Thursday, January 29, 2026
Monday, January 26, 2026
Snowed In and Reading
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| Machiavelli by Ross King |
Machiavelli … does not hold that this conventional morality is entirely practical in the brutal world of Italian politics. “The gulf between how one should live and how one does live is so wide,” he writes, “that a man who neglects what is actually done for what should be done moves toward self-destruction rather than self-preservation.”
Nostrums having to do with keeping oaths and showing mercy are all very laudable on paper, but the man who transfers these moral precepts into the political arena will find himself drastically compromised. Machiavelli offers a new approach to political morality: “The fact is that a man who wants to act virtuously in every way necessarily comes to grief among so many who are not virtuous. Therefore if a prince wants to maintain his rule he must be prepared not to be virtuous, and to make use of this, or not, according to his need.” Qualities that the world considers virtues will lead a leader to ruin, while those regarded as vices will often bring safety and prosperity. Good leadership requires a prince to “know how to do evil.” (King, p. 156)
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| The Maid by Nita Prose |
Saturday, January 24, 2026
Dinner in our deep frozen town
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| I think the low last night was minus 10° F. |
Dinner for a cold evening: ABC stew
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| Day 1: I cooked the stew, then refrigerated it overnight. ABC: Apricots, Beef, Carrots (plus lots more ingredients). |
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| Day 2: I rewarmed stew in oven, then adjusted seasoning on top of the stove. |
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| Parsley and cilantro garnish a plate of stew. We ate it with couscous and crusty bread. |
Ingredients for ABC Stew
Directions
Day 1: Mix the ingredients for the spice rub in a covered bowl; coat the beef with the spice, cover, and refrigerate for at least 4 hours.Turn the heat down, and add the onions to the pan. Brown them for about 5 minutes, or until softened. Add the browned meat, chickpeas (if using), tomatoes, and stock. Bring to a boil, cover, and simmer for 1 1/2 hours. Then add the dates prunes, and apricots. Simmer for another 1 1/2 hours. The beef should be very tender and the liquid should be thickened. Remove to oven-proof cooking pot and refrigerate over night.
Dessert
Friday, January 23, 2026
Axolotls
| An axolotl in Lake Xochimilco, Mexico —See this article on Axolotls, published this week, which inspired me to look up more information about them. |
| An axolotl on a 50 peso note (source) The image is based on a mural by Diego Rivera. |
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| One of many kids’ books about axolotls. |
What, Me Worry?
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
Identities
“After hundreds of years, if there were so many sinners left, what had the Inquisition accomplished? They might root out Jews and Muslims and Erasmists and alumbrados, but then what was left?” (p. 367)
“When Luzia had seen the burnt bread, she hadn’t thought much about passing her hand over it and singing the words her aunt had taught her, “Aboltar kazal, aboltar mazal.” A change of scene, a change of fortune. She sang them very softly. They were not quite Spanish, just as Luzia was not quite Spanish. But Doña Valentina would never have her in this house, even in the dark, hot, windowless kitchen, if she detected a whiff of Jew. Luzia knew that she should be careful, but it was difficult not to do something the easy way when everything else was so hard.” (p 6)
From the beginning, The Familiar is a book about secrecy and identity. Luzia, at the center of the novel, has both an out-facing identity as a servant in an impoverished upper-class home in late-medieval Spain, and also a secret identity as a Jew who would like to flee to Salonika where she could practice her true religion openly. The novel adds an element of magical realism to this identity: Luzia can also do magic.
Here is Luzia’s view of the conversion which her ancestors had experienced a few generations earlier:
“Their great religion can make bread into flesh and wine into blood. But they don’t believe that any amount of holy water or prayer can truly make a Jew a Christian.” (p. 121)
“I have been baptized, she reminded herself. She went dutifully to mass. She knew her Pater Noster, the Ave Maria and Salve Regina, her psalms and commandments. She would happily eat ham and mend a dress after sundown on the Sabbath. And yet she felt her magic like a damning thread, binding her to the past, and to every Jew in every synagogue who still bent their head in prayer.” (p. 198)
The counter-theme of this book is a completely different identity: that of an immortal and magically created human-like being named Santángel who becomes Luzia’s friend and ally in struggling to survive and escape. He says:
“In another life, in another world, I would be called a familiar. My gifts are not my own. They exist only to serve others. People fear me because I want them to, because their fear makes my life easier.” (p. 165)
The plot of this book is elaborate (maybe too much so). There are many twists as the stories of several characters are being told. That’s all I have to say about it.
Blog post © 2026 mae sander
Monday, January 19, 2026
Sunday, January 18, 2026
An Insane Threat
| Beautiful Greenland from our trip in 2022. |
| Even in summer, huge icebergs were blocking our ship at one point. What a fascinating place, and now the target of our horrible leader. |
| In Greenland this week: a large percent of the people are protesting the insane threats of the US President to invade this beautiful country. |
Murderers, Poets and Barbecue
| Creepy country house in 1925. Helena Bonham Carter. Agatha Christie. New Netflick…Just wow! |
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| E.C.R. Lorac’s novel offers us another aristocratic family down on their luck, living in the ruins of their family manor. Suspense! Murder! More Wow! |
| The Poet X — a poor high-school girl trying to become a poet. Couldn’t be more different from stories of the English aristocracy! |
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Overwhelmed by the Renaissance
A not-quite reading success…
My Reading
Thinking of Famous Art in the Renaissance
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| I enjoyed the art history, such as discussion of Michelangelo’s slaves. |
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| Michelangelo: The Sistine Chapel. One of the most amazing mural paintings in history: the book has interesting historical info about this art work and its creator. Shared with Deb’s Sunday salon at Readerbuzz. |
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Tuesday, January 13, 2026
Cooking Dinner
Sunday, January 11, 2026
On the Weekend
Brunch at Alice’s Apartment
Dinner at Home
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| Pork chops and snow peas with mushrooms. |
Recent Reading Failures
| Free book from amazon.com. It stinks. Bad writing, bad characterization, bad in every way. I tried hard but only read around 30%, |
Wednesday, January 07, 2026
Good and Evil
“Enshittification is when you combine the banality of evil with an internet-connected device and a federal law that criminalizes doing anything with that device that the manufacturer dislikes.” (p 141)
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| Why “everything” got worse — easy answer: in this book, “everything” pretty much adds up to Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, the iPhone, and maybe Google. |
Does Cory Doctorow have a life outside of the online world? He probably does. However, you wouldn’t know it from this book, despite a brief acknowledgement of the mess the US is in because of our hideous administration in Washington. The book is a weird read because it’s so devoid of what I would call real life. Does the man ever eat? Read fiction? Go for a walk? I understand that every book has to have a focus, but this book reaches a lot of conclusions based on a kind of hyper-focus that makes it seem distorted.
Here’s a summary of what he means by everything: “We are living through a Great Enshittening. Somehow, humans have unleashed the Enshittocene, in which all of our artifacts and hyperobjects are turning into piles of shit.” (p. 55)
Ok, there’s occasional mention of history:
“Never let anyone tell you that the Luddites were afraid of technology or angry about ‘progress.’ That’s a lie propagated by history’s winners, whose great fortunes required oceans of blood from child laborers, murdered protesters, and enslaved Africans in the ‘New World’ who provided the cotton for their machines.” (p. 196)
The book is a dense read: in fact, I had to read the first half of it twice. There’s a lot of real information about the very recent history of technology. But the author considerably overstates the claim that he covers everything. In fact, as I said, it’s hyperfocused.
UPDATE: Cory Doctorow’s summary of the current state of the main points of the book, in case you want the abbreviated version:
Stuff from Real Life: Good and Evil
| Renewed effort to go to the fitness center. |
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| New recipe: Len’s Shrimp Curry Dinner. |
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| There’s always something to try at Trader Joe’s. |
HEADLINES FROM RECENT NEWS
Rubio Tells Lawmakers Trump Wants to Buy Greenland
President Trump has said since his first term that he wants to acquire Greenland, and he asked aides for an updated plan on Monday. European leaders reject the president’s assertions.
Trump administration halts more than $10bn for childcare and family assistance
Democrats condemn move in California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota and New York, calling it ‘vindictive’ and ‘cruel
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| We have had some snow but not excessive! |
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| Dreaming of Paris which is snow-covered this week. |
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| It’s always good to think about penguins! |































