A pop culture paradise or wasteland,depending on your point of view.
Pop Culture Princess
especially welcome to extensive readers
Monday, January 12, 2026
Working on my reading resolutions
With the growing chaos in our world right now, it’s all too easy to feel completely out of control of things right now.
However, giving yourself an emotional breathing space is important and for me, setting up some reading goals for myself is a good way to do just that.
One of those goals is to continue doing my morning reading duets(read a pair of books that have a direct connection on and off a little bit each day). While I do plan to reread David Copperfield along side Barbara Kingsolver’s Demon Copperhead, I think that I will start off with a reread of The Wizard of Oz with Wicked, since I finally got to watch the movie over the holidays!
Granted, I only saw part one(hopefully it won’t take me as long to see Wicked:For Good) but still, going down both of these versions of the Yellow Brick Road seems to be the best way to begin here:
Another bookish thing that I want to do is Return to Roberts-that I know that I like Nora Roberts’ work, I have fallen behind in reading her books.
Part of my plan to get back onboard is by reading the first two entries in her Lost Bride trilogy, Inheritance and The Mirror , which I picked up during my last library haul of 2025.
The first book has Sonya MacTavish discovering that her father had a twin brother that he didn’t know existed, that newly found uncle has died and left her a rather mysterious mansion in the bargain.
The house, as warned by estate attorney Trey, appears to be haunted by several spirits, many of whom were meant to be brides of the family in question. One of those brides was Astrid Poole, who was murdered on her wedding night and vowed to stay with her husband Collin despite the “death do they part” clause in their wedding contract.
Sonya becomes more convinced each day that the ghost stories are true and in the second installment, finds the title object that reveals what happened to Astrid all those years ago. Can this magical insight break the curse upon the family or will it draw Sonya in too far to escape its centuries old clutches?
I am still new to Nora, so finding my favored footing with her books is tricky. The Gothic vibes of this trilogy do sound eerily enticing and perhaps engaging enough for me to seek out book three(The Seven Rings) as well as more riveting Roberts fare:
Speaking of library loans, a major resolution that I have this year is to finish all of my library books.
Hate to admit but sometimes, I borrow books that I either don’t finish reading or don’t get to at all.
I do make sure to return them on time (occasionally stretching the renewal limits) but it is frustrating when I have new authors and stories that I want to try and for one reason or another, just don’t get beyond the first chapters or open up altogether.
Well, I am already making amends in that front by tackling Renee Rosen’s Let’s Call Her Barbie, a novel about the folks who brought the iconic doll to life and how that affected their lives. It’s a solid read that I should be able to finish in reasonable time.
Right after that, my next library read will be Voyage of the Damned by Frances White. Set in the kingdom of Concordia, a special boating trip for the heirs of the Twelve Provinces that make up the realm is being taken as a celebration of a thousand years of peace among them.
When one of the heirs dies under suspicious circumstances, it falls to the least likely of them to find the killer. Ganymede Piscaro is the only heir to not possess a magical ability( called a Blessing) which lead him to develop a snarky sense of humor.
That sharp wit is no protection from the menace onboard that is targeting the royal heirs one by one, which Ganymede realizes that the only way to not be next is to outsmart their mutual enemy. Can he trust any one of his fellow passengers or will those Blessings be counted sooner than he thinks?
This does sound fun and since this book is being touted as Agatha Christie style mystery with fantasy flair, I am ready to dive in:
I have a couple of other reading projects in the works (really to catch up with last year’s books!) but this basic three point plan ought to get my bookish motor running there.
While I know that focusing on fiction might seem trivial right now, it’s interesting at how relevant certain works turn out to be.
Last night, I watched the season six premiere of All Creatures Great and Small, which was set in 1945 England. By the end of the episode, WWII had been declared over(known as VE Day, I believe) and even in that small village, joy and relief were abounding.
Two of the characters, the Farnon brothers, were standing in the town square, watching the local celebration and remembering the past. One brother remarked how he had stood in that same spot with a friend when the war had started and that friend had told him that “we should be grateful for what we do have.”
The other nodded in agreement and said “Yes but we have to fight for it. It’s not enough to be grateful, we had to fight.”
Strangely resilient, that bit of dialogue, to what we’ve been going through at the moment. Being grateful for what we have is a strong motivation to fight for our freedom and whether or not those lines come from the original source material, such a sentiment still rings true even tucked into a literary adaptation.
Anyway, I do also want to shop more from Better World Books and one of my recent finds there is the first book in a Jane Austen themed mystery series.
Murder in Highbury by Vanessa Kelly has it’s lead detective in the form of Emma Knightley (formerly Woodhouse) being stunned to find the obnoxious wife of Mr. Elton deceased in her husband’s church and while asked not to interfere with the investigation, feels duty bound when one of the least likely residents of Highbury is targeted as a possible suspect!
The book is a charming tale so far and while Emma is not a favorite Austen heroine of mine, her talents for uncovering social secrets is rather fitting with her original literary incarnation. Having Emma as a Regency Nancy Drew is delightfully fine reading that I resolve to enjoy more often:
No comments:
Post a Comment