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Archives for July 2025

Update – Secular (patroness of the arts etc.)

1 July, 2025
Posted in: Dublin, Family, Ireland, Mr. Waffle, Princess

In rapid succession I went to the following events at an arts festival: David O’Doherty (covered earlier, try to keep up), Paul Murray (rather earnest but interesting author of, inter alia, “The Bee Sting”) and Louise Lowe. I found the last the most interesting (Mr. Waffle accompanied me – he was supposed to come to the other two as well but pressure of work prevented him and having run into loads of people I knew at both earlier events who were wondering why I was there on my own – not to mention the expense of getting two tickets when only one turned out to be needed – I was pretty pleased to have him there but I remain mildly resentful about his previous unavoidable absences, as you can possibly tell from this lengthy aside).

Louise Lowe is a director of a theatre company called ANU and I have been to loads of their productions and they are always interesting and usually good. I found her absolutely fascinating. She has a really unusual way of looking at things and she is intrigued by the audience and uses all kinds of different approaches to bring them closer to the production. So enthused am I that I have become a supporter – so far all this has got me is an opportunity for early access to tickets to a play I saw already last Christmas but I remain optimistic.

I have been to see the Mainie Jellett & Evie Hone exhibition in the National Gallery a couple of times. Interesting, but I did not love a lot of the art. Much like the Irish Times in the 1920s, it appears I am not ready for modernism in Irish art.

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Like the curate’s egg though, good in parts.

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Nice to see an old friend from the Crawford Gallery on tour anyhow.

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My brother got me a voucher for an “art afternoon tea” in the Merrion hotel for Christmas. They have an amazing art collection and you get to look at it; get a brochure on it; and eat cakes inspired by it. Not cheap (though free to me) and quite difficult to get a booking but I would recommend. Herself accompanied me. We enjoyed our experience.

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I was listening to the German classical music radio that Mr. Waffle favours when I heard this number I have not heard in over 40 years. We learnt it in school for choir. To be honest I thought it was a bit mawkish but hearing it really brought me back. It’s by Handel, apparently, who knew? I have to say, you’ve got to applaud Mrs. O’Shea’s vaulting ambition for the 14 year old girls in her charge.

Mr. Waffle and I went to tenth anniversary celebratory drinks for the Dublin Inquirer to which we subscribe. It’s run on a complete shoestring but I like their enthusiasm and I like getting a print edition delivered. The drinks were upstairs in a pub and a bit primitive but we got to meet all the journalists and the editor. We also met the mother of one of the journalists. It was that kind of evening. The journalist was American but her mother was Irish (though she had lived in America for many years) and had just that morning arrived in from the States to show support (“I’m here as a subscriber,” she said enthusiastically but she was the only subscriber who had travelled 5,000 kms to be upstairs in a pub). She told us that on arrival that morning, she had discovered through the inevitable channels that her old headmistress’s funeral was that very day so she and her mother (the journalist’s grandmother – are you still with me?) went to the funeral and had lunch in the convent with the nuns which she very much enjoyed. I enjoyed this exchange myself as it confirmed all my beloved stereotypes about Irish people and funerals.

Our media subscriptions may yet beggar us. We subscribe to the Inquirer, the Irish Times, the Guardian and the Canard Enchaîné which you might have thought was plenty. The other day Mr. Waffle said to me “According to Haaretz…” “Sorry, what?” I said. He said, “I’m a subscriber. I felt they needed some support.” I mean yes, but that’s a lot of news organisations to keep afloat.

We went to the Dalkey book festival. Dalkey is a lovely little village beside the sea near Dublin. Our hopes for a lovely day were dashed by the bucketing rain. We went on our bikes and although our rain gear is good it wasn’t exactly the pleasant cycling experience I had envisaged. Also Dalkey is full of electric SUVs. I mean it’s good that they are electric, I guess, but they steal up behind you and unnerve you as you cycle along, like a snowboarder swooshing down the mountain after you as you are attempting a tricky turn.

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We went to a panel talk on the manosphere. I was very underwhelmed. No new insights and I have decided that a panel with four people and a host is never going to give you any depth. I bought this book all the same, I had heard the author on a couple of podcasts and the book sounded interesting, though like everyone else, she had no real chance to shine on the panel. Not a triumph.

What was a triumph was that I had booked a restaurant for dinner and despite the literature loving hordes who had descended on the town we got our dinner and a window seat from whence we could see the crowd at the pub across the road, come out, get driven in by the rain and come out again.

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As we were sitting watching the crowds surge in and out of the pub we saw Mr. Waffle’s brother and his wife locking their bikes to the pole across the road so we rushed out to say hello. Then another friend came up and we all had a nice chat until the rain started again and we all scuttled back to our various locations.

After dinner we went to see Paul Howard talk about Ross O’Carroll Kelly. Wouldn’t be a massive fan myself but Mr. Waffle enjoys the books. Mr. Howard packed out the ballroom of the hotel and the local crowd loved him (technically, I think Ross may be from Foxrock but Dalkey appears to be close enough). It was grand but I spent much of the evening in shock as Mr. Waffle pointed out an apparently very elderly gent whom I did not recognise at all but turns out to have been one of my (younger) lecturers from college. Disturbing.

To recover, we had a drink in the town with the friend we had run into earlier and his wife who was one of the volunteers shepherding literature enthusiasts from venue to venue.

As you will be no doubt aware, Bloomsday was June 16. I’m not a huge Joyce fan but a friend of the Princess’s who is doing a PhD on Joycean stuff was over from England to give a lecture so we went along to show support. Mr. Waffle found it interesting; I thought it was quite hard going myself but we both agreed that it was better than the Dalkey panel, so there was that.

And finally in cultural news, Mr. Waffle and I saw “Jane Austen Ruined my Life”. Grand but nothing to write home about. A bilingual film about a French woman who loves Jane Austen. It is supposed to be set in a big English Georgian house but it is a quite obviously entirely French big house so I found that amusing. We get our thrills where we can.

How have your own cultural outings been going?

Now, for Some Personal News

5 July, 2025
Posted in: Work

When I started this blog, neither today nor yesterday, a friend said to me, “There’s an “about” you section? What’s that for? It’s all about you.” And while that is true, the “about ” section remains.

And while this blog is all personal news, I am keeping this title all the same – do you remember that newsreaders used to say that at the end of the news when they were leaving? Well, I am leaving my current employer after nearly ten years in its not entirely warm embrace. Look, it had lots of merits but I feel I have one job left in me and I want it to be a different kind of job. A number of senior colleagues have told me how “brave” I am to move on at this stage of my career; an intervention I really appreciated as you can imagine. I am hoping (obviously, says you) that the new job will be a good fit and – hold your breath here – it is a FOUR DAY WEEK. I am very excited for this.

I finished the old job on Friday and start the new job on Monday (that was slightly poorly planned, I would concede). Wish me luck.

A Trip to the Ardennes

7 July, 2025
Posted in: Belgium, Travel, Work

While I have been away from my desk, I have not been idle. I have been away many times. Are you going to hear about all these trips? Yes, yes you are.

Nearly 20 years ago I worked with a lovely group of people in Brussels and we have stayed in touch intermittently over the years despite the obvious geographical obstacles. We have gone on weekends away a number of times since we stopped working together but not since Covid and this year we decided to go again. I felt mild trepidation as the Brussels gang had stayed in better touch but I bit the bullet. This turned out to be an excellent decision.

Friday – May 2, 2025

Given the preponderance of our number still in Brussels, we went to the Ardennes. I have never been (Mr. Waffle to me: you have, we have been together more than once) that I can recall. It’s the hilly part of Belgium; though the photographs you will enjoy in the course of this post may make you question that assertion.

The advantage of going to somewhere many people are based is that it is pretty seamless. I was picked up at the airport by one friend and her partner (object of much interest to me as although a long standing fixture for her he was new to me and I had the whole trip to the Ardennes to cross-question him; I enjoyed, he bore up). Brussels airport appears to only allow set down not collection so I was instructed to follow the arrows backwards to the set down area. This worked much more efficiently than I had expected. It had a delightfully Belgian surrealist touch which I enjoyed.

When we got down to the village where we were staying it was evening. This was not a problem as fairy hands had made dinner (one of our number was once a chef, should be a pre-requisite for every friend group) and picked up bedlinen (more of which anon) and opened up the house. It was so much fun to catch up with everyone. I was delighted with myself.

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The house was really cheap so I wasn’t expecting much but it was absolutely lovely. Slightly “L’empire des lumières” vibes below, appropriately.

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Two of the group were staying about 45 minutes walk away and they had to put on head torches at the end of the night and head off into the pitch dark (uber has not made it to the Ardennes, it appears). It seemed a bit unfair that they were the ones who had made dinner but life is a vale of tears etc.

Saturday – May 3, 2025

We went for a walk. Walking is what you do in the Ardennes. The weather forecast was not great. Our prudent Northern Ireland Protestant (you think these things are not sectarian? so wrong) was appalled to find that I had apparently left my coat at the airport; our English friend had forgotten his coat on the train; and our Anglo-Dutch friend had left hers behind. The Pole basically said, “I don’t care about rain so I haven’t got a coat.” “You couldn’t make it up,” said our Northern friend in despair. She and her French partner were fully kitted up. I was glad that they had been largely in charge of importing our food for the weekend. The rest of us were clearly not to be trusted. Might I mention that she also brought tupperware and dishwasher tablets in a tupperware box (if that’s not meeting my stereotype needs, then what is?). All of these items proved extremely useful.

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We started out and the weather was grand actually. Our Anglo-Dutch partner in crime had a spare sun hat (normally she is very well organised as you would stereotypically expect, I must point out, but the coat was a lapse) and I slapped it on and off we went.

We walked to the scenic little town of Durbuy. I have never seen so many Dutch tourists in my life. But it was pretty adorable. Would 100% go back.

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Our Northern Irish French couple had been there a couple of years ago with her parents. Her partner had inadvertently closed the convertible roof of their car on her father’s hand just as they were setting off from Brussels. Mr. French smoothly turned off the motorway and drove straight to the hospital nearby showing great presence of mind. This was particularly so as Ms. Northern Ireland said she had never before in her life heard her stoic Northern father make a sound like that – a kind of continuous keening moan as described to her riveted audience. It was hardly an auspicious beginning to their weekend away. I can’t help feeling that her father was thinking “This would never have happened, if she’d met a nice man from the local rugby club at home.” Not least because no one in their right mind would own a convertible anywhere on the island of Ireland. However it was a bit of a triumph for Belgium, as the hospital fixed him up in no time; sent him on his way; and he and Mr. French were having a beer at this very spot by late afternoon.

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All was well until we were returning to the house when the heavens opened. It was the kind of torrential rain that gets you coming down and then hits you again as it bounces off the pavement. We were in the middle of the country but as extraordinary good luck would have it we were beside the only cafe for miles around. It was more of a truck and some large canopies but any port in a storm. It was kind of alarming when the rain sloshed in sheets to the ground but we remained dry and cozy with the truck owner doling out blankets.

There was talk of sending one of the two people with coats to the house to pick up the car and ferry us back when, miraculously, the rain eased and we scuttled back to the house. Delighted with ourselves.

Dinner that evening was a barbecue. You see our difficulty. The people with the rain gear bore the brunt of the outside work. This prudence lark has its downsides.

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Dinner was great and, obviously, pretty dry for me. We had so much fun chatting. I really like this group singly and together which is a great formula for going away. I often think you never know whether you are really friends with people you meet at work until you leave a job and see whether you want to see people again.

I don’t know how this came up in the course of conversation but my Polish friend referred to when Jesus was in the Olive Garden. I was somewhat startled and then said, “Oh you mean the Mountain of Olives – the garden of Gethsemane”. “Isn’t it the same?” he asked. Well, it is and it isn’t.

Sunday – May 4, 2025

Again we enjoyed a very elaborate breakfast – brought to the Ardennes by the kindly Brussels contingent.

We went to have a look at some dolmens. The area abounds in megaliths. Honestly, who knew?

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On the way to our megaliths we were serenaded by lorries playing hits – it sounded like from their horns? – some kind of protest perhaps? It was somehow a very Belgian experience.

Two of the group had to leave as work beckoned. Alas. The rest of us went to seek an elaborate lunch in a nice restaurant but were cruelly refused by the owners and ended up having a toasted sandwich in the “Maison des Megaliths” interpretative centre. I mean, ok, I guess. At least we had each other. And the setting was scenic.

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We went back to the main house via the smaller place where two of the group were staying. It was in a kind of holiday chalet park; not terrible but not at all as nice as the main house, I fear. The boys in the chalet seemed resigned to their fate which also involved traipsing up to the main house where all the action was. I have to say they were extremely noble.

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Monday – May 5, 2025

My Anglo-Dutch friend and I remained in the big house to shut it up. This entire holiday weekend seemed designed to shield me from any hassle and so it was in this regard too as my friend had booked and paid the deposit so she was, understandably, the most concerned about the ludicrous instructions on cleaning and packing up the house. Behold price list for same. We were never going to be bringing the bedding back (which we had already paid to hire) as we were miles from head office and our only car was back in Brussels. I was not feeling the love. Though overall, even allowing for charges, in terms of quality/value ratio it’s one of the best places I’ve ever stayed, I somehow found this pretty off-putting.

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As I packed my bag and double checked I had everything, I noticed that there was a zipped compartment I had not opened earlier. Well, well, well, what have we here? An idiot, that’s what.

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After we packed we took ourselves off to the train station and the remaining four of us went to Brussels to together. One of the things I had forgotten about Belgium is how excellent the train service is. We were in the middle of nowhere on a bank holiday Monday and it was literally no trouble at all to get a train back to Brussels.

We changed trains in Liège, a city about the size of Cork. Can I tell you that Kent station Cork is very much not like the train station in Liège? I mean, not everything is perfect but still.

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When we got to Brussels, I stopped off in the city centre for a couple of hours before going to the airport. I haven’t been to Brussels in ages and I had forgotten how fond of it I am.

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Since I was last there, they have pedestrianised Boulevard Anspach and Place De Brouckère which used to be a wide traffic choked road with four lanes of cars. I thought it was amazing and deeply improbable. I am thrilled to see that Dublin city council are using it for inspiration for its work on pedestrianising College Green in the centre of the city (long promised but still not with us). We will see.

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Many years ago, when I lived in Brussels in my 20s and my father was still coming to Brussels for work, he would take me to dinner. We would go for a drink in the Metropole hotel on Place De Brouckère (currently shrouded in scaffolding) and dinner in a very down at heel steak chain nearby called the Western Steak which he loved. I was pleased to see that amidst all the new developments, its successor in title survives right beside that legendary establishment “Hector Chicken” formerly Hector Poulet but I guess he’s gone international now.

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I am keen to repeat the dose of a weekend away with this gang next year. Let us hope that they are equally enthusiastic.

Reading

18 July, 2025
Posted in: Reading etc.

Throne of Glass by Sarah J Maas

To say I was disappointed by this is an understatement. I read somewhere that romancetasy (mmm I know not anyone’s favourite portmanteau) books are the biggest sellers in publishing and that Sarah J Maas was the bestselling of the lot. I thought I’d give them a go. As you know, I am not opposed to a certain amount of fantasy writing with maps at the front of the book. This was just poor: the world building was dull and derivative; the heros and heroine (it’s a love triangle) annoying and the plot unimaginative. A page turner it was not. Michael pointed out to me that I had begun on book 2 of the series (who calls their series after the second book in the sequence, who?). I caught up. I realised belatedly that the author’s more famous series is called “A Court of Thorns and Roses”. I’m sorry but I can’t face going back and trying another; I’ve done my bit in the interests of science.

The Racket by Conor Niland

Great sports book by one of Ireland’s greatest modern tennis players. He wasn’t super successful by international standards and he has some, not very flattering, thoughts on the Irish set up. He mentions that his older sister was one of Ireland’s top tennis players. These paragraphs filled me with rage:

Gina remains Ireland’s greatest female tennis player in the modern era, winning more points for Ireland in the international Fed Cup (now the Billie Jean King Cup) than anybody else. She turned professional after finishing secondary school and quickly reached number 470 in the world. […]

In the qualifying tournament for the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, Gina and Siobhan Nicholson lost in the last round of the doubles competition, but a subsequent withdrawal handed them a place at the Games. The president of the Olympic Council of Ireland, Pat Hickey, refused to send them, saying the girls were not legitimate medal hopes and that Ireland would not be sending ‘tourists’.

No doubt the Slovenia team that got through instead couldn’t believe their luck. That Olympic year, Ireland sent forty-nine men and only nine women to Barcelona.

Is it any wonder that women’s sports in Ireland were in such an appalling state for many years. It says something about tennis too, I suppose.

This book also confirms my belief that every tennis prodigy has at least one crazy parent.

It won the William Hill sports book of the year award and very well deserved. Recommended. Unrelated – did you know that William Hill was a Black and Tan stationed in Cork and liked it so much that he regularly came back to Cork on holidays over the years. Honestly, not something I would have put money on if I were a betting man.

Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbit

A children’s book I was interested in reading. I thought it might be fun for an adult to read also but not really. Probably fun for an adult to read to a child.

Death Note Black Edition, Volumes 1 & 2 by Tsugumi Ohba

The twins like these Japanese manga comics so I thought I’d give them a try but ultimately I got too confused by reading the frames backwards. Not bad though, I have to say.

The Outlaws Scarlett and Browne by Jonathan Stroud

The Notorious Scarlett and Browne by Jonathan Stroud

This is another series from the pen of the man who wrote the really excellent Lockwood and Co books for teenagers which I very much enjoyed. I enjoyed these too. I am eagerly awaiting the next installment which I have just ordered from the library. It’s about a pair of very different teenagers who pair up in a post-apocalyptic England. Recommended.

Rivals by Jilly Cooper

This was a book club read to tie in with the TV series about which there was so much fuss. Grand, I suppose. Flew through it but not really for me. I won’t be going back for more Rupert Campbell-Black.

I was reading it at a spot I sometimes go for my lunch and the young, enthusiastic English master’s student who seems to like to see me reading came up to see what I was reading. He was pretty disappointed. It compared unfavourably to “A Place of Greater Safety” an epic Hilary Mantel novel about the French Revolution (did not enjoy) which was what I had been reading last time I was in. Alas, another dream shattered.

A Very Private School by Charles Spencer

This got pretty good reviews and I was curious to read it. I am becoming increasingly convinced that for many, many people in the 70s (and before) schools were very institutionally unpleasant places. Worse, if you went to boarding school. This man had a miserable time at school and at home (his mother left the family home although he does seem to have been v fond of his father, if not his step-mother) despite being enormously rich and privileged (his sister was Princess Diana).

The Last Devil to Die by Richard Osman

Another Thursday Murder club book. What a lovely treat. Will I go and see the film when it comes out? Yes, I will, I definitely will.

Henry ‘Chips’ Channon: The Diaries (Volume 2): 1938-43 edited by Simon Heffer

I am tired of Chips. I have had enough. I lived with him for months. I filled my family in on his doings. I will not be attempting volume 3. During this phase my daughter (who, you will recall has a degree in English from Oxford) said to me “You talk more about books than anyone else I’ve ever met.” Then she added “But you seem to hate them.” There’s always a but.

Entitlement by Rumaan Alam

This is a clever idea well-executed but a bit chilly for my liking. Our narrator works for a philanthropist and increasingly thinks she is entitled to all the riches she sees around her.

The Safe Keep by Yael van der Wouden

This has been a huge success. It’s a love story/mystery story set just after World War II in the Netherlands. Written in English by a Dutch woman. It’s like Joseph Conrad; making me feel inadequate all over again. Isn’t it enough to write a great novel in your first language? I didn’t hate it at all but I certainly didn’t love it as much as everyone else. Not sure why; I guessed the mystery relatively early so that probably didn’t help.

Death at the Sign of the Rook by Kate Atkinson

Kate Atkinson does cosy crime. I loved this. By Kate Atkinson standards nothing bad happens (she tends to torture her characters a bit) although, obviously, there’s um, some violence. Truly recommended.

What does Jeremy think? by Suzanne Heywood

Oh so worthy book about Jeremy Heywood, British cabinet secretary who died young. It’s written by his wife whose own book about growing up on a boat I had found really interesting (not at all as idyllic as it sounds). Her husband was a very clever man and clearly very dedicated to his job but yet, I found it a strange book. So much of it was about logistics and politics with a small p (inter-civil service wrangling) rather than policy. For all Lord Heywood of Whitehall’s (great title) undeniable brilliance, I was interested to see that he was completely surprised by the problems Brexit threw up on the Irish border although the Irish government was, to be fair, shouting itself hoarse on this point. His wife’s book is probably more frank about the system than he might have been himself; I get the sense that he was more suave and more inclined to smooth over difficulties than she is. Although he was very involved in the writing he was also very sick at the time and probably not much up to doing more than dictating content. Interesting all round but definitely on the worthy side.

A Voyage around the Queen by Craig Brown

God this was enjoyable. I highly recommend. The author has placed the Queen at the centre of the book and described the experience of others around her. It is an entirely novel and wholly successful approach. Funny, page-turning and insightful.

One thing that struck me as I was reading. One of the Queen’s friends when she was a child was a Catholic who lived with, I think, her grandfather. Our author describes the grandfather as exceptionally religious because the family said the Rosary every night. This suggests that the author knows little of the standard religious practice of Catholics at the time. Even in the 70s although my own family did not say the Rosary every night, when I was packed off to my cousins, it was everyone in the house down on their knees at bedtime and a full five decades. One person leads and the others follow. I was occasionally called upon to lead and this was particularly daunting as I could never count the Hail Marys and I would be starting Hail Mary number 12 (only 10 in a decade as you may have guessed) and my Nana would tap me on the elbow to stop (I mean the whole thing was long enough without me adding in unnecessary Hail Marys).

There was a great chapter in the book about the Queen’s use of the words “how interesting” (I mean, they were all great chapters) and one of the items included in this chapter is a letter to the paper (maybe the Times) from one Enda Cullen of Armagh. Honestly, it was like coming across an old friend in an unusual context. He is a retired school principal from Armagh and I know this because he is an inveterate letter writer to the Irish Times. Small world and all that.

Walk the Blue Fields by Claire Keegan

Claire Keegan is just a brilliant writer. Did I enjoy this collection of short stories? Not really. They are beautifully written but they are sad in a peculiarly old-fashioned Irish way which I did not love.

Heartburn by Nora Ephron

This is quite the story and very much a roman-à-clef. The author describes her husband leaving her for another woman. All of the characters are very much identifiable and Margaret Jay is apparently still quite annoyed about it. While I did quite enjoy it, it’s a bit sad underneath it all and if I were to reread a Nora Ephron it wouldn’t be this one.

The Unexpected Joy of the Ordinary by Catherine Gray

Self-help is not for me. This was a Christmas present and so I read it but I cannot say I enjoyed it. Perhaps you would like it, if you like self-help?

The Proof of my Innocence by Jonathan Coe

There is a pun in the title and that is not at all the only good thing about this book. I love Jonathan Coe and have read most, if not all, of his books. There are some duds but I am happy to report that this is not one of them. It starts poorly but then really improves. I loved it. Jonathan Coe does cozy crime; also, are English literary authors now having a moment with cozy crime? If so I am, as the middle aged say, here for it. A good part of it is set in Cambridge which I know a bit and knowing the location adds to the fun for me.

Time of the Child by Niall Williams

This is Happiness by Niall Williams

Niall Williams was described in the papers as “the most famous Irish author you’ve never heard of”. Not one but both of my book clubs selected different Niall Williams books for us to read. I have to say that I hated both of them. They’re set in Clare in the 1950s and I found them Oirish and sentimental. That said one of my book clubs loved, loved, loved “This is Happiness”. I hated it and literally every other person in the room adored it. In fact two of them had bought several copies to give as presents (bleurgh). I have never had this before in all my years with this book club where one person hated the book and everyone else didn’t just like it but loved it. My book club is with the majority as these books are hugely popular and one of Mr. Williams’s books was long-listed for the Booker. You’ll just have to read them yourself and see what you think. Or you could go to the film of one of his books which is currently showing. There’s a hilarious review of the film by Donald Clarke in today’s Irish Times and it sums up my feelings on the books beautifully. He is generous to say that “Williams’s novel has a huge following and, in print, I don’t doubt the messages stand out uncompromised.” I mean, that definitely wouldn’t be my view. It sounds like the film is entirely true to his novelistic style and I can’t understand why I am weirdly keen to see it.

James by Percival Everett

This was brilliant; a retelling of Huckleberry Finn from the slave Jim’s perspective. It sounds a bit worthy but it’s clever and funny and sad. I would really recommend.

Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

On the strength of reading James, I thought I would reread Huckleberry Finn. I had read it as a child and found it so hard that in my head I thought it was really a book for adults; it is not a book for adults. I found it pretty shocking though. It brought home to me what it was like to be a slave in the American South like nothing else I’ve read. It was the careless everyday cruelty that did for me. Surprisingly hard going.

Funny Weather: Art in an Emergency by Olivia Laing

A series of essays mostly about contemporary art by a woman who looks at the world in a peculiar way. Really interesting but I’m still not sold on contemporary/modern/post-modern art.

We were Young by Niamh Campbell

This is a book set in the contemporary, arty, bohemian Dublin scene. I recognised almost all the locations and several of the arts events it features. The protagonist is a handsome, unlikable photography lecturer. Not a whole lot happens. I did not love it; I thought it was overwritten. However, as a friend of mine said, “If you like adjectives, this is the book for you.”

The Episode by Mary Ann Kenny

This was an interesting book and, notwithstanding the subject matter, very readable. It is written by a woman – about my own age – who had what we used to call a nervous breakdown after the sudden death of her husband. She is really writing the book to criticise the mental health services and she is still very angry about how she was treated in 2015. Certainly the book does make things seem grim but I couldn’t help thinking as I read through it that the system basically worked for her, though that would not be her view. Well worth a read.

Sarah Cecilia Harrison (1863-1941): Artist, Social Campaigner and City Councillor by Margarita Cappock

What an odd woman Ms. Harrison was but her heart was in the right place and she was a wonderful painter. I got this out of the library for the pictures really.

Not the End of the World: How we can be the first generation to build a sustainable planet by Hannah Ritchie

Quite worthy but heartening. Lots of information about how we can turn the tide on climate change and how much we have achieved already although, certainly, there is still much to do. If you are feeling gloomy on the climate change front – and given this summer’s weather, it’s hard not to – this will cheer you up.

Orbital by Samantha Harvey

This is a short book about astronauts in orbit and it took me forever to read. Very beautifully written and so on but tedious to me. It won the Booker Prize, often a red flag for me. I went to a talk by Paul Murray and he said that he loved to write and sometimes with books, authors find the writing very hard and each word is wrung from them. He said that there was a recent very successful short novel where he thought that this was the case; he didn’t mention the novel but I would bet my bottom dollar that it was this one.

Quickly while they still have horses by Jan Carson

A book of short stories by this brilliant author from Northern Ireland. I loved every one of these even though they contain magical realism which I previously thought I loathed. She has a new book out soon. Rejoice.

The Other Day by Dorothy Whipple

I found this description by the author of her middle-class, happy childhood in the 1890s and early 1900s delightful in every way. Even though it is a long time ago it is so recognisable; the triumphs and disasters of childhood are beautifully evoked. A lovely, lovely read.

Me Before You by Jojo Moyes

I saw an enthusiastic review of this somewhere and thought I would give it a go. It is romantic fiction though, plot twist, the hero is quadriplegic. The writing is grand and I did enjoy reading it but, it was somehow unrewarding, I don’t know that I would try another.

Space on my Hands by Frederic Brown

This was from the box of 50s and 60s science fiction novels that my mother had in the attic when I was growing up. I don’t know why the box was in the attic, possibly a fatal lack of shelf space downstairs. I read them all many times and somehow, I don’t know how – perhaps one of the children brought it up from Cork – this book of short stories ended up in my house and we found it in the great shelf reorganisation. I thought I’d give it a read for old time’s sake. It’s not too bad. It does suffer from the great flaw which puts Mr. Waffle off sci-fi; all plot and no character development. But I enjoy plot. It is, of course, very much of its time. I was amazed to see that it is still in print (first published 1951). Not the worst, if sci-fi is your thing.

Glorious Exploits by Ferdia Lennon

This got exceptionally good reviews and I was curious to read it. As part of the great shelf reorganisation, we got rid of the Princess’s old bookshelves and replaced them with the better ones from downstairs. In the course of this I found a proof copy of this very book on her shelves. On the one hand, I was glad as I had wanted to read it, on the other hand I was bitter, how come no one ever gives me a proof copy? We move on.

This is a work set in the ancient Greek city of Syracuse (in Sicily). The Syracusans have defeated the Athenians and the remnants of the Athenian army are starving to death in a quarry outside Syracuse. All this is apparently historically accurate. Two friends decide to put on a play with the Athenians. One of them is a big, big Euripides fan. The narrator – one of the two friends – is given a strong Dublin accent and I read an interview with the author where he explains that Syracuse to Athens is like Dublin to London. Anyway, it’s clever and very well done. An Irish legendary figure appears as a deus ex machina. I’m sure there are lots of other clever things I didn’t get as my knowledge of Euripides is limited (that is generous). Overall, a bit hard going in parts but interesting and the author can write. If you’re into the ancient Greeks, I think you would love it.

Il Mio Onomastico

27 July, 2025
Posted in: Dublin, Ireland

When I was an au pair in Italy in the summer of 1988 (and can I tell you that it is appalling to think that the child I minded must now be 39), I awoke on the morning of July 26 to find a rather appealing pair of green ruffled pyjamas in a parcel on the end of my bed.

What was this for you ask (as did I). It was my saint’s name day. Not something I had ever been aware of before and certainly not something that was celebrated in Ireland. I was charmed; and I would remember occasionally over the years but mostly I forgot. However, yesterday, a religious friend texted me “Happy St Anne’s Day!” so I remembered and this morning lit a candle at the rather pedestrian statute in the church. Can’t say that St. Anne was experiencing a great deal of love on her name day judging by the number of candles lit but perhaps they had gone out overnight.

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Surprising

27 July, 2025
Posted in: Dublin, Ireland, Mr. Waffle

Mr. Waffle and I had a great time in the Phoenix park today where we went to watch a polo match. Have you ever been? I can totally recommend. The rules are immensely complex and involve, inter alia, handicapping each player (you start at -2 and work your way up with +1 generally being international standard and 8-10 people in the world at +10); the direction of play reversing after every goal; and a lot about the line of play which I can’t say I totally understood. All of this (and more) was explained to me by a friendly Australian who was unfortunate enough to be sitting beside me. The commentator knew many of his audience were pretty ignorant and spent some time explaining the five kinds of foul in polo; to be honest not really time well-spent as far as I was concerned, I remain pretty confused on this point.

I have no idea what the standard of play was but it was extremely exciting as the horses and riders went tearing up and down the, I want to say, pitch. During the break all of the spectators went out and stamped the divots back in place which I found kind of hilarious. I will certainly be back with my new found polo knowledge. It is free to attend and numbers are low so they need all the support they can get.

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