Boss(es)

It’s been a somewhat somber week, so days without a “theme” are tougher for me to choose anything to post.


Tom gave me this for my birthday last month. I wasn’t able to listen to any of the podcasts of conversations between Bruce Springsteen and Barack Obama, so I’m hoping that when I have time to delve into this, I’ll get to learn some of the things they talked about.

I’ve never hero-worshipped. I’ve always known the people I admire have flaws, and I’ve never expected perfection. They’re human. Through the decades, my instincts have been validated by people’s actions and their character–in both directions, but I choose to amplify men, not monsters.

Almost Nothing But Trouble!

Trouble Cat Mysteries No. 1

Back in March of 2020, before I knew I’d be laid off, and when I was still in the habit of reading fiction, an opportunity presented itself for a great sale of a mystery cat cozy series launched by Carolyn Haines. The first book, Familiar Trouble written by Haines, invested me in this cat turned sleuth. The twist was that except for occasional revisits, each of the books in the series would be penned by different authors. As a big fan of Haines’s Sarah Booth Delaney mystery series, I trust her recommendations and bought and downloaded all the Trouble novels then available.

Then… the pandemic happened and brought with it my inability to focus on reading fiction. Since I’ve been trying to remedy that in 2022, I opened my Kindle library and dove into a world of Trouble. I am not a bit sorry, as I’ve enjoyed all of Trouble’s adventures and getting to know lots of characters in different locales, being introduced to new writers, and enjoying some human romance along the way.

Considering world events and national events–including things that should have been bigger news but which have come to seem routine instead of the cultural shocks they are–for me, March became about reading for the pleasure of escape–no research and all non-fiction.

Following is  what my birthday-month reading list was–the Trouble Cat Mysteries in order:

The last one, Year-Round Trouble, I read in paperback rather than as an ebook like the rest of the Trouble mysteries (thanks to Dean James for making that possible).

In non-black cat reads, I read the exquisite 17th Inspector Gamache 2021 offering from Louise Penny:

I also caught up on Miranda James’s Cat In The Stacks Mystery series:

Received the below as gifts from Tim during the pandemic and now have read them.

I ordered the most recent two in the Plum series and will read those in April.

Just for fun, while I was waiting for the 27 and 28 Stephanie Plums, I reread these three Lizzy and Diesel books on my Nook. I wish there were more in this series, and I’m always happy when Diesel and other characters from the series show up in the Plum books:

That’s a total of twenty-eight! I know that won’t happen again, because I have a lot of nonfiction still to read, and that’s much slower for me than fiction. But I do feel like I’ve made up for lost time and am back in a novel-reading mindset. I’m glad, because I’m four books behind in the series of another favorite writer.

I watched very little television, listened to only one podcast, and slowed down on my own work in progress. I need to hit that writing hard so I can finish the fifth book and get to the sixth one!

Tarot Etc. Thursday No. 12


You probably guessed after last week that I might go looking for a version of a Celtic-themed tarot deck, and of course I did.


The deck is beautifully packaged in a self-closing box that includes both a guidebook and the cards.

The art in Kristoffer Hughes’s deck, as created by Chris Down, is quite striking, sometimes bold, and each card offers an abundance of symbology to contemplate. I find it interesting, considering my post last week, that Hughes discusses several bodies of thought that he then unifies in the Celtic idea of the “world tree” (indeed, the title of the book includes the word “branches”).


I imagine I’ll need to spend some time just exploring the cards to know if I feel connected to this deck. There are differences in the names of some of the major arcana cards as well as the minor arcana cards. I haven’t had a good opportunity to sort all that out yet.


In a recent video from Kevin at Body Mind & Soul, he suggested two cards as connected to the last full moon, the Ten of Cups and the Ten of Pentacles. In this deck, those would be the Ten of Cauldrons and the Ten of Shields. Happy online researching if you’d like to know more about these cards. You can also find Kevin’s video at this link.

Disclaimer: I am no expert on tarot cards. Because I don’t study or practice with any particular deck, I don’t do readings. I use the cards as a means of introspection. I also enjoy the art, beauty, and symbolism of many tarot decks and how they reflect the personalities and journeys of their creators. Tarot is like other things that inspire me and engage my interest, such as books, music, and art.

Button Sunday

Today, March 20, is World Storytelling Day.

Also it’s our friend Steve C’s birthday. I’d tell a Steve story, but… Oh, what the heck. One time, Steve and I road tripped from Manhattan to Maine. I’d already driven, I don’t know, twelve hours? More? Gotten lost in Manhattan? Maybe killed a pedestrian before I met up with Steve? (Joke. I hope.) Spent some time with Timothy and Timmy before we got on the road?

We planned to stop along the way to get a good night’s sleep. Only, it was October. LEAF SEASON IN NEW ENGLAND. No room at any inn along what should have been a sixish-hour drive to Portland, except for all the pointless stops trying to find a room. I don’t know, I think we got into Portland around seven AM, where we got a motel room for maybe three hours to sleep before check-out time. I’d been up for 24 hours by that point. We were both delirious, and three hours of sleep is better than no hours of sleep. I’m not sure James and Kenneth expected us to be zombies when we arrived at their place, but zombies we were. After we came back to life the next day, we had days of THE BEST DAMN TIME. Restaurants (THE PIZZA! THE FRIES!), cool shops, apple orchards, museums, sightseeing, LL Bean, plant nurseries, home-cooked meals, lighthouses, stories and piano playing and a cat who became a massage therapist while we were there. Also, Steve shamed me into agreeing to upgrade my cellphone from something that looked like a prop from “Dynasty” in the 1980s.

I 10/10 recommend Steve as a travel companion. We still don’t discuss Plymouth Rock, though.

Long post about art and creativity and trust


Back in 2016, I bought this sketchbook. Others like it, by the way, can usually be found at places like Ross or Marshall’s at deep discounts. The first page inside the sketchbook explains why I bought it.


The first thing I drew was a rendition of my Take Your Action Figure To Work Day, Mad Magazine’s “Spy Vs Spy.” Past that, I wasn’t sure what I’d do with the book, but then I went to a fundraising night at a local tea and coloring supplies shop. We could take pages from multiple books they’d laid out on tables for us, and when I got home with one and a half colored pages, I decided this sketchbook was a good place to put them.

I don’t like to color IN coloring books. I tear out the pages, put them on a clipboard, color them, and then add them to the sketchbook. For this reason, I also don’t like coloring books that use both sides of a page. More on that later.

Ultimately, by coloring while waiting for appointments (Debby’s and mine), at jury duty, and at home (including on craft nights), I filled this book with 81 pages that I colored from March 2016 to December 2020. I also started sketchbooks to store other people’s coloring pages if they wanted to leave them at Houndstooth Hall, and Lynne brought her own book to leave here for her coloring pages. It contains a few, but she has more at home she’s done during the pandemic that I hope get added to her book one day.


As 2021 began, I reached for another blank sketchbook.


I did a collage on the first page, and then input my first coloring page that I finished on New Year’s Day 2021. Between then and a few days ago, I put 109 coloring pages into the book. So it took me four years to put 81 pages in the first book, and only a year and two months to do another 109 pages! That’s because my job was a pandemic fatality, providing me more time to be creative, and coloring became my go-to activity when I needed to think about writing. In 2021, I believe I THOUGHT about writing more than I wrote, a consequence of allowing other people to impair my novel writing efforts.

Lesson learned.

By the end of 2021, as new writing picked up, coloring fell off. I’d thought I’d fill the book by December. However, there’s no deadline for coloring.

I post most of my pages to Instagram, where there are many other people who color, and some of them are AMAZING. I’m all just let me stay inside the lines, and they’re turning other people’s drawings into art. I get inspired there all the time, not only to color, but to remember how important it is for a person to respect her urge to create. I’ve watched one artist go from coloring to creating sketches of her own electronically to finally picking up paint and brush and creating art old school. What a great thing to see an artist’s journey as her confidence grows and her vision sharpens.

I’m also inspired by Lynne when she texts her new coloring pages to me. She’s better than I am, just a statement of fact. I love her color choices and the details she takes on, and I recognize that along with her gifts, she has a characteristic when she’s creative that I often lack–PATIENCE. My Aries self wants to hurry and finish.

Lynne’s always been this way; the reasons why she can sew and crochet and embroider and garden and do cross-stitch, all beautifully, are because she’s gifted and patient. She will say about me that I’m a storyteller and she is not. I’m not sure I agree that she’s not; she’s definitely a person whose imagination, and whose support of my imagination, helped me grow in confidence as the writer my mother and uncle encouraged me to be. She was my first creative collaborator and paved the way for me to trust Riley, Timothy, Jim, and Timmy as partners, and to have the courage to finally let other people, beginning with Tom, and then Amy, Lynn B, Rhonda, and Lindsey, read my work.

There are others, of course, some of whom encourage me even without reading my writing. There are people through the years who’ve liked my poetry more than my fiction. All of them are a reminder that eventually, you need the courage to enjoy sharing your creative efforts with people who want to see or read or hear them. I hope those of you reading the blog know the impact that your comments and reactions to my paintings or novels, and even what I post here, have on me. You have no idea how many times a supportive comment from you has kept me going. Thank you.

Now it’s time for a new sketchbook for my coloring pages. For those coloring books that put drawings on both sides, I can scan and print the reverse sides to save for later. Below is one of my favorite coloring books that’s too large to scan in, so I bought two copies.

The challenge is those pages are also too large to fit onto an 8.5×11 book like my first one, or a 9×11 book like my second one. The pages I’ve already used from The Look Coloring Book have had to be creatively cut. I decided to solve the problem this year by grabbing an oversized sketchbook bought on a whim long ago and never used.

It needed a good cover. Another collage! This collage contains a lot of me but especially a lot of a couple of characters. It began with a center–a card sent to me by Marika sometime just before or early in the pandemic, that’s a lot more glittery than you can see in this photo: You bring such passion and spirit and creativity to life. She was saying it to me. I am saying it to my muses and inspirations.

Now the new book has its first coloring page, completed today.

Thank you for reading all of this. Perhaps its length helps you understand how I managed to turn an old novel I wrote in the 1970s, and rewrote in the 1980s/’90s, into 4.5 books and counting since 2019.

Mysteries, etc.

In my effort to read more fiction this year, one of my goals has been to catch up on the series of my favorite mystery writers. My mystery bookshelves can be deceiving.

On those shelves, I might have one or two books by a writer, but I have just under 300 ebooks, and the largest percentage of those are books from mystery series by prolific writers like Louise Penny, Donna Leon, Carolyn Haines, Alan Bradley, and Martin Walker. Also, there are some mystery series on my LGBT shelves (and some of those authors also have works included in my ebooks), and the full collection of Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum books are in a different room, plus she has other series I have in ebooks.

All of this means I don’t know what’s missing from the pandemic years, and I’m currently compiling a list by author of all their works, and whether I have them in hardcover, trade paperback, paperback, or ebooks, and if they’re in ebooks, whether they’re on my Kindle app, Kobo app, or Nook.

Just so you know what I’m doing with my non-writing time. This is why I don’t watch much TV and see so few movies these days. Though on the TV topic, Tom and I have watched almost the entire first season of “Ghosts” as our dinner entertainment, and while I thought it would just be a fun diversion, it’s actually a show we both really like, humorous and often touching. Glad to hear it’ll have a second season.

More and New From Adam J. Kurtz


Back on October 14, I shared this book by Adam J. Kurtz and a page from it for circling some favorite things. Here’s another recent page, and clearly I don’t listen to any music from this century, but whatever (and also, this page made me listen to The Antlers’s “I Don’t Want Love” and it’s from 2011).

When I look at that list now, I’d add Gladys Knight singing, “Neither One Of Us (Wants To Be the First to Say Goodbye)” because it keeps running through my head while I’m writing. I wonder if other writers’ hearts break when their characters’ love stories don’t work out.

I digress.


I also mentioned in that post that Kurtz had a new book coming out, and I recently received my copy thanks to a very generous offer from him and his publisher, and I keep flipping through it and finding new things to make me smile or think or steel my determination to just be me and stop worrying about whatever it is that plays on a loop in my brain when I can’t sleep.

I appreciate that Kurtz has followed his creative vision his way. One thing I like about both books (and there are more things in his shop that I’ll be buying) is that I feel like a friend is talking to me, saying the things a friend needs to say, that I need to hear, and most of all, being vulnerable and so making me feel a little less vulnerable, if that makes sense. On the inside front cover is written: Even small changes help us transform as life unfolds, whether you’re chasing your dreams or trying to get out of bed. You are here but you’re not alone.

Also, my book came with some extras. Who doesn’t like free stuff?

You can find out more about Adam J. Kurtz at his website, and he’s also on Instagram, Twitter, TikTok, and YouTube.

Bonus Post!

On this last day of Black History Month, I wanted to share two of my related Instagram posts. I was lucky enough to find a couple of dolls on one of my rare ventures into the world of retail. Both are from Mattel’s Inspiring Women Series (I think the only other doll I’ve acquired from this series is Eleanor Roosevelt).


The first is the Maya Angelou doll. What a talent and presence Ms. Angelou had. I really like that the doll is holding a copy of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.

I did this coloring page with a quote from her.


The second doll celebrates one of my lifelong heroes, Rosa Parks. What a difference Ms. Parks made to the civil rights movement.

Here’s the coloring page I did with a quote from her.

Both of the coloring pages were taken from this book.