Then tell us in a comment where you've traveled recently in a book.
The illustration shows somebody else's lunch, since I didn't think to take a photo of mine. I was hungry, was trying to think what sounded good (before even going into the kitchen), and came up with spinach and beets. After taking a look inside my fridge, I added cottage cheese to my list. Hey, it's white like that spinach salad with beets, walnuts, and goat cheese (or their feta cheese option.)
I started tasting it while standing at the kitchen counter, so Clawdia came asking for some of whatever I was eating. I put down a smidgen of cottage cheese, but she turned up her nose at it. I don't have croutons, and I did not think of walnuts before I gobbled it down. My spinach was from a can, but it was still a good combination of tastes.
Joke from Reader's Digest (100 funniest jokes of all time): Did you hear . . . about the veterinarian who prescribes birth-control pills for dogs? It’s part of an anti-litter campaign. — Larry Wolters (RD Issue: January 1970)
International Mother Language Day is a United Nations initiative first celebrated in 2000. It falls on February 21 each year. so it was this past week. Read about it HERE.
Deb Nance at Readerbuzz
hosts The Sunday Salon.
7 comments:
I just finished a book set in Austin, Texas, and I'm about to be in Disney World with my next book.
Glad you enjoyed your lunch even if wasn't traditional.
I was in Detroit in the riotous 1980s and in contemporary Greenwich Village in NYC. Both books I wrote about for today's Sunday Salon.
Have a great reading week.
https://bookdilettante.blogspot.com
Oh my, I love the jokes. That was one of my favorite parts of working in an elementary school...the jokes the kids would share. We actually had a joke book week where kids would read joke books and share one with someone else. Even kids who were not strong readers really wanted to be able to read a joke.
And, yes, traveling via books. Where am I going? I'm reading about a charming girl, Jean, in England whose rich parents suddenly lost all their money (something to do with pepper) and Jean is the recipient of a broken-down horse from cruel (but perhaps not irredeemable) cousins. It's A Pony for Jean.
I must confess I am not a beets fan, but that salad looks so pretty!
Mine wasn't that pretty, Helen.
My current book takes me to Vermont!
I'm shocked that a kitty turned her nose up at cottage cheese!
Post a Comment