Sunday, September 21, 2025

adding historical fiction to my currently reading + journaling while reading

adding this book to my currently reading

In the interest of easily digestible entertainment, I added this highly suggested 1989 historical fiction novel by British novelist Ken Follett. I had a used copy on my shelf and a fellow reading friend read and enjoyed it.

I haven't read a lot of historical fiction, but this mammoth of a novel has started out with that traditionally genre-esque descriptions that I am not that used to because I read so much literary fiction; however, I am enjoying it. So long as it doesn't branch into extreme violence against women and/or children, I will definitely. 

Here's the novel's description:

Against this richly imagined and intricately interwoven backdrop, filled with the ravages of war and the rhythms of daily life, the master storyteller draws the reader irresistibly into the intertwined lives of his characters into their dreams, their labors, and their loves: Tom, the master builder; Aliena, the ravishingly beautiful noblewoman; Philip, the prior of Kingsbridge; Jack, the artist in stone; and Ellen, the woman of the forest who casts a terrifying curse. From humble stonemason to imperious monarch, each character is brought vividly to life.

The building of the cathedral, with the almost eerie artistry of the unschooled stonemasons, is the center of the drama. Around the site of the construction, Follett weaves a story of betrayal, revenge, and love, which begins with the public hanging of an innocent man and ends with the humiliation of a king.

 

I will do a review when I am done, and there are a few novels in this series, and if I enjoy it.


kingsbridge book series

Journaling While Reading


I've taken to paper journaling in one of my hardback journals while reading my classics. Only novels that I feel I will reread make it into my hardback journal, and I am adamant on keeping the feelings of my reads in one place to glance back on.

This practice is an accompaniment to my slow reading life. If I were trying to rush through novels, I couldn't ever do this. If you've ever considered journaling about what you are reading, I highly suggest it. Get a notebook that you will use only for this purpose. Don't worry about it being fancy or even showing it to anyone. Just write down how the novels you read move and change you. In a year's time you will be so glad that you did. 

Saturday, September 20, 2025

poetry pause: autumn thought:: langston hughes

stockphoto: of autumn themed coffee and fall leaves


 Autumn Thought

Flowers are happy in summer;
In autumn they die and are blown
away.

   Dry and withered,
Their petals dance on the wind,
Like little brown butterflies.

-Langston Hughes

Friday, September 19, 2025

paperback jane austen haul + always reading austen

I have given away more copies of Jane Austen than anyone I know. I mean, I am borderline evangelist with the message that everyone should at least try reading Jane Austen.

At risk of this post turning into a Jane Austen outreach mission, I'll just say that nothing beats the feeling of annotating and tabbing a new paperback of your favorite novel. That spine cracking sound (yes I am a heathen who breaks spines and LOVES it), gathering tabs that match the book cover and just having a ball dropping down into those familiar lines...

It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a fortune, must be in want of a wife. (Pride and Prejudice)


love these covers. simple + stunning


This Fall I will be rereading Northanger Abbey. This one of Austen's novels does not get nearly enough love. Or maybe it does, I haven't noticed. Everyone's adoration (well deserved) for Pride and Prejudice and Emma, often overshadow the simplicity of Northanger Abbey or the silent moving resignation of Persuasion (my favorite of Austen's).


both of these deserve rereads next

Always Reading Austen


Yes. It is true. It isn't a typo and I can honestly say I love always reading something by Austen. 

I've written about how I use audiobooks, and I pretty much keep an Austen on audio at all times. When I can't sleep, I put on Pride and Prejudice and laugh at Mr. Collins' proposal and it helps every time. 

There is something comforting and warm about returning to the same stories over and over again. The same is true for some of my favorite works by Tolstoy and James Baldwin. 

Knowing what to expect- feeling safe within the story line- eliminating the emotional highs and lows that fiction brings- are all reasons I return over and over again to Austen's works.

People get mired in ideas about perfection when it comes to Regency Era fiction or reading the classics in general, and I say pick up the novels and have fun. Austen is supernaturally hilarious and just seeing her view on friendship, family, relationships, etc. is just so funny. It interesting how much has not changed about the way humans relate to one another. 

 I've stacked them nicely on top of my other paperbacks for safe keeping as I resist the urge to open each and read my favorite parts.

If you've never given your favorite novel to a friend after annotating and tabbing it, it is not only a great experience, but a chance to get another paperback and do it all over again.

Thursday, September 18, 2025

september coffee and slow reading

Well, August came and went and September is half gone by. Aside from stating the obvious, I have been finding a great deal of solace in reading. Slow reading. Deep reading. Re-reading (my favorite pastime).

Funnily enough, the news and state of the world is so heavy that I've found myself needing to keep up with some of the news, but that means I need the depth that good literature brings to me even more.

a few of my morning 


I sit in the morning with a piping hot cup of pour over. After a short stint and few wasted hundred dollars in two brand new Nespresso machines, I returned to my love of freshly baked, direct-trade, fairly waged coffee and I have never felt more whole.

The idea that saving 15 minutes in the morning was worth drinking conventionally grown, old coffee with no filter was a mistake I wish I could go back in time and undo, alas here we are. If you are a Nespresso lover, help me understand it. AND all that unfiltered coffee is a sure way for my LDL to raise, but now my age is showing. (No shame there).

Slow Reading Mornings


My early mornings are a bit cooler and while my water is boiling for my pour over, I stand and read a poem or a few pages from one of my ereaders or one of The Letters of Gustave Flaubert which has turned into one of my favorite reads of this year so far. I am not even sure I will finish it in 2025.




I know it's beneficial to drink my coffee and get to my work, but my slow reading philosophy promotes reading in my free time, and once I sink down into something great, I want to wait until the chapter is over before getting started with the heavy day.

I've been reading poetry, making coffee, drinking lots of tea, journaling and keeping one audiobook going at a time, and baking lots of new dishes. 

What I've been valuing  

  1. Slow mornings
  2. Pour overs
  3. Early mornings
  4. Baking
  5. Decorating
  6. Silent Time
  7. Decluttering
  8. Fall scented candles
It's easy to get lost in all of the chaos of the world, and lots of anger is palpable in the street, but I won't give away my soul. My inner peace is invaluable, and reading brings me so much inner silence. 

Moving through September, I am working towards a reality that includes space and time (both in my physical world and mentally) to watch good films, read great literature, writing more intensely and quite frankly moving towards a reality where the stress that a new venture (soon to end), and all of the craziness that the world keeps providing, is muted. 

2024 Reading Intentions

I love a good goal. :) However, setting intentions is so much better. It's an energetic exchange. A crafting of a lifestyle... As a qui...