a consistent format, and some taglines, added a new frog image…and meh. They’re just blah. Someone might read them, they might not, but there’s nothing on them that will wow anyone. It’s really just my website review in a different format. There are lots of examples out there for Instagram or Pinterest, but my reviews aren’t really like any of them. As I said, they’re heavy-text, sure, but they’re also content-rich, not visual-rich. So “the simple option” of a consistent format and “making it fit” really doesn’t work.

Instead, I’m going to go with a teaser…I’ll include the cover at larger size, some froggy “chrome” (the parts around the content that signal PolyWogg/ThePolyBlog), and a call to arms … or to clicking mice to visit my website.

Movie reviews, TV reviews, music reviews, any other reviews…they all suffer the same limitations. I need a “teaser” card, not a full card.

For Music, most “reviews” are long-form publications, video reviews, podcasts, or tweets about charts. Very few include any sort of “rating” system, and many specialize in a specific genre to build credibility and followers.

For Movies, a lot of the sites are more aggregator sites like Rotten Tomatoes, showcasing accumulated ratings and taglines. If there is much else shared, it is often more long-form web posts or video clips.

For Video Games and Board Games, areas that I’m not yet reviewing, there are a lot of YouTube items, or the Playtography site from Singapore, with multiple high-quality images and instructions per game. I like the idea of something larger, but I think if I do these, I’ll have to settle for teasers to longer-form info on the website. Interestingly, game “badges” seem to replace traditional visual ratings systems in many of the good sites.

Teachable moments

I have a separate desire for “cards” of some sort related to teachable moments and materials. Take, for example, astrophotography. I would like to do simple AP cards, taken with my smartphone and telescope to show “this is what you see”. Maybe I’ll include a better photo inset to show what a longer exposure can get you; or maybe it’s the opposite, a high-quality photo with a smartphone picture inset. Or maybe it’s just the smartphone image along with the basic EXIF style data of settings, duration, etc. that produced the photo. I want to use a similar approach in my “intro to astronomy” books, but they would work well as a set of flashcards too. So people know what to expect when they’re expecting to see Star Trek-style and instead get black and white images more reminiscent of a dot matrix printer than a high-res copier. In part, what I want to compete against is the high-end video- or image-first feeds out there that show what you can get as an expert with too much time on your hands. On the smaller side, I’d like “baseball cards” for astronomy. Collect all your favourite galaxy clusters! Very few sites out there outside of commercial companies are doing picture-with-metadata. Starwalk probably comes the closest, although they’re also marketing their app, of course. Well, not including NASA or Astronomy Magazine / Sky & Telescope articles. What I don’t know is if I want to do star charts too, or guides to types of scopes, or even make the cards reversible. If they’re just photos, they can be postcard-sized; if I want teachable info, they likely go flashcard size.

I feel a similar desire around Photography in general. Part of me wants to share what I learn as I go, aka how to get off manual mode and take better pictures. And turn that into stuff that budding photographers might also find helpful / useful. Some of that might even be more software-oriented — how to process your photos or astrophotos in GIMP. I think all of those are more likely to be flashcard-size than postcards. And the vast majority of the rest of the field have moved to short-video, not text or cards.

If I go more general, teaching for software tools tends to be more video-based than anything else. Showing people — literally — how to do things in software. AI cards are becoming increasingly common, but so are long-form explanations. I’m intrigued by the various sites that generate strong content only in the form of infographics (e.g., HR on LinkedIn). Some use an “I’m an expert” voice; others are more like me, learning as they go (peer voice). Still others are more unique, with an entertainment voice or a humour voice, for example. Very few have a mascot, like my frog. More professional, less personal voice.

I have to confess. I would also love to have a series on writing. Maybe excerpts of adapted beat sheets from Save the Cat. Heroes’ Journey arcs. Summaries of tips from various writing books. There are some great bloggers out there on the writing life:

  • Jane Friedman (tips);
  • John Scalzi (writing life);
  • Austin Kleon (the writing life);
  • School of Plot (mostly fantasy craft);
  • K.M. Weiland (structuring);
  • Ann Handley (business and marketing);
  • Abbie Emmons (story craft for fiction);
  • Quill and Ink Society (a bit aggregator-ish, but consistent style to tips and resources);
  • Writing Prompts (on Instagram);
  • Tips for Writers (kind of similar to what I was thinking, albeit their version is a bit more aggregator-ish than personal);
  • Save the Cat (beats, of course);
  • Shawn Coyne (Story grid, more of an editorial methodology);
  • Chuck Wendig (working writer);
  • Writers Helping Writers;
  • Writer Unboxed;
  • Anne R. Allen (guidebook author);
  • The Brevity Blog (non-fiction writing);
  • Joanna Penn (indie publishing);
  • Welcome to the Writer’s Life;
  • The Marginalian (writing about reading); and,
  • Cal Newport (study hacks).

There are lots of tips and writing prompts; a few are broken down into reusable flashcards. I don’t quite know if I’m thinking of postcards or flashcards yet. Too soon to tell. But I do have some sub-categories to think about:

  1. Fiction craft (tips, lessons, plot, character, dialogue, voice, drafting, editing, etc.);
  2. The writing life (including creativity, inspiration, etc.);
  3. Business of writing and publishing (including marketing, self-publishing, etc.);
  4. Reading (including reviews, books in general, etc.);
  5. AI (as the devil or saint);
  6. Online resources;
  7. Non-fiction craft (tips, lessons, argument, evidence, framing, reframes, voice, etc.);

It will be a while before I can level up in some of those categories. But at least I have a LIST of the categories.

Recipes

In contrast to the above categories, recipe cards are overwhelmingly represented on the web. There is nothing new under the sun, so to speak, and EVERYTHING is relatively homogenous — ingredients on the left, instructions on the right. Different sites offer pictures of the meal if/when you print it out; some include it in a web app or full app; some include different styles of time estimates; some allow you to alter serving size, which then attempts to alter the ingredient totals; and some have designated “genre” or “difficulty” ratings. Or the type of meal — breakfast, lunch, dinner, appetizer, dessert, etc.

But the format is not that variable. What is variable is whether you produce full recipe cards that can be shared (the relative standard within a site) or teaser cards that lead to the site. Most use teaser cards to drive traffic to the site. And then have 10,000 ads when all you need is a recipe. Pages and pages of scrolling past pablum about their late Aunt Martha’s preference for paprika from one specific store that has nothing to do with the recipe, other than that the recipe happens to include paprika. The content is just there to give space to ads around it and drive revenue for the expensive sites. I hate them with a passion, honestly. Interestingly, almost all include a link labelled “Jump to the recipe.” Is there anyone who DOESN’T jump? Doesn’t matter, the ads still load, they get paid. Whatever. I don’t have ads, I will never have ads, I never want ads. I might have links to websites that I really like, but that’s just sidebar design.

I want to print all my recipes, but I’ve been stuck on a format for quite some time. So I stalled out. However, Andrea and Jacob gave me a special recipe book setup for Christmas this past year, and I’m going to start formatting and putting the good ones in the binder. πŸ™‚

And establishing some cards to go with it. However, I suck at doing “method as photos” while making them, and most of the time, I can’t even remember to take a picture of the final product. Plus, I need to work on the presentation. Anyway, I could install some nice little plugins to format everything for me, AND generate recipe cards for me, and all it costs me is $100 a year. Hmm…not likely. Let’s put a pin in that for now.

Humour and Quotes

Okay, so after all that, I’m back to the beginning. My real problem is not quotes. I know what the quotes can look like, put them on a postcard, make them shareable, just have to spruce it up more. Make it a bit more visually appealing than what I have (text on a bordered background with an alt text add-on for searchability). Boring.

For Humour, I was trying to figure out what to do with some of the long jokes…I was seeing it too much as an all or nothing style. If it’s short enough to go on a shareable meme, it can. If not, some of them may go on teaser cards, all postcard-sized. That took way more time to figure out that it should have.

I was curious, though, in the humour category, to see if there was anyone else there focused on retirement humour that went past sex-crazed snowbirds or old-age homes, or men wearing black socks, or false teeth issues. Aunty Acid is one, Maxine is another. Although they do trend at times towards “grumpy old woman” / wine / yoga pants / naps motif. I found The New 60…click through to see the blog and the latest entries, they’re quite good.

Pickles and Flo & Friends are decent, although a bit too snarky for my tastes. I also tripped over Oldster Magazine (already mentioned in a previous post, I think).

And that’s the ballgame for now.

Some good ideas, and some stuff resolved. Not a bad situation.

Posted in Computers | Leave a reply

Leveling up: Retirement content

The PolyBlog
May 6 2026

As I mentioned yesterday, I’m doing a “content” review of my websites to see if there are areas I should be expanding or contracting, comparing them to other blogs and posts that are out there. I would like to do more on retirement as I transition out of the public service, but I am always conscious of my voice. What do I bring to the discussion that others might not?

One area that I’m interested in is the psychology of retirement. Topics such as how people mentally prepare for retirement, how they frame the decision…do they see it as parole from a long jail sentence or graduation from a long tenured role or simply a celebration of their past accomplishments? Is it a transition — both sweet and sad — as they say goodbye to one domain and hello to another?

Oddly enough, despite my normal types of blogs, I have no interest in blogging about “the how” of retirement. I don’t want to talk about finances or pensions or forms or anything like that. I am interested in the experience, not the process. There are far better people out there on process. If it was something people did regularly, a transition that occurred such as you would experience changing departments, it might interest me. One-offs? Not so much.

As I started looking at some of the blogs that were out there, I found a lot about social security, Medicare in the US. OAS and CPP, etc., none of which are particularly of interest to me as a blogger. Instead, most of what I found that might be anywhere near my style is more that of long-form essayists building frames than bloggers dashing off quick hits.

The wish that was

It doesn’t take long in this space to come across the late Ronni Bennett (Time Goes By). Alas, she passed away in 2020, apparently, and her archived website is now triggering phishing warnings in two different security software programs that I’m running. No worries, there are LOTS of other essays she wrote in other sites, and they’re all good. I almost wish I was looking for stuff ten years ago and could have found her stuff as it was being published. Alas, ten years ago, I wouldn’t have appreciated it as much. And yet, reading back to a post (through the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine) she wrote on June 15, 2020 (coincidentally my birthday of the year in which the world shut down):

I have always used writing to figure out what I think or believe and at this stage, there is a diminishing number of productive hours in a day. So here we are – an exercise in working out my thoughts and a blog post, all in one.

This was part of her Crabby Old Lady persona posts, and included the news that she was within the last six months to go. Short. Poignant. Resonance. A glimpse inside a heart as it actively beats, reverberating loudly in the quiet and increasing darkness. One can aspire to such beauty.

Wisdom of (an individual in) the crowd

Sara Botton runs the Oldster Magazine site, which is more of a digital collection than a traditional magazine, focusing on people aging, at whatever age. How we live, how we die, and everything in between. She has taken a structured approach to interviewing lots of famous people with a subversive “questionnaire”. Some questions resonate with one interviewee, some with another.

  1. How old are you?
  2. Is there another age you associate with yourself in your mind? If so, what is it? And why, do you think?
  3. Do you feel old for your age? Young for your age? Just right? Are you in step with your peers?
  4. What do you like about being your age?
  5. What is difficult about being your age?
  6. What is surprising about being your age, or different from what you expected, based on what you were told?
  7. What has aging given you? Taken away from you?
  8. How has getting older affected your sense of yourself, or your identity?
  9. What are some age-related milestones you are looking forward to? Or ones you “missed,” and might try to reach later, off-schedule, according to our culture and its expectations?
  10. What has been your favorite age so far, and why? Would you go back to this age if you could?
  11. Is there someone who is older than you, who makes growing older inspiring to you? Who is your aging idol and why?
  12. What aging-related adjustments have you recently made, style-wise, beauty-wise, health-wise?
  13. What’s an aging-related adjustment you refuse to make, and why?
  14. What’s your philosophy on celebrating birthdays as an adult? How do you celebrate yours?

Do you see what’s NOT in that list? Anything about retirement, work, money, marriage, children, regrets, death, etc. It’s not about benchmarks or hallmarks, it’s about how you feel right now. That’s kind of powerful.

For me, I’d be more interested in how people approached retirement (expectations), what it was like (voluntary or not, reality of process), negative “outcomes” you sought to avoid, stuff you miss and stuff you are glad to have gone, what does busy look like in your life now, current source of purpose, how have your friends group shifted if at all, any milestones you look forward to or dread, etc.

I could create my own questionnaire of sorts, I suppose. And I’d love to have such conversations with people. Something to think about.

Long-form essayists

Anne Lamott is more familiar to me for writing advice than for the long essays in Hallelujah, Anyway (on Substack) or the numerous books on faith, hope, etc. I have not seen her life-stage focus, or at least, I’ve never noticed it. Not quite a voice I would emulate, however beautiful and lyrical the prose. I admire the voice, but I don’t want to sing like her.

Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot’s work on the “third chapter” of life (ages 50-75) has been nothing short of groundbreaking, shifting the paradigm toward more productive conversations beyond retirement, slowing down, and/or declining health. I’ve added her books to my reading list (The Third Chapter, 2009; Exit, 2012; and Growing Each Other Up, 2016), although I confess I’m most interested in her thoughts on lifelong learning and embracing new things after 50.

Marc Freedman has a similar target audience — the age 50+ — but more on doing meaningful work. His work with Encore.org has all the marks of humanitarian creation, volunteering in retirement, etc. But I am not usually enamoured of the throughline. The argument, frequently, is “do meaningful work, improve your life”. Few question the logic, except that the logic is dependent that your “meaning” in life is from what you do, not what you experience. The service to others argument is indeed powerful, but it is the same argument that suggests every woman should be a mother, easily debunked. If you assume a good life is one that serves others, then serving others is a good way to have a meaningful life. The frame doesn’t hold for me, even if I admire the ethic. It’s part of the answer, but I have never felt it was the whole answer. Too simplistic, in my mind. Not simplistic for everyone, not in a normative sense, I just mean it doesn’t resonate enough with me.

I think what bothers me most, in a simplified way, is the idea of defining your worth in terms of meeting other people’s needs. It is a particularly utilitarian way of looking at life — and a slippery slope to saying other people are only of value if they serve me in some way too. That’s not the message, I know. But it is partly why it doesn’t resonate with me. I think a well-lived life is more about choosing a path, and adhering to it against adversity. Looking for truth in any form you can discover it. Service is one way, but not the only way. Which, of course, won’t stop me from reading his work and learning any applicable lesson I can. πŸ™‚

Tyler Cowen co-created the Marginal Revolution (Small Steps Toward A Much Better World) and the content is glorious. Everything anyone ever wanted to learn about economics is in plain language and free. Unless you buy the textbook. The scope is ambitious, the result is stupendous. And envy-inviting. I could only dream of creating something so significant. And he’s blogged every day since 2003, although he is a bit more succinct than I, and he seems to curate more these days than write. But what does he have to do with retirement? Nothing, really, so much as he does talk about productivity over the life-course. I’m not sure if that will hold as an ancillary lens for me, but it’s worth checking out in more detail. And if not, well, who doesn’t like learning about economics?

Mary Catherine Bateson’s point-of-view of “adulthood II” is compelling as a metaphor, as is the idea of life being a composition. But when she embraces the spirit of cultural anthropology, I find it merely interesting, not resonant.

That can’t be everybody

Of course not. There are literally hundreds of thousands of people out there blogging about various stages of life, but finding ones that are closer to my voice is a bit harder than a pure Google search. And what I avoided were ones with singular niches or specialties. Sports in retirement. Dancing in retirement. Travel in retirement. Sex in retirement. Finances in retirement. That’s not what I’m looking for, nor what I’m likely to focus on. As I said above, lifelong learning is more likely to be my slant than anything else.

And yet searching for that will basically just turn up enormous numbers of sites with ads to “learn with them as a mature adult”. I’ve already blogged about all my learning considerations and options when I retire. And whether I might take a Transitional Support Measure to do some formal learning.

Tom Vanderbilt’s approach in “Beginners: The Joy and Transformative Power of Lifelong Learning” (2021) focuses on a year of doing new things, which is intriguing as an initial premise, but not near long enough to judge a framework.

Although, maybe I’m too quick to discount the ads. There is the Osher Lifelong Learning Institutes (OLLIs) in the US that used to be “Institutes for Learning in Retirement”; the UK and France created the University of the Third Age which is more international now; and there are some examples in Canada. Perhaps worth a look.

I also should perhaps pull my head out of the retirement space to reframe the lifelong learning component and see what others are writing about for lifelong learning BEFORE retirement. People like Cal Newport; Andy Matuschak; Maggie Appleton; or Michael Nielsen. Not quite sure they’re worth the time investment to dive deep or not, as they are often focused on the nature of adult learning itself, which is only part of the issue for me. Although I **DO** have other non-fiction writing that would benefit from that lens, and some of Cal Newport’s work is already in my TBR pile.

I thought I would find more of a definitive resonant source to read. Instead, I found fragmented stuff, all of which are potential rabbit holes for me. The economic stuff alone could consume a year of fun reading. No, I’m serious. πŸ™‚

Useful starting points though.

Posted in Computers, Learning and Ideas | Leave a reply

Leveling up: Government content

The PolyBlog
May 4 2026

Let me start by saying I like my websites. Sure, there are always things I could tweak here or there, or it could be on a faster server, or it could be more SEO friendly. I’d love to host videos inline without jacking the server costs. But overall, I like my two froggy homes. ThePolyBlog for my personal stuff and PolyWogg for my more professional stuff. Or, to steal from someone else’s framing that I like, the first is for me and the second is for others.

That doesn’t mean, though, that I don’t take it seriously. There are almost 2M words on the two sites, and more than a few regular followers. Which is rare for a long-form personal blog. As I near retirement, I wanted to do an honest review of my content against what other people in similar or adjacent spheres were doing. Both to help me understand my positioning as well as potentially give me ideas for opportunities I’m not exploiting. Most of that review is done. Let’s see where I’m at.

Insight into government

I naively thought there might be more sites like mine out there blogging about government life, how government works, etc. Insider looks from a public administration mindset. Government 101 perhaps. Maybe not a lot in Canada, but around the world? Average people like, well, me? Surely there would be some in Australia, US, UK, maybe New Zealand.

In Canada, I quickly tripped over Michael Wernick’s “Governing Canada”, which I had already read. It’s a good find as I do admire some of his style and his ability to remain apolitical in his descriptions (which reviewers decry). Except it was a little too white bread treatment, even for my tastes.

Donald Savoie is a huge Canadian voice, with books, Policy Options essays, etc. They’re practically a whole genre unto themselves. And yet, they don’t land with me as strongly as they should. A little too theoretical, upbeat? Not enough grit perhaps? Not sure.

Sam Freedman’s stuff on Substack (Comment is Freed) and his book (Failed State). A little too British-specific to catch my attention, but quite popular. And long form (many posts > 3000 words!). Except it is far more political than I would want. Predictions on elections, analysis of races, analysis of political positions in various cases. Not my cup of tea, normally. Yawn.

Ian Dunt has Striking 13 on Substack, books and podcasts (oh my!). Finding him was like finding buried treasure. I’ve marked his book,Β How Westminster Works… and Why It Doesn’t,Β for later, although I’ve already skimmed a few chapters. I was super excited about the first bits, until I realized the general thread of “how it works” seems similar to some books written in the Maritimes in Canada — government is stupid because politicians are stupid and do stupid things. Not really my jam. I know why people believe that, I know why people like that line…I’m just not one of them. A little too angry a line for me. Maybe 10% will be useful for me to think about for future topics.

Martin Stanley is a little too Mandarin-ish by contrast. Amazing stuff, from the https://civilservant.org.uk/ website to the Substack. I’ve bookmarked his book, “How to be a Civil Servant” for later. Mostly as I want to see what he has to say about running policy teams. And he has the right tone — this is “how it works” with some analysis of limits and perks, but not angry. Definitely a tone I aspire to match.

I had not seen Jen Pahlka’s work before, or maybe I dismissed it as too US-centric, not sure. The name was familiar, but I had not specifically seen her “Recoding America” stuff before. Digital service delivery is mostly outside of my purview, but I’ll take a look.

David Eaves stuff for Canada is a bit more data-ish, even more than Pahlka, probably more than I’ll enjoy, but I’ll also take a gander.

And then I run out of options that I’m likely to emulate.

Future options

I know I want to write about skills, performance, Government 101, audits, HR and life as a manager. I already know my voice for most of those, and maybe about 10% of the above will help flesh out the 101 stuff and life as a manager. The rest? That’s mostly on me. And some books, of course. Lots of books. I was just hoping to find other writers fighting government monsters and gazing long enough into the abyss that the abyss has begun to start gazing back into them. A few abyss dwellers. And me. Alone in my pond. Typing away. πŸ™‚ I assumed my voice was rare; I didn’t think my croaking was unique. Ribbit.

Posted in Computers | 2 Replies

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