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Friday, June 5, 2026

Friday Fives - June TBR


I'm in a list making kind of mood so I thought I'd start making random five lists.  Sometimes they'll be bookish other weeks not so much. Since this is the first Friday in June, I'm planning my June TBR.  Here are 5 books I plan on reading in June. 


1.  When You Loved Me by Beatriz Williams - I really enjoyed the last book by this author that was also set on Winthrop Island and I'm so looking forward to reading this one!


2.  Code Name: Lise: The True Story of World War II's Most Highly Decorated Spy by Larry Loftis - I've enjoyed other biographies by this author and this sounds like a fascinating story.


3.  Colour Scheme by Ngaio Marsh - I'm a little hit or miss with this author but the last few books have been hits and I love that this one takes place in New Zealand where Marsh was from.


4. Whose Body in the Library by Eva Gates - This is the latest book in the Lighthouse Library series which usually makes for perfect summer reading.


5.  White Hot by Ilona Andrews - The covers for this series are really dreadful but I really enjoyed the first book and want to finish the series.  

What are you hoping to read in June?

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Recipe Thursday - Asiago Chicken with Bacon Cream Sauce

 


One of my goals for 2026 is to sort through all the recipes I have laying around tucked into folders and notebooks as well as my gigantic Pinterest/food blog collection that hasn't been touched in years.  I've been having quite a good time with it.  I enjoy cooking but it can become a chore pretty easily and this has made it a lot more fun for me as I feel like I'm working on a project.   Around here we've taken to calling it Recipe Thunderdome as all recipes have to be auditioned before earning their place in the final recipe binder. 

*For context I'm a reasonably capable home cook but one who is often trying to multitask and who is pretty much completely self-taught. *

Today I'm sharing Asiago Chicken with Bacon Cream Sauce from Julia's Album

Changes:  I used olive oil instead of vegetable oil and left out the parsley because I find parsley to be more trouble than it's worth - though I am willing to hear arguments to the contrary.  I also only used bacon in the first part and did not garnish with the additional bacon.

Thoughts on Recipe Difficulty:   I don't love cooking chicken in a skillet because I'm always afraid of undercooking it but the way this recipe is done that isn't an issue.  This isn't a dump it in a pan and leave it recipe but it is pretty straightforward - seer chicken, make sauce, then simmer chicken in the sauce - and can all be done in the same pan.  I could clean up the kitchen and work on the sides while it was simmering which is always a plus.  As well, the recipe was easy to follow and I didn't have to reread for clarification.

Cook Time:  I'd say from start to finish about 30 - 35 minutes.  

Served With: Mashed potatoes (which were fantastic with sauce poured over them) and roasted green beans

Results:  So good!  It's a little rich for everyday but would be perfect for a company meal or when you're just wanting a little treat.  Serving it with rice or mashed potatoes to use with the extra sauce is a must.    

Verdict:  Survived - it has earned it's place in the final recipe binder which I need a catchy name for now that I think about it.  


Wednesday, June 3, 2026

The Valencia Expat Club - Fiction Review

Goodreads: The Valencia Expat Club by June Patrick

Rating: Liked It! (3.5 Stars)
Source: Publisher

Description:
 Dahlia Delaney’s marriage just imploded, her friend group picked a side (not hers), and her fancy San Francisco life now fits into a single suitcase. Armed with a broken heart, a freelance marketing gig, and one blurry childhood memory of her abuela’s garden, she impulsively hops on a flight to Valencia, Spain, to reconnect with distant family—and maybe herself.

But Valencia isn’t just sunny plazas and sangria. There’s her chaotic new job at a quirky expat bar, a family she barely knows but who embrace her like she’s always belonged, and a brooding American bar owner who’s frustratingly attractive and entirely too familiar.

As Dahlia stumbles through language mishaps, clashing cultures, and late-night paella with new friends, she begins to realize that the fresh start she came for might turn into something even better—if she can let go of the life she planned and embrace the one unfolding around her.

Genre: Fiction - Contemporary/Romance

Why I Picked This Book: I love starting over books and I loved the idea of a Spanish setting.

My Impression:
I have mixed feelings about this one.  I adored the setting and the author did a fantastic job of making it come alive.  I loved the side characters and the whole huge welcoming Spanish family.  The author's writing style pulled me in immediately and at the beginning I liked Dahlia as she dealt with a divorce (not unwanted but definitely unsettling), the betrayal of friends and the struggle with relearning what she wanted as an adult.  
As the book went on I liked Dahlia less and less.  Her struggles with her changing circumstances and dealing with her relationships with her friend group post-divorce came off as very authentic and relatable but the more I got to know Dahlia the less I liked her.  She just struck me as a bit whiny and pretentious.  As well, I never connected with Liam.  The man must be beyond dreamy to make up for his rudeness that never quite made it to delightful banter for me.  As well, anytime Dahlia and Liam were together I liked each of them less.  
Overall, I really enjoyed this book.  This was my first book by this author and I loved her writing style and her way of making the setting and characters come alive.  I wish I had enjoyed my time with the main characters more but overall, the reading experience itself was a winner.

Would I Read More of this Series/Author? Definitely!  I really enjoyed the book even though I didn't like the main characters.

Would I Recommend this Book? If you like escapism starting over books, I'd definitely give this a try.

* I received this book in exchange for an honest review. As always my opinions and impressions are completely my own. *

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Top Ten Tuesday: Ten Books I Can't Believe I've Never Read


Today I'm linking up with Top Ten Tuesday hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl which is all about lists.  Since lists are one of my favorite things this is one of my favorite linkups!  Today's topic is Books I Can't Believe I Haven't Read.  This could probably be a top 100 list but I'm going to try and keep it to 10!


1.  The Dry by Jane Harper - This has been on my TBR since it came out and the second book looked even more interesting than this one.  My library has this in both print and audio but for some reason it just never quite makes it to the top.

2.  The Likeness by Tana French - I have seen so many readers who have similar tastes as mine list this as a 5 star read.  I liked the first book but was annoyed that the main plot point I was interested in never got resolved so I never picked this one up.  I have a copy sitting on my shelf so I really should just read it.

3.  A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett - The Secret Garden is easily one of my favorite books of all time but I've never read this one.  I think I tried it when I was a kid but never got very far.  I should give it another chance.

4.  Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones - This book sounds absolutely magical and I've enjoyed some of the clips I've seen of the adaptations.  It wouldn't take me long to read so I should just pick it up soon.

5.  Onyx Storm by Rebecca Yarros - I've read the first two books in this series and while I didn't love book two I'm invested enough in the world that I want to know what happens next.  


6.  The Girl Who Came Home by Hazel Gaynor - I'm just going to put this one on all these kinds of lists until I finally read it.  I wanted to read it since it came out and I've thoroughly enjoyed every book I've read by this author but for whatever reason have never picked this one up.  It's almost like I've got a mental block at this point.

7.  The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins - I loved The Woman in White and meant to read this one the next year.  It's been 7.  

8.  The Lion in the Living Room by Abigail Tucker - I watched a documentary by the same name and was completely fascinated.  I meant to read this book soon after that documentary but then never did - even though my library has a copy.

9.  The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon - I have a copy of this book on my shelf and so many people have just absolutely raved about it.  The premise really pulled at me as soon as it came out but somehow it just has yet to make it to the top of the pile. 

10. Major Pettigrew's Last Stand by Helen Simonson - This one sounds like so much my kind of book but I never seem to pick it up.  I just started another book by this author so hopefully I love it so much I end up picking this one up soon.

What books can you not believe you haven't read?

Monday, June 1, 2026

The Windsor Affair - Historical Fiction Review

Goodreads: The Windsor Affair by Melanie Benjamin

Rating: Really Liked It (4 Stars)
Source: Publisher

Description:
 Feuding Windsor brothers and their wives—some things, it seems, never change. The Men: Edward David Windsor, heir to the British throne, and Albert, known as Bertie, his younger brother, “the spare.” The Women: Edward’s wife Wallis, an American divorcée, and Bertie's wife Elizabeth, descended from Scottish nobility. The Feud: a rivalry that will last all their lives, make headlines, and still fuel gossip pages nearly a century later.

The Windsor Affair recreates the cataclysmic events that nearly toppled the monarchy and incited the power struggle between Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, the queen-to-be, and Wallis Simpson, aka “That Woman," who fell into a calculated love affair with Prince Edward. Told from the perspective of both women, the novel propels readers into the fabulous world of the debonair Prince of Wales, café society of the 1930s, and the glittering private lives of the Windsors.

The first novel dedicated to the infamous rivalry between these two world-famous women, The Windsor Affair brings us all the gossip and intrigue between the two very different—yet perhaps more similar than they would admit—wives of royals. As Queen, Elizabeth would become the symbol of British pluck and courage during World War II and remain a British institution for the rest of her long life. Wallis would be forever forced to enact the World’s Greatest Love Story even after it sours, as she goes from being admired to vilified and, ultimately, pitied.

Against the backdrop of the Abdication Crisis, World War II, coronations, funerals, births, and deaths, these two women maintain a bitter, biting, sharp-tongued feud—until age and the long arm of history bring about a kind of understanding. For the last communication between these bitter rivals was a simple, surprising “In friendship, Elizabeth.”

Genre: Fiction - Historical

Why I Picked This Book:
I've had good luck with this author and this is such a sliding door moment in history that it absolutely fascinates me.  

My Impression: I really enjoy Melanie Benjamin's writing and her ability to make characters in historical fiction come alive.  This was an interesting story with multiple POVs - sometimes Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, future Queen Consort and then Queen Mother, Wallis Simpson, otherwise known as "That Woman", and occasionally context provided by Queen Mary, Queen Consort and both women's Mother-in-law.   It would have been easy for Benjamin to lean into traditional views and portray one woman as the Saint and the other as the Devil but she doesn't at all.  

Wallis is a challenging and complicated person and while I never liked her there were times I couldn't help but admire her and feel sorry for her.  She is dealt a poor hand in life but has a driving ambition to survive and for security.  While I don't think many people would agree with how she did it and I doubt in real life she made many friends, she does survive though it is questionable if she ever truly felt secure.  Elizabeth is a product of the society she was raised in.  She understands duty and image and is well aware of her charms and the different methods of persuasion.  While I didn't particularly care for her, I couldn't help but admire her loyalty and her protectiveness of her family - especially her husband.  Both women are tough as nails but in completely different ways and it was fascinating to see their story revealed.  

The book centers around a sliding door moment in history with David's abdication but showing all events leading up to it and then the fallout.  It's interesting and a little terrifying to think just what would have happened in World War II if David had remained King as even before abdication he was pretty vocal about his Nazi sympathies.  

While not the fastest read this is a well done and compelling read about complex characters during an incredibly complicated time in history.  If this is a period of time that interests you it is well worth reading - as is any book by this author.

Would I Read More of this Series/Author? Definitely!  I've really enjoyed everything I've read by this author and am looking forward to reading more.  

Would I Recommend this Book? If you enjoy historical fiction this is definitely worth the read!

* I received this book in exchange for an honest review. As always my opinions and impressions are completely my own. *