Early birthday celebration

18 June 2010 21:39

Because Laura (our son Gordon’s girlfriend) has her birthday on June the 10th and mine is on the 19th, we decided to combine our birthday meals out. The only evening which we could all manage was on Wednesday.

So we went to the Annapurna restaurant and had lovely Nepalese food. We had been there before but it was the first time for the rest of the family and luckily they enjoyed it.

I did make a chocolate birthday cake for us both but it turned out to be the driest one which I have baked yet. So the search for the perfect chocolate cake recipe continues.

I did quite like the icing though. Very different because instead of using butter, you use jam and although it probably isn’t any healthier for you somehow the fact that you aren’t eating loads of chocolate flavoured butter is a plus.

So this is the recipe for it.

75g dark chocolate
75g jam of your choice
150g icing sugar

Put the chocolate in a bowl which has been placed above a pan of hot water. When the chocolate has melted, remove the bowl from the heat and mix the jam into the melted chocolate. Add the sifted icing sugar and beat with enough water to make the mixture easier to spread.

I used strawberry jam but you are supposed to use blackcurrant or raspberry. I think any red fruit jam would work though.

Weather update

17 June 2010 22:01

I’m not complaining, honestly. But suddenly it’s really warm again, almost too hot, and the forecast for the weekend is good. That’s nearly a miracle.

The down side of this is that the midges are out and biting by the millions. It’s especially bad near any lochs.

We had been hoping that the horrendous winter would have killed a lot of the wee blighters off. What they think has happened is that the midges survived the cold but the birds and bats which would normally eat the midges, didn’t do so well during the snow and ice.

Unfortunately, human beings are top of the midge menu.

Daphne du Maurier

16 June 2010 09:10

I recently read and reviewed Flight of the Falcon and Rule Britannia as well as the book in my previous post and then realised that although I thought that I had read just about everything which Daphne du Maurier wrote, I was far from correct.

I don’t want to join any more reading challenges, but I want to keep a track of how many I have read, and I hope to add quite a few more to my list before the end of the year.

She also wrote quite a few non-fiction books but I’m going to concentrate on the fiction for the moment.

* The Loving Spirit (1931)
* I’ll Never Be Young Again (1932)
* The Progress of Julius (1933) (later re-published as Julius)
* Jamaica Inn (1936)
* Rebecca (1938)
* Rebecca (1940) (play—du Maurier’s own stage adaptation of her novel)
* Happy Christmas (1940) (short story)
* Come Wind, Come Weather (1940) (short story collection)
* Frenchman’s Creek (1941)
* Hungry Hill (1943)
* The Years Between (1945) (play)
* The King’s General (1946)
* September Tide (1948) (play)
* The Parasites (1949)
* My Cousin Rachel (1951)
* The Apple Tree (1952) (short story collection, AKA Kiss Me Again, Stranger)
* Mary Anne (1954)
* The Scapegoat (1957)
* Early Stories (1959) (short story collection, stories written between 1927–1930[14])
* The Breaking Point (1959) (short story collection, AKA The Blue Lenses)
* Castle Dor (1961) (with Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch[15])
* The Birds and Other Stories (1963) (republication of The Apple Tree[16])
* The Glass-Blowers (1963)
* The Flight of the Falcon (1965)
* The House on the Strand (1969)
* Not After Midnight (1971) (short story collection, AKA Don’t Look Now[17])
* Rule Britannia (1972)
* “The Rendezvous and Other Stories” (1980) (short story collection)

I’ll Never Be Young Again by Daphne du Maurier

15 June 2010 08:58

This book is Daphne du Maurier’s second which she wrote in June and July of 1930, in London.

In it Dick, the sheltered only son of a famous poet, has left home and made his way to London after an unfortunate scene at home. Life in the shadow of his successful father has become impossible and Dick decides to throw himself into the Thames from Westminster Bridge.

A passerby, Jake stops Dick from jumping and they end up signing up together to work on a merchant ship bound for Scandinavia. A great friendship develops with Jake, who is a few years older than Dick taking the part of the wiser, older brother whom Dick had lacked.

They journey around Scandinavia by ships and car but Dick ends up travelling to Paris where more experiences await him, mainly in the shape of Hesta, a young student of music.

Around about the middle of the book I felt that it could have been doing with a bit of editing as there was too much meandering description but otherwise I really enjoyed this one, especially after the action moves to Paris.

Considering that du Maurier was only 23 when she wrote this book I find it impressive that she seems to have been able to put herself in the place of a young man in a relationship so successfully, writing of his feelings for Hesta and then of their changing circumstances.

I wasn’t too sure of this one to begin with but by the time I reached the end I realised that I had thoroughly enjoyed it.

The Tay Railway Bridge

14 June 2010 08:17


We were in Dundee yesterday, so I thought I would take the chance to photograph the bridge, including the scary stumps of the old bridge. The one which collapsed in a very high wind over 100 years ago.

Looking down on the remains of the original bridge from a train is not a very pleasant experience. Luckily, if it is a nice bright day you will be distracted by the lovely view of the hills of Perthshire in the distance.

William Topaz McGonagall that eccentric Dundonian ‘poet’, famously wrote one of his truly dire poems about the incident.

As you can see there is work going on to the fabric of the bridge at the moment. The same can be said of just about every bridge that I’ve seen recently.

Ya Dancer (well, nearly)

13 June 2010 00:00

England versus U.S.A. in the World Cup ended up being a 1 each draw (or tie as they say in the US.) As the U.S.A. were the underdogs I was supporting them and really hoping that they could pull off a win, but I suppose it could have been worse.

I didn’t watch the match as I knew I wouldn’t be able to stand it, for all sorts of reasons, but my husband said that it took only 8 seconds for the commentators to mention the 1966 World Cup.

I had really been hoping to be able to title this post:

YA DANCER! – that lovely Scottish shout of joy, but it wasn’t to be.

To Kill a Mockingbird and stuff.

11 June 2010 08:39

Judith at Reader in the Wilderness has been blogging about To Kill a Mockingbird recently, and then, as often happens, she discovered that this is a special year for it, the 50th anniversary of its publication. As it is one of my favourite books I thought I would write a wee bit about it.

I first read the book in the summer of 1971, I had just turned 12 and I was in Germany, Bavaria actually, visiting my pen-pal Jutta for the first time. Her English was not great and my German was nearly non-existent then and I was there on my own so it was quite a difficult, lonely visit.

Thankfully, an American had visited the village the year before and had left their copy of To Kill a Mockingbird behind, so I was given it to read. I absolutely loved it although it was so unfair and I hated what happened to Tom, but it is the only book which I have ever got to the end of and started reading again almost immediately.

It’s not only against racism, but about intolerance of anyone who is different. So when Scout begins to mock Walter a dinner guest, the housekeeper Calpurnia gives her a row for it. If people want syrup on their meat and vegetables, it doesn’t make them any less of a person. My mum would have skelped me into the next week if I had behaved like Scout. Boo, the neighbourhood ‘bogey man’ turns out to be the life saver and a good soul, a victim of a tormented childhood. As was Mayella, life wasn’t all wine and roses just because you were white.

The book is a lesson on how to behave towards people who are different from yourself. Treat everyone as you yourself would wish to be treated.

Some years later I saw the film starring Gregory Peck. The whole thing was so well cast, even the kids were great. Then it was a set book in high school, so it was a shock to me to find out that it isn’t taught in Alabama, apparently the excuse is that as it is the only book which Harper Lee wrote, there is no body of work to study. In my opinion To Kill a Mockingbird has more than enough in it to be getting on with.

Growing up in a small town in the west of Scotland in the 60s meant that I personally had no experience of racism, everybody in the town was white. The big problem there is religion with the Roman Catholic church insisting that they be given money to run their own schools instead of using the normal state schools like everybody else, meaning that there is religious segregation, which is not a good thing.

However, during World War 2 my dad was in the Merchant Navy and he had spent 6 months in New York when the ship he was on needed to have work done on it. It must have been between 1939 and 42, before America was in the war and dad had a very enjoyable time there, especially in Harlem because there were lots of street musicians and dancers, which he loved.

So when he was in a diner with one of his shipmates, they were surprised to be asked to leave. The problem was that they had chosen to eat in a diner which was for black people only. They hadn’t noticed that everybody else was black and apparently some of the regulars were upset by their inadvertent intrusion.

When dad told me that story I was just a wee girl and I thought how terrible it must have been for my really mild-mannered dad to be chucked out of somewhere, but they completely understood and after all it was nothing to the way black people were being treated routinely.

Racism caught up with me though when we moved to England in the late 70s and as a Scot I was not exactly welcomed with open arms. My husband worked for a Malaysian company and was treated as very much a second class citizen compared with the Malaysian workers.

On the other hand, as a Scot, when you go abroad you are in danger of being hugged in the street by complete strangers if they realise that you are Scottish. It happens in France, Norway and Holland, something to do with Scottish soldiers at the end of WW2 I believe. It’s a bit of a shock the first time it happens to you.

So racism and bigotry come in all shapes and sizes and there are laws now to help fight against such evils. In Britain it is common to be tormented by idiots if you happen to be a redhead and there is no law against that. So you go through school being picked on and judged because of the colour of your hair and there are even advertising campaigns in which the so called ‘ginger’ person is ridiculed.

Although I was never a Michael Jackson fan, I did agree completely with him when he said: “I’m not going to spend my life being a colour.” Yes, I’ve got red hair or as my mum called it, strawberry blonde.

What a long meander – back to the book – Judith is going to be buying herself a special edition of it which has been published to celebrate the anniversary.

A few years ago I treated myself to the Folio Books edition, their books are always beautiful and come with nice slip covers too.

If there is anyone who hasn’t read To Kill a Mockingbird – do yourself a favour and read it or even just watch the film.

Sorry, I know I was supposed to be writing just a wee bit but I got sort of taken over somehow.

Dunfermline Abbey

10 June 2010 08:51

During the Easter holidays we had a good look around Dunfermline which is so close to where we live that it had been completely ignored by us for years, as you do. This is a full view of the Abbey with a closer view below.

This is the Palace archway.

There is a plaque on the Abbey’s boundary wall commemorating King Charles I.

There is actually a lot to see at Dunfermline, certainly more than I thought. The history of the Abbey can be traced back as far as 1070 when King Malcolm III married Queen Margaret in a church there and there is still quite a lot left to see if you go. If you are interested you can read all about it here.

Life Class by Pat Barker

9 June 2010 09:55

Life Class was published in 2007. It is set in the spring of 1914 and the characters are art students at the Slade School of Art in London.

Paul Tarrant has been left a small legacy by his grandmother and he is using the money to finance his art studies, although things aren’t going well for him and he is thinking about leaving the college before his first year is up. He doesn’t think he is progressing with his art and seems to feel that he doesn’t fit in with the rest of the students because of his northern background. He forms a relationship with Teresa, an artist’s model and fellow northerner.

I felt that this part of the book was the least successful bit, and it annoyed me that Barker couldn’t make up her mind whether the character of Elinor had cropped hair, bell shaped hair or it could be tied back with a ribbon.

At the outbreak of war, Paul and Kit, an ex Slade student and up and coming artist, decide to do their bit, hoping to be ambulance drivers in Ypres but starting out as hospital orderlies, although both continue to paint. I think this is the most interesting part of the book. It seems that Barker is most comfortable with the subject of the war.

However, she still made annoying small mistakes. For instance, whilst Paul is back in London and recovering from a leg wound which has left him with a stiff knee, he meets up with Elinor. When they reach her rooms, she asks him to light the fire, which he does and then sits back on his heels. Now I don’t know how it is possible to sit on your heels without bending both of your knees. But a couple of paragraphs later he is saying that he can’t bend his knee.

I know it’s nit-picking and probably nobody else bothers about that sort of thing.

Anyway, apart from that I did quite enjoy the book although it isn’t one which I would read again. If you like books which are set in The Great War you will probably enjoy this one.

A Weather Report

8 June 2010 09:21

I know it’s my own fault, I should not have complained about the weather because now we are back to the cold and rain.

There should be a law against rain in June. Wet washing hanging around the house is so depressing. Such is life.

It doesn’t take much to make me happy, honestly. My washing dried out in the fresh air hits the spot every time