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Monday 30 September 2013

Freedom to Rome






I am enjoying Freedom to Rome by Nick Warlow and Angela Michel so much :)

From the publishers website: "This book charts the route taken by a couple of non-hikers who decided to walk from York to Rome in 2012 with a pair of artificial hips."

It seemed particularly fitting to start reading it yesterday sat in the sun on the new steps up to York Minster (the Minster Piazza), under the silent gaze of Constantine the Great who was declared Roman Emperor whilst in York in 306AD.


A little more about the journey and the wonderful Angela and Nick can be read on their blog:
nickwarlowangelamichel.blogspot.co.uk/

You can also get free courier delivery if you live in York - ours was delivered to the door on Saturday by Nick himself just before I headed to City Screen to see Lois get her head shaved for Kyra... more on this in the next post (and no it won't be a 2 month wait!)

I will write more when I have finished the book but, for now, all I can say is order one now!!

Tuesday 30 July 2013

Walk Away

An old poem I wrote in 2002, that came to mind today.

Walk Away
2002

what am I
don't my feelings matter
oh yes I know you say they do
but how about you show it

who am I
that you can't respect me
that you don't protect me
why can't you just show it

bitter is the feeling
that my tears are falling
falling on an empty little lie
can't you see it

see the pain that haunts me
want to stay and hold me
but you can look then walk away
don't you feel it

why don't you feel it
feel it, see it, show it
feel that I need you
yet you walk away

don't walk away

why am I so stupid
why does it all matter
why can't I just
smile and walk away...




(Edit: P.S.Hush your worrying my dear Alastair, I love you x)

Wednesday 17 July 2013

The Equality Trust & Beasley Street

Good post on The Equality Trust's blog: Was Beasley Street the road to The Equality Trust?

Long time since I last read this poem, wonderfully evocative....

Beasley Street
by John Cooper Clarke

Far from crazy pavements -
The taste of silver spoons
A clinical arrangement
On a dirty afternoon
Where the fecal germs of Mr Freud
Are rendered obsolete
The legal term is null and void
In the case of Beasley Street

In the cheap seats where murder breeds
Somebody is out of breath
Sleep is a luxury they don't need
- a sneak preview of death
Belladonna is your flower
Manslaughter your meat
Spend a year in a couple of hours
On the edge of Beasley Street

Where the action isn't
That's where it is
State your position
Vacancies exist
In an X-certificate exercise
Ex-servicemen excrete
Keith Joseph smiles and a baby dies
In a box on Beasley Street

From the boarding houses and the bedsits
Full of accidents and fleas
Somebody gets it
Where the missing persons freeze
Wearing dead men's overcoats
You can't see their feet
A riff joint shuts - opens up
Right down on Beasley Street

Cars collide, colours clash
Disaster movie stuff
For a man with a Fu Manchu moustache
Revenge is not enough
There's a dead canary on a swivel seat
There's a rainbow in the road
Meanwhile on Beasley Street
Silence is the code

Hot beneath the collar
An inspector calls
Where the perishing stink of squalor
Impregnates the walls
The rats have all got rickets
They spit through broken teeth
The name of the game is not cricket
Caught out on Beasley Street

The hipster and his hired hat
Drive a borrowed car
Yellow socks and a pink cravat
Nothing La-di-dah
OAP, mother to be
Watch the three-piece suite
When shit-stoppered drains
And crocodile skis
Are seen on Beasley Street

The kingdom of the blind
A one-eyed man is king
Beauty problems are redefined
The doorbells do not ring
A lightbulb bursts like a blister
The only form of heat
Here a fellow sells his sister
Down the river on Beasley Street

The boys are on the wagon
The girls are on the shelf
Their common problem is
That they're not someone else
The dirt blows out
The dust blows in
You can't keep it neat
It's a fully furnished dustbin,
Sixteen Beasley Street

Vince the ageing savage
Betrays no kind of life
But the smell of yesterday's cabbage
And the ghost of last year's wife
Through a constant haze
Of deodorant sprays
He says retreat
Alsations dog the dirty days
Down the middle of Beasley Street

People turn to poison
Quick as lager turns to piss
Sweethearts are physically sick
Every time they kiss.
It's a sociologist's paradise
Each day repeats
On easy, cheesy, greasy, queasy
Beastly Beasley Street

Eyes dead as vicious fish
Look around for laughs
If I could have just one wish
I would be a photograph
On a permanent Monday morning
Get lost or fall asleep
When the yellow cats are yawning
Around the back of Beasley Street

Beasley Street on John Cooper Clarke's website

Thursday 20 June 2013

Book quandary.....

Two books just delivered from Amazon BUT how do I pick between them!? Both just published, both by favourite authors......

The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
 The Quarry by Iain Banks

Having read the ocean at the end of the lane (a book & marriage review) by Neil's wife Amanda Palmer, I ordered the book immediately. But I think it is probably The Quarry by Iain Banks that I must read first.....

The Quarry



The novel is about someone dying of cancer, Banks had written 90% of the book by early March this year when pretty much out of the blue he himself was diagnosed with terminal cancer and was given only a few months to live, the words above (from the book) were typed while in hospital after being given his diagnosis on the 4th March 2013.

Having bought the publication date forward to today (20th June 2013) and asked his longtime partner Adele Hartley to "do me the honour of becoming my widow" he got on with life, marriage, honeymoon and finishing the book. He announced his illness to the world on 3rd April and I, along with so many others, hoped that those 'few months' would become many.

Messages flooded in to the 'Banksophilia: friends of Iain Banks' site that was set up to provide updates and a space to comment. On 9th June under the heading 'TOO SOON' Iains death was announced:
Dear Friends of Iain,

From Adele “Iain died in the early hours this morning. His death was calm and without pain.”

We will update this site shortly. Please leave messages here, he absolutely loved them.

For now, a fond farewell to our friend.
Martin
The first book I read by Iain Banks was The Wasp Factory (which was also Iain's first published book), The Quarry won't be the last - I will re-read them, as I have done in the past, over the years to come. In particular I want to read The Bridge again as Iain considered it to be his best book: The Wasp Factory and The Bridge are both waiting beside my bed.

An excellent last interview by Stuart Kelly was published in the Guradian at the weekend.

Style change

Suddenly found the whole black background utterly irritating, simple is now the order of the day. I may tweak a little (who knows I may tweak a lot) but I think I will remain simple for a while ;)

Simple, Seldom and Sad
by Mervyn Peake

Simple, seldom and sad
We are;
Alone on the Halibut Hills
Afar,
With sweet mad Expressions
Of old
Strangely beautiful
So we're told
By the Creatures that Move
In the sky
And Die
On the night when the Dead Trees
Prance and Cry.

Sensitive, seldom and sad -
Sensitive, seldom and sad -

Simple, seldom and sad
Are we
When we take our path
To the purple sea -
With mad, sweet Expressions
Of Yore,
Strangely beautiful,
Yea, and More
On the Night of all Nights
When the sky
Streams by
In rags, while the Dead Trees
Prance and Cry,

sensitive, seldom and sad -
sensitive, seldom and sad.

Saturday 23 March 2013

A wonderful lunch at Melton's

My mind is on my stomach - it is a happy stomach. Lunch was a delight at Melton's:

My choices......

Hand-Dived Scallops - Saffron Crispies
Braised Fennel, Spiced Fish Sauce & Coriander
---
Apple Orchard Chicken - Ampleforth Cider Cream
Parsley Mash Potato, Mushroom, Black Pudding & Cabbage
---
Yorkshire Rhubarb - Crumble, Warm Jelly & Custard, Rhubarb Sorbet
---
I think I made a perfect choice from a menu that tempted with every dish. For me the starter and the dessert were just stunning while the main course still met and passed expectations. Whilst waiting for our starter we were served a delightful 'amuse bouche' of creamed leek soup with a little lemon oil drizzled on top. Complimentary still or sparkling water and filter coffee help you feel like a guest as much as a customer.
---

The scallops were perfectly balanced between needing to be cut and pulling apart, tender and juicy - complemented beautifully with the fennel and coriander with the spiced fish sauce adding a wonderful umami highlight. I had no idea what to expect from 'Saffron Crisipies' but they were just that and had an almost palate clearing lightness and the gentlest hint of almond. My stolen forkful of Alastair's duck terrine was rich and luscious - I had been very tempted by this starter.



The chicken included both dark and lighter meat, which was good for me as I tend to prefer darker meat and often you just get breast meat which I can find slightly dry. Here the balancing of the more delicate breast meat against the cabbage and the richer dark meat with the mushroom and black pudding made it almost feel like two separate dishes tied together by the parsley mash and the sauce. Alastair had the venison and my thieving gained me a tender mouthful with less intense flavour than I had been expecting - memories of childhood venison in Scotland didn't seem to match this tender succulent mouthful.

(Unfortunately, Melton's haven't put a picture of the chicken on their Facebook page.)

And on to the dessert.......

I have been looking forward to this rhubarb creation since it appeared on Melton's Facebook page back in February  As a true West Yorkshire lass I have an appreciation for the finer things in life - one of the finest being rhubarb. Did you know you can hear rhubarb growing if you visit the arcane wonders of the dark rhubarb sheds of the 'Rhubarb Triangle'? What can I say about the dessert.... it was sublime :) From the gently sweet but refreshingly tangy coolness of the sorbet with its artfully placed slender stick of rhubarb, to the warm almost mousse like jelly with a heart of vanilla custard and between them the gorgeously tart rhubarb hiding below the crispy crumble topping. I didn't steal any of Alastair's cheese - nothing was allowed to interrupt the rhubarb worship ;)



This treat was due to my winning of the Melton's meal for two back in January we saved it for this weekend, a week before Alastair's birthday and the day before he flies off to Bosnia Herzegovina to see Chloe.

While Melton's is well beyond our pocket for a normal meal out we would happily return for a special occasion. A beautiful, un-rushed, calm and 'cared' for meal: cared for in the presentation of every item of food and in the unobtrusive but friendly service.

Thank you Melton's - we hope to be back :)

Friday 15 March 2013

Working . . .

Two half days of finance work and I'm exhausted! Ho hum! One more afternoon then it's the weekend. How did I survive nursing practice? And how did I do 9 years of finance work?

I think I was meant to be a lady of leisure . .

Wednesday 6 March 2013

Future princess visits Micklegate?

Was Cinderella on Micklegate last night?

Unfortunately her Prince Charming doesn't seem to
have turned up even though she gave him two chances!



Thursday 28 February 2013

Insanity is hereditary I got mine from my children.......



yes one of those chins belongs to my daughter.......

There was a reason behind this oddness - this was the submission from Pe33les (my daughter) and Mazzertron (her friend) for an intro to the following (their submission is at 0:19):

Wednesday 27 February 2013

Exercise....

So exercise....... about time I got off my backside and did something...........

I set off from Park Street with no aim in mind and found myself wandering up onto the walls.
A beautiful, sunny day and the walls were quiet. It is a long time since I've walked the Micklegate to Red Tower section - I took a few photos on the way, some of which turned out ok.
Cupola on the Bar Convent

looking back at Micklegate Bar

I just love the roof-line of Scarcroft Primary School :)

a view of the Minster from beside Baile Hill

York Castle (well a little bit of it)

Catkins beside the River Foss

the top of Fishergate Postern
I would have taken a 'full' picture of the postern but forgot until I was too close!

Looking back towards Fishergate Bar

passing the Barbican - pity about the modern house roofs
(I prefer 'rooves' to 'roofs' but I will go with the supposedly correct form.)

Walmgate Bar - which houses Gatehouse Coffee

alongside Foss Islands Road

from the new Hungate footbridge looking towards the Minster.
The wasteland in-between will become more new apartments and town-houses.

River Foss from the new Hungate footbridge

All Saints, Pavement

Oliver's, Micklegate.
I would like to know what Oliver's was.

As you might notice from the pictures I didn't go all the way round the walls. I will set off in the other direction next time! Not sure why I omitted taking a picture of the Red Tower, I'll try to remember next time. 

Coffee break on the walls. . .

Gatehouse Coffee
Walmgate

Huge comfy sofas, excellent coffee...

Gatehouse Coffee

... I will be back!

Walking the walls

Set off for a walk and ended up on the walls - beautiful day. Pictures to follow (hmm I've said that before!)

Saturday 9 February 2013

rather a long break.....

....... normal service (whatever that may be) is returning...

Life has seemed a little non-directional for a while. Time to get back.... well not on track .... more get back off the track! Never been one for tracks but recently, to extend this metaphor a little, I have been stuck in a bloody big rut on some track I accidentally wandered on to! So back to forging my own trail......

New project: knitting a jumper, picture to follow :)
New game: Munchkin - fantastic game, particularly if you have numbers of teenagers around!
New food: umami paste