Tuesday 23 August 2016

Tring Book Club - The Map of Love by Ahdaf Soueif



There were parts of this book I really enjoyed. The lives of two sets of cousins, one pair (Anna and Layla) starting in 1901 and the other (Amal and Isobel) in 1997. The latter are researching the story of the former, courtesy of a set of journals, diaries and letters. Lots of connections between Britain and Egypt, Much of the story is told by Amal in the first person alternating with Anna's journal and Layla's diary (both in different fonts thank heavens). Then suddenly the author takes over in the third person ( I realise now she had to when Amal is out of the picture). But once you get used to format, it works very well. So far so very good.

But I just couldn't get on with the enormous amount of politics that engulf this novel from about a third in. One of the character's mother says "Enough of politics!" I couldn't agree more.  If you are interested in the history of Egypt and the torrid time in endured at these times, this is the book for you. I liked the descriptions of Cairo and Alexandria. What I enjoyed most were the connections between the two sets of cousins, the men in their lives, and especially how Anna and Layla meet. At the start of the book there is a family tree. Essential reference time and time again.

Wednesday 17 August 2016

The Girl on the Train, Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant and The Quality of Silence


Crime thrillers are not my usual choice, but the hype and forthcoming movie of this extremely popular book by Paula Hawkins had me intrigued. The Girl on the Train is actually a very well plotted story, full of the usual twists and turns and what turned out to be useful clues along the way. The great thing for me was that there is no gratuitous violence or creepy shocks. Just a real page turner that you want to savour and not necessarily get to the end too soon. Surprisingly good.

Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant


My sixth Anne Tyler and one of her best. In Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant we are right at the heart of one fragmented family, the Tulls. The mother, Pearl, has brought up her three children on her own after her husband Beck left when they were young. Cody, Ezra and Jenny are now grown but, like us all, memories of their their childhoods often surface, not always in a good way.

I liked how each of the ten chapters was told from the point of view of one of the family. It is Ezra who works in the restaurant but "the family as a whole never yet finished one of his dinners--it was as if what they couldn't get right they had to keep returning to." Again and again.


The Quality of Silence was somewhat disappointing  after having enjoyed Rosamund Lupton's previous two classy thrillers. I lost interest in Yasmin and Ruby's journey across Alaska as I thought it went on far too long. The format of telling Yasmin's story in the first person alternating with her deaf ten year old daughter speaking in the first person worked well to begin with but then became a little too predictable. There are moments of high tension and drama, but for me they couldn't sustain the bleak Alaskan winter.

Monday 15 August 2016

The George Askew Story - Five Generations of Agricultural Labourers Part 2


I posted Part 1 on 26th December last year when I ended by saying I wanted to look at farming in that area around where the family lived in Lincolnshire. Little did I know then where this study would take me. From my first internet searches for the East Fen I found a wealth of information including many books on the subject, some I have copied from the web and some I have bought.

What I now realise is that although we know that George's father James was, according to the 1851 Census, an agricultural labourer, this is not necessarily the case for the previous three generations: John Ayscough (1781 - 1846), John Ascough (1758 - 1844) and Thomas Ascough (1735 - ?). It is possible they combined working for the local landowners in the enclosed fields at the end of the Wolds above the East Fen with being fen commoners. Certainly before 1800, the villages on the margins of the fen had common rights on the wholly unenclosed East Fen, West Fen and Wildmore Fen.

The proximity of Toynton St Peter and Toynton All Saints (wrongly marked on the above map as Upper and Lower Toynton) to East Fen is particularly interesting. The map above (by Wenceslaus Hollar and dated 1661) is included in Dugdale's "The History of Drayning and Imbanking of Divers Fens and Marshes"of 1662 showing "The Deeps" of the East Fen. These permanent large ponds are shown on all the maps of the time. My latest prize possession is "Maps of the Witham Fens", a huge volume where R.C. Wheeler has searched for every old map he could find of this part of Lincolnshire. Even the (undated) enclosure map of the East Fen (probably around 1801) still has most of the Deeps unenclosed but now possibly cut off from the surrounding villages.

The Deeps were important to the commoners in the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries for the extraction of peat and then for fishing and fowling. So my research now extends to these more ancient times but particularly how the lives of the common people changed from a hard but fruitful rural existence on the margins of the fen to where their loss of independence through no longer having access to enclosed the fen meant they were now dependent on the new landowners. As I.D. Rotherham puts it in his book "The Lost Fens"  this was "England's Greatest Ecological Disaster". But for the inhabitants it meant so much more.

The Bearbrook 10K


This was the second year I ran the Bearbrook 10K that starts and finishes at the rugby club in Weston Turville. Whereas last year it was quite sunny, this Sunday was cloudy, almost perfect conditions for the race.

Something strange happened. Somehow my training over the last couple of weeks had gone really well but I did not expect to beat last year's time by over a minute. Fifty four minutes and six seconds chip time is a faster pace than many of the 5K parkruns over the last couple of months and my best time ever for a 10K.  And it has hills! I have no idea where that came from.

Thanks to my friend Philip who lives on Worlds End Lane for taking the photo above outside his house, and Alison for hers as we past Bates Lane.


Tuesday 9 August 2016

Neon Demon, Star Trek Beyond and Jason Bourne


Only it's director encouraged me to see this weird movie. Nicolas Winding Refn's "homage" to the fashion industry follows sixteen ("always say nineteen") year old Jesse (an interesting performance from Elle Fanning) through the minefield of LA models. Why LA? Just typical of this director. The dialogue and acting are on the surface really poor. But wait a sec. That is how they all sound? I just wanted more plot. Fortunately Jena Malone’s Ruby is deviously malicious as a makeup artist who divides her time between painting the faces of the living and the dead.


Beyond what? I'm not sure we ever found out. The new Star Trek movie is a moderately enjoyable run through of plots we have seen before. But the screenplay by Simon Pegg and Doug Jung just about saves the day, trying hard as it does to be witty and sharp. Not sure that director Justin Lin made the most of the hugely expensive sets, the action seemed to be mostly by numbers.


Another director whose films I never miss. Paul Greengrass and Matt Damon have been tempted back after a nine year absence to make another Bourne installment. A pretty simple plot and limited dialogue but the set pieces in Athens, London ( I had no idea how Paddington Basin had grown) and Los Angeles are amazing. All three involve huge crowds and innumerable extras. Tommy Lee Jones as the CIA chief looked too old and assistant Alicia Vikander too young, but that's all part of the fun. A great spectacle but curiously uninvolving.