Author Archives: sara

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About sara

i live in michigan with my teenage daughter, my partner, and our three cats. i am a paralegal, legal manager and corporate governance specialist, and when i'm not reading contracts or maintaining the dusty archives of our arcane corporate history like some weirdly specific librarian, i enjoy knitting, books, running slowly, making candles, and bird-watching. i started blogging way back when I was an expat living in australia and in recent years have tried to be more diligent about keeping this space up to date and as a creative outlet for the things in my life that inspire me and balance my 9-5.

the big 2025 reads post!

The stats: I read 82 books / 27,420 pages. Items of note: I switched over to StoryGraph and after a little while of scratching around trying to get comfortable, I like it much better than what I used previously. I used Libby extensively, both for audio and e-books from my library.

These things helped make 2025 a great reading year for me, especially in the genres of horror, thriller, mystery, and suspense. I like things grim and foreboding, I like reading about the darker side: murder, kidnapping, suspense, police procedurals, vampires, ghosts, face-eating zombies and the unknown. But I also appreciate it when writers find new ways to approach these fairly well-worn topics and this year was a treasure trove. This year – Gothic horror of all types. Chainsaws! Hooks for hands, vampires next door in Southern subdivisions and taking vengeance for the historic genocide of their people. Cursed film reels and a missing friend returned after a two year absence and weirdly not the same. Final girls! A haunted house! A murder in Oxford! Oh, and Fort Sumter. (Hmm.)

I don’t tend to rate or review books except for the ones I find to be the most outstanding. This year, my highest rated book was Silver Nitrate, by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. (I think she was also one of my top authors in 2024, for Mexican Gothic.) I read two of her other books in 2025 – The Bewitching and The Seventh Veil of Salome, and they were both very good as well. The Bewitching also makes my short list of outstanding reads for the year, although farther down on the list.

Slightly lower on the rung: The Buffalo Hunter Hunter, by Stephen Graham Jones. I loved this book despite being a little let down by the ending. This book is not for everyone – it is graphic and very dark, but I could not put it down and ended up falling down a Stephen Graham Jones rabbit hole and reading his Indian Lake trilogy as well. The first novel in that trilogy, My Heart is a Chainsaw, also was a standout for me, possessing an unforgettable main character with an enthralling backstory and intermingling stream of conscious thesis on the horror film genre. (I learned a lot about horror movies and ended up watching a few that were mentioned here.)

Also in this ranking group was a late-year read, Guilty by Definition by Susie Dent. This was pure mystery, with main characters who work as lexicographers. I loved the way Dent worked in literary puzzles and clues as well as old words and language – a very novel and cerebral approach to an English mystery.

Other honorable mentions in the horror genre came from Grady Hendrix’s The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires. Again, not for everyone due to very dark and graphic content and trigger warnings galore, but again, for me – I couldn’t put it down. Rachel Harrison contributed two titles to my list this year, both in the horror / suspense genre, with The Return and Play Nice (rated less highly than The Return but still a standout read). Content warning(s) – none of these are for the faint of heart.

And for something completely different, favorite nonfiction: The Demon of Unrest by Erik Larson, which covered the onset of the Civil War.

I hope you read some fantastic books in 2025 and are looking forward to more in 2026.

Past Big Reads posts: 2024, 2023.

recent pins + the last one of 2025

I’m off work now until January 2 and looking forward to time with my family and by myself, doing things that bring me joy and that I don’t usually have a lot of time for during the normal work weeks. I made a big pot of homemade vegetable soup over the weekend, dried some orange slices for a garland, finished a knitting project last week and am close to finishing another, finished a book… we have a jigsaw puzzle locked in, three gingerbread house kits, and I have crafting projects and books to last me until June if my free time allowed. 2025 has been a ride and I’m ready to lock the door and light the candles and shut the world out until I have to rejoin in 2026. With that said, here are a few recent pins to round out the year. Thank you for joining me in this humble space this year and God willing we will see each other on the other side.

This is my plan for my dried orange slices. I doubt it will look this neat.

I like this idea too.

I love this look. I have always wanted to be the kind of woman who could wear a little scarf around her neck like this and look natural but I’ve never been successful. This makes me want to try.

I have a pair of wingtips almost exactly like these but the grosgrain bows here are just *chefs kiss*.

My hairstylist gave me a bixie in October and it almost drove me insane. We had to have a big discussion before my cut last week because…

…I really want to get back to a sort of messy French bob.

And with that –

finished object – baby bear bonnet

One of my colleagues and his wife are expecting their second child in early January and while I don’t usually feel confident enough to gift knit for many people, this was an exception. He is a young expat on assignment from our parent company, I really enjoy working with him, and I have been wanting to make this pattern for awhile so all the forces converged.

Pattern: Baby Bear Bonnet by Pernille Larsen for Knitting for Olive

Yarn: Knitting for Olive Merino / Knitting for Olive Soft Silk Mohair held together (both in Pearl Gray)

This was one of the most fun knits I’ve ever done. It was challenging and I had to rip back and restart three times and find tutorials for the German short rows which shape the back and the neck as well as for the i-cord bindoff on the neck. However, those challenges made it all the more enjoyable and it was a true pleasure to see it come together. It’s definitely not a perfect knit but I’m not embarrassed to gift it (the pattern is so well drafted and truly adorable). I would definitely knit this again, even just to have one in my stash to gift for a future as yet unidentified arrival.

Raveled.

on gifts and giving

At a holiday party last week, I fell into idle chitchat with a fellow GenX-age partygoer and we spun through the usual conversation topics for two people who don’t know each other and won’t remember each other at next year’s party and who both know it and are fine with it and eventually got to the “are you ready for Christmas” line. And it was during this conversation that I had an epiphany.

I’ve never been what I’d consider to be a good gift giver but I’m old enough to remember the days of shopping when if you wanted something, you had to go out and scour stores for it. This was bad for people like me, because it took time, money and planning. In my twenties and thirties I was a very poor planner with a lot of credit card debt and later, as a working mom, I boiled with resentment and guilt that I simply didn’t have TIME to spend hours shopping around the holidays. I wanted to tell everyone that I’d make a deal with them – if they wouldn’t get me anything, I wouldn’t get them anything either and our gift to each other would be a slightly less stressful holiday experience. And as solitary as I felt about that, of course I wasn’t alone. I vividly remember being at home with my baby one Christmas Eve and seeing a news helicopter circling the exit for our nearby mall, which was backed up for at least a mile down the highway with an hour or so to go before closing time. And I remember the story (perhaps apocryphal) of a hapless suitor who waited until the absolute last second of Christmas Eve and had to gift his no doubt nonplussed sweetheart a selection of Walgreens gifts including one of those fabric roses in the plastic tube.

If I wanted something specific for somebody, and waited for the last couple of weeks before a holiday or birthday, which I always did because it rarely if ever occurred to me to buy gifts throughout the year and stockpile them, the odds were that I’d never find it. Cue aimless wandering around some packed and hysterical shopping mall with increasing panic until I ended up convincing myself that some lame yet expensive tchotchke was exactly okay and then buying two because I felt guilty that I knew the gift was crap.

Gift receiving can also be fraught. In my youthful experience it was rarely possible to exchange gifts that had equal weight of meaning although perhaps surprisingly, I wasn’t always been on the weak side of that equation. During my senior year in college, I was seeing a young man that I was pretty smitten with and went to (at the time, I felt) lengths to special order him a hard to find jazz CD that we’d heard playing when we browsed our campus bookstore together. I was thrilled to give this to him and one afternoon I indicated in a telephone conversation that we should exchange gifts that evening, before we each left campus for Christmas. He paused momentarily and then agreed. He came over to our apartment with a paper sack and I could see when he opened his CD (wrapped and with a card that I’d agonized over writing) that while he was happy with the gift, he was also not at all happy because it was as evident to him then as a tornado ripping through the apartment that my feelings for him were different than his for me. My paper sack held one of the “Magic Eye” books that were popular in the mid-90’s, where you look at a field of static and eventually a horse or something reveals itself. My roommate happened to walk in as I was removing the book from its distinctly non-festive sack and she (possessed of no social filter) yelped with laughter and said, “Oh my God, what is that? Sara, you HATE those!” (and to the young man) “She constantly says she can’t ever see the thing and they’re like, totally annoying!” Despite my shooting her an iron stare while she continued to peal with merry laughter on her way through the apartment, and trying to give him reassurance that his gift was in fact perfect because now I could PRACTICE my Magic Eye skills, the damage was done. Whether because of that or for other likely connected reasons, he broke up with me when we returned to campus after the New Year.

Online shopping has helped me enormously although I hadn’t stopped to think about it until that epiphany of a party conversation. The epiphany being that although I still feel like a bad gift giver, it’s been many years since I operated with the active dread of gifting and that’s entirely because of the convenience of online shopping. Now, if I want something specific for someone, I have literally the world at my fingertips and I can usually come up with something more suitable than a Yankee candle or a pair of Christmas earrings that would turn your earlobes green or a day planner from the Hallmark store which then you could never buy refills for. So thank you Al Gore for the miracle of the Internet so that I can find that old out-of-print book in a used book shop in Spokane or the exact charm for my daughter’s bracelet from a seller in the UK or the perfect piece of handmade whatever from Etsy. (And fuck tariffs.)

I do still think that life would be easier at this time of year and maybe even better in a lot of ways if we all just cooled it a bit and decided that gifts aren’t make or break. (I’m not talking about for kids, although that has gotten a lot easier too now that kiddo is seventeen.) Set a dollar value! Exchange a book that you each liked during the year. Treat each other to a coffee or a nice drink instead. Decide you’re going to make a donation to the other person’s nonprofit of choice. I promise you there is someone in your life who would appreciate this enormously (besides me).

finished objects – mittens for detroit 2025

November is a great month for knitting. All my mojo comes back after a year lamenting my inability to get a project across the finish line. Part of this is definitely attributable to the darkness – currently in SE Michigan, the sun is setting around 5pm which is a far cry from our long days of summer, when it will stay light until after 9pm. I relish the joy of evening knitting and the coziness of spending grey weekend afternoons with vlogs or audiobooks and my WIPs.

My pressing projects for the month were my contributions to the excellent Mittens for Detroit initiative. Last year, I finished one pair, and this year, thanks to better planning, I finished three.

Pattern: Basic Bulky Mittens for the Family by Marci Richardson

Yarn: Berrocco Vintage Chunky in (L-R) Charcoal, Mushroom, and Sage.

Raveled here, here, and here.

thanksgiving weekend 2025

Thanksgiving weekend is one of my favorite times of year. Although B and I had to work a little more than usual – ideally I would take the whole week off – it didn’t dim any of the luster. It’s laid back and there’s (usually) no craziness. We eat, we run, we enjoy each other’s company with fires in the woodstove and lots of candles, we take time to remember why we love living here, and we plan a Black Friday outing that does not center around shopping.

One of our favorite traditions is our local Thanksgiving Day turkey trot. No registration, no chip, no bibs, no t-shirts, everyone pays a few bucks to cover the insurance and whatever extra goes to the food pantry. This year it was cold and blustery and we rolled out of bed and ran the half-mile downtown to the start – along with neighbors, dogs, strollers, kids, the local run club, and many turkey onesies. Our little run raised over $500 for the food pantry and an anonymous donor matched it. We are thankful for many things and our community is always one of them.

We had ham this year because the kiddo is not a turkey fan (“it tastes like – meat”) and it was just the three of us so we can eat whatever we want! She spent hours the day before making a French silk pie that is truly a labor of love and B made his family stuffing recipe, so all of us contributed something to our meal. The Lions lost but Jack White performed a quick but electric halftime show with a special appearance by Eminem. (Two well-loved Detroit musicians who continue to represent.)

Past Black Fridays we’ve skated in the shadow of the big Christmas tree at Campus Martius in downtown Detroit and others we’ve visited John King, the enormous used bookstore, followed by burgers at Checker Bar. Unfortunately, Checker Bar suffered an electrical fire in January so we switched things up and went to Mercury Bar for lunch and then on to Michigan Central Station. It was beautifully decorated for the holidays and full of people admiring the decorations and taking photo opps. I tried to tell the kiddo that when she was just a baby this proud space was in ruins, full of broken glass and the winter wind, flooded with gallons of water, and possibly vampires; and now it shines with love and luster, green boughs and baubles, polished marble and wreaths. I don’t think she believed me.

I think one of the things I like best about this time is that it allows me to imagine what life will be like when I’m less tied to a corporate life. Right now my path is clear – I work, and am well compensated, and I am responsible for my daughter, and my home, and our lifestyle. I tuck my yearnings away inside myself during my work weeks and find satisfaction in the life I have now and there’s a lot of it! I like where I work and I like walking into our building and saying hello to people I’ve known now for over 20 years. I like knowing the answers to things and I like my paychecks and our healthcare and my robust retirement savings and I like that when my daughter needs something I don’t have to think twice about it. All of these things are true blessings and I am thankful for them every day while at the same time knowing that I’ve worked really hard to get here. But I am also thankful that I can still see a life past these things, that there’s still a little spark inside me that dreams about buying a cabin in the woods of Sweden or retiring early to become a crossing guard. I don’t want to wish my life away by hoping that the next decade until retirement goes any faster than it has to. The universe has always put me where I should be to achieve the things I need and I am grateful- but in the meantime, maybe a little manifestation and dreaming can help it along.

Now we’re watching an incoming winter storm which seems like the perfect end to a long holiday weekend. We’ll be curled up by the fire eating leftovers. I hope wherever you are, you are also warm and happy in that intersection between gratitude and dreams.

pins of the week – all hallow’s eve edition

Despite our continual societal march towards industrialization, automation, capitalism and cookie-cutter consumption, there is something in the human spirit that is fascinated by the unknown. We love a good scary movie and a bonfire and a mask purchased at the pop-up Spirit Halloween store. We love our pumpkin spice lattes and Jack o’lanterns and dancing paper skeletons. There’s something in us that loves the prospect that while we wander the dark and misty streets with our kids and their bags and buckets of candy, everyone masked and gleeful, we may be rubbing shoulders with otherworldly things called over for just one night. And that after we retire to our beds, turn off lights and close our curtains, our woods and lanes and fields and churchyards are theirs for those dark hours before dawn; the hag, the horned man, the cold one, the thing that is pulled by the moon.

There’s something very Practical Magic about this house but it also feels nostalgic for me, too. A lot of houses in the small town where I grew up looked and felt like this; old farmhouses, including my childhood home and the namesake of this blog.

Nine years ago, my kiddo was still in elementary school and I decorated my car as ‘Under the Sea’ for her Trunk or Treat. I posted it on Pinterest so I’d remember it. The cool thing about that year’s Trunk or Treat is that her dad and her stepmom also participated with an undersea theme – monster kraken and octopi – and they won first prize while I won second. It was completely unplanned and the kiddo was stoked that her extended family swept the awards. (Now she is driving that car, btw…sigh).

Around that same timeframe I ran a couple of autumn half-marathons in the Sleeping Bear National Park in northern Michigan, and parts of the route looked identical to this picture.

Here is a particularly Northern Michigan ghost story for you, titled ‘Happy Halloween…and the Indian Drum’. I found it on Pinterest and the Michigan in Pictures blog. (And what a beautiful photograph, as well.)

We’re at the stage in our household where the kiddo has Halloween parties with her friends and we’ll be staying home and dressing up to hand out candy. Brandon will be Elvis and my costume is a secret but I’ll post pictures once the cat is out of the bag (probably first on my Instagram). I did manage to wrangle a family pumpkin-carving and Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown-watching session earlier this week and the weather is cooperating with cooler temps, drifting leaves, and damp streets, so we’re all in the mood. I hope wherever you are, you are enjoying the end of October and getting ready for a month of November hygge (November being really one of my favorite months for all of the cozy reasons and Thanksgiving my favorite holiday for it’s comparatively low-key, cozy vibe). Be well and remember that hell is empty; all the devils are here.

senior pictures – notes from behind the wagon

sneak peek #1 from behind the wagon

Senior pictures tested my mom skills in a way that they hadn’t been tested before. I already knew I could handle a dance and the related shopping and planning. In fact, senior HoCo had gone off well, I thought – the navy blue cocktail dress with the side sash that we’d ordered on a whim came in the nick of time. It was understated and elegant and very unlike the bright sparkly sheath dresses with chunky white heels that a lot of her classmates picked. Her boyfriend, like last year, wore a traditional suit with a matching necktie and polished dress shoes. They looked classic, elegant, “old school cool”.

Senior pictures were entirely different and I’ve been sweating them since her junior year. For whatever reason, it’s possible that I put more pressure on myself with these mom-centric occasions that maybe I should. I am determined to the end of my grit and determination to make each of them the absolute best for my daughter that I absolutely can and often pay a high price in worry and fretting. How do you find a good photographer? How can you be sure of the weather? What the heck does she wear? Those pictures are forever! It felt massive and daunting. The kiddo was fairly indifferent about the whole thing early on while I tore my hair out. Neither of us wanted summer pictures- we wanted fall color. However, between her marching band and EMT cadet schedules, every fall Saturday was booked except for one lonely little day there which I marked with a big circle.

With the help of a 2025 graduate friend, we found a photographer and by some miracle she had one slot on that one Saturday. When the day came, it was hot and clear. Due to the very warm and dry autumn we’ve experienced in Michigan, the fall colors here are very disappointing. We met the photographer- a no-nonsense, open and friendly woman with a brisk handshake who instantly put us at ease. She had scouted a couple of locations and put me to work pulling her massive utility wagon behind them as she and my beautiful daughter strode long legged amidst the small historical village and trails she’d picked. It was hot and I labored with that wagon up and down hills and trails and at one point the sky did open up with rain and we huddled under her golf umbrella while she and my daughter cheerfully assessed where the color might be best once the shower stopped – up that hill? (Please no, I can’t pull the wagon that far…) We saw groups of kids from a neighboring high school descend in small knots for their own Homecoming pictures. I saw many of the boys wearing (dare I say it – rumpled) black pants and black dress shirts with white sneakers, sunglasses, and neon bow ties matching their dates’ bright dresses – definitely not the ‘Mad Men’ vibe that my kid and her boyfriend had opted for, but it was fun nonetheless to watch their camera poses and exchange waves and smiles with other beleaguered parents.

After almost two hours of shooting and one outfit change, backdrops of field and fence, trees and trail and barn and silo and fieldstone and old columned porch, with the weather laying down on us like sweltering August, I had sweated through my shirt and my shoulders ached, but my heart sang. I gratefully surrendered the wagon to the still-buoyant and daisy-fresh photographer and thanked her for what I am sure will be some amazing photographs and memories. The kiddo and I were completely wrung out and the day ended with her crashed on the couch with Quarter Pounder, grateful removal of her makeup, and a bad vampire movie while I thanked the senior parent gods for guiding me through another one of these milestones. 

sneak peek #2 from behind the wagon

There are only a couple of these senior-specific challenges left that I have to rise to meet and the most dreaded one is left for the spring – the graduation party. That, my friends, is going to make senior pictures look like a literal walk in the park.

october weather

October has felt like a summer month with very little autumn yet. There is a general dusty draining of color – so far, not a lot of vibrancy. The temperatures are still well above normal. 

Head down in the busy season of calendar appointments and activities, planning and budgeting and the day to day work that builds a life, it’s easy to miss these things. So I am trying to remember to notice.

Sometimes I look out my bedroom window and notice the maple turning orange. And on my way out to my car after work, past the retaining pond, the crows watch me from their ragged line in the reeds. They talk amongst themselves and in their voices I hear the slate grey sky and the hard frost and the black bare branches. 

“Odd as it may seem, I am my remembering self, and the experiencing self, who does my living, is like a stranger to me.” – Daniel Kahneman