Ten paths trodden in memory.
Author: Richard Carter
A fat, bearded chap with a Charles Darwin fixation.
Extreme albeit appropriate punishment
Suspected arsonist held over Oxfordshire fires.
That's more like it!
Totally unlike crappy hurricanes and tropical cyclones, don't volcanoes have bloody awesome names?
I'm sorry, I have a kazoo
On Friday evening, Jen and I went to St George's Hall in Bradford to watch two recordings of the long-running comedy radio panel game, ‘I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue’.
Book review: ‘Some Thoughts on the Common Toad’ by George Orwell
Enjoyable essay collection.
How to Write Everything
by David Quantick A fun and funny book. This is a fun (and funny) book. David Quantick has written in most genres, and this is his guide about how you can to. Do you see what I did, there? I wrote something. Q.E.D.
Night Walks
by Charles Dickens Victorian essays. Night Walks is vol. 88 in Penguin's Great Ideas series of little books by ‘great thinkers, pioneers, radicals and visionaries whose ideas shook civilisation and helped make us who we are’. In the case of this particular book, I think that's stretching things a bit. Not that Night Walks isn't… Continue reading Night Walks
Begrutten
adj. having a face swollen from weeping.
Deer Island
by Neil Ansell An unexpected memoir. Deer Island was not at all what I expected. Having thoroughly enjoyed Neil Ansell's previous book, Deep Country: five years in the Welsh hills, and seeing his new book's title, I naively assumed that this was going to be more of the same: very personal nature writing. As it… Continue reading Deer Island
Book review: ‘Claxton’ by Mark Cocker
Field notes from a small planet.