
….pulling hair. But …I am determined to get a post out today. My life theme of “It’s always something” continues to thrive. Our beautiful Rough Coated Jack Russell , Ollie injured his knee. Yes , it was on the leg he previously had rebuilt. So Thursday had him back at the vet clinic, under anaesthesia getting it repaired.
However, as he was coming out of surgery, down the street, Tas Water was accidentally pouring toxic liquid of some sort into the water system. Toxic fumes began rising up out of the vet clinic’s toilet, then the taps.
They closed up the kennel and rang the Hobart City council who didn’t want to hear it. So one of the vets called the fire department who took it very seriously. Client appointments for the rest of the day were cancelled, staff were sent home and the owner vet and head nurse began opening doors and windows to air the place out.
The emergency out of hours vet practice, not far away was called and they sent an ambulance for the two dogs just out of surgery. Ollie ended up at the out of hours clinic for the rest of the day and the night. The firefighters did a great job organising everything.
The vet, who is also a good friend of mine ended up in bed early with a headache and nausea. I’m sure her husband who is a barrister of long standing might have made some phone calls. I didn’t ask.
Ollie came home, completely exhausted on Friday and I set him up in a very comfortable bed in his large pen that he will spend the next 4 weeks in.

On a more relaxing topic I am reading Too Cold for Snow which I am really enjoying. A gentle story about a mother and adult daughter travelling through Japan in the autumn, riding trains, visiting galleries and book shops. Eating at cafes and restaurants and walking along canals in the evening light. It is a story of the gentleness between them as well as the distance they share.

Something else good that is happening. Fullers have added another reading group to their list of fun things. A book group called Books We’ve Always Meant to Read. Their blurb describe it as follows:
‘How often does it happen that we’re talking to someone – at a dinner party, over drinks at a bar, on a moor – and that book comes up? Or we wake in the middle of the night to the ship-like groaning of that listing pile by the bed? How many times do we say to ourselves, ‘I simply must get to reading that book, that author’?
Agonise no more, dear friends. Help is at hand. All the great names are here; those we’ve heard of but never quite got round to exploring, those we’ve been too scared to broach, those who, for no real reason, have simply evaded us at every turn.
Classics by the likes of Mary Shelley, Bram Stoker, Baudelaire and Dostoyevsky; 20th century wonders including Italo Calvino, Virginia Woolf, Clarise Lispector and Jose Saramago; and contemporary award winners by Han Kang, Laszlo Krasznahorkai, Michael Ondaatje and Jeanette Winterson. Books it seems that everyone has read except us. Well no longer!
Join us each month as we delve into the books we both know but don’t know, take hold of our sketchy literary past, and shore up that rickety tsundoku (aka life-threatening book stack).
Guiding us through these foggy straits is novelist and bookseller Adam Ouston. Adam has been a member of the Fullers family since 2007, has run many a book discussion group, teaches at the university, and his debut novel, Waypoints, was on many of last year’s Best Books lists as well as being listed for this year’s Miles Franklin, ALS Gold Medal and the Tasmanian Premier’s Literary Award.
Our first three books will be If on a Winter’s Night a Traveller by Italo Clavino, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (the 1818 text optional), and Flights by Olga Tokarczuk. If it’s your first time tackling them, you’re in for a treat. And if you’ve read them in the past, there are few reading pleasures like the re-read.
The Books We’ve Always Meant to Read group will be held on the first Wednesday of the month at 6pm, beginning October 4.”
I enrolled immediately and am really looking forward to it.
I will leave you with a cute photo of Peanny (Peanut) who had the mass of unruly hair behind her ears trimmed and she now looks like she is starting her first day of school.
I will leave you with that smile.
Until next time.



I like the idea of Books We’ve always meant to read – my list would be long. I bought a Clarice Lispector novel, but retired defeated, and donated the book.
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Oh poor Ollie and what an ordeal for him and the vets!!!
Cold Enough For Snow sounds right up my alley AND it’s short enough for Novellas in November! Added it.
Books We’ve Always Meant to Read is exactly the kind of Book Group I need to attend.
On a moor! ship-like groaning of that listing pile by the bed!!!! take hold of our sketchy literary past, and shore up that rickety tsundoku
Cute pics of the kids!
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It has certainly been a hectic week. Animal disasters always seem to happen when Mr P is in Canada visiting family. 🤣
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Oh man…that is unfortunate timing.
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Looks like it will be a very interesting book club 📚💗
The chosen books all look excellent.
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Oooh no!!! Not only the post issue, but poor Ollie, and also that toxic stuff – gross and scary!!! Hope he’ll continue to be ok! As for the Au book, I loved it, and your new book group sounds excellent!
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I am really looking forward to the new book group. It will be different for sure which I need right now. Ollie is continuing to improve….at his own pace though.🐾🐾🐾🐾🐾🌻🌻🌻
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Hello Penguin I enjoy your posts and the pets– have my own….. The new reading group sounds marvellous, and I would love to join but I live in Canada….any chance there will be an on-line connection? Or even a regular reading list to share? Many thanks
Josée Posen Toronto
647 924 4683 cell
On Sat, Aug 26, 2023 at 1:10 AM A Penguin’s Journey- Books, Travel,
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No chance of online continuation but I will post the information up as we go. It should be interesting. 🌻
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Stressful enough to have to get the treatment for Ollie but that episode with the fumes must have seriously added to your anxiety. Glad he’s back home now and no doubt getting a lot of attention.
Interesting idea for a book club – I know there are some classic authors I find daunting but. having other people to discuss them with would help get me over the fear factor
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I know just what you mean. There evidently will be some classics and then just some that people talk about. Between that and my regular book group it should jump start my reading. The episode at the vet’s was something else. I was no impressed.
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An interesting episode at the vet. The vets were in surgery when the firefighters told them to evacuate and they had dogs on the tables. Firefighters said human life over animals and the vet said, “You don’t know my clients!’ and continued to operate. I am looking forward to the book club for two reasons. Other reading groups I’ve been in have all been mostly women and this one will be led by a young man. Also the books chosen look interesting in a range of genres so that could be fun.
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Oh poor Ollie, I can’t like this post!
And the humans too, what heroism from your vet …
You have tried looking in WordPress’s trashcan?
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Yes. I thought I was deleting a photo but it was the post. No worries. All good.
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