Monday, 2 December 2024

Countdown to Christmas: Day 2


It's the second day of our Yuletide celebrations. Today was more of an outdoor kinda day (for me - Rob was at work all day).

Walk in the Woods






I had a lovely walk in Blackley Forest today, listening to Christmas music and looking out for all the signs that the Holly King's reign has truly begun. There's a beautiful glade of silver birch trees in the forest, and I've fallen into the tradition of visiting it each December, standing in the middle of it and listening to 'Carol of the Bells'.

Stollen



Tonight, I had a bit of a difficult thing to do, as it was the monthly Friends of Crumpsall Park committee meeting, and sadly the meeting when I resigned as treasurer. I've been treasurer for eight years, and I still love the park a lot, but it's time for me to hand over to someone else now. I took some stollen for the committee so that it wasn't all doom and gloom!

Advent Tea



Today's tea in my Bird and Blend advent calendar was Earl Grey Creme!

Advent Model



Today's model in our other advent calendar was a little Christmas wreath!

Sunday, 1 December 2024

Countdown to Christmas: Day 1


It begins! Time to get festive again! Last Christmas seems so long ago - I hope I can remember how to celebrate.

Litter-Pick in the Park





The first day of December was the monthly Friends of Crumpsall Park litter-pick. For the past 8 years, I've been organizing these litter-picks each month, but I've recently decided to step down and hand the baton on to someone else. Since it was my last litter-pick (as organizer) and the first day of our Christmas celebrations, I brought mulled apple juice and mince pies to share with the other volunteers.

Festive Afternoon Tea







We went to Stockport Plaza for Festive Afternoon Tea this afternoon, and it was SO festive. We had a lovely afternoon tea (including mince pies), a glass of champagne and some Christmas songs. We were warned that we'd be unlikely to see Santa, as the detector showed him as still being in the North Pole. I swear, when I spotted that the hand had moved around, I was more excited that I've been for a long time. Oh, and the scones were Cornwall-style, not Devon, by the way.

Advent Tea



Rob got me a Bird and Blend tea advent calendar again this year. Yay! Today's advent tea was Gingerbread Chai.

Advent Model



Rob also got us a quirky Lego not Lego advent calendar with a little model to make behind each door. I think at the end, you can combine the models to make four big ones but for now we're making a little one each day.

Saturday, 30 November 2024

My Year in Books 2024: November

I read some good books this month. Admittedly, it's still a short list, but they were all good one!

If you're curious, here are my posts from the rest of the year: January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October

The Haunting of Alma Fielding by Kate Summerscale (2020)


I got this one out of the library in late October. My local library had a lovely display of spooky books set up for Halloween, which I completely ruined by checking several of them out (sorry!). Initially, I wasn’t going to get this one, as I felt like I’ve read quite a lot of non-fiction about hauntings. Also, although I enjoyed The Suspicions of Mr Whicher (the only other book by Summerscale that I’ve read), it didn’t set my world on fire. However, I did take a look at the blurb and it instantly reeled me in. This is a narrative non-fiction account of Nandor Fodor’s investigation into a poltergeist case in 1938. Alma Fielding is an ordinary woman from near Croydon who experiences a series of ‘paranormal’ incidents that she believes are hauntings. Fodor, in his role at the International Institute for Psychical Research, meets with Fielding and tries to work out the nature of the haunting. I am so glad I ignored my initial reservations and chose this book – I absolutely loved it. The way Summerscale contextualizes the haunting, not only in terms of the wider societal picture in the late 30s, but in terms of understandings and fashions in paranormal beliefs, was just wonderful. It made me think differently about poltergeists, to think about them in terms of class and geography – and there’s a beautiful line (I won’t ruin it) differentiating a poltergeist from other types of ghost that’s one of my favourite sentences of the year!

The Only One Left by Riley Sager (2023)


I got this book on the same library visit as the previous one, though it wasn’t part of the Halloween display. It probably could’ve been though, as it’s a nicely Gothic tale. It begins with a live-in carer called Kit being given a less-than-ideal assignment. In 1929 (the book is set in 1983), the Hope family were murdered in their cliff-top mansion. The only survivor was the seventeen-year-old daughter Lenora. Lenora was never charged with the murders, but the town has always believed that she was guilty. There’s even a Lizzie Borden-esque rhyme about her. A series of medical conditions have left Lenora bedridden and unable to speak, and Kit is called in to provide constant care to the seventy-one-year-old (possibly) murderess. Kit has her own darkness to deal with, which makes it hard for her to turn the job down. When she arrives at Hope’s End, she finds a decrepit 1920s mansion, complete with its own Danvers-like housekeeper, Mrs Baker. She also discovers that, although Lenora can’t speak, she can type, and she might just be ready to start typing out her story. This one has a lot of twists – some I saw coming, and some I didn’t. It’s a little reminiscent of The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield, but told in a very different style and tone. I loved the atmosphere of this one, and it's difficult to not find yourself rooting for a character that you really don’t expect to like. And it’s a proper page-turner too.

Everyone on This Train is a Suspect by Benjamin Stevenson (2023)


Completed a hat-trick of library books with this next one. I checked this one out at the same time as The Haunting of Alma Fielding and The Only One Left, and I read it in the same weekend. I wasn’t convinced initially, as the cover looked a bit derivative of some notable celebrity mystery novels that aren’t really to my taste, but I was totally swayed by the blurb from Stuart Turton (which, if you’ve read the book, you’ll know is pretty funny). This is a knowing bit of meta-fiction – a murder mystery narrated by someone who keeps up a running commentary on his own narration, breaks the fourth wall, and openly points out genre conventions. The plot is that a group of crime writers gather on a luxury train in Australia for a literary festival with a twist (it’s on a train). When one of the writers is murdered, the others (particularly the narrator) try to investigate the crime (or cover it up maybe). The plot isn’t very original, and the clues are pretty clunky and obvious, but I did enjoy this one. The story is fun to read, though most of the twists are things you’ll have seen before. I didn’t realize till I started it that this is a sequel, so I think I will be going back to the first one at some point. The writing style was very engaging, and I liked the narrator (especially because he was never quite as reliable as he believed).

Saturday, 9 November 2024

3 Minute Santas is back for its eighth exciting year!


It's time to submit your festive flash fiction to be played on Hannah’s Bookshelf this December!


Can you tell a festive story in just 3 minutes? Want to have your work played on the radio? This Christmas, I’m once again looking for festive (not necessarily Christmas) flash fiction from around the world for inclusion on Hannah’s Bookshelf, the weekly literature show on North Manchester FM.

On Saturday 14th December, I’ll be playing a selection of my favourite 3 Minute Santas on the show (broadcast on FM and on digital). Want to be part of it? Submit a recording via my website of your holiday-themed story (maximum 3 minutes) by midnight on Monday 2nd December.

All genres welcome – be they cosy, romantic, scary or sad. But ease off the swears – stories have to be radio friendly! All you need is a microphone and a story – the details of how to submit are on my website.

Please share this call with anyone who you think might be interested – I like to cast the net as wide as possible. My favourite 3 Minute Santas will be broadcast on Hannah’s Bookshelf at 2pm on Saturday 14th December, on digital radio and 106.6FM.

Thursday, 31 October 2024

31 Days of Halloween: Day 31


It's the big day! After an entire month of celebrating, Halloween is finally here! And, as with previous years, the big day itself is actually going to be a lot quieter than some of the other festivities we've enjoyed, because that's how the spooky season tends to go.

Coup de Grâce



Kicked off the day with some spooky tram reading from my most recent Abominable Books box - Coup de Grâce by Sofia Ajram.

Office Cakes



Took a box of leftover seasonal cakes into work today to share with my colleagues.

Halloween Lollipop



One final bit of spooky chocolate for the season.

The Exorcist



This evening, the power of Christ compelled me to go to a screening of The Exorcist at Cultplex. A good way to end my month of Halloween celebrations, I think.


And so the wheel of the year turns. We'll be celebrating again at Christmas.

My Year in Books 2024: October

Well, I've not really improved my reading-for-fun streak this month. In my defence, I was really tied up with Halloween events this month, and I had a few books to read for review. I did start another novel, but I didn't finish it by the end of the month, so sadly today's post only has one title on it.

In case you're curious, here are my posts from the rest of the year so far: January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September

Coup de Grâce by Sofia Ajram (2024)


I got this in my Abominable Books box this month, and I was so intrigued by the premise that I jumped straight in. The book is about a man called Vicken who is travelling on Montreal’s Metro with the intention of ending his own life. He reaches a station at the end of the line, only to discover that there’s no exit and no trains leaving from the platform. The building that Vicken finds himself in is a labyrinthine, impossible space that defies logic. I was drawn to this idea, as I do enjoy a bit of impossible architecture. Some of the descriptions of the Metro station are dizzying and utterly bizarre, so I wasn’t disappointed in that aspect at all. To be honest, I wasn’t disappointed by anything in the book, though it’s certainly not subtle. It’s told through first-person narration, so a lot of it is about Vicken describing his state of mind to the reader. The subway station is a pretty obvious metaphor, though there are times when Vicken denies this is the case. However, the nature of the metaphor is a bit more elusive than you might expect, and there are certainly moments that will give the reader pause. Ajram uses a narrative technique in the final section of the book that I really enjoyed (though I won’t say what it is, as I don’t want to spoil it). The book resists a trite or placatory conclusion, and that really worked for me. Enjoyed this one.

Wednesday, 30 October 2024

31 Days of Halloween: Day 30


The penultimate day of our Halloween celebrations! I've got forest, films and pumpkins planned!

Ghost Stories Walk and Talk





Today started off with a really enjoyable Ghost Stories Walk and Talk for Friends of Bailey's Wood. I led a gentle, social walk in the forest, telling stories about lost knights, woodland werewolves, and the time the devil came to Dam Head. And then we had Halloween cakes and cherry squash in the woods!

Halloween Film Afternoon at the Care Home





This afternoon, I was at Castlerea Care Home for our annual Halloween Film Afternoon. I did my traditional dramatic reading of 'The Raven', and then we settled down with some popcorn and Halloween cakes to watch... well... Halloween.

Crown Prince Squash



More squash! We got a Crown Prince Squash in our Groobarbs veg box today!

Halloween Dinner




We went for dinner at my mother-in-law's tonight. I took her a mini pumpkin, and she gave us pumpkin pie (not made from the same pumpkin, of course).

P is for Prom Night



And then we continued our Horror A-Z with my mother-in-law, watching Prom Night tonight.

Tuesday, 29 October 2024

31 Days of Halloween: Day 29


Day 29 of our Halloween celebrations, and a much quieter day after the last few hectic ones.

Library Visit



I had to go to the library today to get some content for my radio show. They had a lovely display of Halloween-appropriate books, which I... erm... totally ruined by checking three of them out (plus one other book that wasn't on the display).

Pumpkin Lantern (and Friends)



When I got home, our pumpkin lantern had acquired some friends.

O is for One Cut of the Dead



Our Horror A-Z continues with One Cut of the Dead. I love this film so much. Pom!

Monday, 28 October 2024

31 Days of Halloween: Day 28


Another day of celebrating the Halloween season! I can't believe it's been four weeks now! Some really lovely things planned for today though.

Halloween Walk in the Park







I took one of the residents from Castlerea Care Home for a Halloween walk in Heaton Park this afternoon. I promised him we'd do this when we did our Poetry in the Park session at the Autumn Equinox, so we've been looking forward to it for a while. We spotted loads of seasonal things in nature, followed the scarecrow trail, and talked about all sorts of things.

Halloween Treat Bags




I made us little Halloween treat bags to have with a cup of tea on our walk in the park, with crisps and a chocolate apple each.

Pumpkin and Beetroot Soup




I used up half of the flesh from our pumpkin lantern for soup (accompanied by beetroot and a bit of orzo).

The Lodger



Me and my friend went to Stockport Plaza tonight for an amazing screening of Alfred Hitchcock's The Lodger, with live improvised accompaniment by Hugo Max on solo viola and percussion. This was such a cool event - so happy that we got to see it.