This past fall was our tenth anniversary. My husband travels monthly to Europe on business (sounds more glamorous than it is), so one weekend I flew over and met him in Paris for a long weekend. The weather was beautiful and it was so fun to just walk around that beautiful and amazing city! Paris is a special place for us since we went there to celebrate his being cancer-free back in 2007. This picture was taken on the day we visited Sacre Couer in Montmarte. Beautiful day! The street vendors were out in force and we walked and walked, enjoying side trips into cafes and a visit to Dali’s house. Ah, Paris…
Author: drbethnolan
Review: HIS MAJESTY’S HOPE by Susan Elia MacNeal
I have really enjoyed the Maggie Hope cozy mystery series by Susan Elia MacNeal and was thrilled to get the latest one through Net Galley. In this third installment (the previous two were reviewed earlier), expert mathematician and British spy Maggie is being dropped over enemy lines into WWII Germany. In a parallel story, her mother’s daughter (Maggie’s half-sister) is working as a nurse and discovers that children with developmental and physical disabilities are being secretly sent to gas chambers by the Nazi’s and vows to work against the Nazi’s (and her mother). In yet another storyline, Maggie’s dear friend David is being pressured by his parents to marry, but he is gay. And finally Maggie’s former fiance who everyone thinks is dead awakes and finds himself in a German hospital.
What will happen? Will Maggie survive behind enemy lines? Will Elise, her half-sister, save the children? Will Maggie and Elise meet? Will David have to renounce the man he loves and enter into a marriage of convenience? And will Maggie find herself in a love triangle with John, her lost love, and Hugh, her current flame? Of course, you need to read to find out!
I really enjoy this series. It’s a historical cozy, my favorite kind, and Ms. MacNeal certainly does her research! I have chatted with her on Twitter and Facebook and even asked if she time travelled in order to get the details so right (FYI – she doesn’t). The Maggie Hope books are fun to read and are one of my favorite genres (WWII). I particularly like how the story continues across books. I recommend them to those who like cozies, especially of this period. Looks like another book will be coming out next year!
Thank you to NG and Bantam Publishers for my copy!
Quick Review of DEATH OF YESTERDAY by M.C. Beaton
As you know, I love, love, love Hamish Macbeth and MC Beaton’s series of cozies about him. In this latest one, Hamish solves the mysterious death of a woman who first reports her sketchbook missing, then winds up dead. There are lots of suspects but not many motives. Who did she see and why would they feel she was a threat to them? One note to regular readers of this series: Hamish’s love life is again center stage as he struggles with the Priscilla/Elspeth love triangle and a new fling. Personally, I’d like to see him make up his mind! Not my favorite in the series, but a fun, quick read nonetheless.
I got my copy from the library!
Saturday Snapshot: Summer Fair
Each year our town holds a summer fair. I volunteer as the director of stage entertainment. This August will be our 131st fair! This was the view from my music tent last summer.
Saturday Snapshot is hosted by Alyce of http://www.athomewithbooks.net. Anyone can participate! Just post a picture you or a friend/family member took and link it to Alyce’s site (appropriate content please!).
Saturday Snapshot: Napa!
I grew up in Napa Valley, California, and we LOVE to visit!
Here are a few shots I took on our recent April trip.
The ride upvalley – forgive the telephone lines…
The driveway into Sterling Vineyards:
Views from the tram up to Sterling:
Um…speaks for itself.. and yes, it was quite tasty!!
This picture hardly does it justice, but this is the view of the evening sun setting from my friends’ back deck (I had to include this because really — if this was out your back window, would you EVER go inside??)
You, too, can take part in Saturday Snapshot, hosted by Alyce at www.athomewithbooks.net. Just post a picture you or a friend took and link it to Alyce’s site! (Appropriate pics only please!)
Reviewing Three by Maeve Binchy: “A Week in Winter”, “A Week in Summer”, and “The Builders”
For my recent trip I purchased three Maeve Binchy stories for my kindle. I had wanted to read “A Week in Winter”, Ms. Binchy’s final book. “A Week in Summer” was a short story that was available. “The Builders” is more of a novella, written as part of an adult literacy campaign in Ireland. I enjoyed all three!
In the short story “A Week in Summer”, a married couple decide they will spend a week’s holiday one summer in order to recharge their middle-aged lives. They find themselves in the midst of a town-wide yearly festival where they meet new friends and discover new interests while rediscovering their relationship. This was a sweet story that was only 99 cents on Kindle!
Next I read the short book, “The Builders”. This less-than-one-hundred-pages novella tells the story of Nan Ryan, a middle-aged widow who takes an interest in the builders working next door to her.Who exactly were the people who had lived there and died so tragically? Who is fixing up the house and for what reason? What will the builders find? Nan builds a friendship with one of the men working there and together they analyze and discuss the situation. Another typical Binchy story – this one was written as part of an adult literacy campaign contribution.
Finally I read Maeve Binchy’s final book: “A Week in Winter”. I was so sad as I read this novel, knowing it was her last. It was typical Binchy fare: a young woman who has been unlucky in love returns home to Ireland and opens what is essentially a B&B in order to give folks a relaxing ‘week in winter’. Chicky, the proprietress, is the common link running through this story as each chapter focuses on one of the members of the household or one of the guests for that first week in winter in which they open. There are two doctors who are escaping a tragedy, a crotchety older woman, a young man who loves music, a librarian who has second sight, and several more. We get to know each one as their stories intertwine.
I have always loved Binchy’s books. I can’t say which is my favorite: “Light a Penny Candle”? “The Glass Lake”? “Evening Class”? Her older works I enjoyed more than her more recent ones (“Quentin’s” and onward). This is classic Binchy however. There’s a warmth and a goodness to these stories that, while I am sure some folks might find it cloying, gives me comfort. As I read the last page of this novel (or the last screen I should say, as it was on kindle), I had an image of Chicky standing at the door of her inn and Maeve standing next to her – welcoming travellers to their little bit of Ireland.
RIP, dear Maeve, and know that your stories live on!
Saturday Snapshot: Some pics from SF
Here are some shots of SF from our trip last week! We started in San Francisco, and then headed to my hometown of Napa to visit friends.
My son delighted in the SF cable cars!!

My daughter asked me to take this shot of the street lantern in Chinatown – our hotel was only a few blocks away.
It was a beautiful day and we enjoyed hanging out at the park by Ghiradelli Square, where I snapped this pic of the Golden Gate Bridge! (a little blurry – iPhone and me)
Saturday Snapshot is hosted by Alyce at www.athomewithbooks.net. You can participate by posting a picture(s) you’ve taken (appropriate content, please) and linking it to Alyce’s site!
Review of On the Rocks: A Willa Cather and Edith Lewis Mystery by Sue Hallgarth
Love, love, love.
I picked up this short mystery while at the library and read it on the plane to California two weeks ago. At first I was a bit skeptical – Willa Cather and Edith Lewis solving mysteries?? But I have to say, I really enjoyed this delightful delving into the personalities of Willa and Edith and the “Cottage Girls” of the early 20th century.
About fifteen years ago I went through a “Cather phase”, where I read all her writings and some biographies on her. I found her so interesting and such a gifted writer. Edith Lewis, for those who don’t know, was Willa’s partner and closest friend. This book made them come alive, along with their other female friends, a group of independent and educated women who summered on Grand Manan in the 1920’s and were known collectively as the “Cottage Girls”.
The mystery itself was enjoyable and well-plotted, I thought. In essence, Edith is painting one day when she witnesses a body plunging off a cliff to the rocks below. Is it an accident – or murder?
Highly recommended to those who enjoy this historical genre, and to fans of great women authors! I’ll be curious to see if Ms. Hallgarth has this as the start of a series or not. She is an expert on Cather and clearly “knows” her well.
A Guest Post by John Lanza — Author of the “Money Mammals” Series
As I am off in California this week, I am more than thrilled to post an essay from my guest, John Lanza. John is the author of the “Money Mammals” books, which I have reviewed. Thanks for contributing, John!
Of Marshmallows and Money
By now, we’ve all heard of the Marshmallow Study by Walter Mischel. You know, the one in which kids who could resist a marshmallow for a period of time would be rewarded with an additional marshmallow to eat. Mischel then followed up his work years later and found that those kids who developed strategies to delay their immediate gratification had been more successful. The studies suggest that learning strategies to delay gratification can help kids later in life. There are elements of the study and what it demonstrates that have been called into question, but both the original study and Mischel’s follow up study are intriguing.
I wanted to touch on this in the context of financial literacy. As the creator of The Money Mammals and a frequent contributor to blogs and debates on the subject of financial literacy, I find certain issues crop up consistently. One is that many parents equate delayed gratification to not spending money at all. I’ve spoken with many parents who suggest that saving for a “rainy day” in an account that can’t be touched is the way to go. It’s essential that we rethink this. Spending money is a part of life — kids need to be comfortable with handling and spending money. Although it’s important to protect ourselves from our own spending habits by keeping money at bay in a savings account that can’t be touched, socking too much or all the money kids are receiving in an account isn’t necessarily going to teach them anything. What will they do when they eventually get their hands on it and they’ve had no experience with spending money in the first place? In addition, younger kids are likely to find the idea of saving money for a rainy day too abstract.
I’ve found that having kids set spending goals can be a very effective way of teaching delayed gratification with a true, understandable end game — even for a five-year-old. My daughter was so proud when she saved eight weeks of allowance to buy a scooter. It was the first monetary savings goal she achieved! Although she had a credit union account with an awesome “starter” interest rate of 5% for the first 500 bucks, the 20 cents she would have earned from that money in the same period would have left her… Well, let’s just say she would have preferred two marshmallows.
I think all parents find themselves a little worried at the beginning of the financial literacy teaching process with the concept of giving our kids too much autonomy over their money. I know I was! This is understandable, because that’s what we do as parents — we worry. We’ll worry when our kids go on their first dates, drive their first car, head off to college and more. That doesn’t mean that we’ll keep them from doing these things, though I wish they’d delay that dating gratification as long as possible. Ultimately, though, we know we must raise kids to the best of our ability and trust them to make smart choices by giving them experience with those choices. We’ve all learned our own financial lessons by handling money. Advice is good, but real world experience is the best teacher.
April is Financial Literacy Month (or National Financial Capability Month, as President Obama has decreed). April 23rd is National Teach Your Child to Save Day. Let’s all use this opportunity to get our kids to learn about saving by having them set a goal to spend their money on something they might want. Here’s an additional idea… As a reward, get a bag of marshmallows, a box of graham crackers and some chocolate. I wonder if those kids in Michel’s study could have delayed their gratification if they’d had s’mores in front of them.
Happy Financial Literacy Month!
John’s Bio:
Saturday Snapshot! I Left My Heart…
Do you know what this is? It’s a LEGO rendition of San Francisco! While we saw this in Florida this February, today we are headed to the REAL SF and to my hometown of Napa! Wish us a Bon Voyage as we start school break!
Saturday Snapshot is hoted by Alyce of http://www.athomewithbooks.net. You can join the fun by posting an appropriate picture that you or a friend/family member took and linking it to Alyce’s site!










