Weekly Menu #645 And The Book Of The Week

 


WEEKLY MENU

Monday

Turkey Kofta Bowls

Kids - Chicken and Rice Bowls

 

Tuesday

Smoked Sausage & White Bean Kale Stew

Kids - Sausage, Beans and Carrots

 

Wednesday

Pork Tenderloin with Gochujang Veggies

Kids - Cheese and Crackers

 

Thursday

Ground Sausage Egg Roll Skillet

Kids - Waffles and Nutella

 

Friday

Chilidogs

Kids - Birddogs

 

Saturday

Coconut Curry Chicken

Kids - Chicken and Rice

 

Sunday

Leftovers Night



Sunday Confessions #342

 


Sunday Book Confessions feels like opening the door to my reading life, sweeping the crumbs off the couch, and admitting that not every week is a whirlwind of five star magic. Sometimes it’s three star reads, unfinished chapters, mood slumps, and books I admire more than I love. This is the space where I get honest about what worked, what didn’t, and why that’s all part of being a reader, not a failure of one.


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Weekly Menu #645 And The Book Of The Week
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Book Review: When the Moon Hatched by Sarah A. Parker
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What I Read Last Week - January 26th to February 1st
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Sunday Confessions #343










28/250 2026 Reading Challenge
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16/102 2025 Goodreads Nominees Reading Challenge



So that’s this week’s confession. No dramatic plot twists, no literary thunderbolts, just a reminder that reading doesn’t have to be perfect to be meaningful. Some books stay with us forever, some simply pass through, and both have a place on the shelf. I’ll be back next Sunday with more thoughts, more honesty, and hopefully a little bit of bookish magic along the way.

What I Read Last Week - January 19th to 25th

 


3 Stars

This one felt like a quiet walk through the woods with someone who is very wise… and just not speaking my language. The ideas of reciprocity, gift economies, and abundance in nature are thoughtful and clearly heartfelt, but I never quite clicked with them the way I expected to.

Kimmerer’s writing is gentle and reflective, almost meditative, and I can see why this book resonates deeply with many readers. For me, though, the concepts stayed a bit abstract, and I found myself appreciating the intention more than the execution. I wanted something that grounded those ideas more firmly or challenged me in a way that felt personal.

Not a bad read by any means, just one that passed through my hands without really taking root. 

3 Stars

Meltzer is a strong storyteller, and his writing is smooth and accessible, but the book leaned far more into biography and historical context than into the conspiracy promised by the title.

If you’re already familiar with JFK era history or past assassination theories, there isn’t much here that feels surprising or revelatory. I kept waiting for a deeper excavation of the plot itself, but instead got a broader, safer narrative that retraced familiar ground.

Well written and informative, just not the deep dive conspiracy exploration I was hoping for. Interesting, but not especially new.

3 Stars


This book definitely did its job intellectually. It challenged my assumptions, poked at my comfort zone, and made me pause more than once to reconsider how I think about policy, progress, and why big ideas stall out. There’s a lot here to chew on, and the arguments are laid out clearly and confidently.

That said, it never quite grabbed me. I appreciated the thinking, but I didn’t feel that spark, the kind that makes an idea linger in your bones or sends a chill of recognition down your spine. It felt more like a very smart conversation than a revelatory one.

Solid, thought provoking, and well argued, just not a book that left me buzzing when I turned the last page.

3 Stars


This one fits neatly into the category of dependable Star Wars storytelling. Familiar characters, clear stakes, and just enough Force fueled tension to keep the pages turning. It does exactly what a Star Wars novel should do, and it does it competently.

That said, it never really ignites. The plot moves along smoothly, but without many moments that linger or feel especially bold. I enjoyed the ride, I just didn’t come away thinking about it long after the credits rolled.

A solid entry for fans of the universe, enjoyable and serviceable, but not one of the standouts from a galaxy far, far away.

5 Stars


This book wrecked me in the quiet, honest way only the right story can. I cried more times than I can count. As someone recently acquainted with grief and loss, this felt less like reading and more like sitting with feelings I hadn’t found words for yet.

Mai Nguyen doesn’t soften the edges of grief. The emotions are raw, messy, and painfully human, and the characters move through their pain in ways that feel achingly real. There’s no rush to healing, no tidy bow. Just the slow, uneven journey of learning how to exist after everything has changed.

What stayed with me most was how seen I felt. The story doesn’t ask you to be brave or positive. It lets you be broken, exhausted, and unsure. And somehow, within all that heaviness, there’s tenderness and connection that makes the tears feel earned.

This is a beautiful, devastating read. If you’re grieving, or if you’ve ever loved someone who is, this book understands you. I’ll be carrying it with me for a long time.

Book Review: Strangers in Time by David Baldacci

 

Title: Strangers in Time

By: David Baldacci

Genre: Historical Fiction

Pages: 435

Release Date: April 15th, 2025 

Rating: ★★★★☆

 

Summary from Goodreads:

During one of the fiercest conflicts the world has ever known, three strangers’ lives collide as they confront the raining bombs of their present and the explosive secrets of their past. Journey back to wartime London in this historical drama from the number one bestseller.

Charlie Matters’ life has always been a fight for survival. Orphaned with no prospects, Charlie steals what he needs, living day-to-day until he can enlist in the battle against the Germans. He miraculously emerges unscathed from the Blitz, but there’s no telling when the next bomb will fall, and whether it will be the one to end his life.

Molly Wakefield’s dreams of a joyful homecoming are all she’s had to hold on to after being evacuated to the countryside via ‘Operation Pied Piper’ five years before. But when she finally returns to the city, Molly faces a London changed beyond recognition, and the devastating news that neither of her parents are there, only her old nanny, Mrs. Pride.

Charlie and Molly’s paths converge when they both seek solace at ‘The Book Keep’, where they find an unexpected ally and protector in the bookshop’s owner, widower Ignatius Oliver. But the trio’s newfound peace is jeopardized as past secrets catch up with Charlie’s illicit activities have not gone unnoticed, an ominous shadow has trailed Molly since her return, and Ignatius is burdened by a secret that contributed to his wife’s death. Can they help one another survive this turbulent time? Or will they be ripped apart from the last people they hold dear?

 

Add on Goodreads

 

Review:

Strangers in Time was a different kind of World War II story than I’m used to reading. Baldacci takes a unique angle on the era, and while the book didn’t quite give me the emotional punch I usually look for in WWII fiction, it was still an engaging and well crafted read. The pacing, intrigue, and strong sense of atmosphere kept me turning pages, and I definitely enjoyed the experience, even if it didn’t hit me in the feels the way others in the genre do.

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.