Tłusty Czwartek

It’s Fat Thursday (Tłusty Czwartek) today! How lucky that we arrived in time to celebrate. I wrote a post about Fat Thursday when we were in Poland before, so if you want more details you can read that one. Basically, the Thursday before Ash Wednesday is the Polish version of Fat Tuesday/Mardi Gras…

…celebrated with pączki.

Everyone in Poland is buying and eating these doughnuts today. Friends of ours bought some yesterday and gave us two. We had those with our coffee this morning (not pictured). While out doing chores this afternoon, I passed a piekarnia (bakery) that was advertising its pączki. They had only about six left. I bought a chocolate and a “rose” which might actually be raspberry.

Delicious!

Winter in Sopot

Hello from Sopot, Poland. We left Stevens Point a week ago, and I’m finally making a post!

Sopot is the smallest of the Tri-Cities or Troj-Miasto of Gdansk, Sopot, Gdynia. Sopot is historically a spa town and is now a major Polish tourist destination–in the warm months. We are the exception!

It has been a busy week of visiting friends, exploring, and getting organized. However, yesterday we had some free time and walked down to the sea, about a 15-minute walk from where we are staying. Northern Poland is experiencing a colder, snowier winter than it has seen in the past 20 or so years.

On the way to the Baltic, we passed some children sledding. Hopefully nobody slid all the way to the road.

It’s all downhill to the beach.

It’s important to remember where you enter the beach. Once you are out on the sand/snow/water, the forest looks all the same. The best route for us is entrance/wejscie 5.

With all the snow, it was hard to tell where the beach ended and the frozen Baltic began. I think we stood on frozen waves, but we saw no reason to risk walking out too far.

The cold isn’t as severe as what we get in Wisconsin. When people tell us it will be below 0 tomorrow, they are referring to Celsius. Not to show off or anything, but weather in the 20s Fahrenheit won’t keep us home.

Still, I’m eager for the snow to melt and the sun to come out. Stay warm, friends.

Best Books of 2025

I’m a few days late with this post as I’ve been in bed with the flu. I’m feeling a bit better today so thought it was time I got it published.

I read 106 books last year and enjoyed most of them. Below are my favorites:

Thank You For Listening by Julia Whelan. I recommend this as an audio book; it is a romance between two audio book narrators, written by an audio book narrator (Julia Whelan). Clever writing, fun and funny.

The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman. This is the first book in the Invisible Library fantasy series. It’s non-stop action, with humor, clever writing, great world-building, and a bit of romance. The protagonist is a librarian (read: superhero) who must steal rare books from certain worlds to keep the universe in balance. There are dragons and fae and a whole lot of danger, excitement, and fun.

Eroshenko by Lucy May Lennox. Vasili Eroshenko (a real person) was born in 1890 and went blind as a child but led a fascinating life. This book centers on his time in Japan. Read my full review for the Historical Novels Society here.

Toto by A.J. Hackwith. This is the true story of what happened in Oz, as told by Toto, who has a lot of ideas and turns out to be a bit subversive. I’m a big fan of anything having to do with the world of Oz, and I enjoyed this unusual take on the series.

The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien. Powerful, thought-provoking story-telling that is fictional but true nonetheless. These short stories center on a group of young men during and after and before their time as American soldiers in Vietnam.

Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik. A vastly different re-telling of the Rumpelstiltskin story. Told via three strong women living in a fictional medieval country (a bit like Poland). Incredible world-building, fast-paced excitement, some romance. Solid fantasy writing.

Tress of the Emerald Sea by Brandon Sanderson. The Princess Bride, but if Buttercup refused to believe that Westley had been killed by the Dread Pirate Roberts and went to rescue him. Tress is a wonderful heroine and the world-building is outstanding.

Seabird by Michelle Kadarusman. This is my only middle-grade novel on this list; its intended audience is ages 8-13 but I recommend it to anyone. Kartini, a 12-year-old of a noble family in Java in the 1800s struggles to gain agency over her life. You can read my full review at the Historical Novels Society page.

You are Here by David Nicholls. Two people meet walking a trail in Northern England, going from coast to coast. It’s nice to see romances with older people (late 30s, early 40s). This isn’t a purely “romance” novel but light and humorous and makes you want to walk across England.

What the Tide Leaves Behind by Malcolm MacDonald Woods. I was lucky to do a book swap with this author at a local book event. Ireland is both the setting and a major character in this novel about a young man trying to find who he is and where he belongs. A dog is involved. Phenomenal writing and story. If you only read one book on this list, buy this one. It’s an indie-published book and is so very good.

Slow Horses by Mick Heron. The streaming series is good but as predicted the book is better. I’ve got the next book in the series on hold. An extremely funny, well-crafted, MI-5 crime novel series. If you didn’t know about it, you do now.

Tom Lake by Ann Patchett. During the pandemic, a woman is telling her adult daughters, who have had to come home, about her short-lived relationship with a movie star before he became famous. It’s slow-paced but in a calm, easy way. Patchett has top writing chops.

Well, I hope I’ve given you some book ideas for the new year. Writing this post has worn poor-sick-me out, so I might take a nap. Toodle-loo.