Friday Favourites

I haven’t blogged as the last fortnight has been frantic – two new books published, we bought a house at auction and we’re off to London on our next home exchange trip next week and so we’ve been planning that.  Here’s my roundup of  some of the blog posts, sites and articles that have interested me over the last week or so and which I want to share more widely.

Advanced Style It often seems that fashion designers and retailers forget that women exist over the age of 40, or think that we should embrace beige in all its polyeser, elasticated forms and I’ve long been a fan of Advanced Style, a street fashion blog that celebrate the older, incredibly stylish women of New York.  I habitually wear black and when I’m older I would be delighted to have even a fraction of the elegance of that marvellous woman over there on the right – those amazing long strings of chunky pearls, that hair and that confidence – to the right.  The blog’s been turned in to a book which I used to stock at the bookshop but now there’s a documentary.  There are showings in (mostly) arts cinemas all over and I’m disappointed that I’m not going to be able to get to the Edinburgh showing but it’s also available to download and that’s going to be my treat next time I’m having a duvet day.  If we’re lucky, we’ll get to be old and if we do then we owe it to the people who we’ve lost along the way to make the most of it.

I love travelling by train – long distances, not the Scotrail service from Edinburgh to Glasgow obviously – and although I don’t have a bucket list (such a depressing concept – what do you do when you’ve ticked it all off? Turn up your toes and wait for death?) if I did, travelling the length of the Trans-Siberian railway would be on it. I quite fancy the Orient Express too for all its glamour and elegance and the iconic nature of it but the Trans-Siberian holds a particular allure, even though the luxury and the bubbling samovars of tea are no more.  I think it’s the sheer magnitude of the journey – 10 days that takes you from the Far East to Moscow, such an amazing variety of people and places.  The Husband thinks I’m mad and if I ever go I’ll be travelling alone or with whichever long-suffering friend I’ve persuaded to join me.  This article by Michael Arditti in The Independent was fascinating although given his top tips and the end and given my temperamental back, it sounds like a journey to make with a good stock of painkillers. But worth it I think.

While we’re on the subject of Russia, these colour photographs of pre-revolution Russia taken by Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky are fascinating.  Over a decade or so, he travelled the Russian Empire recording its people and places in around 10,000 colour images.  He left shortly after the revolution and eventually his archive passed to the Library of Congress who have now made the digital images available free online.  I spent ages browsing these – the unexpected use of colour gives these images of a long-gone age an immediacy that black and white or sepia lack, removing the distance between subject and viewer.

Property develope Sam Collett’s blog is always worth a read and she’s just flagged up this beauty in Devon coming up for auction in November. I love it and want it desperately despite the state of it or maybe even because of the state of it.  The auction guide is £150k and I suspect it will go for a good bit more which makes me feel better about the fact that the rest of the family are less that enthusiastic about my suggestion that we sell up and move to the other end of the country, especially as we’ve just bought a rather sad little cottage to convert and refurbish.

That’s it for now – see you next week when I’ll be back from London and fresh from seeing the Rembrandt exhibition that’s just opened and the amazing installation of poppies at the Tower of London.

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Friday Favourites

One of the rooms at Dolffanog Fach - so comfortable and look at that view

One of the rooms at Dolffanog Fach – so comfortable and look at that view

First up this week is a great blog post from my pal Sara who left bookselling to move to a gorgeous part of north Wales where she and her husband (and their four kids) took over a shabby B&B and have turned it into the most gorgeous retreat.  It’s a six hour drive from here or I’d visited by now but I can’t wait to get there as soon as possible.  This post about how they manage to juggle (horrid term I know) family and running the B&B is fascinating but also illuminating – I’ll never day dream about moving to somewhere like this and running a similarly lovely establishment.

Meg Rosoff is a wonderful writer and I’m privileged to count her as a chum.  In this piece, Why You Don’t Need To Rush Your Writing, she points out that however much you want to be a writer, living life and not rushing to your keyboard can help because the more you’ve seen of life the more you’ll have to say and the more resonance your writing will have.  She wrote her first book at 46 and starting a little later than many certainly hasn’t held her back.

1920 Vauxhall E-type

1920 Vauxhall E-type

The novel I’m working on (crikey – I rarely admit that publicly and don’t get excited, it will probably never see the light of day) is set in 1920.  My heroine is quite adventurous and has a love of fast cars – I think she would definitely have snapped up this beauty when it came on the market with Bonhams a few months ago and sold for a breathtaking £242k. I can see her roaring around the country roads of Scotland in this.  I am desperate to get a close up look at a car of this vintage so that I don’t describe it incorrectly, so if you know of anyone that might let me see theirs, even possible sit in it, do let me know.

I’ve never bought a copy of Vogue, although I always flick through it at the hairdesser’s, but I was intrigued by this interview with its editor, Anna Wintour.  Far from being the ice queen of legend, she comes across a warm and funny, and a bit shy even.  Meryl Streep’s character, Miranda Priestly, the terrifying editor of Runway in the film The Devil Wears Prada (and novel, but the film was much better) was rumoured to be based on Wintour and there’s a definite frisson as the interview enters the inner sanctum and the viewer realises that it’s just like Miranda’s office… I also realised that as someone who habitually wears head-to-toe black, I will always be a disappointment to Anna Wintour.

That’s it for this week – have a lovely weekend. What have you got planned?

 

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New book arrivals – treats!

New books...

New books…

There are people who get excited about new shoes or handbags but I don’t.  Yarn, skincare products, stationery and, most of all, books – those are the purchases that fill me with joy. Leaving aside the gorgeous Manos del Uruguay yarn that I’m currently knitting up into a shawl, and the treats from the Space NK gift-with-purchase that was my reward for getting ahead with my Christmas shopping last week, recent arrivals from bookshops, friends and publishers have been stacking up and I’ve got a lovely pile of reading lined up for the next couple of weeks.  I’ll try to review as many as possible, but in the meantime I wanted to alert you to a few of them.

Top of that pile is Sugar Hall by Tiffany MurrayDiamond Star Halo was Tiffany’s last novel and I love it – she was described perfectly by one reviewer as a rock and roll Dodie Smith.  This is her new novel and it looks a very different thing – a ghost story based on the spooky tales linked to Littledean Hall in the Forest of Dean.  I’ve been to Littledean Hall and has a very particular atmosphere.  This is going to be a delight – I’m considering saving it until the evenings draw in a little more and I can read it by the fire as ghost stories can’t be savoured properly in sunlight.

nora ephronNext is The Most of Nora Ephron which I’ve already started dipping into and which will stay on my bedside table so that I can enjoy a little bit of Nora’s wit and wisdom every evening.  Consisting of extracts from all areas of her writing, even the endpapers remind us of some of her pithy and practical advice: ‘never marry a man you wouldn’t want to be divorced from’, ‘be the heroine of your life, not the victim’, ‘don’t cover a couch with anything that isn’t more or less beige’ and the journalist’s motto: ‘everything is copy’. Like so many, I was upset when Nora died and I knew that there would be no more films such as ‘Sleepless in Seattle‘, no  more novels like ‘Heartburn‘ and no more insightful and funny New Yorker columns. She was like the arch and bossy and wise godmother we all wish we had.  Revisiting her work like this will be a treat.

felix francisDamage by Felix Francis is the latest novel in the ‘Dick Francis’ brand.  Felix Francis co-wrote some of his father’s last books and is now writing alone.  I have a sentimental relationship with Dick Francis thrillers.  Every year I’d buy my grandmother, a voracious reader, his new book at Christmas and every Boxing Day I would borrow it back. She died back in 2000 having achieved her goal of meeting her first grandchild and seeing in the new millenium but I still miss her.  Ridiculous as it may sound, a new Dick Francis novel is a comfort and I’ll enjoy reading this and thinking of her.

jane gardamThe Stories by Jane Gardam, a collection of her short stories, most of which I haven’t read, will be a joy.  Sharp and observant, combining a warm heart with a clever wit, I love her novels and when we owned the bookshop I would handsell many of them.  This collection, although published in May (why? It should have been an autumn title like 2011 gorgeous volume of The Complete Novels of Nancy Mitford from Penguin) would have been one of our big sellers in the run up to Christmas, much like the Nora Ephron collection.

sackville westI picked up The Disinherited by Robert Sackville-West at Mr B’s Emporium of Reading Delights in Bath (along with a stack of other books – such wonderful choice there).  I’d heard about it – without wanting to sound snarky, the Sackville-West name alone means that anything by one of the family will be extensively reviewed – and was intrigued by the true story of the illegitimate offspring of a scion of an aristocratic family and their failed bid to be recognised as the legimate heirs to Knole, one of England’s grandest country houses and home of the orginal eponymous sofa. It looks as though it’s in the same vein as Catherine Bailey’s The Secret Rooms which I loved.

johanna laneBlack Lake by Johanna Lane was sent to me ages ago by the fantastic Tinder Press imprint at Hachette, back in the days when the incredibly efficient and enthusiastic Sam Eades was its publicist, and I don’t know why I haven’t read it.  Out last April, I really am shamefully behind and I mean to get to this as soon as I can.  The paperback is out in February so I’ll probably review it and schedule the post to appear then.  I’ve heard great things about this Irish-set story of how tragedy affects an impoverished family their much-loved estate Dulough and how the upheaval of the move strains the threads that bind them.

clive asletClive Aslet’s The Arts and Crafts Country House epitomises the coffee table book – masses of lucious photographs of beautiful houses in my favourite architectural style. I picked it up – rather, hefted it up as it weighs a ton, mainly because I recognised the cover image as one of the fireplaces at Blackwell, a stunning Lake District house which The Husband and I visited at Easter while The Son was on a school trip.  I loved the house – there were so many corners to curl up in and I could have moved in very easily.  One of the things I love about good Arts and Crafts houses is that although they may be large and rambling, there’s a domesticity and friendliness to them that’s always welcoming.  One of my long-term aims/dreams is to find an Arts and Crafts house to restore but in the meantime I have to content myself with daydreaming over books such as this.

kerry taylorLast is Vintage Fashion and Couture, From Poiret to McQueen by Kerry Taylor, looking at the development of 20th century fashion, with an emphasis on the rareified atmosphere of haute couture – made-to-measure gowns (not dresses!) the price of which today is the equivalent of a fairly expensive car.  I picked this up, partly because of the stunning cover, and partly because of its coverage of 1920s design which will be helpful with the novel I’m currently working on.  I’ll review it properly when I’ve had time to soak it all up.

So there you have it – my reading for the next few weeks.  I’m a lucky girl!

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After the referendum – the view from here

yesshadowLast Friday morning, like many Yes voters, I wept as I watched the results come in from all over Scotland and realised that despite the positive feeling that change was coming, despite the smiles at the polling stations, despite the almost tangible air of positivity, the Yes campaign had only mustered 45% of the vote.  I say ‘only’ – that’s an amazing achievement and far more than was expected even two months earlier when polls showed support for a Yes vote on barely 30%.  By the 18th September, the polls were close, showing a tiny percentage lead for No but the polling companies themselves said that given normal margins for error it was too close to call.

Only one opinion poll had ever shown the Yes campaign in the lead and that, although encouraging in some respects, was A Very Bad Thing because it meant that Cameron, Clegg and Milliband, the leaders of the Westminster parliament who had been convinced that a win for No was a sure thing, dashed north to make all kinds of promises of extra powers for Scotland if we’d only give them one more chance. Whereas previously it had been thought that threats about armed border guards, the loss of our pensions and refusing to let us continue using the pound would be sufficient, the realisation that people were refusing to be cowed made them change their tack. Instead, if we would only vote No, we would have increased tax raising powers, more control over spending and a pony on our birthdays.  Ok, not the last, but those of us of a cynical nature didn’t think any of their promises very convincing.

Undertakings were made about timescales and it became clear that there was no consensus within Westminster or even the individual parties about these promises that were being so fervently given. Since the result on Friday morning there has been much heard about the West Lothian question and ‘English votes on English laws’ and potential devolution for England, Wales and Northern Ireland. We’ve already discussed these things as part of the independence debate but we will no doubt have to wait while the rest of the UK catches up.

Gordon Brown was hauled out of his Kirkcaldy consituency and stuck in front of audiences so that he could bolster the support of Labour voters (because if Labour are ever to win power at Westminster again, they will need those Scottish MPs and they were desperate) and win over the people who would hopefully forget that it was his tenure at the Exchequer that practically bankrupted the country. Brown keeps telling Scots that he will hold the government to their promises and even that there would be a second reading of the proposed Scotland Bill before Easter. The fact is that as a backbench Opposition MP he doesn’t even have the authority to choose the biscuits. And given that his attendance at Westminster is so appalling (last year he took part in only 12.78% of votes and spoke in only 5 debates) it’s hard to see when he’ll be able to do this. Already, pledges made to Scotland are getting bogged down in discussion about English devolution. We’ve been talking widely about these issues for a couple of years, if not forty – it’s a mature discussion.  It’s new to England, so why not get the promised Scottish devolved powers through and then debate the issue elsewhere?

Whilst it’s easy to dismiss this as just another example of the duplicity of politicians who will go to any lengths to save their own skins, it’s more important than that.  A poll published in The Guardian looked at the demographic profile and motivations of those who voted Yes and No in the referendum and it makes interesting reading.  Among the nuggets is a statistics stating that 25% of No voters said that the most important reason for their decision was that a “No vote would still mean extra powers for the Scottish Parliament together with the security of remaining part of the UK’.  If that’s truly the case then that’s half a million people who believed the ‘parcel of rogues’ who headed north to bribe and cajole when threatening didn’t work.  Given that the Yes voted only needed another 200,000 or so votes to carry the day, if Westminster lets Scotland’s No voters down I wouldn’t rate Better Together’s chances of winning another referendum.

And I think there will be another referendum.  This time next year, there will have been another General Election. Labour and the Lib Dems will lose some seats and there will be gains for UKIP and the Conservatives. Scotland only has one lone Tory MP as it is and he could well go, meaning that if there is a Conservative government or a Conservative+UKIP coalition then Scottish people have no voice in Parliament.  Anything can and will be forced through and no attention will be paid to our voices clamouring for them to make good on their promises, such as they were.

The Conservatives have also promised a UK-wide referendum on continued EU membership.  Given the rise of far-right organisations such as the English Defence League and Britain First, not to mention the incomprehensible rise of the numpties that make up the UK Independence Party, I can see there being a win for the motion to leave in England, although I think Wales, Northern Ireland and certainly Scotland will want to stay. Should there be sufficient votes south of the border and they try to drag us out of the European Union then I think that even the most pro-Union voter would be hard-pressed to ignore calls for another referendum on Scottish independence.

The Yes campaign will also need to look at the reasons people shied away from independence – that they were were worried about currency, about membership of the EU, about their pensions and the cost of living and have answers.  Instead of letting one supermarket spread doom about rising prices, they will need to have an actual plan for what’s happening with our currency, assurances will have to be sought from European Union member states that they will support our claim to retain membership. We have to give people facts and as much certainty as possible and not just rely on their willingness to sign up for a vision. And it needs to be made clear that a vote for independence is not a vote for the SNP – the wide-ranging nature of the independence movement needs to be demonstrated.  This time I think the SNP dominated the discussion and people need to see that it isn’t just a party political issue.  Fewer politicians and more sensible, eloquent people such as Lesley Riddoch and Tom Devine.

But then, when we look at the political landscape of Westminster and how it doesn’t even begin to reflect the opinions and attitudes of Scotland and we look at the future we could have, we, the 45%, will grow to far greater numbers and we will finally be able to start making a Scotland that is independent and fit for the 21st century.  People won’t be swayed by empty threats of armed border guards, nor won’t be conned by shiny promises that evaporate like mist when they’ve served their purpose, and nor will they believe the conventional media whose pro-No bias during the referendum campaign was incredible. I see it as being about four or five years until we hold another referendum. Certainly not the generation that Alastair Darling claims. In the meantime we need to maintain this amazing level of political awareness.  Whether Yes or No voter, we need to let our MPs, councillors and MSPs know that we’re watching them and will be holding them to account.

As I said to a friend yesterday, we have to let Westminster mess it up before we go back to people to ask again. Alarmingly we might even have to watch a far-right party take seats in the mother of Parliaments before enough Scots say ‘not in my name’. We have to be willing to play a long game.

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Friday Favourites

Thomson's Tower. Photo (c) SCRAN

Thomson’s Tower – one of the highlights of this year’s Door Open weekend. Photo (c) SCRAN

This week’s major distraction has been the Scottish independence referendum. It’s been incredible to see how engaged people are with the political process and whatever the result I hope we can maintain that level of participation.  As I type this the polls are still open and every pundit around says that the result is too close to call. I feel very fidgety and so I’ve decided to get ahead with some of the blog posts I’ve been meaning to write while I keep an eye on the news and the results coming in – I foresee a very sleepy day tomorrow..

I’m sticking with an Edinburgh theme for my Friday round-up and what better than Doors Open weekend which takes place on the 27th and 28th of September. As always there is an amazing range of buildings open to view, many of which are closed to the general public for the rest of the year. There are churches aplenty, the Lothian Buses depot and some of the New Town’s beautiful private garden squares. One of the buildings I’ll be visiting is Thomson’s Tower in Dr Neil’s Garden near Duddingston Kirk. As you can see from the picture at the top of this post, the octagonal William Playfair designed building has a beautiful setting with the lower level being given over to a museum of curling. I love curling but am blessed with rather more enthusiasm than ability but it will be lovely to see the museum and imagine the romance of curling on Duddingston loch in the shadow of Arthur’s Seat rather than the usual rather more municipal setting of Murrayfield curling rink.

Another thing I’m looking forward to is the Night in the Garden s ‘Go home and sit still! The Scottish Women’s Hospitals in World War 1’eason at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (known to locals as ‘The Botanics’). Walking around the gardens at night will be interesting, never mind with the light show that’s being planned.

The National Library of Scotland on George IV Bridge is a special place – our very own copyright library and I love using it. Every possible book and journal you could need is there and the reading room is a lovely place to be.  A lot of people don’t realise that they have a vibrant series of events and lectures and I’m hoping to go to ‘Go Home and Sit Still! The Scottish Women’s Hospitals in the First World War’, looking at the work of the heroic Elsie Inglis and the women who staffed her hospitals making a huge difference to the care of injured soldiers.

Lady Agnew of Lochnaw

Lady Agnew of Lochnaw by John Singer Sargent

We’re also taking a break from politics over the weekend to visit the American Impressionism exhibition at the National Gallery of Modern Art. There’s an interesting blog post by Phil Jupitus about his favourite painting, Lady Agnew of Lochnaw by John Singer Sargent. It’s one of my favourites too – the technical skills in the way that Sargent captures the texture of her white silk dress is amazing but I’m also fascinated by the subject. What is she thinking with that direct, almost insolent gaze? Compared to so many Victorian paintings of refined noble ladies, there’s no doubt with Lady Agnew that she was trouble.

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