My husband ordered a signed copy of Stacy Abram's new novel While Justice Sleeps!
- Still Life by Sarah Winman whose Tin Man I reviewed
My husband ordered a signed copy of Stacy Abram's new novel While Justice Sleeps!
I decided to try some creative background ideas at the Mackinac Bridge block. I got the idea while waiting for the ophthalmologist in an examination room with nothing to do but look at the desk top home page image. I liked the way the artist put together colors for sky and water.
I layered various fabrics for the sky. For the water, I inserted a darker fabric into the lighter blue and then pleated them.
Sunny looking out our window. The pups left footprints on the deep carpet. Like the footprints they leave in our hearts, our son added. |
Water Lily quilt by Nancy A. Bekofske |
The Heron's Cry by Anne Cleeves, second in the Detective Venn series; read my review of The Long Call here
Talk to Me by T. C. Boyle in which a chimp has been taught to talk in sign language
My brother and his girlfriend are walking the North Country Trail across Michigan. Last weekend's threatening clouds produced some dramatic photographs as they crossed Kalamazoo County.
And Book Club Cook Book win book A Hundred Suns by Karin Tanabe arrived.
Michael Collins is on the left. detail from When Dreams Came True by Nancy A. Bekofske |
When Dreams Came True by Nancy A. Bekofske |
I finished machine quilting the Water Lily quilt! I intend to wash it and the fabric and cotton batting will shrink some, giving it an antique look. I bought this Mountain Mist pattern early in my quilting life, almost thirty years ago. It was time I finally made it.
Foreshadowing began with the opening sentences, narrated in a voice that brought to mind Rod Serling introducing a Twilight Zone episode, setting up the story.A girl sitting beside a swimming pool behind her newly built home. The neighbor boy welcoming her to the neighborhood. A typical day in a typical good neighborhood, upscale and friendly, a place where women gather for book clubs and teenagers can safely run in the local park.But underneath the 'tenuous peace' simmers the possibility of fracture, the conflict of class and money and race and values. For some, conspicuous wealth is the goal. For another, environmental concerns are primary.And probing deeper, there are secret desires and blooming love and the blindness we hold on to for self-protection.Lives will be destroyed. A Good Neighborhood is a reflection of the social turmoil of our time.