Thursday, June 18, 2026

”The Typing Lady”

 


I have read around half of The Typing Lady by Ruth Ozeki (published last week) and I’m enjoying it. The story titled “An Anthropologist’s Kid” was a really good capture of being somebody’s kid. It managed to see life from both a parent’s and a child’s viewpoint — in particular, the perspective of a faculty brat —

“In the winter we played in one of the empty seminar rooms or in my dad’s office. The secretaries let us type on their typewriters. They gave us scrap paper to draw on, and sometimes, if we begged them, they let us help run the mimeograph machine. That was our favorite. We loved the smell of the purple ink. You could almost get high on it.”

I’m planning to finish this book after I read the brand-new Martin Walker book! Bruno, chief of police is back today. 

More by Ruth Ozeki 

 I’ve read all of them, but not reviewed every one of them.

Review © 2026 mae sander


Tuesday, June 16, 2026

“I Who Have Never Known Men”


Existentialist literature pares down human experience to its barest existence. In my opinion, that’s exactly the effect of this novel — I Who Have Never Known Men —by author Jacqueline Harpman (1929-2012). The stark reality of a world in which only one human being remains alive and conscious is the focus of this rather short novel. The character (never named) grapples with fundamental questions that in fact don’t bother most of us who lead an ordinary social existence. She says: “I lived in a perpetual present and I was gradually forgetting my story.” (p. 5)

I admired this novel for the economy with which the author uses words and formulates ideas, getting to questions of existence without being too pretentious. I admired the way a very bleak and unfriendly landscape became a key part of the narrator’s seeking in an absurd world. It makes me think of the classic example of existential fiction, the novel Woman in the Dunes by Japanese author Kobo Abe and the French film based on it.

The existentialists had an acute sense of the absurd, and the narrator of I Who Have Never Known Men puts it thus: “Perhaps, when someone has experienced a day-to-day life that makes sense, they can never become accustomed to strangeness. That is something that I, who have only experienced absurdity, can only suppose.” (p. 55)

And near the end of the book she wonders: “What does having lived mean once you are no longer alive? (p. 159) This is a powerful book, though I think it implicitly claims to be deep and profound to a greater extent than maybe it actually accomplishes. The AI summary from google says: “The book is a modern classic of feminist speculative fiction, known for its haunting atmosphere and philosophical questions about what it means to be human. ”

Monday, June 15, 2026

Speaking of Frida Kalho…

Frida Kalho: Self-Portrait with Monkeys, 1943
In the Guardian today: an article about a three-course feast inspired by Frida Kahlo. The author, Andrew Gilcrist, writes:

“I’m in Mexico City with a Tate delegation just as the huge jacaranda trees are blooming purple and violet across its parks and boulevards – to follow in Kahlo’s footsteps ahead of Frida: The Making of an Icon, a show of more than 30 of her works at Tate Modern in London that seems destined to be a summer blockbuster, adding yet more fuel to Fridamania.”

Cupcakes

 


Alice brought us some Zingerman’s cupcakes. No particular reason to celebrate, just for fun.
Photos © 2026 mae sander

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Swans Again

 



Photos © 2026 mae sander

Friday, June 12, 2026

New Frying Pan and Other Friday Thoughts

 Lamb Chops

Len bought a new, heavy frying pan, and tried it out on some lamb chops.
The recipe was from the New York Times:
"Seared Lamb Chops With Anchovies, Capers and Sage" by Melissa Clark




The chops were simply delicious!

Over-Easy Eggs

For breakfast the frying pan produced lovely over-easy eggs with toasted English muffins.


In the News: The President of Mexico

In the Guardian: a long read about the President of Mexico (link).


Besides politics, the article described the beautiful clothing of Mexico’s President (right).
The photos reminded me of Frida Kalho and her special style — in left image.

“Claudia Sheinbaum’s clothing – tailored from modest fabrics produced in Mexico and featuring Indigenous motifs – is one of the many ways that her administration communicates its slogan: ‘For the good of all, first the poor.’”


Some Postcards I received this week

Thanks to Evelyn who is traveling in the West.

Blog post © 2026 mae sander

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Bonsai at the Botanical Gardens

 









And Dinner



Photos taken June 10, 2026 © mae sander

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

A Few Good Meals

 

Upper left: cold chicken platter. Upper right: the chicken on the grill.
Lower photos: the fully cooked chicken being carved.

Spaghetti all'assassina (Assassin's Spaghetti) is a famous pasta dish from Bari, Italy. Instead of boiling the pasta, you cook it in a frying pan with successive additions of olive oil, garlic, chili, water and tomato paste. The pasta becomes charred and (we thought) quite delicious. The origin of the name is disputed — maybe the cook is trying to kill you with the hot chili peppers! Len didn’t use an excess of hot pepper, and we enjoyed the result.

Breakfast: A muffin from Trader Joe’s


Grilling pork chops…

The pork chops, beautifully seared and cooked. It’s definitely grilling season!

AND Swans

This pair of trumpeter swans at a pond outside of town have quite a little brood of cygnets!


Photos © 2026 mae sander

Tuesday, June 09, 2026

The Silk Road

 

I have been reading this new book about travel in some very unusual places.
The recipes are fun to read, but I doubt that I’ll try them!
I wrote more about the silk road here: https://maefood.blogspot.com/2024/06/i-am-not-pilgrim.html
and here: https://maefood.blogspot.com/2020/03/what-did-marco-polo-eat.html

Images from Ansari’s Silk Roads

Fruit preserves in the style of the author’s family.



Reading Next: A different view of this history


A Long Time Ago

Many years ago, I read about medieval voyages in various contexts, and I wrote a book called Jewish Time Travel. Its pretty obscure though amazon.com still has a listing for it.




Blog post © 2026 mae sander

Wednesday, June 03, 2026

Quiet Days in West Lafayette

Visiting Elaine in West Lafayette. Sushi an other good food at the Japanese restaurant Izakaya.


Clover in the woods.

Mural near one of the local shopping centers.

Detail of mural.



Bridge across Happy Hollow Creek.

 Photos © 2026 mae sander