Chocolate Milk Bread

One of my recent bakes. Recipe is from The King Arthur Baking Company Big Book of Bread, and can be found here: https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/recipes/chocolate-milk-bread-recipe

No actual chocolate milk here, just a chocolate variation of Japanese milk bread, with cocoa powder and chocolate chips. I did use the optional dry milk. I don’t know that the raw demerara sugar on top adds anything extra, but it was fun forming the four dough logs that give this bread its fun shape. Only a little sweet, and quite delicious.

Another recent, simpler bake was strawberry shortcake, including a parfait form, with strawberries from a farmer’s market. Recipes for the sweet biscuits and vanilla whipped cream from Sally’s Baking Addiction, found here: https://sallysbakingaddiction.com/easy-homemade-strawberry-shortcake/#tasty-recipes-68038 . My buttermilk was a month after the best used by date, so I added a little lemon juice to milk and let it sit for about 10 minutes. My next planned bake is banana muffins with coconut and macadamias, from America’s Test Kitchen. I’m not a fan of raw bananas, but like them pretty well cooked or baked.

Brenda

The Spirit Moves

The Spirit Moves by Carol J. Perry

Some cozy mysteries are either too cookie-cutter or too bland to keep my interest. The 4th book in the Haunted Haven series is a pleasant but never boring read. I liked the haunted player piano and dog Finn on the cover. Many ghosts can be found in Haven, a small town on the Florida coast, but the locals never mention the ghosts to tourists. The ghosts are usually pretty friendly, and appear and talk with some of the residents. Ghost Billy, who plays the piano, sets the mood when he plays familiar tunes in the restaurant of Haven House Inn. Ghost Lorna gives Maureen, the Inn’s newer owner, fashion and other advice.

A group of mystery writers, a bookseller and a ghostwriter meet at the Inn, along with a visiting police officer and the local police chief. Two recent unsolved crimes have tourists cancelling hotel and dinner reservations, and a beach wedding is relocating to another town. Maureen and her sweetheart Ted, the restaurant’s chef, have to come up with promotions to attract customers and solve the crimes. A weekend trip to Key West made a nice change of pace. I quite enjoyed this mystery, although it wasn’t quite as cozy as the previous book, Haunting License, which has Maureen organizing a fishing tournament. The earlier books are Be My Ghost and High Spirits. Readalikes include Haunted Ever After by Jenn DeLuca and Interview with a Dead Editor by Shanna Swendson.

Brenda

Murder by Memory

Murder by Memory by Olivia Waite

This delightful science fiction mystery novella is set on the Fairweather, a colony ship. We never go to the bridge, engineering, or anywhere else featuring technology of the future, except for the library. We also never learn where the Fairweather is headed, only that there are 10,000 colonists aboard and their journey is expected to last 1,000 years. The ship left Old Earth 307 years ago.

The ship sounds appealing, with flats, small shops and cafés, a hydroponic garden with trees and a lawn made of moss. Detective Dorothy Gentleman visits her nephew Rutherford, and meets his new partner John, a memory artist who crafts the most amazing cocktails. She communicates with Ferry, the Fairweather’s ship mind. During her latest investigation, Dorothy also visits a yarn shop, a bank, and the previously mentioned library, the scene of a most unusual crime. At only 112 pages, this is a quick yet immersive read.

Brenda

The Eights

The Eights by Joanna Miller

I thoroughly enjoyed this historical novel set at Oxford University in 1920 and 1921. The Eights are four women entering St. Hugh’s College at Oxford. They are in the first group of women to matriculate at Oxford. Before 1920, women could study at Oxford but weren’t awarded degrees. World War I has been over for almost two years and women over 30 now get to vote in Great Britain.

Eight is the group’s corridor number. Beatrice is very tall, and her mother is a famous suffragist. Beautiful Dora is still mourning her brother and fiancé and struggles a bit with math. Otto (Ottoline) is brilliant at math, wealthy, the youngest of four sisters and doesn’t get on with her mother at all. Otto smokes, drinks, and likes to bend the rules. Marianne is devoted to her father, a rector, and goes home every other weekend to help out with his church work. She needs to do well on her exams to get a scholarship in English, and hopes to become a teacher.

The male Oxford students are not a very welcoming bunch. They tease and play pranks, though some are charmed by Dora and Otto. The reader is immersed into college life along with the Eights, and Oxford is lovingly described along with the many rules the women must follow and the mediocre food. There are a few flashbacks to their lives during the war. This memorable first novel makes me want to reread Gaudy Night by Dorothy Sayers, set at Oxford a decade later, or Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear. More, please!

Brenda

The Stardust Grail

The Stardust Grail by Yume Kitasei

If you enjoy the science fiction subgenre of space opera, I suggest reading Stardust Grail, the author’s second novel. A little like Becky Chambers’ work, but not as optimistic, along with some Indiana Jones; the characters are searching for a grail, after all.

Maya Hoshimoto is human, but was infected with the Frenro virus years ago. During migraines she has brief visions of the past or the future. Maya can hear Auncle’s voice in her head and respond telepathically. Auncle is very tall with tentacles. Xie is Frenro, an aquatic species. Wil, an armored human female and Medix, a robot, join them in their quest.

Maya, along with Auncle, found and returned stolen artifacts. Now she’s a grad student with writer’s block on Earth, at Princeton. Liam is a fellow graduate student. Then Auncle arrives, asking Maya to come along on one last adventure. They have the journals of Dr. Huang to guide them, one of the last to see the stardust grail, which is desired by multiple species.

The four of them, later joined by Liam, travel through many space nodes, get involved in a space battle, and visit settlements, a watery moon, and an underground museum with booby traps, with Maya wondering if anyone will survive to return home. And just where is home for her?  An entertaining and thought-provoking read.

Brenda

Tilt

Tilt by Emma Pattee

This thriller covers the events of a single day, from the point of view of Annie, who is very pregnant. On her first day of maternity leave, Annie drives to Ikea on the east side of Portland to buy a crib for her baby, nicknamed Bean. Ikea employee Taylor, while definitely not a model employee, helps cranky Annie find the crib and get out of the store when The Big One hits Portland. The author researched what might happen if a major earthquake hit Portland, Oregon, and the answers were not encouraging.

Annie walks and walks west through Portland (a detailed map is included) to reach her husband Dom. Sometimes she gets a ride. Throughout her journey, Annie tells her life story to baby Bean in flashbacks, focusing on her relationship with Dom, her mother, parenting classes, prenatal yoga, and their money woes. Annie meets many other people along the way, including a few she knows. She traverses a golf course, a large park, bridges, and a school, seeking to reach the café where Dom works. Hot, thirsty, and of course, pregnant, Annie occasionally gets a drink or a snack, but is driven to find her husband. Dom has bonded more with the baby, and Annie worries about whether she’ll be a good mom. Annie is hard on herself, but is clear on her goals in the end. Poignant and sometimes gritty, this first novel is compelling and hard to forget.

Brenda

The Rainfall Market

The Rainfall Market by You Yeong-Gwang

A charming Korean cozy fantasy, a quick and pleasant read. Teen Serin writes a letter detailing what she’d like to change in her somewhat dreary life, and receives a golden ticket to the magical Rainfall Market in Rainbow Town. The Market is full of dokkaebi, which turn out to be goblins, and are described in an illustrated glossary. Other than Taekwondo and listening to music, Serin doesn’t have any hobbies. Her mother is a seamstress and they are poor.

When a week of rain is predicted, the market opens for the lucky people with tickets. Serin has many adventures at the market, accompanied by Issha, a magical cat guide. There is a little hint of Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory about the market and Serin’s adventures. Other then the dokkaebi, there are few Korean words, making for easy reading. I love the cover, really liked the ending, and was surprised to find out that the author is male. I would definitely read another cozy adventure like The Rainfall Market, especially on a rainy day.

Brenda

Eleanor and the Cold War

Eleanor and the Cold War by Ellen Yardley

Read this mystery to view Washington, D.C. and New York in 1951 through the eyes of Kay Thompson, temporary secretary to Eleanor Roosevelt. Kay is 25 and very pretty, and expects to find an attractive, well-off man to marry rather than have a career. Working for Mrs. Roosevelt is quite the eye-opening experience. While many historical characters are featured, Kay is fictional, as is the mystery, the first in a planned series featuring Eleanor Roosevelt.

Eleanor is 66, and working with the United Nations. Kay is filling in as secretary for her aunt. Atomic scientist Elsa Meyer contacts Eleanor from Sweden, looking for her daughter Susan. Eleanor makes contact and arranges to meet her at Union Station in Washington. Kay and Eleanor instead find her body on the train. Detectives Barlow and O’Malley investigate, but Barlow assumes a Soviet communist is to blame, and doesn’t look further. Kay has reason to think the Russian is innocent, as is the train porter, and helps Eleanor investigate. Young politicians, another scientist, a man investigating Communists, and even young Jacqueline Bouvier, a newspaper photographer, are all involved. New York City, Washington, and Long Island are clearly described, with the historical figures, clothing, meals, drinks, department stores and women’s roles setting the story firmly in the early 1950s.

I look forward to another book in the series, and enjoyed reading about Kay and Eleanor. The author studied Eleanor’s autobiography and her many My Day newspaper columns to bring her character to life. A clever mystery that is perhaps deliberately tricky to figure out, but the characters and immersive setting make for an excellent read.

Brenda

Swordheart

Swordheart by T. Kingfisher

I’ve read a few other books by T. Kingfisher, but Swordheart, first published in 2018 and recently rereleased, was new to me. I listened to the audiobook, with an excellent narration by Jesse Vilinsky. The genre is fantasy, with humor, adventure, and a slow-burn romance.

Halla, a respectable widow, has been taking care of Uncle Silas for years until his recent death. Silas was her husband’s uncle, so it’s quite a surprise when Halla inherits the large house and its contents. Nasty Malva wants Halla to marry her son Alver so they can regain the inheritance, and won’t take no for an answer. Alver has clammy hands and won’t stand up to his mother’s demands, so Halla looks for another way out. When Halla draws a sword that’s been hanging on the wall for years, Sarkis appears. He is an immortal warrior, sworn to protect the sword’s owner.

To claim Halla’s inheritance, Halla and Sarkis travel from Rutger’s Howe to a temple where they employ Zale, a nonbinary lawyer priest. They travel back to the village in a wagon, driven by Brindle, a gnole, and his ox. Along the way, they have many adventures. Sarkis is grumpy and hiding secrets about his lengthy past, the ox is extremely slow, and Halla is very curious and asks innumerable questions. Readers of Kingfisher’s Nettle & Bone are sure to enjoy. Daggerbound, featuring the Dervish mentioned in Swordheart, is expected to be published in 2026.

Brenda

When the Moon Hits Your Eye

When the Moon Hits Your Eye by John Scalzi

Another entertaining book in the category of highly improbable plots. If you enjoyed Scalzi’s recent Kaiju Preservation Society or Starter Villain, as did I, this near future novel may be right up your alley. I was lucky enough to hear the author read from Chapter 2 at an author event last fall, which thoroughly entertained the audience.

The premise is that the Moon has suddenly turned to cheese, but is the same mass as our familiar cratered, rocky satellite. Moon rocks in museums have also transformed. At first, it just seems like a great opportunity for silly jokes. Then it gets a little more serious. A moon landing is planned, and how will that go? The Moon is now brighter, and a few other aspects are different; and so…? How did this happen, and how will the people of Earth react? And just what kind of cheese is it??

Told from several points of view, including a museum director, an astronaut, and a government staffer, this is a fast-paced read that has some science, a little bit of philosophy, but is mostly very funny. Enjoy.

Brenda