↓
 

The PolyBlog

My view from the lilypads

  • Home
  • Goals
    • Goals (all posts)
    • #50by50 – Status of completion
    • PolyWogg’s Bucket List, updated for 2016
  • Life
    • Family (all posts)
    • Health and Spiritualism (all posts)
    • Learning and Ideas (all posts)
    • Computers (all posts)
    • Experiences (all posts)
    • Humour (all posts)
    • Quotes (all posts)
  • Photo Galleries
    • PandA Gallery
    • PolyWogg AstroPhotography
    • Flickr Account
  • Reviews
    • Lilypad Library (Books)
      • Book Reviews (all posts)
      • Book reviews by…
        • Book Reviews List by Date of Review
        • Book Reviews List by Number
        • Book Reviews List by Title
        • Book Reviews List by Author
        • Book Reviews List by Rating
        • Book Reviews List by Year of Publication
        • Book Reviews List by Series
      • Special collections
        • The Sherlockian Universe
        • The Three Investigators
        • The World of Nancy Drew
      • PolyWogg’s Reading Challenge
        • 2026
        • 2023
        • 2022
        • 2021
        • 2020
        • 2019
        • 2015, 2016, 2017
    • Movies
      • Master Movie Reviews List (by Title)
      • Movie Reviews List (by Date of Review)
      • Movie Reviews (all posts)
    • Music and Podcasts
      • Master Music and Podcast Reviews (by Title)
      • Music Reviews (by Date of Review)
      • Music Reviews (all posts)
      • Podcast Reviews (by Date of Review)
      • Podcast Reviews (all posts)
    • Recipes
      • Master Recipe Reviews List (by Title)
      • Recipe Reviews List (by Date of Review)
      • Recipe Reviews (all posts)
    • Television
      • Master TV Season Reviews List (by Title)
      • TV Season Reviews List (by Date of Review)
      • Television Premieres (by Date of Post)
      • Television (all posts)
  • About Me
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Me
    • Privacy Policy
    • PolySites
      • ThePolyBlog.ca (Home)
      • PolyWogg.ca
      • AstroPontiac.ca
      • About ThePolyBlog.ca
    • WP colour choices
  • Andrea’s Corner

Post navigation

← Previous Post

Leveling up – From Goals to Pondside Planner

The PolyBlog
May 27 2026

I write a lot about goals. Goals for the day, goals for life, goals for the week. Goals before retirement. Setting goals, monitoring goals, achieving goals, dropping goals. Different types of goals, different types of methods for managing goals. Having goals as a goal in and of itself. Sometimes it veers into performance measurement.

Yet, all of the posts, regardless of the topic, are really about planning.

Hence, I’m going to rename the entire category “Pondside Planner”. Plus, I have long-term plans (hah!) for a book and an app with the same name. I have tentatively given it three related “descriptions”. Purpose, priorities, and progress; goals, grit, and growth; and fundamentals, focus, and frameworks. I know, they need work.

In the meantime, I’m upgrading my imagery too. In the past, I’ve used a combo of images. Initially, I loved the idea of my version of the “Insights Discovery”-type four-quadrant colour map. I even added a yin-yang symbol in the centre.

I even went all-in at one point on those motifs, with a much deeper framework diagram of a Personal Development Model (they both might resurface in the book / guide).

I also have specialized images for a larger quest, 60 things by age 60, 50 by 50, travel, experiences.

At different times, I’ve used and loved all of those images. By contrast, for the day-to-day stuff, I went with more mundane images. A planner, a checklist, an arrow hitting a target.

They have served me well over the last 25 years, although mostly in the last 15. But as I said in previous posts, I am leaning into the frog motif and the new name, the Pondside Planner. An almost new identity, built as much to reflect the energy of my warrior frog as the calm demeanour of my reader frog.

I’m showing the whole image for this one, not just the rounded view, as there is a lot going on in the image. The frog, of course, is a red-eyed tree frog. That’s standard.

He’s not just wearing glasses, he’s wearing MY glasses.

Working on a to-do list to signify goals, next to the pond aka Pondside.

There’s a penguin in the scene, my son’s avatar.

And I have a four-quadrant personality profile diagram on the wall behind him.

If you can’t read the to do list, it says:

  • Eat more flies
  • Start quest
  • Clean swamp

Oh, and a crossword puzzle, in honour of my father, who always had a crossword puzzle book on the go next to his kitchen chair.

That simple category image is pulling a lot of weight in a small space. I love it. And perhaps for the first time since I started the blog, the category of “goals” is now accurately reframed as “The Pondside Planner”.

Let me know whether you think the image is conveying “planner” well enough or if it could be improved with some better props, particularly if you have ideas!

Until the next project starts…

PolyWogg signature in green with a dark blue quill at the end.
Posted in Pondside Planner | Tagged goals | Leave a reply

Leveling up – Movie reviews

The PolyBlog
May 27 2026

Similar to the work on the Lilypad Library (my book reviews), I’ve upgraded my movie reviews, too. First and foremost, I’ve changed the name to Lilypad Cinema. Notice the theme? Yes, I’m leaning fully into the frog motif.

Second, I’ve upgraded my featured image. Previously, I used the couch potato-style image below, with the man slouching in front of a TV, or an image of a film projector.

But the ’90s called and it wanted its clipart back. So, here we are, my new froggified movie reviewer:

If I want something a little different for movies, there’s always my new projector image:

And, finally, I worked through a series of options for potential movie review “card” formats. I originally wanted to figure out a way to put the entire movie review on a card that could be shared on social media. But it doesn’t take long before the text overwhelms the card and I’m down to either dropping images of the movie poster OR reducing the text to 8-point font to get all to fit. Instead, I’ll go with some form of teaser card.

I have not written many movie reviews in recent years, mainly as I don’t GO to the movies as often as I would like (something I’m hoping to change in retirement), and partly as I didn’t like my current format. Now that I’ve solved the “social media” aspects, I feel more motivated to write some. I’m not fully ready to relaunch, but I’m hoping for at least one a week once I get going again.

Oh! And I have a new signature block too. 🙂

Until the next curtain opens…

PolyWogg signature in green with a dark blue quill at the end.
Posted in Lilypad Cinema, Uncategorized | Tagged movie review | Leave a reply
Frog writing book review entries into a journal

Leveling up – Book reviews

The PolyBlog
May 26 2026

Soooo…I have said a few times over the last few years, “NEVER AGAIN WILL I EVER CHANGE MY BOOK REVIEWS FORMAT.”

Why? Because I am generally anal-retentive, and with 300 completed reviews, there is a niggly part of me where, if I change something, I want to go back and change all of them to match. I’ve done that three times. Once around the 100 mark; once again around 150 or so; and once around the 200 mark. I did a different kind of update around 275 or so where I added some code to each review on this site so that I could generate multiple indices without manually adding a file link to all of them.

All in all, I’ve been writing them the same way for 25+ years. A few tweaks here and there, a few major changes in format here and there, but I like my consistent format. So what could I want to change? Not my voice, not my harshness, not my layout, not my content, really. It’s just that…

The visuals are outdated

Let’s start with my featured image. I almost always use this image:

If I’m talking about writing book reviews, or something related to a library, I might use these ones:

Or maybe, on occasion, just me writing.

I liked my clipart, I did. But it is 25-year-old imaging. And having my visuals 25 years out of date does active damage to my brand. It’s time I leap over the millennium hump and enter a new age for my blog. To be honest, I’ve been playing with new visuals to improve things across the entire website, this is the first one I’ve actively blogged about.

Introducing: Book Reviewer Frog

This will be my new Book Reviewer image:

Frog writing book review entries into a journal

Yeah, I leaned in hard on the frog. It has always been my brand, always lurking softly and gently in the background, and I toy with it from time to time, but now I’ve fully committed. I am all in on the frog.

I have two more archetypal characters for myself: reader frog and warrior frog.

A red-eyed tree frog sitting on a lilypad in a swamp wearing glasses and reading a plain white hard-covered book.
A red-eyed tree frog dressed in brown leather armour on his torso with a sword attached to his hip and a shield resting against one knee, while standing on a rock in a swamp. The shield has a ying-yang symbol on it.

I’m also going to change my ratings frog. For the last ten years at least, I have used a symbol for my ratings, an icon if you will…🐸🐸🐸⚪⚪ meant three polywoggs out of five. I’ve used it in my page headings and in my reviews. And it’s okay, but when I wanted to make something a little more visual for my reviews, maybe a little more social media-friendly, it didn’t really work. Way too emoji-ish — like an ancestor before emojis really existed. Sometimes I used an old GIF:

Annnnnyway, I need a new ratings frog, so here he is. His name is Neo…part real world, part avatar.

A red-eyed tree frog smiling and sitting on a lilypad, looking straight forward at the viewer.

All of which is good. But is it enough? No.

Introducing the Froggification process

As I looked at a bunch of my images and material, much of it does very little to encourage interaction or even reaction. I have the book image, sure, like the one below from my second book review on file:

And I can do an image card that directs people to the site to see the review, include a teaser of the content, all of that…most of the professional sites out there are doing stars or aggregating their logos and # of reviews (Amazon, GoodReads, etc.). That’s not really my thing. What could I use as a “froggy” hook? Well, what if I froggified the existing cover?

I took a book cover and put frogs in the place of the characters. It worked a little too well; they look like an alien species, not really Star Trek-y.

I leaned a little harder on the frog premise, and I got Star Frog! An even more alien species and uniform, perhaps a step too far.

I decided to try a different approach and took the original cover three images back and turned it into this:

I am quite amused by that. Hence, my new approach for cards to go with my reviews. I’m going to “froggify” the covers somehow. Just cuz I can. Let’s see me try that with the old clipart. 🙂

Anyway, that’s what I have so far. And no, I’m not going back to do 300 reviews that way. I don’t think. Maybe I’ll do random ones from time to time, just for fun. But mostly I’ll be doing my new reviews. Alas, this will take longer than the original process which was already long enough. It’s fun, though.

Oh, I almost forgot

I’m also going to change the name of the category to the Lilypad Library. 🙂

Feel free to give me feedback on any of it. It’s a long work in progress. Until the next book,

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Tagged book review | Leave a reply

Book clubs 2026-05: May the rigour be with you (it wasn’t with me)

The PolyBlog
May 22 2026

Ah, April showers have brought us May books. Wait, that’s not the right saying. I’ll get back to you on that.

Remember last month when I said I was going to show rigour? Well, that didn’t happen. With the larger intake base, I have 119 entries for consideration this month. Of which, I only said yes or maybe to 37 of them! I went from over 32% all the way down to 31%. Hmm…crickets. I hear crickets. But don’t worry, I’m going to fix that! Next month I’ll be weeding some clubs from the future list. That may not help as the ones I’ll be weeding are the ones that normally contribute to the denominator of book math, not the numerator. Sigh.

Total: 119 rows for May 2026. Poly mix: 12 YES, 25 MAYBE, 82 NO.

YES:

  • Murder by Design, Lee Goldberg — I love Lee, follow him online, read all his stuff, and met him at Bouchercon this past September. Definitely on my automatic yes list.
  • The Confession Artist, Christine Carbo — This one sounded interesting from Amazon First Reads, and I read it this month already. Quite good. Not 5 stars, but definitely 4 stars.
  • Down the River Unto the Sea, Walter Mosley — I read this one back in 2020, and quite enjoyed it. The link is to my review where I gave it 4 stars.
  • The Things We Never Say, Elizabeth Strout
  • Mad Mabel, Sally Hepworth
  • The Art of a Lie, Laura Shepherd-Robinson
  • The Horse and His Boy, C.S. Lewis — I’ve read all of the Narnia series, but haven’t reviewed them yet.
  • The Magician’s Nephew, C.S. Lewis
  • The Last Battle, C.S. Lewis
  • The Queens of Crime, Marie Benedict
  • Start at the End, Emma Grey
  • Value(s), Mark Carney

MAYBE:

  • Two Lives with You, Lauren Ho
  • The Magic of Us, Beth Merlin; Danielle Modafferi
  • Almost Life, Kiran Millwood Hargrave
  • The Last Contract of Isako, Fonda Lee
  • Change of Plans, Sarah Dessen
  • Homebound, Portia Elan
  • The Sex Lives of Cannibals, J. Maarten Troost
  • The Fourth Option, Jack Carr; M.P. Woodward
  • This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me, Ilona Andrews
  • The Last Letters of Sally and Walter, Cammie McGovern
  • Yellowface, R.F. Kuang
  • 2001: A Space Odyssey, Arthur C. Clarke
  • This Inevitable Ruin, Matt Dinniman
  • The Fine Art of Lying, Alexandra Andrews
  • Joyful, Anyway, Kate Bowler
  • Scattered Minds, Gabor Mate
  • Planet Money, Alex Mayyasi
  • The Let Them Theory, Mel Robbins; Sawyer Robbins
  • The Meaning of Your Life, Arthur C. Brooks
  • The Bookshop, Evan Friss
  • The Body Keeps the Score, Bessel van der Kolk
  • Mutual Aid, Dean Spade
  • The Mother-Daughter Book Club, Susan Patterson; James Patterson
  • The Escape Game, Marissa Meyer; Tamara Moss
  • The Way Things Work, David Macaulay
Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
Amazon First ReadsThe Replacement, Liv ConstantineHollywood icon befriends rising costar with secret agendaNO
Two Lives with You, Lauren HoA chance for a do-over to see life without partnerMAYBE
Murder by Design, Lee GoldbergInsurance investigator with TBI decodes crimes enabled by designYES
The Promise of Wonder, Katherine Webb1889 Dorset tragedy reframed after 30 yearsNO
The Confession Artist, Christine CarboSerial killer’s sketch lookalikes have six days to confess publiclyYES
The Magic of Us, Beth Merlin; Danielle ModafferiTarot spell rewrites love-skeptic radio host’s past with old flingMAYBE
The Girl in the Lake, Lauren OliverRationalist psychologist investigates child’s past-life memory claimNO
Westerly, Susan Donovan BernhardGenerational secrets unravel across postwar Germany Ireland and MaineNO
The Quitters Club, Jessica StrawserFour forty-something friends help each other quit and start overNO
AudaciousThe Violence, Adriana E. RamirezColombia’s la violencia traced through grandmother Esther’s family fincaNO
Barnes & NobleGood Joy, Bad Joy, Mikki BrammerEighty-something Joy breaks rules with terminally-ill best friend HazelNO — REPEAT
BBC Radio 2The Wreck, Lizzy StewartTwo 1980s couples test commune dream in English countrysideNO
BelletristAlmost Life, Kiran Millwood HargraveBrokeback Mountain, but with women in ParisMAYBE
Black Men ReadDown the River Unto the Sea, Walter MosleyNYPD-discredited PI investigates frame-up while solving cop killingsYES
Book of the MonthGood Joy, Bad Joy, Mikki BrammerEighty-something Joy breaks rules with terminally-ill best friend HazelNO — REPEAT
Seek the Traitor’s Son, Veronica RothEnemy soldiers Elegy and Rava share prophecy of one’s victoryNO
Dissection of a Murder, Jo MurrayYoung barrister defends accused killer against prosecutor husbandNO
Canon, Paige LewisReluctant teen and ambitious prophet compete on quests appointed by GodNO
The Last Contract of Isako, Fonda LeeAging samurai takes one last contract on corporate-ruled frozen planetMAYBE
The Burning Side, Sarah DamoffFamily saga from alternating views after devastating house fireNO
Everyday ReadingThe Unthinkable, Amanda RipleySurvival psychology: who freezes when disasters strike and whyNO
Globe & MailA Woman’s Place, Danielle SteelTitanic survivor inherits Manchester mill, breaks gender barriers in early 1900sNO
Hope Rises, David BaldacciFBI informant becomes mercenary to take down global crime queenNO
Rites of the Starling, Devney PerryCalandra’s five kingdoms face destruction as Starling magic awakens romanceNO
Alchemised, SenLinYuCaptive resistance witch finds dark romance with necromancer captor post-warNO
Dire Bound, Sable SorensenVengeful queen, bonded direwolf, dangerous Alpha in dark romantasyNO
When the Forest Breathes, Suzanne SimardForest ecologist on tree intelligence, renewal cycles, and ecosystem threatsNO
The Hidden Hand, Warren KinsellaPolitical strategist analyzes propaganda war fueling rising antisemitism in CanadaNO
Joyful, Anyway, Kate BowlerCancer survivor’s wry, tender search for joy amid pain and longingMAYBE
Value(s), Mark CarneyFormer central banker on misplaced market values and four global crisesYES
When the Body Says No, Gabor MatePhysician’s case for stress, trauma, and unsaid emotions causing chronic illnessNO
Scattered Minds, Gabor MatePhysician’s case for ADD as developmental impairment rather than genetic illnessMAYBE
Good HousekeepingTake Me with You, Steven RowleyCollege professor’s husband vanishes into Joshua Tree beam of lightNO
Good Morning America – AdultHomebound, Portia ElanVideo game connects four characters across centuries from 1983 to spaceMAYBE
Good Morning America – Young AdultChange of Plans, Sarah DessenTeen summer at unknown family vacation home, romance, mother’s secretsMAYBE
GoodReads MysteryThe Family Upstairs, Lisa JewellChelsea mansion inheritance unlocks trauma and three corpses from 1990sNO
Don’t Let Him In, Lisa JewellThree women linked to charming serial con-man Nick across multiple identitiesNO
I Care About BooksThe Sex Lives of Cannibals, J. Maarten TroostTwo-year misadventure on remote Tarawa island, far from imagined paradiseMAYBE
Indie BestsellersAmerican Fantasy, Emma StraubNewly-divorced fiftysomething joins nostalgic 90s boy band fan cruiseNO
Cherry Baby, Rainbow RowellCherry rebuilds her identity after husband caricatures her in viral webcomicNO
Agnes Aubert’s Mystical Cat Shelter, Heather FawcettCat shelter manager and disreputable wizard ally in 1920s MontrealNO
Everything Is Tuberculosis, John GreenHistory of tuberculosis told through friendship with a Sierra Leonean patientNO
The Serviceberry, Robin Wall KimmererIndigenous scientist’s meditation on gift economies through the serviceberry treeNO
Lessons from Cats for Surviving Fascism, Stewart ReynoldsHumorist’s eleven cat-inspired strategies for resisting fascismNO
Planet Money, Alex MayyasiNPR podcast hosts on economics through real-world storiesMAYBE
The Let Them Theory, Mel Robbins; Sawyer RobbinsTwo-word mantra for releasing your grip on others’ choicesMAYBE
The Meaning of Your Life, Arthur C. BrooksHarvard happiness expert on finding purpose in modern emptinessMAYBE
The Road to Tender Hearts, Annie HartnettDarkly comic cross-country road trip with widower, kids, death-predicting catNO
Martyr!, Kaveh AkbarIranian-American poet addict’s existential quest through martyrdom and family secretsNO
Dear Debbie, Freida McFaddenAdvice columnist’s life unravels into vigilante payback against deserving targetsNO
Be Ready When the Luck Happens, Ina GartenBarefoot Contessa’s path from D.C. bureaucrat to Food Network starNO
All About Love, bell hooksbell hooks redefines love as ethical practice, not romantic feelingNO
The Bookshop, Evan FrissTwo-century history of American bookstores, from Franklin to AmazonMAYBE
The Wager, David Grann1741 British shipwreck off Patagonia, mutiny, and London court-martialNO
The Body Keeps the Score, Bessel van der KolkTrauma’s effects on brain and body; somatic and innovative treatment approachesMAYBE
Say Nothing, Patrick Radden KeefeIRA disappearance investigation as window onto Northern Ireland’s TroublesNO
Mutual Aid, Dean SpadeSpade’s theory and practical guide to mutual aid as movement infrastructureMAYBE
Jack CarrThe Fourth Option, Jack Carr; M.P. WoodwardEx-SEAL pursues vigilante justice for fallen friend’s son lost to opioidsMAYBE
JeselnikStoner, John WilliamsQuiet bildungsroman of Missouri farm boy turned English professorNO
Jewish Book Council – FictionFagin the Thief, Allison EpsteinDickensian London origin story for Oliver Twist’s Jewish villain FaginNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionThe Prosecutor, Jack FairweatherJewish judge’s decade-long fight to prosecute Nazis in postwar GermanyNO
Katie CouricThe Things We Never Say, Elizabeth StroutMassachusetts history teacher’s hidden isolation meets life-upending revelationYES
Late ShowGhost Town, Tom PerrottaEighth-grader’s grief-stricken summer 1974, Ouija board, dangerous older friendsNO
Main Street Reads – BanterThe Last Letters of Sally and Walter, Cammie McGovernRetirement-home Scrabble romance between newcomer and intense championMAYBE
Main Street Reads – FantasyThis Kingdom Will Not Kill Me, Ilona AndrewsReader trapped in fantasy novel as immortal heroine preventing kingdom’s warMAYBE
Main Street Reads – KidsMystery on Macaw Mountain, Maria Jose FitzgeraldHonduran cousins investigate theft of macaws from Mayan-ruins sanctuaryNO
Main Street Reads – RomanceWest of Wicked, Nikki St. CroweDark romantasy Wizard of Oz retelling, cursed Oz, mysterious mercenary loveNO
Main Street Reads – ThrillerAll the Little Houses, May CobbMid-1980s Texas: ruthless mom and golden-girl daughter face prairie-perfect rivalsNO
Mocha Girls ReadYellowface, R.F. KuangWhite writer steals dead Chinese-American friend’s manuscript, publishes as her ownMAYBE
Natalie PortmanFamesick, Lena DunhamThree-act memoir: Dunham’s fame from Girls, chronic illness, drugs, regretsNO
NYT BestsellersPurple State, Dana PerinoThree NYC friends move to Wisconsin swing district in political rom-comNO
The Mother-Daughter Book Club, Susan Patterson; James PattersonCollege friends and their daughters reunite at Lake Como after tragedyMAYBE
Paradox, Douglas Preston; Aletheia PrestonCBI agent and sheriff investigate murders tied to Fermi-paradox cultNO
When We See You Again, Rachel Goldberg-Polin; Jon PolinMother’s memoir of son Hersh’s hostage ordeal and execution in GazaNO
The Future Is Peace, Aziz Abu Sarah; Maoz InonPalestinian and Israeli peace activists journey together across the Holy LandNO
This Vast Enterprise, Craig FehrmanNew multi-perspective history of the Lewis and Clark expeditionNO
For the Love of the Grind, Sara HallDistance runner’s memoir of career, faith, marriage, and adoptionNO
Release Me, Tahereh MafiRosabelle seeks revenge against Ark Island’s surveillance stateNO
The Escape Game, Marissa Meyer; Tamara MossTeens compete on escape-room game show while hunting a murdererMAYBE
The Thorn Queen, Sasha Peyton SmithQueen Ivy plots against faerie husband while loving his brother EmmettNO
The Way Things Work, David MacaulayIllustrated reference explaining how hundreds of machines and technologies workMAYBE
PBS BooksThis Is Not About Us, Allegra GoodmanA family convinced the problem is never themNO
Poisoned Pen – BritishMissing, E. A. JacksonBritish detective investigates baby’s disappearance from hotel; past/present timelinesNO
Poisoned Pen – CozyThe Primrose Murder Society, Stacy HackneyMother-daughter cold-case sleuthing in retirement building for $2M rewardNO
Poisoned Pen – CrimeMad Mabel, Sally HepworthOld lady who murders was once a young lady who murdered.YES
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalThe Art of a Lie, Laura Shepherd-Robinson1749 Georgian London: widowed confectioner caught in con-artist gameYES
The Lost Book of Elizabeth Barton, Jennifer N. BrownDual-timeline Tudor mystery: academic uncovers prophecies of “Maid of Kent”NO
Poisoned Pen – MysteryCity on Fire, Simon ElegantHong Kong detective investigates murder during 2020 protests, sister-protesterNO
Poisoned Pen – NoirWolvers, Taylor BrownRuined rancher torn between hunting and protecting wolves in Gila WildernessNO
Poisoned Pen – RomanceThe Last Lady B, Eloisa JamesRegency Bluebeard retelling: married heroine falls for Sir Godric EverlyNO
Read with JennaCaller Unknown, Gillian McAllisterTexas vacation kidnapping forces mother to commit crime to save daughterNO
Reader’s DigestKeeper of Lost Children, Sadeqa JohnsonPost-WWII Germany: three interconnected lives tied to real Brown Baby PlanNO
Reddit – DiscoveryEverything I Never Told You, Celeste NgChinese-American family unravels after favorite daughter Lydia found dead in lakeNO
Reddit – EvergreenBeloved, Toni MorrisonEscaped slave in Civil War-era Ohio haunted by murdered daughter’s spiritNO
RedditPerfume, Patrick SuskindOdorless 18th-century perfumer murders virgins to capture their scentNO
The Autobiography of Malcolm X, Malcolm X; Alex HaleyCivil rights leader’s life from petty crime to Mecca pilgrimage and assassinationNO
Morning Glory Milking Farm, C.M. NascostaHuman-monster romance: indebted millennial works at minotaur milking farmNO
The City of Brass, S.A. ChakrabortyCairo con artist summons djinn, discovers Daevabad heritage and court politicsNO
The Ice, Ryan CahillAeson treks icy Valacia to find dragon egg for the rebellionNO
Chapterhouse: Dune, Frank HerbertBene Gesserit defend Chapterhouse against invading Honored Matres after spice lossNO
The Horse and His Boy, C.S. LewisCalormen orphan and talking horse race to warn Narnia of invasionYES
The Magician’s Nephew, C.S. LewisLondon children with magic rings witness creation of Narnia by AslanYES
The Last Battle, C.S. LewisFalse Aslan triggers final war and end of Narnian worldYES
The Secret Commonwealth, Philip PullmanAdult Lyra investigates Magisterium rose trade conspiracyNO
This Inevitable Ruin, Matt DinnimanCarl and Donut survive Faction Wars on the dungeon’s ninth floorMAYBE
Planet of Exile, Ursula K. Le GuinEarth colonists on Werel ally with natives against approaching barbariansNO
Storm of Locusts, Rebecca RoanhorseIndigenous monster-hunter Maggie chases a locust-summoning cultNO
Reddit – SciFi2001: A Space Odyssey, Arthur C. ClarkeAstronauts and HAL the AI encounter alien monoliths on Jupiter missionMAYBE
Reddit – WorldAli and Nino, Kurban SaidCross-cultural Baku romance amid WWI between Muslim boy and Christian girlNO
Days in the Caucasus, BanineWitty memoir of wealthy Azeri childhood in Baku amid Bolshevik revolutionNO
ReeseThe Fine Art of Lying, Alexandra AndrewsNYC art-world wife’s affair tangles into murder and gallery duplicityMAYBE
Secret Chapter MysteryWhile Justice Sleeps, Stacey AbramsLaw clerk guardian to comatose Justice unravels chess-clue Washington conspiracyNO
Service 95So Late in the Day, Claire KeeganThree Keegan stories on misogyny and gender dynamics in heterosexual relationshipsNO
StacksLonely Crowds, Stephanie WambuguCatholic-school outsiders’ decades-long friendship through NYC’s ’90s art worldNO
Sunnie ReadsThat Which Feeds Us, Keala KendallTeen searches Hawaiian island resort for missing twin amid colonial horrorNO
Sunriver – FictionTable for Two, Amor TowlesSix NYC stories and an LA novella continuing Rules of Civility’s EvelynNO
Sunriver – MysteryThe Queens of Crime, Marie BenedictSayers, Christie, and three peers investigate a 1930 locked-room murderYES
TeaTimeMy Dear You, Rachel KhongTen imaginative stories on love, dating, marriage, afterlife, and being deadNO
Zibby’sStart at the End, Emma GreyAudrey and Fraser’s sliding-doors romance with tragedy and unwritten endingsYES

April showers may bring May flowers (I knew that I knew the right phrase), but January to April brought way too many clubs. They’re sprouting up like weeds! I could just dump all the maybes. 🙂 If, of course, I had any rigour. Which I didn’t. I wonder if any of the non-fiction books next month will offer me ways to be more rigorous in my curation.

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Leave a reply

Cleaning up book club lists for January to April

The PolyBlog
May 21 2026

In my last post, I noted that I’m monitoring 40+ book clubs for “new to me” titles to consider putting on my TBR pile. There is an inherent challenge that I’m saying yes or maybe to between 15-20% of the titles, which is WAY MORE BOOKS THAN I CAN READ. I’ll have to trim those down.

In the meantime, I realized that the various book club announcements are not set for the first of the month for every club. Some don’t even announce on a schedule — just randomly, some day during the month. That triggers my OCD and analytical annoyance genes. Which means when I review, say, the books for January, not all the books are out. And then I do February, and might miss late announcements from January when I only review the February announcements. And so on for each subsequent month. I can miss titles.

I say to myself (while rubbing my hands together with an evil laugh), I can use AI to go back and find those gaps so I don’t have to worry about it myself. Here are the books I missed earlier this year.

Backfill: The lost books of the month club

Total: 89 rows across January-April that never appeared on a monthly options post. Poly mix: 9 YES, 20 MAYBE, 60 NO. Oh, look, I’m almost to a full third. Sigh.

January 2026

27 rows

YES:

  • The Briar Club, Kate Quinn

MAYBE:

  • Zed Moonstein Makes a Friend, Lance Rubin
  • Bonded By Thorns, Elizabeth Helen
  • Anxious People, Fredrik Backman
  • Crow Mary, Kathleen Grissom
Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
AudaciousThe Hitch, Sara LevineAunt babysits nephew claiming dead corgi’s soul possesses himNO
BBC Radio 2The Poet Empress, Shen TaoFamine-village girl wields forbidden poetry magic in Azalea Dynasty palaceNO
BelletristLost Lambs, Madeline CashDysfunctional family pulled into billionaire criminal conspiracy by paranoid teenNO
Black Men ReadReel, Kennedy RyanDirector and rising actress romance during prestige Black history film productionNO
Everyday ReadingThe Briar Club, Kate QuinnBoarding-house women bond around widow during McCarthy-era WashingtonYES
Good HousekeepingLost Lambs, Madeline CashDysfunctional family pulled into billionaire criminal conspiracy by paranoid teenNO
Good Morning America – AdultSkylark, Paula McLainDual timeline Paris: 1664 asylum prisoner and 1942 Nazi resister psychiatristNO
Good Morning America – Young AdultThe Swan’s Daughter, Roshani ChokshiTruth-singing swan helps prince judge brides in fairytale courtNO
Jack CarrThe Most Dangerous Game, Richard ConnellHunter becomes prey on a deranged general’s islandNO
JeselnikThe Getaway, Jim ThompsonHeist-gone-wrong couple flees law toward mythical Mexican refuge El ReyNO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionThe Art Spy, Michelle YoungFrench art curator spied on Nazi looting at Jeu de Paume museumNO
Library ScienceHamnet, Maggie O’FarrellAgnes, Shakespeare’s wife, loses son Hamnet to plague in Elizabethan StratfordNO
Make Sure You’re Around After You’ve Gone, David LoweryGhost stories anthology curated and introduced by filmmaker David LoweryNO
Main Street Reads – BanterAmity, Nathan HarrisEmancipated siblings journey to reunite while pursued through post-Civil War MexicoNO
Main Street Reads – KidsZed Moonstein Makes a Friend, Lance RubinLonely boy creates AI best friend with unintended consequences in MonoTownMAYBE
Main Street Reads – RomanceBonded By Thorns, Elizabeth HelenBookworm bargains with four cursed fae princes in Beauty-and-the-Beast retellingMAYBE
Main Street Reads – ThrillerHaven’t Killed in Years, Amy K. GreenSerial killer’s hidden daughter stalked by copycat leaving body parts on doorstepNO
Mocha Girls ReadAnxious People, Fredrik BackmanFailed bank robber takes apartment-viewing hostages, secrets and lives intertwineMAYBE
Natalie PortmanStrange Pictures, UketsuNine childlike sketches hold clues to interconnected Japanese murder mysteriesNO
Read with JennaHomeschooled, Stefan Merrill BlockMemoir of isolation under unconventional Texas mother’s unregulated homeschoolNO
ReeseThe First Time I Saw Him, Laura DaveSequel: Hannah and stepdaughter Bailey on the run again as Owen reappearsNO
Service 95Night People, Mark RonsonMemoir of Mark Ronson’s ’90s New York DJ years before fameNO
StacksGirl on Girl, Sophie GilbertHow early-aughts pop culture turned millennial women against themselves and each otherNO
Sunriver – FictionCrow Mary, Kathleen GrissomInspired by true story of Crow woman who saved Nakota women from massacreMAYBE
Sunriver – MysteryReturn to Sender, Craig JohnsonWalt Longmire goes undercover as mail carrier to find missing colleague linked to cultNO
TeaTimeThe Bell Jar, Sylvia PlathEsther Greenwood’s mental breakdown and psychiatric treatment in 1950s New YorkNO
Zibby’sThe Gallagher Place, Julie DoarFamily-secrets: Marlowe returns to Dutchess County land for old unsolved murderNO

February 2026

6 rows

YES:

(none)

MAYBE:

  • Six Days of the Condor, James Grady
Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
BBC Radio 2Keeper of Lost Children, Sadeqa JohnsonPost-WWII Germany: three interconnected lives tied to real Brown Baby PlanNO
Saoirse, Charleen HurtubiseAmerican in Donegal hides stolen identity; art-world fame threatens to expose herNO
Witch Trial, Harriet TyceEdinburgh jury trial of two teen girls claiming witchcraft for classmate’s murderNO
Jack CarrSix Days of the Condor, James GradyCIA analyst survives office massacre, runs from his own agencyMAYBE
Mocha Girls ReadRhythm and Design, LongTempleBlack romance — architect + gospel musician find love grounded in faithNO
ReeseIn Her Defense, Philippa MalickaLibel trial — TV star’s daughter, predatory therapist, and the witness who knowsNO

March 2026

4 rows

YES:

  • Deviant, Callie Hart

MAYBE:

(none)

Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
Jack CarrThe Day of the Jackal, Frederick ForsythAnonymous assassin meticulously plans to kill Charles de Gaulle.NO
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionAntisemitism, an American Tradition, Pamela S. NadellHistory from New Amsterdam to presentNO
Main Street Reads – RomanceDeviant, Callie HartLow-level mobster draws the line at trafficking in girls, with spiceYES
PBS BooksSalvation of a Forsyte, John GalsworthyDying Forsyte recalls his one chance at loveNO

April 2026

Yeah, there were huge gaps in my April list. I don’t know what happened there. Oh, wait, yes, I do. The gaps were about why I started this list. I wanted to see which books people were reading that I hadn’t heard of before. The ones that perhaps didn’t make the bestseller lists. And yet I realized I hadn’t checked whether the lists overlapped. So, I added Globe and Mail, NYT, and Indie bestseller lists. 42 new rows from bestseller lists. A gap of a different sort.

52 rows

YES:

  • The Summer Guests, Tess Gerritsen
  • The Astral Library, Kate Quinn
  • The Night We Met, Abby Jimenez
  • Between Two Fires, Christopher Buehlman
  • A World Appears, Michael Pollan
  • How to Be Okay When Nothing Is Okay, Jenny Lawson
  • Red Rising, Pierce Brown

MAYBE:

  • The Names, Florence Knapp
  • We Are All Guilty Here, Karin Slaughter
  • Gone Before Goodbye, Reese Witherspoon; Harlan Coben
  • Saint of Thieves, Dana Haynes
  • The Simple Guide to ADHD Regulation, Jenna Free
  • Carl’s Doomsday Scenario, Matt Dinniman
  • Starside, Alex Aster
  • The Keeper, Tana French
  • The Gales of November, John U. Bacon
  • Dungeon Crawler Carl, Matt Dinniman
  • The God of the Woods, Liz Moore
  • A Walk in the Park, Kevin Fedarko
  • The Dungeon Anarchist’s Cookbook, Matt Dinniman
  • If Only I Had Told Her, Laura Nowlin
  • The Sun and the Starmaker, Rachel Griffin
Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
BBC Radio 2Love Lane, Patrick GaleAging Canadian homesteader reconnects with his English family across generationsNO
Book of the MonthPorcupines, Fran FabriczkiHungarian single mother + daughter chase American Dream after Berlin Wall fallNO
PBS BooksWilding, Isabella TreeCouple rewilds Sussex farm; native species return in abundanceNO
PolyWogg – To be readVillette, Charlotte BronteLucy Snowe teaches at French boarding school, confronting love and isolationNO
Richard & JudyThe Names, Florence KnappThree alternating timelines for one boy based on the name his battered mother choseMAYBE
We Are All Guilty Here, Karin SlaughterTwo teenage girls vanish in small town; officer faces personal costMAYBE
The Cove, L.J. RossTrauma survivor flees to Cornish bookshop, gets pulled into local murderNO
The Summer Guests, Tess GerritsenRetired CIA agents in Maine investigate missing summer-tourist teenagerYES
Deadline, Steph McGovernTV reporter’s family kidnapped mid-live-interview by political conspiratorsNO
Gone Before Goodbye, Reese Witherspoon; Harlan CobenDisgraced combat surgeon takes secret job, becomes fugitive when patient vanishesMAYBE
Sunriver – FictionSupersonic, Thomas KohnstammHistory of a Seattle neighbourhood through the yearsNO
Sunriver – MysterySaint of Thieves, Dana HaynesOrganized vigilante team take on the bad guysMAYBE
Globe & Mail – Canadian NFEven the Good Girls Will Cry, Melissa Auf der MaurBassist’s rock historyNO
Lessons From a Lifetime, David Suzuki; Ian HaningtonSuzuki retrospectiveNO
Miracle, Michael Calvin; Naftali SchiffKids who survived AuschwitzNO
Out of the Sky, Matti FriedmanWWII Jewish parachutists drop into Nazi Europe; Hannah Senesh’s missionNO
The Simple Guide to ADHD Regulation, Jenna FreeTips, tools for ADHD adultsMAYBE
Globe & Mail – Hardcover FictionCarl’s Doomsday Scenario, Matt DinnimanCarl and Donut survive level two of the alien-run dungeon reality showMAYBE
Judge Stone, James Patterson; Viola DavisAlabama judge oversees doctor’s felony trial after abortion on raped teenNO
My Husband’s Wife, Alice FeeneyArtist returns home to find another woman claiming her husband and lifeNO
The Astral Library, Kate QuinnLibrary with portals into beloved novelsYES
The Night We Met, Abby JimenezRight person, wrong timeYES
Indie Bestsellers – Hardcover FictionBetween Two Fires, Christopher BuehlmanBlack Death France: knight escorts orphan girl through supernatural apocalypseYES
Starside, Alex AsterMagic has to be claimed, not inheritedMAYBE
The Keeper, Tana FrenchOld Irish feud and murdered girlMAYBE
Indie Bestsellers – Hardcover NFA World Appears, Michael PollanThe nature of consciousnessYES
How to Be Okay When Nothing Is Okay, Jenny LawsonLawson’s tips and tricks for mental illnessYES
One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This, Omar El AkkadRapidly changing worldNO
The Best Dog in the World, Alice (ed.) HoffmanWriters and their dogsNO
The Gales of November, John U. BaconThe wreck of the Edmund FitzgeraldMAYBE
Indie Bestsellers – Trade PB FictionDungeon Crawler Carl, Matt DinnimanCoast Guard vet and cat navigate alien-run dungeon reality showMAYBE
Game On, Navessa AllenEnemies to lovers, dark romanceNO
I Who Have Never Known Men, Jacqueline HarpmanWomen imprisoned undergroundNO
Red Rising, Pierce BrownMiner on Mars starts revolutionYES
The God of the Woods, Liz MooreKids disappear years apart at summer campMAYBE
Indie Bestsellers – Trade PB NFA Walk in the Park, Kevin FedarkoWalk length of Grand CanyonMAYBE
Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall KimmererBotany and Indigenous teachingsNO
I’m Glad My Mom Died, Jennette McCurdyiCarly star’s memoir of overbearing mother and child-actor traumaNO
On Tyranny, Timothy SnyderResisting authoritarianismNO
Raising Hare, Chloe DaltonRelationship with natureNO
The Art Thief, Michael FinkelStealing art prolificallyNO
The Demon of Unrest, Erik LarsonBiography before Civil WarNO
NYT Bestsellers – Hardcover FictionThe Dungeon Anarchist’s Cookbook, Matt DinnimanCarl and Donut face a subway system packed with monstersMAYBE
NYT Bestsellers – Hardcover NFStand, Cory BookerPolitical call to actionNO
Stripped Down, Bunnie XOPodcast rags to riches storyNO
The Anxious Generation, Jonathan HaidtSmartphones and kids mental healthNO
You with the Sad Eyes, Christina ApplegateMemoir of acting career and adjusting to multiple sclerosisNO
NYT Bestsellers – YA HardcoverA Stage Set for Villains, Shannon J. SpannCursed teen infiltrates Playhouse of immortal Players in deadly competitionNO
Divine Rivals, Rebecca RossRival journalists in magic realmNO
If Only I Had Told Her, Laura NowlinRoad not takenMAYBE
The Sun and the Starmaker, Rachel GriffinElemental magic with girl leadMAYBE
Wings of Starlight, Allison SaftEnemies to lovers and a forbidden bondNO

Okay, now it’s time for May. I’m sure I showed WAY more rigour, right? RIGHT????

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Leave a reply

Post navigation

← Previous Post

Countdown to Retirement

Days

Hours

Minutes

Seconds

Retirement!

One of my favourite sites

And it's new sister site

My Latest Posts

  • Leveling up – From Goals to Pondside PlannerMay 27, 2026
    I write a lot about goals. Goals for the day, goals for life, goals for the week. Goals before retirement. Setting goals, monitoring goals, achieving goals, dropping goals. Different types of goals, different types of methods for managing goals. Having goals as a goal in and of itself. Sometimes it veers into performance measurement. Yet, … Continue reading →
  • Leveling up – Movie reviewsMay 27, 2026
    Similar to the work on the Lilypad Library (my book reviews), I’ve upgraded my movie reviews, too. First and foremost, I’ve changed the name to Lilypad Cinema. Notice the theme? Yes, I’m leaning fully into the frog motif. Second, I’ve upgraded my featured image. Previously, I used the couch potato-style image below, with the man … Continue reading →
  • Frog writing book review entries into a journal
    Leveling up – Book reviewsMay 26, 2026
    Soooo…I have said a few times over the last few years, “NEVER AGAIN WILL I EVER CHANGE MY BOOK REVIEWS FORMAT.” Why? Because I am generally anal-retentive, and with 300 completed reviews, there is a niggly part of me where, if I change something, I want to go back and change all of them to … Continue reading →
  • Book clubs 2026-05: May the rigour be with you (it wasn’t with me)May 22, 2026
    Ah, April showers have brought us May books. Wait, that’s not the right saying. I’ll get back to you on that. Remember last month when I said I was going to show rigour? Well, that didn’t happen. With the larger intake base, I have 119 entries for consideration this month. Of which, I only said … Continue reading →
  • Cleaning up book club lists for January to AprilMay 21, 2026
    In my last post, I noted that I’m monitoring 40+ book clubs for “new to me” titles to consider putting on my TBR pile. There is an inherent challenge that I’m saying yes or maybe to between 15-20% of the titles, which is WAY MORE BOOKS THAN I CAN READ. I’ll have to trim those … Continue reading →

Archives

Categories

© 1996-2025 - PolyWogg Privacy Policy
↑