October 2023 Recap: Books and Cookies and Gymnastics, Oh My!

Hello to November, and sub-90 degree temperatures in Phoenix (32 degrees Celsius for my non-American friends)!! The holidays are approaching quickly, and with it, the end of the 2023 challenge and preparations for 2024 (you’re gonna love some of our categories).

Still, I have 2 more months left to finish the 2023 challenge, and I think I just might make it this time. For the month of October, I finished 5 books, getting me to 51 for the year to date. Let’s talk about what I read.

The first book I finished in October was The Alice Network by Kate Quinn, a fantastic historical fiction following two main characters – Charlie, a wealthy American college student who finds herself in Europe after World War II, trying to find her cousin who went missing in France during the war… and Eve, a shy half-French filing clerk whose unassuming appearance, attention to detail, and facility with languages gets her tapped to join an all-female network of spies in World War I.

The story alternates between the 1940’s and the 1910’s, as the two women’s lives intertwine in interesting ways, spotlighting the horrors of war and the underappreciated heroism of the historically factual Alice Network. I could not put it down for the last 2/3 of the novel, and I’m so glad I chose it for prompt #55, Read a book that takes place in at least two different decades. [5 stars]

Next up was Brandon Sanderson’s final Secret Project, The Sunlit Man. This is a very heavily connected Cosmere story, featuring a character we’re introduced to in the Stormlight Archive – so readers will catch more of the references if they’re current on that series. Par for the course, Sanderson has created another fascinating world with its own ecology, its own rules, and its own form of “investiture” (the stuff that powers the magic). Our main character is has a background in engineering, so there is a fair amount of discussion of the science of how this world works, and it is very cool (or as it happens with a superpowered sun, very hot).

Our main character finds himself trapped on an unfamiliar world, where sunlight is fatal and the only way to survive is to stay on the move – so the pace of the story is fast, and constantly moving. The last 2/3 of the story sucked me in and I couldn’t put it down. [5 stars]

After that story, the next one I chose was quite the change of pace – literally. The Queens of Innis Lear by Tessa Gratton is very slow paced, but the writing style is descriptive and poetic. The story itself is a feminist-leaning fantasy retelling of Shakespeare’s classic tragedy King Lear, with a shift of focus from the titular king to his three daughters. The setting is changed from medieval England to an island where magic is infused in all of nature – the stars foretell the future, the trees speak a language that can be learned by wizards, and the waters that spring from deep within the island are sacred.

I’d never read the source material before, but it is clear throughout that this is a Shakespearean tragedy in the telling, and the events of the novel lingered with me after I finished. I chose it for prompt #53, Read a book that has a letter Q in the title, because it was highly recommended by a YouTube channel I follow. I was tempted to rate it higher, but honestly there were pacing issues – aside from the overall slowness of the story, there were several flashbacks that interrupted the main plot and fleshed out information we already knew – as well as some scenes that felt unnecessarily descriptive, and some elements of the story that felt like they were hinting at additional information or would become more important that never played out. Still, it was a very interesting read. [4.25 stars]

After that I selected another fantasy, but a shorter, quicker read – David Eddings’ The Belgariad series is often recommended for epic fantasy fans, and the first book in the series, Pawn of Prophecy, has a lot of the classic epic fantasy tropes: a good vs. evil conflict, young sheltered protagonist being taken on a journey to escape pursuit by enemies, obscure prophecy, hidden royalty (several times over, it seems), and lots of travel. I picked it up on sale for Kindle a few weeks ago, because I wasn’t looking forward to my original choice for prompt #39, A book by an author named David/Dave. This was far more up my alley, and I’m very much looking forward to continuing the series. [4 stars]

Last up, I finished The Justice of Kings by Richard Swan, the first in a planned trilogy that I found through the recommendation of another YouTube channel. The novel was a solid fantasy tale that explores law and justice in an empire on the brink of collapse – the point of view character is a 19 year old clerk being trained by an Emperor’s Justice, a position that travels the remote regions of the empire and wields the power to investigate, convict, and execute punishments on behalf of (and answering solely to) the Emperor… as well as some intriguing arcane powers.

The pace of the story is a touch on the slow side, especially to start, and is told from the perspective of the point of view character much later in her life, so there are frequent (a little too frequent) asides that indicate when things are about to go disastrously wrong. It wasn’t a favorite, but the world was interesting enough to make me want to continue the series eventually. And it was an obvious choice for challenge #58, Read a book with the word “Justice” in the title. [3.5 stars]

Aside from the reading, I rewatched a couple of the Phase 1 MCU movies, finished season 2 of The Wheel of Time on Amazon Prime, started Loki season 2, and finally finished season 1 of The Last of Us. The Wheel of Time season 2 was quite a bit better than season 1 in production value and writing, and the changes in the story from the books generally made for an exciting show. I’m really looking forward to season 3, because they have indicated it will be a much closer adaptation of book 4 of the series, which is my favorite of the books. Loki has been fun so far, although it hasn’t drawn me in as a must-watch. And The Last of Us was extremely emotional, and extremely well-done.

Other activities for the month included a couple of gymnastics meets for my honorary niece, making a couple of batches of oatmeal blueberry cookies (seriously – my favorite… I use this recipe and replace the raisins with dried blueberries), and kitty snuggles. Also, there were 5 weekends, and each weekend featured new nail art. Best photos of October below!

And that is my October update! Once again, I beg you for comments! Talk to me – have you read any of these books? Or if not, what have you been reading lately? Are you also unreasonably attracted to Tom Hiddleston after watching Loki? What is your favorite MCU movie? How about your favorite type of cookies? Hit me with your opinions!

The Linzthebookworm/Logophile 2023 Reading Challenge

Level 1: Book of the Month Club [11/12 complete]
1. Read a book recommended to you on social media or by a friend – Recursion – Blake Crouch

2. Read a book under 300 pages – The Courts of Chaos – Roger Zelazny
3. Read a book with a female main character – Tress of the Emerald Sea – Brandon Sanderson
4. Read a book by an author whose name is Samantha, Sam, or a variant – Seven Blades in Black – Sam Sykes
5. Read a book that was written by an author from your home state
6. Read a book you meant to read for last year’s challenge – Have We Met? – Camille Baker
7. Read a book with a basic shape on the cover (examples: circle, square, heart, star, diamond) – Call It What You Want – Brigid Kemmerer
8. Read a book you got from Project Gutenberg, a library, or another nonprofit source – The Blue Castle – L.M. Montgomery
9. Read a book about a hobby you enjoy or want to pick up (fiction or nonfiction) – The Bullet Journal Method – Ryder Carroll
10. Read a book that starts with the first letter of your name – Daughters of the Lake – Wendy Webb
11. Read the next book in a series you haven’t read in a while – The Lost Metal – Brandon Sanderson
12. Free Space – Pick any book!The Frugal Wizard’s Handbook for Surviving Medieval England – Brandon Sanderson

Level 2: Casual Reader Club [11/12 complete]
13. Read a book by Mary Faulkner (or one of her aliases)
14. Read a book of short stories or a novella – Ford County: Stories – John Grisham
15. Read a book that involves a lot of traveling – Swan Song – Robert R. McCammon
16. Read a book published in 1998 (25 years ago) – Ship of Magic – Robin Hobb
17. Read a book with a yellow cover – The Likely Resolutions of Oliver Clock – Jane Riley

18. Reread a book you have recommended to someone else – The Imperfect Disciple – Jared C. Wilson
19. Read a book by Dean Koontz – Intensity – Dean Koontz
20. Read a book with a one-word title – Slayer – Kiersten White
21. Read book 1 in a trilogy – The Armored Saint – Myke Cole
22. Read book 2 in a trilogy – A Heart so Fierce and Broken – Brigid Kemmerer
23. Read book 3 in a trilogy – Red Country – Joe Abercrombie
24. Free Space – Pick any book!Mad Ship – Robin Hobb

Level 3: Dedicated Reader Club [11/12 complete]
25. Read a book that takes place somewhere you’d like to live – Revenge of the Nymph: The Faeries Vol.2 – Ramon Terrell

26. Read a book recommended by whatshouldireadnext.comThe Lion of Senet – Jennifer Fallon
27. Read a book by an author who shares a first or last name with one of your friends – The New York Trilogy – Paul Auster
28. Read a book with a neon-colored cover – Exiles – Ashley and Leslie Saunders
29. Read a book that has under 1,000 reviews or ratings on a website or app – Joshua: Man of Fearless Faith – W. Phillip Keller
30. Read a middle grade book (8-12 age range) – Howl’s Moving Castle – Diana Wynne Jones
31. Read a book with the word “Time” in the title – The Last Time I Lied – Riley Sager
32. Read a book about a famous criminal(s) – Go Down Together: The True, Untold Story of Bonnie and Clyde – Jeff Guinn
33. Read a movie novelization book (movie to book, instead of book to movie) – The Phantom Menace: Star Wars: Episode I – Terry Brooks
34. Read a fiction or nonfiction book that motivates you to be a better version of yourself – Savor: Living Abundantly Where You Are, As You Are – Shauna Niequist
35. Read a self-published book – Duel of Fire – Jordan Rivet
36. Free Space – Pick any book!Yumi and the Nightmare Painter – Brandon Sanderson

Level 4: Speed Reader Club [10/12 complete]
37. Read a book that is over 600 pages – The Stone of Farewell – Tad Williams

38. Read a book from ListChallenge’s Rory Gilmore Reading ChallengeThe Art of War – Sun Tzu
39. A book by an author named David/Dave – Pawn of Prophecy – David Eddings
40. Read a “Dark Academia” novel – The Secret History – Donna Tartt
41. Read a book with a title that starts with the letter V – Vanishing Acts – Jodi Picoult
42. A book set in Asia or an Asian-inspired culture
43. Read a book with a cat on the cover – The Cat Who Ate Danish Modern – Lilian Jackson Braun
44. Read a folklore book or book based on folklore – American Gods – Neil Gaiman
45. Read a book where the main character is a dancer – Someone Else’s Life – Lyn Liao Butler
46. Read a book by a new author – Dead Man’s Hand – James J. Butcher
47. Read a book that involves a conspiracy
48. Free Space – Pick any book!The Sunlit Man – Brandon Sanderson

Level 5: Overachiever Club [8/12 complete]
49. Read one of the New York Public Library’s Best Books of 2022 (any category) – Ordinary Monsters – J.M. Miro

50. Read a book where the main character is a villain or anti-hero
51. Read a book that has a title that is punny and/or alliterative – Murder’s No Votive Confidence – Christin Brecher
52. Read a “found family” story – The House in the Cerulean Sea – T.J. Klune
53. Read a book that has a letter Q in the title – The Queens of Innis Lear – Tessa Gratton
54. Read a book that has an illustrated cover – Naomi and Her Daughters – Walter Wangerin, Jr.
55. Read a book that takes place in at least two different decades – The Alice Network – Kate Quinn
56. Read a book about an entrepreneur (real or fictional) – Family Money – Chad Zunker
57. Read a book that takes place in Alaska – Northern Lights – Nora Roberts
58. Read a book with the word “Justice” in the title – The Justice of Kings – Richard Swan
59. Read a book involving dinosaurs
60. Free Space – Pick any book!

July 2023 Recap: Birthdays and other nonsense

Well hello there! I can hardly believe it’s August already – the year, as usual, is flying by. I’ve fallen behind in some of my goals, but as far as reading goes, I’m killing it!

In the month of July, I finished 5 books – keeping me nicely on track to finish the entire challenge for the first time in 2023. A couple of them I really loved, too – let’s talk about them!

The first book I finished in July was Mad Ship by Robin Hobb, the second in her Liveship Traders series. I really enjoyed the first in this series, and the second was just as intriguing. There were payoffs for some of the foreshadowing in the first book – I figured some of the things would happen, but I wouldn’t say it was predictable. Some answers were given to mysteries posed in the first installment, but more questions remain to be answered in the third, which I’m definitely planning to read by the end of this year. I couldn’t find a good place to put this on the challenge, so it ended up in the second free space, #24. [4.5 stars]

My next read was for prompt #32, Read a book about a famous criminal(s). Jeff Guinn’s Go Down Together: The True, Untold Story of Bonnie & Clyde was truly intriguing. Over the years, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow have become nearly mythical figures with a glamorous image, and reading a biography that painstakingly sifted through information from unpublished writings by their families brought them down to earth. Their story was a mixture of hard luck and bad choices, and the doom hanging over their heads was palpable throughout. [3.75 stars]

Next up I tore through Someone Else’s Life by Lyn Liao Butler in a couple of sittings – this thriller had me feeling tense and anxious through nearly the entire book. The majority of the story took place during a severe thunderstorm on Kauai, and the atmosphere lent a sense of danger to the rising tension of the story. The main character was a former professional dancer, so I selected it for challenge prompt #45, Read a book where the main character is a dancer – and it was a great choice. [4 stars]

After that, I read a quick little mystery that I’ve probably read before but didn’t remember – I have read most of Lilian Jackson Braun’s Jim Qwilleran series over the years but not since I’ve started tracking my reading. The Cat Who Ate Danish Modern is the second in the series, and it worked well for challenge #43. Read a book with a cat on the cover – well, it sort of did. As it turns out I picked it from my owned TBR list on The Storygraph, and that list had a different cover for the book than my Kindle version. However, the cat action was prominent in the book, so I decided to keep it for the prompt. This series is well written and comforting to read, and as a cat lover (and firm believer that they are smarter than we think), it’s always a favorite. [3.5 stars]

And my final read for July, selected for my 3rd free space (#36) was Brandon Sanderson’s 3rd Secret Project, Yumi and the Nightmare Painter. If I hadn’t already picked a different book for challenge prompt #42 (A book set in Asia or an Asian-inspired culture) this would have been a great one for it – the story is heavily inspired by ancient Korea, modern Japan, Final Fantasy X, and the manga Hikaru no Go. This novel is set within Sanderson’s greater Cosmere, and features a world whose magic is tied to creating art. It is atmospheric and intriguing, with a fascinating core mystery and a surprisingly sweet romance. I loved it. [5 stars]

Aside from reading, I got a few more episodes into Ted Lasso – I’m 5 episodes away from the ending and it’s already one of my favorite shows that I’ve seen in the last few years. I’m 7 episodes in to Veronica Mars now and having a lot of fun… and I finished Secret Invasion, which was… eh. Agents of SHIELD was a better show in every way. I also caught the end of season 2 of How I Met Your Father (not as good as How I Met Your Mother by any means, but I am enjoying it).

Other than media, I made a quick trip up north to visit my bestie for her girls’ birthday party, and took a few days off work to enjoy my birthday. I bought a t-shirt for Linz for her birthday that accidentally got shipped to my house – a happy accident, since I kinda wanted one myself anyway… I took myself out to breakfast (reading while eating out alone is kinda fun), grabbed my free birthday drink from Starbucks, and got taken out to eat by my church music team after our Thursday night practice. The best photos of July, along with my first nail art in a hot minute, below.

So what have you been up to? Have you read any of the books on my list? What’s the best thing you’ve watched this year? Bought any fun t-shirts lately? Talk to me, I love comments!

The Linzthebookworm/Logophile 2023 Reading Challenge

Level 1: Book of the Month Club [11/12 complete]
1. Read a book recommended to you on social media or by a friend – Recursion – Blake Crouch

2. Read a book under 300 pages – The Courts of Chaos – Roger Zelazny
3. Read a book with a female main character – Tress of the Emerald Sea – Brandon Sanderson
4. Read a book by an author whose name is Samantha, Sam, or a variant – Seven Blades in Black – Sam Sykes
5. Read a book that was written by an author from your home state
6. Read a book you meant to read for last year’s challenge – Have We Met? – Camille Baker
7. Read a book with a basic shape on the cover (examples: circle, square, heart, star, diamond) – Call It What You Want – Brigid Kemmerer
8. Read a book you got from Project Gutenberg, a library, or another nonprofit source – The Blue Castle – L.M. Montgomery
9. Read a book about a hobby you enjoy or want to pick up (fiction or nonfiction) – The Bullet Journal Method – Ryder Carroll
10. Read a book that starts with the first letter of your name – Daughters of the Lake – Wendy Webb
11. Read the next book in a series you haven’t read in a while – The Lost Metal – Brandon Sanderson
12. Free Space – Pick any book!The Frugal Wizard’s Handbook for Surviving Medieval England – Brandon Sanderson

Level 2: Casual Reader Club [11/12 complete]
13. Read a book by Mary Faulkner (or one of her aliases)
14. Read a book of short stories or a novella – Ford County: Stories – John Grisham
15. Read a book that involves a lot of traveling – Swan Song – Robert R. McCammon
16. Read a book published in 1998 (25 years ago) – Ship of Magic – Robin Hobb
17. Read a book with a yellow cover – The Likely Resolutions of Oliver Clock – Jane Riley

18. Reread a book you have recommended to someone else – The Imperfect Disciple – Jared C. Wilson
19. Read a book by Dean Koontz – Intensity – Dean Koontz
20. Read a book with a one-word title – Slayer – Kiersten White
21. Read book 1 in a trilogy – The Armored Saint – Myke Cole
22. Read book 2 in a trilogy – A Heart so Fierce and Broken – Brigid Kemmerer
23. Read book 3 in a trilogy – Red Country – Joe Abercrombie
24. Free Space – Pick any book!Mad Ship – Robin Hobb

Level 3: Dedicated Reader Club [9/12 complete]
25. Read a book that takes place somewhere you’d like to live – Revenge of the Nymph: The Faeries Vol.2 – Ramon Terrell

26. Read a book recommended by whatshouldireadnext.com
27. Read a book by an author who shares a first or last name with one of your friends – The New York Trilogy – Paul Auster
28. Read a book with a neon-colored cover – Exiles – Ashley and Leslie Saunders
29. Read a book that has under 1,000 reviews or ratings on a website or app – Joshua: Man of Fearless Faith – W. Phillip Keller
30. Read a middle grade book (8-12 age range) – Howl’s Moving Castle – Diana Wynne Jones
31. Read a book with the word “Time” in the title – The Last Time I Lied – Riley Sager
32. Read a book about a famous criminal(s) – Go Down Together: The True, Untold Story of Bonnie and Clyde – Jeff Guinn
33. Read a movie novelization book (movie to book, instead of book to movie)
34. Read a fiction or nonfiction book that motivates you to be a better version of yourself – Savor: Living Abundantly Where You Are, As You Are – Shauna Niequist
35. Read a self-published book – Duel of Fire – Jordan Rivet
36. Free Space – Pick any book!Yumi and the Nightmare Painter – Brandon Sanderson

Level 4: Speed Reader Club [4/12 complete]
37. Read a book that is over 600 pages – The Stone of Farewell – Tad Williams
38. Read a book from ListChallenge’s Rory Gilmore Reading ChallengeThe Art of War – Sun Tzu
39. A book by an author named David/Dave
40. Read a “Dark Academia” novel
41. Read a book with a title that starts with the letter V – Vanishing Acts – Jodi Picoult
42. A book set in Asia or an Asian-inspired culture
43. Read a book with a cat on the cover – The Cat Who Ate Danish Modern – Lilian Jackson Braun
44. Read a folklore book or book based on folklore
45. Read a book where the main character is a dancer – Someone Else’s Life – Lyn Liao Butler
46. Read a book by a new author
47. Read a book that involves a conspiracy
48. Free Space – Pick any book!

Level 5: Overachiever Club [2/12 complete]
49. Read one of the New York Public Library’s Best Books of 2022 (any category)
50. Read a book where the main character is a villain or anti-hero
51. Read a book that has a title that is punny and/or alliterative – Murder’s No Votive Confidence – Christin Brecher
52. Read a “found family” story
53. Read a book that has a letter Q in the title
54. Read a book that has an illustrated cover – Naomi and Her Daughters – Walter Wangerin, Jr.
55. Read a book that takes place in at least two different decades
56. Read a book about an entrepreneur (real or fictional)
57. Read a book that takes place in Alaska
58. Read a book with the word “Justice” in the title
59. Read a book involving dinosaurs
60. Free Space – Pick any book!

February 2023 Recap: Stories, Songs, and Sadness

Happy March to you… And to the Northern Hemisphere types among us, happy looking forward to spring. Mostly I’m looking forward to more sunlight, not so much the impending heat. Phoenix, man, right?

Despite it being a short month, I managed to finish 6 books (and get halfway through another one). Keep reading for more on what I read, or you can scroll down to the life updates if you actually care. *wink*

The first book I finished in February (on the 1st, in fact, having read most of it at the end of January) was Naomi and Her Daughters by Walter Wangerin, Jr. This one was a recommendation by my good friend Tom, and is billed as historical fiction – or religious historical fiction, I guess. Biblical fiction? Regardless, this book took the familiar story of Naomi and Ruth from the Old Testament book of Ruth, and adds some backstory in context from the book of Judges, tying in the Judges chapter 20 story of the war against the tribe of Benjamin in a truly interesting and heartwrenching way.

The middle section of the book giving some additional story to Boaz dragged at times, and ended with a truly weird moment that just didn’t work for me, but overall I did enjoy the story and the writing was engaging. Also the cover art is just beautiful – which was why I chose to use it for challenge prompt #54 – Read a book that has an illustrated cover. [3.75 stars]

Second up is one of my mom’s recommendations, a biography of the life of Joshua, the Old Testament general who led the Israelites into the Promised Land after their 40 year sojourn in the wilderness. Joshua: Man of Fearless Faith, by W. Phillip Keller, has all of 10 ratings on Amazon, and 49 on Goodreads, making this one a definite qualifier for prompt #29, Read a book that has under 1,000 reviews or ratings on a website or app. This one is not light reading, but it does give some very good insights to the life of Joshua and what made him successful, and how we can apply that to our spiritual lives. [4 stars]

The next book I finished was for prompt #18, Reread a book you have recommended to someone else – and since I first read it in 2020, I have not been able to recommend it hard enough. The Imperfect Disciple by Jared C. Wilson (subtitled “Grace for People Who Can’t Get Their Act Together”) is the most relatable Christian discipleship book I’ve ever read, and I’ve read a solid number of them in my lifetime. The first time I read it, I highlighted half the book, it felt like… and this time through, I highlighted yet more passages, because there is so much wisdom in there.

I’m not one who typically writes reviews for Goodreads or Storygraph or Amazon, I just leave my star rating and move on with my life. This one I had to leave a review for. The gist of it is that this book isn’t for everyone. But if you’re a Christian who isn’t perfect and all too aware of that fact, it might just be for you. [5 stars]

The fourth book for February was another recommendation from my sister-in-law, the source of some of my favorite recommendations (hence, the perfect choice for challenge spot #1, Read a book recommended to you on social media or by a friend). Recursion is by Blake Crouch, the author of my favorite book from last year – Dark Matter. I recall at least one book YouTuber I follow who had read both books, and felt like they were similar in theme, enough that they felt that you would inevitably compare them, and probably prefer whichever one you read first.

I think I did slightly prefer Dark Matter, but I didn’t feel they were too similar for my taste. Recursion is a fascinating exploration of memory and how we perceive the world around us, as well as the pandora’s box of scientific and technological advances. And there were parts of it that were slightly horrific, which was the main reason I rated it just a touch lower than Dark Matter – but just a touch. [4.75 stars]

After that, I read the first of Brandon Sanderson’s Secret Projects (see his record shattering Kickstarter) – Tress of the Emerald Sea. It’s no secret that I’m a huge Sanderson fan – his worldbuilding and magic systems are generally stunning, and the man’s work ethic is all kinds of admirable. His writing style is easily digested and serves his stories well, but generally his prose isn’t regarded as particularly remarkable. In this book, I had to stop several times to appreciate the wording – it feels like he’s leveled up somehow.

This story is a fun adventure, and the back story on why he wrote it was sweet – he and his family had been watching the classic 1980’s film The Princess Bride, and he and his wife were remarking on how passive of a character Buttercup was. His wife wondered aloud what it would have been like if, instead of writing Westley off as dead when his ship was reported captured by the Dread Pirate Roberts, she had instead gone off on a quest to rescue him. The result was a charming seafaring tale through strange oceans of dangerous spores, and a young woman who faces her fears and finds a life she never knew she wanted. I’ve used Tress as a nickname online for the best part of a decade now, so the title of this book was a delightful surprise… and this was a wonderful choice for challenge prompt #3, Read a book with a female main character. [4.75 stars]

The final book I finished in February was Ford County: Stories by John Grisham, unsurprisingly chosen for challenge prompt #14, Read a book of short stories or a novella. This was a fun collection of short stories that take place in Grisham’s fictional Ford County, Mississippi, the setting of several of his legal thrillers (including most notably, A Time to Kill). Some of these stories feature lawyers or the legal system, but some are just interesting slices of life in the rural American South. I think my favorite was Casino, the story of an unscrupulous land developer who swindles his way into the Native American gaming market, and is very satisfyingly taken down by someone he stepped on in the process. [4 stars]

In other February news, I finally finished recording one of my original songs and put it out on YouTube… I’ve written a fair number of songs over the years (hence my screen name), this one I wrote for church and our congregation has enjoyed it for a few years now so I wanted to prioritize putting that one online. Recording and releasing others on a regular basis is one of my goals this year, so stay tuned for more in that vein. If you didn’t see my post from the 11th, you may not have been aware that my older brother passed away in February, so that kind of dominated how my month went. Our fast at church ended, so I’ve been enjoying some occasional junk food again, but for the most part I’m still eating healthier than ever and trying to minimize the time wasting. Productivity, it’s quite the rush.

Below, the best photos of February, including the 3 manicures I finished.

As always, I would love to hear from you! What have you been reading? Watched any good movies lately? How are you doing with your goals for the year? Comment away, my friends!

The Linzthebookworm/Logophile 2023 Reading Challenge

Level 1: Book of the Month Club [7/12 complete]
1. Read a book recommended to you on social media or by a friend – Recursion – Blake Crouch

2. Read a book under 300 pages – The Courts of Chaos – Roger Zelazny
3. Read a book with a female main character – Tress of the Emerald Sea – Brandon Sanderson
4. Read a book by an author whose name is Samantha, Sam, or a variant – Seven Blades in Black – Sam Sykes
5. Read a book that was written by an author from your home state
6. Read a book you meant to read for last year’s challenge – Have We Met? – Camille Baker
7. Read a book with a basic shape on the cover (examples: circle, square, heart, star, diamond) – Call It What You Want – Brigid Kemmerer
8. Read a book you got from Project Gutenberg, a library, or another nonprofit source – The Blue Castle – L.M. Montgomery
9. Read a book about a hobby you enjoy or want to pick up (fiction or nonfiction)
10. Read a book that starts with the first letter of your name
11. Read the next book in a series you haven’t read in a while – The Lost Metal – Brandon Sanderson
12. Free Space – Pick any book!

Level 2: Casual Reader Club [2/12 complete]
13. Read a book by Mary Faulkner (or one of her aliases)
14. Read a book of short stories or a novella – Ford County: Stories – John Grisham
15. Read a book that involves a lot of traveling
16. Read a book published in 1998 (25 years ago)
17. Read a book with a yellow cover
18. Reread a book you have recommended to someone else – The Imperfect Disciple – Jared C. Wilson
19. Read a book by Dean Koontz
20. Read a book with a one-word title
21. Read book 1 in a trilogy
22. Read book 2 in a trilogy
23. Read book 3 in a trilogy
24. Free Space – Pick any book!

Level 3: Dedicated Reader Club [1/12 complete]
25. Read a book that takes place somewhere you’d like to live
26. Read a book recommended by whatshouldireadnext.com
27. Read a book by an author who shares a first or last name with one of your friends
28. Read a book with a neon-colored cover
29. Read a book that has under 1,000 reviews or ratings on a website or app – Joshua: Man of Fearless Faith – W. Phillip Keller
30. Read a middle grade book (8-12 age range)
31. Read a book with the word “Time” in the title
32. Read a book about a famous criminal(s)
33. Read a movie novelization book (movie to book, instead of book to movie)
34. Read a fiction or nonfiction book that motivates you to be a better version of yourself – Savor: Living Abundantly Where You Are, As You Are – Shauna Niequist
35.Read a self-published book
36. Free Space – Pick any book!

Level 4: Speed Reader Club [0/12 complete]
37. Read a book that is over 600 pages
38. Read a book from ListChallenge’s Rory Gilmore Reading Challenge
39. A book by an author named David/Dave
40. Read a “Dark Academia” novel
41. Read a book with a title that starts with the letter V
42. A book set in Asia or an Asian-inspired culture
43. Read a book with a cat on the cover
44. Read a folklore book or book based on folklore
45. Read a book where the main character is a dancer
46. Read a book by a new author
47. Read a book that involves a conspiracy
48. Free Space – Pick any book!

Level 5: Overachiever Club [1/12 complete]
49. Read one of the New York Public Library’s Best Books of 2022 (any category)
50. Read a book where the main character is a villain or anti-hero
51. Read a book that has a title that is punny and/or alliterative
52. Read a “found family” story
53. Read a book that has a letter Q in the title
54. Read a book that has an illustrated cover – Naomi and Her Daughters – Walter Wangerin, Jr.
55. Read a book that takes place in at least two different decades
56. Read a book about an entrepreneur (real or fictional)
57. Read a book that takes place in Alaska
58. Read a book with the word “Justice” in the title
59. Read a book involving dinosaurs
60. Free Space – Pick any book!