In January, 2014 I was trying to read The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt. All I can remember about the book without looking at my notes is that there is a young boy who somehow is in possession of something important and it all revolves around a piece of art.

But looking back at Goodreads, reading my ‘review’ (I honestly never think of my notes as any kind of review) I remember more.

A thirteen year old boy and his mother are visiting the Metropolitan Museum of Art when a bomb explodes, killing his mother. In the chaos someone directs the boy to steal an important piece of art, titled The Goldfinch.

The story goes on from there, on and on for about 800 pages. My review noted the often beautiful writing but the hopelessness of wading through so many pages of it. I was determined, it says in my review, not to let the book beat me.
And now, after all that, I don’t even remember how it ended.

Today, more than 10 years later, I’m reading Fredrik Backman’s My Friends. Mr. Backman also wrote A Man called Ove which I loved and remember almost every bit of.

I expected to have a similar warm and tearfully emotional experience with this book, but so far I am not having those feelings…and I am struggling to finish it. I’m half way through and I’m determined not to let the book beat me.
The book seems to be two stories, one the story of eighteen year old Louisa who has aged out of the foster system and run away, and the story of four friends, one of whom grew up to be a famous artist, and their story of a summer decades ago, depicted in a very famous, very expensive painting.

Now one of those four friends has run into Louisa on her flight from her old life. He might be running away too. He has with him the ashes of the artist and the painting itself. It happens to be Louisa’s favorite painting, one she came to town to see.

That’s as much as I know at this point. Louisa and the artist’s friend are on a train going somewhere. The friend said the artist wanted Louisa to have the million dollar painting. (The artist and Louisa met briefly in an alley where she was spray painting a mural on the back of a building. He said she was his kind of person.)
It has occurred to me that young people and famous pieces of art might be a theme.

Which reminds me of another book, written by a friend of mine, Karen Mulvahill. Her book, The Lost Woman is the story of Nicole who’s parents were each rounded up by the Nazis during WWII. Nicole’s father owned an art gallery and Nicole worked there as a young woman. After it was taken over by members of the Nazi party she managed to get hired to work there again.

She did that so that she could protect as much art as possible. But at what cost? At the beginning of the story she is an old woman, hiring a man named Robert to find and return some of the art that was stolen.
The book, beautifully written, is the story of Robert and Nicole and how they came to be in the places they find themselves.

So here you have three books and three sets of young people absorbed in art. Three different stories threaded together with images of my winter goldfinches who, of course, have their own stories to tell.
January 29, 2026 at 12:32 pm
Hey! I’m reading That Bachman book right now, too! I like it a lot and I’m where they’re just about to get on the train. I don’t keep reviews of books, but I collect quotes from them. this book makes me smile, even in the sad parts.
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January 29, 2026 at 12:37 pm
I agree, I have seen a lot of stuff I highlighted just because it was written so well. I just need to hunker down and get it read. Don’t tell me how it ends, odds are you’ll get done before me.
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January 29, 2026 at 2:32 pm
I had picked up The Goldfinch at a book sale years ago. The sheer size of it was daunting, but I had heard a lot about this book, so… Fast forward to years later and the book was still in my bookcase. Unread. I donated it. Eight hundred pages was a page too far for me.
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January 30, 2026 at 9:40 am
I have several silly rules about reading. One is if I can’t get into it within 100 pages I give myself permission to stop. The other is I can’t start a new book until I’m done with the one I’m ‘reading.’ This rule is especially silly as I’ve been stuck on a book for weeks and don’t allow myself to start something else. I realize my rules are contradicting. I guess that’s why they’re silly rules.
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January 30, 2026 at 9:52 am
Not a silly rule! I don’t get how some people have 3-4 books going at one time. I can’t do that. Only one at a time for me. I hadn’t even started The Goldfinch, Dawn. I just kept on looking at it and then just finally gave up.
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January 29, 2026 at 5:21 pm
Great action shots, Dawn! I read Goldfinch years ago and found it a bit intense, but a good read.
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January 30, 2026 at 9:41 am
I have so little recollection of what I read that it seems a waste to struggle so hard to finish something that I will almost immediately forget.
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January 30, 2026 at 3:04 pm
😀
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January 29, 2026 at 5:41 pm
How absolutely beautiful
1
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January 30, 2026 at 9:41 am
Thank you!
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January 29, 2026 at 10:18 pm
Beautiful. Its a pleasure to observe them in detail…
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January 30, 2026 at 9:41 am
They are beautiful birds no matter what season.
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January 29, 2026 at 11:25 pm
The longest book I ever read was “The Far Pavilions” by M.M. Kaye and I just looked it up – 960 pages. It was for school and I thought I’d never finish it and probably did with the help of Cliff’s Notes. I have never read “The Goldfinch” but I look your Goldfinches and Junco at the feeder. They are fueling up for tomorrow’s bitter cold and the rest of this Winter that won’t quit. That one bird sure is giving you the stink eye. 🙂
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January 30, 2026 at 9:42 am
It’s good to be retired so you don’t have to read anything that long unless you want to!
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January 30, 2026 at 9:48 pm
That’s for sure because in school I read some books that I thought I’d never get through and the stuff like “Beowulf” and Shakespeare, something I had to read, but didn’t enjoy.
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January 29, 2026 at 11:25 pm
“like” not “look” … saw it as it sent … sigh.
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January 30, 2026 at 9:43 am
I didn’t even notice…
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January 30, 2026 at 9:21 am
I didn’t make it through the Goldfinch but I adored My Friends, and felt terrible when the book was over and I couldn’t spend any more time with all those people. But there were folks in my book group who really struggled with the back and forth and such until it comes together more at the end.
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January 30, 2026 at 9:43 am
Then there is hope that if I just settle down and READ it I, too, will like it.
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January 30, 2026 at 10:39 am
I love your birds! I guess I’m going to have to try taking photos out of my windows, too — it’s far too bitterly cold and snowy to trudge around outdoors. I’ve read several of Backman’s books and enjoyed most of them. Somehow, I’ve missed My Friends. I find it interesting how many books stay with you and how many — even despite their length and how much time you spend with them — vanish like mist.
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January 31, 2026 at 1:07 pm
You’d be surprised how well shooting a camera out the window works. Sometimes you can sneak up on them a bit too, unless certain fuzzy members of your household figure out what you’re doing and fling themselves at the window ahead of you.
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January 31, 2026 at 12:03 am
The older I get, the less I try to wade through a book, even one that is highly recommended. If it isn’t working for me, it isn’t working. I put it aside and move on. And yet, even when something really does speak to me, it still might mean I spent a lot of time reading it … listening to it, to the author, to the story.
I just started “The River Has Roots” by Amal El-Mohtar. It’s a youth book, not a little kids book. It’s fantastic. She’s Canadian. It’s truly stretching my mind and my heart.
Love your photos. 🙂 Always. They speak to me.
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January 31, 2026 at 1:08 pm
I know what you’re saying, it seems a waste of time, but often I think there must be SOME reason everybody likes this book and I hope to find it. I fail most of the time. I should learn that lesson.
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January 31, 2026 at 9:11 am
If a book isn’t making me happy to pick it up and continue reading, I have no qualms about “letting it beat me”. I even created my own shelf on Good Reads that I titled “Couldn’t be bothered to finish”. I read for enjoyment, and if I’m not enjoying, my attitude is “nope, not worth my time.”
Love all the goldfinch photos!
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January 31, 2026 at 1:08 pm
I think I’m too stubborn for my own good.
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February 3, 2026 at 10:52 am
I finished The Goldfinch early this year. As an audiobook, it was a good deal, as it was very long; as a Pulitzer Prize winner, it seemed like a good bet. The writing was, in fact, wonderful. The plot kept me desperately wanting to find out how it resolved. The length, in this case, was not a bonus. I had a terrible anxiety, all the way through, wondering how it would resolve itself. So many characters seemed like they could be villains. I was constantly worried for the characters that were flawed, but likeable. What a relief to have it all resolved…and to finally finish! I determined to look for lighter reading this year! And, now that you mention it, I also cannot remember how it ended!
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February 3, 2026 at 12:47 pm
Sad after all that emotional investment and time that we put in we can’t remember how it turned out. I might have been too exhausted at the time to notice. I feel like I should go to the library and read the last chapter again.
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