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  2. I'm sorry to hear that Adrian hasn't been very well, Kev! Poor thing . It's nowhere near on the same level, but Olle had a little cough and stuffy nose last month and I bought this Vicks Cool Mist thing for him: Vicks Mini Cool Mist Ultrasonic Humidifier (compact, quiet, for better sleep, cough and cold, comfort, essential oils, humidity, rooms up to 15m2) VUL525 : Amazon.co.uk: Home & Kitchen I wonder if it might help a little bit when Adrian is home? I had the same cold and it actually helped me too 😅
  3. Today
  4. Poor big fella, he can't believe it 😯
  5. femme fatale, risking a
  6. Tangled Up In Blue ~ Bob Dylan
  7. Yesterday
  8. Song Sung Blue - Neil Diamond
  9. Why I Sing the Blues - B.B. King
  10. attention from Dolly the
  11. Watch the little dog. 90269-6ecf06f9c473c1cde76224b3710d562e.mp4
  12. the hopes of capturing
  13. Deacon Blues ~ Steely Dan
  14. Custard Pie Blues - Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee (two of the best)
  15. Last week
  16. gonna be starting up Gravity's Rainbow as my next long-term read
  17. Lucy Carmichael by Margaret Kennedy. This is a strange one. Margaret Kennedy was a prolific author from the 1920's and I've read several of her books before and enjoyed them. This one from 1951 is about Lucy and how she remakes her life after being jilted on her wedding day. Lucy is a survivor and a realistic one, she makes mistakes and isn't good at everything and there's a feel good ending but it's also strangely inconclusive in many ways. I like books where all the ends are not neatly tied up but here there are story arcs which seem to meander into nothing and don't leave you speculating what might have happened. It's an interesting read but is very much of its time.
  18. i should probably skim the wikipedia or something to make sure i at least know what actually happened lol but yeah in retrospect i really should have been referring to some kind of guide as i went. feels like its too late now though. oops.
  19. 1. Lucy Carmichael - Margaret Kennedy **** 2. Clown Town -Mick Herron ****1/2 3. An Instruction in Shadow - Kevin >Hearne ****1/2 4. Introducing Mrs Collins - Rachel Parris ***1/2 5. In the Blink of an Eye- Jo Callaghan 4 Peach Street to Lobster Lane - Felicity Cloake
  20. Eleanor was exceptional in that she ruled Aquitaine (her dowry and getting on for 1/3 of present day France) as Duchess of Aquitaine in her own right - her father's will specified that Aquitaine would not pass to her husband on marriage as was the rule in those days and that she would keep it until her death. I read this ages ago as background for my job (tour guide in Bordeaux where she married Louis ) and thoroughly enjoyed it though the sheer unpleasantness of some of the male nobles made it hard reading in places.
  21. Yes Madeleine, Richard was a hostage and cost the country a great deal! The End of Mr Why by Scarlett Thomas “Real life is physical. Give me books instead. Give me the invisibility of the contents of books, the thoughts, the ideas, the images. Let me become part of a book. . . . an intertextual being: a book cyborg, or, considering that books aren't cybernetic, perhaps a bibliorg.” This is an unusual novel which involves a mystery and an element of detection. This is a significant part of the novel which examines consciousness, quantum physics, time travel, time, the nature of reality, the nature of love and longing, not to mention an awful lot of Deridda (and Heidegger) and the sort of discussions about philosophy of the sort I remember from my university years. There’s a fair amount of sex as well. Ariel Manto is a PhD student whose mentor has disappeared. The mystery revolves around a Victorian book titled as per the title of the novel. There is only one known copy of the book. Ariel happens to stumble across it in a local second-hand bookstore. In it is the recipe for a liquid that will take the person drinking it into a place called the troposphere. The troposphere is not a physical place and yet it feels physical, you can move around it and jump into people in the real worlds minds and see their thoughts. It’s a bit more complex than that. As one reviewer has said it’s a bit like the Matrix but with less guns, more philosophy, more metaphysics and no Keanu Reeves, although the Adam character comes pretty close. The novel is iconoclastic and playful. The real life landscape is bleak and the university is crumbling and Ariel sums up what many feel: "Real life is regularly running out of money, and then food. Real life is having no proper heating. Real life is physical. Give me books instead, give me the invisibility of the contents of books, the thoughts, the ideas, the images. Let me become part of a book". It's actually quite fun and doesn’t take itself and its absurdity too seriously. 7 out of 10 Starting Less by Andrew Greer
  22. This is on my TBR and I’ve been advised elsewhere that in order to better understand Ulysses it’s a good idea to first read The Dubliners. I have not yet done that either 😁 There is also much in the way of online guidance to help as you go along. Well done getting through it, though
  23. #2. Ulysses (James Joyce, 1922) Well, after about 9 months of picking away at it I finally got through this and I probably understood like 7% of it. It references a ton of things, none of which I know anything about, not even The Odyssey or Shakespeare and I don't know anything about Ireland or the 1900s or Ireland in the 1900s. Every chapter is also written in a different writing style and some of them might as well have been gibberish to me. That being said, the 7 or so % I did get was usually pretty funny and often enough even the bits I don't get at all have some fun lines. The edition I have has a ton of notes and stuff in the back and I might have referenced those had I known they were there before I got to the last chapter lol. Speaking of the last chapter, gosh I wish the whole book was about Molly Bloom singing songs and whoring around solid ending there and now that I'm on the other side of it I do think of the whole of it a bit more fondly than when I was trudging through it though you can't convince me some of this isn't unnecessarily padded, especially the penultimate chapter written in a Q&A format (I liked the point A and point B but everything in between was mind-numbing). Even though I was grasping at straws a lot the craft of it was never in doubt even if it feels for the sake of itself at times. Hard to rate a book that went this far over my head but I'm gonna say... 7/10
  24. I guess that's why they call it the blues - Elton John
  25. Josie Dew. Long cloud Ride. A woman bikes and hikes across New Zealand.
  26. on his nose, in
  27. I omitted 3 or 4 that weren't quite fitting for this forum. 😁
  28. Summertime Blues - Eddie Cochran
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