The mountains & the lake, people & places, children & chickens, frescoes & felines, barbera & books.
Sunday, 31 January 2010
Saturday, 30 January 2010
Quote of the week No. 34 : On self-determination
Friday, 29 January 2010
Thursday, 28 January 2010
A plague upon our heads
Wednesday, 27 January 2010
Sunset
Tuesday, 26 January 2010
Monday, 25 January 2010
Book notes No. 30 : The Constant Mistress, Angela Lambert
I picked up a Penguin paperback edition of Angela Lambert's 1994 novel, The Constant Mistress, in a second-hand bookshop almost a year ago and it has been lying in a pile of similar second-hand treasure ever since. What made me choose it to follow Henry Porter's political thriller, I don't know. The two books couldn't be more different.Sunday, 24 January 2010
Cold day
Saturday, 23 January 2010
Apricot sunrise
Friday, 22 January 2010
Little glimmers of joy
Thursday, 21 January 2010
Wednesday, 20 January 2010
The length of a cock crow
Minus one at 8am. Starting clear with a pretty hard frost. Sunday, 17 January 2010
Saturday, 16 January 2010
Kreativ blogger award
What a lovely way to start the year! Bev, not far from me here in Italy, has nominated me for this great award. Bev's blog, Romancing Italy, is all about her expat life here, and the love affair that brought her to this fair country. Take a look!The instructions for this award are as follows:
1) Thank the person who sent the award. [Thanks, Bev, I really appreciate it!]
a) Copy the award to my blog [Above]
b) Link to their blog [Above]
2) List seven things people don't know about me
i) I adore cheesecake
ii) I hate book launches
iii) I also hate book fairs, especially Frankfurt
iv) I was once accepted for VSO
v) I spend a disproportionate amount of time chasing chickens
vi) If I don't have a cup of tea within 20 minutes of waking up you'd better hope it's because I'm going back to sleep
vii) I love reading etymological dictionaries
3) Nominate seven bloggers for the award
a) Link to those blogs
b) Leave a comment to let them know of their award
i) Strange Pilgram
ii) Tlalocland News
iii) On a Quirky Quest with Lady Fi
iv) Gutsy Writer
v) Suburb Sanity
vi) Joy inthe Burbs
vii) Family Fountain
Have a good day!
Friday, 15 January 2010
Book Notes No. 29: The Dying Light, Henry Porter
Has this ever happened to you? Somebody mentions an old friend, say, or some topic of interest, and over the next couple of weeks the same subject arises again and again in different contexts? I'm sure it has. And many times. In fact, this kind of thing is so common that Swiss psychologist Carl Jung gave it a name : synchronicity.Recently, I experienced just such a network of interrelated coincidences. First, I read in the news that in Britain the local councils, the equivalent of the Italian comune, have trebled the numbers of CCTV cameras on the streets, despite the clear evidence that they do nothing to deter crime, or indeed to help in the prosecution of criminals. I was none too surprised to find my own home town in the top ten, having more than four cameras per 1,000 residents. The Outer Hebrides topped the list with more than 8 cameras per 1,000 residents. With a population of just over 26,000, that's a staggering 208 cameras.
And they're not cheap.
And surely the Outer Hebrides has nothing more than a bunch of sheep to safeguard...?
Then one day, I was listening to BBC Radio 4 over a cup of tea. A segment came on about a new piece of equipment being tested by the Manchester Police Force - ominously called a 'drone', but in fact a small radio-controlled flying gadget with a camera mounted on it. The Manchester Police Force are ecstatic. Now they can spy on whoever they like whenever they like, without the cost and rigamarole of calling out the local helicopter squadron. Those who like to take an innocent stroll at odd times of the day or night are not so sure.
Later that day, a friend was complaining about New Labour's new biometric ID card, currently compulsory only for immigrant workers and foreign students, but already being offered to British citizens, who despite decades of resistance seem actually to be taking them up voluntarily thinking that by doing so they might in some obscure way be helping to solve Britain's benefits-fraud problem. And worse, its tie-up with the new DNA super-database, which includes DNA information even on people who have never so much as asked a policeman for directions, let alone been arrested or prosecuted.
My mind really started ticking when I saw that our local computer shop here in Italy is displaying a sophisticated range of surveillance equipment for private use, and then that it seems to have become à la mode to mount a sweet little webcam on the handlebars of one's motorcycle, of all things. What could it be for? I asked myself. I could only reach the conclusion that bikers far and wide have finally admitted to a vanity we all knew they possessed in buckets. They have found a way to watch themselves breaking the ton with the sun sparkling on their opaque Darth Vader visors (or dog ends from passing motorists getting stuck in their Lynyrd Skynyrd beards, depending on nationality, age and engine capacity). In the meantime, however, they record the activities of any person who comes within range of the parked machine.
And finally, I read a review of a new novel called The Dying Light (published in the US as The Bell Ringers, I believe), by Britain's self-styled guardian of liberty, Henry Porter, whose name rang a definite bell in that part of my dim and distant memory that related to my early days in the world of London publishing, but that's another story altogether...
The synchronicity was too strong to be ignored. My mind, working on its own, quickly grouped these events by meaning as Jung describes and forced my One-Click-Ordering hand. I bought the book, despite not being a huge fan of the thriller genre.
Here's the blurb. 1.) Former intelligence officer dies in bomb attack. 2.) Estranged soulmate inherits his house, lots of dosh and some disconcerting messages from beyond the grave. 3.) Said soulmate finds herself and a lot of other people under surveillance and in some instances under attack. 4.) All is gradually revealed and the dènouemont rages to a breathtaking finale.
Unputdownable! Really.
The author's note makes it clear, if it is not clear enough by the last page, that while the story is a fiction (bound for Hollywood, perhaps?) the structures within British society that would enable the given scenario to become a reality are already in place. One merely needs to project forward a few years. Spy drones, spy cameras, human spies and computerised spies. It all adds up to a Big Brother-style society in which ordinary people acquiesce in the slow and silent theft of their liberty because they think they are being made more secure.
And as Benjamin Franklin once wrote : "Anyone who trades liberty for security deserves neither".
Thursday, 14 January 2010
A nighttime visit
Our garden has been visited again, this time by not one but by what seems like an entire team of destructor machines. Sus bloody scrofa, no doubt after the young bulbs that are starting to shoot just below the surface of what used to be a nicely terraced grassy hideaway and is now looking more like a pile of overgrown rubble.
Hmmm...time to call in the boys in green and their delicious aftershave...
Wednesday, 13 January 2010
Reported conversations No.17 : the problem with similes
Mealtimes in the big house on the hill are a bustling chaos. Four people and any number of cats in the same few square metres, all tripping over each other in an effort to get somewhere too fast.
M., like some devilish alchemist, is at the helm of the wood-burning cucina economica, on which lie various copper pots all bubbling away, with an ancient water kettle in the centre flipping its lid as it boils. B is usually to be found skittering around at floor level tidying up dolls, building bricks, miscellaneous parts of Transformers, and reams and reams of paper. She's popping everything into her doll's pram (that's pee-ram in this house because it's used to ram every piece of furniture, door jamb and human leg in sight). AJ is quite sensibly counting out knives, forks, glasses and plates and putting them on the table in the hopes of 50¢ for his bulging piggy bank. Mama is officiating at the table, "no, the knife on the right, darling, fork on the left..."
The other day, amid the call and response of instruction, backchat, conversation and inter-sibling insult, a little voice pipes up :
AJ : "B., you have to be careful of the paper"
B : "Why? Why you be careful da paypurr?"
AJ : "Because it will cut you. (Taking on Mama's best maestra tone) You see it's sharp."
B : "Da paypurr sharp?"
AJ : "Yes, B. it will cut you."
B : "Paypurr for drawin', paypurr not for cuttin' "
AJ : "Believe what I say, B. You have to be careful of paper. Paper can be as sharp as a fork..."
Tuesday, 12 January 2010
Sponge-cake, anyone?
But let's look on the bright side. After a moulting-season pausa and a looooooong cold-weather sciopero, the chickens (sadly depleted to only 14 following hawk strikes on two successive days) have started laying again. And Mama needs to get baking again.
[Click here for last year's sparrow-hawk drama, same month, same modus operandi, same perpetrator?...]
Monday, 11 January 2010
Good intentions
And it looks like I'm taking that paved road to hell...!
Sunday, 31 January 2010
Saturday, 30 January 2010
Quote of the week No. 34 : On self-determination
Friday, 29 January 2010
Thursday, 28 January 2010
A plague upon our heads
Wednesday, 27 January 2010
Sunset
Tuesday, 26 January 2010
Monday, 25 January 2010
Book notes No. 30 : The Constant Mistress, Angela Lambert
I picked up a Penguin paperback edition of Angela Lambert's 1994 novel, The Constant Mistress, in a second-hand bookshop almost a year ago and it has been lying in a pile of similar second-hand treasure ever since. What made me choose it to follow Henry Porter's political thriller, I don't know. The two books couldn't be more different.Sunday, 24 January 2010
Cold day
Saturday, 23 January 2010
Apricot sunrise
Friday, 22 January 2010
Little glimmers of joy
Thursday, 21 January 2010
Wednesday, 20 January 2010
The length of a cock crow
Minus one at 8am. Starting clear with a pretty hard frost. Sunday, 17 January 2010
Saturday, 16 January 2010
Kreativ blogger award
What a lovely way to start the year! Bev, not far from me here in Italy, has nominated me for this great award. Bev's blog, Romancing Italy, is all about her expat life here, and the love affair that brought her to this fair country. Take a look!The instructions for this award are as follows:
1) Thank the person who sent the award. [Thanks, Bev, I really appreciate it!]
a) Copy the award to my blog [Above]
b) Link to their blog [Above]
2) List seven things people don't know about me
i) I adore cheesecake
ii) I hate book launches
iii) I also hate book fairs, especially Frankfurt
iv) I was once accepted for VSO
v) I spend a disproportionate amount of time chasing chickens
vi) If I don't have a cup of tea within 20 minutes of waking up you'd better hope it's because I'm going back to sleep
vii) I love reading etymological dictionaries
3) Nominate seven bloggers for the award
a) Link to those blogs
b) Leave a comment to let them know of their award
i) Strange Pilgram
ii) Tlalocland News
iii) On a Quirky Quest with Lady Fi
iv) Gutsy Writer
v) Suburb Sanity
vi) Joy inthe Burbs
vii) Family Fountain
Have a good day!
Friday, 15 January 2010
Book Notes No. 29: The Dying Light, Henry Porter
Has this ever happened to you? Somebody mentions an old friend, say, or some topic of interest, and over the next couple of weeks the same subject arises again and again in different contexts? I'm sure it has. And many times. In fact, this kind of thing is so common that Swiss psychologist Carl Jung gave it a name : synchronicity.Recently, I experienced just such a network of interrelated coincidences. First, I read in the news that in Britain the local councils, the equivalent of the Italian comune, have trebled the numbers of CCTV cameras on the streets, despite the clear evidence that they do nothing to deter crime, or indeed to help in the prosecution of criminals. I was none too surprised to find my own home town in the top ten, having more than four cameras per 1,000 residents. The Outer Hebrides topped the list with more than 8 cameras per 1,000 residents. With a population of just over 26,000, that's a staggering 208 cameras.
And they're not cheap.
And surely the Outer Hebrides has nothing more than a bunch of sheep to safeguard...?
Then one day, I was listening to BBC Radio 4 over a cup of tea. A segment came on about a new piece of equipment being tested by the Manchester Police Force - ominously called a 'drone', but in fact a small radio-controlled flying gadget with a camera mounted on it. The Manchester Police Force are ecstatic. Now they can spy on whoever they like whenever they like, without the cost and rigamarole of calling out the local helicopter squadron. Those who like to take an innocent stroll at odd times of the day or night are not so sure.
Later that day, a friend was complaining about New Labour's new biometric ID card, currently compulsory only for immigrant workers and foreign students, but already being offered to British citizens, who despite decades of resistance seem actually to be taking them up voluntarily thinking that by doing so they might in some obscure way be helping to solve Britain's benefits-fraud problem. And worse, its tie-up with the new DNA super-database, which includes DNA information even on people who have never so much as asked a policeman for directions, let alone been arrested or prosecuted.
My mind really started ticking when I saw that our local computer shop here in Italy is displaying a sophisticated range of surveillance equipment for private use, and then that it seems to have become à la mode to mount a sweet little webcam on the handlebars of one's motorcycle, of all things. What could it be for? I asked myself. I could only reach the conclusion that bikers far and wide have finally admitted to a vanity we all knew they possessed in buckets. They have found a way to watch themselves breaking the ton with the sun sparkling on their opaque Darth Vader visors (or dog ends from passing motorists getting stuck in their Lynyrd Skynyrd beards, depending on nationality, age and engine capacity). In the meantime, however, they record the activities of any person who comes within range of the parked machine.
And finally, I read a review of a new novel called The Dying Light (published in the US as The Bell Ringers, I believe), by Britain's self-styled guardian of liberty, Henry Porter, whose name rang a definite bell in that part of my dim and distant memory that related to my early days in the world of London publishing, but that's another story altogether...
The synchronicity was too strong to be ignored. My mind, working on its own, quickly grouped these events by meaning as Jung describes and forced my One-Click-Ordering hand. I bought the book, despite not being a huge fan of the thriller genre.
Here's the blurb. 1.) Former intelligence officer dies in bomb attack. 2.) Estranged soulmate inherits his house, lots of dosh and some disconcerting messages from beyond the grave. 3.) Said soulmate finds herself and a lot of other people under surveillance and in some instances under attack. 4.) All is gradually revealed and the dènouemont rages to a breathtaking finale.
Unputdownable! Really.
The author's note makes it clear, if it is not clear enough by the last page, that while the story is a fiction (bound for Hollywood, perhaps?) the structures within British society that would enable the given scenario to become a reality are already in place. One merely needs to project forward a few years. Spy drones, spy cameras, human spies and computerised spies. It all adds up to a Big Brother-style society in which ordinary people acquiesce in the slow and silent theft of their liberty because they think they are being made more secure.
And as Benjamin Franklin once wrote : "Anyone who trades liberty for security deserves neither".
Thursday, 14 January 2010
A nighttime visit
Our garden has been visited again, this time by not one but by what seems like an entire team of destructor machines. Sus bloody scrofa, no doubt after the young bulbs that are starting to shoot just below the surface of what used to be a nicely terraced grassy hideaway and is now looking more like a pile of overgrown rubble.
Hmmm...time to call in the boys in green and their delicious aftershave...
Wednesday, 13 January 2010
Reported conversations No.17 : the problem with similes
Mealtimes in the big house on the hill are a bustling chaos. Four people and any number of cats in the same few square metres, all tripping over each other in an effort to get somewhere too fast.
M., like some devilish alchemist, is at the helm of the wood-burning cucina economica, on which lie various copper pots all bubbling away, with an ancient water kettle in the centre flipping its lid as it boils. B is usually to be found skittering around at floor level tidying up dolls, building bricks, miscellaneous parts of Transformers, and reams and reams of paper. She's popping everything into her doll's pram (that's pee-ram in this house because it's used to ram every piece of furniture, door jamb and human leg in sight). AJ is quite sensibly counting out knives, forks, glasses and plates and putting them on the table in the hopes of 50¢ for his bulging piggy bank. Mama is officiating at the table, "no, the knife on the right, darling, fork on the left..."
The other day, amid the call and response of instruction, backchat, conversation and inter-sibling insult, a little voice pipes up :
AJ : "B., you have to be careful of the paper"
B : "Why? Why you be careful da paypurr?"
AJ : "Because it will cut you. (Taking on Mama's best maestra tone) You see it's sharp."
B : "Da paypurr sharp?"
AJ : "Yes, B. it will cut you."
B : "Paypurr for drawin', paypurr not for cuttin' "
AJ : "Believe what I say, B. You have to be careful of paper. Paper can be as sharp as a fork..."
Tuesday, 12 January 2010
Sponge-cake, anyone?
But let's look on the bright side. After a moulting-season pausa and a looooooong cold-weather sciopero, the chickens (sadly depleted to only 14 following hawk strikes on two successive days) have started laying again. And Mama needs to get baking again.
[Click here for last year's sparrow-hawk drama, same month, same modus operandi, same perpetrator?...]
Monday, 11 January 2010
Good intentions
And it looks like I'm taking that paved road to hell...!
