Monday, 23 December 2019

Merry Christmas - Happy Holidays!

Whatever your beliefs, I am sure that over this festive period you will be celebrating something. Maybe a birthday or two so - Happy Birthday.

Personally I am very happy that 2019 is almost over. It hasn't been a good year as I've been on the sick list for most of it. I needed surgery and the NHS came up trumps - they paid for it to be done privately. I think it was due to my age. I reached 80 in April. No, no celebrations but I did received two greetings cards with the age on them!

Recovery from the surgery has been slow, but I am getting there - as they say. I am now hoping to be fit enough to do some cruising in 2020 - watch this space!

All the best for 2020 - and here's to a peaceful New Year. Lots of love to you all. 

Saturday, 30 November 2019

The Repair Shop - great television


If you haven’t watched this BBC programme let me recommend it. Especially if you want to see damaged items repaired. Not just any old items but well used ones being lovingly mended by experts. Maybe beloved family reminders, others may have been dropped and a few are antiques.

Running the shop – as it were – is furniture restoration expert Jay Blades. Watch carpenter Will Kirk, especially as he carves a new piece of wood to match the antique he is repairing. (My carpenter Grandfather would have loved to watch him). Then there are brother and sister Steve and Suzie Fletcher. He is an expert on clocks and watches and she works wonders with leather. Also in some of the programmes are Kirsten Ramsay who deals with ceramics (ever seen the number of pieces a dropped plate can create?) Dominic is the blacksmith and I mustn’t forget the doll ladies who clean up, re-make or whatever it takes to bring over-loved dolls and teddy bears back to life.

These wonderful experts – and others – are at The Repair Shop at the Weald and Downland Living Museum in Singleton, West Sussex. I should emphasise that they aren’t there 24/7 but plying their trades for this really interesting television show.

For more information you can contact
BBC.co.uk/shows and tours/takepart/the_repair_shop


Wednesday, 16 October 2019

In Love with Georgette Heyer




I was first introduced to the books of Georgette Heyer in my early teens when a teacher read ‘Friday’s Child’ to us.

Over the decades I have read all of her books – Regency and Mystery – several times. I suspect that every teenaged girl read the Regency novels as romances. But after reading them when a bit older you realise that they are a brilliant insight into High Society in that period. Whenever you read them a second – or more – times you begin to see how witty (in some cases – hilarious) they are.

Georgette Heyer researched everything about that period – clothes, food, transport, manners, speech. She became an expert on the period and was a bloody good writer.

In the 1960s I was working for a mining magazine and it turned out that one ‘elderly’ gentleman there had been a mining engineer and was friends with Georgette Heyer’s husband – who had also been a mining engineer. When I told him how much I admired the writer’s work he said he would introduce me. Unfortunately he died before that could happen.

Thanks to Amazon Kindle I am now beginning my own collection of Georgette Heyer books.

Incidentally, Joan Aiken Hodge wrote a superb biography of Georgette Heyer entitled ‘The Private World of Georgette Heyer'. Paperback available on Amazon.


Sunday, 13 October 2019

Winter Shopping

Yes, I know it is only autumn but for me any temperature below 16c (61f) is cold!!! I do try to put off switching on any heating (fortunately heaters in each room - don't have central heating!) until absolutely necessary. And, no, not yet into the thermals! Well, got to have something extra put on when it gets really, really, really cold.

Of course - as for most of us - this is the time to start checking the winter clothing. Two pairs of trousers and a jacket from Bon Marche. Unfortunately I seemed to have something wrong with my brain the first time I went in there and bought size 20. Eh????? Obviously took them back and changed them for the smaller size (no not telling you!). Fortunately the jacket was too tight round the armholes so I just changed that. It actually made me look like the Michelin Man (remember him?).

Just ordered a jacket on line. The only colour available in my size was 'ochre' a yellowish colour. Wanted the blue (what I call peacock blue but think it has changed its name these days). Have no idea whether the colour will suit me but we will find out when it is delivered.

Sweaters? Got plenty of them and am currently knitting a twin set - cardi in scarlet and pullover in yellow. Should cheer me up! 

Kissing a dolphin in the waters just off Mexico
(in the Gulf of Mexico).
A reminder of warmer days! 

Wednesday, 11 September 2019

Trouble in Trewith Green

This is the opening of the 5th Cleo Marjoribanks murder mystery. Not a good start to the day when a body is found outside her home....


As I pulled up in front of the elegant Georgian house I had to sigh. So beautiful. No, I'm not jealous
of friend's home. If I lived in one like this I'd have to quieten down and become more ladylike. My Edwardian mock-Tudor is better for a slightly overweight, red-headed Eastender driving a Land Rover around the New Forest.
'Come on through to the kitchen, Cleo,' Paula Linley invited me in.
Informal then, I mused as I followed her down the hall. Wonder what this urgent matter is all about? Hope it's nothing to do with Maggie. She's Paula's teenage daughter who hasn't, yet, discovered boys.
'Morning, Stella,' I greeted the young woman sitting at the table, a mug of coffee in front of her.
'Morning, Cleo. Thanks for coming over. I am afraid that it is my fault,' the clipped accent told me.
'Coffee?' Paula asked as I sat down.
'Please. Any gingerbread?'
'No, but I do have some bun loaf.'
'Great. And lashings of butter, please.'
Once we were settled I looked from one to the other of them. 'What's up?'
Paula waved a hand in Stella's direction. 'It's your story.'
The younger woman sighed. 'You know my Mother and Paula were at school together?' The milk chocolate brown eyes looked at me. I nodded.
'Well there was another lady who was at school with them. Caroline Warner.'
Paula took up the story. 'She married Jonathan and they have two daughters.'
Why the life story? 'And all this is interesting because.....?' I asked.
Stella ran a hand through her fluffy brown hair. Hey! She's got some highlights. Should have noticed that before. 'The thing is, Cleo, you will think I am making things up.'
'Such as an overactive imagination?'
'Maybe.'
'Spit it out.'
'What?'
I grinned. 'Sorry, one of my Gran's sayings.' I waved a hand at her. 'Go on.'
'Caroline died of cancer a couple of years ago.'
'And?' Unfortunately too many people still die of cancer.
'Her husband died a couple of weeks ago.'
Silence.
'What of?' I finally asked.
'Fell off a ladder.'
Yeah, that'll do it. 'I assume he was quite high up or something?'
Stella nodded. 'Cleaning the gutters.'
Another silence and Stella finished her coffee. Replacing the mug on the table she took a deep breath. 'The thing is, Cleo, I don't think that was an accident.'
'As in was he pushed?'


https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01DJBANEO

Also available on KOBO. 



Wednesday, 4 September 2019

'MURDER IN MITCHAM PARVA'


Here is the opening to the fourth Cleo Marjoribanks murder mystery.....


I don't believe it!  Only back from Spain for a few weeks and there's another body. No, I haven't found another one as I did when David and I were on holiday.  Apparently there's been a murder in another village in the Forest - that's the New Forest in Hampshire.

This morning before Mrs. Walsh - who 'does' for me - had unpacked her overall and put on the kettle (sorry - switched on the kettle) she was in full spate with the news.

'Had a terrible shock,' she told me in her New Forest burr. 'Linda's dead.'

'Who?'

'My friend, Linda'

'Sorry to hear that.  Was she ill?'

'No-o-o.  Murdered.'  She wrung her hands.  Yeah, honest she did.  She only needed a puzzled look from me to continue, 'Her husband found 'er in the garding this morning.  She went out to bingo in their church 'all last night and didn't come 'ome.'

'Wasn't he worried?'

She shook her head which is now a strange chocolate brown with blue tips and whispered. 'Separate bedrooms.'

'He wouldn't know she'd stopped out.'

'Right, but I don't know why 'e didn't notice at breakfast.'

'Letting her have a lie in?'

'Nah.  She works at Mitcham Manor.  Cleaning, like me, so she'd 'ave ter be up early.'

'You said she was murdered?' I reminded her.

'Head bashed in.'

Yup, that'd kill someone. 'Oh dear.  How did you find out?'

'One of their neighbours phoned ter tell me and ask if I've got 'n hour or two ter spare today if they need someone ter fill in at the Manor.'

Her phone played 'My Way' - she's a Frank Sinatra fan - and she rummaged in her bag for it. That's when I noticed that her nails match the blue in her hair.

When she'd finished the call and was jotting something in her Filofax I asked, 'Why do you still have a Filofax? You can put all that info onto the phone.'

'Don't know how to. This is a new one my 'usband give me.' She snorted. 'A phone's a phone. That's all I need. It's easier ter plan my weeks with the Filofax.'

Rather like me and my calendar. Incidentally, she's a bit older than me.  I think somewhere in her fifties and, so my friend Paula tells me, is always formal. Calls all her clients Mrs. or Miss - whatever. We've decided it must be a family trait as it seems all her family worked in service. You know, maids and things in the big houses.

Mug of tea and two biscuits later Mrs. Walsh finally got started on the work and I went to my office - or study or whatever you want to call it - and phoned Paula.



Sorry, but the cover seems to have gone AWOL!

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00V3CX074

Also available on Kobo. 



Friday, 23 August 2019

Lovely morning but....

Summer has arrived - hurray! And this morning my writer friend, Roberta Grieve, and I met for coffee. As we are both busy ladies with our writing we don't get together often enough so there is always lots to talk about.

Except.... this morning when we were sitting inside the cafe - with its doors open - and had difficulty hearing each other because of a very loud street singer (C&W) 'entertaining' shoppers. Bad enough having to put up with 'background music' inside shops without being force-fed it when trying to enjoy cup of coffee and chat. Time to find another coffee shop - away from the madding crowd!

Left me wondering how many customers, like us, the shops in London Road, Bognor Regis, lose due to the unwanted noise?

Wake up, Bognor, when people are shopping or wanting to chat they DON'T need intrusive noise.