RHYS BOWEN: Like many of you I am finding the news really stressful these days. From climate change to Gaza to hate and division at home the world no longer feels a safe and comfortable place. Once thing I have always liked to do, for my whole life, is have something to look forward to: Only thirty five days to my birthday when I was a child, only six months until I graduate, twenty nine days to my wedding… and for the past few years, since the onset of Covid I’ve found that I dare not do this any longer. I have had four cruises canceled in a row. I rented a house on the beach in San Diego for the entire family and half of them got Covid. I rented a huge house for John’s 90th and almost everyone got Type A Flu. And then, a week before we were due to fly to England where I was to meet up with college friends, see my British TV people and go to stay with my sister-in-law, John was in the emergency room and most of the trip had to be cancelled. It feels like nothing is secure any more.
So I’m trying to think happy thoughts and see what I might have to look forward to this year: the big thing is that my eldest grandson Sam just got engaged. We’ve known his fiancee for four years now and absolutely love her. She fits in perfectly with our slightly crazy family. Now they are searching for a wedding venue and have just come to Phoenix to see if they want to get married at his old high school chapel and then in a venue that could be outdoors in the spring next year. So it’s all very exciting and hopeful.
Book wise I've got the new book with Clare coming out in March: Silent as the Grave. And, in the summer, I'm really looking forward to the launch of MRS ENDICOTT'S SPLENDID ADVENTURE. Cover reveal quite soon. We've been playing with some spectacular scenery on the Mediterranean.
The other thing I’m just starting to plan, tentatively, is a trip to Scotland. John, who has impressive Scottish ancestry, has never been there. I am just starting to write a book set on the Isle of Skye. I was looking into tours that might not be too demanding for my husband but then fate stepped in. Clare was annoyed when she found out we’d be going away at the end of May. She was planning to come to us in California then to work on our next book. So…. Would you like to come to Scotland and drive us around? I said. We can find time to work on the book. Of course she said yes, so now we have to do some research and plan our route. But I’m feeling just a teeny bit excited.
And before that I have Left Coast Crime in Denver–are any of the Reddies going? And then the Edgars in New York. All fun events where i get to see friends and colleagues. Will I see you at one of these?
So how about you, dear Reds? What are you looking forward to this year?
JENN McKINLAY: I think you just described life as we know it now. Last minute changes and cancellations, happy events, and a lot of holding our breath as we see what happens. This year, Hooligan 1 will graduate university! Thrilling! Hooligan 2 and I will attempt a longer race (Pat’s Run in Tempe), and my first fantasy novel will be published. Fingers crossed that these events will not change!
Otherwise, summer vacation at our house in Nova Scotia is always something I look forward to and I have some inklings of a trip to Dublin and London, but I am holding my breath and waiting to see what’s what as possible travel dates draw nearer.
LUCY BURDETTE: The Scotland trip with Clare sounds delightful, Rhys! Fingers crossed everyone continues to feel well! John and I were hoping to take an alumni trip to Scotland and Wales, but it was canceled for this year. Boo! I think I have convinced him to go with me to Brittany and Paris instead:). I do plan to see you at the Edgars in May!
In the work realm, another Key West mystery arrives in August, which I’m thrilled about. I’m dabbling a bit in the Paris book too, though finding it hard to work on both at once. The Friends of the Key West Library season has been going so well–I had many worries about how it would all fall into place. More on that during my week for sure!
HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: You know, I agree– I feel as if I am tiptoe tiptoe tiptoeing through our precarious lives these days.
Looking forward…tiptoe tiptoe…to presenting at the Edgars. Teaching at my Career Authors glam weekend writers’ retreat. Teaching a master class at Thrillerfest, and more. My grandson is graduating from UMass Amherst with a degree in linguistics! (Adorable and brilliant.) Oh, appearing at the Montreal Mystery Festival, that’ll be amazing. Tiptoe tiptoe.
Eighty thousand worlds into a new book, and I'm looking forward to knowing what happens in the plot.
And of course ALL THIS COULD BE YOURS will start bubbling to the surface. Tiptoe tiptoe.
HALLIE EPHRON: I’m just back from 10 days in Key West where I got to teach a week-long class for The Studios of Key West and see Ann Cleeves get interviewed by our own Lucy Burdette at the Key West Public Library and hang out with my very best friend. And thaw out from the New England cold.
Best of all I have not gotten sick (yet!) from the traveling (Yes, I wore a mask at the airport.) and my plane was not delayed.Mostly I stay in the moment, though Wordsworth’s line of poetry keeps going through my head: “The world is too much with us…”
DEBORAH CROMBIE: I feel like life has been smacking me lately, and I'm not sure I want to tempt it by making plans! But I'm looking forward to the first week in March, when Kayti and I are going to see La Boheme at the Dallas Opera. And, then, at the end of March we have our annual trip to Roundtop, the antiques fair down in central Texas. I look forward to this three days all year.
And I'm beginning to daydream that maybe, between finishing this book and having my knee replacement, I might just sneak in a quick trip to London. I am missing it desperately, and I'll need to be planning the next book!
JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: I’m the homebody of our group, I think, because the only travel I’m looking forward to is the book tour for AT MIDNIGHT COMES THE CRY in November, and honestly, that feels SO far away it’s hard to imagine right now. I do also have occasional trips down to DC to visit my family, which is always lovely, but it’s not exactly Venice or the south of France, is it?
I’m looking forward to spring, and to aggressively tackling the various invasives that took over my land last summer, when I wasn’t doing any gardening because of my pre- and post- surgical knee. I’m looking forward to whatever Victoria and her new wife decide on to celebrate their marriage sometime this summer. And in March, Virginia is coming back to the US on a quick visit to pick up the Million Dollar Cat - and you had best believe I’m looking forward to waving goodbye to kitty at Logan Airport!
RHYS: Now it's your turn. What are you looking forward to this year?
We have learned not to plan anything too far in advance lest some disaster [usually illness] befall us. But we are looking forward to having our Colorado daughter and two grandsons come stay with us for a couple of weeks this summer . . . .
ReplyDeleteComing to stay is usually safe!
DeleteYesterday we got about 8" of heavy snow and in addition to the shoveling I did all day, the 1/4 mile farm driveway was plowed out three times. (My plow guy of the last fifteen years got stuck on attempt #2, had to be towed out, and informed me that he quit forever. As the county was nearing a state of emergency road closure, it took a bit of time to find someone new for pass #3.) Because we've had anemic winters for the last five years, the first snowbanks hadn't been pushed back far enough and now the huge banks make it hard to move any more snow. Thus I had tentatively planned to hire a bucket loader to come out today to PICK UP and MOVE the snowbanks. (!$$!!) However this morning it is 3°F, we have wind gusts of 30-50 mph, and all the snow is drifting. So today I am looking forward to staying home, making a pot of turkey soup, and baking some bread.
ReplyDeleteMore long term I am not a traveler but when lambing season is over I look forward to quick visits to Connecticut to see my son and grandchildren. (Selden)
Selden, that's a weather disaster! I approve of your plan to make soup and bread.
DeleteYikes! Yes, this winter caught a lot of people flatfooted, for sure!
DeleteSelden, that sounds awful... Makes our "snowstorm" feel like a sauna and I should stop whining about the snow I had to move around.
DeleteI'm looking forward to retiring, attending Malice Domestic and Spring.
ReplyDeleteDRU: Enjoy your first year of retired life.
DeleteRetirement! Wow! How do you feel about that??
DeleteI'll be interested to see what "retirement" looks like, Dru-Ann style.
DeleteI foresee more award-winning writing in your retirement, Dru Ann!
DeleteHope you have a great year, Dru!
DeleteI'll let you know in April...
DeleteHappy retirement, Dru
DeleteSounds like a plan!
DeleteCongrats on retiring!
DeleteDru, Retirement is a strange experience. I've heard friends say so many times that now they can't imagine how they found time to work and do all the other stuff a person has to do! But I hope you'll still be our north star at conventions!
DeleteI'm excited about this coming Sunday evening (here in Porugal - early afternoon in CA) because I'll be doing a Zoom poetry reading for one of my poetry groups in Sacramento. I've really missed them. They were so helpful with suggestions at meetings and, while the group is large, I'm friends with many of them on FB, so I've kept in touch a little. But it will be great to "see" them again.
ReplyDeleteAfter that, we have family friends from California visiting us in early March, and in mid-June more friends from California (she's and old college chum). And a visit from one of our doctor nephews who lives with his wife and two children in Denver. (They are trying to coordinate with a medical conference in Europe, so dates are not confirmed yet. But can't wait! We "WhatsApp," but it's really not the same as being able to hug in person and we haven't seen the kids yet in person, so this will be wonderful.
Deborah, lucky you! Rajan and I both love La Boheme. One of our favorite operas.
Portugal sounds awfully tempting right now, Elizabeth. I bet you’ll get many US guests
DeleteScotland sounds wonderful, too. I hope it all works out and you have a wonderful time.
DeleteElizabeth, it's one of my favorites, too, but it's only my daughter's second opera so I hope she loves it, too.
DeleteWhat wonderful things to look forward to: Scotland, graduations (a new linguist, yay!), marriages, book tours, family time! May everyone stay healthy for all of it.
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to LCC in Denver and being a featured author at a local literary festival (instead of going to Malice the same weekend). Mostly I want to soak up as much family time as I can. A happy event will be my daughter-in-law's doctoral graduation in August, but that might also mean they'll move farther away WITH MY GRANDGIRL, sniff.
And, after finally have a real winter again (I hear you, Selden!), I'm really looking forward to gardening and bare feet and sun-warmed blueberries and basking on a beach in the summer.
Oh, no! Ida Rose might be moving away? Hope they don't move further than an easy driving distance, my friend.
Deleteoh no, I hope the move isn't too far.
DeleteSame! But when you're applying for a history professor job and your husband works from home, sometimes you go where the position is. It's all up in the air right now as Alison interviews and works to finish her dissertation.
DeleteThat said, they love where they live and Ida Rose's daycare/preschool. I hope that sways them to stay.
DeleteDarn, academic positions can be hard to find. Fingers crossed they don't move very far away.
DeleteWhen I first read this, I didn't have anything to say. But my daughter just came in with a fun thing she has planned. While she was in chemo, she created a 'chicken through the decades menu". This month we start with the 1920's. They will be full course dinners from appetizer - dessert. My part of this will be to eat and evaluate. The whole project becomes part of the Nome Street Clowder Cookbook that I have been working on. I can't promise the future for us, but I can promise food.
ReplyDeleteCoralee, that sounds like so much fun! What a great idea! Please let us in on some of the menus as you cook your way through the decades!!
Deletewow, Coralee, that sounds amazing. I love the title too. Please keep us posted!
DeleteCoralee, that is so cool.
DeleteHaving someone cook for you is such a gift in itself! Enjoy your collaboration, Coralee.
DeleteThat is genius!
DeleteChicken through the decades! Boggles the mind. Surely we start with chicken a la king. And somewhere i the middle it gets flambe'ed. Today it's oven roasted. Imagining what we could do with other-foods-through-the-ages.
DeleteSuch a creative idea, Coralee! Props to your daughter! I'm so stuck in the "oh my god, not dinner again" having to cook mode. Sigh.
DeleteIt sounds like a good title for a book, like Julie and Julia !
DeleteThat’s exactly what I was thinking, too, Rhys!
DeleteChicken through the decades! I like the sound of that. My brother-in-law once told me that “I just realized that you never make chicken the same way twice. You should write a cookbook called “365 Ways to Cook Chicken!”
DeleteAnd now I want your chicken recipes!
DebRo
What fun, Coralee! You'll have to keep us posted!
DeleteI agree with Rhys about how precarious our plans can be these days. The news is dreadful. It is terrifying to see what is happening. Without getting too political, I am horrified and don't see a way out of this mess both here and abroad.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of abroad, we have plans to take a long cruise this summer through the Greek Islands. Irwin is really afraid of how much he will be able to do and see, and I am worried about contracting some virus on the way there, like I did last year when we went to Alaska for bear camp. We aren't as strong as we were even 5 years ago, and that isn't all that has changed. I wanted to attend LCC but am afraid to leave him alone for a weekend. Sigh.
Oh Judy, sigh indeed. I sure hope you get to go on the cruise. Worse comes to worst, he sits on the deck and enjoys the scenery! Meanwhile, we believe a mask is our still our friend while traveling.
DeleteJudy, I hope you can take your cruise. When I went on my last cruise, I wore a mask.
DeleteI'm with Irwin. Stay on deck as much as you can.
DeleteJudi , I’m going through the same thing with John. He’s had another set back and I’ve decided Scotland will be too much for him. But at least on a cruise you can stay on board and sit and watch if it’s too much to disembark
DeleteRhys, I'm so sorry about the setback. Sending him all best health wishes - and you.
DeleteSorry to hear this news about John, Rhys. He's been through a lot lately. Hugs to you both.
DeleteThat's hard on both of you and Clare, Rhys. I hope you find something else to look forward to.
DeleteRhys, I am so sorry that John has had another setback. It is discouraging.
DeleteYes, I am going to Denver LCC since I am Fan GOH.
ReplyDeleteOne week later, I am off on a solo 16-day trip to Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong.
Grace, sorry to miss you at LCC Denver. Are you going to Malice? Enjoy your trip. Will you meet up with Ovidia in Singapore?
DeleteNo, I am not going to Malice or Bouchercon this year.
DeleteI met up with Ovidia twice last year. Not sure if I will see her this time.
Standing ovation! Xxxx
DeleteCongrats on the GOH, Grace!! Enjoy your travels!
DeleteHoping to see you there, Grace!
DeleteGrace, I really wanted to be at LCC to meet you in person and to support you, but fear won out. Will you be staying in the hotel where the conference is being held?
DeleteThanks HANK and FLORA!
DeleteJUDY: I understand. Family needs come first. I hope you and Irwin enjoy the cruise.
Yes, one of the perks of being GOH is having hotel booked & paid for by the LCC commitee. I am staying an extra few days to visit former haunts in Denver & Boulder.
Currently looking forward to two of our kids arriving this Friday! We haven’t seen them since we packed up and moved the end of September and their 5 day visit will be way too short.
ReplyDeleteMostly I just take life one day at a time.
Visits from kids: the gravy
Deleteof old age!
Wasn't it John Lennon who said "Man plans and God laughs"? (And did you all see Sir Paul rocking on SNL last night?)
ReplyDeleteSteve has been getting antsy to "go somewhere", and I'm trying to stay positive that we will be able to plan some trips. One is a drive across the country and through Canada, a trip we've been talking about for years. All three of my kids are in careers that are threatened right now: public health, sustainable energy, and diplomacy. So we are waiting and seeing about travel with or to them at the moment.
My big plans involve gardening. Our property will be on the garden tour again in June, and I've been invited to join three different garden clubs in the last two months. The Universe is telling me something. One of the clubs is a revival of one that was started by a friend's ancestor more than 100 years ago, but was shut down an unknown time ago. Now her great great granddaughters are restarting it, and they invited me to join them. These young women, Sarah and Becca, are 41, and I've known them their whole lives because their parents are longtime friends. They were my students back when I taught sewing, and are almost as close as my own daughters. Along with another young friend, we are strategizing for vegetable and fruit gardening at our four homes, with the goal of sharing our bounty. It's just a small thing, but we hope it will help our own food security.
Short-term plan: take my newly turned 20 grandson Zak to the foodie paradise Jungle Jim's tomorrow for his birthday gift, a shopping spree. He's an avid and adventurous cook, and we are both looking forward to it.
Karen, when my youngest nephew was in high school, he would come to Cinci for a barbershop quartet camp in the summer. His dad let him drive his junior year, so with a fellow classmate, they slowly meandered their way back north. What took them so long? First up was a stop at Jungle Jim's (and lots of pit stops after).
DeleteHow fun! Zak has been hearing about JJ's for years. He is SO excited that he's actually planning to get up before noon tomorrow. LOL (He's a server at a restaurant.)
DeleteI love hanging out with grandkids. Our oldest we here yesterday planning his wedding. So exciting
DeleteNow that's a milestone, Rhys. Happy times.
DeleteHard to make plans these days. Safe travels, everyone!
ReplyDeleteRhys, I am the same kind of person who always needs something to look forward to. When I was teaching and had most of the summer off I never wanted to go away until the summer was almost over so I had all summer to be thinking about it and looking forward to it. Lately I've been thinking about Scotland, too. My nephew and his new wife lives there and I would dearly love to go. We'll see.
ReplyDeleteCongrats to Sam. I hope he and his bride will have a long lifetime of love, respect, and devotion to each other as they weather life's challenges.
ReplyDeleteWhat am I looking forward to? These days, the next nap...although lately I have been having occasional political nightmares. i also look forward to my kids and grandkids -- their smiles, their laughter, their enthusiasms as well as they way they handle every negative with style and grace. I'm pretty lucky.
Thank you. They were here this weekend and found the perfect venue for the reception
DeleteI feel the same about my sons and their fabulous wives, Jerry. Very lucky.
DeleteRhys, looking forward to the book set on the Isle of Skye! 🤞🏼your trip goes as planned! My husband and I have a trip planned for May to London, Edinburgh, and then a bit of traveling while based on Loch Lomond. I’m a MacKenzie from way, way back and have wanted to go to Scotland for a long time. Not enough time but we’ll take what time we can. May the gods be ever in our favour for all of us.
ReplyDeleteI hope you make it to !Scotland. I’ve realized we probably won’t
DeleteOh Rhys, I’ll pray you 3 are able to! I am crossing our fingers for us.
DeleteMy most urgent looking forward to is finding an orthopedic appointment, and moving forward with the healing of my fractured wrist. After Urgent Care (they installed a large and very uncomfortable splint), I had an appointment scheduled across town at the orthopedic clinic of my health care provider. Unfortunately it was last Thursday in the middle of our doozy of a winter storm. I called to cancel and was told they couldn't reschedule, no appointments for 3 weeks and I should look for a fracture clinic. Tried to call a couple on Friday, but they were both closed due to the weather. I'll try again today, hoping they won't be closed due to the holiday. Tick tock tick tock, the splint is getting old. If I can get rid of it, maybe I can look forward to something else, like JRW Happy Hour.
ReplyDeleteGillian, my fingers are crossed for you! It's so important to get the correct care for a fracture. I broke my arm close to my wrist years ago. At the time I had no insurance, so my orthopedic doctor didn't tell me that I could have a brace made to size. Thus, due to a too-big brace, the middle two fingers of my left hand will never be straight again, even after intensive hand therapy.
DeleteOh Gillian. I hope you get this sorted out. Fractured are no fun!
DeleteGillian I wonder if you went to an urgent care center if they would have an ortho doc on call or an ER room, if you can't get in tody at a fracture clinic.
DeleteGee, Gillian. Storms at this time of year throw us all off, but I am really angry on your behalf that you cannot get the treatment you need. I agree with Anon above, that an ER would be the next best thing. Bring a book. The other idea is to call your family doctor and ask for help getting an appointment. My doctors have always been great about helping us if we can't get an appointment that we need.
DeleteUnless you have a large displacement, it is too late for surgery. Buy a comfortable brace, they are easy to find, and your wrist will continue to heal. Your wrist has probably already healed quite a bit, breaking a healing bone is not usually done.
DeleteNo displacement.. it seems it's a pretty uncomplicated fracture. I'm happy to report that I found an appointment for Friday with a clinic a friend recommended...and (of course) the original clinic that had no appointments called to offer one this week. Thanks for the comments!
DeleteLike Rhys, I'm finding our present as difficult, if not more so, than when Covid hit. At least then, I could see all my ducks at the end of the day and know that they were all safe. Now, every day brings new atrocities to our democracy, with no clear end in sight. I've mentioned before that I write. Currently, one of my projects is a second novella. These stories are drawn from my family's background in Eastern Kentucky. This one in particular begins in the years just before and during WWII, so I've been researching details of life then, the political news, etc. And remembering my dad and what he fought for. Looking forward to the new music my nephew Walker is creating--I honestly can't tell right now if he's playing someone's song from the 40s or 50s or whether it's his own work.
ReplyDeleteThe current situation is why it’s easier to write about the past, right, Flora?
DeleteFor all the reasons Rhys mentioned, I am almost afraid to say this aloud, but I am EXTREMELY excited about our plans for this year. We have three trips planned. (One is small, but stilll....)
ReplyDeleteWe are driving to Florida for a week at a friend's condo in Sanibel in just a few weeks. We chose to drive it rather than fly this year because I am so afraid of the germ content of airports. Plus we're retired, so why not take the extra time to drive.
The biggest trip is coming in August. We plan to visit our son in Japan. Since it is such a long flight, we are going to stay around three weeks, which is probably the longest trip I have ever taken. We are still working out exactly what we want to do while we're there. And the frustrating thing is that we can't book any of it until he gets his contract for next year which specifies exactly when his days off fall. (We know August will be his longest break of the year, but we won't know the exact dates until then.)
We were perfectly content with just that trip to anticipate. But then, our lovely young priest announced that he is leading a pilgrimage to Rome in November as part of the Church's Jubilee year. It made no sense whatsoever for us to join this group, with all we had planned already. Italy was the next place on our bucket list to visit, and there's a lot more we want to experience than just Rome and a few nearby religious sites. But I have had many friends who have gone to the Vatican with church groups and on their own, and it is clear to me that the two things are very different experiences. So we took the plunge and signed up for that trip as well. It will be the first trip we have ever taken that is an organized group trip instead of touring on our own, and already I am finding it luxurious to just not worry about any of the planning.
Susan, what an exciting year ahead. I do hope it all comes off smoothly. The Rome pilgrimage will be memorable
DeleteSusan, enjoy Japan! And be sure to pick up some nail clippers. I know it sounds trivial, but they make them like nobody else. Trust me.
DeleteThis is just another reason why I love this group, as where else would you get the excellent advice to pick up nail clippers in Japan!
DeleteMargo, I couldn't agree more!
DeleteSusan, I've never heard anyone complain about their trips to Japan or the Vatican. I'm sure you will have an amazing time.
DeleteI too love the nail clippers advice... and this group! (Selden)
DeleteLike Dru Ann, I plan on retiring this year. Once that happens, I'll see what I want to do the next day. The one thing I know for sure, is that on the last day I work, I will turn off my alarm that morning and keep it off for the next four days, maybe longer.
ReplyDeleteHave a wonderful retirement! Congratulations
DeleteHappy retirement!
DeleteFor what it's worth, I feel like I spent the first three months (at least) of my retirement mostly sitting on my deck reading books and enjoying the beautiful flowers in hanging baskets around me. Sometimes just watching the bees and hummingbirds that landed on them. It felt so indulgent!! Eventually I started doing more outside the home and have a busy schedule of my own choosing now, but I still cherish the memory of that period of unwinding.
DeleteDEANA: Happy retirement. Enjoy not using the alarm clock!!
DeleteMy question to all of you retiring, what if social security or medicare disappear? Do you have enough to live on without social security, any alternative
Deleteavenues for insurance. These questions are why my husband is not retiring, We have very good free employer provider insurance.
You know the saying: Man plans, God laughs.
ReplyDeleteFor me, I have two books releasing next month and another in August. I'm looking forward to visiting my sister in the summer and maybe getting that staycation I planned on last year. Oh, and Malice Domestic in April and Pennwriters in May.
Of course, I shall remain flexible because you never know what will crop up.
We have two major trips Plath is year. Three weeks in Denmark with our youngest son and family. Then a sailing trip in July to the US Virgin Islands with middle son and family. The daily chaos is so upsetting that I am pinning hopes on these exciting trips happening.
ReplyDeleteSo envious! Sigh
DeleteBeing at the end of a book that has daunted me, I'm wasn't feeling excited about things at the moment--until I read this post. And then I started thinking about PLANS. Let God laugh, because I think planning is a good portion of the fun. So...two book launches this year (that is, if this pesky novel I'm working on settles down). A trip to Left Coast Crime, to Bouchercon, and to the Edgars. Several author events...and my husband is buying a boat after saying he wasn't getting another boat...and we are moving...and we are going to the Galapagos with a host of friends on a tour. How's that for plans?
ReplyDeleteTerry, visiting the Galapagos remains one of the top five highlights of my life. You will love it.
DeleteYou're on a roll, Terry! Have fun.
DeleteLooking forward to seeing you in Denver, Terry!
DeleteWow, Terry! You do have a lot to look forward to!
DeleteConcerning plans! Did I imagine it or is there A Reds and Readers Happy Hour? Nothing under events on that FB page. Several evening meetings this week fear that this one that I want to attend will be missed. Thanks, Elisabeth
ReplyDeleteRHYS: Hope you, John and Clare get a chance to visit Scotland! I loved Scotland and it was very easy to take the train from London to Edinburgh. However, I have never been to Cornwall and would love to visit Cornwall someday. My great grandfather was born in Scotland. His mother's great grandfather was a bookseller in Scotland. As Terry said, planning is part of the fun.
ReplyDeleteLook forward to reading MRS. ENDICOTT'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE. I have this vision of a pencil ? drawing of a vintage Citroen meandering on a road with many trees. Whatever the cover looks like, the cover will be gorgeous!
So exciting about your grandson's upcoming wedding!
Stay tuned for cover reveal soon!
DeleteI am looking forward to retirement after 32 years of teaching high school. Trying to live in the moment during these weird times we live in.
ReplyDeleteMy usual optimism is currently eluding me.
ReplyDeleteI’m happy for all those who have upcoming plans to look forward to, but I don’t happen to be one of them and I don’t see anything changing in the foreseeable future.
I have no plans currently. No travel plans either except for returning to Virginia in a week or so. We may try to meander and take in new sights but it may be weather dependent. As for the rest of the year, any trips will be domestic and planned last minute.
ReplyDeleteI’m looking forward to Left Coast Crime next month! (I hope you’ll be able to make it, Rhys.) We (hubby and I) don’t have any vacation plans for this year so far, but I have reservations for Bouchercon in September. Beyond that, I’m trying to not freak out about what is happening here. — Pat S
ReplyDeleteSee you there, Pat!
DeleteRhys, I too love having things to look forward to, and I have some that I hope will become reality. Short-term treat: spending this coming Saturday lunchtime and afternoon with our son. Spring treat: (fingers crossed) my husband and I will be driving around Transylvania for several weeks, admiring dramatic scenery and great castles and churches. Summer treat: my 50th college reunion. THAT should be entertaining. I find women much easier to recognize than men after 50 years. The boys I went to college with had huge quantities of hair all over their heads and faces. The men they turned into--where is all the hair??
ReplyDeleteOn their chins!!
DeleteConsidering how dangerous the US government is becoming…DOGE now trying to get access to IRS data, even though it has nothing to do with DOGE’s supposed mission…I’ve decided to spend as little money as possible. Groceries, yes; restaurants, no more. IF I go on a vacation, it won’t be in the US, etc. No need to help Trump’s economy. Family, friends, libraries, hobbies, etc., are going to be my optimistic future.
ReplyDeleteHad a skype from my son in Vancouver and he and his wife will be here for the family May weekend. He is apologizing for maybe coming a week early, but I will try and get them to ‘help’. I must remember to not expect too much, and be thankful for what I get and just maybe get some ear-muffs! We haven’t seen them for 2 years, so that will be nice. They are ‘wired’ so I will probably be glad to see the back of them!
ReplyDeleteThey invited us to come to a huge 2 families’ trip to Barbados next Feb. I said we could be dead by then, so made no long distance plans. The last few years have been learning to pivot, not make long term plans, and be able to change your mind in a moment.
I do enjoy reading about all the different plans here that people are looking forward to. Rhys, the Scotland trip should be amazing, somewhere I still might want to go. Since Kevin's passing, I have to admit that there isn't a lot I look forward to. I hope that changes. We've had to plan everything around court dates for almost two years. My son's murderer's trial is the first of April, and while not looking forward to it, it will be such a relief to finally conclude that part of our lives. We did fit in a trip to Paris last year, but it was at the urging of a friend of my husband's and was somewhat bittersweet. Nothing else has been possible since then. Perhaps, I'll still get to England one day. Who knows? I will say that I just read where the President just fired 400 FAA employees, less than three weeks after the midair collision in D.C. That doesn't inspire me to get on a plane. Sorry to be a Gloomy Gus, but sometimes life is more challenging than you ever thought it would be. Learning to live a different life takes time, and I have some courageous women here as role models in that. Of course, I learn useful information from the guys in the crowd, too.
ReplyDeleteKathy, I'm with you with "sometimes life is more challenging than you ever thought it would be." These are tough times even before we consider our personal challenges and burdens. I'm so sorry for your loss of Kevin. My heart goes out to you. (Selden)
DeleteJust...sending hugs, Kathy.
DeleteThank you Selden and Edith. I've been working on the victim impact statement, and it makes things harder.
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