Books Read In January 2023

The Quentin Blake Book by Jenny Uglow

Ego is the Enemy: The Fight to Master Our Greatest Opponent by Ryan Holiday

Sidney Chambers and The Dangers of Temptation by James Runcie

B: A Year in Plagues and Pencils by Edward Carey

Career of Evil by Robert Galbraith

The Silkworm by Robert Galbraith

The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse by Charlie Mackesy

Inspector Cadaver by Georges Simenonย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย 

I haven’t really felt that I’ve been reading much the first month of 2023 but according to GoodReads I’ve clocked in eight books. Five of these were on my Kindle and the other three were a lot of pictures, so I guess it soon mounts up . Heavier on the fiction than non-fiction but that’s just how I’ve been feeling.

Standouts for me were The Quentin Blake Book and B: A Year in Plagues and Pencils and I think I need to revisit both to get more out of them as it was difficult to take them in with just one reading. The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse is a book that I put off reading for far too long and should also spend more time with.

I’ve also been dipping into Doctor Sleep by Stephen King (the “sequel” to The Shining) and An Immense World by Ed Yong. I’m enjoying both of these but just haven’t had a chance to really get into them. I may well get to finish them during February.

Sat Nav Snafu

Meet Doris

Last week I had to go to an in person meeting. This is the first in person meeting Iโ€™ve had with this client since early 2020 when the pandemic was just about to kick off. The client had asked for a 0830 start which meant with travel time and a bit of leeway I had to leave the house at 0600.

Weโ€™d been experiencing some cold nights and heavy frost and because our house-move means I no longer have a garage to park in I either have to cover the car up or scrape the frost and ice off. I didnโ€™t actually have to do that on the morning of the meeting as it was quite mild, so I was good to go on time. My car has a built in Sat Nav (I used to use Google Maps in our old car), so I programmed it with the destination and set off. As we headed North I noticed that the temperatures outside were starting to drop and we hit a pretty consistent -5ยฐC and then not long after that the Sat Nav (letโ€™s call her Doris) said โ€œTraffic Jam Ahead! Recalculating Routeโ€ฆโ€

Now Iโ€™ve visited this client before and I roughly know the route, I really only need directions for the last little bit, so I was expecting to stay on the dual carriageway but Doris had other ideas to avoid the traffic jam and she told me to leave the dual carriageway. Wanting to make sure I reached the client on time I decided to do as I was told rather than risk the delay in the traffic jam. At this point the outside temperature was now down to -8ยฐC.

I left the dual carriageway as told and over the next few minutes the quality of the roads deteriorated to narrower and untreated single track roads. Doris was insistent that this route would avoid the traffic jam and I would still make my destination on time. I have to say at this point I wasnโ€™t convinced and had visions of ending up sliding off the road into a ditch. The roads got narrower and more slippery and progress was slow as I made sure that I could maintain control of the car on slippery roads. After about 20 minutes Doris told me to rejoin the dual carriageway and we were back on roads that had seen a gritter in the last few hours.

I made the meeting on time and it went well. On the way home Doris was back on duty and again she decided on a slightly unconventional route back to the dual carriageway (and different to the one sheโ€™d taken me on earlier in the day). Once I was on familiar territory I turned her off.

I think the moral of the story is that I need to look at Dorisโ€™s options because Iโ€™m pretty sure that there are ways to avoid being taken on unclassified roads. If this had been the middle of summer it wouldnโ€™t have been a problems but untreated narrow country roads that youโ€™re not familiar with are no fun in winter with ice and frost!


A little bit of housekeeping. I have now turned on paid subscriptions and if you were a free subscriber at the point this happened you now have a free โ€œpaidโ€ subscription for life, you wonโ€™t be charged for this.

January 2023 Update

I’m pretty sure that a year ago I wrote something like I can’t believe that it’s the end of January already. This year I’m glad it is and this month really feels like it’s been dragging. We’ve had a few unexpected things happen that has made the month more stressful than it might otherwise have been and some of these are going to be expensive to put right. Others just are, and there is little that we can do about them for the time being.

Firstly we had the boiler in our “new” house serviced and discovered that there is a small problem with the gas supply. The problem is not urgent but is going to need to be fixed and will cost quite a bit to put right. On the positive side we also had the chimney swept and can now use the wood stove. I have mixed feelings about this as I have concerns about the air quality and climate change issues surrounding it but it has been a definite boost to morale and when our tumble dryer broke a helpful way to dry clothes.

We also discovered that the old conservatory has a leak somewhere and this will also need to be attended to, probably means we need to replace the building itself. Again more expense.

Most recently we have had groundwater flooding. This is basically where the water table reaches such a height that it breaks the surface of the ground and causes flooding. It’s not been as bad as I know it can get, but it has meant that we’ve had to be careful with out water use as it has impacted on our sewerage system. I’ve had to rig submersible pumps and think about things that I’ve not had to for some time and would really rather weren’t an issue. Other houses in the local area are much more badly affected by it, but sometimes it is difficult to see beyond your own immediate experience.

All of this has made January feel like it was never going to end and why I’ll be glad when the days start to lengthen and the weather gets warmer. I’ve realised how much I hate rain. It has become something we are hoping will not happen (as this exacerbates the flood impacts) and it has had a big impact on my mental health at times.


Reading

I’ve had a little less time to read this month and have mostly been sticking to crime novels. Nothing has really jumped out to me as something that I think I should mention here, some were better than others.


Watching

We haven’t been watching much TV, and in reality what we have watched was catching up with things we didn’t watch over the Christmas period. Christmas specials of All Creatures Great and Small and The Detectorists as well as other shows that we would normally watch if they were on as well as highlights such as The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse and reruns of the Wallace and Gromit claymations.


Garden

I have made a little bit of progress in the garden when it’s not been too wet or cold to get much done. I’ve managed to start to repair the raised beds that were already here and have recently discovered that I have more spare bits than I thought I did so will be able to do some more work on these in due course. I’ve also made a start on this years crops with potatoes that are chitting ready for planting towards the end of March (hopefully) and some onion sets and other seeds ready to get started in the next month or so.


Work

It’s been a quiet start to the year which wasn’t entirely unexpected, but I do need to get things going again and get some income in (as mentioned above we have some unexpected expenditure on the horizon). I had a meeting with a client at the end of the month, which was the first time that I’ve seen them face to face since before the pandemic.


Outside

This still remains one of my highlights and daily walks have really helped my mental health and deal with some of the low points over the last few weeks. It’s hard to overstate how much this is one of the pleasures of living here now.


In other news I’ve reached the Fiftieth post in my Fifty Things From Fifty Years newsletter and decided to keep going. You can read more about what that means here. It might also have an impact on what happens here to, here’s what I wrote about that:

Away from the newsletter Iโ€™m thinking about using my blog more. Perhaps as more of a status update or more immediate news. I havenโ€™t quite thought this through. You can also subscribe there (if you really want an overload of me in your inbox) or use an RSS reader or just stop by now and again. Iโ€™m thinking of this more as a replacement for Twitter unless by some miracle thatโ€™s rescued by someone sensible, which seems increasingly unlikely.

Well I think that’s it for this month, thanks for reading, stay safe and take care. Expect the occasional extra post over the coming weeks as I adapt to my new ideas about how this site will be used.

Life After Fifty Part II

Not One of the Fifty

brown and white abstract painting

So last week was the 50th of 50. I wonโ€™t lie I feel a certain sense of achievement in having done what I set out to and as promised hereโ€™s what Iโ€™ve decided in terms of what happens next. Life After Fifty.

Iโ€™m going to continue, I was easily persuaded. However there will be some changes. I donโ€™t think I necessarily have enough 50 Things post ideas left to do that indefinitely but there are still a few that I havenโ€™t told. I did love all of the suggestions as to things I might do and if I had enough time would do all of them, but sadly I donโ€™t. This takes a little bit of time each week to sit and write, probably when I should be doing something that is paying the bills and I enjoy doing it.

What I do love though is that each week I write about one thing. Whether thatโ€™s about music or Action Manโ„ข or anything else for that matter. I write about one thing. So thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m going to continue doing. Each week Iโ€™ll write about one thing thatโ€™s inspired me from the ideas that you all gave me or is something from my 50 years (soon to be 51). It might be a book I read or had a big influence on my life, it might be about the garden, who knows what will come next! Iโ€™ll try and keep to the same routine, but I might take the odd week here and there for holidays and stuff if I donโ€™t bank posts up, so you shouldnโ€™t find me in your inbox any more frequently than you do already.

Of course if you donโ€™t like the sound of this please feel free to hit the unsubscribe button at the bottom of this email. Iโ€™ll be sorry to see you go, but I understand if this isnโ€™t what you signed up for and no hard feelings.

Now Iโ€™m also going to make some other changes. Iโ€™m not using anywhere near the potential that Substack offers, so I want to up my game a bit. Starting somewhen between when this post goes out and before the next one after that, Iโ€™m going to turn on paid subscriptions and the chat feature. I donโ€™t yet know quite what Iโ€™m going to do with the chat yet and initially there will be no difference between being a paid subscriber and a free subscriber. Iโ€™m also going to make everyone who is subscribed at that point a free paid subscriber for life (unless you unsubscribe at a later date). So if youโ€™re one of the people who reads this newsletter by following the Twitter or other link but isnโ€™t subscribed nowโ€™s a good time to hit the subscription button. Ultimately I will be doing some things for paid subscribers only but not quite yet. Should you not wish to be a paid subscriber (even a free for life one) then let me know. It might sound counterintuitive to do this but loyalty has its rewards and you can always buy me a coffee here.

Away from the newsletter Iโ€™m thinking about using my blog more. Perhaps as more of a status update or more immediate news. I havenโ€™t quite thought this through. You can also subscribe there (if you really want an overload of me in your inbox) or use an RSS reader or just stop by now and again. Iโ€™m thinking of this more as a replacement for Twitter unless by some miracle thatโ€™s rescued by someone sensible, which seems increasingly unlikely.


So thatโ€™s it. I hope youโ€™ll stick around but if not thanks for joining me this far. Any questions then just leave a comment or simply reply to the email that delivered this newsletter and Iโ€™ll get back to you.

Ghost Train

50 of 50

So weโ€™ve reached the โ€œendโ€ 50 posts from 50 years. If youโ€™ve been here from the begining or joined in at any point over the last 50 weeks, thanks for reading. I really do appreciate you taking the time to read the words that Iโ€™ve been writing. I hope that youโ€™ve enjoyed it and that itโ€™s bought you some enjoyment.

Iโ€™m going to send out a separate post in the next week or so about what Iโ€™m thinking of doing next but in the meantime on with the show!


Growing up we used to have a regular visit from a travelling fairground which would set up near us once a year for a few days before moving on to the next location. We didnโ€™t go every time they came but I do remember one particular visit. It might possibly have been the first time that I was taken / allowed to go, probably by virtue of being considered to be old enough.

My memories are snatches of the different rides and attractions. From having a go at trying to shoot a target with an air-rifle to trying to win a goldfish in a plastic bag by bouncing a ping-pong ball into a glass bowl. Looking back these seems a bit barbaric as Iโ€™m sure the fish would be much happier in the bowls and I wonder whether this is still a feature of fairgrounds today?

school of goldfish inside clear plastic bags

By the time weโ€™d tried some of the static attractions it was time to try some of the rides. I must have still be quite young as I do remember being too short to go on some of the rides that my older friends were allowed on. One of the exceptions to this was the ghost train. At the time I donโ€™t think I had a concept of what this was, other than it was supposed to be scary; that I didnโ€™t want to really go on it and it took a lot of persuasion to get me into the car that you rode in.

I remember it being a bumpy, jerky ride and with adult hindsight what was obviously puffs of air, sprays of water and strands of cotton wool and other things designed to give you the chills along with clearly past their best mannequins and dolls in all manner of different โ€œscaryโ€ poses with fake blood and gore, along with the sudden changes of direction to make you think that you were going to run into one of them. The thing that scared me the most and I do remember vividly though is when we rounded one corner in the dark and up ahead we could see another car with people in it coming straight towards us on a collision course.

As we barreled towards one another I distinctly remember thinking that this was how it was going to end, until of course at the last minute we made a sharp turn away from our reflections in a mirror. The combination of poor lighting and the build up really did make for a scary experience.

I suppose that the scary experience I get now looking in the mirror probably isnโ€™t quite the same thing, but that is a memory that sticks with me to this day. Itโ€™s odd that it does because itโ€™s such a minor thing from 50 years. I also remember from years later when we went on trips with our youth club to Thorpe Park (somewhat different now to how it was then), that the Ghost House wasnโ€™t nearly as scary to me as it was to some of my friends.

Thanks for reading.

Fickle Memories

49 of 50

Thereโ€™s just one more of the original FiftyfromFifty to come after this one and for me this has been a bit of a nostalgia trip. Iโ€™ve tried to keep most of the posts positive and avoid any sense of weltschmerz, there are of course exceptions that prove the rule in the archive of posts. Itโ€™s also worth noting that all the posts are more memoir rather than diary, by which I mean they are my recollections of the time and not something that I have taken from a verbatim first hand account written at the time.

Iโ€™m pretty sure that my memory is reasonably reliable – at the moment at least. But having said that I had a long list of possible things to write about and some I definitely remember better than others and Iโ€™ve tended to stick to the ones that I am more certain of. For example I have memories of flying kites on the Downs and hunting for tadpoles in local streams. I know these things happened, Iโ€™m sure of them and even to a certain extent who else was there but Iโ€™m not sure enough to write coherently about the adventures.

They are happy memories and I feel blessed to be able to talk about such things where many people donโ€™t have the same feelings about their time growing up.

Iโ€™ve also spent a lot of time going through old photographs this year, digitising some of them as I went. Some of them come from a time when I was too young to remember what was going on or why the photograph had been taken. Some Iโ€™ve been able to make a guess at though.

For example the image above definitely shows my Dad (in the apron) and my Uncle. Theyโ€™re in my Grandadโ€™s butchers shop. Beyond that my guess that the baby is either me or more likely my cousin and this is a christening or a christening tea afterwards. I probably wasnโ€™t born when this was taken or even if the baby is me too young to remember it, but it does bring back happy memories of three significant people from my childhood and most of my adult life.

While Iโ€™m happy to share these pictures and my surmises about what is happening I canโ€™t do so with any large degree of confidence and make a post about them, so I tend to err away from them. So although I have a nice photo I donโ€™t necessarily have the memory to go with it or similarly Iโ€™ll have good memories and no photos.

Memory is a fickle thing.

Thanks for reading.

New Year New You?

48 of 50

Wishing you all a very happy New Year, and welcoming new subscribers whoโ€™ve signed up over the last couple of weeks.

person standing on white digital bathroom scale

Itโ€™s that time of year when some of us start making promises that we might or might not keep. The New Yearโ€™s Resolution seems to me to be the kind of promise that is just made to be broken after a bit. For years I made them, often they were similar each year – lose weight, get fit, etc., etc., – but more frequently they would fail at some point, quietly forgotten about until January 1st the following year.

I havenโ€™t made any New Yearโ€™s resolutions for over ten years. Whatโ€™s the point? You can make a change at any time. I donโ€™t think doing it on the first day of the year means that you are any more likely to succeed than making it at any other time. If anything my experience says youโ€™re more likely to be successful if you make the decision when itโ€™s right for you.

As youโ€™ll know if youโ€™ve read a few of these posts youโ€™ll know I like to read, and I always like to read more if I can. That said I found having a target of reading X number of books a year to almost be a barrier to reading that many books. So a few years ago I set my target to just read one book and low and behold I read more books in that year than Iโ€™d ever read in any previous year and Iโ€™ve been pretty consistent. Even in a year when Iโ€™ve had a lot going on like this year Iโ€™ve still managed to read 80 books.

Iโ€™m not saying that this would work for everything, but if your aim is to do lots of something you only achieve that by doing it once and repeating it lots of times. Lose weight – well you need to lose one kilo and then repeat – admittedly thatโ€™s an oversimplification because ultimately your diet and exercise will also play a part in whether you can, and how fast youโ€™ll lose that weight.

Over the years Iโ€™ve seen more people including myself fail at achieving a personal change when they set out to do than if they set out to do it at any other time of the year and I think this is because weโ€™ve been conditioned to say that we are going to undertake x, y, z thing as a New Years Resolution when ultimately our heart isnโ€™t in it, rather than achieve the exact same thing by doing it another time when weโ€™re up for it.

What do you think – have you succeeded with your New Yearโ€™s Resolutions in the past and have you made any this year? Let me know in the comments, and thanks for reading.

Weโ€™re two posts away from the mythical Fifty, and Iโ€™m still thinking about what happens next. Iโ€™ll be writing more about it in due course in a separate not one of the fifty post.