They say there is a time for tears
But pray don’t make my leaving one
I’ve had my share of frights and fears
Still, as God knows, I’ve had good fun
You know I left that emerald land
Amid the second bloody war
But found joy holding Richard’s hand
And now it’s love forever more
I coaxed new babies from the womb
Nursed young and old back to good health
Don’t cry for me, don’t put on gloom
Family and friends, you've been my wealth
A hole in one along the way
The bowls have kept me on the straight
And now I rest above earth’s fray
Holding on to my handsome mate
I breathe in heaven’s clear fresh air
And walk without my wooden cane
You’d love the way the saints here share
These glory days will never wane
It’s been a gift to know you all
And I hope you have found me true
So til you get the final call
Be sure and leave a gentle hue.
(21 May 2012, London)
A Canadian writer living in Blackheath, London, UK, sorts out the world of politics, religion and the arts in prose and verse, sometimes with tongue firmly in cheek.
Wednesday, 23 May 2012
Monday, 16 January 2012
What are you reading?
Whether it’s in those all too infrequent transatlantic telephone calls with my children, during the meetings of our quixotic Blackheath Writers’ Group, or in the clipped conversations between pints of Bombardier in the Dacre Arms pub - that is the essential question.
What are you reading?
Or, what’s important to you? What’s inspiring you? What’s changing you? As Alberto Manguel writes, “I believe that we are, at the core, reading animals and that the art of reading, in its broadest sense, defines our species.”
What are you reading?
A few years ago while browsing in a bookstore in Paris with two committed bibliophiles, we came across a journal designed to list the books you have read during the year. We loved the idea but for some reason none of us bought one. Ever since then I have promised myself I would chart my reading journey for a year to remind myself of where I had been.
I finally got around to doing this in 2011, and as I look back there is little wonder why it was such a good year for me.
I have experienced the exhilaration of freedom (Jonathan Franzen), the unsentimental joy of family (Colm Toibin), the rhythm of love (Carol Ann Duffy) and the tranquility of home (Marilynne Robinson). I have also plumbed the depths of war and peace (Leo Tolstoy), suffered through complaints (Ian Rankin), spent time far from the madding crowd (Thomas Hardy) and sometimes muttered "so much for that" (Lionel Shriver).
I have rambled (Mark Thomas), run (David Grossman), waltzed (Anne Enright), travelled on Green Dolphin Street (Sebastian Faulks), searched for Gilead (David G. Hallman) and restored myself with tea (Sophie Dahl).
Along the way I plunged deep into smut (Alan Bennett), endured the occasional idiot (Fyodor Dostoyevsky) and enjoyed other people’s money (Justin Cartwright) but I did learn 23 things they don’t tell you about capitalism (Ha-joon Chang).
As the year wound down I got the sense of an ending (Julian Barnes) and felt I was at the point of departure (Robin Cook). It was time for a homecoming (Bernhard Schlink).
Sorry, I got carried away. But it gives you a sense of the breadth of the adventures available, even when we don't wander far from novels. Perhaps more important were the discoveries and re-discoveries.
Parts of Franzen’s Freedom absolutely dazzle so it was great to encounter him again as a Christmas gift. The Stranger’s Child by Allan Hollinghurst was the sumptuous feast I expected. Price be damned, I went out and purchased the hardback as soon as it was on the bookshelves of Waterstones.
Marilynne Robinson was a new and incredible discovery. Certainly Home was the very best book I read in 2011, a moving look at family and reconciliation that is rich in theological and political insight.
And the Land Lay Still by James Robertson was an engrossing immersion into the politics and art worlds of Scotland that began with a lucky quick pick at Heathrow Airport. Julian Barnes’ The Sense of an Ending was wise and witty and I was happy to finally read him along with Howard Jacobson’s baffling yet engrossing The Finkler Question.
But the real find for me last year was a beautiful book by Mary Rose Donnelly, titled Great Village, a graceful story about family, community and poetry in Nova Scotia that made me weep, and then quickly hand it on across the pillows.
(In case you are interested: 42 books read – 32 novels, three books of short stories, three books of poetry, four books of non-fiction. I can send the list if you get in touch.)
What are you reading?
What are you reading?
Or, what’s important to you? What’s inspiring you? What’s changing you? As Alberto Manguel writes, “I believe that we are, at the core, reading animals and that the art of reading, in its broadest sense, defines our species.”
What are you reading?
A few years ago while browsing in a bookstore in Paris with two committed bibliophiles, we came across a journal designed to list the books you have read during the year. We loved the idea but for some reason none of us bought one. Ever since then I have promised myself I would chart my reading journey for a year to remind myself of where I had been.
I finally got around to doing this in 2011, and as I look back there is little wonder why it was such a good year for me.
I have experienced the exhilaration of freedom (Jonathan Franzen), the unsentimental joy of family (Colm Toibin), the rhythm of love (Carol Ann Duffy) and the tranquility of home (Marilynne Robinson). I have also plumbed the depths of war and peace (Leo Tolstoy), suffered through complaints (Ian Rankin), spent time far from the madding crowd (Thomas Hardy) and sometimes muttered "so much for that" (Lionel Shriver).
I have rambled (Mark Thomas), run (David Grossman), waltzed (Anne Enright), travelled on Green Dolphin Street (Sebastian Faulks), searched for Gilead (David G. Hallman) and restored myself with tea (Sophie Dahl).
Along the way I plunged deep into smut (Alan Bennett), endured the occasional idiot (Fyodor Dostoyevsky) and enjoyed other people’s money (Justin Cartwright) but I did learn 23 things they don’t tell you about capitalism (Ha-joon Chang).
As the year wound down I got the sense of an ending (Julian Barnes) and felt I was at the point of departure (Robin Cook). It was time for a homecoming (Bernhard Schlink).
Sorry, I got carried away. But it gives you a sense of the breadth of the adventures available, even when we don't wander far from novels. Perhaps more important were the discoveries and re-discoveries.
Parts of Franzen’s Freedom absolutely dazzle so it was great to encounter him again as a Christmas gift. The Stranger’s Child by Allan Hollinghurst was the sumptuous feast I expected. Price be damned, I went out and purchased the hardback as soon as it was on the bookshelves of Waterstones.
Marilynne Robinson was a new and incredible discovery. Certainly Home was the very best book I read in 2011, a moving look at family and reconciliation that is rich in theological and political insight.
And the Land Lay Still by James Robertson was an engrossing immersion into the politics and art worlds of Scotland that began with a lucky quick pick at Heathrow Airport. Julian Barnes’ The Sense of an Ending was wise and witty and I was happy to finally read him along with Howard Jacobson’s baffling yet engrossing The Finkler Question.
But the real find for me last year was a beautiful book by Mary Rose Donnelly, titled Great Village, a graceful story about family, community and poetry in Nova Scotia that made me weep, and then quickly hand it on across the pillows.
(In case you are interested: 42 books read – 32 novels, three books of short stories, three books of poetry, four books of non-fiction. I can send the list if you get in touch.)
What are you reading?
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