Tuesday, January 7, 2020

RIP, Elizabeth Wurtzel

I just learned this morning that Elizabeth Wurtzel, the author of the bestselling memoir Prozac Nation has died. I love that book so much. Those who have read my blog will know reading PN made me want to write my own story of depression and going on Prozac. I now want more than ever to publish my memoir. It's sad that she will never know how she inspired me😥



My review on Goodreads:
As someone currently on Prozac for depression, I knew I had to read this book to see how, if at all, I could identify with what the author described herself going through. Even though I know that it was written over 20 years ago. Still it was a thought-provoking read. And I did see some incidents in the book that were nearly the same as (if not identical to) what I had gone through before beginning my Prozac last year. Although it took me this long to realize I suffered from depression and needed to seek help. I felt I was brave to have read this.
It's been four years since I first read this iconic book. I read it again in June 2018. 

From the New York Times today:

Elizabeth Wurtzel, whose startling 1994 memoir, “Prozac Nation: Young and Depressed in America,” won  praise for opening a dialogue about clinical depression, died on Tuesday in Manhattan. She was 52.
 The writer David Samuels, a friend since childhood, said the cause was metastatic breast cancer, a disease that resulted from the BRCA genetic mutation. In 2015 Ms. Wurtzel had a double mastectomy. After her diagnosis, she became an advocate for BRCA testing — something she had not had — and wrote about her cancer experience in The New York Times.

A full obituary will appear soon.




Something she learned in 2018 (click to read the rest):

Life is just a shock to the system.
It turns out that the man I have spent 50 years believing to be my father is not my father.
My mother lied to me about who my father is. My father is Bob Adelman, the photographer, who most famously caught Martin Luther King Jr. in profile having a dream on the Lincoln Memorial. You know the shot. You know many of Bob’s pictures. When they say something is iconic, they just mean everyone knows it. Bob was early for history.
I too chanced young upon the world. When my first book came out, I was 27 years old. Prozac Nation changed the way people see mental illness, and it changed the way publishers see memoirs. The New York Times Book Reviewcalled me “Sylvia Plath with the ego of Madonna.” I was a hashtag before there was Twitter.
My mother had an affair with Bob Adelman when she was working at Random House. I was born in 1967.
I knew Bob all of my life. When I was 4, Bob gave me a print of his photo of protesters being hosed down in Kelly Ingram Park in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963. He gave the same shot to Martin Luther King, who was shocked “that beauty could come out of so much pain.”....





Friday, January 3, 2020

Chapter Break Bingo – January 2020

Here is the card for January.

January Bookish Bingo


My Books:
  1. The Snow Bride--Debbie Macomber (10 squares): Physical Book, Family, Repercussions, Cold Weather, Quest, Achievement, Ulterior Motive, Mountains on the Cover, Not in a Series, Library Book
  2. Daisy Jones & the Six--Taylor Jenkins Reid (4 squares): Free Book, Historic, Meant to Read in 2019, Free Space
  3. Wayward Son--Rainbow Rowell (3 squares): Two Books With Similar Topics, In a Series, Unusual Mode of Transport
  4. I'm a Gay Wizard--V.S. Santoni (1 square): Two Books With Similar Topics
  5. Superfudge--Judy Blume (reread) (2 squares): Audiobook,  A Favorite Author
  6. Game Over--Fern Michaels (1 square): Antiques
  7. Bad Boys With Expensive Toys--Nancy Warren/MaryJanice Davidson/Karen Kelley (2 square): Shelf Love, Shoes on the Cover
  8. Cranford--Elizabeth Gaskell (1 square): Ebook

23 squares completed on January 28

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Back to the Classics Challenge 2020

I had a feeling that Back to the Classics wasn't coming back this year so I signed up for another classics challenge. But today, BttC announced it will be back. Having done this challenge for years now, it felt wrong to abandon them. I like many of its categories and will be in again. The more classics read, the better, and some categories overlap.



1. 19th Century Classic. Any classic book originally published between 1800 and 1899:
The Green Carnation--Robert Smythe Hitchens

2. 20th Century Classic. Any classic book originally published between 1900 and 1970. All books in this category must have been published at least 50 years ago. The only exceptions are books that were published posthumously but were written at least 50 years ago:
Infants of the Spring--Wallace Thurman 

3. Classic by a Woman Author:
The Bluest Eye--Toni Morrison

4. Classic in Translation. Any classic originally written in a novel other than your native language. You may read the book in your native language, or its original language (or a third language for all you polyglots). Modern translations are acceptable, as long as the book was originally published at least 50 years ago. Books in translation are acceptable in all other categories as well:

5. Classic by a Person of Color. Any classic work by a non-white author:

6. A Genre Classic. Any classic novel that falls into a genre category -- fantasy, science fiction, Western, romance, crime, horror, etc.:

7. Classic with a Person's Name in the Title. First name, last name or both. Examples include Ethan Frome; Emma; Madam Bovary; Anna Karenina; Daniel Deronda; David Copperfield, etc.:

8. Classic with a Place in the Title. Any classic with the proper name of a place (real or ficitonal) - a country, region, city, town, village, street, building, etc. Examples include Notre Dame de Paris; Mansfield Park; East of Eden; The Canterbury Tales; Death on the Nile; etc:

9. Classic with Nature in the Title. A classic with any element of nature in the title (not including animals). Examples include The Magic Mountain; The Grapes of Wrath; The Jungle; A High Wind in Jamaica; Gone With the Wind; Under the Volcano; etc:

10. Classic About a Family. This classic should have multiple members of the same family as principal characters, either from the same generation or multiple different generations. Examples include Sense and Sensibility; Wives and Daughters; The Brothers Karamazov; Fathers and Sons; The Good Earth; Howards End; and The Makioka Sisters:

11. Abandoned Classic. Choose a classic that you started and just never got around to finishing, whether you didn't like it at or just didn't get around to it. Now is the time to give it another try:

12. Classic Adaptation. Any classic that's been adapted as a movie or TV series. If you like, you can watch the adaptation and include your thoughts in your book review. It's not required but it's always fun to compare:

Challenge completed on September 25

New Year--What to Expect?

I know no one knows what to expect ever. I certainly never do.  It will be a year since I restarted my creative writing class at work after it was dropped in 2017 for being offered at a not-so-great time. That I know for sure.

If someone asked me what my list of resolutions was, it would look like this:




I don't bother making any, because like a lot of people, I know I'll forget about them before the month is up, let alone before the year is over.


But even though I dislike the idea of making resolutions, I know I want to get back writing more. I not been doing so for sometime now, with other things on my mind. Also, there are some online classes for writing offered by the county library (along with over 500 kinds of classes) I may join. They are free and can be done anytime. So that is a possibility.  I'll just take everything as it comes.

The 2020 Pick Your Poison Reading Challenge

I was trying not to signup for too many more of these things, but after days of deliberating, I decided to try this one. I think the Baker's Dozen level is doable, but who knows if I can do more. Will aim for 13 books for now.  Click on the link to see a larger image.



Here is what I am reading:
(Note 4/17: I have decided to upgrade to Fortnightly).


  1. Selfies (Written in First Person): I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter--Erika L. Sanchez
  2. Singles (One-Word Title): Superfudge--Judy Blume
  3. Birds of a Feather (Feather or Wings  on the Cover): I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings--Maya Angelou
  4. Shorts (Book of Short Stories):Bad Boys With Expensive Toys--Nancy Warren/MaryJanice Davidson/Karen Kelley
  5. Places (Place Name in the Title): Cranford--Elizabeth Gaskell
  6. Diversity (Author From a Different Culture): Elijah of Buxton--Christopher Paul Curtis
  7. Reading Women (Woman of Color): Ordinary Girls--Jaquira Diaz
  8. TBR Crushers (Been Meaning to Read Forever): Piper Morgan Plans a Party--Stephanie Faris
  9. Next Door (Local Author): Imaginary Animal--Rachelle Linda Escamilla
  10. How Old? (Written Before You Were Born): The Bluest Eye--Toni Morrison
  11. Animal Kingdom (Animal on the Cover): Stud Rites--Susan Conant
  12. Body Parts (Feet on the Cover): Megan Meade's Guide to the McGowan Boys--Kate Brian
  13. Making Stuff Up (Fictional Language): Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone--J.K. Rowling 
  14. Check Out Those Lists (NY Times BestSeller): The Swans of Fifth Avenue--Melanie Benjamin
  15. Movie Quotes (I'm Not Bad, I'm Just Drawn That Way--Graphic Novel): Honor Girl--Maggie Thrash
  16. Dark Genres (Speculative Fiction): I, Robot--Isaac Asimov
  17. Reading Cliches ("Beach Read"): Sand Castle Bay--Sherryl Woods
  18. Careers (By a Former Journalist): More, Now, Again--Elizabeth Wurtzel (reread)
  19. Music Genres (Title Could Be a Country Song): Convenience Store Woman--Sayaka Murata
  20. Brought to You By the Letter N (Set in Country That Begins With N): My Sister, the Serial Killer--Oyinkan Brathwaite
  21. Recovery (About a Missing Person): Finding Me--Michelle Knight
  22. Quick Decisions (A Book by an Author You Always Read): Sunset Beach--Mary Kay Andrews
  23. Seconds (A Clock or Stopwatch on the Cover): The Gap of Time--Jeanette Winterson
  24. Hidden (Author Who Uses a Pseudonym): Tigress--Jennifer Blake
  25. Inspirations (Book about Improving Self Image): You Are a Bada**--Jen Sincero
  26. Where We Live (Moving to the Country): The Portrait of a Lady--Henry James
  27. Wildcard: Centers on a Group of Friends: Pumpkinheads--Rainbow Rowell & Faith Erin Hicks
Challenge completed on October 3

Sweet Southern Reading Challenge 2020

This didn't turn up until yesterday and I wasn't sure about joining, but I enjoyed it and will be in again.





For this challenge, the South is defined as the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia.* 

There are five reading levels for this challenge. 


  • One Glass of Sweet Tea: Read 1 - 3 Books
  • Two Glasses of Sweet Tea: Read 4 - 6 Books
  • Three Glasses of Sweet Tea: Read 7 - 9 Books
  • A Pitcher of Sweet Tea: Read 10 - 12 Books
  • A Gallon Glass of Sweet Tea: Read 13 or More Books


Here is what I am reading: