In Which I Say Goodbye To 2025 (Featuring a life update and my book highlights)

It’s raining as I write this.

I will never not love the rain, I think. There’s something so calming and beautiful about it. I’d be happy if it rained every day.

This year has been… well. It’s certainly been. Joyous and sorrowful and full of laughter and tears and successes and disappointments. In other words, life. When I think about everything that’s happened, I see God in my life and I’m thankful. He’s good and everything will turn out right because of Him.

This season in my life is particularly difficult. I’m in the process of auditioning for major music schools across the country, and it takes a lot of dedication and no small amount of time. So if I disappear from the blogiverse for an extended period, it’s probably because I’m off somewhere practicing my tail off. 

Yet despite the difficulty, it’s still good. I get the chance to pursue a career in the thing I love doing most in the world. Hard things are worth doing. Perseverance.

But somehow I’ve also managed to read a good deal this year (thank the LORD!) In no particular order, I’ve compounded a list of my most memorable books of 2025. Enjoy!

1. The Princess Bride by William Goldman

2. Little Women by Louisa May Alcott*

3. Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery*


4. Emily of New Moon by L.M. Montgomery*

5. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen*

6. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

7. Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen

8. That Hideous Strength by C.S. Lewis*

9. The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien*

10. Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett

11. The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett*

12. Echoes of a Silent Song by Amanda Wen

13. The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis*

14. Prince Caspian by C.S. Lewis*

15. The Book Jumper by Metchthild Glaser

16. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë*

17. The Four Quartets by T.S. Eliot

18. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

19. What Comes of Attending the Commoners’ Ball by Elisabeth Aimee Brown

20. Les Miserables by Victor Hugo

* = re-reads


Happy New Year!

Hannah

In Which I Indulge My More Rambly Tendencies

You ever get the feeling where you have so much to say but you’re not quite sure how to say it? I do. I try to keep a journal, but time, that cruel invention, runs away from me like Peter Pan’s shadow. Sure an’ don’t I know that’s everyone’s favourite excuse.

I was re-reading Emily of New Moon the other day - Anne Shirley’s less famous literary sister. Emily’s a writer, or at least she’s becoming one. Father Cassidy tells her to “keep on”. I remember that sometimes, when I’m not sure what else to do. “Keep on”. Keep going. Don’t you dare ever give up. You can become something, if you work hard enough. God knows how much I want that.

Don’t let anyone tell you that you can’t.

I am a lover of beautiful things in a world that is often cruel. You see something ugly and you think oh, how terrible. You see something beautiful and your soul sings. Words move, music moves / only in time; but that which is only living can only die. Words after speech / reach into the silence. Only by the form, the pattern can words or music reach / the stillness, as a Chinese jar still / moves perpetually in its stillness.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year,

Hannah

A Christmas Blog Tag

 Merry Christmas (again!) I’ve been tagged for the Christmas Blog Tag and this felt like a very fitting day to stop procrastinating that. (For obvious reasons.)

    Here are the rules:

  1. Acknowledge who tagged you (Thank you, Lizzie!)
  2. Answer the questions
  3. Tag friends & notify them
  4. Fill out this form to have your blog challenge post spotlighted on The Moonlight Wanderer’s December Newsletter! (Optional)
  5. Have fun!

1. What are some traditions that you and your family have leading up to the holidays? And what’s something new that you want to try this month?

Let’s see… we get our tree around the end of Thanksgiving season, and continually procrastinate on putting up Christmas lights. On Christmas Eve, we go to our church service (my brother and I join the worship team with our violins), watch Miracle on 34th Street and wrap presents - it started as more procrastinating, but it’s become a fun tradition! As for something new… hm. We’re always do so busy that we’re kind of lacking in the decoration department, so it would be wonderful to do some more of that.

2. What’s your favourite Christmas recipe, food, or drink?

I’m a sucker for hot chocolate, apple cider, tea, and anything peppermint!

3. Every Christmas is different, and some years come with unexpected twists. But if you could have the perfect Christmas, what would the day look like for you?

Well, it doesn’t snow where I live, but if I had my way it would! We’d get up on the relatively early side, eat blueberry pancakes and exchange gifts, maybe take a trip to the mountains or something, and have a generally cozy time. And then we always have family over for dinner, which is really wonderful!


4. What are some of your favourite winter activities? (e.g. carolling, sledding, drinking hot cocoa)

Really all of the above! I love Christmas activities in general, and also reading cozily by the fireplace and exchanging gifts.

5. Do you decorate? How?

Like I said, I do wish we decorated more than we did, but we tend to favour candles and greenery and red ribbons and also some Norwegian traditions, because my family’s very European.


6. What is your favourite Christmas song or hymn? Why is it your favourite?

I don’t have a favourite, per se, but I do love The First Noel because it has an interesting and beautiful melody and also encapsulates the entire Christmas story.

7. What’s a gift or experience you’re really wishing for this Christmas? And what’s your favourite gift to give others?

We live about a two hour drive from the mountains and slightly longer than that from Sedona, and I do love taking road trips to see snow! As for what to give others… I don’t have a lot of time or money, and usually give people hand-painted gifts.


8. Describe some of your favourite Christmas memories. 

There are a lot, but some of my favourite include Christmas Eve services and time with family on Christmas morning.

9. What is your favourite Christmas-y book? Movie?

I love The Christmas Carol, The Gift of the Magi, and also It’s A Wonderful Life and really all old movies.


10. List ten words to that encapsulate the feel of Christmas for you.

cozy
family
Christ
candles
peppermint
apple cider
red
fire
snow
laughter

11. In your own words, what is the meaning of Christmas?

Christmas literally means Christ’s mass. It’s a time of gift-giving and remembrance and beauty and joy. It’s a time of spending time with family and eating good food. But most of all, it’s a time of worship and of glorifying God for the good He’s done for us.



And I’m not sure who’s been tagged and who’s not, so if you’d like to steal it, feel free!


Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas

 “Glory to God in the highest,

And on earth peace, good will towards men.”








Merry Christmas! “God bless us every one.”

In Which I Chatter On About Books And Attempt To Defy Time

I got asked some rather wonderful questions in my “Ask Me Anything” post!

1. How do you manage your time? This is something I'm not great at, and since you seem like a hardworking person, I'd love to hear some tips.

To be completely honest, this is something I’m still working on. I’ve learned that you have to say no to some things in order to do the more important things excellently.

2. Do you plan to study violin at Curtis or some other music school? I know you're insanely good at violin...

Well, I’m currently working on auditioning for some major music schools to attend next fall, and I hope to make a career out of violin!


3. What's your worst fear? I'm just curious. You don't have to answer if you don't want to.

Umm… I tend not to dwell on fears in general, but when I really think about it - probably losing people close to me, or not being loved. 

4. Do you have a book and a film you think everyone should read/watch at least once?

I have many, actually, probably unsurprisingly. The Lord of the Rings, of course - if you know me, you know that I’ve been in love with those books since I was but a wee child - and also Pride and Prejudice (any Jane Austen, really), The Book Thief (AHHHH MY HEART), The Great Gatsby, The Four Quartets

I could go on, but time is apparently finite.

5. Is there one day in your life that you would re-live if you could?

Hmm, a difficult question. (How could you, Lizzie.) Perhaps either the day of the concert that I was concertmaster and we played Dvorak 8, or when our family took a trip to Sedona!

6. What kind of tea best matches your favorite piece of music?

Well, my favourite piece of music tends to change and I generally have more than one at any given time. But that said, I’d have to say Shostakovich 5 and cinnamon black tea.

7. Is there a certain character trope you find yourself constantly using in your writing? Are there certain character tropes that you realize you never use?

I am rather inclined towards writing both arranged marriages and also defying tropes. As for something I’ll never write…

*RANT WARNING*

So many modern authors, primarily of YA fiction, loooooove the “strong independent woman” who’s “better than the boys” and is also incredibly unlikeable yet somehow beloved by everyone else in the story. And her love interest is a suave, leans-seductively-on-doorframes-and-treats-the-girl-horribly-but-she-still-loves-him, stinkin’ hot (literally) mess. (I tried to make that sentence make grammatical sense and gave up. Oh well.) Oh, and let’s not forget his awfully mysterious past that he’ll never talk about.

Please, for the love of everything good and beautiful, STOP WRITING LIKE THIS. Jane Austen is a much better influence than Twilight.

*RANT OVER* (you can open you eyes now)

…moving on.

8. You just found out you're leaving tomorrow on a week-long trip. Which books do you pack to bring with you?

Are all of them an option? No?

Bother. Okay, probably my Bible, T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets, Pride and Prejudice, and Little Women.

9. One of your stories (whichever you like) is going to be adapted to screen. What genre of movie will it be? What kind of changes will it make from the original story, or will it be a completely straight adaptation? Who will be in it? (Optional bonus questions: Who will direct the movie? And we have a time machine, so what decade do you want the movie filmed in?)

Oh I love this question!!

Okay. So. I’m currently writing (“currently” is generous, by the way, because yay college) a book called The Red Sun Rises, loosely based on some childhood drafts I’d written with some friends. I’d probably want it to be a pretty straight adaption, but I’d accept minute variances for the sake of movie-ization. I kind of would want it to have a film noir kind of setting (maybe like Hamlet-but-less-dark) OR a Pride and Prejudice sort of atmosphere and directed by… Christopher Nolan, maybe? Or Kenneth Branagh. I’m not too well-versed in directors, though. Alas.

What: set in a fantasy world without magic where a duty-bound princess is forced into a marriage with the king of a warring country.

Who: the main characters are as follows (sorry, this is going to be long and I’m completely ignoring time periods here because of course we have a time machine, why wouldn’t we?)

Tovíen Serenil (played by Keira Knightley as in Pride and Prejudice 2005)

  • nineteen, 5’4, long honey-brown hair, golden eyes, fading freckles
  • princess of Raváryn
  • duty, arranged marriage, fire eyes, golden, sunkissed, sarcasm, masks, autumn, chilly wind, meadows, daffodils, flower crowns, fairytales
  • Vivi

Theronan Aisryl (played by Henry Cavill as in Enola Holmes)

  • twenty-one, 6’3, dark wavy hair, emerald green eyes, scars on his chest and arms, beautiful smile
  • king of Alynia
  • dark, scars, war, trauma, hope, healing, survival, deceit, brown cloaks, forest, ferns, stars, learning to love
  • Ronan

Anwir Sereníl (played by Kenneth Branagh)

  • thirty-two, 6’1, white-blond hair and stubble, piercing black eyes, uncomfortably cruel
  • king of Raváryn
  • decorated palace, royal, elaborate, cruelty, prisoners, darkness 

Barínthin Sereníl (played by Jimmy Stewart as in It’s a Wonderful Life)

  • twenty-five, 6’3, golden hair, brown eyes, laughing
  • royal advisor and heir of Raváryn
  • smiles, agreeable, jokes, easily persuaded, manipulate, dark cloaks, nighttime
  • Barí

Skylyn Argyros (played by Robin Wright as in The Princess Bride or Lily James as in Cinderella)

  • eighteen, 5’7, long blonde hair, bright blue eyes, elfin nose, mischievous smile
  • lady of Alynia (Theronan’s cousin)
  • courtroom meetings, sundials, scribbling late at night, ocean waves, high cliffs, easy smiles
  • Sky

Emira (played by Emma Watson)

  • sixteen, 5’3, black hair, brown eyes
  • Tovíen’s maid
  • birdlike, sharp motions, bad spy, shy and careful
  • Emi

There are more characters, but I fear I haven’t written them into the book yet and thus things would be Confusing. We’ll leave it there and hopefully I can write again soon (someday…)


Anyways! Thank you to everyone who asked questions - it was lovely to answer them all :)

Merry Christmas and God bless :)

Hannah 

Book Recommendations For Winter

 Some wonderful works of fiction that will assist in properly getting into the Christmas season :)

1. Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

2. What Comes of Attending the Commoners’ Ball  by Elisabeth Aimee Brown

3. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

4. The Gift of the Magi by O. Henry

5. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis

6. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy

7. Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie

8. The Call of the Wild by Jack London

9. The Winter’s Tale by William Shakespeare

10. Hercule Poirot’s Christmas by Agatha Christie

Merry Christmas!

In Which Questions Are Asked… By You

    I shall do a quite original thing and borrow, with of course the intention of returning, an idea from my lovely friend Lizzie. 

    You can comment on this post with questions to ask me, if you so desire - all I ask is that they be appropriate, kind, and Christ-like as always (and if I am uncomfortable with answering something, I shan’t.)

    But aside from that, have at it! I shall relish the opportunity to wax eloquent about music and tea and all things literary…



Oddly Specific Things I Love In Books Tag

    Why hello there :)

    An embarrassingly long time ago in a galaxy rather close by, I was tagged for the Oddly Specific Things I Love In Books Tag by my dear friend Miss Lizzie Hexam. Since there in fact are many I things I love in books, Let Us Begin. 

    (Because you know, we could be here all day.)

    First, allow me to present The Guidelines. 

1. Link back to who tagged you.
2. Share the Graphic on your blog
3. Share the Outline on your post.
4. Share a detail you love about the season of summer into fall.
5. List at least 7 random/ specific things YOU love to read about in books, big or small.
6. Tag 7 people who would enjoy taking part/whose answers you are curious to read!

    As you (hopefully) know, unless you have buried your head under a rock for the last few months (and as Lizzie pointed out as well) it is no longer summer into fall, but rather fall into winter. Autumn is of course my favourite season, but the feeling in the air when it’s slightly crisper (despite living in a Rather Warm Place), the rain, pumpkins everywhere and hot chocolate and tea (of which I have been known to drink an Uncivilised Amount) - it’s all just wonderful.

    Anywho, after having ado-ed for longer than necessary, shall we proceed?

    

    1. Faith content

Let me clarify on this one. I absolutely love it when authors include faith content that is not preachy, heavy-handed, or inaccurate. Well-done, like C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien; or like some more modern authors such as Elisabeth Aimee Brown or Nadine Brandes, it is brilliant. I am all for good stories; and faith-filled fiction is even better :)


2. Cozy descriptions

I have a weakness for cozy things and for beautiful things. I tend to be attracted by anything warm, fuzzy, pretty—you name it. The beginning of The Hobbit is a wonderful example of this.


3. Loveable side characters

The main characters are great and all (or sometimes they aren’t), but everyone has their own story and I love seeing well-developed, relatable side characters who are actually people too. (Lewis does this really excellently. For example, Tumnus. And Puddleglum. You can’t go wrong with Puddleglum.)


4. Music… described correctly

One of my biggest pet peeves, as a classical musician, in any form of media (movies and books) is music represented or described incorrectly. So naturally I love it when it is done correctly all the more :D

(I still haven’t found a book that does this. Let me know when you do.)

EDIT: I  found one!  The Echoes of a Silent Song by Amanda Wen (an actual musician and also a Christian!) is a split-time romance and murder mystery and it’s actually really good ;D

5. Flawed and virtuous characters

One of the biggest problems in today’s modern literature is stereotypes. There’s the strong female character who’s better than the boys at everything; there’s the suave, dark male love interest who’s always got a suspicious past; and I’m tired of it. I love it when people do new and interesting things. Give me torn characters, flawed and indecisive characters, human characters. You know it’s a good book when you actually care about what happens to the characters, even if you don’t necessarily like them all the time. 

6. When characters repeat a phrase to each other

This one’s oddly specific and the title doesn’t make that much sense, but it just Does Something to me when one character says something that’s meant as a reproof or slight, and then the other character says it back to them at a later point. Example: in Enola Holmes, Sherlock tells Enola “you’re being emotional. It’s understandable, but unnecessary.” She later repeats it back to him and it’s just So Satisfying. (And yes I know that’s a movie but it’s a very good one and please don’t kill me because that’s the only example I could think of.)

7. After-marriage romance

I’m kinda stealing one of Lizzie’s points here, but… I love it when the author lets you see beyond the initial romance into the marriage relationship as well. In so many stories it’s like okay they fall in love and kiss and that’s the end… but really, in real life, it’s not. So I love seeing the characters fall in love with each other again continuously. (Love is a choice, after all.) L.M. Montgomery does this really well in the Anne series, and so does Alcott in Little Women


And there you have it - seven of the Oddly Specific Things I Love In Books ;P

I shall tag…

Hannah Ruth at Faith, Fiction, and Fairytales

Iona at Story Blossoms

Olivia at Meanwhile, in Rivendell…

And because everyone else I know has already been tagged, consider yourself tagged if you’d like to be! 


What do you think of tropes in books? What’s your favourite Oddly Specific Thing?

My Top 10 Favourite Musicals (in no particular order)

 As much as classical music is my life, I also love musical theatre. Mainly because it combines both my love of both stories and of music. 

    Today I come to you with my top ten musical recommendations, in no order whatsoever because I am an indecisive human being. (But please, I beg of you, never ever listen to the Lord of the Rings musical. It is an abomination to Tolkien's masterpiece and will probably make you lose both several brain cells and faith in humanity.)

1. The Great Gatsby (the original Broadway cast recording with Jeremy Jordan and Eva Noblezada)

2. The Phantom of the Opera (Live at the Royal Albert Hall)

3. Les Miserables (the original Broadway cast recording; and I'm actually going to see this live!!)

4. My Fair Lady (the movie with Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison)

5. Mary Poppins

(it is at this point that I start referencing my musicals playlist on apple music, because in addition to being indecisive, I am also forgetful.)

6. Little Women

7. Newsies (with, again, Jeremy Jordan)

8. The Secret Garden

9. West Side Story

10. Beauty and the Beast

Enjoy your musical-listening, and happy October :)


Soli Deo Gloria,

Hannah

In Which I Say Goodbye To 2025 (Featuring a life update and my book highlights)

It’s raining as I write this. I will never not love the rain, I think. There’s something so calming and beautiful about it. I’d be happy if ...