Sunday Matters: Summer Reading?

Sunday Matters, a latte on a wooden tray against greenery.

YOU GUYS! Oh, sorry to yell. You’ve all been posting your summer reading lists and I seriously have not even thought about my summer reading. You know me. I love a good list but work has been very busy and my brain has been occupied, like by a face hugger from Alien just sucking the life out of me.

I’m learning all sorts of cool things but there is a lot of it and different components that haven’t quite come together yet. Oh, and there is a little dispute with the union over the reclassification of my job. All in all, it will get dealt with, it’s just requiring more justification on my part to make it happen. That means, effort.

Face hugger on a face in Alien the movie.
Face hugger from Alien.


Right Now:

My Sunday routines are pretty static. Host a service, hang with students. Get something to eat and then sometimes a nap but lately helping people out with stuff. If I am lucky, I will work some reading in somewhere. Sometimes, not until I go to bed!

This Week:

This is a short week for me. Monday is a holiday and then I am taking Thursday and Friday off to visit my son in Seattle for the weekend. He has all sorts of things planned including me helping him at the Boys and Girls Club, where he is a director. He’s short staffed and I work with kids so he background checked me (ahem) and I get to meet all the characters he talks about.

Other than that, I am looking forward to a visit to one of my fave bookstores, Elliot Bay.

Reading:

Julie Chan is Dead by Liann Zhang (review coming soon)
My Friends by Fredrik Backman
Abigail & Alexa Save the Wedding by Lian Dolan

Watching:

I did finish Cobra Kai but the last season was such a dud.

Grateful for:

    Fitness apps (tracking steps and distance)
    Long weekends (no kidding)
    Long-time friends

Hope you all have a wonderful week. Maybe I’ll come up with a summer reading list! Maybe not. Probably will. 🙂

Review: The Imagined Life

The Imagined Life
By Andrew Porter
Knopf, April 2025, 288 pp.

The Short of It:

You know that feeling of gently working your way through a story because it’s just so good? No? Read this.

The Rest of It:

Steven Mills has reached a crossroads. His wife and son have left, and they may not return. Which leaves him determined to find out what happened to his own father, a brilliant, charismatic professor who disappeared in 1984 when Steve was twelve, on a wave of ignominy. ~ the publisher

Steven’s family lives in a nice, Orange County neighborhood. His parents host pool parties, movie nights and are surrounded by academia everywhere they look. Their friends, professors themselves. They talk education and research and accomplishments. This is a touchy subject.

Steven’s father is brilliant and happily married but his quest for tenure at the university puts a strain on his marriage and family. This is where I tread carefully when I say that the undue strain of jumping through academic hoops to prove his worth leads him down a path of no return.

Let me paint the picture. Warm California evenings, a cabana house, plentiful liquor and jovial conversation. Attractive, powerful colleagues and a man who wants that for himself. The casual, friendly interactions fueled by drink, slowly become something more.

Twelve-year-old Steven senses a shift as he watches these parties unfold. Observing these parties from the privacy of his room, he notices the familiarity of good friends but also the tension, mostly in how his own mother reacts to what is going on.

What is going on?

Steven is very close to his mother so when she returns to the house after these parties, he knows she is hurting. He’s not entirely sure why or what he can do for her, but he feels compelled to be there for her.

What he does, is gently explore his father’s thoughts. Walking out to join him after the guests have left. Listening to his plan to publish his book and earn tenure. As good a guy as his dad is, Steven knows that he’s a dreamer. Never has been much of a realist. He takes this with a grain of salt.

For a young boy, navigating the delicate nature of his parent’s marriage and also figuring out what he desires for himself, proves to be complicated.

We see Steven as an adult, dealing with his own personal issues but ever present is his quest to figure out what happened to his father that year he went missing. When everything blew up and his father left without a trace.

This is a tender story about so many things. Family, the relationship between a mother and a son, a father and a son, Steven’s coming of age and how all of it influences his own family as an adult. It’s about identity and value and sacrifices made for the sake of your family.

The last few chapters were breathtakingly beautiful. I re-read them, sat with them awhile and felt the weight of Steven’s memories.

So good.

Source: Review copy provided by the publisher.
Disclosure: This post contains Bookshop.org affiliate links.

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