Archive for the ‘Random distractions’ Category

h1

Portrait of the writer wondering where to put her books

February 20, 2012

Cover of book called POMPEII showing portrait of woman with writing materials

Above is one of the largest and loveliest of all the books here at Downie Towers. Apart from a brief trip to the radiator to have its photo taken, it lives on the floor. It’s too big and heavy to go anywhere else.

However – if the property gods are kind (and here in the South of Britannia they are notoriously capricious) it may soon have a new floor to live on.  Pushing aside all thoughts of packing, I remain inappropriately cheerful, telling myself that this will be a chance to Get the Books Organised At Last.

This is not a way to avoid doing more important things (well, not entirely). I really must get the books sorted out so I can see what’s here. Surely I’m not the only nitwit who has bought a book and then found there’s already a copy of it hiding on the shelf at home?

Oh.

Ah well. Filling the gap until the next Real Book arrives, I see that Alison Joseph has a Sister Agnes novel free on Kindle today (20 Feb)  in the UK. For those who prefer Romans to contemporary nuns, there’s a great collection of ‘Tales of Ancient Rome’ by Simon Turney here - also free. Hooray!

h1

‘Tis the season

December 23, 2011

‘Tis the season to be jolly, and here at Downie Towers we are celebrating in the traditional way, with a merry 24-hour cacophony of coughing and sniffing. It’s a sound that has roused the Ghost of Winters Past, and to my surprise she looks very much like the diminutive form of a long-retired Headmistress.

There were many good things about my old school, but the School Hall was not one of them. It was designed to be impressive rather than practical, and  like its much grander cousin the Albert Hall, it suffered from a terrible echo problem. The use of a microphone merely set the echoes bouncing around the walls from several competing sources, so that the noises had to be reassembled like a jigsaw before anyone could make out their meaning.  To stand any chance of working out what the Head was saying, the other 600 people at morning assembly had to remain completely silent.

The problem was infinitely worse in winter, because it was the season of colds.

If you had a cold in the late 1960′s/early 70′s, you were faced with a choice. You could stay at home, where with luck from time to time your Mum would come clattering across the lino of your unheated bedroom with a cup of Disprin, a bowl of steaming menthol mixture, and a towel. You would then be expected to sit above the bowl with a towel over your head, inhale the fumes, and Clear Those Tubes.

Alternatively, you could arm yourself with your own Disprin, stagger into school and spend the day wandering from one warm classroom to another in the company of your friends. The menthol mixture had to be left at home, but a similar effect could be achieved by consuming Fisherman’s Friends (a lozenge so powerful it can only safely be eaten when the tastebuds are dulled by cold) and sitting in a room whose radiators were brightly festooned with the damp socks and gloves of students hoping to get them  dry before getting them wet again on the way home.

Of course this had a dire effect on Morning Assembly, where one echoing cough could undo all the efforts of the Head and her microphone.  Every gathering was therefore prefaced with the words, ‘If you want to cough, cough now!’  The Head would stand and wait until the resulting explosion of sound had died away before attempting to improve our hearts and minds and tell us about the exploits of the First Hockey XI or the lunchtime practice arranged for the Senior Choir Third Altos.

Despite this tactic there remained patches of ignorance throughout the hall, caused by the stifled convulsions of girls trying to control throats that had begun to tickle outside the allocated time. People who needed to know things often left assembly comparing interpretations of what they thought they had just heard.

On reflection, it’s hardly surprising that Whole School Assembly is pretty much a thing of the past. Many schools now contain thousands of pupils and I’m told it’s possible to spend several years in one without ever finding out what the Head Teacher looks like. Perhaps we are the healthier for it, although the current industrial scale of consumption of Lemsip and tissues at Downie Towers suggests not.

Dear reader, through a festive haze of Hall’s Mentholyptus, I wish you a very merry Christmas, and a happy and healthy New Year.

If you want to cough, cough now.

h1

Along the twisting paths of the internet

November 25, 2011

I don’t often pay attention to the interior workings of WordPress – the part that’s labelled ‘Dashboard’ where the author of a blog is supposed to take control. Usually I stab timidly at the occasional button and retreat, vowing to come back and get the hang of it one day.

However, today I am delighted to read that someone has reached this page by doing a search for the words ‘disposable picnic boxes’.

I have no idea who or where you are (which is as it should be), nor how you got here or indeed why*, but you are very welcome.

 

*Ah… a further thought… something to do with the post on Japan, perhaps?

h1

Lichfield Literature

September 8, 2011

Lots of good things happening in Lichfield in the first week of October. The  lineup for this year’s literature festival is here and includes Adam Hart-Davis, Sophie Hannah, Douglas Hurd, Val McDermid, Eleanor Bron, Lionel Blue, and Colin Dexter.  There is also, in the lower right-hand corner of the webpage, a writer of mysteries set in Roman Britain. I’m looking forward to visiting Lichfield Library on the afternoon of Saturday 8th October  to talk about writing historical fiction.

I’m also hoping to slip into a talk earlier in the day about the language of the much-loved King James Bible.  In preparation I’ve been enjoying  a delightful diversion from the many things on today’s ‘urgent’ list - an online  ’Shakespeare or Bible’ quiz. Since procrastination loves company, here‘s the link.

h1

Mostly armchair archaeology

August 8, 2011

Several technological goodies have popped up this week, so I thought I’d put them all together in one post.

First – many thanks to Mark, who’s sent a link to details of a smartphone app through which visitors can explore the sites and streets of Roman Londinium. (His original comment is under ‘Welcome’ above.) This one does involve leaving the armchair, as I think you have to be in London to use it. It’s the work of the fine folk at the Museum of London and seems to include the chance to pinpoint the find-spot of those famous leather bikini briefs.

Sadly I’m unable to test it since, apart from not being in London, I have the wrong kind of phone.  If anyone can give it a try, do please let me know what you think of it.

The other three are all gleaned from the latest Roman Society newsletter.   “Identifact provides three entertaining quizzes for students to learn and test their skills in classical architecture, Ancient Greek pottery and Romano-British small finds.” Allegedly,” This is simple to use and fun to try out.” It’s certainly fun once you get the hang of it, so it’s worth persevering with the mysterious zoomy things all over the screen.  It’s been created by the Centre for Interdisciplinary Artefact Studies at Newcastle University.

The next goody isn’t as zoomy as the previous one even though it’s created by the same people. Inscripta is “an e-learning resource aimed at teaching students to transcribe, transliterate and translate Romano-British inscriptions.”  You see a photo of the inscription, hear it read out and see it typed. Then you have a shot at translating it yourself before clicking to reveal what the experts make of it.   (Warning – this one works fine in Internet Explorer but doesn’t seem to like Chrome.)

Finally, in celebration of their centenary in 2010,  the Roman Society have begun to put the best of their large collection of photos on the web. You can see the ones up so far, and offer them your own, at  www.romansociety.org/imago

That’s it. Now I’m off to play with them.  If anyone’s found anything else along these lines, please send it in!

h1

Down in the mud

July 4, 2011

Apologies for the recent silence on the blog. I’ve spent much of the last fortnight on my knees, scraping at a Northamptonshire hillside with an archaeological trowel. The team were – indeed, still are – uncovering  the remains of a Romano-British bath house. When I say ‘remains,’  please do not picture anything on the scale of the Baths of Constantine in Arles:

Baths of Constantine in Arles, with walls still at full height

British archaeologists have to content themselves with more humble fare. While the other bath house on the site (you can see it on the right here) had walls that still looked like walls, this one was probably demolished in Roman times, and they did a pretty thorough job of it.

Remains of walls and underfloor heating for bath house

It may not look much to you, dear reader, but believe me, every inch of that site has been lovingly and painstakingly trowelled out from beneath a field of grass. It’s not as chaotic as it appears in this unofficial end-of-the-working-day snap – in Jeremy Cooper’s excellent high-level photos*,  it’s possible to see the shapes of the rooms.

However, when your nose is close to the ground, it’s hard to see the site as a whole. Instead you concentrate on your own little patch, poking and prodding and scraping. From time to time you stand back and squint at it from different angles, desperately searching for some sort of pattern to reassure you that you aren’t just a sad obsessive who likes playing with mud. There really is – or  was – something there.

*Later  - I’ve just updated this link because the latest (2011) photos are even better.

h1

Turn left after the tinned tomatoes

December 17, 2010

I know those cunning advertisers can persuade us to buy things we never knew we wanted, but surely even the mighty Tesco are going to struggle with this one:

 

Sign over shelves in Tesco announcing 'Aches and Pains'

h1

Normal service will be resumed shortly

October 21, 2010

Apologies for the recent quietness of the blog - we’ve been having a few technical problems here at Downie Towers. 

Strangely, the computer remains dead despite the application of the entire domestic repertoire of technical know-how.  This ranges from repeated grumbling to poking, slapping, switch-clicking and fuse-swapping, aided by the occasional cry from spouse of,  ’Haven’t you got it working yet?’  (This last is always especially helpful.)

More soon, when we hope to have triumphed over technology. 


h1

Crimefest starts tomorrow…

May 19, 2010

…which is both exciting and unfortunate, because it’s now gone 10pm and I haven’t started packing yet. This is because I foolishly promised the nice editors they would have the revised draft of Ruso 4 before the weekend. I also promised Husband to get several trays of seedlings planted out by the same deadline.

Planting was interrupted by having to move out of the way of a mother starling supervising her fluffy baby while it fluttered round the pond and fell in. Luckily baby starlings can swim.

Having spent several hours of daylight getting muddy, I’ve passed most of the evening staring at a computer screen.

If any of the lovely people reading this are planning to go to Crimefest,  please come and say hello. I will be the badly dressed one with the earthy fingernails and bloodshot eyes.

On second thoughts, you may want to slink quietly away.

h1

Dreaming of digging?

February 18, 2010

Now here’s a better use of technology (better, that is, than seen below in ‘A matter of taste’).  There’s an extremely whizzy, and free, online magazine called ‘Past Horizons’ published by the BAJR – British Archaeological Jobs Resource.  It not only offers some fine photos and articles about archaeology all over the world, but explains how readers can get involved.

With luck,  this link should get you there. I was hoping to do something extremely clever that would make it appear before your very eyes within this blog, but the magic wand seems to have got stuck somewhere round a bend in the computer. Apologies.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.