May
31
2009
1

Camping in the Lake District

P1000941Well….. The Mister and I have had a fabulous week off. We went camping in the Lake District next to Ullswater and it was absolutely gorgeous. Not had the most amazing weather, at least two days of hot sunshine, although it was a bit chilly at night. We stayed on a lovely campsite by the lake and spent a happy afternoon chilling out next to it, watching the kids (and the Big Boys) play in the water.

I am absolutely shattered now because it took me five hours to drive home. I have done just over 700 miles in the last week, and on the first night I managed to sprain my ankle which limited the fun somewhat but I survived!! I have taken lots of pics, so if you want to see follow one these the pictures below to the Flickr account. However, I particularly like the fact that I managed to find a boat named after myself and there is a picture here on the left.

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Written by Anna Williams in: Uncategorized | Tags: ,
May
31
2009
3

May books

51uehbr6dyl_bo2204203200_pisitb-sticker-arrow-clicktopright35-76_aa240_sh20_ou02_The Kalahari Typing School for Men by Alexander McCall Smith is the fourth book in the Number 1 Ladies Detective Agency series.

Mma Precious Ramotswe is faced with new challenges in this book and the beautifully gentle stories continue. Once again the actual mysteries she solves are secondary to the details of life in Botswana. What I really enjoyed about this book though was that her assistant Mma Makosi’s character was developed and we learnt more about her. In this novel she gets herself a boyfriend and starts a new business in the evening to help her make more money to send to her family.

These are such wonderful books and reading each one is like meeting an old friend again.

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41y7vfjwvrl_bo2204203200_pisitb-sticker-arrow-clicktopright35-76_aa240_sh20_ou02_A Kept Woman by Louise Bagshawe is everything a chick-lit novel should be. Beautiful women, cheating husbands and lots and lots of backstabbing… but I really enjoyed it!

Diana is rich and beautiful and marries a very rich man. All goes well until she finds her rather wet husband in bed with a dominatrix and they end up divorcing… although she comes out of it rather badly. Now she has to get a job, work hard and make her own way in the world. For a change it would seem that the beautiful heroine isn’t as useless as most of these books make out.

It was a good read, nice characters and a fun storyline. It was also entirely predictable, which maybe is why I enjoyed it so much!!!

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519hpwr5b7l_sl500_aa240_The Summer of Secrets by Martina Reilly is a brilliant book. Kind of in the vein of Marian Keyes but I think she is a better writer.

Hope Gardner loses yet another job and decides to take an extended holiday. However, the plane flight she takes to this dream is less than expected when it crashes and the majority of passengers die. Hope survives, with some significant but not life-threatening injuries, and to cheer her up her two friend Adam and Julie decide to take her to a cottage in Ireland, near where she grew up, to recuperate. Whilst she is there she undertakes some counselling to help her manage her anxiety, and with the help of this therapist she starts to address some of her unresolved issues about her past.

I think I really enjoyed this book because it takes the issue of trauma seriously, and shows some good examples of desensitization techniques and therapy. But, more than that it was just a really good read and I romped through it in about 2 days!!

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511bg6gt5tl_sl500_aa240_1The Return by Victoria Hislop is a good read. It is one of those novels which flits back over the years – tying two stories together through the characters. In this case a woman called Sophie, her love of Spain and the discovery of her mother’s life in Granada during the Spanish Civil War. It’s a good read, nice characters and enough historical detail to make it interesting without making it overwhelming. I have to say though, I didn’t love it quite as much as her other book The Island which I thought was a fantastic read.

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41n7zh8kasl_bo2204203200_pisitb-sticker-arrow-clicktopright35-76_aa240_sh20_ou02_Sparkles by Louise Bagshawe is a slighlty ridiculous tale about a jewellery empire called the Massot family. Bizarrely Pierre Massot disappeared leaving a wife and a young son. Seven years on Mme Massot decides that in order to save the empire she needs to get involved. However, she hadn’t banked on hostile takeover attempts from both s rival company and her son.

This was really quite a silly book. The plot was verging on the ludicrous and it was almost like three stories that had been put together in a poor attempt to pad out the book. Not a terribly good novel in my humble opinion!

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51xjmknbsgl_sl500_aa240_The Kommandant’s Girl by Pam Jenoff was a story that I listened to on CD when I was driving around recently.

It is set in Krakow during the Second World War and overnight nineteen year old Emma Bau’s world is turned upside down. Her husband Jacob is a member of the Resistance and he is forced to flee the city and go underground. She returns to her family home, only to find that her parents have been taken into the ghetto, and after a brief stint with them in the ghetto the Resistance move her to live with Jacob’s aunt. She assumes a Catholic identity and after a chance meeting at a dinner party she is offered the position of assistant to Kommandant Richwalder at Nazi headquarters. From there she is able to work for the Resistance, whilst always hiding her true identity.

This was a really good story, despite it being a little slow in places. I found the tales of the Resistance, the bravery of the people involved and the things that were experienced by the Poles very emotive. I was also surprised that I found some sympathy for the Nazis. An interesting story about a period of history that generally fascinates me.

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51pivf7suil_sl500_aa240_Behind the Scenes at the Museum by Kate Atkinson is a book narrated by Ruby Lennox, right from her conception through to adulthood. It tells memoirs of her very disfunctional family who live in York and their strange relationships, both with themselves and with each other.

I expected quite a lot of this book. I mean even on the back cover The New York Times Book Review says, “Rermarkable… full of the grimness, grit, and grandeur of Yorkshire life… One of the funniest books to come out of Britain in years.” Quite frankly I certainly found it grim, but I didn’t find it funny in the slightest. there were very irritating full chapter footnotes after each main chapter and I didn’t really think it had a story. Most disappointing.

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51c958nztxl_bo2204203200_pisitb-sticker-arrow-clicktopright35-76_aa240_sh20_ou02_Wife in the North by Judith O’Reilly is about Judith, a mother of two children, with another one on the way who moves from London to Northumberland. This isn’t her dream, it is her husband’s and she struggles to get used to living in the middle of nowhere. Whilst there she starts writing a blog about her experiences and these memoirs document her experiences, fears and frustrations of living far away from what she calls home.

This book was fab, there were some real laugh out loud moments, but it was also poignant, sad and very, very honest. She also came up with a fab quote about friendship… “Some friends become another family. Some friends you talk to once a year, A few are there in every crisis and extremity. You hurt when they hurt. There are times when you put down a phone after they have read you the latest chapter of their life and you weep for the Some, occasionally, disappoint. Occasionally, you disappoint back. You try to listen. In sadness and disaster you day: ‘I love you’ and hope they can hear between their shouts of pain. You say: ‘I’m here for you’ and hope they can see you in their darkness. it seems the least that you can do.”

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41zj7pzm50l_bo2204203200_pisitb-sticker-arrow-clicktopright35-76_aa240_sh20_ou02_Birthday Girls by Annabel Giles is about six different women, all celebrating six important birthdays in their lives. Initially they all seem like independent, unrelated individuals but through their stories it is possible to work out that that they are all inter-linked through one way or the other.

This book was ok. Kind of pointless in someways (like most chick lit) but it wasn’t even a very good read.
Back to the charity shop I think!!

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51n1wavqthl_bo2204203200_pisitb-sticker-arrow-clicktopright35-76_aa240_sh20_ou02_1Night by Elie Wiesel is one of those books that has had a profound affect on me. I first read it when I was in my late teens and I found it incredibly moving and thought provoking.

Elie Wiesel is a Jew who was born in Transylvania. Night is his memoir of the Holocaust and his experiences of being in Auchwitz and Buchenwald concentration camps. However, the book isn’t a straightforward story of the experiences of the Jews. It is his recollection of the loss of hope and the despair over his loss of faith that really got to me. For me, this is probably one of the most moving quotes in the whole book….

“Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed.
Never shall I forget that smoke.
Never shall I forget the little faces of the children, whose bodies I saw turned into wreaths of smoke beneath a silent blue sky.
Never shall I forget those flames which consumed my faith forever.
Never shall I forget that nocturnal silence which deprived me, for all eternity, of the desire to live.
Never shall I forget those moments which murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams to dust. Never shall I forget these things, even if I am condemned to live as long as God Himself.
Never.”

I think everyone should read this book. The travesty of the loss of so many Jewish people, along with all the others who died in the concentration camps, is completely overwhelming. I wonder regularly what gifts the world has missed out on because of the early demise of these souls.

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51uj137ofhl_sl500_aa240_The Editor’s Wife by Clare Chambers was a book that I listened to on CD when I was driving around. The Mister also listened to some of this one too because I was driving and I wanted to know what happened!!!

This book is about an aspiring novelist called Christopher Flinders who makes a pretty spectacular error of judgement and this has a major impact on the rest of his life. I really enjoyed this book and found the peripheral characters somehow more satisfying than the main characters. It certainly passed the time when I was driving anyway!

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41ov3sstchl_bo2204203200_pisitb-sticker-arrow-clicktopright35-76_aa240_sh20_ou02_A Breath of Fresh Air by Erica James is about a thirty-something woman who is widowed and moves back to her childhood village to live. There are the usual host of interfering villagers and family to content with. This was a dull book with a predictable storyline and the most totally predictable ending. Perfect to read when I could only read a bit at a time, but not one of her best.

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41ytnta5jgl_sl500_aa240_I picked up the audio book version of The Secret Diary of a Demented Housewife by Niamh Greene thinking it would be entertaining to listen to when I was driving. The blurb on the back of the case says that it is about Susie, a stay-at-home mother and this is her private diary of the highs and lows of of her life.

I have to say that this was a truly rubbish book. The main character was unbelievably self-centred and truly irritating. I also decided there were only so many stories I could listen to about poo and snot. Truly grim.

There was 10 CD’s on the set and I switched it off after 2 1/2. I just couldn’t take it anymore!!!

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Written by Anna Williams in: Uncategorized | Tags: ,
May
25
2009
7

Southend Air Show

Well, for once it would seem that Bank Holiday weekend has blessed us with glorious weather. Yesterday The Mister and I took a trip to Southend-on-Sea for their airshow and it was fab. It was absolutely teeming with people, we ate fish and chips and watched a variety of aircrafts, including the Red Arrows, the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight and the RAF parachtists, displaying across the sea front. It was a lovely day out… even if The Mister caught the sun a little too much!!

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Written by Anna Williams in: Uncategorized | Tags:
May
23
2009
0
May
17
2009
5

Woosh… and then the weekend is gone

The Mister and I have had another fab, but very busy weekend. Last night we went to Cal’s house for dinner and to help her celebrate her birthday.

Today we went to Duxord Airshow. It was a fab programme but it was absolutely freezing. The last time we went there I was really cold and this morning I considered putting on my thermals under jeans as the wind was really chilly. I wish I had done, as it was cold, cold, cold again. The best bit of the programme for me was seeing a glider, the towing plane and another little plane doing their programme. When the glider was detached from the towing plane it was incredible to see it twisting and turning and flying upside down. It got so close to the ground before landing that I was just open-mouthed watching it. Fabulous stuff.

Also, following on from my musings about Shuttleworth about having an alternative commentary for women, I have decided there I definitely a marketing opportunity here to run a tent for women and children only. They would pay a smallish amount to come in and in the tent there would be comfy sofas, with gossip magazines, books, scrabble, newspapers etc and tea made in teapots, along with yummy cakes. There would be a children’s corner with a DVD player and toys. But best of all it would be warm and comfortable and I guess it would be like a ladies creche. I would probably call it the “I’m not that bothered” tent. I think it would be a success!

Ps) I have selected the picture carefully… no planes… just a picture of me wearing my new hat which I acquired through the lady who can acquire things. Marvellous innit?

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Written by Anna Williams in: Uncategorized |
May
11
2009
9

Camping in Yorkshire

At the weekend The Mister and I had our first ever camping trip together. We went to Howgill Lodge in the Yorkshire Dales and it was absolutely beautiful. The only downside was that it was absolutely freezing at night, despite the fact that we looked a bit like the The Princess and the Pea because we had so many duvets and blankets. The site was a beautiful terraced site with sheep and lambs over the dry-stone wall from our tent and a gorgeous bluebell wood near the toilet block. On the last day we got woken up by this really peculiar noise, and when I got up to go and visit the… ahem… facilities… there was this pheasant sitting on the wall by the tent and making the most obscene noise. On the Sunday, once we had packed up the tent and the many, many blankets we went for a lovely walk around Bolton Abbey. The wild flowers were absolutely beautiful and it would have been really peaceful… but there were loads of people also out enjoying their day!

It was lovely to be outdoors again and I do love camping, even if it was only for a couple of days. We are off to the Lake District at the end of the month and I can’t wait.

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Written by Anna Williams in: Uncategorized | Tags: , ,
May
05
2009
3

The real truth about swine flu?

song chart memes
see more Funny Graphs

Graph taken from here.

Written by Anna Williams in: Uncategorized |
May
03
2009
3

Shuttleworth

Today The Mister and I donned our anoraks and went to our first airshow of the year at Shuttleworth. It was a lovely day but I am surprisingly knackered.

Shuttleworth is a fab place. They have an exhibition of old planes but they also have a bird of prey sanctuary and we pitched up there just in time for one of their flying shows. It was lovely to see owls being flown right over our heads! We saw lots of very old planes flying, although it was a little bit breezy for the really old ones (the ones that look like they are made out of matchsticks) to fly. Despite a chilly breeze it was a fab day to watch an air display. Shuttleworth has quite a large collection of early aircrafts, most of which fly. There was quite an amusing moment though when we were wandering through one of the hangars. I saw this plane and I was chuntering on about it being a de Havilland Dragon Rapide and how I had been in one of them many years ago when I was about 10 years old, Anyway, I suddenly realised that this wasn’t any old Rapide, but this was the one that I had been in. It’s owned by my Dad’s old boss and I only realised because it has his daughters name on the side.

The other thing I decided at this air show was that I would like to run an alternative commentary for women. Something like…. “Ladies here we have coming into view another plane… yes another one…. it’s red this time. Pretty isn’t it? I think it would match my shoes nicely.” I think it would add something to the experience for all those women who are dragged along there by their husbands/boyfriends/sons etc.

A fab day out…. so here are some pics.

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Written by Anna Williams in: Uncategorized | Tags: , ,
May
03
2009
0

Shaw’s Corner

Well, so far this weekend has been fun and rather busy. The Mister is here and so is Peterson.

So, yesterday we went to Shaw’s Corner, a National Trust property in Hertfordshire and the home of George Bernard Shaw.

It is a beautiful place and must less grand and less fussy than I expected. It was so cosy I could imagine living there myself and curling up in one of the chairs with a book and a cup of tea. The gardens were also beautiful, gorgeous spring flowers coming through.

Then we went over to the The Whipsnade Tree Cathedral. It was created after the second world war and has a varitey of trees planted out in the design of a full sized medieval cathedral. really what I wanted to see was lots of bluebells but I couldn’t find the place I wanted to get to!!

Anyway, it was a beautiful day to go to the tree cathedral. Only spoilt, as was lunch and a visit to Tesco’s by badly behaved screaming children. is it too much to ask for parents to encourage their children to behave in public and not either shriek back, or completely ignore them?

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Written by Anna Williams in: Uncategorized | Tags: ,

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