Fitbit 12 – Week 13

Things keep moving in the right directions as I kept my 30,000-step week streak alive for the tenth straight week while also running my streak of 4000+ days to 47.  The week got off to a good start on Sunday, needing a mere 2 additional steps to finish with 4600.  Monday was just slightly lower, ending with 4500 steps.  A nice improvement on Tuesday pushed me up to only 7 steps shy of 4800.  A lunchtime walk helped me to 5600 steps on Wednesday.  An additional 22 steps was all that stood between me and 5200 on Thursday.  An afternoon trip to Wrigley Field on Friday put me over my daily goal and just 25 steps away from 7700.  A trip to the Chicago Public Library in Bridgeport for a presentation on Dick Allen helped end the week with 5100 steps.

Total steps: 37,576

Daily average: 5368

Book 21 (of 52) – Home Is Where The Bodies Are

Home Is Where The Bodies Are – Jeneva Rose

They say you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover, but you can certainly be drawn in to a book because of one.  Such is the case with Home Is Where the Bodies Are, the latest from Jeneva Rose about a family that reunites following the death of their mother, bringing decades old secrets back to the surface.

Nominated for a 2024 Goodreads Choice Award for favorite mystery and thriller, the book drew my interest due to its use of a video cassette tape as a cover, standing out from the crowd of nominees.  It was my first experience with the work of Jeneva Rose and I may be on the lookout for more going forward.

And with that, we draw to a close my relationship with the Chicago Public Library.  I’ve saved a lot of money over these past four years and read a lot of books I probably wouldn’t have otherwise.  Time to see if my smaller, local library can fulfill the same at a similar pace.

Locking Down The Library

Back in the summer of 2021, despite not living in Chicago, I got myself a digital Chicago Public Library card which gave me access to eBooks and audio books that I would never have had otherwise.  In the nearly four years since, I have read, or listened, to hundreds of books, starting with The 4-Hour Workweek by Timothy Ferriss in late July.

Earlier this morning, I received an email that the Chicago Public Library is retiring their eCards program as of May 1st.  Thankfully, I picked up a Frankfort library card last December, so I can move on with (hopefully) minimal interruptions.  It looks like Home Is Where the Bodies Are, by Jeneva Rose, will by my final book.

Book 57 (of 52) – Happy Place

Happy Place – Emily Henry

Harriet, a surgical resident in San Francisco, arrives in Maine for her annual reunion with her college friends planning to tell them about the end of her engagement.  Instead, she finds her former fiancé waiting for her, convinced into coming as this will be their last summer together in the family cottage and a surprise wedding.  Harriet tries to work through her feelings, for her ex, her job, and everything else, before the week comes to an end.

I had initially skipped over Emily Henry’s Happy Place when I saw that it had won the 2023 Goodreads Choice Award for Best Romance, as that isn’t really my genre.  When I came across it again on the list of best books of the year from the Chicago Public Library, I decided to give it a shot.  Despite the fairly obvious ending (of course they are getting back together!), it was an enjoyable read.  I don’t know how much I will dip my toes back into the romance pool going forward, but this trip, at least, was worth the ride.

Book 21 (of 52) – The Night Shift

The Night Shift – Alex Finlay

On New Year’s Eve of 1999, a tragedy at the local Blockbuster Video stuns a New Jersey town, especially when the suspected killer goes on the lam.  Fifteen years later, a similar attack at a local ice cream parlor leads everyone to assume the killer has returned.  While the local police investigate the new murders, an FBI agent looks into the older crime, hoping to find connections.  Instead, she unravels a web of lies that ties more than those two crimes together.

Ordinarily, I wouldn’t read two books from the same author twice within a month’s time, but the Chicago Public Library served up The Night Shift, the second novel from Alex Finlay, just weeks after I read his first outing.  In some ways, this may have ended up being a good thing, as I was able to see some growth from Every Last Fear going into The Night Shift that I may not have recognized if it were months or years down the line.  The downside, of course, is that I won’t get another crack at his work for quite some time.  I look forward to what comes next and hopefully continuing the adventures of FBI Agent Keller.

Book 29 (of 52) – The 4-Hour Workweek

The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9–5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich – Timothy Ferriss

In The 4-Hour Workweek, Timothy Ferriss advocates for abandoning the traditional 9 to 5 grind by finding ways to work remotely and infrequently, letting your business run itself and enabling you to travel the world and experience life to its fullest.  While it seems easier said than done, it is a goal for many of us to work less, travel more, and get more enjoyment out of life.

I recently got myself a digital Chicago Public Library card, despite not living in Chicago, which gives me access to eBooks and audio books that I would never have otherwise.  This was my first checkout, and just the second audiobook I’ve listened to in the past 11 years of this 52 book challenge.  Ferriss, as read by Ray Porter, has some interesting ideas, many of which were probably novel when he first wrote this back in 2007, but I wonder how much of it is still applicable in 2021.  I imagine all of the façade companies sitting in front of drop shippers that were going to be successful have already been created, so finding a turnkey business that can run by itself with limited hands-on focus.  His chapters on how to convince your bosses to allow working from home seem quaint in a post-pandemic world where many people, myself included, have been working remotely for 17 months and counting.

I do like the concept of what he is selling here.  As a newly minted home-based worker, I have been looking for ways to translate my ability to work from anywhere to spend time away from home.  I haven’t quite figured out a good way to do that as of yet, at least not without paying twice to live somewhere, but this has just put my thinking about these plans into hyperdrive.