Sandy, welcome. I’m not familiar with Maggie Sefton or her books, and our library does not appear to have any. Will have to check the used book store. Do you also read Kate Jacobs? My f2f read
The Friday Night Knitting Club which was a real eye-opener for me, all the different fabrics and materials used in knitting. Jacobs has a recipe for Maple-Apple Muffins in the Author link above, and which can be made with gluten-free flour,
Marjifay.
Bella, the elderly ladies on your husband’s route are lucky that he has been their carrier for so many years. I live on a one block dead-end, and we seem to have many different carriers, subs and temporary workers.
I’ve read a bit into Gaile Parkin’s Baking Cakes in Kigali, and am finding it fascinating. It’s easy to pick up and put down, perhaps while reading another book, because while there is continuity in the novel, there’s also a sense of completeness in the individual chapters. I love the cadence in the dialog, much like in the McCall Smith books, though I believe this title has more depth. Not everyone is happy, but they are willing to work to solve their problems. Author Parkin was raised in Zambia. More about both author and title --
Baking CakesGaile ParkinThe New York Times has reviewed Holiday Cook Books, and two, maybe three, would be on my list, if I were still buying cookbooks --
THE PLEASURES OF COOKING FOR ONE by Judith Jones, 50 years a Knopf editor, starting with JC’s
Mastering the Art of French Cooking.
Gourmet Today, compiled by editor Ruth Reichl and published just two weeks before the magazine’s demise.
LA CUCINA: The Regional Cooking of ItalyHoliday Cook BooksThe rest of them look too complicated for me.