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An update on Jacob…

The PolyBlog
March 24 2026

For those of you who don’t know, as I didn’t blog about this much before, Jacob decided to have surgery on his legs this year, which he did at the end of February. I’ve held off posting anything as I didn’t want to ask Jacob what he was comfortable with me sharing, but today was a big day, and he was feeling magnanimous, perhaps, but he said I could blog away; he didn’t care. So, here I am.

For simple context, Jacob both has and doesn’t have cerebral palsy. Officially, he doesn’t have CP…he has “spastic diplegia of unknown origin that presents as CP”. If we’re talking to medical people, that’s the diagnosis; if we’re talking with laypeople, he has CP. In reality, what he has are really tight hamstrings, heel cords, and various other leg muscles. CP generally is caused by a break in some circuitry connections in the brain. It often occurs in utero; it could be a virus, or a hundred other things. Often no outward signs, but the connection is “broken”. Two wires are not connected, and so his body tells his legs to tighten. And that signal never stops. It is ALWAYS on. When he was a kid, he had ankle-foot orthotics, did serial casting, lots of physio, all designed to help him relax the tone in his legs. But it isn’t something you can “fix”, just something you can treat. If you do an MRI on the heads of CP kids, they can find the break. Except Jacob’s MRI is unremarkable. Which isn’t an insult; it just means they can’t see a break. Hence, they call it spastic diplegia rather than CP, since they can’t find a break.

In recent years, it has meant that his left foot sits flat when he stands or walks, maybe slightly turned in, and his right foot pronates strongly, so he mostly walks on his toes on that foot. Not the most stable or efficient of gaits, and so his body fights against itself when he’s walking, tiring him out faster than average and reducing his endurance. We also suspect that it contributes to his chronic pains and dizziness, but only time will tell.

We have talked about potential surgery for Jacob since he was about 5 or 6. For serious CP, it may not make much difference for some. For others, it can make a huge difference. For mild CP, the same. Every patient’s prognosis is different. In Jacob’s case, they considered five things.

The biggest surgery is called Selective Dorsal Rhizotomy (SDR). Since his brain is telling his legs to tighten, the SDR surgery interrupts the signal by kind of burning out the connections in his back, so his brain can’t tell his legs to tighten in the same way. You break the circuit. But it’s a pretty big surgery, and if it goes wrong, he’s instantly paralyzed, likely for life. Scary AF. But it is routinely done in the U.S., with significant benefits for patients. Of course, it takes almost a year to regain the mobility you had before, as you have to learn to walk again. In Ontario, the rehab is only offered in Toronto as inpatient care for three months. A pretty big commitment. If it had been offered in Ottawa, Jacob likely would have gone for it. I’m almost glad it isn’t easily available in Ottawa; I would have had way more stress as it approached.

The next biggest surgery is femoral derotation. Basically, turning your hips back to square. CP kids frequently end up with their hips out of the socket joint or not sitting right, at least, in the socket, because they have to constantly adjust their bodies to adapt to the “always on” tone. Jacob felt this was “too much”, and the surgeons weren’t convinced it would make a significant difference for him anyway. He decided no.

The next two go hand-in-hand. They use surgical techniques to lengthen the hamstrings and the heel cords. If you think of it simply, if you put a short rubber band between a post and a peg, and it stretches really tightly, that would be Jacob’s muscles. If you increase the length of the band somehow, it isn’t stretched as tightly. So even if the brain says “tighten”, it isn’t massively tightening a short band, it’s moderately tightening a longer band.

If you’re squeamish, you might want to skip this paragraph (and the next one). The surgeon explained it as being a bit like a sausage. If you grab a sausage in its case and try to stretch it, it won’t do anything. The case protects the overall length and gives it structure. On the other hand, if you slice into the sausage and then try to stretch it, it WILL stretch. Jacob’s hamstrings and heel cords were the sausage in this metaphor. Two large incisions and slicing, and instant longer hamstrings. Well, maybe not INSTANT, since the surgery took five hours, but I digress.

Lastly, they made two incisions in his left foot to reduce his foot’s tendency to rotate inward, with one on the side and one underneath.

Making the decision

As I said, Jacob decided. He has been on-board with doing “something” since he was about 10 or 11, and he is about to turn 17. He was about 12 or 13 when we went in for a bigger “planning” exam, where we heard a bit more about rehab. I was asking about the recovery period, as I knew he would have walking casts. I asked, “So, like how much help will he need?” Mostly, I wanted to know whether he would need help going to the bathroom. The surgeon blithely said, “Oh no, he won’t need much help, most just swing over from the wheelchair easy enough.” Jacob’s head snapped around and glared at me. It was the first time anyone had mentioned he would use a wheelchair for ANY of the recovery period. I thought that would kill things right there as Jacob’s quite proud of never needing assistance to walk.

He was actually added to the surgical planning schedule back in 2019 to do both his hips and legs in 2020. And then that pesky little global pandemic borked EVERY surgical waiting list. Every year, it was extended. And then he was finally going to do it about 2024, after five years of waiting, and his chronic pain stuff was flaring up. Not the best environment for adding to your health concerns.

And then last year, he met with the primary surgeon who has been ready to do this since Jacob was 6, every year saying “sometime, when he’s ready, and it’s appropriate”, and the surgeon was like, “Meh, I don’t know if it’s worth it.” WTF? We got a second opinion from another surgeon in the hospital, and he was more optimistic. No guarantees, and Jacob decided only to do the hamstrings and heel cords.

We have been trying for the last five years to do this at a time of year when it would limit the impact on Jacob’s schooling. They were GOING to do it last year, but we wanted to push it to the summer, and then other factors intervened. This year? We really wanted summer again. Nope, the open window was in late February. Frak. Jacob already misses enough school, but he is also about to age out of CHEO. This was the time to do it.

A hard decision, no doubt. Lots of potential risk, plus the work for rehab, and the potential pain and hassle of surgery at all. Jacob faced it squarely and made the call. It was a go for February.

Andrea and I are not in hospital mode anymore

I remember back in the day when Jacob was small and a frequent flyer at CHEO. We had a routine where Andrea would take a change of clothes, plus clothes for Jacob, full snacks, toys, chargers, etc. We were ORGANIZED. For the day of his surgery, done as out-patient, it was like we had never done this before. We felt like we were wandering around the house, going “Chargers? Snacks? What?” Plus, you know, you have to be early.

We had to be there at 7:00 a.m., which doesn’t sound bad, but Jacob hasn’t gotten up easily before 10:00 in many months. I had already picked up a wheelchair the day before, so we would have a wheelchair when we got home. They gave Jacob some early meds around 8:00, and his whole team showed up at 9:00 for the surgery to start. It was supposed to be just over 3 hours or so. Andrea went in with him to the room, they started asking him questions, gave him the anesthesia mask, and that was it. Andrea didn’t even get to kiss him good luck! But there were lots of people there — three in the surgical team, three in the anesthetic team, and three nurses, plus some others wandering around unidentified. For five hours. Can you imagine the bill if we were paying direct instead of through OHIP?

Andrea and I went to breakfast in the cafeteria, then back to the waiting room. There’s a sign in the room, that many people do not read, that says, “If the phone rings, answer it.” Seems odd, but it’s the way they notify parents their kids are done and awake. Seems odd to answer and say, “Hello? Just a second!” and then ask, “Parents of Danica?” while looking around at other parents before handing it off to whichever parent is there.

We waited. And waited. Saw some other medical people who have treated Jacob, but not that day. Waited some more. Finally, as we got closer to the five-hour mark, the surgeon showed up and told us everything had gone well. The surgery took so long as it was more technically challenging. The incisions are done to the hamstrings while Jacob is lying on his back, and they go in through the adductor area (inner thighs), so hard to get to and Jacob’s legs are really tight. They did the hamstrings and the heel cords. Which we knew about. But he also did the feet, which I didn’t even know had been an option. Anyway, all good.

Seeing Jacob in the recovery room was odd. First and foremost, he had his glasses off and wasn’t wearing his contacts. So he looked different than usual anyway. But he also just seemed older. His voice was a bit deeper, he wasn’t as playful as he is usually. He was in super serious mode. And not cuz he was in any pain, cuz he wasn’t.

Mom joined us, we helped him sort of get ready to leave, and then the fun began. With the surgery, Jacob had two casts on his feet from the toes up to just below the knee. But the legs also have to stay relatively straight almost 24/7 for several weeks to aid in the healing so they gave him these leg casts / braces that go under the backs of his legs and do up in front, going from ankle to groin on each leg, and done up tight with velcro. They prevent the knee from bending at all. No problem, we knew this was happening.

When we had talked to the surgeon, he had told us that we should have them on all the time, but of course, we had to drive home, and he had to use the washroom, etc., etc., etc. So we could remove them. But when we went to plan our trip home, the nurse said, “Oh, no, you can’t take the braces off, they have to stay on, surgeon’s orders.” We were semi-sure that was not the right interpretation, but we weren’t sure; we could have misheard. So we left them on. And then had to get surgical scrub pants from the hospital to go OVER the braces as there was no way Jacob’s pants would fit and he was kind of flapping in the wind.

We got him off the bed, standing, and into a wheelchair with his legs supported and very reclined. All the way to the front door of the hospital, but then we had to get him into the car. I’m sure CHEO could sell that footage as it likely looked like a gong show, but it was incredibly stressful. It is near impossible to put someone in leg casts into a car when he’s 17 and mostly deadweight. It took almost 20 minutes.

When we finally got home, and in the garage, we took the pants off and the braces (called Zimmers by the way), and got him into the house and into the wheelchair in about 5 minutes with no gong show antics. We should have absolutely trusted our original instructions.

The biggest thing after that was the first two days for pain management, although it was both simple and complicated at the same time, and highly efficient. I was expecting him to have a lot of pain and soreness. Instead, he had almost none. They gave him what they call a nerve block for each leg. In effect, there was a catheter running from the nerves that control the pain in the area, out the side of his legs into a bag, and the bag had a numbing agent in it. The bag sat in the equivalent of a fanny pack that could go around your waist or more easily, just over your neck, and sits there for two days, blocking all nerve pain from reaching your brain. At the end of two days, you watch a little video, and then you pull it out yourself. Or, in our case, Andrea did it. Jacob said it felt weird having this thing moving inside his body to come out, but no pain. He took Tylenol and Advil as preventative and treatment, but never needed his “stronger” pain meds. He took one, I think, on two different nights when he had spasms earlier, but mostly he survived VERY well on his own.

We put two chairs in a downstairs and upstairs bathroom so he could transition from the wheelchair (which doesn’t fit in bathroom doors) to the chair, then close the door, before transitioning himself to the toilet. Most of the time, the only real help he needed was for food in the kitchen to access the fridge and cupboards; carry his wheelchair up and down the stairs once per day; and help doing up the straps on his Zimmers. When he started walking, we gave him support a few times, but most of the time, he did it himself.

For about a week after the surgery, Jacob had been going up and down the stairs mostly on his butt. Then, one night, I was carrying the wheelchair up the stairs ahead of him, I got to the top to put it down and set the brake, etc., and I realized he was already at the top and I was in the way. And then I realized the reason I was in the way was that he had walked ALL THE WAY UP on his own two feet, not climbing backwards on his butt. Amazing.

I confess with his earlier aversion to the wheelchair, I thought he would fight it. But he didn’t. On the other hand, nobody ever saw him it outside of people at CHEO (using one of theirs) or Andrea and I at home. He didn’t even tell his friends he was having the surgery until afterwards, and he has avoided inviting them over until he feels more stable walking. Maybe now that the casts are gone, he might feel better.

Oh, and he has needed help with bathing, in a way. Not help with the bathing part, more getting INTO the bathing setup. CHEO and others basically said, “Okay, don’t get the casts wet.” Which means they advise you to shower with garbage bags over your casts and taped so no water gets in. In case water DOES get in, they advise you to first wrap the casts in a towel. The other alternative is you can buy these plastic leg bags that have a tight seal at the top. You put them on like a giant sock of sorts but they have a tight opening that seals around your leg. I had one when I was in wound care for my leg; we still had an extra one for Jacob to use along with a garbage bag on the other one. But he liked the commercial one better, so we got him a second one of those. I helped him get towels around his casts and the plastic socks over his casts and on to his legs, and then he looked after getting into the tub and showering. I helped once to get them off as did Andrea, otherwise he did almost everything himself. He wouldn’t even have needed my help much the first time except the duct tape twisted and wouldn’t break for him.

Four weeks later

He wore his first casts for two weeks and then we went to CHEO (no BRACES IN THE CAR this time) to have them removed. Or more accurately, changed. They checked his legs, the incisions, and then our orthotics specialist measured him to get new ankle-foot orthotics (AFOs). Now that his right foot will sit straight, he can wear AFOs again without any posting, so we needed to order new ones. Today, for the end of week 4, we went back to CHEO to remove the last cast, have the surgeon check things (he figures he got a 30% improvement in his right ankle and foot!), and to get the new AFOs.

Going forward, it means that Jacob will wear AFOs again pretty much all the time, and in particular, in the coming weeks as he basically learns to walk again. As the surgeon put it, he’s walked for 17 years one way, and now his left foot is straighter and his right foot goes flat. It felt weird to Jacob to stand on it, but that was more about the change from the casts than the change from before.

The big ticket item is physio. He has to go twice a week for quite some time. At least we know the physio though: she’s the same person who has done his serial casts twice previously! And was involved with his original therapy for occupational therapy for writing and speech. She’s known him since he was about 4, I think. We love her.

Interestingly, the AFOs would normally send us to a special Kiddie Kobbler in town with Rob the Shoeman as the owner. He was a foot specialist before selling shoes, but he’s closing the store, and this weekend is his last. Very sad. We have a lot of fond memories going there to get Jacob shoes in a world where such an outing for large oversized shoes to fit AFOs could be a nightmare instead. It was great for us. I’m hoping to stop in this weekend just to say so long and thanks for the fish. We have good options still, now that Jacob is older, but Rob was a lifesaver for us.

The big question mark, though, is when Jacob will be strong enough to walk consistently for any distance and go back to school. He has zero interest in using a wheelchair at school. It is far too polarizing for him. But his physical recovery over the last four weeks was more challenging than we hoped and expected, and he hasn’t been able to do much schoolwork. He’s behind in everything. He wants to believe he can still finish everything, but at the risk of low marks, and now that he’s in Grade 11, those marks will go on his university application.

Yet there have been some other bright spots. Little moments here and there, for instance.

Seeing him in recovery, and him seeming older and more mature suddenly.

A few days after surgery, he slept an insane number of hours in one day, like 11:00 until almost 11:00 at night, and then back to bed around 12:30 until the morning. It was almost 18h in a 24h period. But while he was awake, he was SUPER HYPER. And gregarious. He wanted to tell me everything that was in his head. And I was so sad cuz I was dead on my feet and I had to put him to bed. I would have loved to stay up longer and just listen to him for hours.

Another moment that has happened a few times is that, as he’s sitting on the couch in his braces with his legs up, I’ve lain down beside him with my head on his leg for a simple cuddle. We’ve sat there a few times just hanging out, with him playing with my hair or massaging my head. It is so peaceful and relaxing.

Heck, I’ve even enjoyed the bedtime routine of lugging everything upstairs, as it has felt like he’s a kid again and we’re putting him to bed.

Lighter moments where we can find them.

But there is a phrase that keeps running through my head, in my pride of the decision he made on his own, albeit with our support, and all that the decision has entailed.

Bold decisions, extraordinary results.

And today? I saw him with his feet sitting completely flat with no effort, no help from an AFO, no brace, nada. Just his two feet flat on the floor, straight out from his body. Extraordinary. Beautiful.

The rehab will be hard. School will be what it is and what he can do.

But that “flat feet” posture alone is all the result we could have hoped for and more. I’m so proud of him.

Let the next phase begin; he’s ready.

Posted in Family | Leave a reply

Using Calibre to embrace my inner librarian for ebooks

The PolyBlog
March 23 2026

I have used Calibre literally for years to manage all my ebooks. It started way back when Kindle was doing a huge business of people pushing freebies of their ebooks. Some good, some slush, all free. But it meant a LOT of ebooks to manage. So I tried a couple of programs, most of which were nothing more than list managers in a database format; essentially, little more than “collection” managers for people who had adapted them from album, CD or physical book trackers.

Calibre was different. It had lots of fields, and it kept multiple formats of the books together. And you could even convert from one format to another. Digital Rights Management was a small, noisy fly easily swatted away by entering your Kindle serial number into a plugin, and everyone justified it by saying they were making “backups” of their books in case Amazon ever went away. Or something like that.

Over the years, I’ve played with multiple options. I tried having different libraries for different things, like a library for mysteries, a library for non-fiction, or a library for books I finished reading. Sometimes it took way too long to move between libraries, sometimes it was fine. I like to call those options Poly Library 1.0.

Poly Library 2.0

Eventually, I went back to a single library and realized that what I was really trying to do was create a good workflow. The most basic workflow for books is a To Be Read pile/category, an Active Reading pile/category and a Finished pile/category.

Of course, it gets a bit messy with just three piles. What about ones that I have finished reading, but I haven’t reviewed yet? That clearly goes between reading and being completely finished.

And what about new books that I add to the library but I haven’t catalogued yet or validated that the format is readable, etc.? I created an “intake” heading.

But wait, there’s more. My anal-retentive inner librarian showed up.

And suddenly I had folders for TBR – Fiction and – Non-fiction; Mystery – Series and – Standalone; Fantasy / Sci Fi – Series and – Standalone; Non-fiction folders for – Astronomy, – Biography, – Books & Writing, – Business, – Goals, – Government, – Health, – Hobbies and Crafts, – HR, – Learning, and – Other.

Most metadata is automatically imported from plugins that scrape Goodreads, LibraryThing, WorldCat, Amazon, Indigo, Google Books, SmashBooks, and more. I don’t really have to “catalogue” them much, I mostly just clean up the data so that if it says “My Big Beautiful Life: A Novel”, I tend to take the “Novel” part out, and make sure it is sorting properly on books that start with “A” or “The”. Not every site does it the same, so there’s a small cleansing role.

Most of these sound like simple tags, and in most library setups in Calibre, that would be true. But I got cute. I discovered that if you create a custom category for Workflow (for example), and make them all single option tags, i.e., they couldn’t be more than one tag at the same time, I essentially created a virtual workflow where things started at “Intake” and went all the way to “Final – Fiction” or “Final – Non-fiction”.

Except I borked it. I was playing with the database after making major revisions, and I haven’t backed up in the last couple of weeks while I’ve been working on this part. I went to highlight about 20 books and move them from one workflow category to another. Except, oops, I accidentally clicked the category twice instead of once and didn’t notice. If I click it once, I would get all the books in “TBR – Fiction” (about 20), and I could then move them to Standalone Fiction. Unless I click it TWICE, which I did, in which case it doesn’t show you all the books in that category; it shows you all the books that are NOT in that category. So the whole library, except for those 20. And I moved them to the new category.

Did I mention that, while that sounds relatively simple, the database part is actually really quite complicated? Thousands of books with one change in them. Not one change easily undone, but several thousand little changes in sequence. And you CAN’T undo it. It’s done. Permanent. Without a backup, no way to revert the index. Frak.

I asked for help online, and the best advice was basically, “Next time, do a backup, dodo bird!” Ook.

It sounds bad, but honestly, I could really easily revert something else back to the basic three buckets — TBR, active, and finished. I have more than that, but I also had a lot that were not sorted well.

Hmm…perhaps this is an opportunity in disguise! Enter Classification Man! A super hero librarian with the resources of the internet to design the ultimate in metadata sorting and fields. The ultimate library setup. Muahhahahah!

(Sorry, that laugh makes me think he’s more of a Super Villain than a Super Hero. But I digress.)

Playing with a classification “menu”

With all the time and energy I’ve put into tweaks over the years, I thought it was time to do some serious analysis before I start PolyLibrary 3.0.

The first area of “tags” is generally what I would call the “book profile“. It includes the obvious ones from any list, like the title and author, although it gets a little more sophisticated in the details. The title includes options for the title itself (i.e., the “presentation” title) as well as a field for the sort order. So a book like “The Whispering Pines” would show up in presentation as “The Whispering Pines” but in the sort field as “Whispering Pines, The”. Authors get a little more sophisticated still — if you put in that it is a collaboration between “John Smith and Jane Doe”, it will treat that as one author’s name. If, instead, you say John Smith AND Jane Doe, it will treat it as two authors. I’ll experiment with the Title to see if I can add a subtitle option so it shows either way. It’s an important field, and I’m not sure whether it allows listing both ways, like the author field does. I am also considering adding a subtitle option…I really don’t like when it says “Make It So: The blah blah blah of Captain Jean Luc Picard”; I just want the main title. As I mentioned, I can download the metadata from various sites so that I don’t have to “clean it up”, but every site varies slightly.

Of course, the title and author fields are not nearly enough. There is also a publisher field, the publication date, the book’s formats (i.e., which e-formats I have, not which other formats it comes in), and a cover. Technically, the cover isn’t really part of the database; it’s just a link to an image file stored separately with the book, rather than embedded (i.e., if the book has it embedded, that’s a separate thing). And then there is the biggie — an ID number.

Calibre actually has space for three ID numbers. It has a “Universal Unique ID” (UUID), a long alphanumeric string it generates for each book, so the database can never confuse the record with any other. It has nothing specific to do with the book; it was just generated so it can be tracked in the database. It also has a relatively simple ID, which is more like “which record is it?” i.e., #1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Except, of course, like any good little database, you can move stuff around, copy it to other libraries, copy it back, etc. The simple ID can change, the UUID will not. And then there is the ID field for the book’s public ID numbers, like an ISBN # that all commercial books use, an ASIN number that Amazon uses, a Goodreads tracker number, a DOI #, etc. There are quite a few that get tracked by the field so that it can sync with various sites. Which is really useful when you have an ebook that doesn’t have ANY public ID numbers (often indie- or self-published ebooks on non-large commercial sites don’t have the big numbers that everyone else does, partly because some countries charge fees for ISBN #s, although in Canada it is free).

I also mentioned that there are default fields for three dates: the published date I mentioned above; the date and timestamp when the book was added to Calibre; and the date when the record was last modified. I find it a bit amusing how many people online, and even some of the documentation, describe the third field as the date the book was modified. It isn’t “changing the book”, it is changing the metadata for the book — basically updating the catalogue information only (although, technically, Calibre IS powerful enough to edit the actual book file in many cases). You know, updating the database record for that book. Because in the end, that is what Calibre is. A database with fields for all this info, including links to the actual ebooks themselves. Which is the last field in the main area — the path to the folder where the books are stored.

Those are the main fields. You can add as many as you want, and as part of my inner librarian duties, I looked into what else people use in this tag category. Some like to add information about physical copies, including condition, where they are kept (in different libraries in the house or loaned to someone), trim size, weight, whether they are signed copies, etc. None of which is really useful to me in the “ebook” world, as I’ve purged almost my entire physical library. I’m considering adding a field if I still have a paper copy, too.

Another group of people are really into the production elements of the books. Are there different editions? Is there a formal subtitle (mentioned above)? What about editors or translators? Or even library catalogue info like Dewey decimal numbers or BIPAD/ISSN numbers for periodicals. In a similar vein, some people read online books that might have multiple versions or publication and/or revision dates. Most of which don’t really apply to my usage.

There are even those who want to get hardcore into the Digital Rights Management side of things, including the DRM status at purchase, what it is now, whether it’s a personal copy, and so on. I understand their interest; I don’t share their desire.

There is a last sub-category that I find interesting, before I come to a gap in the above framework. There is a plugin for Calibre, and several online sites, that track other details about books, documents, etc. It is a literacy overview, of sorts, with the # of pages, the # of words, and with the help of the plugin, an estimated literacy grade of the level of reading difficulty. I love all three, I really do, and I have them for every finished book, and yet I do nothing with that info. I have no idea what it would be good for, particularly as it is a generic set of numbers unique to how **I** calculate it or rather how I have the system calculate it. It isn’t a formal piece of information that the publishers always provide. I’d also like to include an estimated reading time, but that’s just a rough estimate. Average reading speeds range from 200 to 300 words per minute, so any estimate would depend on what number I choose. I read closer to the high end, while others might be closer to the low end. And is it really relevant?

I mentioned above that there is a gap in my profile framework. I posted my outline on the Calibre Reddit list to see if any other inner librarians might embrace my framework and comment. Several did, and one pointed out a field that they use regularly: the country of publication. I love the premise at first blush, but then it gets complicated. Take J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series. The first book in the series was called The Philosopher’s Stone in the UK, but was later retitled The Sorcerer’s Stone in the US and many other countries. Which means it’s a UK book published in Canada and the US, and with different titles in some cases, but even in the version in Canada, with the original title, do I call it a UK book because Rowling is from the UK, or do I count it as a Canadian because I got the Canadian e-version? I know it matters a whole lot to a certain sub-group of people, mostly because some American readers hate British spelling, and some Canadian and British readers hate American spelling. But I don’t really care. I read so fast that an American or British spelling doesn’t stop my train of thought. I’m used to both. I’d like to flag Aussie or Norwegian authors, but I’m running into the same issue: should I code the AUTHOR or the BOOK? I haven’t wrestled that to the ground yet. The funny part is that those who DO use country codes often use small country flags in the database to symbolize nationality, and that looks cool visually. I’m a nutbar if I add it just because it looks cool, right?

The second tag category is what I call “user engagement“. I’ll admit that some people don’t separate this section from my next one (user tools), as they are almost all coded by the user, but you’ll see why I do in a moment. To me, this section is about me as the reader dealing with the reading process.

Calibre starts with an obvious field for you to enter a rating from 1 to 5 stars. GoodReads, Amazon, Chapters, and most book sites also use a five-star rating system, and if you download metadata, it will first populate the average rating from that site. Plus all the metadata from the book profile above.

But if you are so inclined, Calibre also has default options for a comments field where you can add a blurb, synopsis, personal notes, or even your review. Of course, the downside of this default field is that many plugins use it to dump info from various websites when they grab metadata for a download. If I add my notes and then run a metadata download from Amazon, it overwrites what I already had. I had forgotten that until recently, when I was testing a different plugin on some sample data, trying to better integrate my library with GoodReads. I write reviews for every book I finish, and I store copies there. Because I had already downloaded the metadata before pasting my review, I never even considered what I might lose if I redownloaded it. I definitely need a new custom field for MY review.

Of course, there are many ways to do that: a single field that has my whole review in it; a series of fields that together “build” the review for the plot/premise, what I liked, what I didn’t like, and my bottom-line / one-line review; or a hybrid of several options. Some reviewers also want to include a reason for abandoning a book if they did not finish (DNF), fields for favourite quotes, or maybe even (in my case), where I have posted my reviews online or even that they ARE posted. Interestingly, I read on my Kindle and soon (there will be a separate post), on a revived tablet for PDFs. In both cases, I can make notes as I go and save them with the book. There is a plugin for the Kindle side, and potentially for the PDFs, that lets all my notes while reading be sent back to the desktop and included as a field. It’s not fully seamless yet for either source, but I’m working to get there. I generally highlight only in my non-fiction reading, and I don’t tend to save quotes from fiction. But I like the premise of saving the annotations, as once I delete it from my Kindle or tablet, those notes are gone forever.

Within user engagement, there is one last area: tracking your reading progress. It generally includes an actual field for progress, which sites like GoodReads will let you sync your Kindle to so that it a) shows what you are reading; b) lets you check in how far you have read in the ebook; and c) registers when you have finished reading. I kind of like the premise, but any book on my Kindle already tells me that. I don’t need Calibre to track it as well. Once I start, I generally go until I’m done. Sites like GoodReads and others also want a Date Started and a Date Finished/Read so you can track the duration. But I think about my own reading, and it almost makes no sense. Or at least doesn’t really resonate with me. A book like Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series has really long books, and I can’t just plow through them quickly. Equally, I’m struggling to finish Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment that I have been reading forever. It’s awesome for plot, but the prose is slow as molasses. I plan to finish it this year, and the timing isn’t relevant. Nor is it relevant if I pick up a simple murder mystery and finish it in a day.

Then, my brain borks. Because I consider books only “finished” when I actually review them. And I have over 300 in backlog, with dates I know were 2025, 2024, and then “sometime before that”. I’ve put in dates where I could, or at least years, because I use the date “read” to help me see how many books I’ve read in a given year. I participate in Reading Challenges, but because my “reviewing” list isn’t up to date, my other stats aren’t either.

My third and final tag category is what I call “user tools“. I mentioned above that I separate this from user engagement because most of the information here, while often bibliographic or self-generated, is used to help the user sort lists in various ways, not necessarily to engage with the book. To me, it means engaging all the books, not just this one.

The obvious field up front is just labelled “tags”. It is a giant catchall field where people can literally tag anything they want…fiction, non-fiction; mystery, suspense; point of view; etc. Most people use it to tag genres, and I do too. Where I differ is that I force the book into a single genre, while someone tagging Harry Potter might tag fiction, magic, UK, male lead, mystery, series, good defeats evil, coming of age, etc. I sort books separately by fiction and non-fiction, but I haven’t added a field for it. I just stored them in separate workflows. Calibre also assumes that you might have books in a Series, so there is a field that doubles up to include both the name of the series (such as Harry Potter) and the position the book is in the series (like The Philosopher’s Stone is book #1). It seemed weird at first as the number of the book has decimal points with it. I was like, “Huh?” Except often there are prequels, side books, short stories, or novellas between book 2 and 3, for example, so you can actually number it 2.5! I find that kind of cool, actually.

But with the power of Calibre, there really is no end to what you can create and tag:

  • Genres as nested hierarchies or relational tags for filters and sorts — Fiction / NF categories, type of text (play, SS, novella, poem, full-length book, collection), genre categories (limit one per book)
  • Series chronology if the numbering isn’t sufficient?
  • Series or standalone (if you fill in the series field with the word standalone, Calibre will think all books by all authors that are standalone are part of the same series!)
  • Vibes (mood, pacing, setting)
  • Tropes (meh)
  • Point of View
  • Content warnings
  • Status (owned, borrowed, library, store, prices?)
  • Shelves (GoodReads is big on this with shelves for read, TBR)
  • Context (reading challenge, award, gift, book club, recommended by someone)
  • Priority for TBR (aka up next)
  • Workflow (staging, sorting, cleaning up metadata, reading, reviewing, final archive) — this is where I got into trouble!
  • Years only (publication, reading, reviewing), rather than months and days
  • Count of how many books you have by that author in the database? (already generated in lists)
  • URLs of links to books on places like GRs, review site, etc.

Plus, there are hundreds of plugins that will let you add fields for just about anything. Mostly around creating ways to filter and manipulate your list.

The only other field I added is another ID #: the number I assigned to the review of that book. My list started at 00001 and is now just over 00300. I can go up to 99999, so I’ll never need six digits. I’ll likely break 1000 one day, and I could theoretically hit 10,000, but that’s highly unlikely. I’d have to write a review a day for 26 years. 🙂 (Challenge accepted!)

Okay, so what am I actually including in PolyLibrary 3.0?

I mentioned above that I discussed this with a guy on Reddit and a guy I know through another site who is bibliographically inclined, and they both thought, “Holy crap, that’s way too much!” (my interpretation of their words). Apparently, I didn’t explain that it was the full menu, not what I was ordering.

Let’s weed the list above to a more manageable size. Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are downloadable or generated by plugins, not me.

  • Book Profile
    • Title + Title sort (investigate option of alternate titles or just add an alternate title to the same field) (*)
    • Author + Author sort (including & for others, and figure out how to best indicate editors) (*)
    • Subtitle (a new field, if / where warranted)
    • Publisher (*)
    • Publication date (change to year only) (*)
    • Cover (link) (*)
    • Paper copy too (a new field)
    • Literacy overview (# of pages, # of words, literacy grade) (*)
    • Country of author (still considering)
    • Type of text (new field for play, shortstory, novella, poem, full book, collection/anthology)
    • Plus defaults: Formats, ID x 3 (UUID, simple ID, ISBN/ISSN/ASIN), Path (*)
  • User Engagement
    • Rating (original + add a new one for MY rating, not just the metadata download) (*)
    • Comments (*)
    • Review field (new one for MY reviews + Separate one-line review + Review tracker for BR # plus + where posted including link to PolyWogg URL)
    • Annotations field (for notes synched between Kindle or Tablet) (*)
    • Year Finished, Year Reviewed
  • User Tools
    • Fiction / non-fiction (new toggle field, or potentially nested with the next two)
    • Fiction genre (modification to tag field and workflow tags so it’s just MY tags)
    • Non-fiction genre (modification to tag field and workflow tags)
    • Series name (keep original with position) (*)
    • Series / standalone (new toggle field or nested with fiction/non-fiction hierarchy)
    • Read / TBR (new toggle field, or could expand to include active or other shelves from GoodReads and modify Workflow)
    • Source of recommendation (new for Reading Challenge, award, gift, book club, personal recommendation)

Moving forward

I’m quite proud of that list, actually, and I’m happy that I did the deep dive. However, there are a few little niggly things I want to add to the database, all of which are “calculation” fields for display.

One of the guys on Reddit shared an example of his database, and while he is heavily invested in syncing with GoodReads, what interested me more was that he found a way to take a whole bunch of complex info you need in some fields and turn it into quick visuals. For example, while he has a field called Nationality, he also has another field that looks up the info in the Nationality field and displays a small flag for that country in his columns…the text column is there and hidden, but his display just shows the little flag. Similarly, for say, genre, he might have a magnifying glass icon for mysteries and a moon icon for astronomy. Quick little icons to represent text that takes up a lot of space in other columns that don’t have to show. It made the display really sleek and manageable. So, that’s on my list now… creating columns with images. 🙂 On the positive side, if I do that, they’re basically just fields that calculate content from other fields; I don’t need to calculate those separately or enter data in them. There are several fields above that I can distill into quick visuals.

Pray for my inner librarian. Even just for having to fix 300 book reviews that are in the wrong field.

Posted in Book Reviews | Tagged book review | 2 Replies

What would you put in a personal health dashboard / framework?

The PolyBlog
March 8 2026

I started this year with a few short plans to work on health factors in my life. Some of it was prescribed; I needed a physical exam for certain pension forms. Others were ones that I was trying to do some proactive work on, like my teeth and my feet. And still others were more responsive, like finding out my A1C numbers had jumped precipitously into the hard-core diabetic range.

But I have trouble visualizing all of it, and since I’m a planner by heart and often by profession, I like the idea of some sort of framework, perhaps with a bit of a dashboard, to monitor it more easily. I have MY list of things, but what else am I missing?

AI has entered the chat

In addition to my list, I thought, why not let AI do some secondary and tertiary research for me on the web? I went through multiple iterations, multiple questions, and here’s my curated list after it was done feeding me stuff. I liked the list of preventative health categories, but it is far too simple, with lots of stuff missing or not intuitive as a layperson to categorize.

  1. Cardiometabolic health (heart, circulation, diabetes)
  2. Cancer screening
  3. Organ systems
  4. Functional health (mobility, hearing, cognition)
  5. Lifestyle + behavioural health

A deeper dive allowed me to come up with 15 major domains:

DOMAININCLUSIONSMETRICSSTATUS
CARDIOVASCULARVitals
Blood chemistry
Structural/imaging
Circulation
– Blood pressure (longevity)
– Resting heart rate (longevity)
– Fitness heart rate (VO2 Max?) (longevity)
– Total cholesterol
– LDL (longevity), HDL, Triglycerides?
– hs-CRP (longevity)
– ECG
– Echocardiogram
– Stress test
– Coronary calcium score?
– Peripheral artery disease screening?
– Ankle-brachial index?
OPTIONAL:
– Saturation levels
– Heart rate variability
– ApoB
– Lipoprotein(a)?
– Need to do ongoing BP monitoring for a week, but have history of high controlled with meds, a bit higher recently (first number, not second)
– Lab work came back good on all the blood stuff
– Had ECG, echocardiogram and stress test within last five years, no issues for my heart
– Not sure what the last three are
METABOLIC / DIABETESGlucose
Kidney
Neuropathy
Feet
– Fasting glucose
– HbA1c (longevity)
– Insulin resistance markers
– Neuropathy
– Foot exams
– Weight / BMI
– Waist circumference (longevity)
OPTIONAL:
– Body fat %
– Fasting insulin
– HOMA-IR (insulin resistance)
– Waist to height ratio
– A1C was high at lab work (13!) so getting it down with higher Metformin doses and dietary shifts, working well
– Neuropathy fine
– Looking after feet with chiropodist
– Weight, BMI, waist later this year
GASTROINTESTINALUpper GI
Lower GI
– GERD severity
– Barrett’s esophagus risk?
– Endoscopy, if indicated?
– Colonoscopy
– Stool tests, including cancer screening
– IBS symptoms
– Had endoscopy and colonoscopy within 10y, all good
– Need stool sample test
– Would like to get off PPI eventually
– Not severe enough for IBS, but not great either
CANCER SCREENINGColon
Prostate
Skin
Lung
Testicular
– Colonoscopy, stool test
– PSA test, prostate exam
– Skin cancer check
– Low-dose CT, if indicated
– Self-exams
– Need to do a provincial stool test
– Would like to see a dermatologist for skin, if GP suggests
– Could do more on self-checks
KIDNEY AND URINARYDiabetes-related– Creatinine
– eGFR
– Urine microalbumin
– Urinary symptoms
– Kidney ultrasound, if needed
Recent lab work all good
LIVER & METABOLIC ORGANOrgans– AST
– ALT
– Fatty liver risk
– Alcohol intake
– Ultrasound, if abnormal
Not sure what most of those are, but have no alcohol and had ultrasound of all organs 2 years ago (back problems, looking for kidney stones or anything else causing referral, all normal)
ENDOCRINE / HORMONESHormones– Testerone
– Thyroid (TSH)
– Vitamin D
– Cortisol (if symptoms)
OPTIONAL:
– B12
All labs are normal
MUSCULOSKELETALStrength
Bone
Joint health
Mobility
– Grip strength (longevity)
– Leg strength (longevity)
– Bone density scan (DEXA)
– Arthritis
– Cartilage wear
– Gait speed (longevity)
– Balance
OPTIONAL:
– Squat capacity
– Need to build core and arm, leg strength
– Not sure how I would measure grip strength or gait speed
– Always worried about knees but haven’t bothered me as much lately
– Balance issues seems to be purely head (vertigo with certain meds)
PHYSICAL FITNESSAerobic
Strength
Flexibility
Recovery
– Cycling, walking, kayaking
– Heart-rate zones
– Lifting (longevity)
– Resistance (longevity)

– Stretching
– Yoga
– Resting HR (longevity)
– Sleep quality
– Main goal for April+
– Sleep has been all over the place the last few weeks, but seems to be settling back down
NEUROLOGICAL & COGNITIVECognitive
Neurological
Sleep
– Memory changes
– Executive function
– Tremor
– Neuropathy
– Coordination
– Sleep apnea
– Sleep duration (longevity)
OPTIONAL:
– Daytime fatigue
– Attention
– Executive mostly fine, but I would like a better set of tests tailored to me to test
– No neuro issues
– Memory isn’t quite as quick as it used to be
– Apnea under control, but want a new machine
– Duration bouncing around with new meds
MENTALMood
Treatment
Lifestyle
– Depression
– Anxiety
– Medication impacts
– Therapy
– Meditation
– Stress level
– Burnout
– SSRIs are working well, pluses and minuses
– Stress for retirement, mostly manageable
– Work up and down
SENSORYVision
Hearing
Dental
– Eye exam
– Glaucoma
– Cataracts
– Macular degeneration
– Audiogram
– Hearing changes
– Periodontal disease
– Cavities
– Bite alignment
– Eyes are managed
– Need hearing test and aids
– Need 2 crowns and deep cavity fixed
SKINDermatology– Mole changes
– Skin cancer screening
– Sun exposure
On my list for later this year
CIRCULATION & LYMPHATICCirculation
Lymphatic
– Edema severity
– Varicose veins
– Venous insufficiency
– Lymphatic swelling
– All good except for edema on shins (colour)
– Getting new compression socks and liners
IMMUNIZATION & INFECTIONVaccines– Shingles
– Influenza
– Tetanus
– Pneumococcal
– COVID
I don’t have tetanus or pneumoccal, but get flu & COVID and got my shingles
SOCIALSocial time
Community
Friendships
Loneliness
– Duration, frequency (longevity)
– Degree of closeness
– Episodes, feelings of isolation

For the ongoing monitoring, a bunch of the frameworks out there suggest four monitoring levels:

  • Lifestyle — Exercise, diet, alcohol, sleep, stress, meditation
  • Functional — Fitness, strength, mobility, balance, hearing, vision, cognition
  • Medical risk — BP, cholesterol, glucose, weight, kidney markers, liver markers
  • Disease surveillance — Colonsocopy, prostate screening, imaging, bone density, vaccines

It’s not bad, I might be able to merge that with something for PACE planning (primary, alternate, contingency, emergency). Although there is an element of time in there too — daily (exercise, sleep, BP), annual (labs, exam), decade (colonoscopy, bone density, imaging). Not sure I’m down for all those.

Anyone see anything missing before I build my dashboard?

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | 2 Replies

Book clubs 2026-03: Options for March

The PolyBlog
March 8 2026

February wasn’t as productive as I had hoped, at least not for my “bookclub reading”. I had 28 from book clubs below as potential reads, but my Christmas present hangover reads occupied most of my attention, plus some non-reading projects. Oh, and life itself, I guess. I read This Book Made Me Think of You (2026) – BR00300 (R2026) – 🐸🐸🐸🐸🐸 and as you can see, it was excellent. I also read Two Bodies Are Better Than One by Erica Ruth Neubauer (2026) – BR00301 (R2026) – 🐸⚪⚪⚪⚪and it was NOT a good choice. I was going to pitch it at several points and it was a train wreck. Wow. Just wow. So +1 point for Reader’s Digest for the year, -1 for Amazon First Reads.

Let’s take a look at options for March…out of 93 possible books suggested by book clubs, I decided on:

  • Yes (13):
    • The Last Labyrinth, Gwendolyn Womack
    • This Story Might Save Your Life, Tiffany Crum
    • Her Hidden Fire, Cliodhna O’Sullivan
    • The Drowning Woman, Robyn Harding
    • The Burning Library, Gilly Macmillan
    • Blood & Roses, Callie Hart
    • The Searcher, Tana French
    • Sun-Kissed Cooking, Brooke Williamson
    • La Belle Sauvage, Philip Pullman
    • Innocent Guilt, Remi Kone
    • The Frozen People, Elly Griffiths
    • In Time With You, Kristin Dwyer
    • Death at the Sign of the Rook, Kate Atkinson
  • Maybe (5):
    • What Happened Next, Edwin Hill
    • Almost Life, Kiran Milwood Hargrave
    • More Than Enough, Anna Quindlen
    • The Scene of the Crime, Lynda La Plante
    • Wolf Hour, Jo Nesbo
  • No (75):
    • 58 decided as no
    • 17 had no info available for March as of March 7
  • ** Updated March 15 **
    • My Grandfather, the Master Detective, Masateru Konishi
    • How To Get Away With Murder, Rebecca Philipson
    • To The End of Reckoning, Joseph Moldover
    • Once and Again, Rebecca Serle
    • The Shakespeare Secret, D.J. Nix
Book ClubBook title & authorBrief DescriptionYes/no for me
Amazon First ReadsThe Price of Honey, Liane MoriartyWife sits with three ex-wives at tech mogul’s funeral (SS)NO
As Far As She Knew, Diana AwadArab husband dies, had unknown second house, why?NO
In the Great Quiet, Laura VogtOkholahoma land rush, independent woman alone with potentially violent pastNO
Yours Always, Corinne SullivanOld lover with missing ex-gf, dating apps, intrigueNO
No Place to Be Single, Felicia KingsleyChildhood friends reunite in small Tuscany village, but he is modern businessman and she is relaxed vintnerNO
What Happened Next, Edwin HillLong ago, Father stabbed man and wounded Mother, now son wants to know whyMAYBE
Maybe It’s Fate, Heidi McLaughlinWoman drops current life to take care of distant friend’s kids when friend dies, romance ensuesNO
The Last Labyrinth, Gwendolyn WomackOutlander + Merlin’s sister, and musicYES
Whispers of Ink and Starlight, Garrett CurbowCharacter of ink come to life, escapes her origin storyNO
AudaciousTell Me How You Eat, Amber HusainHow and why we eatNO
Barnes & NobleLake Effect, Cynthia D’Aprix SweeneySexual awakening in ’77 with consequences for teenage daughter when adultNO
BBC Radio 2
** Updated March 15 **
Minbak, Ela LeeSouth Korean family generational storyNO
Belletrist
** Updated March 15 **
The Valley of Vengeful Ghosts, Kim FuMother dies, daughter buys house in valley, flood comes with ghostsNO
Black Men ReadTemple Folk, Aaliyah BilalFictional challenges of faith and action for Black Muslim AmericansNO
Book of the MonthLove Is An Algorithm, Laura Brooke RobsonCan an app manage your relationship?NO
Almost Life, Kiran Milwood HargraveBrokeback Mountain, but with women in ParisMAYBE
Lady Tremaine, Rachel HochhauserCinderella elsewhere on pageNO
This Story Might Save Your Life, Tiffany CrumSurvival podcaster goes missing, cohost is suspectYES
Kin, Tayari JonesMotherless daughters, elsewhere on pageNO
Everyday Reading Book ClubProject Hail Mary, Andy WeirSave the world by finding aliensNO, already read, nowhere near as good as Martian
Good HousekeepingWait for Me, Amy Jo BurnsYoung folk singer debuted and vanished, another longs for storyNO
Good Morning AmericaThe Secret Lives of Murderers’ Wives, Elizabeth ArnottThe wives of three killers try to find a current killerNO
Good Morning America: YAHer Hidden Fire, Cliodhna O’SullivanServant uses her magic to fake her master’s abilitiesYES
Good Reads (Mystery, Crime, Thriller Group)The Girl On The Train, Paula HawkinsGirl sees something while commutingNO, already on list
The Drowning Woman, Robyn HardingRich woman wants help to disappearYES
I Care About BooksTuesdays with Morrie, Mitch AlbomMan visits dying man on TuesdaysNO, already read
Jack Carrn/a
Anthony JeselnikMother Night, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. Nazi on trial in IsraelNO
Jewish Book Council: NFAnti-semitism, an American Tradition, Pamela S. NadellHistory from New Amsterdam to presentNO
Jewish Book Council: FThe Anatomy of Exile, Zeeva BukaiJewish, Israel, Palestinian relations between two families now in USNO
Katie CouricMore Than Enough, Anna QuindlenDNA test upends woman’s life with her book club friendsMAYBE
Late Show
** Updated March 15 **
This Is Not About Us, Allegra GoodmanTwo estranged sistersNO
Library Science n/a but now has February:
I Want To Show You More, Jamie Quatro
Diverse set of SSsNO
Main Street Reads – Fab FantasyThe Dragon Keeper, Robin HobbFirst book in series — dragons have returnedNO, maybe future read
MSR – Thrill in the ‘villeThe Burning Library, Gilly MacmillanTwo secret societies of women battle for old powerYES
MSR – KidsAlice With A Why, Anna JamesModern version of Alice in WonderlandNO
MSR – Kiss & Tell RomanceBlood & Roses, Callie HartLow-level mobster draws the line at trafficking in girls, with spiceYES
MSR – Books & BanterThe Pohaku, Jasmin Iolani HakesHawai’i’s historyNO
Mindy’s Book Studion/a nothing for March but April is out
Mocha Girls Read
** Updated March 15 **
Dirty Laundry, Disha BoseThree mothers, one’s dead, everyone’s a suspectNO
Natalie PortmanThe Beginning Comes After the End, Rebecca SolnitChanges have come to world PoVNO
Native Americann/a
Oprah 2.0n/a but February is now out:
Kin, Tayari Jones
2 motherless Black friends with different livesNO
PBS Book Readersn/a
Poisoned Pen – Cozy Crimes
** Updated March 15 **
My Grandfather, the Master Detective, Masateru KonishSchool teacher consults grandfather in solving crimesYES
PP – Croak and DaggerThe Searcher, Tana FrenchEx-cop looking for quiet in Ireland gets convinced to look for a kid’s missing brother YES
PP – CookbookSun-Kissed Cooking, Brooke WilliamsonVeggiesYES
PP – British Crime
** Updated March 15 **
How To Get Away With Murder, Rebecca PhilipsonScotland Yard chases self-help guruYES
PP – First Mystery
** Updated March 15 **
To The End of Reckoning, Joseph MoldoverTraumatic brain injury father, supportive son with love interest whose father is missingYES
PP – Crime Collectors
** Updated March 15 **
Her Last Breath, Taylor AdamsWoman goes caving with best friend, meets hostile strangerNO
PP – Historical
** Updated March 15 **
Daughter of Egypt, Marie BenedictModern archaeologist, strong female leader in pastNO
PP – Notable new fiction
** Updated March 15 **
Once and Again, Rebecca SerleWomen in family have ability to turn back time to undo somethingYES
PP – Hardboiled/noirSomebody’s Done For, David GoodisBoat capsizes but found by reluctant Samaritan crooks NO
PP – Noir 2
** Updated March 15 **
From the Dust, David SwinsonRetired cop, dead bodyNO
PP – Romance
** Updated March 15 **
Second Chance Duet, Ana HolguinWork and live together with old nemesisNO
PP – Historical
** Updated March 15 **
The Shakespeare Secret, D.J. NixThree women write plays and hire Shakespeare as a beardYES
PP – SciFiThe Eye of the World, Robert JordanStart of giant series, excellent fantasy but way too many charactersNO, already read
Read with JennaWait for Me, Amy Jo BurnsFolk singer, already aboveNO
Reader’s DigestWarning Signs, Tracy SierraWilderness thriller, boy with father clients, and a creatureNO
Reddit /BookClubMini: Stitched To Skin Like Family Is, Nghi VoChinese migrant can hear stories from the clothes she sews, the violence that went beforeNO
Poetry: n/a
Any: The Correspondent, Virginia EvansImportance of writing lettersNO
PubDom: Vanity Fair by William Makepeace ThackerySatire of Victorian England’s social and economic waysNO
World 1: The Mabinogion, Sioned DaviesWelsh medieval history storiesNO
World 2: The Blue Book of Nego, Manon Steffan RosPost-nuclear war in WalesNO
Evergreen: The Secret History, Donna TarttAcademic lifestyle beliefs go wrongNO
Discovery 1: The Birds and Other Stories, Daphne du MaurierSS of chilling experiencesNO
Discovery 2: Dark Tales, Shirley JacksonSS, scaryNO
MOD: The Constant Rabbit, Jasper FfordeFull size rabbits living among usNO
Runner-up: The Alice Network, Kate QuinnEx-spy + pregnant socialite team up to find out what happened to a cousinNO, already on list for future
Bonus: Golden Fool, Robin HobbIntrigue in a king’s courtNO
Bonus: Odyssey, HomerThe tale of a journeyNO
Bonus: Tender Cruelty, Katee RobertThe gods are at war in Olympus and Hera is conflictedNO, future read
Bonus: Brimstone, Callie HartSecond book in Fae and Alchemy seriesNO, future read
Evergreen: The Picture of Dorian Gray, Oscar WildeFaustian bargain for eternal youth and beautyNO
MOD: Remarkably Bright Creatures, Shelby Van PeltAquarium worker, sentient octupus also a detectiveNO
Bonus: The Silver Chair, C.S. LewisRescuing the princeNO, old read
Bonus: La Belle Sauvage, Philip PullmanBoy protecting a small girl, a magnet for power and magicYES
Bonus: Heretics of Dune, Frank HerbertBook 5, Lost Ones are returning homeNO, future read
Bonus: The Eye of The Bedlam Bride, Matt DinnimanBook 6 of Dungeon Crawler Carl seriesNO, maybe future read
ReeseLady Tremaine, Rachel HotchhauserCinderella, if stepmother wasn’t evilNO
Richard and Judy (Spring picks)The Day I Lost You, Ruth ManciniTwo mothers, loss, and one child leftNO
Innocent Guilt, Remi KoneWoman walks into police station with bloody bat, but won’t speak, dead man in parkYES
The Scene of the Crime, Lynda La PlanteCSI: London, new police unitMAYBE
Wolf Hour, Jo NesboSerial killer in 2016, case history in 2022MAYBE
Swept Away, Beth O’LearyOne night stand drifts out to seaNO
The Great Alone, Kristin HannahVietnam vet returns home, can’t cope, takes family to Alaska wildernessNO
Secret Chapter Mystery (Cumberland)The Frozen People, Elly GriffithsTime-travelling detectivesYES
Service 95Bad Feminist, Roxane GayBiography/essays on cultureNO
Stacks Book ClubParadise, Toni MorrisonMass violence eventNO
Sunnie ReadsIn Time With You, Kristin Dwyer“Groundhog Year”, mystical do-over to save boyfriendYES
Sunriver – FictionThere Are Rivers In The Sky, Elif ShafakWater as metaphor for historyNO
Sunriver – MysteryDeath at the Sign of the Rook, Kate AtkinsonRecover a stolen paintingYES
TeaTimeDiorama, Carol BensimonOne Brazilian congressman kills another, daughter wonders years laterNO
Zibby’s Book ClubThis Is Not About Us, Allegra GoodmanTwo estranged sistersNO

FYI: Yellow code: #FFFFE0

Posted in Book Reviews | 2 Replies

2026: O is for Organized and P is for Purge

The PolyBlog
February 19 2026

I feel like this project today is worthy of two letters. Overall, I want to be better organized, and some of that is computer-ish, with better use of OneNote; one part is paper-ish, for financial records and old school and work stuff I want to whittle down; and then there is just decluttering.

I have had a project I have wanted to do for 20 years, and this is the year I hoped to do it. Purge a ton of clothes. That’s barely an exaggeration. I have clothes that represent basically two sizes smaller than I have been for the last six years. The eternal hope, of course, for all of us fat b******s is that we’ll eventually go back down in size, and while we’re transitioning back through those previous sizes, we’ll want to wear some of the old clothes for comfort, nostalgia, and frugality. Except you are rarely the same shape going down as you are up, and the longer you spend up, the less likely you’ll go back down.

I put some old stuff in bins some time ago, maybe even as far back as when we moved to this house from our previous one, and there might even have been ones from a previous move. Perfectly organized, just not weeded, and I couldn’t pitch without sorting.

We had some major plumbing work done on our house today, which necessitated cleaning out the walk-in closet, or at least a significant part of it. So with a huge whack of clothes already piled on the bed, why not purge before returning? I thought I might wait to do it until I retired, as many of the clothes are work/casual dress pants and dress shirts that I used to wear every day for work. Now that I’m primarily remote and nearing retirement, I’m mostly doing polos for in-person and whatever I feel like it from home (a few too many Ts probably). Anyway, I digress.

The point is that I have extra clothes from three “eras” and it was time to start the purge. I figured I would do an hour tonight, but at the hour, I was basically done Phase I (recent work clothes) really well. And Andrea was willing to stick around and help for phase II (casual pants, undershirts, socks, etc.) and phase III (old bins that were almost 100% dead on arrival).

We ended up spending about two hours in total. Andrea was purging too, although she has done more regular purges and even some recently, so hers wasn’t as aggressive, but me?

We now have ten bags of stuff to get rid of…two are recycling, one is pillows, and the rest are for donation — with some curtains and beach towels in one with some of Andrea’s stuff, and then another seven bags of my clothes.

SEVEN garbage bags of clothes. Including two empty bins that were under beds, and another bin just randomly in my bedroom. I found some pants that still had TAGS on them that I had outgrown before I wore them. I kept a few things for future smaller me, things are heading in the right direction finally, but was relatively ruthless.

I’ve been feeling like I should do this for almost 20 years and probably wanting to do it for at least ten. Why tonight? Why this year? Why this time? I could point to the meds I’m taking, but maybe it’s more the idea of just wanting to declutter some more before I retire. I’m not entirely sure.

I just know I wanted to get it done. And somehow it happened! Andrea even did some weeding of my tie collection — I had 23, she brought it down to 7. Which doesn’t include about 30 that I got rid of about 20 years ago or another 5 or 6 about 15 years ago. I almost never wear ties, not sure I even need 7, but some were too sentimental favourites to let go yet. And yes, of course, I have the red tie still. Silly question.

Now, if I can just do the same de-hoarding of books.

Posted in Goals | Leave a reply

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