Sunday, October 26, 2025

No, the wait times of Governors are not getting outta hand. These are Halloween decorations. If you have plans to visit the Orono, Maine area add this fine restaurant to your itinerary. 
Breakfasts, lunches, dinners--
They're ALL winners. 
BTW they aren't paying me. I'm just a big fan of their excellent food and service. 
Jules Hathaway 



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Saturday, October 25, 2025

Tangleroot (YA fiction)

     With her debut novel, Tangleroot, Kalela Williams hit one out of the literary ballpark. It is rich, nuanced, vibrant, vulnerable, and straightforward. It reminds me of a s'more with the marshmallows perfectly toasted and the gooey chocolate holding everything together because it's three layers--an evolving, often problematic mother-daughter relationship, the fight for justice in a small Southern town, and the search for very significant but overlooked parts of its history--create a highly engaging read for its target demographic and way beyond. 
     When her mother, Dr. Radiance Castine, becomes president of Stonepost College, narrator Noni has her plans and life hijacked. She was going to have one last pre college summer with her best friend. She'd landed a perfect internship. But she has to accompany her mother from liberal Massachusetts to a small, rural Virginia town where the past is very much alive and racism is accepted. (Noni and Radiance are Black). 
     Radiance is starting her new job in social justice mode. She's campaigning to get the school's name changed. Her research has shown that it was founded by one of her ancestors for people of color and then taken over by whites. Needless to say to say Board members are not happy campers.
     Radiance, feeling that Noni is being selfish and immature insists that she get a job for the summer. There isn't much in the way of work. But she manages to get hired at a restaurant/farm. Her coworkers seem friendly but she's not really interested. 
     "But what was the point in reconciling, or making friends, when I was moving five hundred miles away in a few weeks? Besides, the Charm servers weren't the people I would hang out with. They listened to country music. Some of them had kids. Fluvie was even a farmer."
     Noni and Radiance are living in what had been the master's house of a plantation. Noni becomes fascinated by the life of a long dead former resident. While researching to learn more about Sophronia she uncovers some secrets about the town and her own family. 
     I'm going to highly recommend Tangleroot to my daughters and to everyone else who enjoys a rich, nuanced and thought provoking narrative. 
     The story behind the story is its own kind of fascinating. Tangleroot was decades in the making. Williams was first inspired by a field trip to an enslaved community.
     "I had wanted to know their names, these people who had lived, involuntarily labored, and died on that land--people who were like my ancestors had been. But that hope evaporated like sweat."
     Ten years later she had a vision for the book. But it took many years of writing and revision and copious amounts of research to bring it to fruition. The publication of her novel that advances her mission--illuminating history through fiction--was for her a dream come true.
     And reading it was a dream come true for me. I hope that you too will find it both satisfying and thought provoking. And I hope that she is hard at work on her next masterpiece. 
On a purrrsonal note, wonder of wonders, miracle of miracles. If you're a reader of this blog you know how hard having to eliminate sugar from my severely restricted diet has been on me. Yesterday Catherine gave me a package of no sugar added chocolate chocolate chip cookies. I wasn't holding my breath since sugarless candy in my experience bears as much resemblance to candy as decaf has to coffee. Basically none. But when I tried a cookie it was delicious 😋 😜. (They're Voortman Bakery's Fudge Brownie Chocolate Chip Cookies.) And Catherine says she'll hook me up with another flavor. Oh happy day!
A great big shout out goes out to Catherine for her excellent detective work and kindness, to Voortman Bakery for creating and selling such a much needed treat, and to Hannaford for carrying them.
Jules Hathaway 


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Friday, October 24, 2025

Thursday, October 23, 2025

The Scammer

    "Everyone knows that monsters are real, that they don't just lie on the outskirts of our imagination with the tooth fairy. What we were never told, never fully explained, is how the monsters can roam among us, hidden in plain sight, with nice teeth, gorgeous skin, and breathtaking smiles. How they have the power to manipulate, the power to persuade, the power to siphon the life out of you."
     The transition from high school to college is a HUGE step for most undergraduate students, especially those who choose residential colleges. This is most definitely true for Jordyn, protagonist of Tiffany D. Jackson's The Scammer. Her perfectionist parents are irate that she chose a HBCU (historically black colleges and universities) instead of Yale. They don't even help her get ready. And she's recently lost the most important person in her life, the only one who understood her, her brother, Kevin.  
     Jordyn is elated when she and her suite mates--Vanessa, Kammy, and Loren--hit it off immediately and bond quickly, becoming like sisters. For her college is a chance to reinvent herself, have a life and friends. Pretty soon they're hanging out and going places together. She's over the moon. "My classes are great, my friends are amazing. I have a life worth being jealous of."
     But that doesn't last long. About a month into the semester the girls find a strange man sitting in their living room. He's Vanessa's brother, Devonte. He's just out of prison and needs a place to stay. Good looking and able to cook, he makes a good impression on the roomies...
      ...and a whole lot of other students. The suite becomes a gathering place for the many students who trust his advice and share his vision for a better world.
     When Jordyn starts to question him things get ugly. He uses his minions to trash her reputation and assault her. She's in real danger and feeling helpless. And her parents would love an excuse to pull her out of the school they consider inferior. 
     She does have one unlikely ally. But will the two of them be enough to protect her from a sociopathic messiah figure and his legions of followers?
     This is Jackson at her best. If you're a fan or you're looking for a truly suspenseful chiller The Scammer is a most excellent choice. The hype surrounding it is well deserved. 
On a purrrsonal note, OMG!!! DO I HAVE EXCITING NEWS!!! Soon I won't be the only celeb in the family. (I'm alluding to the People story on my completing my masters degree and graduating last May after a stroke.) My precious Tobago cat made Newsweek. Pet of the week. I just found out. I couldn't be more proud of her! Better believe I broke out the Fancy Feast to celebrate. 
A great big shout out goes out to the one and only Tobago Anna Hathaway!
Jules Hathaway 



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Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Blood in the Water

     There's only one thing better than locating a hot off the press Tiffany D. Jackson chiller at the library. It's getting your hands on two in the same library visit. When this happened to me last Friday thanks to inter library loan magic you'd better believe I was doing my library happy dance. Reading the books back to back also made me realize how Jackson is versatile across demographics rather than limited to one.
     Blood in the Water, her juvenile offering, dropped very fittingly on the year the movie Jaws turned fifty. It is set in the town featured in that iconic chiller. And in the book great whites are on people's minds even when they're not in the actual ocean. 
     Kaylani's beloved father is in prison, convicted on what she's sure is a false accusation. Getting him released and clearing his name is her number one priority. She's determined to spend her summer studying to pass the entry test for a pre-law camp. "I'll learn what I need to help our lawyer and get us one step closer to freeing Dad."
     So she is not a happy camper when she is sent to spend four weeks with friends of her grandparents and their granddaughters, Logan and Cassie, in their bougie home on Martha's Vineyard. 
     Kaylani's first night with the Watsons the girls sneak out to a beach party. There they witness a heated fight between two boys: Chadwick and Jaden. The next day Chadwick is reported missing...
     ...until his body is located. People are saying that he was a victim of a shark attack. But the evidence doesn't all add up. Suddenly his death is being ruled a homicide. Cassie was the last person to see him alive.
     Kaylani is doing her own investigation and learning some disquieting truths about the Watsons.
     Will she be able to leave the island alive?
     Back to the sharks. Movies like Jaws portray them as bloodthirsty killers. Actually they are more in danger from us than we are from them. We slaughter tens of thousands of them every year in really inhumane ways. If we decimate their population too much it will throw off the balance of nature with really bad consequences. 
On a purrrsonal note, I'm really looking forward to a thrift shop on campus tomorrow. Clothes, shoes, and jewelry. I hope I can find some bargains. 
A great big shout out goes out to the bus drivers without whom it would be much harder for me to get anywhere. 
Jules Hathaway 
     

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Monday, October 20, 2025

Another page...

...from my joy journal with all the pretty stickers. 
Eugene played a joke yesterday that really fooled me. He drove off in his truck and then his brother gave him a ride home. I asked him if the truck was in the shop. He said he had to return it because he couldn't afford the payments. That really scared me because we live in rural Maine. Not the extreme part where the moose out umber the people. But public transportation is extremely limited. Today Amber told me that he was just joking. You can't imagine how relieved I am. 
I'm sitting out near my garden. If it doesn't 🌧 I can work outside all day. 



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Sunday, October 19, 2025

It's Not Like It's A Secret

     Sana, narrator of Misa Sugiura's It's Not Like It's a Secret, gets a very unwelcome surprise on her 16th birthday. Her mother has taken her out to eat and to a favorite beach. (Her father is away on business). As they are leaving for home she tells Sana that they are about to move to California. Her father has laid down the edict (as always) and her mother has blindly accepted his decision (as always). She believes in the importance of gracefully enduring the unendurable and being unselfish. 
     Probably most 16-year-olds would be less than thrilled with being required to leave their homes and friends in the middle of high school. Not to mention the pressure to blindly accept her fate. But Sana has more reason than most for trepidation. For years she's had reasons to suspect that her father is having an extramarital affair. What if they're moving so he can be closer to the other woman in his life? What if her mother learns about her? What will happen to their family?
     When she starts school in California she's quickly taken in by a tight knit group of fellow Asian Americans. She begins to feel a real sense of belonging. But when she tries to integrate a Hispanic girl, Jamie, into the group there's suspicion the on the part of both the Asian Americans and Hispanics.
     Not to mention that Sana has no idea how either group will react to her more than liking Jamie.
     It's Not Like It's a Secret is a nuanced take on complicated intersectional relationships and tough issues, perfect for the more mature YA reader.
On a purrrsonal note, there was a spectacular sunrise this morning when Eugene and I were enjoying our Governors breakfast. The day started out spectacularly cold but seems to be warming up. Hopefully I'll get in outside time. I've gone two weeks getting in my exercise every day. Which has been boring AF because almost all involved stationary biking. I so miss actually getting somewhere, seeing scenery, feeling the wind...paradise lost.
A great big shout out goes out to the fabulous chefs and servers at Governors. Check the place out if you're in Old Town, Maine. 
Jules Hathaway 



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