1. Yes, the lab I go to for blood draws at Kootenai Health was under heavy demand from a small horde of geriatric patients like me ready to get poked and surrender urine samples. The staff in that lab, though, are peerless in their efficiency. They also exhibit grace and kindness under pressure. None of us had to wait long (I happen not to mind waiting) which made me happy primarily because I was eager make my deposits, take my pills, and dash to the coffee stand to break my fast with a latte and chocolate croissant.
Oh! I thought the results looked as good as the tests I had done about a month ago.
2. I really like many of Trader Joe's dips, spreads, and dressings and bought several largely in preparation for Debbie's departure on Friday. I also bought oatmeal. peanut butter, ground turkey, hamburger buns, nuts, dried fruit, and other staples for when I'm living alone to supplement the meals I cook for myself.
3. I stayed up past midnight and finished Jess Walter's So Far Gone.
It's not a long book, but it has a lot going on in it. It examines the impact of going off the grid on the inward life of one character; it explores family, relationships within the family, the rifts that develop, and explores the messy and confusing nature of familial love and the ways family members hurt one another and raises question about whether familial pain can ever be overcome; I think it's a book about different expressions of masculinity, and in one storyline, explores how something like cowboy/militia masculinity coupled with Biblical literalism and the idea that we are in the midst of spiritual warfare can be a volatile and violent combination.
This might be the first novel I've read that I thought could be called a Covid novel. Characters in this book carry non-medical and ongoing effects of the pandemic: disillusionment, grievances, scars, and more that shape their lives.
It's also very often a funny book, making it a rich blend of humor, violence, suffering, vengeance, loyalty, and courage.
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