Weekly Menu #644 And The Book Of The Week

 


WEEKLY MENU

Monday

Ground Turkey Taco Bowls

Kids - Cheese Quesadillas

 

Tuesday

Banh Mi Sausages

Kids - Crispy Hot Dogs & Rice

 

Wednesday

Mediterranean Stir Fry

Kids - Buttery Noodles and Chicken Bites

 

Thursday

Tuna Melts and Side Salad

Kids - Chicken and Crackers

 

Friday

Big Mac Sloppy Joes

Kids - Pizza Sliders

 

Saturday

Meatless Chili

Kids - Cheesy Rice and Apples Sauce

 

Sunday

Family Dinner

Chicken Pad Thai



Sunday on my blog always feels like a quiet room after a loud week. The books are stacked like witnesses, my coffee’s gone cold twice, and I’m here peeling back the reader version of me that pretends everything I pick up was intentional and profound. This is the corner where I admit which stories surprised me, which ones I side eyed through entire chapters, which characters I loved out loud and which books I only finished out of stubborn spite and a calendar reminder. No polished reviews today. Just reader confessions, slightly dramatic, fully honest, and probably accompanied by a tottering pile of “what was I thinking?”


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Weekly Menu #644 And The Book Of The Week
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Book Review: Strangers in Time by David Baldacci
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What I Read Last Week - January 19th to 25th
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Sunday Confessions #342











23/250 2026 Reading Challenge
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13/102 2025 Goodreads Nominees Reading Challenge



And that wraps another week of bookish honesty. Some wins, some flops, some reads that felt like warm hugs and others that politely wasted my time. Either way, the pages keep turning and so do I. See you next Sunday for more confessions from the ever growing, slightly chaotic stack.

What I Read Last Week - January 12th to 18th

 


4 Stars

It still rattles my brain that this is real. Not “based on,” not “inspired by,” but an actual human deciding, “You know what my friends fighting in Vietnam need? A cold beer,” and then just… going. The entire premise sounds like something cooked up at 2 a.m. over bar napkins and bad decisions, yet here it stands in nonfiction clothing.

What starts as a ridiculous dare turns into something surprisingly human and heavy. Chick’s journey barrels straight through war zones with equal parts stubborn loyalty and wide eyed naivety, and watching that bravado slowly crack against the reality of combat is where the book really lands. It’s funny in places, tense in others, and unexpectedly emotional when the weight of what he’s walking into finally sinks in.

The writing is straightforward and conversational, which fits the story. No frills, no dramatic over seasoning, just a regular guy narrating an absolutely unhinged act of friendship. That contrast is what makes it hit so hard.

Wild, unbelievable, heartfelt, and somehow both absurd and sobering at the same time. 

DNF'd
4 Stars

This is one of those books I picked up fully expecting to say “well, that was intense but not for me”… and instead it grabbed me by the collar and dragged me straight through the fire.

Crime fiction isn’t usually my comfort zone, but Cosby writes with this sharp, smoldering energy that makes everything feel immediate and dangerous. The story is heavy with family tension, buried secrets, and bad choices. Every chapter feels like a fuse burning closer to something explosive.

What really hooked me was the emotional core under all the grit. It’s not just crime and violence for shock value. It’s loyalty, desperation, generational weight, and the messy pull of family even when it’s toxic. The characters feel raw and human, which made it impossible not to care what happened to them even when they were spiraling.

Definitely darker than my usual reads, but so well written and gripping that I’m really glad I stepped outside my normal lane for this one. 


4 Stars

This was a strong and engaging read, but I finished it wishing the story had chosen one timeline and gone deeper instead of splitting its focus. The dual threads work well together and are interesting in their own right, yet I kept wanting to linger longer in ancient Egypt.

Hatshepsut’s story was the real standout for me. Her rise, her intelligence, and her quiet defiance were fascinating, and every time the narrative shifted away from her, I felt a little tug of disappointment. I would have happily read an entire novel devoted solely to her life and legacy.

That said, the writing is compelling and the concept is thoughtfully executed. If you enjoy historical fiction that explores powerful women across time, this is definitely worth the read, just be prepared to crave more of Hatshepsut once you’re done.

Received an advance reader copy in exchange for a fair review.

5 Stars

Jenny Lawson does that rare, magical thing where she makes you laugh while gently holding your hand through the mess. This book is short, quirky, and packed with ideas that feel tailor made for a neurodivergent brain. It never talks down, never pretends everything is fixable, and somehow still manages to be deeply comforting.

I loved how relatable this was. Every chapter felt like a knowing nod, a “yes, that feeling, I know it too.” Lawson’s humor keeps things light, but the honesty underneath gives the book real weight. It’s the kind of read you can dip into when your brain is loud and leave feeling a little more human, a little less alone, and slightly more okay than before.

Received an advance reader copy in exchange for a fair review.

4 Stars

Julia Quinn always feels like slipping into a warm, witty ballroom where everyone has secrets tucked into their gloves. This one was charming, romantic, and full of that signature Quinn banter I adore… but my heart kept wandering back to the Bridgertons like an ex I still stalk in fictional society papers.

The story itself is sweet and clever. A mistaken identity, a pretend marriage, emotional tension simmering under polite Regency manners. Cecilia is determined and likable, Edward is swoony in that soft wounded soldier way, and their chemistry absolutely works. The romance builds nicely and the writing is smooth and engaging as always.

But Bridgerton casts a very sparkly shadow. That series has this electric mix of drama, humor, and unforgettable characters that set the bar sky high, and while the Rokesbys are enjoyable, they just don’t hit with the same glittering intensity for me.

Still a wonderful read, still Quinn magic, and I’m absolutely continuing the series because once I’m invited to a fictional family gathering, I’m staying for the whole season.

4 Stars

This book feels like opening a dusty holocron and finding Luke Skywalker elbow deep in the terrifying responsibility of rebuilding an entire religion from scattered ashes. No pressure, right?

I loved the premise of Luke searching the galaxy for Force sensitive students and trying to stitch the Jedi Order back together while the New Republic is still wobbling on fresh legs. It has that classic expanded universe energy where everything feels big, earnest, and very Star Wars in spirit. New characters, old favorites, political threads, shadowy threats quietly sharpening their claws in the background.

The academy itself is such a fun concept. Watching raw, untrained Force users struggle, doubt, and slowly awaken gives the story heart. It’s less lightsaber ballet and more “how do you even begin teaching people to control something that can explode planets?” which I really enjoyed.

Some parts drag a bit and the pacing wanders like a lost droid in the desert, which is why it’s a solid 4 instead of a 5 for me. But overall it’s a strong start to the trilogy and a must for anyone who loves the post Return of the Jedi universe.

Jedi legacy, galactic stakes, and Luke stepping into myth sized shoes. 


4 Stars

This one is pure starfighter adrenaline injected straight into the veins of the New Republic. The moment Ysanne Isard slithers back into the story, everything tightens. You can practically hear alarms blinking red in the background.

I love how Stackpole writes Rogue Squadron like a found family forged in laser fire. Wedge is steady and sharp as ever, Corran still carrying emotional scars under the flight suit, and the squad dynamics feel lived in and real. The space battles are crisp and tactical without getting lost in jargon, which makes every dogfight feel like you’re strapped into the cockpit watching your shields flicker.

Isard remains such a chilling villain because she doesn’t just attack fleets, she attacks minds. Manipulation, psychological warfare, long layered revenge plots. She’s less Empire and more venom in silk gloves, and her presence raises the stakes instantly.

The plot is fast and engaging, though a few threads feel slightly rushed toward the end. Still, it’s a strong, satisfying continuation of the X Wing series and a great payoff for fans invested in the Rogue Squadron arc.

Fast ships, sharp strategy, and one very angry ice queen hunting from the shadows.

3 Stars

This one and I just never clicked, like two puzzle pieces from completely different boxes.

I can absolutely see why people love it. The whimsy is loud, the magic is chaotic, the world feels like it’s constantly tripping over its own shoelaces in a very intentional way. But for me, the tone bounced so hard between silly and surreal that I never felt grounded enough to really care about what was happening. It read more like a fever dream wrapped in fairy tale logic than a story I could sink into.

Sophie was interesting in theory, Howl was… a lot, and the plot felt scattered like it kept wandering into different rooms and forgetting why it walked in. I finished it out of loyalty to my book club brain, not because I was emotionally invested.

Not my style at all, and definitely not something I would’ve picked up on my own. But hey, sometimes book club hands you a castle with legs and you politely ride it to the last page anyway.

Book Review: The Shinning by Stephen King

 

Title: The Shinning

By: Stephen King

Genre: Horror

Pages: 497

Release Date: January 28th, 1977

Rating: ★★★★☆

 

Summary from Goodreads:

Jack Torrance's new job at the Overlook Hotel is the perfect chance for a fresh start. As the off-season caretaker at the atmospheric old hotel, he'll have plenty of time to spend reconnecting with his family and working on his writing.

But as the harsh winter weather sets in, the idyllic location feels ever more remote... and more sinister.

And the only one to notice the strange and terrible forces gathering around the Overlook is Danny Torrance, a uniquely gifted five-year-old.

 



Add on Goodreads

 

Review:

I love Stephen King, and this one delivered that slow tightening dread he does so well. The isolation creeps in first, quiet as snowfall sealing every exit, and then the hotel starts breathing through the walls. The tension builds brick by brick until the whole story feels like it’s leaning over you. I couldn’t look away.

Jack’s unraveling is sharp and uncomfortable in the best way, Wendy’s fear feels painfully real, and Danny’s shining adds that eerie glow that makes every hallway feel longer than it should be. King turns the Overlook into a character with teeth, and every room feels loaded.

Such a chilling, immersive read. Classic King horror at full volume.

Sunday Confessions #340

 


Sunday book confessions time. This is the space where I admit my reading sins, the impulsive book grabs, the emotional damage I absolutely signed up for, and the moments when I swore I’d read something light and did the exact opposite. No judgments here, just honest thoughts from a reader who keeps chasing stories that wreck her heart, steal her sleep, and somehow still feel completely worth it.


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Weekly Menu #643 And The Book Of The Week
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Book Review: The Shinning by Stephen King
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What I Read Last Week - January 12th to 18th
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Sunday Confessions #341




★★★☆☆

This one just didn’t quite hit for me. The story itself is interesting, and there are moments where T. Kingfisher’s signature ideas shine through, but I never felt fully pulled into the world the way I usually am with her books.

I kept waiting for that immersive spark, the point where everything clicks and the story takes over, and it never fully arrived. It’s not a bad read by any means, just one that didn’t leave the same impression as her other work.

A solid but underwhelming read for me, earning three stars.








14/250 2026 Reading Challenge
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11/102 2025 Goodreads Nominees Reading Challenge


At the end of the day, my reading life is clearly powered by emotion. I’m drawn to stories that hurt, heal, surprise me, or quietly linger long after I’ve closed the book. Some reads completely wreck me, others miss the mark, and a few land somewhere in between, but every one of them adds to the bigger picture of why I love reading in the first place. These confessions aren’t about perfection or ratings, they’re about the experience, the feelings, and the reminder that even the books that don’t fully work still shape the reader I’m becoming.