The Healing Season of Pottery

The Healing Season of Pottery by Yeon Somin

In the past few years, quite a few charming novels have been translated into English from Korean and Japanese. Some are cozy fantasies, others are comfort reads, still others bridge the gap with magical realism. This Korean novel is a comfort read, taking place over the course of a year at a pottery studio not too far from Seoul, South Korea.

Jungmin, 30, has turned into a hermit after she left her stressful broadcast writing job. She just happens upon the studio, and is encouraged to learn to hand-build ceramics, and later to use the pottery wheel. Johee is the ceramic artist who teaches beginners of all ages and mentors Gisik, an advanced student who dreams of opening his own pottery studio by the sea. There is, of course, a cat, who needs a foster home.

Others include Jura, Jungmin’s childhood friend. They are both stuck on some issues from their past, and each seeks forgiveness. There are several other regular characters, and many scenes set in cafés, ice cream shops, and coffee shops, with many untranslated Korean words for food and drink. Other than wishing for a glossary of Korean words and phrases, I thoroughly enjoyed this heartwarming story, with the ceramics studio making for an appealing setting, and including life lessons of patience, perseverance, and building community.

Some of the many readalikes include: The Rainfall Market by You Yeong-Gwang, The Kamogawa Food Detectives by Hisashi Kashiwai, The Full Moon Coffee Shop by Mai Mochizuki, We’ll Prescribe You a Cat by Syou Ishida, and The Dallergut Dream Department Store by Miye Lee.

Brenda

Almond Croissant Milk Bread

This is the fanciest and tastiest bread I’ve made that I am looking forward to baking again. Medium effort, high reward baking. I started the milk dough after dinner one night, put the dough in the fridge overnight after the first rise, and we were eating the delicious bread for lunch the next day. It also smells wonderful during and after baking. I don’t think there is a big resemblance to croissants, but it’s more of a coffee cake bread. The almond flavor comes from sliced almonds, almond flour, and almond extract. No almond paste or marzipan. Only two eggs are needed, and one stick of butter. Swedish pearl sugar is listed in the recipe, which I’ve never bought, but granulated sugar or turbinado sugar are good substitutes. There is some nonfat dry milk powder in the recipe, but The King Arthur Baking Company Big Book of Breads states that the milk powder is entirely optional. It does take quite a while to mix the soft bread dough in a stand mixer, but the almond filling is easy to make.

This bread also freezes well, and tastes great plain, with butter, jam, or other toppings. I only wish it made two loaves! Isn’t it gorgeous?

The recipes, with excellent step-by-step instructions are freely available on the King Arthur Baking website, here.

Enjoy!

Brenda

The Christmas Crush

The Christmas Crush by Noelle Douglas

Even as we’re heading into Spring, it can still be enjoyable to listen to a winter holiday romance. This is my favorite from the last couple of years, a first novel by an Illinois author, probably because much of the story is set in a cookie bakery and its new rival. Elena Voss is a vice-president of marketing for Sparkle Cookies. She is very good at her job, but finds it increasingly stressful and would rather be painting, or maybe adopting a cat. Sparkle Cookies has many cookie shops and the cookie dough is mass produced at a central bakery then baked and served by staff. The stores look fabulous, with a lavender color theme, and influencers love the photo ops of the cookies, especially at openings of a new bakery.

Lawrence Higgins, tall and handsome, is fond of his grandma and rather shy. He runs Sweet L’s Bakery in New Hope, Pennsylvania, the location of Sparkle Cookie’s next shop, with a grand opening expected on Christmas Eve. Lawrence’s dog Sugar often comes and hangs out in the office. Lawrence and Elena do not have a meet cute during their first encounter at a town hall meeting, but are soon striking sparks. They meet again at a cookie exchange, and Elena gets to experience a small-town Christmas tree lighting. Elena’s boss is very demanding, though her friend and coworker Priya is great, and she is challenged to make the grand opening a big success.

This is an uplifting and sweet rom-com, not at all a cookie-cutter romance, if you’ll excuse the pun. Lawrence bakes with love, his assistance Carmen is awesome, and the small-town setting is snowy and cozy. Lawrence is a talented baker, as is his grandma, and he can tell that Sparkle cookies don’t use real butter. Is there a way his little bakery can compete with the big chain, and will Elena be a help, or just a rival? Listening to the audiobook narrated by Kim Churchill makes me want to bake lots of cookies or a least visit a local, non-chain bakery to enjoy the wonderful aroma of freshly baked cookies. Pistachio Drop cookies from Sally’s Baking, anyone? Here’s the link: https://sallysbakingaddiction.com/pistachio-cookies/ I look forward to another sweet rom-com from Douglas.

Brenda

The Mars House

The Mars House by Natasha Pulley

January Stirling is a principal dancer for London’s Royal Ballet until severe flooding has him looking for refuge. When offered a chance to immigrate to the Tharsis colony on Mars, he gratefully accepts. But once on Mars, his employment options are limited to heavy labor, as he is Earthstrong, and must wear a device to keep him from injuring the tall, slender, and frail naturalized citizens, except in his small apartment or while working in a factory. Unwilling to go through a risky naturalization procedure, January is stunned when Senator Aubrey Gale offers him a very unusual job.

While January is male, citizens on Mars, incubated in a uterine replicator, don’t label themselves with a gender. Religion is also not practiced on Mars, though many immigrants celebrate their traditional holidays. Gale is running for Consul, head of the Senate, and needs January to help their image. An unusual dust storm leads to a power shortage and the need to either build a new solar array, with the workers wearing heat suits, or to accept help from China in building a nuclear reactor.

Gale loves linguistics and their aides warn January that Gale will speak on the topic at great length. On Mars, a variant of Mandarin Chinese is spoken, along with some Russian and English. In my favorite part of the book, Gale shares that with technology, they can communicate with a herd of mammoths, who are enormously tall in the low Martian gravity.

The house in the title is huge, and has an indoor bonsai garden, a koi pond, some very high ceilings, and in places a glass floor. January often sees a person who may be a ghost, but who is never mentioned by anyone else. January finds Gale fascinating, even as their views on naturalization are very different, and January is still suffering a bit of culture shock.

Pulley is known for her Watchmaker novels, beginning with The Watchmaker of Filigree Street, which I remember as having elements of steampunk fantasy and time travel. I found that trilogy highly unusual, but excellent. Mars House is wondrous, charming, and unlike any other Mars books I have read.

Brenda

Eddie Winston is Looking for Love

Eddie Winston is Looking for Love by Marianne Cronin

A truly sweet novel, this was a pleasure to read. In flashbacks to the past, Eddie meets Bridie when he is a Ph.D. student at the University of Birmingham and she works as an administrative assistant. Her husband, Alistair, not a nice man, is a professor there. Eddie and Birdie, as he calls her, become friends and are attracted to each other.

In the present, Eddie is 90 and works in a charity shop in Birmingham with Marjie. He takes extra care with the belongings of people who have recently passed away, donated by friends or family. He also adopts a guinea pig that is brought to the shop. Young Bella brings in Jake’s concert t-shirts, notebook, and painted Converse shoes. Eddie saves them, certain she’ll want them back someday. They become friends, often eating lunch on a park bench. She writes her way through grief by writing letters to Jake. When Bella learns that Eddie has never been kissed, she sets up an account for him on a dating app.

Bella works at Sainsbury’s grocery store, where she meets a man she calls Ham & Cheese, for the sandwich he buys every day. Bella and Ham & Cheese, aka Chris, go on a date. In an exciting turn of events, Eddie and Bella are invited to visit a Greek island to return a packet of letters to a woman’s sister. At long last, Bridie comes back into the picture. I really enjoyed Bella and Eddie’s unlikely friendship, the main theme of the book for me. I won’t say anything more about the plot, except that I finished the novel with a big smile on my face.

Brenda

To Shape a Dragon’s Breath

To Shape a Dragon’s Breath by Moniquill Blackgoose

The First Book of Nampeshiweisit

This is the best fantasy debut I’ve read in years. 500 pages was not too long, and I eagerly await To Ride a Rising Storm, to be published this October. This novel is from 2023 and won the Andre Norton Nebula Award. Teen Anequs sees a dragon flying east from the island of Masquapaug, then finds a dragon egg. Her village gathers around the egg in celebration, and the hatchling dragon, Kasaqua, bonds with Anequs. Her brother Niquiat, working on the mainland, says that she must apply to attend the Anglish dragon academy with Anequs. No dragon has been seen in the islands for many generations. This alternate history fantasy with some steampunk elements is set in a version of the 1840s in which the Vikings rule eastern North Makeslund. The breath of a dragon can have both useful and destructive powers, so Anequs must learn skiltakraft, a combination of alchemy and chemistry. Having never attended a traditional school, she has some catching up to do.

As an indigenous islander and a girl, some of the academy staff look down on Anequs and her unpedigreed dragon. Only one other student is female, and Marta’s from a wealthy family. Anequs studies hard and speaks her mind, affecting the status quo, making connections at all levels of society. Her goal is to take her dragon and move back to the island, probably an alternate Nantucket, to use her new skills to help her village. Kasaqua, unlike dragons in books by some other writers, grows slowly and is not yet flying by the end of the book. This is listed as a readalike for the popular Empyrean series by Rebecca Yarros, beginning with Fourth Wing, but it sounds darker than To Shape a Dragon’s Breath. Moniquill Blackgoose is a member of the Seaconke Wampanoag tribe and lives in Rhode Island. Anequs is a memorable protagonist, and I loved reading about her world. Adult and teen fans of dragon fantasy books will likely enjoy.

Brenda

Spirit of the Wood

Spirit of the Wood by Kristen Britain

It’s a lovely surprise when you find out that an author you like has a book that you’ve overlooked. This 2023 fantasy novella is a compelling read. This is not a cozy fantasy, but a more traditional epic fantasy. Britain is known for her Green Rider series, and this novella features a regular character in the series at an earlier time in her life. Laren Mapstone is assigned to take trainee Tavin Bankside on his first long ride. Tavin has recently been called to the Green Rider messenger service and is unsure of his magical gift. Inwardly, Tavin thinks of Laren as the Ice Lady, and she is mostly silent on their ride. When she is injured, Tavin and their two horses manage to get Laren to a warded waystation. A forest ranger and a hermit help him care for Laren. The hermit, who can only be found by seeking the spirit of the wood, helps Tavin control his magic, which is empathy. This appealing story is full of wonder, adventures, and danger, and includes a squirrel plus stories from the now conscious but still tart-tongued Laren. I just discovered that a new novel in the series, Falling in a Sea of Stars, will be published in September. The first book in the series is Green Rider.

Brenda

A Death in Diamonds

A Death in Diamonds by S. J. Bennett

This is the fourth Her Majesty The Queen Investigates mystery, but is set much earlier than the others, in 1957. The premise of this delightful British mystery series is that Queen Elizabeth II, with the assistance of her assistant private secretary, solves mysteries. She never takes any credit for her detective work, and doesn’t even share her secret with Prince Philip.

Joan McGraw is a typist at Buckingham Palace and is thrilled to fill in for the Queen’s assistant private secretary Fiona, who is out on sick leave. Joan had worked at Bletchley Park during the war, and speaks French and German. While the mystery she helps the Queen solve is completely fictional, the official events, travel, and gowns are based on fact, including an unexpected encounter with Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa. The Queen’s friendship with a famous author is also real. A sabotage plot is, however, made up.

The Queen has noticed several minor problems connected with her official travel, including a speech that goes missing. Is one of her staff making mistakes, perhaps deliberately? How will this affect her upcoming visit with Prince Philip to Canada and the United States? There will be televised speeches, including one in French and English, a first for the Queen. Her children Charles and Anne are still quite young, though Charles is soon to enroll at a boarding school.

While I enjoyed the palace scenes and the travels, this wasn’t my favorite of the four mysteries in the series. 1957 wasn’t a terribly happy year in Great Britain, and the crime, which involved a secret room, a stolen tiara, and a man of uncertain nationality, takes a long time to solve and casts suspicion on quite a few people. Joan is very clever, enjoys her time with the Queen, and figures out which member of the staff is betraying the Queen’s trust. I look forward to Queen Elizabeth’s next case.

Brenda

The Martian Contingency

The Martian Contingency: A Lady Astronaut Novel by Mary Robinette Kowal

Elma York, 48, is the deputy administrator on Bradbury Base on Mars. The year is 1970, but this is an alternate timeline. In Kowal’s award-winning Lady Astronaut series, the race to space was accelerated after a meteor strike in 1952 triggered global warming as well as causing many, many deaths. Technology developed for space is also helping conditions on Earth. Racism and discrimination against women are evident here, but they are being dealt with much sooner than on our version of Earth. Elma and her husband Nathaniel, an engineer, are part of the 2nd expedition to Mars, and they will not be returning to Earth. Elma really enjoys math, piloting, and baking, especially when she’s anxious. Nathaniel is a workaholic and they are both Jewish. On the base the habitat observes Jewish, Islamic, Chinese, Hindu, and Christian holidays. The calendar is a focus here as days on Mars are 39 minutes longer and the year is twice as long as on Earth, and there is a time lag for communications. While technology is more advanced than our Earth was in 1970 (or in 2025), in others not so much, such as for healthcare. Secrets from the first expedition are gradually uncovered, and there are complications in preparing for the next expedition, which will include teens as well as adults. This is the fourth book, after The Relentless Moon. Calculating Stars is the first book, and they are all excellent, compelling reads. I am enjoying the combination of science fiction and alternate history, as well as the memorable characters. I read a digital review copy; the novel will be published March 18.

Brenda

Cabin

Cabin: Off the Grid Adventures with a Clueless Craftsman by Patrick Hutchison

Patrick has a pretty good job as a copywriter in Seattle. But he increasingly feels like he’s missing out, as his friends and peers settle down, get better jobs, or do cool things like buy a sailboat to live on. Searching online ads, he finds a tiny cabin for sale in the Cascade Mountains. Only two hours from the city, and just $7500 (this is 2012). It needs a little work. Okay, lots of work. Patrick buys it, borrows his mom’s small truck, and brings a couple friends, some plywood and 2 x 4s, and a few cordless tools. Now it’s a base for hiking in the nearby national forest, and a place to learn to use lots of different tools and acquire new skills. With a camp stove and a propane heater and lanterns, plus an old futon, this could work. Next he acquires the tiniest woodstove, then a steep staircase is built to the loft, and so on. This memoir is very enjoyable reading on a cold winter day, as Patrick and friends make the cabin, though it has no running water, electricity, or Wi-Fi, increasingly cozy. A mudslide and some tall, leaning trees cause delays and anxiety, but in the end he has a new lifestyle and job. If you’ve ever wandered the aisles of a hardware or lumber store, or spent hours watching DIY videos on how to repair or create something, you’ll likely appreciate this memoir. I know Patrick will be working on more cabins, but I also wonder what he’ll be writing next. His website is here: https://patrick-hutchison.com/.

Brenda