This is what I think of Ursula Le Guin’s book The Word for World is Forest: Furry green men? I’m not onboard with this literary device, if that’s what it is. I appreciated the name of the earthlings’ space ship, the Shackleton — but the rest of the story just isn’t my thing. Not to mention that the text is annoyingly repetitive. Maybe in 1972 when it was published, readers would have approached it in a different way than I did just now.
Wednesday, March 04, 2026
Ursula Le Guin: The Word for World is Forest
This is what I think of Ursula Le Guin’s book The Word for World is Forest: Furry green men? I’m not onboard with this literary device, if that’s what it is. I appreciated the name of the earthlings’ space ship, the Shackleton — but the rest of the story just isn’t my thing. Not to mention that the text is annoyingly repetitive. Maybe in 1972 when it was published, readers would have approached it in a different way than I did just now.
Monday, March 02, 2026
Weekend Images
Partly-Read Book
| I wasn’t finding very many new ideas here, so I skipped several chapters I expected more from Mark Bittman.. |
Silly Newspaper Items
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| I guess if I got drunk I would forget it was still winter. |
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| As they say, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. |
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| Wait… What? |
Baking Hamentaschen
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| Ingredients for the dough, which has to be made, chilled, rolled, cut out, and filled. |
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| We cooked some traditional prune filling, and also used jam. |
| A Purim Play: children watch through the window. A plate of hamentaschen is on the table. |
Saturday, February 28, 2026
February Wrap-Up: Not Much New
Hello Mona Lisa in Paris and in my kitchen
| I’ll start my February wrap-up with this Mona Lisa from Evelyn’s trip to Paris. You probably know that I collect Mona Lisa objects. |
Mona Lisa and Other Magnets: Past and Present
| Mona Lisa to my refrigerator, pretty much the same as January. This month just hasn’t been very acquisitive, as you’ll see throughout this post. |
| Magnets in Janyary, 2024 — mainly from Costa Rica. |
| Magnets in October, 2021 |
February Kitchen
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| Soup, stew, burgers, lamb chops. |
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| Fruit, pancakes, and Len’s bread. |
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| Note the valentine platter! |

| I guess I’ve had this white octagonal bowl a long time. And eating the same thing over again. But we like it! As I say, a month without much that’s new. |
Dinner from Carol’s Kitchen
Not My Kitchen: Lunch at Zingerman’s Deli
| A Mural at Zingerman’s |
Not My Kitchen: Food at the Olympics
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| During February we watched a lot of the Milan Winter Olympic Games. |
Polar bears in the news: another thought for the month though not in the kitchen
| In Svalbard in 2015, we saw this polar bear from the deck of the National Geographic Explorer. |
Kitchen Trouble
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| Trouble? Our dishwasher is misbehaving, but we are trying to discipline it. |
Sherry’s In My Kitchen blog event offers a chance to share your kitchen and see what other people have in their kitchens at the end of each month (or the beginning of the next month). Most of the participants share new kitchen gear, new food choices, and new recipes. This month, I didn’t get any new stuff, but I’ve done my best to share what’s going on in my life. I’m also sharing this with Deb’s Sunday Salon.
Thursday, February 26, 2026
A Food-Obsessed Book
“As it melted under the heat of her tongue, the sweet butter expanded lusciously, rousing all the cells across her body capable of apprehending its rich goodness.” (p. 69)
“Reiko set down on the table a selection of large plates, each of a different design and glaze, and the meal began. Bagna càuda with a plentiful variety of steamed winter vegetables and a rich anchovy sauce, thinly cut slices of warmed salt pork, a tofu and leek gratin, rice cooked in an earthenware pot with vegetables and chopped oysters, and miso soup,” (p. 7)
“Eating was ultimately an individual and egoistic compulsion, Rika was starting to realise. A gourmand was ultimately a seeker of the truth. You could wrap up their mission in all kinds of fancy language, but they were simply confronting their desires day in and day out. As you learned to cook, you became increasingly able to shut out the outside world and create a fortress within your own spirit.” (p. 179)
“When I made them boeuf bourguignon, all they saw was beef stew.’ (p. 336)
Note: I do not recommend this book! It’s tedious and I suspect the translation is bad, or at least in English the author often seems to use the wrong word for common things. (Example: for the entryway of an ordinary house, the book uses the word “lobby.” The book uses the phrase “a pat of butter” to refer to an entire 200 gram stick of butter. And so on.) If you want to read Japanese literature with food scenes, I recommend Haruki Murakami.
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Easter Island History
Mike Pitts’ history of Easter Island (Rapa Nui) and how it was understood and misunderstood was published January 27, 2026. |
| Photo advertising tourism to Easter Island. |
The Movie “Rapa Nui”
“Rapa Nui” slips through the National Geographic Loophole. This is the Hollywood convention which teaches us that brown breasts are not as sinful as white ones, and so while it may be evil to gaze upon a blond Playboy centerfold and feel lust in our hearts, it is educational to watch Polynesian maidens frolicking topless in the surf. This isn’t sex; it’s geography. …Concern for my reputation prevents me from recommending this movie. I wish I had more nerve. I wish I could simply write, “Look, of course it’s one of the worst movies ever made. But it has hilarious dialogue, a weirdo action climax, a bizarre explanation for the faces of Easter Island, and dozens if not hundreds of wonderful bare breasts.” I am however a responsible film critic and must conclude that “Rapa Nui” is a bad film. If you want to see it anyway, of course, that’s strictly your concern. I think I may check it out again myself.
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Saturday Lunch
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| Recently redecorated alleyway downtown next to Frita Batidos, a Cuban diner where we were going for lunch with friends. |
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| Lunch: a chicken sandwich with fritas (fries), churros (a pastry like a donut), and batidos (a kind of smoothie). |
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| The walls are decorated with interesting abstract murals. |
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| After eating our frita (sandwich) we went next door to Sweetwater’s for coffee. The mural here is realistic. (Images © mae sander 2026) |
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Evil Genius
Creepy book (in a good way)
“To make up for what I had done to those poor rubbery faces, I began to collect Barbie dolls in earnest. I took loving care of them. I never took those dolls out of their boxes. My mother encouraged my interest. She cleared out the pantry. Together we put up shelves and painted them pink. Over the years, my collection grew. Every birthday and every Christmas and every time I got an A on my report card, my mother gifted me a new doll for my collection. But it was maybe too late to reform me.” (p. 20)
Celia Dent’s inner life is full of violence. There’s some of it also in her physical life — as well as the “lives” of the Barbies. As she works in her job at a telephone company complaint center, and commutes from her home in Redwood City in the San Francisco Bay area into the city, her mind is full of oddities —
“I heard the same little song in my ear that I’d heard on the train the night before—love and death, love and death—and the people scurrying along the sidewalk with me, all those scurrying souls, yearning toward that train station, whipped their heads around and stared at me in wonder. Those people had heard my innermost secret thoughts. My body had shouted my secret thoughts out in every direction. All the thoughts I’d tried so hard to keep quiet. Thoughts about love and death, is what I mean. Thoughts about how love could be a land mine buried in a shimmering field of wheat, or a pistol shot, or a sticky trap set in a corner, or a noose, or an insidious addiction—and so could death be all these things.” (p.75)
She sees herself in odd ways, sometimes by imagining her father of whom she knows nothing whatsoever, but speculates that he might be the subject of a photo with the name “Dirk” written on the back. Her mother won’t tell her anything. But she creates an identity for herself —
“I remembered what I had always known: I was Daughter of Dirk. I was Minion of the Crab Queen. I was in a full fever. I wasn’t a normal girl. I was supernatural. I was uncanny. I was magnificent.“ (p. 117)
Most critically, she’s a witness at a very bizarre and violent death scene, which I can’t tell more about because it would be a terrible spoiler (and I’ve already spoiled a bit). Anyway — upon being held in jail she ruminates on refusing to talk:
“As was my right. Remaining silent had been my right ever since Ernesto Miranda’s landmark case in 1966. Think of it. One man, named Ernesto, single-handedly altered the dialogue in every climactic scene in every true-crime show and police procedural to come, forevermore, and what’s more, thanks to Ernesto, I was walking away a free woman, but with a soul still burdened by my unconfessed crimes.” (p. 206)
Friday, February 20, 2026
From Ann Arbor (in reality) to Paris (in memory)
Grocery Shopping
More Olympics
Unfinished History Book
“The Bookseller of Florence by Ross King tells the story of Vespasiano da Bisticci, a major Renaissance bookseller who created magnificent, hand-copied manuscripts for Europe's elite before the printing press disrupted his business.” (Goodreads)
Paris Today and in the Past
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| Paris, 1976. Poilâne bakery on Boulevard de Grenelle, Paris. (My photo) |
| Paris, 2018: Bread and Pastry at Poilâne on Rue du Cherche-Midi. (My photo) |
| The bakery today, still selling bread at the location that first opened in 1932. (From the Poilâne website) |
| A recipe book that we bought years ago. |























