Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Saying Goodbye to the Garden by Karla Stover

 



First of all I'd like to pay respect to all the Veterans and thank you for your service.  You are all very much appreciated.





I have a couple of peanut butter trees in the garden and generally, when they bloom in mid-August the yard smelled like jasmin. But, for some reason, not this year - - - a total bummer since my garden is very sad. (above)

A couple of weeks ago a friend send me information on a popcorn flower. (above left) Members of my garden club sometimes bring in unusual plants. Lower left is a hanging cucumber tree. And one of our members has a mouse plant (right, which I think is kinda creepy because the "mice" look like slugs.) 

The most interesting unusual plant, or in this case, plants, is a chocolate garden one of my club members made. A chocolate garden has three types of plants: those with brown flowers, plants whose blooms smell like chocolate, and tomato plants with fruit that resembles chocolate-covered cherries. 

It's surprising how many dark brown flowers there are: bachelor buttons, columbine, and cosmos are a few. 

My opinion of the chocolate cherry tomatoes is that they are over-rated and I haven't tried the chocolate peppers.

Most of the summer I slogged around the house avoiding my garden but now, naturally, when it is too cold to do any planting and weeding, gardening is sounding good. I guess I'll just look at seed catalogues and wait for spring.

Monday, November 10, 2025

Hello November - Barbara Baker

 

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

The ski season has started. The conditions – dismal. But hey, there are six more months to get better coverage on the slopes. I can feel those powder turns whenever a snowflake falls while I hope said snowflake has a ton of friends. 

A person cleaning a lift with a sign

AI-generated content may be incorrect. 

Until then, lets talk about November. 30 days has September, April, June and November, all the rest have 31 except February which has 28 and every leap has 29. Remember having to learn a version of that jingle in grade school?

Did you know November means ‘nine’ in Latin? Kind of odd since it’s the eleventh month of the year, don’t you think?

  

The original Roman calendar started in March which made November the ninth month. The calendar was 304 days long which caused a problem because it was too short to align with the solar year which has 365.25 days. The end result – the calendar got out of sync with religious events and agricultural happenings. 

To correspond with the changing seasons, the Romans added January and February. November got to keep its name because they didn’t want to confuse people by changing it so late in the game. Even back then, people did not do well with change. 

Here’s more November trivia: 

  • In 1953 the first TV dinner was made when a Swanson employee ordered way too many turkeys for American Thanksgiving. Those turkeys didn’t sell. A combination of the rise in families watching TV while eating supper and an ambitious executive who suggested cooking and packaging the meat in foil trays with sides of mashed potatoes, gravy, peas and cornbread dressing brought TV Brand Frozen Dinners to the American culture. I wish my mistakes came with such ingenious and profitable results. 

  • The Jingle Bells song was originally a Thanksgiving song written by James Lord Pierpont in 1857. It was called The One-Horse Open Sleigh. Speculators debate its original intention – some even say it was written to be a tune about drinking and a comical incident during a sleigh ride. Regardless, it became so popular that in the 1860s people began singing it during Christmas festivities. I tried to find the original words to the tune, but darn Google let me down which makes me even more curious what the comical incident was all about. 

 

  • Babies born in November are often thought as even-keeled and have a higher chance of being left-handed. I wonder what tests are done to determine an ‘even-keeled’ temperament. Possibly an explosion to record a person's reaction? If they didn't react, they were considered even-keeled? 
  • And don’t forget about the whiskers. November is known as Movember when moustaches become unruly to raise awareness for men’s health issues. 

Dad’s moustache is never unruly 

World War 1 ended on November 11, 1918. In 1919 The British Empire called it Armistice Day and King George V urged people to take two minutes of silence to remember those who lost their lives.

In 1921, the Canadian Parliament renamed Armistice Day to Remembrance Day and it was set for the first Monday in the week of November 11th. Veterans and citizens were upset that the day was not acknowledged on November 11th. Parliament had to rejig their thought process. In 1931 it was established that Remembrance Day would always fall on it’s given day - November 11th. Again, change is hard sometimes

Do your part, remember those who sacrificed for all of us. 

 

Baker, Barbara - BWL Publishing Inc. (bookswelove.net)

Barbara Baker Author Page Facebook  

Summer of Lies by Barbara Baker — BWL Publishing

What About Me? by Barbara Baker — BWL Publishing

Jillian of Banff XO — BWL Publishing

A group of books with text

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Sunday, November 9, 2025

My Father and I by Naguib Kerba


naguib - Books We Love Publishing Inc.


This is a Saturday morning in mid-August 2025. I find myself drawn to the keyboard and just typing away. What began as a simple exercise has turned into a small mission. I'm listening to the headphones I successfully paired with my computer on the first try. I’m already having a good day with technology. How much better can life get?

 I am listening to Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto, or as it is appropriately known, Piano Concerto No. 5. Most people probably recognize it instantly. To me, it reminds me of my father, who passed away ten years ago. The day he died, my wife and I visited him at the hospital. He looked unkempt, dishevelled, and unshaven—something he would never have accepted for himself in any of his nearly ninety years. Dad was always impeccably clean-shaven and often overdressed.

The nurse on duty explained the different breathing stages at the end of life, and we were only one stage away from the final one. The last stage, once it began, would give us time to get back to the hospital to say our final goodbyes. The nurses would call us once the final stage started. My wife, Donna, and I decided that, because the dog at home was alone without a break to go out and pee, and she would be suffering, we needed to go back and would return once we received the call. We drove the forty-five minutes back to the house in mid-afternoon, with me thinking about how badly Dad looked, and I felt uncomfortable leaving him like that.

That uncomfortable feeling worsened throughout the day. By ten thirty that evening, I was too restless, so I had to go to the hospital to shave him. I arrived after eleven. He was still breathing the same way as when we left him earlier that afternoon. He remained uncommunicative, but I understood that we could still communicate with the patient, even if we didn't know exactly what they were taking in at that moment; they were still receiving it.

I started shaving Dad and chatted with him about the Leafs' win that night, a rare occasion, but I figured, as a long-time Leafs fan, he would appreciate hearing about their victory. I also played the Emperor Concerto, knowing it was one of his favourite pieces.

The other was a song written by my son Chris and his cousin Adam called ‘Sailing Home.’ Chris was in British Columbia, 4,500 kilometres away, performing a gig at the Grey Cup for the Atlantic Schooners. When they heard it was time to say goodbye to “Pops,” they rushed back instead of staying for the rest of the party. They never did make it, but Tara had called Chris, and he said his goodbye remotely. Sailing Home has become a farewell song, played in memory of loved ones who have passed away. It has since touched many lives. It was even honoured with a special choreographed dance to honour Chris.

Once I shaved Dad, I felt better; he looked presentable in a way he would have approved, given his situation. The nurses reminded me that the next stage was still a while away and told me to go home and rest, as the following day would be long. I did as they asked.

I was home for just half an hour before I received that dreaded call. We got into the car and headed back, only to discover that he had passed away a few minutes earlier. I suppose he wasn’t ready to go, despite how he looked. My shaving his stubble was, in hindsight, a way of saying that we’ve got this — that we will be alright — and that Mom was also in good hands. Not that he ever needed our permission to do anything; it was a thing people think is thoughtful.

 


Saturday, November 8, 2025

Story behind my newest release "Deep Beneath the Surface" by J. S. Marlo

 


Deep Beneath the Surface
To buy, click Here



Red in the Snow
To buy, click Here


   
 

  

To buy any of my books, visit



I present you my latest novel Deep Beneath the Surface. 

 

    The discovery of a century old Model T at the bottom of a northern lake sends shock waves across multiple communities. Buried secrets, hidden scandals, and forgotten tragedies resurface, unleashing deadly threats.


     Hauk Ludwig leads the salvage operation. After losing one of his men, he is forced to hire a new diver, Star Fisher. Her investigative skills, feisty attitude, and tumultuous past stir up conflicting feelings and strange events that throw Hauk’s life, and the life of his crew, into chaos.


     Disfigured by a violent attack and haunted by recurring nightmares, Star finds solace in the silent depths. The relics she discovers on the sandy bottom links the sunken wreck to the unsolved disappearance of a rich heiress.


     Danger lurks above and below the surface. To protect their future, Star and Hauk must unearth the truth before they become victims of the past.

This is the story behind the story:

    Years ago, my daughter was exploring underwater wrecks on the Atlantic Coast. The descriptions she gave of the shipwrecks were eerie and fascinating, and they ignited my imagination. As far as I know, she has never seen a Ford Model T underwater, but she was the inspiration behind my female diver, Star.

    My daughter was also my technical adviser behind the scene. Not only did she review my underwater scenes, but one day when I was visiting her, she laid her scuba diving equipment on the living room floor, explained how everything worked, and got me to don some on the gear on so I could get a better feel and understanding. Unfortunately, I am a few sizes bigger than she is, or else I would have put everything on.

    To thank her, I wrote her a cameo in the story.

Interesting titbit:

A few months after I finished writing the story, my daughter sent me a newspaper article describing the fluke discovery of an old wreck in a remote lake, except it wasn't a Model T, it was a lost plane.

Practical titbit:

When she moved out of the house, my daughter left her diving weights behind. For the longest time, they were in a bag on the lower shelf of the shelving unit in the garage to keep it steady. 


This year, I was late putting the Halloween inflatables in front of the house. I usually stake them out on the front lawn mid-October, then my husband runs an electrical cord into the tree, up the side of the house, and into the plug near the roof so kids don't trip over the cord walking to the door.


Well, time ran away from me. Next thing I knew, it was October 31st in the afternoon, I wasn't tall enough to get that cord out of the way, and my husband wasn't coming home until after the kids started trick-or-treating. So, I improvised using my daughter's diving weights and garbage/recycling bins, and set the inflatables up in front of the garage. It worked!. 


Stay Warm & Happy Reading!
Hugs!
JS

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Notorious Character by Paul Grant

 

https://books2read.com/Notorious-Moose-Jaw

I spent more than thirty years as a reporter and producer for CBC Radio.  Thousands 

of people told me their stories of tragedy or triumph or just plain getting by, and those

stories shaped me as a writer who believes that characters drive the plot.   In my new 

BWL novel Notorious, journalist Eleanor Bell is driven to stability and order because of how she grew up:  Her own childhood had been a chaotic series of moves from house to rented house as her parents tried to find work.  Far from celebrating their Cree heritage, her father tried to pass as white because, he said, nobody hired ‘lazy Indians’.  Her mother and grandmother tried to share some cultural touchstones, but Eleanor was too busy trying to survive in high school and university to pay much attention.

Bell brings sense to her world by writing. Bell’s Blog is subscribed to by dozens of media outlets because she brings clarity and solid research to political, social, and business stories. When the drug trade threatens to take over Moose Jaw, she puts her life at risk to follow the money behind the meth, enlisting help from her old pal, builder Jamie Staryk.

Moose Jaw has a starring role in Notorious.  The city’s wide streets, gracious architecture, and easy-going pace are the perfect backdrop for a mystery.  I hope you enjoy the story.

https://www.bookswelove.com/



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