Archive for April, 2004

Parties and Allotments

Monday, April 26th, 2004

Had a wonderful weekend. Friday night was Suzanna’s 30th birthday party. Gill was already down there, having spent the evening out of the house so that I could get on with some work (some chance). I rolled up about 9pm, just as the kids were getting knackered, and grabbed some of the dinner which the others had been eating - some aubergines cooked with garlic, then calzone with salad, and for dessert a gorgeous home-made tiramisu which we drenched with Italian brandy. Drank a fair bit of wine as this was going on, but after dessert Suzanna got the spirits out - I had some Sicilian herb digestif, which tasted a little like Mirto di Sardegna, then some grappa, which was jaw-tinglingly good.

Lola was knackered, so Gill carted her off home at about 11pm, I was intending to follow with Rowan about five minutes afterwards (the only reason I didn’t go with Gill is because I wanted to walk rather than take a cab), but then Harriet offered to take Rowan back to hers for the night, and I got caught up in interesting conversation and somehow ended up there until 2.30am, just me, Suzanna, Nat and Robin.

I’d never met Nat and Robin before - they’re a couple about my age, but have four kids aged 17, 15, 13 and 4. It took me a long time to actually take this on board, I don’t think of people my age as having kids that old, especially as they both look very young for their age, and Nat is very beautiful in a sort of bean-pole way. It was interesting talking about her kids and their various experiences at school - took me right back to being a teenager myself, and I think I managed to offer a bit of a teenage boy’s perspective on their various problems and challenges. And I offered to lend her my copy of Joe Sacco’s Palestine because her eldest son wants to spend his year off in Palestine and she’s scared shitless of the idea. Robin and I, meanwhile, hopped from coincidence to coincidence in our parallel lives… he programs computers, plays bass (started, like me, on a short scale bass and progressed, like me, to a fretless… which turned out to be a rather rash choice, as it was for me). He studied archaeology, although he was introduced to me as having studied psychology, like me. And he’d been to the archaological dig at West Heslerton where I scraped soil and unearthed Anglian pottery for a week in 1988. And lots more… I guess we even look fairly similar. Fun evening.

The next day I got up early, hungover but pleasantly so. We got our stuff together and headed, for the first time, to our new allotment - Cath came along with Beth, and Harriet with Emily, Lucy and Ruth. Had a wonderful day and the weather couldn’t have been better - more about the allotment and lots of photos here on my Life page.

And then Saturday evening we left the kids with Emma and Gill & I drove up to Marsden. Lovely drive across the moors via Holmfirth - all the windmills were still, seemed like an omen of the end of the world, but nothing could spoil that end-of-the-day glorious spring sunshine. I’d just burnt a CD of randomly selected MP3s which I’d rated as five stars in iTunes, so we never knew what was coming on the stereo next but it was all good (Björk singing swing jazz in Icelandic from Gling Glo: excellent stuff).

Martha’s mum’s house is just incredible - up on the side of the hill overlooking Marsen, a real country-cottage feel to the place. Moorland straight behind it (the smell of heather mingled beautifully with the rosemary in the garden it ). Town below and then another moor opposite with darker peaks behind. A small pond in the garden had managed to attract a male and female mallard. The table was laden with good food. Perfect. Almost. With the exception of the council state just further down the hill, from where we heard sounds of kids driving a banger around all night, and at one point crashing it into a tree.

Chatted away to a few of Martha’s friends, although not quite as much as I’d have liked because I got somewhat stoned which made me a little tired, shy and easily confused. Saw Bronwen for the first time in about ten years, but we got to speak to her far too little; at least I know how to get in touch with her now, so I’ll definitely be paying her a visit in London. Also met a really nice Israeli woman, Sharon, who’s doing a criminology PhD on solitary confinement. Would have liked to have talked to her more, but… yeah, I got a bit stoned. Still managed to just about last out until the wee small hours; I rember coming up with a lot of strange beer-food ideas. It was because people kept putting their beer glasses down and then finding slugs or snails in them. I said we’d better put beer traps down in our allotment, and then my mind leapt from this, via the greenhouse, to the idea of irrigating our vegetables with beer, so that we end up growing slug-free beer-flavoured vegetables. I also thought that you could leave edible snails to do their starvation gut-cleaning thing in a bucket of beer, so that not only do they die happy, they also die beer-flavoured. Hmm. Somebody also complimented me on my beard: “I’ve spent time in Calfornia and I’ve never seen a beard like that.” (Well, I assume it was a compliment). Gnarly, dude.

So another early start… out of the house by 9am, back across the (still beautiful) moors to Sheffield, and then out to the moors again. Woodcraft Folk were celebrating their 75th anniversary in Sheffield by having a hike and meeting under Stannage Edge. As I sat on a rock picnicking I was struck by a feeling of tranquility and love of nature, for the third time in two days. As I was sitting there, I heard a cuckoo: coincidental because yesterday in Marsden had been “cuckoo day”–a grand procession of cuckoo hats and decorated wheelbarrows, along with other fun and games.

I’m ashamed to admit that we didn’t hike, at least not any further than the couple of hundred metres from the car. I could convincingly claim that this is because it would have been hard work with Lola, but I think the fact that we were knackered, hungover, and I quite fancied getting home to see Jenson Button battle Michael Schumacher off the start line of the San Marino Grand Prix. Which I didn’t manage to do: I only caught the last thirty laps, which were unutterably dull but at least ended in our boy grabbing second place - not quite what I’d hoped for, but damn good all the same.

And then all the usual Sunday evening rush to get kids off to bed and everything ready for Monday and blah and… well, it all had to end somewhere, I guess. But at least it was good while it lasted.

Dead Babies

Saturday, April 24th, 2004
Found some dead babies in the undergrowth today

First dead baby
Second dead baby

Today’s Suitable Presents

Friday, April 23rd, 2004

Why not buy your loved one some erotic automata? Or some possum fur nipple warmers & a g-string?

Gem

Thursday, April 22nd, 2004

We’ve been thinking about getting another dog for a long time, putting it off and putting it off. Last weekend I really felt the urge to have a dog again, to be able to go for long pointless walks in search of inspiration.

This morning, I was sitting in the café with Gill & Lola. A woman with a cute little terrier sat a few tables along. Gill said “shall we get a dog”. That was all it took.

We headed down to the RSPCA shelter and braved the yapping to look at all their inmates. So hard to choose, so many gorgeous loving-looking dogs. I think we’re going to go for Gem (I can’t find her on the website at the mo), a six-month old smallish (perhaps spaniel-sized) white bitch with a few browny-black dalmation/spaniel-type splodges. Got to take Rowan back later to see whether she likes her as well, then pass all the RSPCA’s suitability test, but… I’m really excited.

On the way home, I passed three identical young black-and-white cats, stalking butterflies through the dandelions.

Quentin Tarantino

Tuesday, April 20th, 2004

Read a most beautiful crazy fun inspiring blog entry about one woman’s chance encounter with Quentin Tarantino.

Jobs with no Training +The Fog of War

Sunday, April 18th, 2004

I read the following earlier in Cloud Atlas, in the second half of the Sonmi~451 thread:

How did you feel about such a role in a terrorist organisation?
The greatest trepidation; I was not genomed to alter history…

Accompanying the quote was a large and recent feeling of déjà vu; I racked my brains and racked again, trawling back through the book, knowing that this must be one of the many recurrent themes woven into the six stories. It didn’t seem to fit anywhere in the other narratives though.

It was only when I put the book down and returned later that I realised I hadn’t heard it in the book. Very similar words (albeit without the bit about genoming, obviously) cropped up in the film The Fog of War, which I went to see yesterday. Robert McNamara had been president of Ford motors for some ridiculously short period of time, I think five weeks, when President Kennedy offered him the role of chief treasury officer or, failing that, defence secretary. McNamara responded that he had no training for the job, to which Kennedy replied “do you think there’s a school for presidents?”

I love it when cross-source synchronicities like that crop up. It’s something I’ve been noticing a hell of a lot lately, as I’ve had more and more books on the go at the same time - leaps from Stendhal to something on Radio 4 to Herodotus to something spotted in the British Museum to… Reminds me that not only is it a small, small world after all. It’s also a small, small history and a small, small pool of ideas.

The film, by the way, was excellent. A fascinating documentary with great insights and scary parallels, from LBJ saying “we are fighting a war against tyranny and aggression” (so America has had at least 40 years experience of fighting abstract nouns) to McNamara saying “we must win the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese people” to the uncanny facial resemblance (right down to the specs) between McNamara and Colin Powell.

Then McNamara says “we saw Vietnam as part of the cold war. They saw it as a civil war. We were wrong”.

Well filmed too, and the Interrotron makes for compelling eye-contact viewing. During interviews, McNamara’s face fills the screen so that you can watch his unwavering stare as he talks of killing thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, or the tears welling in his eyes as he recalls JFK’s burial. And inbetweentimes, the Philip Glass music and slo-mo/fast-mo photography makes you wonder whether the film should have been subtitled McNamaqatsi.

Funny, until a couple of years ago I wouldn’t have dreamed have going to the cinema to watch a documentary. Now, after being hooked on the likes of this, American Splendour and the absolutely incredible Dark Days (get the DVD: the “making of” is even more mindblowing than the film itself) I almost can’t be bothered to go and see fictional films any more.

(BTW, as ever all the quotes quoted here are straight from my memory, not straight from the source. Please don’t quote me on these quotes).

Old Photos

Thursday, April 15th, 2004
Been digging out some old photos from the box in the living room:

Check out the 'ambience'
Here’s me with Gill and a very small Rowan.
Photo taken outside my parents’ house
by our French/Italian
language student, Sabine Schierano
(wish we had stayed in touch with Sabine…
she wrote us a couple of letters, we never replied, time passed…)

Check out the 'ambience'
And here’s me in Keswick, with two Scottish lasses whose names I forget.
We were on Woodcraft Folk national DF camp, circa 1992.
The sign
behind us says:
"Eat your own fish & chips on my tables and I will charge you
£5 per person table charge. Thank you".

No, thank you.

Distributed Proofreaders

Sunday, April 11th, 2004

Feel like reading a page or two of an old book each day, and helping the world while you’re doing it? Why not sign up for the Distributed Proofreaders project, and proofread some books (or rather, pages of books) for Project Gutenberg.

Cloud Atlas

Sunday, April 11th, 2004

I recently started reading Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell. Fucking excellent. With every book - from Ghostwritten to Number9Dream to this one, he grows in stature and range (Number9Dream, being much more ambitions than Ghostwritten, lost a bit in cohesion. This book seems to combine the best of them both).

There are still bits in the book which feel contrived, inner voices which don’t quite ring true, but this can be excused on several levels: firstly because, in true Mitchellesque style, the book is a whole series of interlinked writings, not by the author of the book but by his main characters. Any inadequacies of language and thought are hence devolved to the characters. And secondly, because it’s such a cracking good tale (or rather a necklace of tales) that I really couldn’t give a shit if he slips up here and there.

Random quote from my current page (170):

Sometimes the fluffy bunny of incredulity zooms round the bend so rapidly that the greyhound of language is left, agog, in the starting cage.

Really looking forward to the rest of this and all his future novels. If this one doesn’t get the Booker (the last one was shortlisted) I’m sure he’ll clinch it within the next ten years.

Walkley Defaced

Friday, April 9th, 2004

Another April Fool’s day has gone by, another opportunity wasted. I didn’t get it together to take the photos, make the replacement letters and paste them up in time. Maybe next year instead the sign down the road from us will change from this:

to this: