Month: October 2024

made by Mega Puzzles ~ art by Disney ~ 750 pieces

I thought this puzzle would be easy. Nope. It was actually quite difficult! But in a calming way, I didn’t at all mind the extra time it took. Not only does it have fun, irregular shapes (with some whimsy pieces, but they’re all hearts or butterflies, so not much variety there) and an irregular border, but there are these extra shapes you lift out of the puzzle once it’s done, to create a cut-out pattern around the edge. See the last two photos in the sequence. I thought at first that the cut-outs weren’t included, but realized pretty quick they’re part of the puzzle, you fit them into place and then remove them for the final look. However for once I bagged up those pieces separate at the end. I think it might be fun to re-assemble this puzzle someday, without the cut-out pieces included, to see if it’s that much harder to do.

About halfway through I realized there was a repeating pattern- the piece cut is completely symmetrical, mirrors itself left-to-right and top-to-bottom. So having done one edge or corner, it’s quicker to assemble the others, as they fit together in exactly the same way. In fact, at the end I amused myself by switching around four butterflies in the center:

So in that regard it will go faster a second time around, because I already know the pattern now, but if I assemble without the cut-out pieces in the mix, maybe that will level out the difficulty again. We’ll see, someday. I enjoyed putting this together more than anticipated. The odd shapes were fun. And figuring out how the curvy edges go around the irregular frame. There’s a diagram included in the box that shows what shapes to lift out to make the patterned border, but it only shows the interior ones. There’s pieces that fitted into the outer edge that you lift away also (or don’t include in the first place). I removed those for the next-to-the-last step, you can see. I’ve never done a puzzle like this before, and I quite liked it.

Final size 26.5 x 19″. (Because of the irregularity inherent in doing a shaped puzzle, the photos don’t all line up perfectly to each other).

a thrift store find

Answers to the 50 Questions Cat Lovers Ask

by Catherine Davidson

A little book on cat behavior. In a format I’m familiar with from several Desmond Morris books I once read (on dogs and cats, respectively). It’s organized into a few general sections: kittens, behaviors that harken back to your cat’s wild ancestry, things that (may) cause friction between humans and their cats – or just bafflement, on our part- and specific problems, like dealing with a cat that sprays in the house, or claws the furniture, or attacks people’s ankles. A lot of the answers to the questions seemed like just plain old common sense to me, but then I’ve lived with one cat or another for decades of my life. Some of the explanations on underlying reasons for what cats do added to my knowledge (if the author was correct, a few I wasn’t sure about- like why cats put their rear ends in the air -towards you- when you pet them). The teeth chattering for example, that explanation was new to me (it is the same jaw motion a cat uses to sever the spinal cord). And the reasons behind cats playing with their prey- which the author attests wild cats and barn cats don’t do. She states there are two possibilities- pet cats get fewer opportunities to hunt, so they want to make the chance last as long as possible. Also, if they are not experienced with different prey types, they won’t know a small mouse can’t really hurt them, so they smack it around a lot to disable or stun it at first. But for the most part, not much in this book was new to me. I’d heard or read of (or simply observed and deduced) these answers before. And I thought that the advice given on how to deal with some problems and situations fell short of the mark. Solutions are not always so easy as the author presented. I did like that a few pages had little extra side boxes with tidbits on similar behavior in other species- whether big wild cats or completely different animals- ranging from zebra to foxes, bears, chimpanzees, squirrels and dolphins. I was, sorry to say, not very impressed with the illustrations. Most of them had something slightly awkward about the drawing.

I think there’s something about fiction or narratives that my brain still struggles with- maybe the imaginative part. I paused a J Fic novel I was struggling through to read this one, this felt much easier to comprehend. Straightforward. So that’s a plus!

Rating: 3/5
128 pages, 2017

made by RLYLF ~ designer unknown ~ 2 pieces each

I’ve solved all the little metal puzzles from this box. Once again, the majority were fairly easy- all on the same theme- if you know how to align the straight parts to slide out, or how to twist the curved x’s, the thing just falls apart in your hands. Sometimes by surprise, if you’re fiddling with it and not paying attention.

These last three were a bit more tricky. The m shaped one (bottom row) was the hardest. I had that in my pocket for over a week. When I did finally solve it, it always seemed to happen by accident- I knew what alignment would make it come apart, but could never remember how to get it into that position. I tried it over and over, able to solve it a bit faster each time- but it wasn’t until I glanced at the cheat sheet that could reliably do it in just a few manipulations.

The first one I include here with the tricky set even though it only took two motions, because if you turned it the wrong way, it ended up stuck. So it was really only two steps. The stuck scenario (to avoid). I think it would have been more challenging to have it start in this position!

My husband, by the way, is much better at these puzzles, even though he finds them tedious to do (it feels like a task, not a game, to him). He solved the m one in just a minute or two, on the first try!

borrowed from my kid

text by Brandon Terrell

by Jake Maddox

About a middle-school kid on a varsity swim team. He’s struggling because most of the other boys on the team are older, in high school. Plus he has problems at home- with his parents recently separated, overhearing arguments that makes him fear it will get worse, causing high levels of stress and anxiety. He frets about this all day and sits through the boredom of school, looking forward to swim practice where he can just focus on moving through the water, trying to better his time. Impressing his teammates is another story. They’re trying to qualify for a higher level meet through some preliminaries, and he’s on the relay team but the older boys think his performance will drag them down. Unfortunately swimming is no longer the escape it used to be- flashback memories of things going wrong at home keep interrupting his focus. But by the end of the story he’s started to work some things out (even though the situation with his parents didn’t improve) and is able to not only push some distracting thoughts aside, but to hold onto the positive of other memories, mostly having to do with why he loves to be in the water. I liked this one because I was on a high school swim team myself, so there was a lot of familiarity there. Some of the writing felt a little rough, the bits of story fitted together a tad too perfectly to make a point, if you know what I mean. Like the other books in this series, there’s a small glossary and a bit of trivia on the sport at the end. No author bio for the ghostwriter in this one, though (the skate park volume had that).

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 2/5
98 pages, 2020

by Marjorie A. Zapf

Warning for SPOILERS if you might want to read this book.

Jeb’s family lives on the edge of the Okefenokee swamp, vast regions of which are unexplored. Jeb is well-versed in traveling the swamp and surviving there. He knows how to avoid snakes and crocodiles, how to catch fish, how to navigate the waterways. But one day he gets overly eager to explore a new area, makes a mistake, and gets lost in a storm. Ends up far from his familiar haunts and has to find his way back again. Before attempting to return home though, something draws him even deeper into the swamp- with the risk he will never find his way out again- a strange sound that appears unnatural, could only have been made by some human implement. He’s sure that nobody lives out here- so what made the noise? It frightens him. And then he thinks he sees a boat slipping away under cover. He has to overcome his fear and discover what is lurking in the swamp. The answer is surprising- a few people left from a native American tribe, assumed to have died out decades ago. When Jeb encounters a young man near his own age, the other boy is very apprehensive and fearful. I liked this part of the story best, the puzzle Jeb had over how to communicate with the other boy, and his dilemma over helping them or keeping their secret location hidden. Most of the book though, I admit I found kind of dull. It’s very atmospheric, with pages-long descriptions of the dim swamp and surrounding forest. Lots of snakes. There were a few brief encounters with wildlife- a boar, a wildcat, a large snake- all which were threatening dangers the boy had to avoid or fight off. He has a dog with him but the animal is so well-trained he sits stock-still in the boat nearly the whole time and does almost nothing (and gets injured near the end of the book when they’re on an island at last, so does more nothing). He has a pet alligator at home that just waggles its tail and follows him around for food, and that’s about it. I thought the pets would be more interesting, at least.

I did learn a few things about the swamp wildlife- alligators will stash food for later, in underground crevices or caves. Some turtles lay their eggs in the upper layer of croc nests, instead of digging their own. And wild boars are omnivorous- they will eat other animals if they can catch them. The one in this story sounded particularly aggressive, though- from what I briefly looked up online, boars usually go after smaller mammals or reptiles, not full grown deer like in the book! (Okay, so the dog did have one active scene where he faced the boar). While the parts that featured nature or animals interested me most about this story, that wasn’t really the focus. It was an adventure story about braving dangers and making discoveries, so not quite up my alley. Entertaining read that got me a bit out of my comfort zone, but not one I’ll be keeping.

I can’t remember where I got this book, I think I picked it on a whim at a thrift store or library sale. It was kind of an odd tactile experience reading it, because it’s over fifty years old- faded pages and style attest to that beyond the publication page- but otherwise it felt like a brand-new book. As if nobody else had ever opened it before. The corners of the covers were still sharp, no dings. The binding felt tight and the pages very crisp. Sadly though the glue didn’t hold up well, I inadvertently cracked the front cover off the spine. I wonder where this book sat for so many years that nobody (apparently) ever read it. Well now it got appreciated at least once.

Rating: 3/5
168 pages, 1967

by Donald R. Sobol

This kid’s name is Leroy but everyone in his small town calls him Encyclopedia because he’s so smart and remembers all the facts he reads. His father is police chief and Encyclopedia likes nothing better than to help his dad solve a crime. He also runs a small enterprise, charging a quarter to help kids solve problems. Usually things like finding a missing item, catching a thief or determining who’s lying in a disagreement. The mysteries to solve are presented in very short chapters, just a few pages each, not much story to them, barely enough written to set up the scene. Then Encyclopedia declares his answer to the case but leaves it up to the reader to figure out how he knew or arrived at the solution. In the back they’re all explained, if you couldn’t figure them out. Some I saw the answer right away, others I had to think a bit, and a few honestly stumped me (which I feel silly for). Most of the scenarios were vaguely familiar, so I think I must have read this book at least once, probably decades ago. It just didn’t have enough substance to interest me now, though I suppose kids who like mental puzzles would enjoy it.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 2/5
88 pages, 1963

by V.P. Anderson

A friend told me about this book. I struggled a bit to get through it. Mainly for a very mundane reason- most of the pictures are quite dark (because the main character ends up on a team of vampires) with dark purple backgrounds and almost everyone wearing dark clothing, so it was simply hard for me to see well and tell what was going on! I ended up liking it more than I expected to (did almost quite halfway through) even though some of it was also hard for me to follow because I’m not super familiar with vampire lore (vampire stories just aren’t my thing).

So, Mina is a competitive figure skater who has been struggling with finding her place in that world- especially since some of her friends outpaced her with their skills and moved up a level before she was ready. She kept going but her heart wasn’t really in it . . . (much of this is revealed later on in the book) and then she suffers a serious injury at the worst possible moment during a competition, that puts her off the ice for who knows how long. She doesn’t have time to feel devastated though- because suddenly she gets kidnapped by a pair of imps who drag her to an abandoned shopping mall-  the secret practice headquarters for a roller derby team made up of vampires. For some reason (I didn’t get it) they need a human on the team as jammer. And that’s going to be Mina. She has a whole new struggle in front of her- translating her ice-skating skills into derby moves. Learning how to fit in with the team (lots of unspoken rules). Making it through the brutal practices in one piece. And then facing the competition in her first bout! Plus lots of backstory and history among these teammates that slowly gets unfolded- with a lot more to come in the sequel, it looks like. In the final pages, Mina realizes that she actually likes playing roller derby, is starting to feel part of the team, and is even developing a crush on one of her teammates. There’s a lot more happens that I am not going to bother to describe- because if this at all sounds appealing, you should just read the book!

I know I’ll look for the sequel, even if it wasn’t quite up my alley. And just have to say, I’m jealous of these imaginary derby gals because I’ve always wanted (since I started skating myself) to skate through an empty shopping mall. So much smooth floor space!

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 3/5
190 pages, 2024

by Clare Ham Grosgebauer

When you need a quick, easy read there’s still nothing better than a children’s book- and on some days I still need that. I think I didn’t realize how much YA fiction is a bit still beyond me, until I finished The Goose Girl. Well, this one caught my eye because of course it features roller-skating. I wasn’t familiar with the character before: Snickerdoodle is a tiny man who rides around in a car made out of a peanut shell. He’s full of optimism and cheer, faces every problem with a can-do attitude and encourages others to do the same. That’s the whole message. That you can accomplish anything if you put your mind to it, in ways that aren’t obvious at first, and no matter what others think of your abilities (in his case, Snickerdoodle is often overlooked because of his small size).

So, this tiny man finds a horse stuck in a mudhole, and helps it get out by tickling the horse (so he laughs and with a sudden leap and kick, is free). Then he finds out the horse ran away from a rodeo because he felt he didn’t fit in there, he didn’t have the temperament of a mean, bucking bronco, but wanted to show off his roller-skating skills and wow the crowd with his performance. Snickerdoodle goes with him back to the rodeo grounds to make his case. The rodeo boss thinks this is a joke at first, but when Snickerdoodle insists, he puts an impossible condition on it: the gray horse can roller-skate for the crowd, if Snickerdoodle can ride the toughest bronco. This didn’t seem fair to me, but the small man was not deterred. He leaped on the mean horse, hung on and started twisting its mane. He braided the bronco’s mane while riding him, which astonished (and pleased) the horse so much that it stopped to look at itself in a mirror. So then the roller-skating horse gets to perform his tricks, and I have to say the one thing that bugged me about the story was that the illustrations make it look like rollerblades, when it kept saying roller skates and the tricks named definitely sound like things you do on quads. Plus they didn’t at all look the right shape/size for a horse’s feet- if you’re going to put a horse in roller skates at least make it look like they would fit! Ha. Oh well. It was a cute story with a very good message. All told in rhyme, as well. I bet it’s fun to read out loud, but I didn’t do that.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 3/5
36 pages, 2005

made by Sure-Lox ~ artist James A Meger ~ 1,000 pieces

Last one of that ten-puzzle box! Another tricky puzzle. So many dark colors, hard to see differences. And of course, like the others in the set they were all one shape, very straight ribbon cut. I don’t know what were the hardest sections of this puzzle because they all seemed hard. I went at it very methodically, and it’s finally done. I don’t know what more to say.

Finished size 23 x 15″.

a thrift store find

text by Brandon Terrell

by Jake Maddox

I was curious when I saw that several of the books in this series feature the same sport. Again, this is an activity I’m only peripherally familiar with. Like the previous book, it had some skateboarding terms and names of tricks explained either within the text, or in a brief glossary at the back. It amused me to read about the origins behind some of the trick names. Also noticed that this one is by yet again a different ghost writer. And much better in quality. I actually enjoyed reading it and would look forward to another by this writer. The narrative and dialog flowed smoothly, the prose was interesting and descriptive, not dull and plain, in spite of using simpler words and phrases. There was just enough of metaphors and popular phrases to make it feel relevant and a good story.

It’s about a kid who skateboards regularly with several friends. They live in a small California town, and are super excited at news that a famous professional skateboarder is going to pay a visit, putting on an exhibition of skills at the local skate park, with a small competition involved. The kids all want to enter the contest, but some friction arises, threatening to damage their friendships. Main character lets his jealousy and pride override his better judgement. Also he seems to often not pay careful attention to his surroundings, sometimes getting in the way of or knocking over other skateboarders. There’s one slightly older guy from school who has a grudge against him because of this, even though he always apologizes. It’s a lot: dealing with his friend issues, trying to make the most of this exciting event, and wondering if he can ever get on that older boy’s good side. He’s kind of trying to force things to work out to his own benefit, but then realizes in the end that he’s done wrong to his friends, so makes a gesture to put things right, removing himself from the spotlight. He stands aside and watches his friend take the glorious moment. Happily, his attempt was recognized by the person he wanted to impress most, and he did get to have a moment standing next to his hero after all. Even the older kid with the grudge gave him a reluctant nod of approval. I was surprised at how much I liked this story. It felt relevant, well told, and even funny in some parts. Not too bad for hi-lo (my friend says they’re often terrible). I also liked that the facts on skateboarding and the sport’s history in the end pages were different than those in the previous book I read. So I gleaned a bit more knowledge.

Borrowed from the public library.

Rating: 3/5
98 pages, 2016

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All books reviewed on this site are owned by me, or borrowed from the public library. Exceptions are a very occasional review copy sent to me by a publisher or author, as noted. Receiving a book does not influence my opinion or evaluation of it

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