Friday, March 19, 2010

Stuck-in-a-Book's Weekend Miscellany


Will you look at that, somehow it's the weekend again. Hope you all had a lovely week - mine has not been quite as busy as perhaps it should have been, but was very nicely interrupted today as Our Vicar and Our Vicar's Wife paid a fleeting visit on their way through to a wedding in London. Oh, and the photo above isn't particularly relevant - I took it last summer in Cornwall - but I don't think I've shared it here before, and it is rather brilliant.

Right - as per usual, the link, the book, the blog post. It's like the good, the bad, and the ugly - except it's the good, the good, and the good.

1.) The link - is this rather fun and interesting article about joining a book group. I may or may not have stolen this link from someone else, I made a note of it last Saturday, and can't remember - so apologies if I'm not crediting you! I look forward to my various book groups as highlights of my month, and love reading about other people's experiences in them...

2.) The book - came through the post yesterday, and has the rather irresistible title Love, Revenge & Buttered Scones and is by Bobbie Darbyshire. I'm hoping to read this before too long, but thought I'd alert you to it now, in case it takes a back seat while I wade through the enormous fantasy book I've promised my brother I'll read... Anyway, the novel is about (I quote the blurb) 'an innocent meeting of a reading group which sparks a series of bizarre events. Three troubled people, driven by loneliness, vanity and revenge, hurl themselves on Inverness public library to find that nothing is as they expect.' Sounds fun, doesn't it?

3.) The blog post - is a little unusual for a book blog, but I was struck by Spitalfields Life's post on Postman's Park - which commemorates those who died in 'Heroic Self-Sacrifice'. To give an example: 'Soloman Galaman, Aged 11, Died of Injuries, Sept. 6 1901, After Saving His Little Brother From Being Run Over in Commercial Street.' For lots of photos of the unique commemorative tiles there (they are Victorian and the turn of the century), and a bit of the history behind it, click here. I've never been in person, but will try and seek it out next time I'm in London. Have you ever been there?

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