Countryside
porn for the suburbanite. Totally aspirational wish-fulfillment about a simple,
more spiritual life tramping the ancient byways and tracks of our world. Lovely
to read, made me sigh and want to be outside on the chalk downs, or sailing
into rocky Hebridean inlets. The car has been written off, just waiting to hear
from the insurance company. As result we
need to get a new car, which means I am temporarily forced to care about cars
again for a period. 'Yes the Alhambra has everything we need, but is very
pricey and it's a diesel so not suitable for short runs. On the other hand the
Zafira is in our budget, but has a terrible reputation'. I just don't care. I
know I should do as it's going to have a big impact on my life, but it's just
so terribly dull. I gamely went along to a few showrooms and now will hopefully
be able to outsource all further research to Helen's Dad. . .
Tuesday, 7 January 2014
Monday, 6 January 2014
Jonathan Phillips, The Fourth Crusade: And The Sack Of Constantinople, HÃ¥kan Nesser, The Mind's Eye
Back on home
territory; a book about Byzantine History and a Scandi-Noir novel. Read in the
Twixtmas lull, after having ditched the car into a river on Christmas Eve. I
didn't appreciate the extent of the flooding between Chobham and Windlesham; it
was dark and as I came over the bridge on Burnt Pollard Lane I went straight
into the halebourne, which has burst its banks. Waiting to hear about the
damage to the car. . .
Monday, 23 December 2013
Max Egremont, Forgotten Land: Journeys Among the Ghosts of East Prussia, Alan Bennett, An Uncommon Reader
Was convinced I must
have read Forgotten Land already, but it wasn't on my shelves! The groundwas
covered in Norman Davies' Vanished Kingdoms and Anne Applebaum's work
though, so maybe that's why it seems so familiar. Managed to avoid straying
into a romantic yearning for a lost Prussia while explaining the motives of
those that do. A bit chilling in places when reminded that there are still
Germans who refer to the old DDR as 'Mittel' rather than 'Ost' Deutschland.
It's interesting to speculate on what the future holds for the Russian half of
East Prussia; ethnically mostly Russian now, but an enclave with Belarus and
more in between. Will it stay in Russia? Move towards Germany? Become an
independent Republic of Kant?, 'An Uncommon Reader' was a cracker; I read it in
one session on the exercise bike laughing out loud when the Queen asks the
Cabinet if they've ever read Proust.
Just getting ready
for Christmas at the mo; after his birthday and all the parties Fred has been
in a present and party cake frenzy since late November. In the last entry I
said he didn't seem that interested in story books, but Helen bought him some
Horrid Henry which he has loved.
Friday, 20 December 2013
Rose Tremain, Merivel: A Man of his Time, Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, The Spirit Level: Why Equality is Better for Everyone, Clive King, Stig of the Dump
Merivel was a nice
bit of throwaway historical fiction set in the Restoration. A class up from
Simon Scarrow. Naturally I agreed with every word of The Spirit Level, even
the bits I didn't read or didn't
understand, because it reinforces my prejudices about inequality being a BAD
THING. Similarly, all the rebuttals of it are WRONG as they are politically
motivated. Obviously I'm joking to an extent, but it does show how little we
use facts (or I do anyway) to form our opinions, and how much we use them to
back up already formed prejudices. Luckily of course, Reality has a Liberal
Bias. Stig of the Dump was fab, wish I'd read it when I was 8 when mucking
about in rubbish dumps and making camps and hunting squirrels would have been
the best way to spend a summer holiday . Have tried to interest Freddie in a
book rather than a picture book, but he doesn't seem ready yet. Also of course,
I so rarely do his bedtime as Libby is so insistent on me looking after her.
Apparently she spent all of yesterday telling Helen that she liked everyone
except Helen. 'Like Bea. . . Like Daddy. . . Like Luke. . . Like Gemma. . . Not
Like Mummy, Mummy not sleep with me, Daddy sleep with me'. Helen bribed her
with chocolate last night to stay in her bed. It worked, and I had the first
whole night's sleep in my own bed for weeks. The precedent has now been set. .
.
Tuesday, 3 December 2013
Arthur Conan Doyle, The Return Of Sherlock Holmes, Ken Livingstone, You Can't Say That: Memoirs , Simon Scarrow, Sword & Scimitar, Tom Fort, A303: Highway To The Sun
Some easy reads for
a change! Nothing about Habsburgs, Scandinavian murders or cartographical
inspiration. Reading Sherlock again made me think of all the classic detective
fiction I have never read - nearly all Agatha Christie's, Maigret, Peter
Wimsey. Maybe that'll be a them in the future. There's still a load of
Inspector Montalbano to read though, and I promised myself to read more Van
Veeteren. . . Maybe it is time for a Kindle so I can read while putting Libby
to bed! At the moment I'm in the room with here for up to an hour. I don't mind
as I can sing songs to her and browse the internet, and sit down for a bit. I
do wish she would let me sing something other than the Thomas & Friends
theme tune or 'The Wheels On the Bus' though. I'm not even allowed to riff on a
theme. Any deviation from wheels/round,
wipers,swish, mummies/chatter, daddies/say "don't do that" is
immediately met by a forceful 'NO!' from Lib and any hopes of her settling are
gone as she sits up ramrod straight to protest the indignity of being forced to
listen to incorrect verse.
Ken's memoirs were
as subjective as you'd expect, but politically I can’t think of much where I
disagree with him other than Foreign policy. I'm not as ready as him to accept
the Spanish claim to Gib, the Argentinian claim to the Falklands and the Palestinian
claim to the Holy Land; but that probably reveals my Little Englander
tendencies rather than being an internationalist. On everything else -
economics, education, transport, health. . . I'm with Ken, a s shining example
of an electorally successful unashamedly populist unashamedely left wing
politician. 'Sword & Scimitar' was
set in the Great Siege of Malta, and was formulaic tosh. I went to see Simon
Scarrow talk at Woking Library and found him very engaging, so thought it might
be worth a read. The Great Siege is crying out for a great novel or, even
better, a great film. Finally, the A303; an ode to a road. It was a fun read,
but seemed incomplete; the A303 starts nowhere just outside Basingstoke and finishes
with a whimper as a side road in Somerset. All the way through it seemed as if
it was the story of part of a journey rather than the whole journey from London
to the south west. Maybe the A30 for a companion piece?
Tuesday, 12 November 2013
Morrissey, Autobiography, Jean-Yves Ferri, Rene Goscinny, Albert Uderzo and Didier Conrad, Asterix & The Picts, Jerry Brotton, A History Of The World in Twelve Maps
There's been a lot
of alternative covers for Moz's autobiography floating around, see here http://www.theguardian.com/music/gallery/2013/oct/16/morrisseys-autobiography-15-alternative-front-covers
My favourite was the
one that read simply 'Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me
Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me MeMe Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Johnny Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me
Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me Me'. Skirts over the time of
The Smiths, and more time is dedicated to the court case and how Moz was the
victim of the biggest injustice ever witnesses in a court of law. Mostly score
settling and myth peddling, but the early chapters on his childhood are written
with beauty and Moz's normal disregard for truth. 'Asterix & The Picts' is
the first book produced without the sole involvement of Goscinny and Uderzo,
but since the death of Rene Goscinny the stories have been iffy anyway, even if
the illustrations remain faithful. Anthea Bell is on translation duty again,
but it didn’t seem to have the same amount of genius punning and ambitious
landscape/cityscape pictures of the early books.
It's getting dark by
4 o'clock now, but we're still cycling back with lights blazing. I'm really
keen to keep it up although it's a logistical ballache. Helen can't really
cycle down in the morning now she's expecting so I have to drop the bike at
Gemma's first thing in the morning before heading for a run/the gym.
Wednesday, 23 October 2013
Michelle Paver, Dark Matter
A book in a day,
it's been a while since that happened. It was only a wee novella , but it kept
me gripped through my cycle in the morning and then finished off in the evening
while Helen was out at dance class. A ghost story set on Spitzbergen, and written
as a journal, so had the immediacy and shared paranoia of Dracula, with the
villain of the piece barely appearing, but lurking as a presence.
Freddie is getting
more and more confident with his cycling, we go out exploring at night at the
weekends now, and our journey back from Gemma's is getting more and more
convoluted. Each route or part of the journey has a name: 'St Andrew's Passage'
if we go through the council offices, 'The Magic Raindrops' if we go along
Victoria Way (there's a sprinkler permanently turned on causing a tiny burst of
rain for a second or two), 'the York Road Hideout' if we go through the new
development between The Sovereigns and the railway and 'Morrisons Madness' if
we go past Morrisons and over the canal on the footbridge. . .
If I take him to
school in the morning, we race between the bridges - Bedser Bridge, the 'BAC'
Bridge (after some graffito on it), the Tall Bridge and finally the Barn Bridge
(The Bridge Barn Bridge?) . It's the best part of the day.
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