Easter 2015

image

HOPPY Easter, friends!  I hope you had a good one!  Ours was… well, it was a bit of a challenging day, but ultimately Easter can’t be anything but fun with two little ones in the house.  I was exhausted all day after being up pretty much all the night prior, tending to Nugget.  He’s going through a growth spurt and it’s making him extra ornery.  As a result, I didn’t get more than a 30 minute stretch of sleep all night, until after 6:00 a.m.  So I was extra not amused to see this view in the morning:

image

SNOW?  Seriously?  C’mon, Buffalo, it’s enough already.  I’m so unbelievably over winter, I can’t even tell you.  We’ve had snow on the ground since November.  That’s seven months, if you count April.  I’m done.  Anyway, I turned my attention to happier views.

image

The Easter Bunny came!  Peanut made out like a bandit.  She got chocolate, a Pooh puzzle, gardening tools, stickers, a cup with a fun straw, and a Silvermist fairy doll (from the Disney fairies movie franchise, which we have basically memorized).  And she got:

image

Gruff, the Neverbeast (from the most recent Disney Fairies movie, Tinker Bell and the Legend of the Neverbeast).  She was overjoyed to find him next to her basket.

image

The bunny didn’t forget Nugget either, although his basket was a lot smaller than Peanut’s.  He’s not really playing with toys yet, and he certainly can’t have chocolate.  But he got a stuffed frog and duck, and an Oball car.  All three now belong to Peanut (according to Peanut).

image

He didn’t really know what to make of this whole Easter thing, but he was interested in his basket.

image

Meanwhile, Peanut lived out all of her toddler dreams by eating chocolate before breakfast.

image

Later in the day, we colored Easter eggs.  We’d meant to do the job the day before, but it didn’t happen.  Anyone surprised?  Anyway, we got it done and that’s what counts.  The eggs looked basically white when we took them out of the dye because we were impatient, but whatever.

image

The kids took naps (and I tried to nap but failed; I think I was overtired), and after everybody woke up we got all dolled up in our Easter finery for FaceTime with Nana and Grandad and then dinner with Grandma and Grandpa.

image

image

image

Nugget wore a sweater vest.  Can you even handle the cuteness?  I couldn’t.

image

I told them to smile for the camera.  This is what happened:

image

Ah, well.  You can’t win them all!

image

Dapper little dude, isn’t he?

After the photo ops, I set the table for dinner.

image

(I used my favorite Provencal linens, which I bought in Paris.)  No pics of the actual dinner – Grandma and Grandpa brought it over, and I contributed a pineapple cake for dessert – but everything was delicious.  We had chicken, potatoes, asparagus, and a Polish bread.  And thus ended Easter and began the nightly bedtime negotiations…

Hope all of my friends who celebrated yesterday had a wonderful day!  And now, seriously, WHERE is spring?

The Spring List

Knox5

So, it’s spring… allegedly, anyway.  It’s still pretty dismal and dreary out there (that picture above is from last spring) but at least I can see grass again.  (Brown grass.)  Given that there’s been snow on the ground for the last five months straight, I’m a bit skeptical of ever seeing green or flowers again, but I keep hearing that it will spring in good time, so.  I will put on a brave face and make a list of things to do this spring.  When it comes – when.

  • Enjoy my maternity leave and get in lots of snuggles and bonding with Nugget.
  • Take a spring hike at Reinstein Woods Nature Preserve.
  • Plant a patio garden (herbs, tomatoes, beans and peas) with Peanut.
  • Take a tour of the Roycroft campus in East Aurora.
  • Continue our family project of hiking in a different place each month.
  • Take Nugget to the “Book Babies” program at our local library.
  • Start training for the Mohawk-Hudson River Marathon (as soon as I’m cleared to exercise again)!
  • Organize my yarn stash and put together a usable craft closet.
  • Invite one of Peanut’s school friends over for a playdate.
  • Paint the living room fireplace.

There – that’s ten things to do this spring!  I think that’s plenty.  (I usually try for fifteen, but I never quite make it and with a newborn in the house, there’s just no way that more than ten activities are happening, anyway.)  Mostly, I just want to enjoy our first full season as a family of four.  (FOUR!)  We’ll still be in the newborn black hole for awhile yet, but I think we can muster up the energy (somehow) and make an effort to really enjoy each other and have some fun this spring.

Are you making a spring to-do list?  What’s on your agenda?

Reading Round-Up: March 2015

Reading Round-Up Header

Reading is my oldest and favorite hobby.  I literally can’t remember a time in my life when I didn’t love to curl up with a good book.  Here are my reads for March, 2015

Station Eleven, by Emily St. John Mandel – WOW, I really loved this.  Station Eleven is a chilling, yet uplifting, dystopia telling the story of a small band of musicians and actors traveling between settlements of survivors after a massive flu pandemic has wiped out 99.99% of the world’s population.  The novel alternates between several points in time to tell the stories of a few different characters – famed actor Arthur Leander, who collapses and dies onstage during a performance of King Lear on the night the flu first hits North America; Jeevan Chaudhary, ex-paparazzo turned paramedic who tries to save Leander’s life, and Kirsten Raymonde, a child actress who witnesses Arthur’s death, survives the flu, and becomes part of the band of traveling performers trying to keep art and culture alive in the cruel post-flu world.  I don’t want to say much more about this one, because I don’t want to spoil anything.  It’s a chilling, outstanding, heartwarming book – highly recommended.

Miss Buncle’s Book (Miss Buncle #1), by D.E. Stevenson – Barbara Buncle needs money.  She can’t think of any other way to earn it, so she decides to write a book and try to have it published.  The trouble is, Miss Buncle isn’t particularly creative.  She’s fairly dull – believed stupid by her neighbors – and decidedly lacking in imagination.  So she writes a book based on her town, Silverstream, in which her friends and acquaintances are barely disguised.  Miss Buncle is delighted when the book is picked up for publication – she can finally get a new hat! – and shocked when it becomes a runaway bestseller.  But it doesn’t take long before the residents of Silverstream realize that they’ve been immortalized in fiction – some of them, to rather ill effect – and they’re determined to smoke out the anonymous author hiding in their midst.  This was a gentle, fun, whimsical read – perfect for the first days with a newborn.

Queen of Hearts (Her Royal Spyness #8), by Rhys Bowen – Lady Georgianna Rannoch, thirty-fifth in line to the throne of England, is off on her farthest-flung adventure yet when her mother, the famed actress and “bolter” Claire Daniels, invites her along as company on a journey to America.  Claire is headed for Reno to get a quickie divorce from her current husband so that she can marry her German paramour.  Having nothing better to do, Georgie delightedly tags along and finds herself mixed up in a mystifying jewel heist and the murder of a Hollywood producer.  Light, silly and fun, as always.

Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania, by Erik Larson – I’ve only read one of Larson’s books before this one (In the Garden of Beasts, which I really enjoyed) but I knew as soon as I read the description of this one that I was going to have to read it.  I’ve never known much about the Lusitania disaster, and Larson promised a bigger story than the one we learned in history class (Germany torpedoed it, and caused the U.S. to join World War I as a result).  I was fascinated by Larson’s narrative of the disaster, and I learned a ton.  (For example, the Lusitania alone didn’t really get the U.S. into the war – it took another two years of affronts to the U.S. neutrality policy before we joined in.)  It’s history, but not dry in the least – compulsively readable, fascinating, and addictive.  Recommended to history buffs and fans of narrative non-fiction.

The Railway Children, by E. Nesbit – I’d downloaded this sweet story of three children whose family has fallen on hard times, and their love of the railroad near their new home, months ago and had been reading it in five minute snatches ever since.  I should know better than to read that way, because I never enjoy the story as much as it deserves until I really sink into it, which I finally did this month.  Bobbie, Peter and Phil are charming companions, and their adventures playing near the railroad are sweet and a pleasure to read.  Now I’m looking forward to reading more of E. Nesbit’s work.

The Buried Giant, by Kazuo Ishiguro – The new Ishiguro novel – his first in ten years! – is in some ways a departure from his previous work and in other ways, right in the same wheelhouse.  The Buried Giant follows the journey of a pair of elderly Britons, Axl and Beatrice, who are living in sixth-century Britain.  A supernatural mist clouds the land and robs its inhabitants of their memories, and Axl and Beatrice struggle to recall shared moments in their relationship as they travel to visit a son they barely remember.  Along the way their paths cross with several other travelers, all of whom have their own closely-guarded secrets.  I enjoyed The Buried Giant, and its themes of remembrance and forgetfulness (classic Ishiguro themes), although not as much as I enjoyed Never Let Me Go or especially The Remains of the Day (one of my all-time favorite books).  Still, I’d recommend it to Ishiguro fans or fans of the fantasy genre (which The Buried Giant is, nominally, although the fantasy elements of the story are not as important as the larger Ishiguro-esque themes).

That was a decent month of reading, if I say so myself!  Six books – less than I was doing in a month last year, but more than I’ve managed in any month since last October – and I enjoyed each one.  Dead Wake was probably the highlight; I couldn’t put it down.  Station Eleven was a close second.  But a little D.E. Stevenson, a little Georgie, and the new Ishiguro to round out the list make it a very good month indeed.  Here’s hoping the trend continues into April!