Showing posts with label book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book. Show all posts

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Fight Fate or Accept It?


I love that most of my Book Club reads are interesting, entertaining, and thought-provoking. Today we discussed our June book – Here One Moment.

I've read a few Liane Moriarty books and they always have so many interesting twists. We all enjoyed this one, too.

Let me set the stage: Imagine being on an airplane and some random woman – whose mother was a self-proclaimed psychic – walks down the aisle and stops at your row of seats and tells you exactly when and how you are going to die. That's how the book starts.

And no matter how it all ends – no spoiler alerts here – we realize that even if we can't 100% fight fate, we don't have to accept it either. We can take action to increase the odds that certain things don't have to happen. 

And in retrospect, realize we are living life to the fullest with no regrets. That's not always our mindset so I like when a book sort of kicks us in the backside to start thinking that way.

Of course that begs the question: Have any of YOU visited a psychic or medium? And what did you think about/act on based on what you heard? 

I've never been interested in that, but after this book, I'm more open-minded... and wondering. 

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Jumping into a Busy Tuesday


Not that there is anything more important than you, my dear readers, but I am beat after quite a full day.

Work was a bit chaotic because we had a new member of our team and the mother hen in me always wants to go overboard to be sure they're welcomed and know their way around.

From work, I went straight to Nekoosa for their track meet so I could finally get the "field" part of a Track & Field meet pictures of our Royals. Got what I could before my next engagement.

Book Club.

We were discussing my book "The Last Secret of the Soul" at R&R Patio and Bar (formerly Joker's). The book is a novel a point of view of a 10-year-old boy and how he gets through the holocaust, etc., near the end of World War II. Our group has done several different WWII novels but not from the point of view of a child, so it was interesting.

My next engagement?

Well, as I mentioned we have a new member on our writing team, so of course that calls for a trifle. I have to do the finishing touches so that is why it is not photo ready at 10 p.m.

I also need some sleep. Quite the full day for a Tuesday. The rest of the week can feel free to slow down. Am I right?!

Sunday, March 23, 2025

Deja No Thank You


Since the winter storm came through on Wednesday, we had choir practice at 8:15 a.m. today before church. Little did I realize we'd have the same weather exiting church today. Mr. Deck Chair was not a fan.

Yup, all day on and off again snow and sleet. With a mix of a ton of NCAA hoops on TV. 

Later in the day, I finally decided to watch a movie on Netflix that I'd read the book on. It Ends With Us was not fun to watch but it did match the disturbing storylines of the book. I guess that means I'll have to turn my attention to a different book tonight. 

Hope you all stayed safe traveling today. Please continue to wish for spring!

Friday, March 21, 2025

TGIMM (Thank God It's March Madness)

 

Of course I filled out a bracket at work. No cost so it's not illegal. We just have some interesting "traveling trophies."

Do I even know what I am doing? No. Does the competitive me still hope to win? Of course.

But I just pick a random upset here or there and see if it pans out – after no more than 3 seconds of picking each winner. Today Memphis lost and I had them set to win 2 more games. So I logged off and started my weekend pity party early.

And by party I mean taking a 2-mile walk with a friend and watching a few more episodes of The Crown while Jim works his church fish fry. I will watch Marquette tonight to support Wisconsin. But don't judge me if it's on mute and I am listening to an audio book.

March Madness means different things to different people. Good luck!

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Just Another Sun, er Snow Day


Thank God and doctors that my cough medicine I got last night helped me sleep. But unfortunately, I felt a little light-headed at church. So I sneaked out early and the rest of my day was editing hockey photos and listening to an audio book.

I also did a little crocheting to finish up a baby girl blanket for our brand new neighbor.

By then it was a bit of Wild Card action (most of you know how that turned out) and the beginning of a new book. 

Thank goodness it was Sunday and nothing is expected of any of us. Hope you had a similar experience and can go into Monday with a relaxed and energized attitude!

Monday, November 25, 2024

Stay-cation Day 1

Today was the official start to my Stay-cation. And I had low expectations as I do the rest of this week. 

I did get a little de-cluttering done in my office, but still have quite a ways to go. 



First of all, I was confused about it being Thanksgiving week when huge Christmas like flakes were falling. This happened for hours.

So I started making some treats for my family Christmas cookie exchange in a few weeks. Ended up being 100+ treats that I now will keep frozen until the second weekend in December. I also will add another kind of cookie or treat, too.

Tonight was my intro into the winter sports season. Seems like it's a shorter break each year. Tonight was Assumption Middle School hoops. I only got to shoot the 8th grade game at 4:30 p.m. because I had Book Club at 5:30 p.m. at Ida's.

We discussed my book tonight – Where Butterflies Wander – and it was nice. If you want to borrow my copy (it was 4.3+ out of 5 stars), let me know. A tragic but heartwarming story. 

The rest of the evening was editing those pictures (since we have high school hoops tomorrow). And now I may watch The Voice since I'm on stay-cation and can sleep in if it gets too late. We'll see.

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Up-Cycled and Uplifting


I'm guilty of disliking movie-makers who just recycle old movies instead of putting decent screnewriters to work to produce something new and exciting. But tonight I realized, what's old can be new again – when up-cycled the right way.

Case in point: The Best Christmas Pageant Ever movie.

Some Robyn-pedia background for you: The Best Christmas Pageant Ever (titled The Worst Kids in the World in Australia, New Zealand and the UK) is actually a children's novel written by Barbara Robinson way back in 1972. That's why the title sounds familiar. 

The book (and many movie and stage versions) all tell the story of six misfit children who volunteer to star in their town's Sunday school Christmas pageant, and end up teaching the town the true meaning of Christmas.

The 2024 movie version of it is both entertaining and inspiring. I was glad I could enjoy it tonight with some 70 people who signed up through my church to attend for free. Great crowd and great movie. Lots of laughter and even some tears. So well-made!

As a bonus I got popcorn for supper. I'm still eating from the Bland Foods Group. Lunch was a small order of french fries. And dinner was a small popcorn. Just right. 

If you get a chance to see this one this holiday season, do it! Also on my list is the Red One Christmas movie and, of course, WICKED! Popcorn might become more popular than turkey for dinner this month!


Monday, October 28, 2024

Mama Love

My book club has an amazing track record of picking out interesting books we often haven't heard of or think of reading. The 6 of us core members rotate choosing books each month so the group reads 2 of our choices per year. Mostly fiction, we occasionally have a good nonfiction title, too.

Such was the case for October and The Many Lives of Mama Love: A Memoir of Lying, Stealing, Writing, and Healing, where New York Times bestselling author Lara Love Hardin's memoir recounts her slide from soccer mom to opioid addict to jailhouse shot caller and her unlikely comeback as a highly successful ghostwriter.

If you haven't heard of it this year, here's the synopsis:

No one expects the police to knock on the door of the million-dollar two-story home of the perfect cul-de-sac housewife. But soccer mom Lara Love Hardin has been hiding a shady secret: she is funding her heroin addiction by stealing her neighbors’ credit cards.

Lara is convicted of 32 felonies and becomes inmate S32179. She finds that jail is a class system with a power structure that is somewhere between an adolescent sleepover party and Lord of the Flies. Furniture is made from tampon boxes, and Snickers bars are currency. But Lara quickly learns the rules and brings love and healing to her fellow inmates as she climbs the social ladder and acquires the nickname “Mama Love,” showing that jailhouse politics aren’t that different from the PTA meetings she used to attend.

When she’s released, she reinvents herself as a ghostwriter. Now, she’s legally co-opting other people’s identities and getting to meet Oprah, meditate with the Dalai Lama, and have dinner with Archbishop Desmond Tutu. But the shadow of her past follows her. Shame is a poison worse than heroin—there is no way to detox. Lara must learn how to forgive herself and others, navigate life as a felon on probation, and prove to herself that she is more good than bad, among other essential lessons.

The Many Lives of Mama Love is a heartbreaking and tender journey from shame to redemption, despite a system that makes it almost impossible for us to move beyond the worst thing we have ever done.

It was as good and interesting as it sounds. We all gave it a 5 out of 5 rating! I listened to the audiobook so I got to hear it in her own words and voice. That always adds impact for me. 

It's actually a story many of us can identify with – sans the heroin and Oprah meet-up. I mean we've all done something in our lives we are ashamed of or, if not, someone has made us feel ashamed about. Or worthless. 

In her 15-minute Ted Talk called Thieves of Hope, Lara talks about how good people who make a bad decision often carry that shame with them for the rest of their lives. Unless they find hope. Hope and shame cannot coexist. If you have shame, you can't have hope. And vice versa. That's why shame is the thief of hope.

If you can relate, you know it's not always easy to let go of the past and move on. No matter the scale of how "bad" or "stupid" you think you were. Most of our lives we aren't fighting the people who are shaming us, we're fighting ourselves and our inability to forgive ourselves for mistakes or poor judgment.

Throw in a fragile self-esteem and it's chaos.

As I shared with the club tonight (over an always delicious meal at El Mezcal), the way I personally combat it is practicing gratitude. If you thank God every night for your blessings that day, you'll start to see the big picture of your life in terms of what you have, not what you don't have – and certainly not what you've done. 

Thanks for reading my Robyn Talk. Isn't it great to start the week in a positive frame of mind? We've got this!


Monday, September 23, 2024

Monday Views


When you wake up to 40-some degrees and just want to snuggle under the warm covers for the day, you know it's going to be a long Monday.

Thank god there are some redeeming moments after a long day of work.

I actually had a few errands right after work, including delivering some flash drives of senior photos. Then it was on to Book Club.

We were supposed to meet at one restaurant, and when that was surprisingly closed, we went to our old standby corner booth at Applebee's. Which seated 5 of us just fine.

This month's book was the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. You probably read it in high school. We chose to re-read it after reading James earlier this year, which was the point of view of the surprisingly educated slave Jim, aka James.

It was interesting to compare the two. And of course, interesting to catch up on each other's lives.

The parking lot sunset shot above was our exit view. Love it!

I got home in time to catch the season opener of my show – The Voice – too, so everybody wins. Plus, did you know...

Now that's a summer-lovin' girl like me can keep in mind! Enjoy these pleasant summer-like days this week!


Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Midwest Mexican Murder Mystery

It just happens that we met for Book Club tonight at El Mezcal. But the book had everything to do about Wisconsin and absolutely nothing to do with Mexico. Still... the Wisconsin version of Mexican food was muy bueno

As for the book... not as spicy as the food but very interesting!

I love that "Home is Where the Bodies Are" is set in small-town Wisconsin. I can totally relate. It also has siblings at odds with each other for a variety of reason. Which I can partially relate to but at the same time am grateful that all 8 of us still talk to each other on a regular basis.

If you like a mystery with a (for me) surprise ending, check this out. And it's always good to support a Wisconsin-based author – even if her name isn't Robyn Austin. 😊

Side note: It was great to get together with girlfriends and hear updates on life – including once in a lifetime trips to Iceland. Books just tie our lives together. And I'm so grateful!


Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Work-Life Balance


What is work-life balance? Work-life balance is typically defined as the amount of time you spend doing your job versus the amount of time you spend doing what's important (or fun) to you outside of work, whether that is with loved ones or pursuing personal interests and hobbies.

Sometimes you can do both.

It just happened that today by some coincidence our boss is on vacation all week and "someone" commandeered the TV remote to have a "balance" of news and Hallmark. How strange.

Unfortunately, my work space is facing the other way, so I could only catch this "balanced" work atmosphere when I swiveled my chair.

Which, of course I did!

Next time I need the closed captioning on so I know when it's the falling in love part versus the conflict with 20 minutes to go versus the resolution with 3 minutes to kiss to the end.

Not that Hallmark Christmas movies are predictable – even Christmas in July.

After work, I continued the "life balance" with book club. Nothing beats homemade pizza and friends talking about a good read. In this case – The Frozen River.

I figure I'll keep the balance tipped to LIFE for the rest of the evening. That's the smart and healthy decision, right?

Thursday, April 25, 2024

Not The Weaker Sex


There's a couple of things I've realized in the last 3 weeks. The most important one being that women are stronger than we think. Not sure how my sister or my mom keep trudging forward, but they are both the type of strong woman I hope to be.

It was by pure coincidence that our April (the longest month of my family's life) book club book was The Women by Kristin Hannah.

I'll admit that everything I've learned about the Vietnam War was from Robin Williams' Good Morning, Vietnam and Tom Hanks' Forrest Gump movie. It's sad but as a high school student in the early '80s, when they went through American History, I'm pretty sure they ran out of time at the end of the school year and  crammed in the Bay of Pigs, Vietnam, and Korea in one week.

And even though I've watched a ton of M*A*S*H episodes, I didn't equate it to the fact women were also serving in the Vietnam War – mostly as the crucial role of nurses.

What an eye-opening and really, really well-written book. Across the board, we almost all gave it a 5 out of 5 rating. 

You know I don't go on and on about particular books much (since I read a ton), but this one is worth a read. Is it long? Yes. Was the war long? Yes and then some. I personally got a chance to listen to the audio book and was engrossed from the beginning. Reading a handheld book (or device) will likely get you in the same position.

When I see servicemen wearing their caps or jackets, I always thank them for their service. But nurses in Vietnam? I haven't seen your badge of honor. First of all, you deserve it. Secondly, thank you so much! 

This book (and life) is a great reminder we all deserve praise for our accomplishments and service, and support for our struggles and unearned uphill battles.

Just so glad I have the support today of my sisterhood – birth sisters and "adopted" ones. Love you all! Let's keep moving forward!


Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Sister Scenic Route


As it happens, I got to share this sunset in Wisconsin Rapids with two of my sisters today. Make that two retired sisters who chose their destination as the Rapids for their day trip. And one of the two who is a godmother to our basement dweller!


So Carter got to see Aunts Rayna (left) and Renell (and treat his godmother to dinner)...


And I got to spend Book Club with my sister Rayna and the rest of the usual crew. For the record, Aaron's Wines and Steins has the best "Carnivore" (aka all meat thin-crust pizza) we've ever had!


On the way home, I realized that – thanks to my sisters and this sunset – I'd had a glorious and beautiful day. It was great to see them face to face, even though we'll see each other for Mom's birthday this weekend. But they shared stories with Carter I may or may not have heard before.

Feel so blessed they took the sunset scenic route here. Just to display their colorful presence in all our lives.

Hope your week is equally as blessed!

Thursday, February 15, 2024

Love Stories


First of all, happy belated Valentine's Day! I was busy doing things I love yesterday. Sort of. I mean there was work first, but the our boss got us heart-shaped pizza for lunch. So what's not to love about that?

From work, I raced back to Rapids so I could practice choir a few minutes before our Ash Wednesday church service. Yes, Lent is here. The ultimate love story, right? 

Singing went well and then we had practice to learn a new song to sing this coming Sunday. By time I got home to see my valentine, it was after 8 p.m. We exchanged gifts AND he had a Shamrock Shake waiting for me. What's not to love about that? I will have to make that last a few days!

After that, I had a few hundred hockey photos from the night before to edit so it was definitely straight to bed and no blogging when I got done at 11 p.m. – on a "school night" as we say.


Woke up this morning to a sight I do not love. I know I shouldn't be surprised to see snow – it is February after all – but I was loving the mild temps and DRY commute. It was a bit on the slick side this morning!


Tonight, as I previously blogged about, we went the Rapids airport to hear author John Armbruster share his experience writing the book Tailspin – a nonfiction account of WWII vet Eugene Moran's survival of falling 4 miles in the air after being shot down by Germany fighter pilots AND being a POW. 

As I also mentioned previously, we got ahold of the book a few months ago because our friend's daughter is married to Moran's grandson. Tonight I got to talk to him and asked it he knew about any of this story before the book was done. He said his grandpa died when he was about 20 and all he knew was about the 4-mile fall.


Mr. Armbruster (I'm just going to call him John) had quite a display there tonight. Lots of newspaper articles about Moran and various artifacts...


Including a letter to Moran's mother when he was first declared missing in action.


Very interesting to look at.


And interesting to hear the story and see pictures and hear actual audio of Moran telling John about some of the things that happened in the Rikki Tikki Tavi aircraft.


Loved that John signed all our books and loved that there was a good crowd in the airport hangar to support him and learn more. As someone who loves reading (and writing), that was great to see and be a part of.

If anyone wants to borrow our book, you can. Otherwise it's available on Amazon and quite possibly Target and Wal-Mart. One of my sisters is reading it on Kindle right now and texted me how intense it is. I said, yep, and I feel badly that even though I say "Thank you for your service" to veterans, that I didn't give a lot more love and attention to those WWII survivors.

I'm sure there's a lot of untold stories out there. We're glad John was able to share this one.

Hug your loved ones! And appreciate them for their sacrifices – big or small. 

Tuesday, February 6, 2024

A Tale about Tailspin


I don't always talk about books I've read (because there's sooooo many), but once in awhile, there's a little more to it. Here me out – especially if you're in the Wisconsin Rapids area.

The premise of this book Tailspin according to the "book blurbs" online and our thoughts: World War II tail gunner Gene Moran (from Wisconsin!) fell four miles through the sky without a parachute and lived. Captured by the Germans, he survived a harrowing eighteen months as a prisoner of war, including a six-hundred-mile death march in 1945 across Central Europe.

When Gene returned home, he kept those memories locked up for nearly seventy years. His nine children knew little of their dad's war story. But when John, a young history teacher (also from Wisconsin!), learns of Gene's amazing fall, he's desperate to learn more. Finally, Gene agrees.

As the interviews go on, John faces an ordeal of his own. His wife is fighting brain cancer. What will happen to his wife and his two young children? John must continue uncovering Gene's story of survival as he himself confronts the greatest trial of his life.

It was really a captivating book. And even more so because we happened to get a copy of the book because Gene Moran's grandson is married to the daughter of some friends of ours. Small world.

But there's more...

The author – John Armbruster – will be at our Wisconsin Rapids airport at 7 p.m. on February 15 to talk about Tailspin, share videos, photos, historical artifacts and do a Q&A session after his presentation. The event is FREE, but books will be available for sale and for signing.

We both read the book and were so moved, we just wanted to share. 

Plus, you gotta support writers when you can.

P.S. Message me for my Venmo account. 

Sunday, January 28, 2024

A Baker's Dozen't

Is it Murphy's Law or Baker's Law when you remodel your kitchen – except for replacing the stove – and then it dies a month later?


This is the last batch of cookies (or anything) baked in our trusty Frigidaire glass-top stove we bought 24 or so years ago. I was trying to be the daughter-in-law of the year Saturday and was excited to discover Cream Cheese chips to add to my spice cookies. But when the first pan was in, all of sudden the temperature was going down. Thankfully, it lasted just enough to get the first 20 cookies out of the oven and give Johnny a dozen.


After further review, the burners no longer worked either. And the clock went black until I turned on the "bake" dial. Yep, far more messed up than when I could simply replace the heating element several years ago. (I was so proud of that DIY moment!) 

So we had to pick out a new stove – and since we have those concrete countertops in place, one that must squeeze into that 30-inch gap exactly! Fingers crossed for the new stove arriving Thursday!

After that, we grabbed some food in Point and went to the Pacelli Co-op Hockey game so I could shoot pictures of their Stick it to Cancer night. I feel like my dates with Mr. Zamboni are now supervised!

Today, we took advantage of our last free weekend for the foreseeable future and went to the movie The Boys in the Boat, based on our 1936 Olympic rowing team. I've read the book and was excited that the movie did a great job reflecting their story. We both liked it.

Then it's been nothing but football and me doing a little photo sorting for scrapbooking weekend. 

Naturally, we ordered Portesi pizza for dinner since we couldn't do a take-and-bake from anywhere. Takes getting used to. I'm wondering if the remaining cookie dough will last in the fridge until I can bake it. Someone seems to like it. And it's not me or the kitty.

Saturday, December 23, 2023

Un-seasonable Season's Greetings


When I was heading home from book club this morning, I noticed it was unseasonably warm for the day before Christmas Eve. So I stopped at Kwik Trip and got my car washed. Who wouldn't? I have friends in Minnesota who even golfed today. Jealous but glad we both took advantage of the unseasonable season's greetings!


And so did hubby. Here he is grilling some brats outside on Christmas Eve eve at the same time he's testing out the snowblower, of course. It's being finicky. In the months to come, we'll need that a heckuva lot more than the grill.


While he was doing that I made the third version in 10 days of a peppermint bark trifle.

I also got the ham going. But based on the party in our front yard, I could've gone with turkey!


We had a good meal and great time with the Austin clan. My father-in-law appreciated the humor in his personally autographed (via my PhotoShop skills) picture of a certain celebrity he does not like. She takes too much focus off of football!


He did enjoy seeing his great-grandkids – as we all did.


The annual cousins picture is missing two of the tall ones – Casey and Carter – but still looks pretty cute because Colin and Clay certainly are! It was fun having little Mya and Eli here, too.

Pretty sure Sylvester wasn't a fan, but I give them props for trying! At least she didn't hiss, just ran away and hid under our bed a bit.

It was just nice. And we have leftovers for tomorrow night when we feed 2/3 of our offspring after our afternoon church choir "gigs". I just say gigs so the kiddos think we're popular. 

Enjoy your Christmas Eve eve and Eve!!

Friday, November 10, 2023

Dinner and a Movie

About once a decade (not an exaggeration) hubby and I go to a movie together. There's rarely one we both want to see. And rarely one where we can't wait for it to come out on one of the streaming platforms. But tonight we found ourselves sitting through a nearly 3 1/2 hour history lesson.

I was surprised when Jim mentioned wanting to see this. We had just talked about this in book club not that long ago. I hadn't read the book, but now we both want to. The book/movie was based on a disturbing true story. When oil is discovered in 1920s Oklahoma under Osage Nation land, the Osage people are murdered one by one—until the FBI steps in to unravel the mystery.

The movie was slow-paced and kind of drawn out. But of course the acting was stellar. 

And so was the popcorn for dinner. We certainly didn't need the 64-ounce "small" drink cups to go with it. There was minimal sipping. Had to make sure my bladder lasted 206 minutes! 

Now it's off to bed because that was a lot of excitement for this old bird on a Friday night. Have a great weekend!

Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Everything AND the Kitchen Sink


Today was a big day. We have a kitchen sink for the first time since September 17! Of course, there's some plumbing and countertop finishing touches to do tomorrow. But that's progress. You can see a bit of the concrete countertop but I won't reveal all just yet. We love it though!

So tonight we did one more meal out, of course. Went over to Kellner International so we were close to home. I had a big lunch today so I only had an appetizer, but then the waitress just had to mention the dessert options.

Share a piece of Pumpkin Cheesecake for dessert? Yes, please! So yummy. And oh so filling.

Got home in time for my other date night. Crossed the street to watch a TV show with Cindy. Lessons in Chemistry is based on a brilliant book we read for book club. Unfortunately, it only on Apple TV. But fortunately, Cindy's got it! 

We only watched the first 2 episodes but it is very well done. If you don't have Apple TV, then read the book. In your free time... during these dark, dark nights that start at 5 p.m.!

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Boo-tiful Sunday

Was nice to pick up Rayna this morning and have her go to church with me. Thanks to all my church friends who met her and still convinced her I'm pretty cool despite my NFL preferences! 

She hit the road by noon so my afternoon included a trip to Stevens Point with my friend Cindy. First stop: the Fall Boozy Book Fair at District 1 Brewery. 


We both though this summed up our opinion as book lovers!


In the end, we both bought a few books. Mine were very "soft" mysteries (far from scary or horror) but still, we were both happy to support small, local businesses. 

We made our way down to Kohl's and Menards. Hey, she got clothes and I got a kitchen faucet so it was a successful trip all around!

The rest of the day was Jim golfing and me finishing a few photo and design projects. I hope I still have few hours to enjoy the weekend. Hope it was a BOO-tiful day for you, too!