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Frog writing book review entries into a journal

Book clubs 2026-06: A birthday buffet too rich to finish

The PolyBlog
June 10 2026

Ah, the fresh scent of June and my birthday month. There are lots of interesting books for me to consider reading on my birthday. First, though, there are some gifts from last month that weren’t posted in time for my roll-up, even though I said no to all of them!

Book ClubTitle & AuthorGenreDescriptionMe
BBC Radio 2Dissection of a Murder, Jo MurrayThrillerYoung barrister defends accused killer against prosecutor husbandNO
John of John, Douglas StuartLiterary FictionArt-school dropout returns to Hebridean croft, faces devout fatherNO
Oprah 2.0John of John, Douglas StuartLiterary FictionArt-school dropout returns to Hebridean croft, faces devout fatherNO

I’ve also been wondering about having more of a Sci-Fi input from SOMEWHERE, so I was pleasantly surprised to find out the video star Elle Cordova (The Grammarian) has her own sci-fi book club. I added all 18 of her choices to my tracker, although I didn’t say yes to QUITE all of them (8 yes although I’ve already read 2 of them + 2 maybe).

Book ClubTitle & AuthorGenrePickDescriptionMe
Elle CordovaContact, Carl SaganScience FictionNovember 2025Radio astronomer detects alien intelligence and fights to build a machine to meet them.YES
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, Philip K. DickScience FictionJune 2025Bounty hunter pursues rogue androids in post-apocalyptic Earth, basis for Blade RunnerYES
Exhalation, Ted ChiangShort StoriesApril 2026Nine science fiction stories probing free will, memory, time, and consciousness.NO
Hyperion, Dan SimmonsScience FictionJune 2026Seven pilgrims travel to face the mysterious Shrike on a doomed world called Hyperion.NO
I, Robot, Isaac AsimovShort StoriesMarch 2025Nine stories exploring robot ethics through psychologist Susan Calvin’s careerYES
If the Dead Belong Here, Carson FaustLiterary FictionJanuary 2025Indigenous girl goes missing; sister unravels family trauma, ghosts, and colonial legacyMAYBE
Klara and the Sun, Kazuo IshiguroScience FictionAugust 2025Solar-powered android watches humans from a store, yearns to be chosenYES
Neuromancer, William GibsonScience FictionMarch 2026Burned-out hacker recruited for a last-chance cyberspace heist by a rogue AI.YES
Parable of the Sower, Octavia E. ButlerScience FictionMay 2025Young Black woman survives societal collapse, founds new religion EarthseedNO
Project Hail Mary, Andy WeirScience FictionFebruary 2026Save the world by finding aliensYES
Sea of Tranquility, Emily St. John MandelScience FictionMay 2026Time-travel detective uncovers a shared anomaly linking lives across five centuries.YES
Service Model, Adrian TchaikovskyScience FictionFebruary 2025Robot valet accidentally kills his master, wanders post-apocalyptic world seeking purposeNO
Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut Jr.Science FictionDecember 2025POW witness to Dresden firebombing comes “unstuck in time”NO
Solaris, Stanislaw LemScience FictionOctober 2025Scientists studying an ocean-planet find it projecting their repressed memories as living people.NO
The Fifth Season, N.K. JemisinScience FictionSeptember 2025In a world of world-ending seasons, a woman hunts for her kidnapped daughter across a dying land.NO
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas AdamsScience FictionJuly 2025Earthman hitchhikes across the galaxy after Earth is demolishedYES
The Left Hand of Darkness, Ursula K. Le GuinScience FictionApril 2025Human envoy navigates gender-fluid alien society on ice world to negotiate allianceNO
The Power, Naomi AldermanDystopianJanuary 2026Women develop the ability to electrocute at will; global power structures collapse and invert.MAYBE

For the remaining book clubs, I’ve generated 107 titles. Combined with the above, that gives another 125 in total for the database, with 27 yes, 22 maybe, and 76 no. Still way too many, and it is time to start weeding clubs too. Not that such moves will help — I’m mostly just dumping ones that don’t generate any YES picks anyway. And I haven’t even posted about the larger best-seller lists I included this month to see what kind of data they would give me. I’ll cover all of that in other posts.

Of the too-many yes votes, I am most looking forward to:

  • aliens (Contact, from Elle Cordova’s Sci-Fi list, the Carl Sagan book on which the movie with Jodie Foster was made);
  • a fake-dating romance (called Dolly all the Time by Annabel Monaghan and, no, I don’t know why about eight different fake dating romances showed up on my yes or maybe list after I watched the Off-Campus series);
  • portals into books (the Astral Library by Kate Quinn);
  • a podcaster suspected of murdering their cohost (This Story Might Save Your Life, Tiffany Crum);
  • an involuntary time-traveller jumping forward in time (like Kes from Voyager except she jumped backward, this one is the book, The Traveler by Joseph Eckert); and,
  • a Greek mythology boarding academy, and I don’t care if it is for middle grade (The Aftermyth, Tracy Wolff).

Of my maybe list, I would consider upgrading these three to YES if there is time:

  • PI investigating father’s hidden life (The Safe Room, Lisa Unger);
  • Dead husband left confession of youthful crime (What Remains of You, Kimberly Hensle Lowrance); or,
  • A detective helping a client find a missed connection on a plane (The Missed Connection, Tia Williams).

Are there any books you’re looking forward to this month? If you are, DON’T TELL ME! I have too many already πŸ™‚

Until the next book…

PolyWogg signature in green with a dark blue quill at the end.
Book ClubTitle & AuthorGenreDescriptionMe
Amazon First ReadsA Single Captive Spark, Emberly AshFantasyHuman servant and changeling enemy forced together; magic, betrayal, dark romance.NO
A Voice in the Dark, Barbara NicklessThrillerFBI profilers hunt an online radicalization predator linked to two family massacres.NO
Happier Here With You, Amy Gail HansenContemporary FictionWidow discovers WWII family history at Wisconsin farm; food and second chances.NO
The Date, T.H. MurdockThrillerAcquitted actor joins friends’ road trip; murder follows, echoing his original charge.MAYBE
The Delivery, Gregg HurwitzThrillerAI humanoid helper delivered to struggling family turns menacing and dangerous.NO
The Museum of Second Chances, Jo LeeversContemporary FictionCornwall beachcomber runs quirky museum; lost objects unlock community secrets and her origins.MAYBE
The Safe Room, Lisa UngerThrillerPI investigates her dying father’s hidden life β€” surveillance room, weapons, mob cashMAYBE
The Sky Beneath Her, Mary Ellen TaylorContemporary FictionReturns to Outer Banks; WWII shipwreck secrets tied to her drowned mother.NO
The Tomorrow Tree, Carolyn BrownRomanceWoman returns to Texas hometown; second-chance romance beneath a childhood oak tree.NO
What Remains of You, Kimberly Hensle LowranceThrillerWidow opens time capsule; dead husband’s youthful crime confession upends her grief.MAYBE
AudaciousJohn of John, Douglas StuartLiterary FictionArt-school dropout returns to Hebridean croft, faces devout fatherNO
Barnes & NobleValley of the Moms, Hannah SelingerThrillerPTO mom snaps at queen bee, turns up dead; husband becomes suspectNO
BelletristHunger and Thirst, Claire FullerHorrorTeenage outcast commits violent act to belong; decades later her past resurfacesNO
Black Men ReadRazorblade Tears, S.A. CosbyThrillerTwo ex-con fathers β€” one Black, one white β€” avenge their murdered married sonsNO
Book of the MonthMain Characters, Bobby PalmerRomanceLondon couple’s love story told entirely through friends, flatmates, exes, and strangersNO
Nymph, Sofia MontroneLiterary FictionItalian girl working at grandmother’s mountain hotel falls for an American womanNO
Summer’s Never Over, Darby BozemanThrillerCamp heiress returns to confront a suspicious death and two ex-boyfriendsNO
The Catcher in the Rye, J.D. SalingerLiterary FictionDisaffected teenager Holden Caulfield wanders New York after expulsion, railing against phoniesYES
The Children, Melissa AlbertFantasyChildren written into mother’s fantasy series confront its dark realityNO
The Lowe Job, Grace AlexanderContemporary FictionLowe family parlays one woman’s political affair into fame, fortune, and chaosNO
The Missed Connection, Tia WilliamsRomanceCasting agent enlists a detective to find her mysterious seatmate from ParisMAYBE
The Shrouded Queen, Ashley TropeaFantasySlave and princess swap fates during an attack in an ancient-Egypt-inspired worldMAYBE
Worry Doll, Laura McPhee-BrowneLiterary FictionMelbourne train encounter ignites an obsessive, mismatched sapphic affairNO
Everyday ReadingSwim Team, Johnnie ChristmasMiddle GradeBree conquers fear of water, joins school swim team, uncovers pool-segregation historyNO
Good HousekeepingWhistler, Ann PatchettLiterary FictionWoman reunites with ex-stepfather after decades; both haunted by shared long-buried memoryNO
Good Morning America – AdultDolly All the Time, Annabel MonaghanRomanceSingle mom fake-dates wealthy scion in seaside Rhode Island; feelings become realYES
GoodReads MysteryIt’s Not Her, Mary KubicaThrillerMurder in a cabin, missing kidYES
We Used to Live Here, Marcus KliewerHorrorHouse-flippers let in a stranger claiming the home; his family won’t leaveNO
Jack CarrThe Lost Empire of Emanuel Nobel, Douglas BruntNarrative NonfictionAlfred Nobel’s nephew built Russia’s petroleum empire; the Revolution erased itNO
JeselnikA Children’s Bible, Lydia MilletLiterary FictionTwelve contemptuous children flee their drunken vacationing parents into apocalyptic climate chaosNO
Jewish Book Council – FictionLike Wafers in Honey, Leah EskinHistorical FictionItalian-Jewish family flees 1943 Pitigliano; Holocaust survival, recipes across timelinesMAYBE
Jewish Book Council – NonfictionMilena and Margarete, Gwen StraussNarrative NonfictionForbidden love between two women in RavensbrΓΌck concentration campNO
Main Street Reads – BanterThe Mountains We Call Home, Kim Michele RichardsonHistorical FictionPackhorse Librarian Cussy Lovett unjustly imprisoned, finds new calling in Kentucky prisonMAYBE
Main Street Reads – FantasyThe Astral Library, Kate QuinnFantasyLibrary with portals into beloved novelsYES
Main Street Reads – KidsHarper Sharp: Kid Detective, Jarrett WilliamsMiddle GradeFifth-grade detective Harper unravels plot threatening his school’s Inventors’ FairNO
Main Street Reads – RomanceSeek the Traitor’s Son, Veronica RothDystopianEnemy soldiers Elegy and Rava share prophecy of one’s victoryNO
Main Street Reads – ThrillerThis Story Might Save Your Life, Tiffany CrumThrillerSurvival podcaster goes missing, cohost is suspect.YES
Mindy’s Book StudioTwo Lives with You, Lauren HoContemporary FictionA chance for a do-over to see life without partnerMAYBE
Mocha Girls ReadThese Ghosts Are Family, Maisy CardHistorical FictionA man’s stolen identity ripples through a Jamaican family across three centuriesNO
Poisoned Pen – BritishI, Spy, L.M. KempThrillerEx-spy mother is dragged back into espionage with her four-year-old in towMAYBE
Poisoned Pen – CozyMurder Most Delicious, Danielle Postel-VinayMysteryAmerican sommelier’s Paris reboot ends when her celebrity chef boss is poisonedNO
Poisoned Pen – CrimeStorm Warning, James ByrneThrillerDez Limerick must crack a locked-down Arctic facility to rescue a friendNO
Poisoned Pen – HistoricalA Perfect Hand, Ayelet WaldmanHistorical FictionScheming lady’s maid falls for the valet next door in 1880s EnglandNO
Butterfly Games, Kelly ScarboroughHistorical FictionFourteen-year-old Swedish countess falls for the crown prince amid palace intrigueNO
Poisoned Pen – MysteryDaughters of the Sun and Moon, Lisa SeeHistorical FictionThree Chinese women survive anti-Chinese violence in post-Civil War Los AngelesNO
My Name Was Gerry Sass, Tiffany HanssenThrillerDead Iowa hitman narrates from purgatory while his daughter hunts his killersMAYBE
The Traveler, Joseph EckertScience FictionMan begins involuntarily leaping forward in time in ever-doubling intervalsYES
Poisoned Pen – RomanceThe Summer Share, Jenn McKinlayRomanceTwo strangers discover they’ve co-inherited the same Outer Banks beach houseMAYBE
PolyWoggCity of Intellect, Nicholas B. DirksNarrative NonfictionBerkeley’s ex-chancellor recounts crises, argues for reforming the universityNO
Empire of AI, Karen HaoNonfictionInvestigative exposΓ© of OpenAI’s rise and AI’s hidden costsNO
Flesh, David SzalayLiterary FictionDetached Hungarian IstvΓ‘n’s life from housing estate to London eliteNO
Global Higher Education in Times of Upheaval, Simon MarginsonNonfictionScholar analyzes global higher education amid geopolitics and decolonizationNO
Higher Education in China, Gerard A. PostiglioneNonfictionSurveys China’s vast state-directed higher education system and 2035 ambitionsNO
Higher Education, State and Society, Lili YangNonfictionCompares Chinese and Anglo-American higher-education traditions and the public goodNO
Oblivious, Elaine DewarNarrative NonfictionInvestigates Canada’s segregated Indian hospitals and settler obliviousnessNO
Peak Higher Ed, Bryan AlexanderNonfictionFuturist forecasts decline and possible futures for US higher educationMAYBE
Perfection, Vincenzo LatronicoLiterary FictionMillennial expat couple chase a perfect Berlin life, find ennuiNO
Success Factors of Innovative Universities, Dara MelnykNonfictionDoctoral study of success factors at three innovative universitiesNO
The Pivot, Robert J. BliwiseNarrative NonfictionJournalist traces Duke University’s pandemic response through campus-wide interviewsNO
The Synthetic University, James L. ShulmanNonfictionArgues shared cross-institutional services can curb higher education’s rising costsYES
PolyWogg – To be readA Far-Flung Life, M.L. StedmanHistorical Fiction1958 outback Australia: a truck accident shatters a sheep-station family across generations.NO
A Montreal Cook, Lesley ChestermanCookbookAward-winning Montreal chef shares 90+ recipes celebrating the city’s food culture.YES
All’s Well, Mona AwadHorrorChronic-pain theater professor staging Shakespeare makes a Faustian bargain with strange men.YES
Apple, David PogueNonfictionIllustrated 50-year history of Apple: origins, near-death, Jobs’s return, and Tim Cook’s empire.YES
Cut to Black, Rod Black; Jim LangNonfictionCanadian sportscaster Rod Black’s 40-year memoir: Blue Jays, figure skating, and 9/11 live.NO
Fever Dream, Elsie SilverRomanceBull rider joins a reality dating show to save his ranch; falls for the location consultant.NO
Girls Just Wanna Have Sun, Rachel LaceyRomanceWoman at lakefront vacation risks rekindling a sapphic romance with the one that got away.YES
I’m Thinking of Ending Things, Iain ReidThrillerWoman on road trip to meet boyfriend’s parents secretly plans to break up with him.NO
Keeper of Lost Children, Sadeqa JohnsonHistorical FictionPost-WWII Germany: three interconnected lives tied to real Brown Baby PlanNO
Lights Out, Jenni FletcherYoung-AdultBroke university student agrees to fake-date an F1 bad boy to fix his reputation.MAYBE
Oh My Affogato!, Donna Ghorbanpoor; Daphne AngYoung-AdultTeen plans an Italy trip to win back her situationship; friendship secrets complicate everything.NO
One Hot Summer Wedding, Falon BallardRomanceWoman attends estranged friend’s Costa Rica wedding; forced proximity with the bride’s brother.YES
Recursion, Blake CrouchScience FictionDetective and neuroscientist race to stop a memory-distorting epidemic unraveling reality.YES
S’more of You, Tessa BaileyRomanceCamp counselors nurse an eight-year mutual crush through pranks and rivalry.YES
Save a Horse, Keep the Cowboy, Jessica PetersonRomanceCountry music star returns home; faces the cowboy who chose his ranch over her.YES
Summer Staycation, Sarah Grunder RuizRomanceNeurodivergent woman in Florida finds grounding with a travel blogger over one weekend.YES
Summer Thaw, Rebecca JenshakRomanceWoman thaws toward a charming hockey player over one summer encounter.YES
The Aftermyth, Tracy WolffMiddle GradeGirl sorted into the wrong house at a Greek mythology boarding academy; fate has other plans.YES
The Caretaker, Marcus KliewerHorrorBroke woman accepts a Craigslist caretaking job at a strange house; rites must be followed.NO
The Chambermaid’s Key, Genevieve GrahamHistorical Mystery1929 Toronto hotel chambermaid uncovers a gangster’s murder on the eve of the Crash.NO
The Hike, Drew MagaryFantasyBusinessman stranded in a surreal, deadly wilderness hunts the mysterious “Producer” to escape.MAYBE
The Last House on Needless Street, Catriona WardHorrorBoarded-up house, unreliable narrators β€” man, girl, and cat β€” hide a stolen child’s truth.NO
The Rainshadow Orphans, Naomi IshiguroFantasyMisfit outcasts in a corrupt city unite around a stolen dragon pearl to defy an emperor.NO
The Underwearwolf, Gideon StererMiddle GradeBoy ignores the warning on magic underwear, transforms into a werewolf under the full moon.NO
Unsettling Salad!, Aaron ReynoldsMiddle GradeTwo junk-food-loving critters forced to eat a salad; the broccoli bites back.NO
Villain, Natalie Zina WalschotsScience FictionThe Auditor escalates her campaign to dismantle the superhero industry from within.MAYBE
Read with JennaThe Children, Melissa AlbertFantasyChildren written into mother’s fantasy series confront its dark realityNO
Reader’s DigestGood Joy, Bad Joy, Mikki BrammerContemporary FictionEighty-something Joy breaks rules with terminally-ill best friend HazelNO
Reddit – DiscoveryGilead, Marilynne RobinsonLiterary FictionDying preacher writes his son about faith, grace, and an old woundYES
Reddit – EvergreenThe Brothers Karamazov, Fyodor DostoevskyLiterary FictionThree brothers clash over murder, money, and God in 19th-century RussiaMAYBE
RedditGeorge Eliot: The Last Victorian, Kathryn HughesBiographyHow George Eliot’s scandalous private life shaped Victorian England’s greatest female novelistNO
Little Fires Everywhere, Celeste NgContemporary FictionSecrets collide in planned suburban Shaker Heights when a free-spirited artist arrivesNO
No Name, Wilkie CollinsLiterary FictionIllegitimate sisters stripped of their inheritance; Magdalen schemes obsessively to reclaim itMAYBE
The Devils, Joe AbercrombieFantasyFriar conscripts monsters and mercenaries to stop a warlord threatening the empireMAYBE
The Great Believers, Rebecca MakkaiHistorical FictionAIDS devastates 1980s Chicago; a survivor searches Paris for her estranged daughterNO
The Mill on the Floss, George EliotLiterary FictionBrilliant Maggie Tulliver chafes against the narrow bounds of Victorian provincial lifeNO
Reddit – WorldI’m Not Going Anywhere, Rumena BuzarovskaShort StoriesMacedonian women flee poverty abroad, finding new forms of desolationNO
ReeseA Pair of Aces, Marie Benedict; Victoria Christopher MurrayHistorical FictionBlack prosecutor and Manhattan madam unite to bring down Lucky LucianoNO
Service 95Having Spent Life Seeking, Kae TempestLiterary FictionEx-prisoner Rothko returns to hometown, reckoning with their pastNO
StacksThe Alchemist, Paulo CoelhoLiterary FictionAndalusian shepherd crosses the Sahara chasing prophetic dream of buried treasureNO
Sunriver – FictionInland, Tea ObrehtHistorical FictionFrontierswoman and ghost-haunted outlaw converge in drought-ridden 1893 ArizonaNO
Sunriver – MysteryThe Fallen Man, Tony HillermanMysteryLeaphorn and Chee link decade-old Ship Rock skeleton to fresh sniper killingMAYBE
TeaTimeMare, Emily Haworth-BoothLiterary FictionChildfree woman facing early menopause finds unexpected obsession caring for another’s horseNO
Zibby’sThe Burning Side, Sarah DamoffContemporary FictionFamily saga from alternating views after devastating house fireNO

Posted in Lilypad-Library | Leave a reply
A red-eyed tree frog wearing a panda apron is stirring food in the Lilypad Kitchen.

Leveling up – Three kitchens, one frog

The PolyBlog
May 28 2026

Let me start with a confession. I only have 12 recipes on the website. Not much of a start, right? But this is part of my anal-retentive side. I like to curate recipes, find some good ones, and then put them on my blog. Except that I have hated the design of my recipes for some time. They didn’t look very professional, kind of just thrown on there in loose format and layout, and they weren’t even mobile-friendly. They were mostly just “hey, here’s some ingredients and cooking steps”, text dump. I didn’t want to add too many more until I fixed the format.

But I’m retiring soon, and I want to curate a bunch of new recipes. Actually, since starting my happy pills back in January, I’ve been more involved in the food planning and prep for our family, and hopefully that will increase even more when I retire. So, yeah, it’s a growth area of my website. And I need to expand the content, manage and organize the recipes better (including making them more digitally useful), and redesign the look. I’ll be creating three new sub-brands out of what is now a giant pile of ingredients.

Expanding the content

Of the twelve recipes on the site at the moment, there’s one appetizer, one soup, seven main dishes, and three desserts. I definitely want to expand all of the “cooking” recipes, particularly for soups and main dishes, although I suspect I’ll also start to throw in more snack-y foods (french flies, chocolate turtles, etc.). But I see the collection as a bit different from my other two areas. I’m going to call this one the Lilypad Kitchen.

My normal process for new recipes is that we try it once for dinner, to both try it out and to see if we really like it. I only choose recipes that have a high likelihood of success for all three of us (Jacob doesn’t like high spice; Andrea isn’t a big fan of mushrooms; I don’t like a ton of ingredients that simply mush together into something flat or bland), so the real test isn’t simply if we like it, but if we like it well enough to add to the rotation or simply look for something else next time.

I haven’t fully landed on the branding. Recipes, roasts, and ribbits or spices, sauces, and scales…probably the first one. Scales don’t sound tasty if you confuse them with fish scales rather than weighing scales for ingredients.

My second area is baking. Dough, dusting, and dewdrops or pastry, piping, and petals? Probably the first again, although this one is that I’m likely to do more bread than pastries. Although I’m also going to throw all desserts into this category. The category name, of course, will be the Lilypad Bakery. I have a LOT of plans for bread-making in my retirement, although I’m heavily invested in the idea of small batches, too. Unless Andrea can take some of my creations to work with her to share the width, errr, I mean share the wealth.

I blame the last area on my old boss, Gord. When he retired a few years ago, he started posting on Facebook about Friday afternoon drinks. Different mixes each week, concoctions to try. I’m not much of a drinker, but there are lots of mocktails out there. Think “real frog, faux drinks”. So I’m going to try a bunch of mocktails too. A lot will be fruit punch by another name, alas, but there are some decent non-alcoholic ingredients out there designed to mimic the taste of vodka, gin, whisky, etc. But even without those, there’s a drink at one of our local pubs, called a Blue Lagoon — blue raspberry, lemonade and club soda. Sounds simple, but the flavour output seems almost exponential to the ingredients.

Improving recipe management

As I said, I had created a layout for my recipes some time ago, and it was “okay”, but it didn’t have all the bells and whistles that other recipe bloggers have for adjustable sizing, better layouts, mobile options for viewing, etc. The hidden reality behind my reticence to improve things the “easy” way is that recipes are like reviews to me. Very personal, highly structured, and they come out onto the page the way they are structured in my brain. As such, for books, movies, TV, etc., I can’t use “apps” or “plugins” to format everything. They use stars; I want frogs. They often want specific fields; I want my own. They cost money; mine cost brain cells and mental discomfort. Pain, suffering, years of torture, potential therapy, repetitive rebuilds, new formats, and harassing my family for views on the layout. It’s a whole process-y thing.

Recipes, on the other hand, are relatively straightforward. While books and movies might generate unique fields for any one critic’s approach, recipes all have the same fields…title, rating, picture, times, categories, ingredients, equipment, what type of bait to use to catch the fish (oh, wait, no that’s a PolyWogg-only field, sorry), and the steps to prepare everything.

The only real challenge is that if you use a plugin from “out in the wild” for WordPress, the vast majority of the ones for recipes are tied to large commercial sites that host the recipes on the site and then let you embed them on your website. I don’t want to EMBED them on my website, I want to HOST them on my website. That’s WHY I have a website, so I don’t have to post it all elsewhere.

Which makes things way easier this time around. There’s really only one big recipe plugin for WordPress that stores everything in WordPress itself. Hello WP Recipe Maker. It adds more overhead than I would like (you enter the recipes into a separate area and then choose different formats for display in your posts), but it’s pretty powerful. With a few extra upgrades you can get if you subscribe for a year. For my website, I get a better recipe layout that I like (you can build your own, but why bother if the default options work?) and was able to tweak slightly, better printing control, and scalable recipe options (if you change the number of servings, all the ingredients automatically update in both the ingredient list AND in the instructions). I couldn’t do any of those on my own, or at least not without a lot more work than I have time for right now. I tweaked the layout to adjust the size and position of the food picture and disabled about 30 monetization options I’ll never use. along with numerous customizations to build a vibrant food community. I’m a big frog in a small kitchen kind of guy, I don’t need all the bells and only a few of the whistles.

If you want to test the first recipe out, try here: https://www.thepolyblog.ca/maple-pork-rec00002/. Looks good on screen, good fonts and layout, with a scalable sizing for serving size, and you can click and format nice printing too. A hundred-fold improvement on my previous layouts, so I’ll start upgrading my other 11 recipes in the coming days. Let me know what you think of the new layout, particularly how it might look on your phone or tablet.

Upgrading my images

Given my wife’s and my link to pandas (Paul and Andrea, PandA, Panda themed-wedding, etc.), I used to use the following panda image for my recipes and food-related posts.

I like the panda, it’s really cute, and when Andrea and I first took some cooking classes together for Asian food, pandas seemed cemented for avatars. But I’m a PolyWogg, through and through. So I want some frogs for my recipe images too (as cooks, not ingredients!!!!).

My first new image for the Lilypad Kitchen (aka the cooking recipes), I have a main one of a frog cooking while wearing a panda apron.

A red-eyed tree frog wearing a panda apron is stirring food in the Lilypad Kitchen.

But it was a hard choice of that one over a kissing-cousin:

A red-eyed tree frog in a panda apron is stirring a red stew in the Lilypad Kitchen.

Initially, I was thinking I would just have one of those for all recipes. But I do have baking recipes that don’t really fit that vibe, hence the creation of the Lilypad Bakery and another image:

A red-eyed tree frog rolling out dough in the LilyPad Kitchen wearing an apron with a panda image on it.

And, as I mentioned above, there is a need for a Tadpole & Tonic (TnT) image too for the mocktails:

A red-eyed tree frog is pouring tonic water in a copper mug on a dock next to the pond.

I like them square, I like them round. I like all my recipe-making frogs.

And now my recipe inbox is open. If you have a cooking, baking, or mocktail recipe, send it my way! I’m hoping to add at least one a week for the first year of retirement.

Until the next pot simmers, the next sun rises, and the next shared T&T…

PolyWogg signature in green with a dark blue quill at the end.

Posted in Lilypad Recipes | Tagged recipes | Leave a reply

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. πŸ™‚

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…🐸🐸🐸βšͺβšͺ 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. πŸ™‚

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. πŸ™‚

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

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