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May 2008

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May. 13th, 2008


[info]white_hart

Confused

The Afternoon Play today appears to include a number of poems, which are introduced by a sound almost exactly like the new message notification sound my email makes. This is very confusing...

(Yesterday's was actually rather fun - it was set in a university department and I couldn't help laughing when a character said "If you look at my job description you'll see I am explicity prohibited from showing any initiative". I think the writer probably had personal experience!
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[info]unblinkered in [info]brit_knits

Question!

Anyone ever used www.knitandsew.co.uk?

I'm trying to order DK acrylic in non-baby colours and they have it, but thought I'd pick the communal brains here before parting with any cash! Texere have it oo, but their postage is a lot more and I'm trying to do the project on the cheap.

Ta!

[info]callmemadam

Careful with that hoe



This is a foxglove called 'Primrose Carousel', named because the flowers grow all round the stem. I prefer the traditional 'all the flowers on one side' type but this is such a pretty colour. Thompson & Morgan started selling seed of it a few years ago, very expensively, and it was a big success. I grew some plants, was pleased with them and carefully saved seed to sow again. I have other foxgloves in the garden and none of the new plants I raised came true from seed. Every now and then though, one pops up, as seen above. Here's some more free plants )

[info]white_hart

AKICOLJ

If I use my UK mobile to phone someone with another UK mobile who happens to be abroad, I know that they have to pay to receive the call (although less than they'd pay to call me). Do I pay any extra because they're abroad, or am I just charged at my normal rate (I presume the latter, as I'd have no way of knowing they were abroad, but would rather check before running up a large bill!)
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[info]flissypop in [info]brit_knits

Charity knitting- Oxfam

I didn't see anything else about this, going back through recent posts, so I thought I would pop something up. It seems like something some of you might be interested in.

Oxfam are calling for knitters/crocheters to make squares for a giant baby blanket to be presented at Downing Street in September. Every square will represent a mother who has not survived her pregnancy because she could not get access to adequate medical care. They need 250,000 squares.

Anyway, if you are interested in helping out, or you know of any knitters or crocheters who would like to lend a hand, all the details you need are on these two sites.

http://www.oxfam.org.uk/applications/blogs/campaigners/2008/03/wanted_knitting_activists_to_d_1.html

http://stitchandbitchlondon.wordpress.com/2008/01/26/oxfam-needs-your-help-knitters/


This will be posted elsewhere.

May. 12th, 2008

[info]dovegreyblog

Happy Birthday to...

Mcr_orig You may not remember this but I do.
Last year I had a spectacular failure as I attempted a reread of My Cousin Rachel by Daphne du Maurier after a gap of forty years. I recounted it all here and to my complete mortification the entire nation was then informed of my disaster via the Guardian Around the Blogs feature. I was trying hard to celebrate Daphne's centenary and it all went horribly wrong, but have no fear, I'm back in time for her hundred and first birthday today.
The party's a bit quieter and the Cornish pilchard canapes have all gone (thankfully) so it's all much less of a squash, I'm sure Daphne would have preferred it this way.
I think I was as nervous as Philip Ashley about My Cousin Rachel but I'm trying to do something I did with Margaret Atwood a few years ago, read every book by a single author, and it seemed best to just bite the bullet and get on with it. What a difference a year and some background reading makes, different time, new contexts.
Justine Picardie's Daphne, pushed the gates open, Daphne's letters to Oriel Malet have flung them wide and I have been entranced by My Cousin Rachel from page one.
We knoweth not the exact time or the exact place (though we know Daphne had Menabilly in mind as she wrote) but the story doubtless well-known by one and all as the enigmatic Rachel appears on the nameless Cornish estate of her late husband Ambrose. Having wintered in Italy as a bachelor for his poor health Ambrose has met and rapidly married the enigmatic Rachel, the widow of Count Sangalletti. Marriage definitely doesn't suit Ambrose, indeed it's the death of him by all accounts and having  left the estate in the hands of his young charge Philip, it is Philip who now finds himself infatuated with his cousin.
This novel written by Daphne when she was forty-four would seem to be judged the last of her best sellers, as Sally Beauman points out in her excellent introduction to my Virago edition

' Here, for the last time, du Maurier applies the full battery of skills that made her a best-selling author. The result is dazzling....it is a razorblade of a novel : the blade is carefully hidden, but it is there, inside the packaging, and fifty years later, its capacity to draw blood remains unaltered.'

But now I'm reading as if with a new set of eyes.Cousin Rachel was the demon when I read it all those years ago, now I've read a completely different book and with grateful thanks again to Sally Beauman for that introduction.

'What we are reading is certainly a confession - but is it sane or mad truthful or profoundly manipulative?'

Daphne has written the book in such a way as to mirror human instinct. How easy it is to hear a story, pass judgement and feel sure of our ground ? Then how easy it becomes to ignore the little bits of evidence that should be causing that ground to shift?
Never will the words 'we hear what we want to hear' ring more true.
Daphne most certainly recognised the fallibility of the human psyche both in her characters and her readers and lays it all bare with My Cousin Rachel. Philip and Ambrose completely inexperienced in the ways of women and therefore how much can we rely on what they say? They jump to all the conclusions and took this reader with them when she was fourteen, even though Daphne sets up uncertainities and caveats throughout. Sally Beauman calls them 'destabilising devices', older and wiser I now find myself considering this book and a great deal more besides in a whole new light.
And just another du Maurier's Cornwall picture to keep you going. Daphne's first home at Ferryside in Fowey.

Ferryside


[info]dorianegray

So, I got up relatively early (around 9.30am) yesterday, and went and bought caster sugar, and constructed meringue (which involved much hard work with the rotary whisk, but we don't own an electric whisk). Put it in the oven. Then realised if we were going to have dinner before about 5.30pm, Pavlova was not a happening thing. If I'd read the recipe a bit more carefully on Saturday night, I would have known this and made it then. More fool me.

So, the Pavlova was abandoned, and [info]taliesinn made lovely roast pork and accompaniments, and the parents came over, and lunch was had (and absence of Pavlova was graciously forgiven), and mother seemed to like her birthday present, and generally all was good. (And now we have tickets to go see daddy's AmDram group's latest offering, on Thursday.)

Also, mother brought over my Christmas present, a lovely stripy cardigan that she made me...of course, now the weather is all warm and nice, so I will not get to wear it for a while. But it is lovely! And has so many colours in it that I will be able to wear it with just about anything!

This morning, I woke up at 5.30am and realised that I hadn't put the bin out, so had to get up and do that (twas the lovely Brown Bin, and was getting a bit stinky, so couldn't really be ignored). Naturally, I then couldn't get back to sleep, so was very dozy at work today. Luckily, R called in (sort-of) sick; he'd been to a barbecue over the weekend and was now looking after an unwell child. So no-one required me to use my brain at all, which was much appreciated.

[info]white_hart

Summer eating

The weather is warm enough for the prospect of a hot dinner to lose its appeal somewhat (madness, given that two weeks ago we were still thinking in terms of warming comfort food). Instead, we tend to have meals made from a mixture of warm and room-temperature ingredients. Warm salads, I suppose; they do tend to have some kind of leaf involved somewhere.

Today we fancied fish, which on a Monday tends to mean smoked mackerel (I've always been told that you should never buy fresh fish on a Monday, because the fishermen don't go out on a Sunday and you're eating Saturday's catch, although this may well not be true any more). We don't have the right kind of potatoes for salade nicoise yet, unfortunately, but mackerel also goes wonderfully with lentils. After that, it was just a matter of rummaging in the fridge and the veg rack to see what needed using up; carrots, mostly, and the some roasted onion and pepper to add a bit of colour.

Smoked mackerel, lentil and carrot salad )
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[info]girlyswot

Grrr

I am this close to finishing. My last paper was handed in this morning and I am preparing for my final exam (ever!). It's a translation exam on Exodus 1-14. We went through about 6 1/2 chapters in class and had to prepare the rest on our own. There'll be one section from the class work and one from the rest in the exam. Most of the chapters have between 20 and 30 verses. Chapter 12 has 51 verses.

Guess which chapter I can't find my translation of?

Grrr. I really, really want to just take the gamble that it won't come up, but I have a horrid feeling that it will.

[info]ebolajez in [info]brit_knits

Quest for 29" circulars

An American pattern I am hoping to use calls for 29" (74cm) circulars. I've searched a lot of UK online retailers and haven't been able to find any in the size I need, so I've turned to the US. However, having just received a shipping quote of $24 for two pairs of circular needles, I am about ready to give up!

Will it make much difference if I use 24" (60cm) circulars instead? I imagine the stitches would be rather bunched up, but will that make much of a difference?

I'd also be grateful for any recommendations for good US knitting sites that ship internationally.

[info]dovegreyblog

The Wodehouse Prize Draw- update

Rocky Jeeves is in topping fine form and practising hard for the forthcoming Wodehouse Prize draw which will be held on Wednesday.
He has perfected the art of the knife-edge trouser crease and is calling us all abysmal chumps and nincompoops so things are looking entirely promising.
I can hardly believe the bounty of this draw but lest there be any doubt here's the evidence, it's a real be-ribboned hamper and yes, there really are eighteen books. We've been putting the names into the hat as they appear and though it is filling fast, don't let that put you off, names in comments and Jeeves will deign.
Wodehouse_1













Wodehouse_2













Wodehouse_3


[info]callmemadam

Greetings

Happy birthday [info]land_girl! Have a lovely day.
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May. 11th, 2008

[info]dovegreyblog

Alphabetical dithering

AlphaA dither while I catch up with myself. Here's my version of one of those lists we used to spend hours on as children and thanks to Simon at Stuck in a Book nicely revived for the book blog world. In the end it all got ridiculous and I had to set myself boundaries.
How could I possibly let Bronte Charlotte push Barry Sebastian out of the running who was in turn eclipsing Barker Nicola ?
Or Eliot George exclude that wonderful book by Erdrich Louise or should it be Enright Anne?
The playing field was most unlevel so in the end I have chosen books from recent years and even that was a hopeless dither. About three hours later, getting up and down from my desk about 250 times and calling out to Bookhound to 'read out the T's for me again' , I decided they may not necessarily be the very best books ever written but I remember them all very clearly for two reasons.
They all gave me that thrill as I read them, followed by that feeling of bereft follow-that-if-you-can-ness as I turned the final page.

Atwood Margaret - The Blind Assassin
Barry Sebastian - A Long Long Way
Barker Nicola - Darkmans
Belbin Rosalind - Our Horses in Egypt

Barry Sebastian - A Long Long Way
Carey Peter - His Illegal Self
Desoto Lewis - A Blade of Grass
Enright Anne - The Gathering
Have now got fed up with colouring the first letter
Erdrich Louise - The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse
Fitzgerald Penelope - The Gate of Angels
Fitzgerald Penelope - Human Voices
Fitzgerald Penelope - The Blue Flower
Fitzgerald Penelope - Offshore
Fitzgerald Penelope - The Bookshop
Fitzgerald Penelope - At Freddie's
Fitzgerald Penelope - The Beginning of Spring

Fitzgerald Penelope - The Gate of Angels
Grenville Kate - The Secret River
Hegi Ursula - Stones From the River
Indridason Arnaldur - Silence of the Grave
Jacobson Howard - Kalooki Nights
Jones Lloyd - Mister Pip
Kneale Matthew - When We Were Romans
Kelly Richard - Crusaders
Kneale Matthew - When We Were Romans

Kelly Richard - Crusaders
Leyshon Nell - Black Dirt
Miller Candi - Salt and Honey
Mengestu Dinaw - The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears

Miller Candi - Salt and Honey
Ngozi Adichie Chimamanda - Purple Hibiscus (no of course that's not cheating)
Ondaatje Michael - Anil's Ghost
Ondaatje Michael - Divisadero

Ondaatje Michael - Anil's Ghost
Petterson Per - Out Stealing Horses
Potok Chaim - My Name is Asher Lev

Petterson Per - Out Stealing Horses
Quite Definitely - Impossible
Rob Smith Tom - Child 44 (not cheating either)
Shriver Lionel - We Need To Talk About Kevin
Smailes Caroline - In Search of Adam

Sinha Indra - Animal's People
Toews Miriam - A Complicated Kindness
Urquhart Jane - The Stonecarvers
Very Little - Choice
Williams Niall - As It Is In Heaven
Xtremely Difficult - Not a Single One on the Shelves
Yen Mah Adeline - Falling Leaves (the only one on the shelves)
Zusak Markus - The Book Thief


[info]dorianegray

I am sitting here at my computer headbanging to the fourth movement of Beethoven's 9th Symphony. This is probably an Odd Thing, if not altogether a Wrong Thing.

[info]gghost

I'm Back, Sort of

I came home yesterday, but am very sore, so I don't think that I can do too much on the computer yet. But I wanted to be sure to thank all of you for your wonderful kind thoughts and prayers. You don't know how empowering they are.

I love you all.

[info]callmemadam

The Unfortunates