Monday, June 13, 2016

More wot I have heard…

Written in Scars by Jack Savoretti


This album is difficult to characterise but even though the artist has made his name as a solo acoustic singer he has added a lot of skilfully engineered backing musicians to this collection of songs that unfortunately often feel much the same, are loud and not quite distinctive enough to hold my attention.  

A Stag Do…

As Paul’s best man it was my responsibility to organise his stag do. It was on a weekend and was in two parts; firstly was to travel into London and in the morning visit several of the new craft breweries that have sprung up around Bermondsey including: 

Then we headed to Borough Market where we split up for lunch, some of us ended up in the restaurant called Roast that overlooked the market.

Suitable sated we commuted over to Clapham Junction where we had a drink in The Falcon (once in the Guinness Book of Records for its long bar) and to our main attraction for the evening at the

Four Thieves a pub with their own microbrewery on site and a large games room where we played on the Moonshine Raceway (radio controlled pick-up trucks around a large track) and Plonk Crazy Golf (nine holes squeezed into the smallest of spaces). There was also ping-pong, football and ice hockey tables, and video games including a giant screen Street Fighter.

It was a fun day, but eventually the hours got and loud music got to us old folk and after a last drink at the Falcon we headed to our beds.


The following day we headed out to West Sussex where Southern Pursuits put on a variety of activities based at Tulleys Farm. Here a dozen of us gathered in the rain to try our hands at Archery, Clay Shooting and Axe Throwing. During the morning/afternoon the weather improved and I think most people enjoyed themselves. 

Boardgame geeks…

It was the 10th anniversary of the UK Games Expo and the event has grown considerable in scale with this year’s expansion into the NEC halls increasing the space and allowing for more people to move around more comfortably. I think they were surprised with the increases this year and many of the stall holders were running out of stock by the last day. Plenty of space in the hotel convention rooms allowed visitors room to play games brought and bought. There was quite a gang of us together allowing us to play a wide variety of games. I was reasonable conservative in my purchases with only three games bought:

A milestone birthday…

It was Jamie’s 30th birthday recently, and although he was going to be in the USA for the big day with a few pals on a road trip, we managed to catch up with him before he left. We went with Deb and Barbara to Kingham’s in Shere where we had a fabulous lunch. Afterwards we visited the Silent Pool Distillery to try their gin and admire their beautiful still. And then Barbara dropped us off at the Dorking Beer Festival where we sampled a few brews, eventually staggering back via a few pubs in town on our way home including the Spotted Dog, The Kings Arms (where we saw the lively Southern Blues Kings) and then finally The Star.

Underground…

After talking in the bar the night before we arranged a private visit to the caves in Reigate, both Barons and Tunnel Road caves. Sue had not been before and I think she quite enjoyed the experience.

Out on the town…

One of our favourite local bands, Eclectix, were playing and the Red Lounge in dorking and so we got together with Chris, Carole, Deb and Howard to go out for the evening and thoroughly enjoyed ourselves.

Helping hands…

Recently we have been helping our friends Paul and Lorraine prepare for their upcoming nuptials and we enjoyed being able to assist with the choosing of their wines for the wedding. Continuing in a co-operative way we put up our new handmade gate (or rather acted as helpers to our more DIY-skilled neighbour Howard). We also tried to jet wash Deb’s kitchen roof with little success as the high pressure water ended up forcing its way through the seals of the roof lights to drip into the kitchen below. 

More of wot I have read…


this was a very entertaining book for many reasons; firstly as it was written by a Chinese author it had a different world view and the English translation seems to have kept some of the flavour from the original language; secondly the science elements of the story had an authentic feel t them – even the more outlandish alien ones; and lastly it had some interesting characters in it that felt original and fresh. The pace was slow and measured as it gradually built up tension through the book and now I am looking forward to the next one in the series.


‘1967: Ye Wenjie witnesses Red Guards beat her father to death during China’s Cultural Revolution. This singular event will shape not only the rest of her life but slao the future of mankind.

Four decades later, Beijing police ask nanotech engineer Wang Miao to infiltrate a secretive cabal of scientists after a spate of inexplicable suicides. Wang’s investigation will lead him to a mysterious online game and immerse him in a virtual world ruled by a tractable and unpredictable interaction of its three suns.

This is the Three-Body Problem and it is the key to everything: the key to the scientists’ deaths, the key to a conspiracy that spans light-years and the key to the extinction-level threat humanity now faces.’



I read the first book, Ancillary Justice, some time back and enjoyed the writing style very much. Now I read the next two in the trilogy back to back and still liked the flavour the author gave the universe of the Radch and the deliberate ambiguous single pronoun aspect of the language. The expansive scale and long history is reminiscent of the Culture series.


‘What if you once had thousands of bodies and near god-like technology at your disposal?

And what if all of it were ripped away?

The Lord of the Radch has given Breq command of the ship Mercy of Kalr and sent her to the only place she would have agreed to go — to Athoek Station, where Lieutenant Awn’s sister works in Horticulture.

Athoek was annexed some six hundred years ago, and by now everyone is fully civilized — or should be. But everything is not as tranquil as it appears. Old divisions are still troublesome, Athoek Station’s AI is unhappy with the situation, and it looks like the alien Presger might have taken an interest in what’s going on. With no guarantees that interest is benevolent.’



‘For a moment, things seem to be under control for the soldier known as Breq. Then a search of Athoek Station’s slums turns up someone who shouldn’t exist – someone who might be an ancillary from a ship that’s been hiding beyond the empire’s reach for three thousand years. Meanwhile, a messenger from the alien and mysterious Presger empire arrives, as does Breq’s enemy, the divided Anaander Mianaai – ruler of an empire at war with itself.


Anaander is heavily armed and extremely unhappy with Breq. She could take her ship and crew and flee, but that would leave everyone at Athoek in terrible danger. Breq has a desperate plan. The odds aren’t good, but that’s never stopped her before.’