Rocco DiSpirito’s The Pound a Day Diet, week three

The strict diet portion of this book aimed at weight loss is meant for 28 days.  After that it moves into maintenance and I haven’t looked that far, although I do know it’s Mediterranean based. I took off three days this past week for Thanksgiving festivities, so I’m only on day 18.  I’m trying to get back on track (except last night when I was organizing my Christmas gift giving I might have, maybe, eaten 4 Godiva salted toffee caramels).  On Thanksgiving Day I ate everything I hadn’t had in a few weeks, noodles, mashed potatoes and gravy, rolls and butter and I even skipped that low-fat bird and went straight for the ham.  Ah, Thanksgiving.

IMG_1389[1]Here I am enjoying the day with family (I think there were about 40 of us this year and somehow this is the only picture I have with me in it!)

Ok, the diet, it’s going well even with all my cheating this past week.  My goal at the start of the diet was to lose 10 in 28 and I’m almost there!

Week 1 – lost 6 pounds

Week 2 update – lost 0 😦 gained 0 🙂

Week 3 – lost 3 pounds

total loss so far – 9 pounds!

Mailbox Monday – December 1

mmb-300x282Mailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books that came in their mailbox during the last week.Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists.

dec1I received 3 books in the mail and picked up the older Kingsolver book at Half-Priced Books for $2. Score!

You Should Have Known by Jean Hanff Korelitz (received from Goodreads 1st Reader)

Grace Reinhart Sachs is living the only life she ever wanted for herself, devoted to her husband, a pediatric oncologist at a major cancer hospital, their young son, Henry, and the patients she sees in her therapy practice. Grace is also the author of the forthcoming You Should Have Known, a book in which she castigates women for not valuing their intuition and calls upon them to pay attention to their first impressions of men.

But weeks before the book is published, a chasm opens in her own life: a violent death, a missing husband, and, in the place of a man Grace thought she knew, only a chain of terrible revelations. Left behind in the wake of a spreading and very public disaster, and horrified by the ways in which she has failed to heed her own advice, Grace must dismantle one life and create another for her child and herself.

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle:A Year of Food Life by Barbara Kingsolver (purchased)

Bestselling author Barbara Kingsolver returns with her first nonfiction narrative that will open your eyes in a hundred new ways to an old truth: You are what you eat.

“As the U.S. population made an unprecedented mad dash for the Sun Belt, one carload of us paddled against the tide, heading for the Promised Land where water falls from the sky and green stuff grows all around. We were about to begin the adventure of realigning our lives with our food chain.

“Naturally, our first stop was to buy junk food and fossil fuel. . . .”

Hang on for the ride: With characteristic poetry and pluck, Barbara Kingsolver and her family sweep readers along on their journey away from the industrial-food pipeline to a rural life in which they vow to buy only food raised in their own neighborhood, grow it themselves, or learn to live without it. Their good-humored search yields surprising discoveries about turkey sex life and overly zealous zucchini plants, en route to a food culture that’s better for the neighborhood and also better on the table. Part memoir, part journalistic investigation, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle makes a passionate case for putting the kitchen back at the center of family life and diversified farms at the center of the American diet.

“This is the story of a year in which we made every attempt to feed ourselves animals and vegetables whose provenance we really knew . . . and of how our family was changed by our first year of deliberately eating food produced from the same place where we worked, went to school, loved our neighbors, drank the water, and breathed the air.”

If You Were Me and Lived in Greece and If You Were Me and Lived in Peru by Carole P Roman (received from Red Feather Productions)

It’s never too early to start teaching children about the world around them. In If You Were Me and Lived in…Greece , early learners get a taste of what their life would be like if they lived in Greece while being introduced to the birthplace of democracy. This book is the latest installment of the educational series about the cultures of the world that speaks to young children about the topics that interest them, such as the foods people eat, the names of boys and girls, and the activities that children their age living in a foreign land are likely to engage in. This exciting visit to Greece also introduces the important concept of democracy to children and highlights some of the other cultural contributions that Greece has made to Western civilization. Basic information is offered in a playful way that won’t overwhelm children.
**
You’ll never guess what crazy dish the ancient Incan kings ate. But you can read all about it, and more, in If You Were Me and Lived in…Peru, the latest book in Carole P. Roman’s fun travel series for kids.

An exciting introduction to world cultures written for young readers ages three through eight, this new expedition takes kids to South America and gives them a colorful glimpse into what living in Peru is like. Highlighting a myriad of topics, including language, cuisine, climate, and history, this book teaches kids about diversity while also revealing to them the important truth that we are all connected.


 

Did anything arrive in  your mailbox this week?

 

My Life According to Books 2014

I decided to take up Elyse on her meme since I wanted to sit down and decompress from our whirlwind trip back home for Thanksgiving.  I hope you all had a great day with family and friends.

Use titles from the books you’ve read this year to complete the sentences.

1. Black Friday makes me The Invisible Man (HG Wells)

2. If you post racist jokes on Facebook, I (am not) Missing You (after unfriending) (Harlan Coben)

3. In my ID photo, I look like The Wife, the Maid and the Mistress (Ariel Lawhon)

4. If someone interrupts my reading, (they might find) A Discovery of Witches (Deborah Harkness)

5. When I read/watch the news, I Love Life (Rob Lowe)

6. The last time I visited the zoo, I (saw a) Gift From the Sea (Anne Morrow Lindbergh)

7. If I were a Supreme Court Justice, I (would be) American on Purpose (Craig Ferguson)

8. Absolutely nothing compares to That Night (Chevy Stevens)

9. Best advice my mom gave me (be) The Best (wo)Man (Kristan Higgins)

10. My hope for 2015 is (a) Miracle Cure (Harlan Coben)

Winners – something to be thankful for

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Just in time for Thanksgiving tomorrow I’ve got a few winners to announce-

 

Nise (Under the Boardwalk)  winner of Round 3 of my Quizzes!  An amazing 9th win!!!  $16 B&N giftcard is on the way.

Rita winner of a special quiz participation prize.

JoAnn (Lakeside Musing) winner of First Darling of the Morning, a signed book by Thrity Amrigar

 

Congratulations and I hope you all have a safe and happy Thanksgiving!

Fourth Down and Out by Andrew Welsh-Huggins – where I talk a little football

Fourth Down and Out: An Andy Hayes MysteryFourth Down and Out. Finished 11-4-14, rating 3.5/5, mystery, 256 pages, pub. 2014

The job seems easy enough at first for private investigator Andy Hayes: save his client’s reputation by retrieving a laptop and erasing a troublesome video from its hard drive. But that’s before someone breaks into Andy’s apartment in Columbus; before someone else, armed with a shotgun, relieves him of the laptop; and before the FBI suddenly shows up on his doorstep asking questions.

Soon, there’s a growing list of people with a claim on the computer, all of them with secrets they don’t want uncovered. When one of those people ends up dead, Andy has his hands full convincing authorities he’s not responsible, while trying to figure out who is—and who’s got the laptop—before someone else dies. Soon the trail leads to the last place Andy wants to go: back to Ohio State University, where few have forgiven him for a mistake he made two decades earlier in his days as the Buckeyes’ star quarterback.

from Goodreads

It’s Rivalry Week here in Ohio.  We play that team Up North this Saturday so I thought it would be a good time to review this book about an ex-Ohio State quarterback.  Ohio State is a big school, when I was in the early 1990’s there were around 60,000 students on the Columbus campus.  Never a dull moment, especially on Game Day.  Football is king even when we had an excellent basketball team.  In 1995 as I was finishing up my student teaching I was out one night with a friend when she introduced me to Kirk Herbstreit and if football is king, quarterbacks are super-sized kings.  (And for those of you who are College Game Day watchers, yes Kirk is really that good-looking in person)  So, it’s obvious why this mystery set in Columbus appealed to me.

Andy did something bad and now years later, even after serving his time, Columbus still hates him (why he is stayed in Columbus is still a mystery).  He does some PI work to make ends meet and withstands the comments and glares from those who still recognize him.  When he takes a small job and agrees to wipe a laptop clean he becomes the target of violence and theft and not one to let things go he starts his own investigation that leads to more questions and danger.  He isn’t a particularly skilled PI but he gets the job done.

This is perfect for Columbus residents and college football fans.  The mystery itself becomes a little convoluted but the setting of Columbus is spot on and I loved revisiting the city I lived in 4+ years.  Especially notable is the German Village bookstore, The Book Loft that has 32 rooms of books in every nook and cranny and is a must visit if you are ever in the area.  I loved the nod to Ohio State football history in the naming of the main character and his dog.  Seriously how cute is the name Hopalong for a dog?

Author Welsh-Huggins is a long-time AP reporter and this is his first book and the beginning of a series about Andy.  I’m looking forward to seeing what Andy (and Columbus) is up to next.

Go Bucks!

Rocco DiSpirito’s The Pound a Day Diet, Week 2

Hm, let me say that week 2 on Rocco’s diet was not successful.  Three days I had minor to major cheats (two date nights and a family trip to Five Guys where I was able to resist the burger but not the fries) and didn’t lose any weight.  That doesn’t make me a happy camper.  I’m not throwing in the towel.  I’m back on this week until Thursday and Friday.

Let’s talk shirataki noodles.  Ever had them?  They are in quite a few of these recipes as a pasta replacement.  There are tofu brands but I’ve only tried the soy varieties.  A little more about them if you aren’t familiar.  My regular grocery store didn’t have them, but  the health one did.  I tried the angel hair with a teriaki sauce (it was okay), the fettuccine with a cheese sauce (inedible, threw it didn’t away instead of eating it), and the spaghetti with a peanut and a lemon sauce (both were good).  I think they are best if you cook them long enough but if you’ve any experience with them let me know because they are a great carb replacement and I’d like to know if there is a trick to them.

I forgot to take a picture this week but I did have a favorite recipe.

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So, week 2 I managed to keep off the first 6 pounds but wasn’t able to lose more, but I can’t completely blame that on the diet since I ate 2 meals out and had a bunch of Five Guys Fries (they were so worth it though!).

 

 

Sundays with Gage – Five minutes is a long time

Last week we took Gage to the Jump Yard, a huge warehouse filled with giant inflatables for kids, a snack bar, video games and rooms for birthday parties.  Here are a few pics to show how much fun Gage had.

IMG_1200[1]IMG_1212[1] IMG_1281[1]IMG_1246[1]IMG_1262[1]See, he even made a friend to run around with.

These pictures are a little misleading because they are all focused on Gage.  If I’d panned out a bit you would have seen hundreds of people, kids and adults, milling around.  It only got more crowded the longer we were there.  We made Gage sit down for juice and after three sips he was ready to go.  Jason got up and headed to the big room with him and when I looked up a minute later Jason was looking around for Gage.  I started looking around, not panicked because how far could he have gotten?  Through a sea of people I catch a glimpse of him going up the stairs and I take off in that direction, only a little nervous because there was slide way in back that I knew he was headed to.  It took me too long to get throught the bottleneck at the stairs and by the time I got to the top and turned the corner he was nowhere in sight.  I hightailed it to the back slide/obstacle course and couldn’t find him.  Most of these inflatables are so big you can’t actually see the whole thing so it took me a minute to realize he wasn’t there.  Being such a big place there are lots of doors that go to back rooms and he could have gone in any of them but I assumed that he was playing somewhere.  I made a circle of the upstairs, completely panicked by now and Jason was at the entrance downstairs.  This was not my best be-calm-in-the-moment-of-crisis moment.  There were so many people.  I even told a passing worker that I lost a kid and she just smiled and kept walking.

I headed to the back again to regroup and Gage is walking right towards me calm as can be.  Luckily we were in the area they have set aside for football games for dads and there was a chair and a quiet spot where I could sit him down and tell him he was in trouble.  Deep breath.  Gage was unconcerned and was mad that he had to sit down instead of running off to play.  This is the first time he’s been out of sight when there were that many people and it did not endear me to The Jump Yard.  Gage, of course, would like to go back every weekend.

IMG_1232[1]That smile and this were the two good things about  this excursion.IMG_1292[1]He hasn’t fallen asleep in the car for over a year!

Four year olds are fast and sneaky and ours outsmarted both of us.  We’re in trouble.

Heroes Are My Weakness by Susan Elizabeth Phillips

Heroes Are My WeaknessHeroes Are My Weakness.  Finished 11-16-14, rating 3/5, romance, 367 pages, pub. 2014

The dead of winter.  An isolated island off the coast of Maine.  A man.  A woman.  A sinister house looming over the sea …

He’s a reclusive writer whose macabre imagination creates chilling horror novels. She’s a down-on-her-luck actress reduced to staging kids’ puppet shows. He knows a dozen ways to kill with his bare hands. She knows a dozen ways to kill with laughs.

But she’s not laughing now. When she was a teenager, he terrified her. Now they’re trapped together on a snowy island off the coast of Maine. Is he the villain she remembers or has he changed? Her head says no. Her heart says yes.
from Goodreads

The book opens with our heroine, Annie, having a conversation with her multitude of puppets as she drives to her secluded cabin in the middle of a snowstorm.  It’s those puppets that kept me from investing fully in Annie from the beginning.  She grew on me but the absurdity of the puppets (and their continued butting into the story) turned me off.  The puppets did, much later, play a part in the sweetest aspect of Annie’s story and I think if that had been their involvement I may have liked this better.  I’m sounding very anti-puppet with all of these complaints, aren’t I?  Maybe it’s my problem and not Annie’s!

As for Theo Harp, our dark hero, he came off as so damaged at the beginning it was interesting to see how she would redeem him. In the end the big reveal wasn’t all that big a surprise but it did work in making him a more sympathetic character.

This felt very different from SEP’s other romances.  There’s always hot sex that happens before it seems it should and there is always humor, sarcasm and intelligent characters and this book had all that.  It felt like less romance this time around and it had a more sinister undertone since someone was trying to scare/hurt Annie.  It was good, but different.

I know this has been nominated for many end-of-the-year book awards, but it just didn’t quite do it for me.  But, no worries, I’ll still buy the next book by Susan in hardcover the week it comes out 🙂

Thanksgiving Quiz

quizFor the last quiz of 2014 you just need to fill in the titles with words associated with Thanksgiving, my favorite holiday.  Extra points if you can tell me the author!

Take your best guesses, be entered to win a prize – you only need one correct answer to be eligible for a prize.  No cheating (using the web to help find answers) or copying.  All extra details can be found here.

Leave your guesses in the comment section by Tuesday afternoon.

1. The Cat Who Talked ______

2. A Moveable _____

3. So Long, and _____ For All the Fish

4. Dress Your _____ in Corduroy and Denim

5. _____’s Progress

6. 44 _____ Point

7. What’s _____Gilbert Grape

8. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time _____

9. The _____ _____ Queens’ Book of Love

10. The Sisterhood of the _____ Pants

Answers to last week’s Recognize Me? Quiz here.

A reminder about my giveaway

GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY!

Gage got me up before 5:30 this morning so I’m too tired to write a review, but I wanted to remind you that I’m giving awaya signed copy of Thrity Umrigar’s book about growing up in India and a bag this month.  You can see my original post here.  I’ll even give you a chance to get an extra entry. Comment here AND there and get an entry for each!  If you want to tweet about it and let me know in your comment I’ll  throw in another entry.  Make sure you leave an email address.

Open internationally.  I’ll draw a winner November 25.

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First Darling of the Morning:Selected Memories of an Indian Childhood by Thrity Umrigar

First Darling of the Morning is the powerful and poignant memoir of bestselling author Thrity Umrigar, tracing the arc of her Bombay childhood and adolescence from her earliest memories to her eventual departure for the United States at age twenty-one. It is an evocative, emotionally charged story of a young life steeped in paradox; of a middle-class Parsi girl attending Catholic school in a predominantly Hindu city; of a guilt-ridden stranger in her own land, an affluent child in a country mired in abysmal poverty. She reveals intimate secrets and offers an unflinching look at family issues once considered unspeakable as she interweaves two fascinating coming-of-age stories—one of a small child, and one of a nation.

In addition, author Duffy Brown graciously contributed a great canvas bag highlighting her new series set on Mackinac Island, Geared for the Grave.