Wishing You a Happy New Year and a Look Back at 2025
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| May, 2025: Alice Graduates from University of Virginia, one of the highlights of the year! |
My Kitchen, 2025
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| January: cooking from Fuchsia Dunlap’s book. |
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| May: our kitchen extends into the back yard, which continued until October. |
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| September: Carol brings us a fruit tart. |
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| December: Chanukah — latkes and salmon. |
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| Christmas dinner at Nat’s house (not my kitchen). |
December Celebration
Outstanding Books, 2025
I read and reviewed many books this year, as I enjoy reading and I had time to read. Here are just a few of the ones that I especially liked.
Interesting Places, 2025
The Dismal State of the Union
Politics this year has been a nightmare, and I’ve avoided any attempt to write about my reaction to the horror show in our nation. However, to wrap up the year I feel I must at least acknowledge how terrified I am that the fundamental philosophy on which the American experiment has rested for 250 years is severely threatened. Here is a summary that seems to capture the situation:
“By any honest accounting, 2025 has been a year of wrecking-ball damage to the constitutional scheme. Our democratic structures are more vulnerable by orders of magnitude than they were at the beginning of the year, before Trump took office. Indeed, one theme historians will likely emphasize is the speed and breadth of Trump 2.0—the way the administration hit the ground running with pre-cooked plans, especially those from Project 2025, to erode the separation of powers.
“That unprecedented damage has come from a ruthless and often lawless executive branch, a Congress that has largely declined to act as a co-equal branch, and a Supreme Court that—too often—has been solicitous of presidential power, especially on its emergency docket. The result, at best, is a pockmarked landscape that will require a herculean reclamation project, legally and politically, if constitutional government is to be fully restored.” — Harry Litman, December 29, 2025
Mona Lisa in 2025

Macron announces plans for Mona Lisa.
“The Mona Lisa will be moved to a new exhibition space at the Louvre in Paris as part of a plan to renovate the world's most frequented museum. Emmanuel Macron stood in front of the masterpiece by Leonardo da Vinci as he made the announcement to an audience of dignitaries, with the change to be introduced by 2031 and visitors charged separately to see the painting.” (BBC)
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| In Paris last June (from Alice). |
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Jean Margat, Mona Lisa collector extraordinaire and creator of this famous issue of Bizarre Magazine, died in February. |
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From Andy Borowitz
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Blog post © 2025 mae sander
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