Priest is so underrated. I’ve read a few of his novels and many of the short stories and they’ve all been terrific. Funnily enough A Dream of Wessex is next up for me! I bought a copy the other day. Can definitely recommend The Affirmation and Airside if you haven’t got around to those as yet.
03.03.2026 06:53
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Four books read in February, The House in the Borderland, Offshore, The Dream Archipelago and What we can Know.
Books read in February. The House on the Borderland is an old friend - I must have first read it in a battered secondhand copy when I was about fifteen. The Priest volume contains short stories - all good with ‘The Miraculous Cairn’ and ‘The Watched’ being brilliant.
#BookSky
02.03.2026 12:20
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Five authors by whom I’ve read at least five books
Agatha Christie
Graham Greene
Iris Murdoch
Rachel Cusk
Thomas Hardy
#BookSky
22.02.2026 20:46
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The House on the Borderland, by William Hope Hodgson. Recent Penguin Weird Fiction edition.
The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson. I first read it in my teens (long distant times) and rereading it now it still holds up pretty well. Nothing like a bit of cosmic horror to see one through these grey February days.
09.02.2026 09:30
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Books read in January. Quite a productive reading month for me, and reading The Girls of Slender Means after reading Frances Wilson’s biography of Muriel Spark certainly added to my appreciation of the novel.
02.02.2026 15:30
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Possibly my favourite story of all. It looks terrific and it has so many great lines. ‘You know, you’re a classic example of the inverse ratio between the size of the mouth and the size of the brain’. Also, for brevity, ‘Schumfff!’. Happy days …
29.01.2026 09:20
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Haha! That was my intention too but I caved in just before Christmas and bought the hardback.
19.01.2026 22:35
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Ha, yes, that’s a bit strange to put it mildly. Sort of guiltily glad to see The Mind of Evil on the list though. One of those episodes that I do rather love. See also 73 Yards. I’m not going to defend some of the others though …
14.01.2026 21:05
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That’s a terrific opening paragraph, great analogy and absolutely spot on!
11.01.2026 17:01
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Electric Spark: The Enigma of Muriel Spark, by Frances Wilson.
First read of 2026. Such a terrific book, covering Muriel Spark’s path to becoming one of the 20th-Century’s most interesting novelists. Spark is a famously enigmatic figure, but Wilson comes up with some terrific insights into her life.
#BookSky
11.01.2026 16:38
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Ludicrously late as ever but here are my favourite reads from 2025. Some old friends in there - Iris Murdoch, Agatha Christie, Rachel Cusk - but plenty of authors who were new to me as well. Special mention to the Alan Garner book which is just so thought-provoking.
#BookSky
10.01.2026 13:34
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Doctor Who, The Seeds of Doom, on the TV with a black and white cat helpfully sitting on the coffee table.
TV night, one of Tom Baker’s finest. Beanie, never a cat to blend into the background, has decided to keep me under close supervision just to make sure I don’t get too frightened.
05.01.2026 21:44
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Two carved figures on the side of a font. Julian’s Church, Norwich.
Figures on the side of the font at St Julian’s Church, Norwich. So evocative, somehow, of distant times.
05.01.2026 09:23
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Beanie, relaxing on this chilly New Year’s Day. An extremely well-read cat …
01.01.2026 16:56
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Five books: Maigret’s Holiday, The Bell, Monsignor Quixote, Cat’s Cradle and According to Mark.
Went into town yesterday and bought a few secondhand books in the charity shops. Particularly happy with The Bell. I’ve got a first edition but those old Penguin copies of Murdoch’s novels with the orange spines are lovely. Good design, good quality paper. Couldn’t resist …
21.12.2025 17:52
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Bushes with orange and red berries amidst the green foliage.
A river, with a single swan. Bare trees in the background, fallen leaves in the foreground.
A bit of December colour on this morning’s walk.
14.12.2025 13:39
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Black and white cat, relaxing on a bed with all four paws in the air.
Beanie, feeling quite relaxed on this grey and damp #Caturday
06.12.2025 16:48
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Yes! Well spotted. It’s a little framed print that I’ve had for years.
26.11.2025 12:24
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Selection of five books including Powsels and Thrums by Alan Garner.
Books read in October, all of which I really enjoyed. As a side note the Alan Garner book contains a chapter called ‘The Valley of the Demon’ which is hands down one of the most unsettling (in a good way) things I have ever read.
#BookSky
01.11.2025 11:57
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It’s the Season 13 story I’ve seen the fewest times, which is telling. Salamar (Prentis Hancock) is a painful to watch one-note ball of lunacy but otherwise it has its moments. Baker and Sladen are great (but then they always are) and it looks pretty good. You can’t beat a 1970s BBC studio jungle.
26.10.2025 12:49
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Oh, gosh, that brings back memories … I graduated 35 years ago and at the time the ‘d’ in ‘good’ was disappearing making the sentence a rather curious ‘Ah Goo the Sea’. I’m impressed it’s still there. It’s reassuring somehow…
22.10.2025 17:56
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Best season of Doctor Who ever? It has to be right up there. I watched the documentary on Ian Marter last night and was really quite moved by it. Beautifully put together and with plenty of insight but it’s incredibly poignant.
#DoctorWho
21.10.2025 20:05
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Probably my favourite Hammer film, and certainly the one I’ve seen the greatest number of times. Barbara Shelley rather steals the show (understandably, as she’s terrific in this) but I’ve always had a soft spot for Suzan Farmer. The cute, likeable blonde amidst all the swirling Gothic chaos …
11.10.2025 13:42
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Books read in September. All terrific, and there isn’t one title here that I wouldn’t highly recommend, but Rhine Journey might be the standout. Beautifully written, very subtle and very perceptive. Great to see it back in print.
#BookSky
01.10.2025 11:51
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Probably my favourite Hammer film and I must have watched it a dozen times over the years. It’s so stylish, and Lee is superb, but for me it’s Barbara Shelley and Suzan Farmer who really steal the show. They’re both pitch perfect and they work so incredibly well together.
24.09.2025 05:49
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Eric Ravilious jigsaw puzzle completed. Great fun to do with the woodwork being easy to complete, the upholstery being difficult and the landscape being somewhere in the middle. Such a beautiful, evocative painting.
07.09.2025 08:26
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Books read in August. It was a quiet reading month but these were all great. Bonus points for the two Maigret novels on the grounds that the cover designs are so beautiful.
#BookSky
01.09.2025 21:36
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Went to see the Ithell Colquhoun show at the Tate but the same ticket gets you into the Edward Burra show as well. Quite a bonus! Loved his paintings of Jazz Age America. Also appreciated the way the exhibition highlighted Burra’s taste in music and literature and how that shaped his art.
31.08.2025 07:41
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Loved the Ithell Colquhoun show down at Tate Britain. Particularly enjoyed her paintings inspired by the Cornish landscape - a mix of stone circles and folklore viewed through a veil of magic and surrealism. It’s so good to see her work being brought to a new audience.
31.08.2025 07:29
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Beanie, demonstrating the correct way to spend a damp and windy #caturday .
30.08.2025 19:00
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