Coffee Blog

Books we’ve discussed. Remaining books. All during coffee.

Welcome to book review forty-seven of fifty-two for this year’s virtual coffee shares. I’ve picked books related to the Brewing Coffee, Twisting Words & Breaking Pencils theme—coffee, books, and puzzles.

Title Review
I don’t have a review for you this week. After I veered off my reading track last week with Blueberry Muffin Murders, I reviewed the titles I’ve shared so far this year and which ones are pending.

Books we’ve discussed:

  1. Murder by the Book
  2. Visions and Vanilla Cappuccino
  3. Coffee Self-Talk
  4. Spells and Spiced Lattes
  5. Death by Coffee
  6. Death by Tea
  7. The Ghost Writer
  8. The Lost Bookshop
  9. A Bookshop to Die For
  10. Coffee and Corpses
  11. Southern Magic
  12. Spellbound in the Stacks
  13. Coffee Magic for the Modern Witch
  14. Death by Pumpkin Spice
  15. The Absent Author
  16. Death by Vanilla Latte
  17. On What Grounds
  18. Death by Espresso
  19. Puzzle Box
  20. Murder at a Cape Bookstore
  21. A Page of Murder
  22. Sleighed
  23. Bookshops and Bonedust
  24. Before the Coffee Gets Cold
  25. Meet Me at the Cupcake Café
  26. Wake Up and Spell the Coffee
  27. Murder by Page One
  28. Death by Café Mocha
  29. Coffee Shop Girl
  30. Murder at the Library
  31. The Pumpkin Spice Café
  32. The Jigsaw Puzzle
  33. Murder in the Library
  34. Bread, Coffee, Magic
  35. Coffee, Cream Pies, and Crimes
  36. Books Can Be Decieving
  37. At the Coffee Shop of Curiosities
  38. Murder at the Bookstore
  39. That Old Witch: The Coffee Coven’s Cozy Capers
  40. Death by French Roast
  41. Death by Hot Apple Cider
  42. Death by Hot Cocoa
  43. Death by Spices Chia
  44. Death by Iced Coffee
  45. Death by Peppermint Cappuccino
  46. Death by Caramel Machiatto
  47. Blueberry Muffin Murders

Remaining books to discuss in 2025, in no particular order:

  • The Puzzled Mystery Adventure Series: Books 1-3
  • Puzzle House
  • The Writer
  • The Book of Chaos
  • The Writing Retreat

If we were having coffee, I would share a bit more about my tarot reading journey. A couple of weeks ago, I shared a picture of my first tarot deck. I’ve been getting to know the deck for a while, but struggling to apply what are traditionally understood meanings to the cards. The Rider-Waite Tarot is sort of the gold standard for readings, but it never called to me, so . . . Anyway, my progress with my deck has been slow and sometimes frustrating. I joined a Facebook group a few weeks ago and shared about my deck. Through my conversations there, I realized that although tarot reading can be done using traditional symbolism and meanings, it doesn’t have to be. My deck is better suited to intuitive readings. From that knowledge, I signed up for an online class called “Intro to Intuitive Tarot” by Victoria Maxwell just to supportively nudge myself in the right direction. My first learning point from this course is that there are clone decks to the Rider-Waite, and I found one that called to me: The Modern Witch Tarot. So, I have ordered a deck, and my goal is to learn to read both traditionally and intuitively.

If we were having coffee, I thought I would share a collage of images from my Illustrated Life Journal.

By Shari Marshall – 2025

10 thoughts on “Books we’ve discussed. Remaining books. All during coffee.

  1. I do love your illustrated life journal! Thank you so much for sharing those photos! I really like the idea, perhaps you just gave me an idea for a Christmas gift! Have a wonderful rest of your weekend!

    Liked by 1 person

      1. I found a beautiful book about how to draw an illustrated life journal by Samantha Dion Baker that I ordered for my daughter. I also ordered her sketchbook for her. I think she is going to like those a lot!

        Liked by 1 person

  2. I love your journal images. I’m starting to get into junk journalling. Just getting ideas now but I plan to start on 1 January. I’ve just written a post about it, coincidentally. I’m very interested to hear more of your experience with Tarot cards.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Your journals are much more beautiful than mine. I have three of them going at once. One is for to do lists and notes from online classes, another is for my prayer journal, and the last one is new and is called a Biopedia. The idea behind it is to have pages for each of the places you have lived in your life. Then you start filling in the pages with things that happened when you lived in those places – or at least a list of the stories. They you have stories as you remember them in more or less chronological order.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. It is a commitment. Mine are all working journals. I suppose, if I were artistic like you are, I could create an illustrated Bible study journal. But my to do list and note-taking journal – no can do!

        Liked by 1 person

Comments are closed.